Spring's Bedfellow. Spring went about the woods today, Tho soft foot Winter thief. And found where idle Sorrow lay between the flower and leaf. She looked on him and found him fair For all she had been told; She knelt down beside him there And sang of days of old. His open eyes beheld hei^aught. Yet 'gan his lips do move; but life and deeds were in her thought And he would sing of love. So sang they till their ores did meet. And failed fear and sname; Moro lwild ho grew and she more sweet Until tuey sang the same— Until, say they who knew the thing. Their very lips did kiss. And Sorrow, laid abed with Spring, begat au earthly bliss. —William Morris. Philadelphia to New York In lo Minutes. All sorts of attempts to produce flying machines that would fly have been made, hut it has remained for an in genious Philadelpliian apply the trol ley system of electricity to tho problem. H. Gawthrop, a well known business man, gives this preliminary description of the apparatus: This flying machine is to bo driven by an electric motor, the power being con veyed by the now well known trolley system to drive a large fun. Tho body of the machine is a largo flat sur face, shaped like tho deck of a vessel, the stem part hinged and controlled to steer the machine up or down. There is also a rudder to cliango tho direction to right or left, and a hanging weight to keep from tilting. Like a bicycle, it will require much skill and alertness on the part of the op erator, and will bo attended with some dangers beginners. It should bo kept about 100 feet from tho ground to give leeway, and the trolley firmly secured to the wire and the wire to tho poles. Mr. Gawthrop is under the impression that this system, if properly perfected, would enable the distance from Phila delphia to New York to bo covered in ten minutes.—Philadelphia Inquirer. Tremendous Water Power. A paper company at Niagara Falls finds it 110 easy task to decide how the tho terrific power from tho 130 feet head of water which is to be at their disposal shall ho utilized. At a recent confer ence of the officers of the company about twenty wheels and methods of develop ing power were submitted to them, and all but three were immediately passed over as being wholly inadequate to the occasion. Most of tho water wheels made would crush like eggshells be neath tho force of a column of water falling 130 feet down a penstock. The wheels selected for further tests are to receive it at Holyoko, and when a decision is reached tho company's archi tect will prepare plans for several ways of using tho power. The contract for building a colter dam for the company has been let, and also for tho tunnel and snaft. The tunnel will he 500 feet long and probably 10 by 13 feet in size. The shaft will have a depth of 140 feet, and will bo 14 by 40 or 45 feet in sizo.—Spring field Paper World. Protection by Smoke from l'rost. Experiments in the making of arti ficial clouds for tho preservation of plants from tho effects of frost took j place yesterday in tho Jardin d'Accli- ! matation, under the auspices of the Agricultural society. Masses of resin ous matter in boxes of pinewood were set alight, and soon guvo off denso "volumes of smoko. This was expected to produce tho required nebulosity, but it failed to rise to tho level of the situ ation, and was blown away in tho di rection of tho seal pond. Experiments of a similar kind have been tried with more success in tho Girondo vineyards. The proceedings in the Jardin d'Aceli matation were watched by several staff officers, who wished to see if tho new invention could bo utilized for military I purposes, such as tho masking of ex- | posed troops or batteries in time of war. | —Paris Cor. London Telegraph. A llattcrcd Old War Fugle. Thursday T. W. Lantlers shot and wounded a gray eagle near the Dres back bridge on Dig Pine, and after con siderable trouble ho succeeded in cap- ! taring and carrying it to R. Dresback's store. A Btrip of sheet brass was dis covered coiled around the bird's neck and wade fast by a brass wire. The strip of brass measured inches in width by 13 in length, with letters stamped on which said: "Memphis. Teuu., Aug. 15, 1864. Samuel C. Boils, Co. G, 57th O. V. I." The bird is a sav age looking monster. One wing meas ured over three feet. A portion of the { other being shot away they could not get the exact dimensions. He is now confined in a cage.—Ohio Democrat. Foolhardy Feat of Waltzing. Groat excitement was caused in Sack ville street, Dublin, recehtly, by a fool hardy feat performed at tho top of Nel son's pillar by a watch manufacturer from Cork. Tho mail and a friend mounted to the top of tho pillar, and then tho former climbed over the rail ings at tho summit and commenced waltzing round the parapet. A false step and he would have been dashed to pieces. A large crowd assembled, and two constables ascended the pillar and arrested the men. They ware taken be fore the magistrates, who discharged them on their asserting that their con duct was nothing but a froak.—Pall Mall Gazotte. Her Sacrifice. Seated at the dinner table were the father, mother and their two young hopefuls, the youngest a five-year-old and very averse to going to school. The mother said to the eldest: "Ethel. Lent is here. What are yon going to give up?" Sho could not make up her mind, hut Enid, quick as a flash, said, "Mamma, 1 know what I will give up; j I will give up school."—New York Trib une. A 5-ton traction engine ran over a foot, leg and arm of William Murford, Jr., at New Morefield, ()., on Tuesday, I without iujuring him. Costly Wedding Presents for Sale. It is a pitiful item in a story full of pathos that several of the presents origi nally bought as wedding gifts for the Princess May should now bo onco moro offered to the public, their intended designation lending them a special charm to a certain class of buyers. One feels additionally touched when one remem bers the delight with which the princess is said to have received those which were sent her before her terrible trouble. Yet in a little shop in the Strand, well known to connoisseurs, can be seen the cele brated Tiffany necklace, a riviere of magnificent diamonds, which was bought in New York to present to the popular princess. Another particular treasure is a sap phire. I was going to say a priceless stone, but truth to tell it is priced, and" its value is £5,000. It is a perfect stone, without flaw, of exquisite color, two inches long and inches broad. At present it is sot around with fine bril liants and forms a royal looking brooch. The other day a would bo purchaser brought his wife to see the present he proposed to make, but she would have nothing to say to the jewel. "No, thank you," she exclaimed; "I should fe*l like a church window if I wore that." So the treasured heirloom of an old noble Russian family is still in the market.— London Cor. Philadelphia Telegraph. Newest M<xlo off Burglary. The other day a gentleman in a north ern suburb found a stranger ascending his staircase, who, without betraying any emotion, said he had come about the repairs. > "Oh, yes," roplied the own er, "but I am in a hurry to keep an en gagement just now. Come out with me, I and I'll tell you what I want done." The two walked out together, the house holder talking about waterpipes and tanks, and the stranger answering with a glibness that showed considerable ex perience, until they came to a police man, when the former )*t once gave the pretended plumber into his custody for ; being in his house with unlawful in tent. Upon him were found the usual in- ! struments of the burglar's business, and j when taken to the police station he was j soon identified as an expert crib cracker, : who was already wanted on several charges of housebreaking and burglary. People will do well to view with suspi cion men who come to their dwellings to do repairs which have never been or dered.—Philadelphia Telegraph. Telephones for Uso in Itattle. Particulars of the behavior of the field \ telephone system in tho French autumn maneuvers have now been published, j Magneto telephones were used, as no delicate microphone or battery is rc- j quired with them. The transmitter was held in the hand and the receiver was j affixed to tho "kepi." Combined re ceivers and transmitters were also eni ployed. A bare bimetallic wire 0.6 mil- j limeters in diameter was unrolled from a drum and laid out of harm's way on hedges, branches, walls and in trenches. ! A line twenty-three kilometers long was thus laid, with the addition of ten posts, in five hours; speech was good, j and the whole was taken up again in an hour. During a sham fight a cavalry division passed over a long line without | interrupting the communication. A bayonet stuck in tho ground made a good earth circuit, so did the body of a cavalry horse if the wire was attached to tho bridle.—London Globe. Russian Discipline. Much comment has boon excited by a recent occurrence at VVilna, in western Russia. The men of one of the butteries of an artillery regiment stationed at Wilna mutinously refused to salute one of their officers when he came among them. He summoned them more than once to pay him tho due sign of respect, hut the soldiers paid no attention. The officer, enraged at this behavior, at j length drew his revolver and shot two ! noncommissioned officers, one after the other. He was taking aim at a third I when the soldiers, in fear of their lives, at length gave the proper salute. Tho incident is being hotly discussed in mili tary circles, somo officers maintaining that their confrere was justified in his act, while others condemn his extreme couduct.-Asonlfin Times. A Strange Explosion. Sctli Williams and Morris McClelland met death in a mysterious explosion at Cave City, Ky. They were digging a cistern and had reached a fiat rock eight feet down. Williams struck the rock with a sledge hammer, causing a terri ble explosion, which buried McClelland I beneath flying bowlders and killed him, and threw Williams into a tree fifty yards away. McClelland lived just long enough to tell what had happened. Sev- j eral persons have closely examined the ! scene of the explosion, but discovered nothing beyond bluisli vapor with a sul phurous smell issuing from between two large rocks.—Exchange. All Kiiglneer In Karc Luck. By the death of Patrick Costello, in Detroit, Tom Costello, of Wichita, an ' engineer on tho Atchison road, will get . $60,000. Patrick, tho elder brother, left Ireland forty-five years ago for Austra- j lia, and ten years later Tom came to I America. About 1865 Patrick wrote to i his family that he was rich and that he j i was leaving Australia for America, and : 1 they never heard from him again. He had lived in Detroit, It seems, for many years, but no one know much about him, ' —Kansas City Times. At tho recent term of tho supremo ju I cicial court of Franklin count)', Me., no ' indictments were found, and the mem- ( hers of the grand jury when dismissed presented to Judge Emery a pair of white kid gloves as an emblem of the purity of the county's morals. A coasting party in Guilford, Me., re cently consisted of Orman Cimplier, aged I five years; his mother, his grandfather 1 and his great-grandmother, aged ninety- i four. Tho party coasted down the long 1 hills for an hoar and then enjoyed a 1 hearty backwoods breakfast. i ! Opium Smuggled Within a Dead Body. j A remarkable smuggling story is re lated by a reliable resident of National | City, Cal. According to* the story a | corpse was brought across the line from [ Mexico, ostensibly to be shipped to rela tives in San Francisco. It was not exam ! ined very closely, as the mourners would have resented too close an inspection of ' the dead body, but the informant hap pened to he there and his curiosity was aroused. He therefore investigated. No sooner was the solemn procession well away from the line than it changed its course, and instead of filing toward San Diego went rapidly toward the east, climbed the hills until it readied Otay mesa, and stopped at a house where tho coffin was taken in. It was by this time growing (lark, and the person who was following it was puzzled how to continue his investigations. He rode boldly up to tho corral and put up his horse. The occupants of the house were too busy to notice his arrival. He then walked to the house and looked through the win dow cautiously. He saw the whole crowd of mourners busily engaged in taking out small tin boxes of opium from tho cadaver and piling them on the table. Tho observer, feeling that he al ready knew too much for his own good, and fearful of detection, went quietly to the corral, saddled his broncho and do liar ted. He knows the names of the parties, but will not disclose them. Ho said, however, that the procession was com posed of Mexicans, but the house where the supposed corpso was taken belonged to an American.—Cor. Portland Orego nian. A Parentlcgg Nest Full. The passengers on the 7:20 western bound passenger train of the Pennsyl vania railroad Friday evening had their hearts moved by a most touching sight. Huddled together iu two of the train seats, facing one another, were eight lit tle children, the eldest not yet in her teens and the youngest a tiny babe, which opened its eyes to the light on Christmas day. These poor little ones were all brothers and sisters, but father less and motherless, left adrift thus ear ly in their lives without a single rela tive, save ono in far off India, whither they were bound. The birth of tho little babe Christmas morn had proven the death of its moth er. The anguish stricken father, a poor mechanic named Robert Graham, turned from tho sad bedside a heartbroken man. His sonse of tho overwhelming responsibility tlms imposed upon him combined with his great grief to pros trate him, and from tho severe fever which ensued he never recovered. New Year's day hie silent remains wore borno to the graveyard and laid to rest beside those of his wife. But for tho charity of a kind hearted neighbor the eight little orphans must have fared very ill in their lonely state. This neighbor learned of tho where abouts of the relative in India, corre sponded with him and left with the little ones last Friday. Philadelphia Record. Hum His Own Church. The now Hovey Avenue Baptist church building is a handsome one, for which its pastor, J. C. Jacob, is entirely re sponsible. A year ago he began to agi tate tho building of the structure, hut meeting only with rebuffs ho decided to go ahead with the construction. Accordingly he begged the lumlier from prominent firms of the city, and with his own hands laid tho foundations and erected the superstructure. Six [lays out of seven for nearly six months past he has toiled early and late on the structure. With his own hands he has painted the entire building, and his own ingenuity is responsible for the beauti ful interior finish of butternut, syca more and black ash. Though the prop erty as it stands is worth nearly £I,OOO. the cash outlay by the church has been loss than £l,ooo.—Muskegon (Mich.) Cor. Chicago Inter Ocean. A Bravo l'ilofc. Captain John Stout, a Mississippi pilot, died recently in Now Orleans. His life was distinguished by several acts of bravery. He was at the wheel of the steamor Robert E. Leo when she was burned at Yucatan plantation, in 1882. On that occasion he saved a score ->f lives by remaining at the wheel and lidding his boat to the bank. He re mained on the blazing vessel until the very last moment, and only escaped by fliding down the log chain. Captain Stout was on board the steamboat J. w. White when she was bnrned above Bayou Sara in 1880, anil jumped over board to escape the flames. He was licked up almost lifeless.—Philadelphia Ledger. When the Men Were Saved. A small Victoria trading sloop was water logged, her mast having fallen through her bottom, in a recent blow off Cape Flattery, Wash. Some Indians went off to the boat, but refused to take lie men off until they agreed to givo be Indians all the contents of tho sloop, which they did, and the red men then owed her into Cape Beal. Tho Port Yngeles Tribune calls the Indians along hat coast regular freebooter sharks. A Seven-Tear-Old Hero. Des Moines has a veritable hero seven | 'ears old, named John GreCh. The bur-year-old daughter of Senator Lewis was playing in a neigboring yard, and while crossing a cistern the boards iroke and dropped her into seven feet of water, ten feet from the top. Green vas near and plunged in after her and leld himself und child above water intil help came, which was not for fif eeu minutes.—Exchange. Tho Interest on Twenty Hollars. The first book issued by the Institution or Savings in Newport, Mass., on the irst day the bank was opened, April 5, 820, mid still in the possession of the amily of the depositor, was received at he banking rooms recently to have the nterest added. The original deimsitwas wenty dollars, and no more deposits vere made. Tho interest to dato amounted to £B9B.—New York Press. i A Priestly Curer of Ills. I Another miracle worker has recently come into prominence in this vicinity. Ho is a Catholic priest without a parish, ami the meilical fraternity attributo his alleged cures to imagination, which, as all doctors know, is worth tons of medi cine in many cases. It seems an estab j lished fact, however, that a man who for years has been tortured with respi ration several times as rapid as the normal, ami who had consulted many eminent physicians without relief, got | rid of his trouble between dawn and dark of a single day after an application I of prayer and holy relics, and that all of his ailing acquaintances have ever since kept the priest's door ajar, some of them ; going away in the belief that they have j been permanently benefited, j The worker of these alleged cures, who attributes his success to divine aid, is a stalwart man of fifty years—a man of the kind whom the weak and credu lous would instinctively obey so far as their nerves and muscles would allow and if he has compelled a lot of liypo i chondriacs to once more come under their own control lie has done a great ; deal of good whatever may bo his meth od, or lack of it. Such men are of un speakable service to physicians, all of whom, in this Vicinity, aro haunted by a lot of people who imagine themselves ill and who are sure they know what is the matter with them.—New York Cor. Chi- j j cago Tribune. Restitution. A builder in Avise, a village in Cham pagne. was arrested by two gendarmes j and taken to Chalons, where the judge i j d'instruction commenced the conversa- ' tion in the way usual to his calling by j saying, "You are a thief and an assas | sin." After this polite greeting he went on to remark that a murder, accomjia- j nied by theft, had been committed in j ! tho neighborhood, and a small boy had ; given it as his opinion that the builder j I was the murderer. | The poor prisoner naturally felt indig- \ i nant, and declared he was ready to ! prove an alibi. But of course he was i not believed, and every day for three 1 ! days he was marched through Chalons and Avise with handcuffs upon his j I wrists. At the end of that time the j judge d'instruction said to him: "Wo were wrong. Your innocence has been proved. You are free." | "Yes, disgraced and ruined," added the poor builder. "Who do you think will employ mo after seeing mo led i through the streets handcuffed like a ( felon?" Tho heart of the man was | touched. "True," he said, "we have done yon an injury, my good man." And he pressed into the hand of the builder a ten franc piece.—Paris Letter. Electricity fen in Wind. Owing to the comparative scarcity of water power in many parts of England for tho generation of power for elec trical purposes, attention lues been given to wind power, of which the country is well supplied. A small experimental plant has been in operation at a flour mill near London, tho windmill supply ing sufficient power to run a small dy namo. Tho current is used to charge a storage battery, from which a number of arc and incandescent lamps wero lighted nightly. Although tho current obtained was small the experiment was successful in demonstrating the valuo of this form of power for generating electricity.—Electricity. Making Jewelry In Stnto Prison. Tho authorities liavo decided to begin manufacturing pearl buttons and pearl jewelry in tho southern Illinois peni tentiary, which is located in Chester. Warden Murphy has returned from Au burn, N. Y., where ho engaged three experts to superintend the work. Ar rangements have been made for the salo of tho entire product, and tho manufac turing will bo done on the state's ac count. One hundred convicts will be em ployed in the industry, which, it is claimed, will not antagonize the free labor of the state.—Cor. Jowelers' Weekly. Tun Singular Accidents. Annie Delamater, tho eleven-year-old girl who was choked to death Sunday afternoon by swallowing a small rubber toy balloon, was buried from the residence of Mrs. Kane, 70 Henry street. The child's father, a widower, who boards in Williamsburg, while going up stairs in the house where tho corpso lay at 3 a. in. on tho day of tho funeral, fell backward down a flight of stairs. An ambulance took him to Gouverneur hospital, where it was found that both legs were paralyzed, and lie is now in u critical condition.—New York Sun. A Walking Kiigino. A New York genius has evolved a cu rious kind of a traction engine that has both wheels and legs. The end of the machine to which tho six legs are at tached is supposed to bo tho rear of the engine. Tho legs aro operated by ec centrics and they work in pairs. The feet are shod with blocks of rubber to enable them to take hold of the ground. The originator of this novel species of draft animal confidently asserts that it will go astern as well as ahead and will climb any hill less steep than a pitch roof.—New York Journal. Succottaful Hunting. One day last week while George J. and Pat Wynne, of Oglethorpe county, wero out hunting, tho former found a couple of partridges on tho ground, and wishing to kill both, fired at them. He was more than surprised on going to pick them up to find that he had killed not only the two ho saw, but seventeen others besides, none of which he had seen.—Savannah News. Fire L.OMM for Last Year. An unusual amount of inventive tal ent is now being used to prevent the oc- * currence of fires. Tho spur in this lino 1 is caused by the statement of fire losses ' in tho United States and Canada during 1891, which aggregated $138,01)0,000, an i increase of 30 por cent, over 1800.—New ■ York Times. t An Offlcer's Tragic Death. A lieutenant of the Twenty-fourth regiment of Chasseurs, named Taverne, met with a most tragic death near the 1 port of Nice yesterday. His horse, a 1 big, fiery roan, which had been very littlo ridden, became restive shortly after ■ leaving headquarters. While passing ' the well known Chateau Smith tho horse took fright and bolted down an incline. ' Some octroi officers saw this, but were unable to arrest liia progress. Tho offi -1 cer managed to steer the animal around tho Nice port, but coming to a rapid curve in the road at a spot known as Rabau Capen he lost all control. The home .lushed madly at a wall, cleared it, and both horse and rider were dashed over tho rocks into tho sea below. ! The admiral of the Mediterranean squadron sent a steam launch, four boats and fifty men with grapnels to try and find tho bodies. They found a key on tho rocks, which has been identified as that of the officer's chamber in the bar racks, and some hair of the horse stuck to the rocks. Up to the present, how ever, the bodies have not been recovered. ; They have probably been taken out to ! sea by currents. M. De Freycinet, who is now in Nice, visited the spot to make j inquiries. The unfortunate officer, who was only thirty years of age, was most popular.—Pall Mall Gazette. Aii Elephant's Toothache. J The elephant in the Zoological gardens j in Paris must be a very reasonable crea ! ture. He suffers from toothache, and if I hi proportion to his size, he must suffer a good deal; yet, while it is being stopped j and filled, we are told, ho is exceedingly patient, only "gently moving liis trunk" when the operation is particularly pain ful. A word of praise is nkio surely due to the dentist. A man* might have ; earned tho Victoria Cross and yet have | some misgivings when that trunk began ;to wave. In the case in question it was I only employed "to caress the operator," j byway of fee, when the proceedings j wero concluded; but it might have been ] put to a different use. j The report does not inform us whether j the elephant is placed in a chair with I his head well back, a position with which most of us are only too well ac- I quainted. There is a littlo difficulty, it ' [ seems, in inducing him to take laughing gas, which he may think beneath his dignity.—James Payn in Illustrated London News. Travelers on the Move. The tido of the genus tramp has al- j ready begun its flow northward. For j tho past week the applications for aid at j | the central office of the Associated char- j ities havo been made up chiefly of per sons who have been in the city but a day or so, and they generally apply for shoes and clothing. Theso applicants are composed of that class that annually migrate to the South at the commence ment of winter, where they stay until the opening of spring, when they turn ! their nomadic faces northward.—Wash ington Post. Cuul In the Argentine Republic. The outlook for the recently discov ered coal mines in the Argentine Repub lic is so favorable that tho railway com panies of that country have declined to renew their contracts with tho British mines for fuel. Hitherto all tho coal burned on tho Argentine railroads has been imported, but it is believed that tho newly discovered mines will furnish a supply entirely sufficient for domestic consumption.—Engineering. Fun with a Wild Wolf. A party of fox hunters around Cleve land, deciding that "reynard" was too tamo to follow longer, liberated a wild mountain wolf from Kansas. By tho time the fierce animal had bitten off a finger of one hunter, torn holes in tho boots of three or four more, killed two dogs and severely wounded several others, tho fox hunters, after killing him, decided they had enough of that kind of sport.—Exchange. The Modern "Man in Our Town." The modern counterpart of tho man who recovered his lost eyes by a second jump into a bramble bush is found in tho person of A. A. Hubbard, of Stet son, Me. The other day Hubbard dis located his shoulder by falling from an ox cart, and while on the way to a neighboring lawyer's his horse twitched the sleigh in some way so that the shoul der was forced back in its original posi tion.—New York Sun. Measuring Ulgll Temperatures. A Frenchman has recently made some experiments with the idea of measuring \ high temperatures by determining the ! intensity of the radiations emitted by a i pyrometer of platinum or clay or other j material when compared with the light j of a standard lamp. The results indi cate that the method is an excellent one. —New York Times. A now series of postage stamps has been issued by tho republic of San Sal- | vador. All stamps previous to 1893 havo been called in and only the new stamps aro the accepted in payment of postage hereafter. A citizen of Parrott, Ga., expresses his willingness to vouch for the truth fulness of a statement that he recently killed seventy blackbirds at one shot with his breechloader. A recent English invention is a screw propeller in which the blados can be ad justed for maneuvering, or can bo feathered for running under sail. In the Florence oil field of Colorado there was produced last year 100,000 barrels of illuminating and 5,000 barrels of lubricating oil. A Montana man has invented a ranch snuwplow for scraping tho snow off the ranges so that the cattle can get at the grass. An eagle measuring 7 feet 6 inches from tip to tip of wings was shot in j Montgomery county, Md., a few days l ago. . ( What is Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverisliness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas toria is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friend. Castoria. I " Castoria is an excellent medicine for chil dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its I good effect upon their children." DH. Q. C. OSGOOD, Lowell, Mass. Castoria is the best remedy for children of which lam acquainted. I hope the day is not far distant when mothers will consider the real interest of their children, and use Castoria in stead of the various quack nostrums which are destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending I them to premature graves." DU. J. F. KINCIIELOE, Conway, Ark. Tho Centaur Company, 17 Murray Street, New York City. iii iimmiwh m—i II iiii —ii ihi m iwiwi— BOOTS AND SHOES. A Large Stock of Boots, Shoes, Gaiters, Slippers, Etc. Also HATS. CAPS and GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS of All Kinds. A Special Line Suitable for This Season. 0000 MATERIAL! LOW FRIGES! XITXGKH: MALLOY, Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Freeland. S. RUDEWICK, Wholesale Dealer In Imported Brandy, Wine And All Kinds Of LIQUORS. THE BEST Beer, Porter, -A-le -A-nd. Brown Sto"u.+.. Foreign and Domestic. Cigars Kept 011 Hand. S. RUDEWICK, SOUTH HEBERTON. PETER TIMONY, BOTTLER, And Dealer in all kinds of Liquors, Beer and Porter, Temperance Drinks, Etc., Etc. Geo.Ringler&Co.'s Celebrated LAGER BEER put in Patent Sealed Bottles liere on tlie premises. Goods de> livered in any quantity, and to any part of the country. FREELAND BOTTLING WORKS, Cor. Centre and Parboil Sts., Freeland. (Near Lehigh Valley Depot.) A. RUDEWICK, GENERAL STORE. SOUTII HEBERTON, PA. Clothing, Groceries, Etc., Etc. Agent for the sale of PASSAGE TICKETS From all tlio principal points in Europe to all points in the United States. Agent for the transmission of MONEY To all parts of Europe. Checks, Drafts, ami Letters of Exchange on Foreign Banks cashed at reasonable rat vs. Castoria. " Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior toauy prescription knowu to me." 11. A. ARCHER, M. D., 11l So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. " Our physicians in tho children's depart ment have spoken highly of their experi ence in their outside practice with Castoria, and although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it." UNITED HOSPITAL AND DISPENSARY, Boston, Muss. ALLEN C. SMITH, Pres., E. M. GERITZ, 2d yen re in Germany and America, opposite the Central Hotel, Centre Street, Frcelaeu. The Cheapest Repairing Store in town. Watches. Clocks and Jewelry. New Watches, Clocks and Jewelry on hand for the Holi. days; the lowest cash price in town. Jewelry repaired in short notice. All Watch Re pairing guaranteed for one year. Eight Day Clocks from $3.00 to 812.00; New Watches from $4.00 up. E. M. GERITZ, Opposite Central Hotel, Centre St., Fw jland. GO TO Fisher Bros. Livery Stable FOIt FIRST-CLASS TURNOUTS At Short Notice, for Weddings, Parties find Funerals. Front Street, two squares below rreelaud Opera House. "cTdTrohrbach, Dealer in—— Hardware, Paints, Varnish, Oil, Wall Paper, Mining Tools and mining Sup plies of all kinds, Lamps, Globes, Tinware, Etc. Having purchased the stock of Wm. J. Eckert and added a considerable amount to the present stock I am prepared to sell at prices that defy compe tition. Don't forgot to try my special brand of MINING OIL. Centre Street, Freeland Pa. H. M. BRISLIN, UNDERTAKER AND
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers