FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVERY M IN DA Y AND THURSDAY. TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year.... 50 Fix Mouths 75 Four Months..*** * 50 Two Months 25 Subscribers are requested to observe the chit© following the name on the labels of their papers. By referring to this they can tell at a glance how they stand on the books In this office. For Instance: - Grover Cleveland 2HJuuel>l means that Grover is paid up to Juried, ISW. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report promptly to this office when v<ur paper Is not received. All arrearages must l u paid when paper is discontinued, or collection will be made in the manner provided by law. FREELAND. PA., APRIL 10, 1894. The A. I'. A. and the Catholics. From the Philadelphia Record. One of the clerical champions of the American Protective Association asserts, as an excuse for His own bigotry, that "a man cannot he a good Catholic and a loyal citizen." It would be interesting to learn on what evidence this state ment is made. There certainly is no proof of it in the recent forgery of an encyclical of Pope Leo, which gave such a fright to the members of the American Protective Association in Cleveland and Toronto. The circulation of so impudent a fraud affords in itself the strongest assumption and genuine proof of the disloyalty of Catholics toward this country cannot Vie dis covered. Nor can any proofs of such a charge he found in the policy of Pope Leo, who not long ago wisely but gently advised the Catholic Bourbonsof France to loyally support the French republic. But when have the Irish Catholics of this country (or the German Catholics either) ever betrayed the slightest want of fidelity to this government? When have any of them afforded aid and com fort to its enemies? One of the ac knowledged purposes of the A. P. A. is to oppose the election of any Catholic to office in the United States. This is nothing more or less than a revival of the Know-Xothingism of bad memory. But who ever heard of a Catholic voting for or against a candidate for office because of his religious creed or want of creed? In this respect the Irish Catho lics set an example of liberality and freedom from sectarian favoritism and bias which some members of other de nominations would do well to imitate. In Ireland the foremost political lead ers of the Catholics, from G rattan to Parnell, have been Protestants, to whom they have yielded a support and devo tion not often accorded to leaders of their own religious faith. Daniel O'Con nell truly expressed their sentiments when he said: "We go to Home for our religion, hut not our politics." When some years ago, English Catholic emis saries were suspected of intriguing at the \ atican with the view of influencing the situation in Ireland, it is not for gotten with what spirit the Irish Catho lics resented the assumption that their political policy could be dictated or con trolled by religious considerations flow ing from Home. There is nothing better understood at Rome than that the Catho lics of Ireland will tolerate no outside interference with their political affairs. What folly and falsehood, then, is the pretense that the Catholics of this coun try could permit their political opinions and acts to he molded by ecclesiastical power, if ecclesiastical power had any conceivable interest in such dictation. There have been great crises in the his tory of the American people, as in the re volutionary war, the war of 1812 and the civil war, when such an organization as the A. P. A. would have been nothing less than treasonable. Suppose that in the spring of 1801 such a secret organiza tion had risen out of the darkness with the avowed purpose of subjecting Catho lic citizens to political ostracism; would not the tendency of the movement have been to discourage enlistments, and would that not have been treasonable to the government? No one professing any loyalty to the Union would have been so intolerant and so mad in 1861, or in any period of the civil war, as to have suggested the policy of excluding Irish Catholics from political or military pre ferment. The fact that profound peace prevails, and that, therefore, no necessity exists to appeal to the bravery arid patriotism that have never been want ing in the Irish Catholics of America, does not mitigate in the least the mis chievous chat acter of the secret organi zation of the American Protective Asso ciation. In time of war such an organi zation could not be tolerated, because of its manifest tendency to provoke civic strife and to weaken the government. In time of peace it is none the less iniquitous in spirit and aims, BUSINESS BRIEFS. The headquarters for fancy dress trini ings is McDonald's Parties supplied with icecream,cakes etc., by Daubach at reasonable rates. Wall paper, li cents per double roll at A. A. Bachman's. Paper hanging .lone at short notice. For sale, a farm property, gob acres, 85 acres cleared, in Schuylkill! valley; double house, barn, etc., and lots of lini-1 her on it. Apply to J. C. Berner. Kasy terms. ~ j WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, April 13, 1894. Senator Harris very cleverly outwitted the Republican senators this week and put an end, for the present at least, to Republican filibustering to delay the tariff debate. lie made a bluff of in tending to offer a resolution providing for meeting at 11 o'clock and sitting until G each day. This frightened the Republicans and they made the proposi | tion that for a week the senate take up the tariff bill at 1 o'clock and continue its debate without roll-calls or other in ] terruptions untils o'clock. This wasex j actly doubling the time that had been ; previously devoted to the tariff bill, and I I being more than the Democrats expect- j I eil to get without a struggle, was prompt ly accepted. Senator Harris is perfectly willing that this agreement should eon-| tinue in force for ten days or two weeks t longer. Then he will begin to put on ! the screws in earnest, to bring the debate | to an end, beginning by adding an hour a day to the sittings and continuing until j they are continuous, compelling the Re publicans to keep a speaker on the floor ! at all times. The most notable feature of the cau- j eus held by Democratic members of the house this week at which resolutions en dorsing the repeal of the tax on state hank currency were adopted, was the j speech made by Representative Cum mings, of New York, in favor of the resolutions. He told the caucus that the people of New York had cast their votes for the Democratic candidates with full knowledge of the contents of the nation al platform, and that he was anxious and ready to redeem every plank in the platform. It is the general impression, even among the strongest friends of re peal, that it cannot be accomplished as at present proposed. That is to say, that a majority of the house will vote against unconditional repeal of the law. It might be possible to pass a bill repeal ing the law which imposed stringent conditions upon the issue of currency by state hanks. The caucus was attended by less than one-half of the Democratic membership of the house. Senator Wolcott's resolution, which was passed by the senate, requesting the president to open negotiations with Mexico for the purpose of obtaining the , consent of that government to the coin- j ing by our mints of standard Mexican { silver dollars for export to China and other eastern countries, is generally re garded as a bit of buncombe on the part of Mr. Wolcott, intended to please the friends of silver. Few people believe that Mexico will grant such a request. If, as asserted by Mr. Wolcott, the mint capacity of Mexico isn't sufficient to sup ply the demand for these silver dollars in the east, the question naturally arises, why not increase it? The minting of these dollars is very profitable to Mexi co and it seems little short of ridiculous to expect that the Mexicans would he willing to surrender any of that profit to a foreign nation. It would not surprise me if President Cleveland should ignore the resolution entirely, as he may very properly do in the exercise of the dis- j | cretion vested in him by the constitu- j tion. Senator Hill's speech against the tariff bill has been the most talked about j event of the week, and Republican praise of it has been carried to an ex- i tent that must be nauseating to Ilill. Democrats, as a rule, decline to publicly discuss the speech, but the few who do, while conceeding Senator Hill's personal right to talk and vote against his party's measure, are practically unanimous in expressing the belief that he has made a great mistake, and that it was aggravat ed by his uncalled for attack on the ad- | ministration, as well as by his slurs upon ; the southern Democrats who have so : often stood by the party even when | they had to pockt't their own personal opinions as well as those of their con- \ stituents in order to do it. The man I does not live who has the right to doubt j or cast aspersion upon the loyalty of southern men to the Democratic party, i and least of all, Senator Hill, who has! had so many good friends among south- j em Democrats. What effect the speech : will have upon the fate of the tariff bill remains to be seen. There is more catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to bo incurable. For a great many years doctors pro nounced it a local disease, and prescrib ed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pro nounced it incurable. Science lias proven catarrh to bo a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, j manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., 1 loledo, Ohio, is the oniv constitutional cure on the market. It is taken in ternally in doses fr m ten drops to a I teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the sys tern. They offer one hundreil dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENKY & ' i)., Toledo, O. £2?" Sold by druggists, Via. Infant's dresses, -oc at McDonald's. When Baby was sick, wo gavo her Castoria.' When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, sho clung to Castoria. When sho had Children, she gave tbern Castoria I ALL ABOUT TRUFFLES. They Tasto Good But Aro Not Fair to Look Upon. The Favorite Method of Locating Them N to Kmploy the ServieeH of a Knowing Hog A Peculiarly Frenchy Industry. Of all things eatable, in the opinion of the French, the truflle takes a very high place. It is called the "black pearl" of cuisine and the coquette of the banquet. The gourmet says of it that "all the other fruits of generous nature are appetizing, good, excellent; but the truflle is exquisite." Anyone suddenly asked the question where truffles are found would proba bly answer in the pate de foie gras, for the black patches which take away the greasiness from and give the delicate flavor to the goose-liver pate is about all most people know of it. This rarest gem of the culinary art is. like other gems, found in few local ities. In France truffles are found in Champagne, I'oitou, Kourgogno and Dauphiene. These are bad, good and indifferent. Those found in I'rovenee are much better. Rut the truffles of Perigord are the best known and stand highest in the commercial market. There are other places where they are found in more or less quantities and divers qualities, but few of them, outside of France, are regarded witli favor. They grow in the forests of Germany and, to a lesser extent, in the woods of the south of England. Some fifty years ago a number of Parisian refugees who had braved the terrible mul de mer of the Rritish channel, and were breathing unhappi ly the fogs of Great Rritain's metropo lis, had their hearts gladdened by the discovery of truffles in Windsor forest. It was a strange sight to the rural Englishman to see four or five foppish ly dressed gentlemen wearing stove pipe hats and wandering in the shades I of the great forest with a small razor j hack pig in leash. The pig had been imported by these poor exiles to hunt i the truffles for them. Truffles are a kind of inexplicable vegetable excrescence, or fungus, - — £ SEARCHING FOR TIIUFFI.F.B. ! vvlilch grows at the roots of trees, just i under the sod. The porker, with his long snout and keen scent, makes the best of truffle hunters. It is as much j a tid bit to the pig in its natural state as it is for the gourmet after it lias I passed through the hands of a Rrillat i Savarin. Therefore the pig has to be j muzzled. After uprooting these delicacies, the [ pig is always given a morsel byway of j reward. Dogs have been trained to I limit truffles. Truffles are invariably I found in woody spots, growing , naturally and spontaneously, as do mushrooms. They seem to have a par j ticular partiality for the oak tree. [ During the last half century much 1 scientiiie attention has been directed to the cultivation of this vegetable, or ; fungus, and whole plantations of oak i trees and chestnuts have been set out for the mere production of truffles. Truffle culture is to-day a well recog nized industry. Many arc the stories i of large fortunes made in it. I It is certainly, even now, one of the i most speculative callings that the peasant and small farmer of France can engage in. lie may make a for tune, or he may make nothing, for the truffle is peculiar. It may grow abun dantly in one spot for several years, Kind then suddenly disappear. 1 It is probably the only lottery in na ture, for, so far, it cannot with cer tainty be forced or cajoled. Like all lotteries, it stifles the incentive to labor. The French hunter is very much like the "white trash" of the i south, who spend a good part of their : time hunting for the high-priced gin seng root, so loved by the Chinese. Truffles are found at the fall of the leaf, and maintain their perfume a month or so later. They vary in size from a large plum to that of a large potato. The common truffle is black in color and has a warty surface. Truf fles are growing in popular favor every year and in general use. Kli*i'| :tt ItcitftH of l.urden. In the northern parts of India sheep ! nre made to serve us beasts of burden, j The mountain paths unions the foot hills of the Himalayas are so precipi -1 tous that the sheep, more sure-footed than large beasts, are preferred as bur den carriers. The load of each sheep is from sixteen to twenty pounds. The sheep are driven from village to village, with the wool still growing, and in each town the farmer shears as much wool as he can sell there and loads the ! sheep with grain, which he receives in exchange. After his ilock has been sheared he turns it homeward, each sheep having on its back a small bag i containing the purchased grain. White Horses Are llarred. White horses are to be barred from : military service in Germany. The em peror has ordered that no more bo pur j chased for the army, and those now in ; use are to be sold. He tllinks that in I war white horses would be especially conspicuous because of the use of I smokeless powder, and would afford an casv mark for the enemy.. JOSEPH KEPPLER. TL#I IVUK. H Father t< the Whole Younger Generation of CartoonUtH. Joseph Iveppler. the great cartoonist of Puck, who died but recently, is in separably associated with the growth of caricature in America. He was born in Vienna about fifty years ago. His father was a fancy baker, and the boy fostered a love of art from ornament ing wedding and birthday cakes with quaint and curious designs, lie then made copies of fine costume plates, which he offered for sale, and subse quently drew for the German comic papers. Finding this did not pay he . joined a dramatic troupe and assumed at will the role of tragedian and I comedian. The company foundered, > and he became a prestidigitator, doing the accomplice and assistant act. I *W HIE LATE JOSJA'II KKIM'I.UR. About 1800, feeling that the country was too small for him, he came to America, settling in St. Louis. There he began to work in earnest. Most of his time was spent in making designs for lithographers, but lie was too am bitious for that work and induced some of his friends to aid him in establishing the German Puck. St. Louis was a poor city for such a paper, and the venture lived only a few months. The thwarted but not discouraged Iveppler went to New York in 1872. His genius was at once recognized, and he and Matt Morgan drew cartoons on Leslie's in opposition to Nast on 11. r per's. lie remained with Leslie until 1870, when, in company with A. Swartz mann, he revived the German Puck, the English edition of \vhieh appeared the following March. Iveppler was not mistaken, and the paper was an assured success almost from the start, lie had al ways been quick in appreciating young j genius, and* there was never anything \ in the country too good or too expen- I sivo for Puck, which has been a father I to the whole younger generation of I cartoonists and a fortune to its owners. ADMIRAL DA GAMA. The ISroziUan Insurgent Loader In an Ardent Monarchist. Rear-Admiral Saldanha da Gsuna is one of the most able and influential oilieers of the Rra/.ilian navy, lie is, and always has been, a strong 111011- are.hist and was greatly esteemed and trusted by the late emperor. For some time after tlie present insurrection broke out he remained neutral, and j when he finally decided to oust in his lot with Mcllo and the other insurgents his decision gave much additional prestige to their cause, his incorruptibility and moral influence being undoubted. His recent monarchical manifesto proves that he has the courage of his convic tions, be they right or ill advised. It was not considered politic of him to is sue the manifesto at the time he did so. He fore joining the insurgents he was the superintendent of tlie naval r 1 , jj will y-A . ■ 'X * ' ADMIRAL DA GAMA. academy at Rio. Me was born in Rio, but is closerndi d from the noble Portu guese family of Pa Gaum. lie has vis ited the United Slates- a country he is very partial to several times and speaks English with great fluency. In his recent action it is believed that he was somewhat influenced by the cler ical party II is strange to observe the seeming quiet and apathy of that party —an apa: by that can scarcely be other than seeming, considering the great perquisites and privileges it enj >yed ■ under the empire, when the state in . ■ great measure supported the church. Princess Isabella. Countess d'Eu i is noted for her devoutness. Strange j stories are told of her walking to church barefooted and kneeling and praying from step to step up a long flight leading to the church doors. Ku I doubt the priests would gladly have the monarchy re t rcd with her for ruler She was always a great abolitionist and used all her influence and -when re gent- power to further emancipation. Notwithstanding her goodness she is very generally disliked by the people. < orrivspmidpnt H in \VHhiii?toH. The current work of congress is looked after by Ml regularly accred ited correspondents in the press gal leries of the senate and the house, and they serve 171 papers. New York is represented by twenty-one correspond ents, who serve fifteen papers. A Thorough Tent. A very wise man once said that when he began to feel too important he got a map of the universe and tried to find himself on it. FOR COAST DEFENSE. Carriago Which Permits Guns to Vanish Instantly. Th Invention of Col. A. It. ISuflliißtoD unci Capt. William ('rosier —Uncle Sum llnafu the Whole World Once More. Among- the defenses employed for a nution's'coast against an enemy's war ships are heavy cannon. These a hos tile fleet wouid naturally try to dis mount by a few well-directed shots; and if, as has been customary heretofore, the guns on shore were visible over the earthworks in which they were mount ed, they would afford an inviting tar get. Injury or deatli to the gunner is another peril that must attend the first one. Hence the great value of a car riage which will permit the piece to disappear instantly after firing, and will bring it up into place when ready for another shot. The idea of mount ing ordnance in this way is said to have originated in this country, although England led the world for a time in its development. A number of such gun carriages, however, have been invented and tried on this side of the Atlantic; and one which is the joint product of Col. A. R. Ruflington's and Capt. Wil liam Crozier's skill showed, during the tests at Sandy Hook last December, a decided superiority over anything else yet produced. In this mechanism, when the gun is in a firing position, the trunnions rest in sockets in the upper ends of a pair of massive upright levers, hung so as to swing, and sustaining from their lower ends an immense counterpoise. This is lifted and sustained by a pawl and ratchet, when, after a "discharge, the piece recoils and sinks. In the re cent tests at Uncle Sam's proving ground an eight-inch breech-loader was tried, and a mass of metal weigh ing about 117,000 pounds was suspended from the levers. This really more than counterbalanced the gun; for when it was desirable to bring the latter up for another shot, the weight was released and did the work. At the breech is a light framework, also pivoted, whose unction is to keep the gun pointed in DISAPPEARING GUN CARRIAGE, exactly the same direction, in which ever position it may be. It is possible, by the way, in aiming to depress the gun live degrees below a horizontal, and give it an elevation of fifteen. Resides the counterweight, which takes up only one-third of the recoil, there are two hydraulic cylinders to receive the rest. These latter are placed in a horizontal position, and are movable. Their pistons are stationary. A few weeks ago another disappear ing gun—with a ten-inch bore—was tried at Sandy Hook; and ten shots were fired in about fifty-eight or fifty nine minutes. This is an average of about six minutes to a shot. The projectiles used at that time had a weight of 575 pounds, and the charges of powder 250 pounds. The eight-inch rifle fired from a llufilngtou-Crozier carriage took only a 400-pound shot, and just half the powder required in the other test. Seven rounds were fired in eight and one-half minutes, and ten in twelve minutes and three seconds. In one case, fifty-five sec onds were consumed in loading, five in losing it to a firing position, one in firing and one in the recoil. This was better time than has been made with stationary gun carriages, and the record has no equul, either at home or abroad. Striding Lund from (lie S*. Enterprising men have away of growing land along the marshy shores of Delaware bay. The plan is to cut the dikes and let the tide rise and fall for a course of years over a consider able area, including some upland. It is found after awhile that the dikes may be removed considerably out toward the low-tide line, and that many acres of arable land have been gained at small cost. Marsh compa nies usually exist for the purpose of cooperation in such work, and there ' are many quarrels over the land of j men that refuse to join the company in making a temporary sacrifice of up- i land for the purpose of reclaiming sub- i merged marsh. The land thus re- ! claimed is extremely fertile, but it usu ally yields a crop of malarial fevers when first brought under cultivation. ! CliiucHe Miirrittgen Arc I eg:tl. Judfre Bellinger, of the United States | district court of Oregon, has decided, j in the case of a Chinese woman who desired to land to join her husband : whom she had never seen, that a be trothal at tlie ago of two years and a marriage six months ago by sewing to- I gether two cards on which the partic ulars of tlie engagement had been writ- j ten was a valid marriage according to the laws of China and must bo recog nized by the United States. In render- | ing this decision Judgo Bellinger said he was aware of the danger of imposi tion in such cases, hut added that such danger exists in all eases where Chi nese are landed and must continue to exist until exclusion is made absolute. Women's Feet (Jetting l.argm. If hosiers know what they about the feet of American women nre larger than they once were. Three dozen pairs of women's hose used to l>e as sorted as to size in this fashion: Six pairs No. s, six No. 8, twelve No. , six No. six No. 10. The No. S's have now disappeared from among women s sizes and the number of the larger sizes in three dozen pairs of hose is increased. MM C. BERNER'S gp®i AJVJVO ricEMENT ! hirst floor, Washington street entrance, you And our 19c counter. Some articles worth three times what we ask. 19c COUNTER. Men's check coats jr, u Men's seersucker coats Girls' outing- Manuel coats pi,. Men's Domet Munncl shirts ui c Hoys' Domet Manuel shirts p,e Hoys' Domet waists Ladies' woolen hose ne Men's woolen hose Hoys' woolen hose IQ c Men's drawers. pic Ladies' chemise u c Ladies' drawers uc Linen tidies n c Men's suspenders lii c Ladies' silk mitts 19 C Ladies' black tail'uu gloves lOe Hair brushes uo Shoe brushes Hkj Clothes brushes lPc Men's caps loc Ladies' corsets loc I have sold over one thousand 19c articles, and everybody is satisfied. 11 you can buy the same quality goods elsewhere for less money, bring ours back and get your money refunded. DRY GOODS and NOTIONS. We add daily to our now immense stock. Best apron ging hams, sc; dress ginghams, etc., 6c; Outing flannels, 7c; dark dress calicoes, sc; best blue calicoes, 00. Blankets reduced; a 89 all-wool blanket for 87; an $8 all-wool blanket for 86; a 87 all wool blanket for 85; blankets as low as 79c. Comfort ables and quilts reduced 81.45 to 81; quilts as low as 45c. Our dress goods department is full of valuable goods, all shades and prices. All woolen cloths at and below cost, Chenile curtains, 83 99, worth 85; lace curtains, 7()c to 89 per pair. Ladies' muslin underwear, the finest assortment ever shown in this town. BOOTS and SHOES. Our spring stock will arrive in a few days and we will have them on the tariff reform list. Watch for them. Old stock now closing out at cost. QUEENSAVARE. Dinner setts, 813 to 818; tea setts, 85 to 88. In every day ware we have anything and everything useful. HATS, CAPS, WALL PAPER, Etc. # Not necessary to mention separately, as we are closing them out away down. Also our wallpaper. All at one-half price This means 5()o paper for 25c; 2.6 c paper for laic; 10c paper lor sc. Not much left. Come and get the balance. Like all other general stores, we keep household tinware, granite ware, wood and willow ware, tubs, brooms and brushes A good scrub brush for sc. FURNITURE. This is the largest and finest assortment Freeland has ever seen, .lust look at the quantity. 55 different dining room tables in stock, at 81.5(1 to 819 each; 35 center tables, for par lors and bed rooms, 81.25 to 815 each; 22 different bed room suits, 816.50 to 895 each; 13 different side boards and clief foniers, 813 to 840 each; 6 bookcases, 87 to 833 each - lo hair rugs, from 87 to 835 each; 12 different parlor suits, 829; black moliner cover, solid walnut frame, only 829; rug suits 850 to 875; silk brocalett, 8125 to 8135; 57 different bed steads 82.25 to 8o each; 2.) cribs and cradles, folding cribs and swinging cradles, 81.50 to 88.00; 1000 different chairs, cane seat wood seat, leather seat, with high backs, etc; 36 different rocking chairs, 81 to 810; 12 different styles of lounges and couches. CARPETS and OIL CLOTHS. 40 rolls ingrain carpet, ranging from 17c to 8(c per yard- 15 rolls stair carpet, 20c to 85c per yard; 35 rolls Brussells car pet, with or without borders, 50c to 81.35; 6 rolls rag carpet 30c to 00c per yard. 25 different patterns of oil cloth and lenolinne, prices as per quality. Smyrna rugs, wool rugs rugs of Brussells and ingrain carpets. Bed springs mat tresses, piilows, feathers, etc. MY FURNITURE STORE is a wonderland of novelties, and I invite everybody to pay it a visit. If in need of any goods you will be more than paid by doing so. as our prices are the lowest the market affords. GROCERIES. ~1 lbs granulated sugar $1 CO! ! 10 lbs No. 1 currants 05 [ 10 lbs gold dust meal or, i 0 lbs oat Hake o-, ! • lbs out meal gf> ■ " lbs soda biscuits of, 0 lbs mixed cakes 05 [ ;"> lbs raisins 05 ■'> llw l ice Si 5 lbs barley 05 0 <lts beans hi, Full cream cheese U 4 lbs starch or, albs tapioca or, 1 lb dates 10 5 lbs Lima beans or, California Ham 10 1 Ham, siiKur cured jgj FRESH TRUCK EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY. EVERYTHING IN SEASON. Any goods not satisfactory after purchase may be brought back and money will be returned. A ours for prosperity, JOHN C. BEUNEK, Soul! auil Miiugloi) Streets, Freeh. 3 sailor ties 10c 1 man's silk scarf loc I man's silk tie 10c 1 silk hankerchief loc 1 pair linen towels liic •> tea spoons, silver • luted. 10c , •' table for's, silver plated 10c ' pair child's napkins 10c 1 pair scissors loc I mutch safe, silver plated 10c 1 luminous match safe lOe I sugar sliell, silver plated lUe 1 butter knife, silver plated lite 1 two-quart delph pitcher lOe I Hx 10 picture frame, with glass 10c 1 cainp stool 1 spring roller window shade 10c 1 curtain pole, brass rings 10e. 1 carpet rug 1 boys' cap ft bottles chow chow $1 00 ft corned beef 1 00 bottles pieklcs 1 00 0 lbs prunes 05 1 lb buking powder pi Ilb pi uk tobacco ;10 1 lb flue cut tobacco ;K) 4 cans corn or, ~ cans salmon 25 ■i cans pie peaches 25 ~ cans table peaches 05 5 canß sardines 05 1 quart-bottle ketchup 15 3 cans lime 05 1 can condensed milk 10 :i biK glasses mustard g5 1 can French peas :J0 ; 1 can domestic peas 10 I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers