People'* Champion Kept In Quad. May I call attention to the case of a worthy man who is in prison for resist ing the attempts of landowners to seize and inclose the land of the people? The case I refer to is that of the liev. F. Haydn Williams, who is incarcerated in Holloway jail, and has now been impris oned for a whole month because he! knocked down a wall which had been built to incloso what had been from time immemorial an open space, called the Abbey plain, where the people used to play football and other games. The injustice of Mr. Williams' impris onment is, that instead of being properly tried and if it is found that he has done wrong made to pay for the damage he I has done to the wall of the lord of the | manor, he has been sent to prison with out trial on a charge of contempt of , court, and there he may remain month after month, according to the caprice of | the court of queen's bench. This power of committal to prison for an indefinite period on such a fanciful charge as con- i tempt of court seems to me to be a thing savoring of the proceedings of the court of the star chamber, which was abolished for its arbitrary acts by the breath of popular indignation. In my ignorance I thought there was passed by the repre sentatives of the people, for their protec tion from arbitrary imprisonment, an act called th&habeas corpus act, which pre vented a man from being capriciously imprisoned for an indefinite time with out fair trial if he has been guilty of any crime. But here is a man—a gentleman and a minister—being treated as if he had been guilty of robbery.—Cor. Lon don Chronicle. Somewhat Eccentric. A strange case of insanity has recent- I ly come to light at Ballston. The un fortunate person is Charles H. Morris, thirty-two years of age and an expert accountant. He has for a long time been Jcnown as a man of many eccen tricities, and has frequently been made the object of practical jokes by sporting men. It is thought that constant joking and teasing have been a potent factor in impairing his mental faculties. He has several times lately left town for a few days, sometimes 011 business, sometimes 011 pleasure, and before leav- ; ing caused to be published in the local papers paragraphs to the effect that he •'had gone to New York to attend a con vention of the ragpickers at the Fifth Avenue hotel." About two months ago invitations were sent out announcing that he was about to marry a well known j young woman from another town. The ' invitations were liona fide, but on the day of the wedding Morris remained in town, denying that he had any thought of marrying. He is considered a first class accountant, and appears to be as sane as any one except for these actions. —Albany Journal. TliouHUiidtt of Ton* of OH. Oil is to be used as fuel instead of coal in all the big furnaces at the World's fair grounds. The exposition company will pay the Standard Oil company sev enty cents a barrel until 1893, and then have the privilege of getting the oil at the lowest market price, not to exceed cents a barrel. The contract will be for perhaps the largest quantity ever sold to one consumer. The lowest es timate that has ever been made of the amount of coal that would be burned at Jackson park during the exposition was 75,000 tons. On this basis 225,000 bar rels of oil would be used, but it is prob able that the amount will be largely in excess of that estimate.—Cleveland Her ald. Divorced for Telling: Ele*. In the circuit court at Beatrice, Neb., Saturday, William Truesdale was grant ed an absolute divorce from his wife, Amelia. The petition reciting the charges on which divorce was sued foi is the most curious one ever filed in court It recites the fact that the wife is an incorrigible gossip, whose tale tell ing propensities and penchant for gos siping render life with her unbearable. Truesdale avers that in the three year* he has lived with his wife she has told 10,000 lies. "She cannot tell the truth," j he declares in his petition, "and while it Is in the nature of a disease, I believe it incurable. Hence I ask relief in a divorce."—Cor. Philadelphia Press. lfl* Dottle Proved to Do Loaded. A young boy named Gilson, in com pany with one or two other boys, wa* on the Bewer dock and discovered sev eral bottles in an old iron tank. In one of the bottles was a white substance. Young Gilson's curiosity was aroused. He produced a match and, lighting it, dropjed it into the bottle. He held the bottle in his right hand, and no soonei had the match struck the bottom of the bottle than an explosion followed, blow ing the bottle to atoms, filling Gilson'* hand with the fragments of the glass and also nearly blowing the thumb ofl his hand.—New Haven Register. Taken In. A woman with a baby in her arms ap proached an innocent looking young man who was sitting in Central park yesterday. She asked him to hold the baby while she went to look at the menagerie. As she did not return the young man thinks sho must have been taken in by the boa constrictor 01 the rhinoceros, but the sparrow cop tc whom he confided his suspicions is oi tljfi opinion that it was the young man who was taken in.—New York Evening Bun. A Ilapid Water Wheel. In one of the Coinstock mines a new water wheel is to be placed, which is tc run 1,150 revolutions a minute and have a speed at its periphery of 10,805 feet per minute. A greater head of watei than has ever liefore been applied to u wheel will be used.—Exchange. A Suicide's Gloomy View of Marriage. "I am as happy as though I was going to be married," was one of the queer sentences of a note left by Vito Miraglio. who committed suicide by shooting himself on Tuesday.—Philadelphia Itec •rd. Enterprise Aiuong Eiigllli Paper*. The boat race between the representa tive crews of Oxford and Cambridge is ■ rgwed annually 011 the river Thames. • This year's race was noteworthy, not only on account of the breaking of the record in point of speed of the contest ants, but as enabling the London press ! to carry out sucessfully a remarkable ! piece of enterprise. | The London papers containing the re j suit and full details of the race were on j sale within four minutes after the Ox- I ford crew had passed the winning post. , The press boat as it steamed up the Thames paid out a cable consisting of a seven strand conductor, insulated with vulcanized rubber, with warps and braids of flax, which had been specially manu factured for the puriiose. Over this ca j ble the progress of the boats at intervals of a few minutes along the entire course was transmitted to the papers and pub lished all over London almost as the crews wore passing the points indicated. : Immediately following the result there was dispatched a complete description of the race from start to finish, which was in tho hands of the newspapers and others provided with instruments long before a single pressman was able to land his "copy" from the press boat at Mortlake, and also long before the pigeons dispatched from the scene were able to settle down in a homeward direc tion. The instruments used were Morse j sounders. The short description of the race which was finally sent contained over 150 words.—London News. l'apcr Maker* to Stop for Awhile. Representatives of nearly all the Hol yoke paper mills that make fine writing papers and one of the mills in Mit | tineague and one in Westfield met in this city Tuesday morning to consider the matter of the annual shutdown. These manufacturers belong to the tine writing paper section of the American Paper Makers' association, and a shut down means a reduction of from sev enty-five to 100 tons a day in the output. It was understood that the mills would shut down from July 1 to midnight of July 11, although no formal vote was taken on the subject. The Holyoke mills will be forced to shutdown from July 1 until midnight of July 4, as the water is to I*3 drawn from the canals during these days. The shutdown is to enable the manufacturers to work off the surplus stock, and is a little longer than the usual summer vacation.— Springfield (Mass.) Republican. A Long lll<le on a Snowbank. j Friday morning as ten miners were going from tho Eureka Mills boarding house to what is called Rough and Ready, with dinner pails in hand, to begin their day's work, the soft new ; snow above the trail on flie mountain side began to slide. 11l a moment the men were being carried down the slope with great speed. The suowslide sep arated, one part carrying five of the ! men down a slope about 700 feet, the other part continuing down about 1700 feet, leaping over a precipice probably i thirty feet high and carrying the five : 1 men with it. At different times all the 1 men but one were under the snow and, I strange to say, but one man was in • jured. It was first thought his leg was broken, but we learn it was only sprained and bruised. Another man was almost smothered.—Pulmaa County j Bulletin. A Groom's Error. A bashful and youthful bridal couple from the rural districts had a painful experience at Danbury circuS day. The young husband wrote his own name and his wife's on separate lilies of the hotel register and the purblind clerk assigned them to separate rooms. Each waited for the other to set the matter straight, but it was only after a terribly lonesome hour that the bride plucked up her cour age and her marriage certificate and de scended to interview the clerk. She held out the document mutely and the situation at last dawned upon him. The banished benedict was summoned from his seclusion and the curtain fell amid profuse apologies.—New Ilaven Regis ter. Flic* So Thick They Put Out the Eight*. About 9 o'clock Tuesday night Battle mountain was infested with a cloud of tiny flies that drifted into the saloons on Front street in myriads, in many in stances darkening the rooms and putting out the lights. When the jiests liad passed away it was found that the tops of the lamps were covered an inch and a half deep and the lamp chimneys choked. It would appear that these minute flies were attracted by the lights in the saloons, and in countless millions perished.—Central Nevadan. Enough to UepleiilHli the Hurtling Luke. The steamer that has been expected for several days with a cargo of sulphur has arrived. There are 4,500,000 pounds 1 of brimstone in all, half of it being des ; tined for Wayne, where it is to he made ! into sulphuric acid, and half for points |on the Grand Trunk. The sulphur is valued at $50,000. The vessel aitd cargo ' come from Palermo, Italy.—Eastern : Argus. tlnlvemlty StutihtlcH. The new catalogue of the University of Pennsylvania shows 1,704 students, or twenty less than Yale, while the Uni versity of Michigan lias 2,638, or just twenty less than Harvard. In the num ber of teachers Harvard now comes first, . with 258; the University of Pennsyl vania second, with 237; Columbia third, with 220; Yale fourth, with 158, and Michigan fifth, with 145. The man who wrote to his wife in the e country that he didn't know how to en t dure the heat was told to keep the gas i turned down and not to play poker all j night. The legislative assembly of Styria, in Austria, lias passed a law forbidding poor people to marry without a special 3 license from the authorities. A calf with a single eye, no ears and ; five legs is the joy of Wayne county, la. It is now over a month old and bids fair i to grow into full cowhood. Prehistoric Giant*. Near the Mediterranean coast, not far from Nice, are some grottoes which are ! remarkable for the prehistoric remains found in them. The value of these grottoes us a field of prehistoric research was recognized twenty years ago. They were at that time purchased by Mr. Einile Riviere, who, however, neglected ; to work them, and sold them again to a i quarry master, who, on removing some of the rock,' unearthed some of the re mains. Since then the grottoes have been in litigation much of tho time and no one has been able properly to investi gate them. At present three skeletons found there are figuring in the law courts. One is of a man whose estimated height is 7 feet 9 inches. The head of tho skeleton is missing. Another is the skeleton of a woman 6 feet 8 inches tall, and the third is the remains of a youth. These added to previous discoveries make seven skel etons of prehistoric men unearthed up to the present time in these caves. The Italian government has not attempted to exercise any rights in the matter. Up to 1875 Mr. Riviere had discovered , the skeletons of one man and two chil- j dren, which were some twenty-nine feet j below the level of the caves and were \ surrounded by undoubted paleolithic ' implements. The bed is a compact one ! of limestone.—Chicago News. Wediled Over Her Mother's Grave. The most unique marriage ever per formed in Baltimore took place Mon day within the boundaries of Green Mount cemetery over the graves of the parents of the bride. The groom was Colonel Hendrick von Stamp, ex-minis ter of Denmark to the United States, a knight of the Order of Dannebrog, and | the bride was Miss Mildred Hammond, j daughter of the late General Hammond. Six carriages were occupied by the wed ding party, but tho vehicles were sup posed to be a funeral cortege as they slowly moved through the cemetery. When the Hammond lot was reached the graves were strewn with flowers and the wedding was quickly per formed, the bride standing upon the grave of her mother and the groom upon the grave of the bride's father. The bride is of one of Maryland's oldest families, being a remote descendant of President George Washington. She is forty and the groom forty-four years old.—Baltimore Letter. The Human Journey of a Lathing Nail. About fifty-four years ago Washing ton Mugahan, contractor and builder of this place, was working at hiH trade, that of a plasterer, in Blair county, when he accidentally swallowed a lathing nail. He was very much alarmed about the accident at the time, but as he felt no evil results from the extraordinary diet, in the course of two or three weeks he liad forgotten all about it. Recently, however, Mr. Megaliun has felt a pecu liar sensation in the palm of his left hand, and one day last week he was able to feel the outline of a small nail, and then it was that he remembered having swallowed the lathing nail fifty-four years before. The nail is rapidly work ing its way through the flesh of his hand, and when it lias worked up under the skin Mr. Megaliun will have a physi cian remove it.—Somerset Herald. One Veer's Work. At the twentieth anniversary festival of the Provident Surgical Appliance so ciety in London, Dr. Bond in the course of his speech said that he knew of only one case dealt with by the society in which any dissatisfaction was given. A young woman was fitted with a Roman nose, but the boys of the college, notic ing the change, made her life unbear able. SheMiesought the society to help her, and was supplied with a pretty little retrousse nose so attractive that all her companions were made envious, and several offers of marriage were insured. Dr. Bond's society lust year distributed no fewer than 6,225 artificial arms, legs, teeth and noses.—London Letter. Stopping a CuMtomer Eii lloute. A Maryland farmer who was waiting for the train to leave for New York was accosted by Detective McDevitt, ! who finally learned that the gentleman I from the rural districts was going to New York with $46(1 in his pocket to buy "green goods." The farmer said j that the agent of the green goods man would meet liiin at Snminorville. Mc- Devitt sent the farmer back to his fam ily and saved him the loss of his money and the exponses of his trip. He says that mon may be seen at the depots every day on their way to deal in green goods.—Washington Star. An Electric Launch. An electric launch on exhibition at I the crystal palace, London, is thus de scribed: Tho Lily, as she is named, is 28 j feet long and lias a beam of 5 feet 0 ; inches, a depth of 2 feet 10 inches and a 1 draft of 2 feet. The electrical equip- : ment consists of a two horse power mo- j tor, supplied with a current from thirty j "Epstein" cells. Her weight complete ' is 2,500 pounds, she will hold from twelve to fifteen passengers, and with one charging will run at her full speed of seven miles an hour for five hours. ltuii Down l>y an Ihlhihl. Captain George W. Torrey, of the fishing schooner Alice, reports that his boat was almost run down by a floating j island in the Pacific ocean off Cape Flat tery. The captain and crew went on it and made partial exploration. There was a hut and a small farm on the is land and other signs of habitation, al though there were no signs of life.— Seattle Letter. Australians have had hitter experi ence of the mischief which rabbits are capable of doing, and now they seem likely to have trouble of a similar kind from the introduction of foxes. [ A sore throat troubled John Haines, of Danville, Ills., and he lost his voioe in consequence of it. After a few days he j coughed up a brass pin and his voice ' Was restored. Tho New Treanury Notes. Perhaps tho principal object of the re vision of the United States paper money is to make the backs of the notes more ' open, that is, less covered with tho en graving, so that the silk fibers shall bo j more distinctly visible. | The distinctive paper now in use no ; longer has the two threads of silk run j ning longitudinally through the note, I but in their place are two stripes, each ! half an inch wide or so, of short red and j blue silk fibers scattered thickly in the paper, in such manner that they show only on the reverse of the bill. I These two fiber stripes practically di j vide the note into three sections of about j equal size, and this feature of fiber in | the paper is held to be an almost abso j li&e safeguard against successful coun ; terfeiting. But that is only one of sev i eral devices employed to insure the inviolability of the currency. Each note has an entirely separate design, the work of which is so open as ; to show readily any error of an attempt ed counterfeit, and no portion of the design is repeated on tho same note; so that no small part could be engraved by a skillful oj>erator and then duplicated by mechanical processes to till any amount of space, as has been the cose with some of the previous "paper mon ey" of the government. I The geometrical lathe work of the new designs is said to be the most ex quisite and complicated ever executed, and such as to utterly baffle any at tempt at its illicit reproduction.—Paper World. ltougli on the Siiuke*. Snake stories are always in order in tho spring, and the latest one comes from an interior town in Ohio, where 1 tho heat from the stove awakened the reptiles and they commenced to fall to the floor from holes in tho ceiling. John Thompson, who lives in the Cheat river country, was in the city yesterday buy ing provisions for a lumber camp. He tells a tale that is not unreasonable and one can readily believe it. The mountains along the Cheat are famous for their blacksnakcs, and they 1 can bo seen at any time during the day in the summer sunning themselves on the rocks. Mr. Thompson says when the weather suddenly broke up about April 1 and led a number of people to throw off their underclothes, the black snakes awoke with a start, rubbed their eyes and crawled out on the rocks to stretch themselves. The sun was so warm that many of them ventured far away from their winter homes, and when it suddenly got cold again the snakes couldn't get back. Mr. Thomp son claims he got tired of killing black snakes which were so stiff that they couldn't move. They were stretched out on the stones, and were at the mercy of the lumbermen, who amused them selves making the flat heads of the snakes more flat. This is a true story.— Pittsburg Dispatch. A UouKiii'H Strange Heath. Probably the most remarkable occur rence ever known happened in Dawson Wednesday. Martha Roundtree, the well known negro woman who kept a restaurant at the south end of Main street, now occupies a grave at the ceme tery, the result of a sneeze. The phy -1 siciaus of Dawson say that they have never heard or read of a similar case. Wednesday tho woman, as well as usual, was at the restaurant attending to her work. She had just left the rear of her eating saloon and walked to the front when she was attacked with an exces sive spell of sneezing and coughing. She had been afflicted with hernia, and tho strain was so great as to burst a hole in her stomach. Surgical aid was called in and her stomach sewed up, which gave relief. She lingered until late Saturday afternoon, when she died. The victim of this remarkable oc currence was a large woman, weighing 240 pounds.—Savannah News. ltig Sheep Shearing. Sheep shearing is now being pushed rapidly, and most of the flocks in the valley have been shorn of their fleecy coats. Some big records have been made in shearing, but the ten men headed by O. H. Lane seem to take the lead. They clipped 42,000 fleeces in six weeks. The l>est record for a single day was made by G. O. Meager and L. Palmer, who sheared 155 each. Lane will start in a few days for Flagstaff, where he and his band have work al ready engaged to last three months. The clip this season is unusually good, although the early winter drought killed off a large percentage of flocks. Han son Brothers, of Show Low, were among the heavy losers, having lost SIO,OOO worth of sheep by death and strays.— Arizona Republican. Effective Treatment. j Fifteen natives on the east coast of Australia, suffering from fever, put themselves in tho hands of tho Maori tohunga, or doctor, who prescribed. | After taking his physic they were told to go and "sit in the creek" until the tohunga released them. Thirteen out J of the fifteen died.—Exchange. Queer Chicken, in Ohio. Dr. Btounsbury, of Middleport, has a hen with a brood of twenty-one chick ens that combine all the hues of tho rainbow in their down, much like the grown peacock. It is said the ancestress is a peculiar breed imported from Aus tralia.—Portsmouth Times. At the dictation of tho men put in power by the unionists in Australasia all immigration into the colony is pro hibited, so that the thousands of people j now unemployed there may have an j opportunity to find work. A musical prodigy has been discov <u-ed at Albany, Ga., in the person of Tom May, who can reach low F, and whose voice lias oxactly the same com pass that Whitney had in his halcyon days. In 1888 nearly 11,400,000 citizens voted for president. This yoar the total will |i not less titan 18.000.000. Centenary of the Guillotine. Mnrderoro and cutpurses from the dangerous districts about the Pantheon and Pere Lachaise have been known Ul compose and sing grinilj' humorous bal lads in honor of the guillotine when in their cups. These people will hardly, however, go so far its to celebrate the hundredth anniversary of the first execu tion in Paris by the instrument of de capitation which the "Constituante" adopted on the motion or Dr. (Jhillotin, who had seen the machine at work in Italy. The doctor's idea in introducing the bois de justice was purely philan thropic, for he wanted to do away with the slow tortures inflicted upon crim inals. On May 27, 1792, the first crim inal, a highwayman, was executed on the Place de Greve, now the Place de l'Hotol de Ville. This is the date given by Larousse, but other authorities state that Monday, April 25, was the 100 th anniversary of the first execution by the guillotine in Paris. In any case the terrible instrument was destined to be busy during 1793 on the heads of persons more illustrious than the common highwayman named Peletier. For this reason some of the modern symimthizers with the Terror ists, supposing them to have the blood thirsty intention of celebrating the cen tenary of the gnillotine, would be inclined to fix the date of their com memorative ceremony on Jan. 21 next. There can be no donbt about that day, as it would be the 100 th anniversary of the execution of Louis XVI on the spot murked by the obelisk in the Place de la Concorde, as the spacious plot of ground once termed the Place Louis XV, and afterward tlio Place de la Revolution, is nowadays known.—Paris Cor. Loudon Telegraph. AflldavitH Accompany Thin Story. Mr. John Oilier and partner were fish ing with their large net on the beach five miles below Pablo when they saw an immense dark object about 100 feet ahead come slowly out of the ocean and walk leisurely up on the beach. They at once started to capture the monster, which proved to be a turtle, the like of which was never Been on tho bench before. It measured 7 feet 6 inches in length and 2 feet 10 inches across the back. It had a beautiful black color on the back. The belly is spotted like a rattlesnake, and it will weigh at least 800 pounds. The monster was hauled up by Mr. Dutton's team, and can be seen at the Arcade. This no fish story, as will be seen by the following affidavits: "We, the undersigned citizens of Pablo, do certify that the alxivo account of the capture of the said turtle, or whatever it may bo, is true. H. M. Shockley, Charles Overt, John Ohler, Joseph Seither, R. B. McKinnick, F. X. Philippe, Walter H. Seeds. "Sworn to and subscribed before me this 29th day of April, 1892. "J. E. DICKERSON, Notary Public." The monster's flippers are three feet in length, and resemble the wings of a large bird. —Cor. Florida Times-Union. Slavery In the Pacific. That slavery still exists in the Pacific is evidenced by the fact that the steamer Moneserrat is fitting out for a blackbird cruise, and will sail shortly for Gilbert island, whence it will carry a hold full of natives to work on the Guatemala coffee plantations. All this is to be done under the guise of an equitable contract. Last September the brig Tahite, load ed with 100 Gilbert islanders, and noto riously a slayer, was blown off its course and put in at Duke's bay. Learning that it was likely to be seized, its captain put hurriedly to sea and the next that wns heard of it was when sighted bot tom up off the coast, all its crew and cargo having perished. The samo have planned the Moneserrat's slaving cruise, hoping to recoup thomselves. There will be no difficulty in getting a cargo, as agents at the island are now at work inducing tho nutivcs to sign contracts.—Washington Star. In ik Florida Garden. Lovers of the beautiful, the beautiful in plant life, should pay a visit to a garden belonging to a private house at the corner of Market and Church streets. To say that it is a blaze of color is to convey but a faint idea of it; scarcely a bare spot of ground is to be seen for the length of an entire block—roses, pinks, calleopsis, phlox, pansies, sweet alyssuni, all thrusting forward their claims for recognition. But the crowning glory of the garden is its poppies; surely such popples never grew anywhere else than right here in Jacksonville and in that one garden. They are of all shades, from delicate pinks to deepest reds, and as double as it is possible for flowers to lie. They grow from two to three feet high and the flowers themselves are at least three inches in diameter. That garden is worth a walk to see.—Jackson ville Times-Union. Electrle Light* on a Train. A novel lighting plant of sixty-five lamps capacity is carried by the railroad car at present making a tour of tho country exhibiting California fruits. The furnace, boiler, engine and dynamo are placed completely in one eorner of the car, and current is furnished to tho Igmpß distributed in and around the car. Tho experiment has proved so satisfac tory that steps are to be taken to equip the entire train. —New York World. Shakespeare's lllrthday. .Shakespeare's birthday celebrations at Stratford-on-Avon and in London were attended with great success. The Me morial theater in tho poet's' native place was crowded by pilgrims from all parts of England, as were also thoee thea ters in the metropolis where Shake spearean plays are presented.—London Telegraph. The Tuyallups' Land. The Tacoma papers tell of the interest that has been aroused in the state of Washington by the prospect of tho open ing of the Puyallup Indian reservation. The land of the Puyallups is tortile, •veil timbered and contains mineral and teal deposits. Special ! Special ! TO OUR PATRONS AND THE PUBLIC. For the Next Two Weeks Only ! We are offering everything in the various lines of our large stock at such low prices that they will astonish you. Please note the following quotations: Good tea toweling. 4 cents per yard. Best skirt lining, 4 cents per yards. Best light calico, 4 cents per yard. Good, heavy, yard-wide unbleached muslin, 10 yards for 50 cents. Double-width fine cashmere, 10 cents per yard. Fine 30-inch-wide Bedford cord and clienron and Henrietta dress goods that were 45 cents are now going at 25 cents. In our line of Notions you can buy: Ladies' ribbed undervests, 4 for 25 cents. Men's seamless socks, 5 pairs for 25 cents. Ladies' chemise, 25 cents each. Lace curtains, from 75 cents per pair upward. Shoe department: Children's dongola spring heel shoes, 35 cents per pair. Children's heavy pebble heel, or spring shoes, with sole leather tip, 75 cents per pair, reduced from #1.25. Youths' good lace shoes that were #1.25 are now going at 75 cents. Ladies' common sense dongola shoes, #I.OO. Men's good shoes, #I.OO. Ladies' fine dongola shoes, with extension sole and patent leather tip, at #1.25, reduced from #2.00. Clothing: Boys' outing cloth waists, 15 cents each. Men's outing shirts, 20 cents each. Boys' knee pants, 25 cents. Men's good heavy pants, 75 cents. Boys' knee pants suits, reduced from #2.00 to #I.OO. Men's suits for #3.00 which were formerly sold at #O.OO. MF 00 * WE DEFY COMPETITION. JON. NEUIHTHGKR, LEADER IN LOW PRICES, P. 0. S. of A. Building, Freeland, Pa. Wi Sfiiifptfltiifs FOR And Hardware of Every Description. REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE. We are prepared to do roofing and spouting in the most improved manner and at reasonable rates. We have the choicest line of miners' goods in Freeland. Our mining oil, selling at 20, 25 and 30 cents per gallon, cannot be surpasssed. Samples sent to anyone on application. Fishing Tackle and Sporting Goods. B\RKBE.CK'S, CENTRE STREET, FREELAND, PA.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers