j^||ggg||gjgf|f CHATS ABOUT MEN. Baron Hirsch is about to distribute another lump of SIOO,OOO among English charities. Whitelaw Beid is the heaviest tax payer in the town of Harrison, West chester county, N. Y. Sir Julian Pauncefote is not only a musician of considerably ability, but has published a number of original compo sitions. Chief Justice Peters, of Maine, recent ly completed the seventieth year of his age, and reports himself in excellent physical condition. It is rumored that William A. Slater, of Norwich, Conn., the cotton manu facturer, is to have a steam yacht "which is to eclipse anything now afloat." Secretary Foster is the thirty-first secretary of state, and six of his thirty predecessors became president—Jeffer son, Madison, Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Van Buren and Buchanan. Rev. William J. Potter, for thirty three years pastor of the Unitarian church at New Bedford, Mass., has re signed, and his congregation has voted to pay him $2,000 a year for five years. Major Virginius Freeman, one of the best known civil engineers in the south, died recently at Norfolk. He built the, Norfolk and Virginia Beach road and at one time was chief engineer in the United States navy. Dom Sebastian, the new superior gen eral of the Order of the Trappists, is a Frenchman who formerly served as a captain in the Pontifical zouaves and fought with distinction in the army of his own country during the campaign of 1870. ______ STAGE GLINTS. Over 280,000 people witnessed "Ali Baba" during its long run in Chicago. Bernhardt's season under Mr. Abbey in Europe is said to have exceeded all expectations of success. Robert Downing and company are re hearsing a new play entitled "Richard the Lion Hearted," to be produced for the first time in Toronto. Jennie A. Eustace, the widow of the "Alabama" company, has a clever paper I in The North American for November on "Objections to Theatrical Life." Manager A. F. Hartz cabled to Paris offering Paderewski SIOO,OOO to appear next season as Adrian Karje, the mu sician, in Edwin Milton Royle's "Friends." A feature of the play is a piano recital incidental to the story. In Omaha recently Clara Morris pro duced a new emotional play called "Claire," an adaptation from the Ger man by herself. The new piece is said to have made a success and is to he con tinued as the chief feature of her reper tory this season. E. S. Willard will open his New York engagement at the Star theater on Nov. 21, under A. M. Palmer's engagement, supported by Marie Burroughs, Louis Masson, Royce Carleton, Nannie Crad dock, and other well known players, in "The Middleman." THE FASHIONS. Mixed silk and wool fabrics that are repped from selvage to selvage are in great favor. Round and slightly pointed waists with corselets, girdles and bretelles are still in high vogue. Venetian velours is a soft thick cloth with a velvet finish. It is used for jack ets, capes and portions of winter gowns. Some of the autumn bonnets are trimmed with ribbons of ottoman silk in rich stripes, or with uncut velvet with grounds of the most exquisitely varying shades. Box plaited, coronet and gathered skirt backs are all popular, and the fashion of trimming each of the gored seams all the way from belt to hem on the front and sides is gaining ground. Nothing could be handsomer than the empire and directoire long coats and cloaks made ready for winter wear. Some are of cloth, others of Russian velours, and the richest of plain and ribbed velvet in combination. Overdresses have appeared among the latest importations from abroad. One arrangement shows a very close bell skirt, with six breadths (ungored and either open on the sides or down the im mediate front) falling over the bell un derskirt.—New York Pott. WORLD'S FAIR NOTES. Mrs. Manak, one of the Eskimos at the Eskimo village at the Chicago World's fair, gave birth to a daughter, who was christened Columbia Susan. Francesco Paolo Nuclietti, the celehrat ed Abruzzi painter, is painting at Rome a large picture of St. Dominic, which he intends for the Chicago exhibition. "What America Owes to Women" is the title of a book which Mrs. Lydia Hoyt Farmer is preparing for the wom an's department of the World's fair. Lorado Taft has placed his two groups before the main entrance to the Horti cultural building, of which "The Sleep of the Flowers," is said to be graceful and even poetic. ASionx sqnaw, living near San Diego, Cal., will exhibit in the Woman's build ing at the World's fair a dress of deer skins, richly embroidered with sixteen pounds of heads. She worked for two years in making the garment. Mrs. John A. Logan proposes to ask the managers of the World's fair to uiahe an appropriation for bringing over from Scotland a suitable tenant for tho Burns cottage in the person of the po et's great-granddaughter, Miss Jean Ar tnosr Burns-Brown. TURF TOPICS. Tammany won more money than any other American 8-year-old this year. Ormonde, the famous English race horse, has been bought for $150,000, and I will be taken to California for breeding ; purposes. The Santa Anita weanlings are twenty- j nine in number, and a recent visitor says that if size and conformation go for anything they are a grand lot. Pierre Lorillard is accused of playing j a foxy game with Locohatchee with an 1 eye on the early handicaps of 1898. The 1 colt's quarter crack is said to be a myth. I Montana is certainly most flat and j stale. He cannot race a little bit any | more, and the best thing they can do i with him is to put him away until next j season. Pierre Lorillard will send Trainer ! John Huggins to England to buy some serviceable handicap and stake horses j for him, being unable to find what he wants in this country. English turfmen are excited over the prospects of a match between the Duke of Westminsters colt Orme and Baron i Hirscli's filly La Fleche. If made the match will be for $30,000 a side. An eastern authority says that "Snapper" Garrison will go to Eng land next spring to ride for the English branch of Marcus Daly's stable. His contract calls for $12,000 and expenses. It is said that the $30,000 G. W. John son has been fired. Dr. Knapp, how ever, had Dr. Sheppard examine the leg before the Brown sale, and his opinion ; was that if fired it would stand train- i ing. So the doctor bought with his 1 eyes open. WHISPERS ABOUT WOMEN. Miss Carrie F. Cochrane, of Nashua, ' N. H., has been appointed a notary pub- i lie. One of the new belles of England is a Miss Fraser, who is described as a straw berry blond. The Baroness James Rothschild is re- j ported to possess the finest collection of fans in Europe. Miss Ella Bradley publishes a small paper at New Orleans in the interests of colored women, hoping to raise their standard and give them a chance to ex- ! press their own opinions. Miss Frances "Willard, the prohibition lecturer, strongly advocates Jean Inge low for poet laureate of England, al though she evinces no hope that such | will be the queen's—or Mr. Gladstone's —choice. Mile. Rose L'Ouverture, a grand- ; daughter and the only living descendant of the great Haytian soldier, lives in the I village of Soirac, France. She is sixty nine years old and dependent upon an annual pension of 1,552 francs paid her I by the government. Miss Helen M. Gould, daughter of the ' great financier, is worth in her own | right no one knows bow many millions. i She spends more on her charities than ; on her dress, which, for the street, is j simplicity itself. She seldom is seen at 1 any brilliant gatherings. At the opera she wears pretty, but not striking gowns. ODDS AND ENDS. The well that prompted Samuel Wood worth to write "The Old Oaken Bucket" 1 is still kept in good condition at Scituate, j Mass. The lord chancellor of England, on ! retiring from office, has a pension of £5,000 a year for life whether his term of office has been long or short. Mayalipuram, India, is graced with I seven of the most remarkable temples in j the world, each of these unique temples of worship having been fashioned from | solid granite bowlders. The knitted woolen sweater worn by ; athletes and others who must guard against sudden cold when warm with exercise is the almost exact counterpart of the outer garment worn by Dutch ; fishermen on the coast of Holland. The hill near Jerusalem where the crucifixion occurred is formed of lime stone. The shores of the Dead sea are ; lined with pumice stoue showered out of some volcano that destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah, which cities finally sank be neath the waters of the Dead sea. RAILROAD JOTTINGS. The Philadelphia and Reading an nounces that Swartwood station on tho Buffalo division of the Lehigh Valley road has been discontinued. Secretary of State Rice has issued a certificate authorizing the Jersey Cen tral railroad to do business in New York j state under sections 15 and 10 of the gen- j j eral corporation law. Tho Pennsylvania Railroad company | 1 is now building at its shops at Altoona 1 cars for the transportation of the 124 and 05-ton guns which will be sent to to the Chicago exposition by theKrupps, j of Germany. The Pullman Palace Car company has made contracts with the Little Rock and Memphis for a period of twenty-five years from May 2, 1892; Western New York and Pennsylvania, for a period of i twenty-five years from the same date; Chesapeake and Ohio, extended for a pe riod of fifteen years from Jan. 1, 1892. POINTED FACTS. America produced 10,000,000 barrels i | of salt last year. In Japan every child is taught to work j with both hands. Cigar stubs bring about a shilling a pound in London. ! The Swedish mile is 11,GG0 yards long, ! und the Vienna post mile is 8,200 yards. ! There is room for just five more dead ! in the "poet's corner" of Westminster i abbey. The widest church in America is that of San Miguel, in Santa Fe, N. M. It I was built in 1545. In 1841 each individual consumed thir- I teen ounces of tobacco; in 1891 he exm -1 sumed twenty-six ounces. BRISTOL'S WESTERN MAIL. I What Came of Printing an Interesting Item About Spinsters. Communications have lately been j | pouring in in extraordinary numbers j ! upon the two youths who act respec- j I lively as postmaster and postmaster's I I clerk at the postoffice in Bristol. These j missives were from many lone bachelors j I in the far west, desiring the postal offi- • j cials to procure for them the names and ■ I addresses, and, if possible, without re- j ! gard to cost, the photographs of some ! of the many maidens of whom these j j same bachelors understand the popula i tion of the town is chiefly composed. 1 A story concerning the astounding j j numbers of maidens of an uncertain age | ! who resided on a certain street and with- I in the confines of one short square in : Bristol had appeared in The Record, and | j the cause of the influx was at once ax- ! plained. This article hud been circu- I lated far and near, and bad been copied from one paper to another until the fame of that Bristol square was widespread. Many a lone bachelor, sitting partner- 1 less by some western hearth, devoured the lines eagerly until tlieir meaning so grew upon him that he could stand it no ! longer, but poured forth his desires for a wife to comfort that loneliness to the Bristol postmaster. The Bristol postoffice is a modest in stitution, and was at first so embarrassed by these appeals that it knew not what I to do, but finally, reflecting upon the I wretchedness of those lone western | bachelors, its largo heart so overflowed j with sympathy that it bethought itself jof taking the matter in hand. Upon j consideration it was decided to post the letters in some place not conspicuous, but where the searching eye of the Bris tol spinster would perchance light upon them. For some time after the posting of these letters the Bristol maidens had much need of stamps, etc., and dropped in at the postoffice for every mail. In ' the course of a few weeks there was j such an increase in the western mail coining to Bristol that an additional bag l bad to be provided for its accommoda tion. At mail time a continuous line of j bashful spinsters from the street in ' question was observed entering with ex- I pectant faces and issuing with either ; blushes or with sighs. The residents of Bristol know not how i to account for the presence of such in numerable hosts of unmated maidens, unless it be that the buildings on the i street—in so many cases resembling, ! with their porticoes and friezes, the Tem , pie of Diana—have inspired in the fe- I male Bristol breast a desire to follow 1 the chaste goddess' example, but soon evidently this condition of affairs may j be ameliorated.—Philadelphia Record, j Drowning Scnsiition*. I have had some personal experience ' in the drowning or being drowned busi ness. St. Paul was thrice wrecked; I j was tlirice drowned. I want to record ' for the benefit of those who feel like I making the experiment that death did j not come to me as "the gentle friend," but rather as "the grisly terror." From | such an experience heaven forofend me : evermore. ; The events of my life most surely did come up before me, like a swiftly mov | ing panorama, with awful vividness and I startling reality. I did not call them ' up; they came; they thronged; they op j pressed; they overwhelmed me. I will I carry the remembrance thereof to my grave. | I was never hanged, though perhaps I ■ should have been, but I was three times "drowned"—once beneath the ice when ! skating, once in the ocean, so completely that the first attempt at resuscitation j was abandoned, when it occurred to some persevering friend to try again, ! with the happy result that I am still a living, breathing, sentient being. ! The terrors of death have to my mind always been one of the great deterrents of sin, and he that robs death of its frown is plucking out one of tho sharp est stings of sin. Besides, will not the Suicide club delight to learn for certain the "pleasant and painless" road to death! 1 have long believed that virtue | only can make the bed of death "soft as ! downy pinions are."—Cor. New York I Sun. "Tho Largest Organ in the World." j "The largest organ in the world" has j an unfortunate habit of spreading itself ; over a great surface. It is in Boston, in 1 j Harlem, in a dozen other European cities, in Garden City, in Brooklyn, in | j Chicago. Possibly we may have it some j time in New York. The great Harlem organ has sixty stops and 4,088 pipes, j Fifteen of these stops and 1,098 of the, pipes are in the echo organ. It takes so I much strength to play this organ that 1 the organist is said to bo completely ex- | haunted after a performance. I The organ in the Brooklyn Tabernacle ! i lias no stops and 4,448 pipes. The organ in the Chicago Auditorium has 109 speak- i i ing stops and enough mechanical acces- I sories and pedal movements to bring the i number to 176, and 7,124 pipes, besides j sixty-nine bells. The echo organ alone has 8-12 pipes.—New York Times. ' i Buttons and Combs Made of Blood. ! There is a large factory at a small 1 I town near Chicago employing about 100 I to 150 workers, which is wholly given i , over to the manufacture of useful arti cles from waste animal blood. At cer- ' tain seasons of the year this unique fuc- ! tory uses from 10,000 to 15,000 gallons 1 of fresh blood per day. It is first con- 1 , verted into thin sheets by evaporation and certain chemical processes, and aft erward worked up into a variety of use- I ful articles, such as combs, buttons, ear rings, belt clasps, bracelets, etc. Tons of these articles are * i nt to uU parts of the world every year from this "bloody" Sucker State manufactory.—St. Louis Republic. ' PROF. VENO IS HERE. An Account of the Wonderful Work He Did at Nuuticoke. i Last night, at Smoulter's hall, Veno, the wonder-worker, created quite a sen sation. The hall was crowded, and many were unable to gain accommoda , tion. About half past eight, an old man named Smith, living at 29 Sealpingtown, this city, who was severely crippled from rheumatism and unable to work, hobbled on the stage as best he could with a stout cane in his hand for sup port. This man has been treated by seyeral doctors but failed to get a cure. ! Where physicians fail, Veno succeeds, I for in about half an hour the old man re-appeared on the platform without his cane, jumping and leaping for joy at the sudden change. The man showed him i self free from pain and stillness, and I walked home without his cane. Michael l'tak, from Centre street, Ply : mouth, also appeared on the stage to tell I the people about the miraculous cure that had been wrought on him by Veno. : I He had been completely crippled for | i three years, and for nine monthscould not work or waik about. It is now three weeks since Veno treated him and last ! ' night he showed himself to be able to I walk as free and as easy as any man. He ; felt much stronger and able to work. He was unstinted in his praises of the • man who brought him back to health and strength after so many physicians j ; had failed. Before Venn's liniment and ' i medicine were applied to him he was not able to raise his right arm or stoop to put on his boots, but is now able to do both as freely and easily as he ever did, and has no further use for his crutches since Veno's very first treatment. Noah Davis, at present living near Providence, but formerly of Nanticoke, was cured by Veno of sciatic rheumatism about six weeks ago and is now working every day. Many others in the neigh borhood have been cured. Some of the cures seem almost impossible, hut facts are hard to deny and seeing is believing. Veno has certainly shown himself to be one of the greatest healing, wonder workers of the present age. He stays in Nanticoke until Saturday.— Nanticoke Daily News. Prof. Veno will be at the Cottage hotel hall, Freeland, during this week. His first lecture will he given this evening, and all are cordially invited to hear him. Admission is free. Found a Petrifled Standin M Forest. F. B. Scliemerhorn, geologist, who re cently discovered the great glaciers in Idaho county, has found a fossil forest in the center of Custer county. In the same locality he has discovered the pet rified hones of a now extinct raco of men and animals, which will bo sent to Chi cago. The forest covers an area of four square miles, and the condition of the ground shows that at one time an enor mous flow of clay, which worked in from the northwest, buried the tree trunks to a great depth. This clay has turned to stone, and no one can ascertain its true depth without going to great expense. All the trees in this forest have their j tops broken oft* and stand from ten to forty feet above the ground, averaging about twenty-eight to the acre. Scliem erliorn took the exact measurement of some of the trees, and found tlieni to average twelve feet in diameter on top and sixteen feet in diameter at the sur face of the ground. How far the trunk reached through the clay stone to the soil he had no means of ascertaining. A branch which had become detached from a tree and ! was lying about sixteen feet from it was I three feet in diameter. From the size ! of the trees and their branches Mr. i I Schemerhorn thinks they are a species of I redwood, such as is found in California, and attributes their fossilization to the i clay, which, bearing a large part of j mineral, and presumably coining from some volcano soon turned the living trees into monuments of stone. —Idaho | Cor. San Francisco Examiner. A Cow Inside of Log. | Owen Glancey, of Summit, missed a I very vuluable cow last week and spent i several days looking for her without finding any trace of her whereabouts, j and bad about concluded that she had j been stolon when one of his children discovered the animal not over fifty I yards from the liouso. She hud wandered into a hollow cedar log, presumably to I get into the shade, and in pushing her I way for fifty feet into the log she passed | through a place where it had splintered I in falling, with the splinters headed in ! the direction she was going. Of course when she attempted to back l out her exit was effectually blocked, the ; splinters having sprung back. And there she was, as securely confined as any pris | oner in the penitentiary. When discov- I ored there she had been imprisoned for five days. 1 Mr. Glancey had to cut the log in 1 front of her before she could be taken j out, nothing the worse for her experi j once except for her enforced fast. The cow weighs about 1,500 pounds, so the size of the cedar timber- in that "ndck of the woods" can be imagined.—Ehnira (N. Y.) Chronicle. A Great lioon to London Mechanics. Nearly 000 young men and women have i applied for membership in the splendid new Polytechnic in the Borough road. | The big institution must prove the great | est boon to the densely packed district in the midst of which it stands. It does ( one's heart good in going over the build , ing to see the way in which Mr. Edric 1 Bayley and Mr. Evan Spicer, L. C. C., and other south London philanthropists I have combined the usual "poly" fea ! tures—gymnasium, swimming bath, lab oratories, carpenters' shops, photograph ic studies, and so on, with excellently equipped rooms for laundry work and plain sewing, | At a small coat the men's and women's j clubroonis have been given an exceed , ingly refined and attractive appearance. For a deposit, of five shillings, to cover breakages, the young chemists are to be provided with a bench and cupboard full of requisites, which is wonderful in its completeness. In every department, in fact, the same thoroughness is appar , ent. Even the music class rooms have j double doors.—Pall Mall Gazette. CHURCH DIRECTORY. h ETHEL BAPTIST. Ridge and Walnut Streets. Rev, C. A. Spuulding, Pastor. Sunday School 1000 AM Gospel Temperance 2 30 P M Preaching 6 00 P M II EAVENLY RECRUITS. -Li Centre Street, above Chestnut. Rev. Charles Rrown, Pastor. Morning Service 10 00 A M Sunday School 200 PM Love Feast 3 15 P M Preaching 7 30 p m J EDDO METHODIST EPISCOPAL. In charge of Rev. E. M. Chllcoat. Preaching 1000 AM Sunday School 2 00 I'M DT. ANN'S ROMAN CATHOLIC. Rev. M. J. Fallihee, Pastor; Rev. F. P. McNally, Curate. Low Mass 800 AM High Mass 10 30 A M Sunduy School 200 PM Vespers 4 00 P M Mass on Weekdays 700 A M ST. JAMES* EPISCOPAL. South and Washington Streets. Rev. J. P. Buxton, Pastor. Sunday School l ;{0 P M Prayer and Sermon 7 00 P M QT, JOHN'S REFORMED. O Wuluut und Washington Streets. Rev. H. A. llcnner. Pastor. Sunduy School 9 00 A M German Service 10 30 A M Praise Meeting 7 00 PM English Sermon 730 PM Prayer and touchers' meeting every Saturday evening at 7.45 o'clock. QT. KASIMER'S POLISH CATHOLIC. O Ridge Street, above Carbon. Rev. Joseph Ma/otas. Pastor. Mass 9 00 A M Vespers 4 00 P M Mass on Weekdays 7 30 A M QT. LUKE'S GERMAN LUTHERAN. O Main and Washington Streets. Rev. A. Bcimullcr, Pastor. Sunday School 9 00 A M German Service .10 00 A M Cutccliial Instruction 5 00 PM ST. MARY'S GREEK CATHOLIC. Front and Fern Streets. Rev. drill Gulovich, Pastor. Low Mass 800 A M High Mass 10 30 A M Vespers 2 00 P. M rpRINITY METHODIST EPISCOPAL. JL Hirkbcck Street, South Hebcrton. Rev. E. M. Chilcout, Pastor. Sunday School 200 PM Preaching 7 00 P M Epworth League meets every Sunday even ing at 0.00 o'clock. WELSH BAPTIST. (Donop's Hall) Walnut and Ridge Streets. Sunday School 10 30 A M Prayer Meeting 0 00 PM POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS. PX)R SUPERVISOR— JOHN METZGER, of East Foster. Subject to the decision of the Democratic nominating convention of Foster township. SUPERVISOR JOHN O'DONNELL, of Eckley. Subject to the decision of the Democratic j nominating convention of Foster township. TTOR SALE.—One house, 24x34 feet; stable, L' 20x20 feet; lot, 25 feet front; also good will | und fixtures of suloon. Michael Welsh, Five Points, Freeland. TJX)R SALE.—Two lots situated on east side -J of Washington street, between Luzerne and Carbon streets. Five Points. Apply to Patrick McFadden, Eckley, or T. A. Buckley, Freeland. BIDS.— Bids will be received up to December 15, 1892, by the Foster township school board, for the sale of No. 2 Buck Mountain school house, situated between Eckley and Buck Mountain. Bids must he sent to the secretary of the board, Thomas Mcllugh, Jeddo, Pa. IFOR SALE.—A two-story frume shingle-roof X 1 dwelling house on Burton's Hill, lately occupied by Jcnkin Giles; the lot is 65 feet wide und 150 feet deep; it is all improved und hus many fine fruit trees growing thereon. Also a lot 31x150 feet on the west side of Centre street, above Chestnut. Titles Uuurunteed. Apply to John D. Hayes, uttorney-ut-law. PATENT , A 48-page book free. Adderss W. T. FITZ GERALD, Att'y-aH.aw. Cor. Bth and F Sts., Washington, D. C. "PKOTECTIO3ST or FREE By Henry George. The leading statesmen of the world pronounce It the greatest work ever written upon the tarilf question. No statistics, no figures, no evasions. It will interest and instruct 3'ou. Beud It. Copies Free at the Tribune Office. Subscribe for the Tribune. TALES FROM TOWN TOPICS. 0/-J y ear 'he most successful Quarterly ever published. More than H.OOO LEADING NEWS PAPERS in N.>rth America have complimented this publication durin > it* first year, and uni versally concede that us numbers afford the brightest and must entcrt fining reading that can be had Published ist day of September, December, March and June. Ask Newsdealer for It. or send the price, £SO cents, in stamps or postal note to TOWN TOPICS, 21 West 23d St., New York. ZW Ttds brilliant Quarterly is not made up from the current year s issues of TOWN TOPICS, but contains the best stories, sketches, bur lesques, ptcins, witticisms, etc.. from the ha k numbers of that unique journal, admittedly the cnsj>est, raciest, most complete, and to all JIIISN AND WOTiI.N the most interest ing weekly ever issued. Subscription Price; T:*n Topics, por rear, - •M 00 Tale 3 Prom To*a Topics, por year, 2.00 Tao two clubbed, • - - 6.C0 OO* * UI,CB 861,1 " ou trial lor B.- Previous Nos of " TAI.ES ' will be sasSE* 4 - postpaid, ou receipt of I WITH DECEMBER COMES ANOTHER SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY for you to prepare yourself for tlie winter WITH WHATEVER YOU MAY NEED IN THE LINE OF Wearing' Apparel by attending nn Itoiicr IIMII Si' Have just received several large consignments of winter goods which makes our assortment of Ladies' Misses' and Children's Coats, Men's and Boys' Over coats, Underwear, Gloves, Boots, Shoes, Furnishing Goods of all descriptions, Blankets, Comfortables-, Ilats, Caps and Notions larger and more complete than ever, which we offer at IMUCES LOWER THAN EVER BEFORE HEARD OF. In Our Flannel Department We are now selling extra heavy mining flannel at 25 cents per yard, which was never sold before under 85 cents. *"f In Underwear you can buy boys' extra heavy random wool underwear, sizes 24 to 81, at 25 cents each, actually worth 40 cents. Ladies' heavy ribbed merino vests at 25 cents. Men's extra heavy scarlet and white mixed woolen under shirts at 45 cents each, reduced from 75. In the Overcoat Department And in the ladies' and children's coat department we have a much larger assortment now than ever and guarantee we can give better values for your money than you can procure anywhere else in town. Our Shoe Department We are continually receiving new goods, and have just re ceived 200 pairs of children's buttoned school shoes with sole leather tips and a solid shoe throughout.' The actal value of A these shoes is $1.25 a pair, but our price will lie 75 cents. We have received also 150 pairs of ladies' fine Dongola shoes, in button or lace, plain and patent leather trimmed, which we will sell at $1.50 a pair; this is fully 75 cents less than they are actually worth. Our entire stock we will sell at very low prices. CALL AND SECURE SOME OF THE BARGAINS offered during this great money saving sale :it jtof* Ifg-er s ; BARG AIN EIPOKI UM •4 ——in the P. 0. S. of A. Building, Free land, Pa. Iff A.TV Headquarters, FOR o a S l> ' B 0 1. s EH ALL ' 1 EH j And Hardware of Every Description, REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE*; j We are prepared to do roofing and spouting in the most j improved manner and at reasonable rates. We have the choicest line of miners' goods in Freeland. Our mining oil, 1 selling at 20, 2a and 30 cents per gallon, cannot he surpasssed. I Samples sent to anyone on application. Guns, Ammunition ami Sporting Goods. 3\RKQECK'S, CENTRE STREET, FREELAND, PA V