NEWS OF THE WEEK. Thursday, June 22. Senator Leland Stanford died at his home, Palo Alto, Cal. Seven persons wtsro killed by lightning during a circus performance at River Falls, Wis. Four lives were lost in a fire at Duluth The great Ferris wheel was set going at the World's fair Banks in California and Ohio closed their doors Commencement exercises were held at Williams and other colleges Reports from the Brooklyn , hospitals show that 8 people wero killed and 29 severely injured in the Parkville disaster on Tuesday evening. One man is thought to be missing It was reported that John Hunter had re signed from the hoard of control and from the board of stewards of the Coney Island Jockey club Six people were injured, one perhaps fatally, at a fire in West Eight- | couth street, New York Francis Spies, [ a New York commission merchant, killed j himself It was found that the explosion j in Madrid, which caused a fatal panic in a j circus, was the work of anarchists Six teen men were killed in an explosion of l>enziue at Odessa Tho hearing before the Behriug sea tribunal of arbitration at Paris was continued Tho Dominion ! Liberal convention met at Ottawa | The reorganization committee of the Na- I tional Cordage company issue their report, which shows assets above liabilities of more than $13,000,000. The management of the company is criticised, useless offices will be abolished, and the directorate will be changed A new railroad labor organ- , ization was formed B in Chicago William C. Todd of Atkinson, N. H., has given tho Boston public library $50,000 for a news- | paper reading room Seward A. Simons, n Buffalo lawyer, was arrested on a charge of Importing from Canada a gardener to work on his premises The house of L. H. Van Dusen at Madison, Wis., was de stroyed by fire. One child perished, an other was badly burned, and a do mestic, Theresa Rink, fatally burned. Friday, Juno 23. M. Millevoyo brought up in the French chamber of deputies the question of the stolen documents and read a list of al leged recipients of bribes from England. The chamber by a nearly unanimous vote condemned the documents as spurious. Dr. Herz is not to be extradited at present James E. Hoctor, lawyer and real es tate broker, accused of being "Little Fat ty," a noted bunko man, is locked up on a charge of swindling a sailor The uu known husband of the woman who drowned herself from a Troy bout told the boat's officers that he was going to kill the man who wrote tho poetry found in his wife's stateroom Sixteen persons were killed and many in- 1 jured by a tornado in eastern Kunsas. i Storms raged in other states The board of managers of the Philadelphia and Read ing Railroad company decided to abandon the reorganization plan The bail of ex- Commissioner C. F. Peck of the state bu reau of labor statistics and of his stenog rapher, Elbert Rodgers, was declared for feited Several banks iu California and other states closed their doors Com mencement exercises were held at Hobart, Gettysburg and other colleges Governor MoKlnley was warmly received at tho World's fair Ex-President Harrison de livered the address at the unveiling of the Fort Dearborn memorial in Chicago Henry Sheldon & Co., tea and coffee bro kers of 109 Front street, New York, sus pended with liabilities of nearly $400,000 Mrs. Ellen Pollock fainted twice dur ing the trial of her suit in the court of common pleas, New York, to recover $50,- 000 damages from her father-in-law In the house of commons Mr. Gladstone stat ed the alterations that the government had decided to make in the financial clauses of the home rule bill Mr. Bayard was re ceived by the queen at Windsor and pre sented to her his credentials as embassador Mr. Phelps began his argument be fore the Behring sea tribunal of arbitra tion Tho investigation into the bomb explosion at the house of Senor Canovas del Castillo in Madrid has led to the dis covery of an international anarchist plot. Saturday, June 24. The British battleship Victoria was sunk in collision with the battleship Camper down off Tripoli, Syria, and about 400 men were drowned, among them Vice Admiral Sir George Tryon Burt Doran, a pu gilist, killed himself after poisoning his little boy at Rochester Important banks in California, New York and other states were forced to close because of the money stringency The strike of the lumbermen at Tonawauda was settled Preparations are being made in Chicago to give the Co lumbus caravels a fitting reception when they reach the World's fair city Class day exercises were hold at Harvard John D. Crimmins resigned from tho pres idency of the Metropolitan Traction com pany The Campania nnd Paris made runs only a short time over tho records from Queenstown and Southampton The closing exercises of the Staten Island academy were held A stone the size of a hazelnut was removed from the right kidney of Mayor Wanser of Jersey City at j St. Luke's hospital Judge McAdamhas given Bella W. Savin of New York a do- 1 cree of limited divorce from Thomas L. Savin and ordered that their baby Mar gery be kept in the custody of the court The outward bound passenger fleet from New York carries an army of tourists bound for Europe Maurice J. Power and others apply for a receiver for the Mu tual Brewing company of College Point, charging that a majority of the directors are seeking to wreck the property The gunboat Machias has been prelimina rily accepted by the navy department The Canadian government will offer the Thousand Islands in the River St. Law rence for salo at public auction Tho body of the man found below Niagara falls on Monday has been identified as John Eichberg of Buffalo. He was drowned while fishing Mrs. Fanny Bryant God win died in Bar Harbor. She was the wife of Parke Godwin, formerly editor of the New York Commercial Advertiser. She was a daughter of the poet William Culleu Bryant. Monday, June 20. Dr. McGlynn has returned from Rome. He had a private audience with the pope. He declined to discuss his case Mrs. J. Coleman Drayton bought the old Astor mansion In New York, and It is said is to live there with her husband and children, the reunion to take place at Newport very soon The statue of Gladstone by Bruce Joy was unveiled at the World's fair. Re ligious services were held in Festival hall on the exposition grounds Baccalaure ate sermons were preached at Yale and other universities and colleges The latest crevasse in Louisiana will cause a loss of $1,000,000 The Re publicans elected a mayor in Milwaukee -—Ocean Grove camp meeting services were opened Mrs. Grant and Mrs. Davis have had several pleasant meetings at Cranston's, near West Point. Mrs. Davis has accepted an invitation to go driving with Mrs. Grant Two more teachers of Wilson school lor girls, Brooklyn, were dismissed for believing in theosophy, and the school will close in consequence The German ministers expect a gov ernment majority of 10 in the reichs tng. The alliances among various par ties opposed to the army bill were broken at the last moment by the dis like of the voters for socialism Bern lias been placed temporarily in a state of petty siege because of anarchist outbreaks M. Norton says M. Ducrot, editor of Tho Cocarde, advised him to forgo the documents alleged to have been stolen from the British embassy in Paris A dispatch from Berlin says that a Caprivi organ has opened fire on the chancellor and that the negotiations for a Russo-Ger man treaty have failed It is understood in London that Rear Admiral Markham and the officers of the Camperdown will be court martialed Many anarchist news papers, leaflets and books have recently been seized in the barracks in Milan, Naples. Florence and Turin, Italy. Many noncom missioned officers have been arrested on suspicion of having distributed them Harden and Glover, the two American swindlers arrested May 28 in Berlin for theft, robbery, picking pockets and confi dence work, have confessed to five big rob beries Ephraim Cox of Middletown, while crossing the Erie tracks behind a freight train, stepped in front of an ex press and was instantly killed At Celi 11a, ()., C. E. Craig, a balloonist, attempted to make a parachute jump. The parachute failed to work, and Craig fell 300 feet. He will die President and Mrs. Cleveland have been invited to attend the centennial celebration of Williams college. Mr. Cleve land has accepted The Lake Erie Iron J company and tho Union Rolling Mill coin | pany of Cleveland have decided to shut down on July 1 for repairs and to await | the signing of the Amalgamated associa ! tion scale in Pittsburg. Tuesday, June 27. The Victoria was sunk by the Camper down while the squadron was executing the change from double to single file j Governor Altgeld pardoned the con ; victed Haymarket anarchists, Fieklen, Schwab and Neebe Delegates are arriv j ing at Saratoga to attend the convention of . the State League of Republican Clubs. I ! which opens there today Class day ex j ereises were held at Yale university i Tho coal schooner Thomas W. Havens of Norfolk was wrecked at Long Branch, ! and two sailors were drowned The i New Hampshire building at the World's I fair was formally dedicated Tho I Viking ship started on its trip to Chi- I cago The story of tho sinking of the American ship Alexander McCallum was J told by the survivors of the disaster, who I arrived at New York on the steamship Alaska John Austin Stevens, Sr. and Jr., filed claims against New York city for ! about 12,500 for services in connection with the naval ball A suit for S2OO in the New York city court has led to a protest of the Italian government to Secretary Gresham The Valkyrie defeated the Britannia, Satanita and Iverna in a 00-mile race A sailor on a vessel in the Tyne from France has died from cholera. There I were 455 deaths from the disease jat Mecca on Sunday The Socialists have I fared worse and the National Liberals betr I ter than had been expected on the second j ballot in Germany Excitement was ! created in financial and in Washington of i flcial circles by the suspension of free sil -1 ver coinage in India. The white metal fell jto the lowest price ever known Eugene j Brink, 14, son of Cartman Brink, was j drowned near Hornellsville, N. Y., while ! fishing Senator Hill will deliver an ad j dress at the Madison county hopgrowors' J picnic at Sylvan Beach July 29 Michael Powers of Rock Stream, N. Y., was I found alongside of the road with his S neck broken. It is supposed that he fell ! from his wagon while intoxicated ] Rev. Lansing Van Schoonhaven. pastor ol ' the Bethany Presbyterian church, Buffalo, | announced that he was in full sympathy I with Dr. Briggs E. H. Todd, a wealthy I carriago manufacturer of Quincy, Ills., { committed suicide The Pennsylvania Democratic state convention will he held !in Harrisburg on Sept. 19 Mrs. P. T. Harris and her 10-year-old daughtei were drowned in the Rio Grande rivei near Del Norte The naval board which inspected the new cruiser Detroit at Balti i more has announced that the vessel will jbe accepted Samuel Basnel and Joseph j Bradley were struck by a train near Be raent. Ills. Basnel was killed and Bradley fatally injured. Wednesday,' June 28. The cabinet discussed the silver quea tion. It is stated that the president do lays calling an extra session because he wishes to give the congressmen an object lesson There was a fierce battle be tween convicts and prison guards at Ful som, Cal. The sixth annual conventior, of the Republican League of State Clubs was held ut Saratoga Brooklyn da> was observed at the World's fair with n big meeting in Music hall The annual meeting of the Army of tho Potomac asso ciation was held in Boston Yale do feated Harvard at baseball on the Yale field by the score of 3to 0 There were alumni day and class day exercises at Yale and other universities and colleges j New York city has refused to pay its share , of the cost of elevating the New York Cen ! tral tracks until the constitutionality oJ i the law is decided A jury awarded Mrs. I Ellen Pollock of New York $37,500 in hei j suit against her father-in-law for the alien j ation of her husband's affections At the Parkville disaster inquest in Brooklyn ; several persons testified to seeing the ! switchman asleep Major William R. j Pettigrew was relieved from duty as ma ; jor of the First battalion by Colonel Eddy of the Forty-seventh regiment at the state J camp at Peckskill, N. Y. Services in memory of Vice Admiral Tryon I were held in London Ahlwnrdt, the "Jew baiting" member of the reichstag, J was again convicted of lib?l Mr. Daly'6 new theater in London was opened E. J. Phelps continued his arguments before the Behring sea tribunal at Paris There ie little doubt now, says a dispatch from Ber ' lin, that the military bill will become a i law No further official news hus been ; received in London of the Victoria disas ; ter, but private letters are being received The natives of one of the Philippine islands have risen In revolt against the Spaniards, and a battle has been fought j Philip Dessurean of Merideu, Conn., | committed suicide by shooting him ; self in the head with a revolver The New Haven police raided 12 policy ! shops in all parts of that city and arrested the proprietor in each place The strin j gency of money may result in stopping work on the streets of Stamford for a time. The town and borough taxes are not due until August. Meanwhile tho officials are ' compelled to borrow funds to continue work A gang of bandits kidnaped near PalaciOß in the province of Pinar del Rio, . Cuba, an 8-year-old boy, for whom they demand a ransom of $4,000 Cholera ad vices from Mecca show that there were 999 deaths from the disease in thut city Mon i day The biiudearuth has approved the 1 new ariny bill. POWER IN CULM BANKS. I Inventive Genius Will in Time licvise a Way to llring It Out. From the Philadelphia Record. Nothing strikes the tourist who makes a journey through the anthracite co I regions of Pennsylvania with more amazement than tho enormous wastoful ness of mining operations as exemplified hy the great piles of culm which lie un utilized near the mouth of every mine. The culm banks are mainly composed of fine coal crushed into particles so small as to be unmarketable. This culm is coal of the best quality. Thousands of tons of it are piled up at the mines throughout the mining districts, at some points seriously encumbering mining operations. The Heading Itailroad Company has been able to burn it for locomotivo use with furnaces constructed on the Woot ten plan, and it is stated that Eckley B. Coxe has secured a patent for a furnace in which culm and the smaller sizes of merchantable coal can bo burned. Doubtless inventive genius will in time devise some method of combustion that will bring the fine waste of. the mines into profitable use and arrest the destruction which follows from long ex posure to the weather, from the action of lloods, and from accidental fires. When the culm can be burned so as to produce steam power it may not bo found necessary to carry it away from the points where it has accumulated in order to bring it into economical use. Precisely as waste water power is made available in generating electricity, to be carried by wire to the place where force is applied, the waste power lying dor mant in the culm banks may be turned into a valuable commercial product and sent by wire to the towns and cities where electrical energy can be profitably used. Power so generated might not bo quite so cheaply produced as that derived from the waterfall at Niagara; but within the area in which the percentage of loss in transmission should not render its sale commercially unprofitable it would find a steady market. Experiments and improvements in tho transmission of electrical force warrant the belief that Philadelphia is not so far from the coal mines that its manufacturers might not hope to profit hy such processes as may bo devised for extracting motive power from coal dust. Libcnil Way of AdvertiHing. Make as many small English words as possible from letters contained in C—E— I.—E—K—Y P—l—L—L—B, -without using a letter in any one word more times than it appears in "Celery Pills." To the person sending largest list will bo given a beautiful matched pair of cream white ponies, gold mounted harness and phaeton; a trip to the World's fair and return for second largest list received; a fine upright piano for third; a pneumatic bicycle for fourth; fine gold watch for fifth; pair diamond earrings for sixth; parlor organ for seventh; elegant harp for eighth; black silk dress pattern for ninth; music box, drum and bells for tenth largest list; also 100 other valuable prizes for first 100 persons sending a list of not less than sixty words made from letters contained in "Celery rills." Budge's "Celery Pills" are w hat you re quire if troubled with nervousness, in somnia, loss of appetite, weakness, dys pepsia, stomach trouble, headache, indi gestion, etc. Send thirteen 2-cent stamps with list of words and try for one of our handsome prizes and receive free a sam ple package, with full particulars and list of those in your state who have won prizes to introduce this great nerve and stomach remedy, all delivered in U. S. free. Enclose thirteen U. S. 2c stamps with list of words promptly to Itudge Celery Pill Co., Montreal, Que., and you are sure of a first-class prize for your trouble. * Curfew Will Ring. An ancient custom has been revived in tho cities and towns in Canada. This is the ringing of the curfew. In oldon times tho curfew was rung nt nightfall, at which time nil fires wero covered, lights extinguished, and the people re tired to rost. Tho custom was instituted in the reign of William tho Conqueror. The act passed at tho last session of par liameut in Canada is not, however, quite so strict as tho ono of olden times. It ! provides that at 9 o'clock the curfew I shall bo rung, and if any persons under j 17 years of ago are found on the streets | they shall be locked up hy the watchman j or police, and uidess satisfactory explana tion can 1)0 given the parents shall be made to suffer either by confinement in jail or fine or tho sending away of tho children to some public institution where they will bo taken care of until tho au thorities seo fit to let them out.—Niagara Falls Letter. Tlio Trolley Buzz. Just as constant use of the telephone was said to produce aural affection pop- I ularly known as "telephone ear," so is the overhead wire system of electric tran sit being hold responsible for an affliction which in Philadelpia is denominated' 'tho trolley buzz." It is a nervous affliction re sulting from tho combination of hiss and roar which is a prominent featuro of tho "cheap and nasty" system of rapid tran- I sit. It worries tho possessors of fine sensibilities, is dangorously annoying to the sick and prevents tho robust from sleeping as they ought to sleep. "Huvo you got tho trolley buzz?" is a common query in tho Quaker City, and if greedy corporations can liavo their way here the same inquiry will take the place of tho oriental "How is your livor?" or the j American "How d'ye do?" Washington ' Star. . KELLMER iNiovofmAnis: n will make for tlie next 30 days ONE DOZEN CABINETS of our "French Finish" (regular price, $4.00) for $3.00. Make two negatives and show proofs to select from.. WT T T (* TT AT? A BETTBB WORK THAN CAN BE HAD ' ' AUU VL U xVXVxVIi i IJHJ ANYWHERE ELSE IN THE KEG ION. 13 West Broad Street, Hazleton. TpOlt SALE.—House nnd lot on Centre street, J? Freeland; house, ICixSl; lot 125x25. For further particulars apply ut this olliee. ECKLEY CLIPPINGS. Next Tuesday being the Fourth of July the members of St. Mary's T. A. B. Society will hold another grand picnic in the grove here and try to givo the young folks an afternoon and evening of pleas ure and enjoyment. In former years the T. A. B. members have shown all who attended their picnics a lively time and all who may attend their picnic on Tuesday next may rely upon having a firstclass time. An excellent orchestra has been engaged for the occasion. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kennedy, of Sandy Run, were the guests of James McDormott and wife Sunday. Miss Mary Quinn, of Highland, spent Monday with friends in town. Daniel Craig is doing jury duty this week. Misses Mary A. McOill, Gracie O'- Donnell, Katie Mcllugh and Bella Murrin, four accomplished young ladies of town, spent Sunday among Freeland friends. K. B. Coxe is having a large addition built to bis stable. Mrs. James Barrel and Miss Maggie Barrel spent Monday with friends in town. Miss Ella Campbell and her mothi r returned home from Jackson, Nebraska, on Friday evening. A Hungarian employed by King & Co. at the stripping here had 0110 of his arms seriously injured on Monday by a huge piece of rock falling on it. Today will be pay day here and to morrow the streets will be crowded by fakers of every discription. The Stockton club will probably play the Terrors here next sunday. Miss Rose Roarly spent Sunday with friends at Freeland. Manus McFadden left here last week for Connecticut, at which place he in tends to reside for the future. We all wish him success in his trip. The breaker is running twelve hours a day for the past week. Misses May and Annie Gallagher spent Monday at Freeland. Daniel Connor, of Hazleton, was a visitor to town Sunday. Patrick O'Donnell, of Drifton, spent Sunday with his parents. The Hazle Brook club came to town Sunday to cross bats with the Terrors of town, but owing to the rain the game had to be postponed until some future date. Manager Probert, of the Hazle Brook club, should feel proud to have it to say he got such a good club as be has, but it will take all the material that Ilazle Brook can produce to compete with the Terrors and perhaps a few out side of the Brook. Edward Toy transacted business at Freeland Sunday. MAKY ANN. Pensioner* of the Revolution. Upon the death of Mrs. Anna Maria Young, which occurred at Easton, Pa., on Wednesday, the last Revolutionary widow who drew a pension in this dis trict was stricken from the lists. Mich ael Fritz, the last survivor of the war of 1812 in this district, died about a year ago at his home near Reading. Thero are still Beveral widows of the survivors of the war of 1812 drawing jamsions from the Philadelphia office, and quite a num ber of the survivors of the Mexican war. The theory that pensions prolong life by the removal of tho constant worry to which agod persons of tho poorer classes are subject is borne out by tho remark able vitality of tho vast army of pen sioners. There are still 15 widows of Revolutionary soldiers drawing pensions throughout tho country. Mrs. Young, who died on Wednesday, was the oldest, having been but a few months less than 100. Sho was tho widow of the late Cap tain Jacob Young, whom she marriod when she was 22. Despite her tender age. Captain Young was her third hus band. The gallant captain survived six months of married life. Mrs. Young leaves 80 great-grandchildren and a largo number of great-great-grandchil dren, all by her first and second hus bands. When one considers the great dispar ity in the ages of tho surviving Revolu tionary widows and their late husbands, it looks very much as though somo of the marriages had been purely commer cial transactions. Tho Revolutionary war was over in 1788. Take tho caso of ono of theso dames who is now 75 and who married her husband when she was 25 years old. Ho could scarcely have beon less than 20 when tho war was over. This would make tho marriago tako placo in 1848. On tho theory that ho was 20 when the war was over, and sho was 25 when sho married him, ho mußt have been 80 at that interesting period of his life. Then, when he died shortly after, sho merely exchanged a husband for a snug pension.—Philadelphia Record. THE SPECIAL BARGAINS STILL GOING at J. C. Berner's. 1-yard-wide dress goods, 6 1-2 cents. 1-yard-wide dress plaids, reduced from 25 cents to 12 1-2 cents. Cashmere satines, worth 20 cents, for 12 1-2 cents. Rugs, Mats, Carpets, Oil Cloths, Furniture and Beddings—the largest stoek in town. Avail yourself of the bargains. Groceries and Provisions below market price. •T. C. BEKNEK. }4 EJIL B- IRESKE^BERXA " / NfllS 85" S -afcL BL €&JO I caret ui invi-tWntior i a t-.civ lorponubil- I -rJ Eg FSi pa H6ki2!il bSEHS v - p ity ana a-.-i meats <f cur Vr. !..'<; i H ; r—f,v J, ■■■!, n iWimiaMWlKaiuaxwiMumniaii ninAmnmaJ .f *, Htfk' =5 mm M Cliloride &m M->eis • iVtlleoinTilptolyilostrr.ythodi-HlrornrTOaACr.Oinfrom a tar. dnyo. Tc-■ . „•; \ lmrm- X {•. /L # .3 KM! cn<H> no ..K'niuw", iindniu y hoglv.-n tn ncup <*!■• u>r euttw&ilMmr tlm I.WJ- /A yX B* *' els . t3 put.jut, who will vulaaterily MO, amok l,n;or choiringln 1.1 vxe a yd. f .■& W / L ;; v\o jv.-.tivv.t, BY TIIO 1130 -F cur COCCIAL FORMULA GOLD CITC TAULU'IS. / -"> V <\ / KR "! i !>nrln r ; treatment pr.tl .ij nro nllnwod ilio frco ■ o of lie . cr Uor- *IX A IIDW 33 • • jib I un. 11 audi l into r ? they sin: 11 voluu turily r*i v o thorn i:j •. .£ i> > * \ (fc II lliif '-►J . Wo fuuui )>u-ticular? ;tutl pamphlet oi I.<-..l.lin:r.ili fv , f.nO Glir.ll x'' " ' \ V M HHZ bo pi :-u ioj,l.u ami vii - r.-i Irom any of lwvo liablta in coinmnnb.u- S < • v\ S J liSlllilfil fllS M Aj tlou with |rrs:-i.s\vhc ir.vo been cured by thouujefourYAKLCT.-. +■ '- \ "'X / lUflimmiUQli fig "'} , itUX'e TJ;3LCTS nro for SOLO BY 11l FIK3T-CL.\:.J \ "l \ jv' from persons BL_ r- i dru ryl .mut s J .00 u: r pack. r-"- /V* \V \ \ •• r fig rv' II yout; not kt^p cn^loaons 2 J .OO S\ •> * K "•&■ /? \A\O liavO bCOKI r u.~ . Arfl wo v.-ill you, by rctui uiuull u ;>&ckn;jo ci our #s N A'• "X V, \ jr i^s3 lJ- Ban ,o X Cured by the ÜBO Of J J I&.FE" 3 " RO LUR MARI,K "° Y" PIJFE TSLLLPFC I l'] an yMtf thn varloua'nndt* dina iSZ J 9 W!CIS. I oirnrod for em-. Ak for J-r ,;T J 7 , J --f > ' J jr t i li .and taxo no olh„ 'J > g g M uiufucturod only by A -> v. bM y,t claim loi It. I used ton cents ■ fc-vj _____ rat, w a V// T.-vjiU c.l U'i\i tobacco a day, —TxIIj ■- V r i nor- r> o t. fl\n cipfivg; or I vould Hmoko I 33H _\\ v*" y f o::i Inn to i wrty rijica of tobucco. Iluve chow<d S OHIO CHEMICAL CO., Y | Y V|XY ofi Tablcld cuiLd nic ro I linvo no desire for It. UKOB 3 C1.53A DB Opera Block. Sf jf ILH.JAYLOUD Leslie, Mich. g • N V ' Y FIIT . Donns FEPRT, N. Y. _ LIMA, OMIO. f r T f>ATTTTrTTT AT>Q A t■ JO ; ; 11 li^:.! •.iu . I lttjOUgll 1V: 1 illl i.CIVy liUlOkCl" Olid CIICWCT. g —B AKTICULAUS X tbey (aIU tlio \/ork i i !:• :niu.n li: I < days. I> .M cured. ■ ■ RDRC W\ V'l\ R l'.-U:Y youro, MATHT'.V JGIIN&ON,P.O.Box®. G rntti RIITSNVITGII, FA. Kow Is Your Time — To buy your CLOTHING, DRY GOODS and BOOTS and ■SHOES if you want to save money. Come and see what NEU BUBGERS can do for you, and enjoy the full purchasing power of yom dollar. We always endeavor to give our patrons as Much for Their Money as We Can, and the success we have attained through this motto has made us all the more anxious to surpass all of our former successes, and has placed us on the alert for whatever bargains we could buy to offer our many customers. By this way we have succeeded in securing about 800 SIL \ ER HANDLED GLORIA UMBRELLAS, which we can sell for less than half their actual value. We have them in three sizes as follows: 20-inch fast black gloria, silver handle, 40 cents; never sold before under §I.OO. 28-inch goes at 50 cents; regular price, §1.15. 80-incli, our price now is 60 cents; regular price, $1.25. If you want an umbrella come and see these goods. They are the greatest things ever offered at the money, ai.d while this lot lasts they go at the prices quoted above. This is an oppor tunity of a lifetime to get a good umbrella for almost nothing. Come and get what you want of them while you have the oppor tunity. If you want anything in our other lines you will find • them at greatly reduced prices at Jos. Ncuburger's Bargain Emporium, In the P. O. S. of A. Building, - Freeland, Pa. IS AS SAFE ANO HARMLESS AS A Flax Seed Poultice. It Is applied right to the parts. It oures all diseases of women. Any lady can use it herself. Sold by AIJ. DRUGGISTS. Mailed to any address on receipt of sl. Dr. J. A. McGill & Co., 3 and 4 Panorama Place, Ghloago, lIL ' sola -by GROVEE, IFreelarta. John Smith IN THE BIRKBECK BRICK BUILDING, FREELAND, has the largest and best stock of CLOTHING, BIS' BOOTS mil SHOES, lIIISIG (MS,, Etc., in Freeland. Everything New and Cheap. Our store room, which is the largest in Freeland, is filled with the latest fashionable productions of the best clothing manufacturers, and all our goods are at your disposal for inspec tion. We give the best for the least money. I^™pj I;EIA)W WEIDER & ZANG, Tiiiloi'S, We nro located above Meyer's Jewelry store and have on hand u line line of Roods, which : will be done up in the hi test styles at a very : moderate price. Our aim is to satisfy and WE ASK FOU A TRIAL. Repairing Promptly Executed.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers