FIIEELAKD TeIIJUNE. RI'BUSUED FVBHY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TITOS, A. BTJ OKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN FTREET ABOVE CENTRE, I SUBSCRIPTION RATIOS. Ono Year £1 60 j Six Months 75 Four Mouths 60 Two Months 25 Su'-scribors aro requested to observe the date following the nnroo on tbo laltcls of their papers. By referring to this they can tell ui a glaiH-o how they stand on the books in this offloo. For lnstanco: Grover Cleveland 28Juncf5 miauis that Qrover Is paid up to Juno 28,1885. Kocp the Source in advanceof f < presontdatc. Report promptly t< tills olTcu when your I>"4►oi ls not received. All arrairu#t must bo paid when paper is discontinued, or collection will bo made in the manner provided by law. FREE LA NK i'A., UNK 25, 1894. | W lull has Congressman J Fines, ever (lorn to deserve a renomina-\ t'nm from the Democratic parly / I CH'JRCH AND CLERGY. POPE LEO XIII. has just completed a I book reviewing' his pontiflcato. IT is said that Protestant Christian ity is growing in India as fast as it is in this country. OVER Mr. Gladstone's bedstead is hung the motto: "Christian, Re mem- j bor What Thou Hast to Do." IT is estimated that there arc over throe million people in London who never enter a place of worship. THE largest Sunday school library in I the world is in Washington, D. C., the 1 property of the Assembly Presbyterian j church. REV. WILLIAM MAYS, of Purryvillc, | Ivy., has preached the gospel for sixty I years and has never accepted a dollar j for his services. IT IS said that when Tennyson was ! asked what his highest aim was he ro- ! plied: "My supreme wish is to get a | eleurer vision of God." MR. MOODY receives a royalty of ! twenty per cent, from the publishers 1 of "Gospel Hymns," and since the lirst | publication of the collection this roy- J nlty amounts to one million two hun- \ dred and fifty thousand dollars. Miss FANNIE EDWARDS, the girl evan gelist of Louisville, Ky., is reported to have saved one th usand souls in Ohio , and Indiana. She is eighteen years of ago and lets her long hair hang down ! over her shoulde; > REV. WATSON T. MOSIEII, of Brook lyn, who hua been pastor of the Grace Baptist church for the last year, re- ! coives no regular salary, only asking ! pay when ho needs money. Ilis occlcsi- ! ostical brethren do not approve of Ids method. MUCH IN LITTLE WIIEN real nobleness accompanies tho I imaginary one of birth, the imaginary i seems to mix with the real and bccomo j real, too. —GrcvlUo. POSTHUMOUS charities aro the very | essence of selfishness, when bequeathed | by those who, when alive, would part I with nothing.—Colton. WHAT sad faces one always sees in the asylum for orphans! It Is inoro fatal to neglect the heart than tho I Lead.—Theodore Parker. IGNORANCE is a mere privation, by ' which nothing can be produced; it is j a vacuity, in which the soul sits motion less and torpid for want of attraction, j —Johnson. THE method of tho enterprising is to plan with audacity and execute with . vigor; to sketch out a map of possibili- i tios and then to treat them usprobabil- I ities.—Bovee. IN all worldly things that a man pur- | sues with the greatest eagerness, ho j finds not half the pleasure in tho pos- j session that ho proposed to himself in j the expectation.—South. NOTES OF COMMERCE. NEW GUINEA yields largo quantities i of sago fronf the palms which grow I wild. NEWFOUNDLAND contributes codfish, | codlivcr oil, lobsters, sealskins and ; copper. Net AVE., an independent state in tho J Himalayas, gives tho world musk and i borax. GREAT BRITAIN manufactures every { year £50,000,000 of iron ami €84,000,000 of steel. rnc lon i r grain crop of Queensland ism. thf leading mineral product •is coaL TEE Leeward islands are now cx- l v ■ ' i '■ o quantities if preserved fruit juice. THE Western .Sahara provides a i large share of tho worl i's supply of i gum arable In; - . Niger valley region exports rice, i onions, dates, honey and cotton anl i leather. ODD THINGS IN LIFE. -inoTON, CONN., boasts of an eel fifty ' years old. A SHOWER of ivy crr!es fell in Ting* 1 land in 1000. I BI.AUK frost is only seen in very severe weather. NEW YORK city has more southerners than any city in the south. ONE-TJIIRD of tho earth is controlled by the Anglo-Saxon race. ONE-HALF the wealth of England is in possession of one thousand persons. IN a square inch of tho human scalp the hairs number about ono thousand THERE are millions of people on the face of tho globe who don t know what soap Is. ALI. the Chinamen who come to New York spend much time examining the Jlroakly n bridge. FROM 1883 to 1887, Inclusive, one thousand and thirty persons were killed by lightning . A B CASBIUS CLAY'S HOME. Account of a Visit to tho Grord Kontuckian's Rotreat. ' O! 1 War ilorse Is Sppmlinff His Herllnlas Years Amid the Trophic* of His Ac tive Days Souvenirs from Russia'* Royalty. i ' Yes. Hah, you'ra on do riglit road; i Joss tak vie nex' tun to do lcf'nn' dreck ! L . || }i see wha Massa Cash lives," * It was a sunny April day and for tho j, .( half hour the carriage wheels had ... id the pounded limestones of the "pikes." To right and left, fenced in liy low stone walls and budding hedge rows, green pasture land and fallow i field had rolled in graceful billows out to tho horizon line, while over all the | ever-present haze was spread—a regal robe—-above the blue grass. The party had been talking of a j : pi minent man, his college days at Yale, | the y.-ars of his young manhood given t < slavery's uprooting, the True Amer- i lean, his paper founded at Lexington; 1 those bitterly fought canvasses in , 1 w hii-h Cussius Marcellus Cluy had never spoken save with his weapons close at' hand, of the mobs that he had quelled, j I often by the more force of personal 1 presence, and the terror that his name i pired; of his Mexican war record, imprisonment and his glorious return; ' of his stand when came secession, his i secret mission to his native state, his I Russian ministry and his recall. And ! one of the party recalled a political meeting of the year before at which | one of the hero's letters had been read, and how tho room had rocked with cheering and the white-haired justice on the bench had pounded with his ; cane upon the floor and shouted: "Listen at the old war horse," till the very win dows rattled. Kentucky loves its great ! men; anil now the next turn in the road i would bring his home in sight. It crowns a rise of ground so gently rounded us to suggest other means than those of nature, and like all Ken- WHITE HALL, CLAY'S IIOME. tucky country houses is some distance j from tho road. The building is of red brick, large and tasteful, and seems to j carry, us so many southern mansions 1 do, a vague impression of tho ample hospitality within. The visitors wore j directed to a side door by a servant, I presenter! tho letter of Introduction John G. Fee had given, and stepped in to the presence of the general himself. I ITc is a massivo man, bearing aw if he f-It it not tho burden of his more than | eighty years, a man with youthful flash-1 i ing eyes and long white hair, one who | would bo recognized as forceful any : where and at a glance. Through a con j servatoricd portico In which some large, j rare plants were blooming, the party • •ntered the library—a part of the "old house" built by Gen. Clay in 1700, when Daniel Boone was yet a man in middle life, and upon tho shelves of which many "quaint old curious volumes" j were reposing. | It i*> a pleasure, with its owner for your guide, to view the wonders of this blue-gross palace. Hero is a group of! family portraits'and there a treasure j of hammered Pompeian silver; here a picture of the tsar and the tsarina | presented by their royal highness, and there a bronze bust of Emperor Na poleon III.; here paintings by some of the greatest modern masters, and there painted Russian and Parisian porcelain, I so beautiful as to bring surprise oven to ; eyes fresh from the wonders of tho i Manufactures building. A score oi j lands have added in making White Ilall beautifuL The Corinthian-col umned drawing-room, with full-length mirrors, rich old mahogany chairs and luxurious divans, Russian candelabra ' ; and paintings and statues to right and i left, is a grand place. In the waning j I afternoon the visitors sat before tho library fire and listened to tho reminis- i cences of tho host. America'* Champion i:at-r. Capt. V. A. Rankin, weighing almost three hundred pounds, and living at Crown City, 0., claims he is the cham pion eater of the United States. He disposes of three square meals during the day and wakes up every night nt ten o'clock and morning at two o'clock and eats a big meal his wife prepares for hini before retiring. He frequently demolishes two fried chickens, six fried eggs, a loaf of bread, six ounces of but ter and four cups of coffee for break fast. Mr. Rankin is wealthy, but he j says his money doesn't agitate his mind I as often as his appetite. Kahhlt Nursed by a Cut. People are flocking open-mouthed to i the farm of Mrs. William Leslie, about; a mile from Moravia, Pa., to see a cat nurse a rabbit. Where it came from i nobody knows, save that the cat • brought it from the fields recently I along with four kittens of her own. Apparently &he did not notice the differ . neo, and, meantime, the young rascal rules the nest and is growing about | | twice as fast as tho kittens. A Woman's Lovo for Women. 5 The most remarkable trial on record ; t was that of Mary Hamilton, an Eng- I lishwoman, who was brought into , j court on October 7, 1740. IShc was one j of tho greatest frauds of the day, hav i ing succeeded in deludiig her own sex i in a most extraordinary manner, it be , ing clearly proven at the trial that she i had at different times and places mar- I riod not lens than fourteen other women $£ various iigcfc. __L. * MARRIED THE BAf Y. The Pretty Romance of ion irec-maa Oat OH, or Alal . There is a romance ii -1 ► <t>f i. William 0. Gates, who tration democrats of \ \ > •> nominated for governor. ,M.i it t sr% -t . ordinary romance eith r. A i >•,■] i-t concocting such an episodt r> t,u on© in which tho colonel actual 1 | irVfi i patcd would, in all lik 1 charged with going beyond t : 0 of probabilities. Mr. < r tho confederate army in - | tain and came out as a c mi l. ' said that he got shot wor- than t OOL. WILLIAM o. OATEB. bo<ly who lived. He was six times so verely wounded, oneo in the right arn\, then in the right leg, next in the left hip and completely through the n ht thigh and hip, then in the head, and finally, before Richmond, his right arm was taken off. When he lost his u-rm Col. Oates wai taken to a farmhouse, where he wai nursed by a southern girl. After he was ablo to be about he felt that if he couldn't win the girl ho would thank her for having saved his life. He made his confession, but she said nay. "Never mind, colonel," said the fair one's mother; "just wait for her," pointing to a laughing baby in tho cradle. Oates grew interested in her as sho grew up, and when sho got to be a young lady he was very much in love. He reminded her of tho promise made over her cradle, and—well, they are regarded in Washington as an ideal couple, difference in ago notwithstand ing. "Col. Gates is one of the most striking figures in congress, lie is six feet tall, 1 broad-shouldered, deep-chested und I crcct. lie was the democratic candi date for governor of Alabama in 1872, but was defeated with the rest of the ticket. Later, in the same year, he was nominated, for congress and de feated. His next attempt was success ful, and ho has served in congress seven terms in succession. Ho is a na tive of Alabama and was born in 1835. lie is a lawyor by profession and was very successful in pructico. SCHOLAR AND SEAMAN. Capt. A. T. Mahnn, the Famous Com mander of tho Chicago. It is strange how comparatively un known to the American public, outsido of government and naval circles, is A. T. Mahan, formerly president of tho , United States war college, and now j comanding officer of tho Chicago, flag- I ship on the European station. And ; when persons read in tho daily papers that a banquet was given in his honor, in London, on the queen's birthday, they asked: "Who is this Capt. Mahan they arc making such a fuss about in England?" Capt. Mahan, says tho Illustrated American, Is the greatest authority on naval tactics in the world. Moreover, he has written two great works upon tho "Influence of Sea Power," as fasci ' nnting and instructive to landlubbers I as to seamen. The first tells of the in -1 fluencc of that power "Upon History, CATT. A- T. MAIIAN, U. a N. 1000-1783," and tho second, "Upon the French Revolution and Empire, 1703- ' 1812." Capt. Mahan has also written ; "Tho Gulf and Inland Waters" and a "Life of Admiral Farragut." This ornament to the United States navy is a New Yorker by birth, and was appointed to tho naval academy in 1856. In 1801 he was commissioned a i lieutenant, and lieutenant commander | in 1805. During 1870-71 ho was at : tached to the Now York navy yard, and in 1872 was commissioned com mander. lie was promoted to captain in 1885, and was made president of tho , war college in 1880. Last year ho was appointed to the Chicago. Only a Few FSigon Aro Left. The domesticated herd of buffaloes in Otoe county, Nebraska, recently re ferred to by Secretary Morton, numbers eight. They were bred from three calves rounded up with cattle in Colo ; rado. Tho buffaloes have been kept in a six-acre lot and fed like native cattle. Two of the bulls, seven and eight years, fought out the question of lead ership a year ago, and the cider was pushed by the younger through a heavy plank fence. They aro now kept apart. Along with tho buffaloes is a herd of elk, also numbering eight. They arc mas ters of the situation. A cross between the elk and black-cattle was obtained, i but the only calf proved barren. The elk are fed lightly and arc ordinarily i peaceful, but when they arc in search of water their rush is irresistible. 1. STRANGE DISCOVERY. Tho Ossified Remains of a Pre historic American. Splmi W'tiß Carved So That the Man C'oulil Not Have Looked Away from tho <> round Secrets of an Aneient Mound. An hour's ride south of San Francisco the remains have just been discovered of a community of prehistoric inhabit ants of this country. They were found by a party of students from Stanford ; university who were on a scientific ex ploration some four miles east of the university grounds. A pear'shaped mound of earth covers 1 the remains of the colony. It is calcu : '.ated that some thousands of persons I ire buried there. The mound lies with i ' ts longer axis north and south, and leasures 470 feet in length by 320 in \v'idtli, and has an area of nearly two It -res. In height it ranges from about | two feet at the southern end to ten foot at its highest point, near the northern 1 OKtrcmity. The soil used in its con- i biruction was the ordinary black adobe ( of tho neighborhood. It was ascertained from some of the oil inhabitants of Spanish descent in thi vicinity that when the whites first ! bottled the country there was an Indian 1 viluigo near the mound. But that i w not necessarily indicate any con nection between tho Indians and the prehistoric people buried there. T . nound is now being explored , I '-vt' i "ntiilc care under the direction | of i'm Mary Sheldon Barnes, who has Da p the work in Pacific coast his- | 1 tor\ io university. Tit day's excavation resulted in , tho lit of three skeletons, together with i bor of pointed bono imple- j . men; , l two largo stone mortars, [ such is used by tho Indians for t | grind' ' 5 j • skeletons, which is dc- I ■ 'ed i • pparently that of an old ,I l who 1 been u sufferer from a ' t. which had caused an , I extr-un.il., formity. With the cx j OSSIFIED If,.- I HE PREHISTORIC • • ceptlon of h■ ' i t n the neck M there was a >u loation of all 5 | the joints it t u Inmn, making it as rigid a. c. The ribs " : were fixed to . kione, .caving no 5 possibility of .otion in rcspiiation. At the points of attachment of tho larger ligaments there wore deposits of os- j ' scous tissue. Tho unfortunato man with the immovable backbone did not I oven possess the advantage mf boing j able to stand upright. Ills siino was j curved forward from tho first lumbar. I lie could never havo seen the sky un ' | less his friends turned him on his back. } j It is rather surprising that a primi ' tivo people should have to* "*r oar? of ! such a useless old man, Im j isibl v j j they thought his shape wo n indi I j tlon of supernatural power The larger bone of his 1. >♦' l | had been broken at som< rivi . 1 ' | reset with considerable sk . r I he : • | man was found reposing ■ >< 1 | ashes and his legs had b in ti • ' | burned. Close at hand fo n ■ large stone mortar, and M was found near his left 1 i ! 1 ing, possibly, that he had • | that mollusk shortly befc 1 Not far away wore the r ' i large quantity of burned 3 bay oyster, crab and abo ly the remains of a prchi bake. Bones of a deer, •!k • • other animals wero also ui <• evident that tho primiti j> i • j I extremely wclL Some twenty skeletc s ; • ■ ■ \ found, according to the utr • p . They are those of pcrsc >f i. The owner of more th; u had mot with a violent .cat). , skull a boned spear-1 ad w< .i ul imbedded two Inchos. Th- • i ih that of a child not mo? . n years old. The skua !>c judged from tho one repr iu iuv, are those of a race < f small U t. lli gcnco. A number of shell n < its wore found, and also r erfornl. ; its and pendants, showin tit ornamentation. A Nice Old Family. ; There is living at present in tho Jil . lagc of Urussofka, in the Russian r j * j eminent of Tula, a hard-worl in i j industrious peasant family, the 'aid of which is 104 years of age, an I , formerly body servant to Prhio ] Schakofskoi. There are nine so is. 3 whoso ages range from 50 to 80 yea Is. t Two of them performed the long m |i r tary service of twenty-five years tnu - Czar Nicholas. The father is still e< I i paratively as active as his yount i'* sons of 50 and 00 years, and takes a* j full and equal share of tho fi- 1 : l j farm work. No member of the fain 3 is a total abstainer, but father 8 W sons have always led a temper i* i' frugal life. The patriarch hirr >of his gay moods, is still accust/ 1 > execute with astonishing verv a d agility some of the favorite i '>n j dances—dances which always rrqiii v I a suppleness of limb in the dan < ? The villagers invariably cons it t b ' old man in their troubles. Topi's and Their Boards. I f wc are to believe the old { > prophets have always hod ben l the faithful to swear by; not < w t tho popes. From tho time of S: t down to the year 1153 the ppc 1 wore full beards, but for the nc f centuries they wore cleanly ! Then came a period of two centu \ \ which they again wore tho beai I I from tho year 1700 until the i I time tho smooth face alone has heed | seen In the papal line. i WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, D. C., June 22, 1594. "What can't be cured mußt he endu ed," is a homely adage that is about a the consolation that the average Dem crat can get out of tlie delay in the si I ate in passing the tariff bill. Sena' Harris, as the Democratic leader, i done all that one man could do, and has been ably supported by some of Democratic senators, but unfortuna not all, and the margin is too sm:i force anything without a united supi Some of the Democratic senators to have an idea that when they pit I \ their votes to the bill they had per ed their whole duty; as a consequ here's another week gone and the vote is not in sight, although it is Hi cult to seo what excuse the Repu' .-aa will have for prolonging the agony mgi than next week. A Democratic . atoi remarked in my hearing today; ' I don' I believe tho Republicans will e. ■ i n,i, sent to have a vote taken on tuis bili until we compel them to doso." Whitl er this is true or not, 1 understauu that it is the intention of nearly all of the j Republicans to make long speeches 011 I 1 some portion of the bill next week. If that is allowed it is a very easy mathe- f matical calculation to show the impossi bility of passing the bill next week. President Cleveland's little salt walei | trip did him a world of good. lie re- € turned looking like a new man; but the * trouble with him is that he works just as hard in the debilitating weather of sum mer as he does in cold weather, 1 I natural consequence is that ... 1 gets run down. He knows this as whl as anybody does, but he is so m.-iitu ted that he cannot stop work u . goes away from where the work is. Speaker Crisp has been confined to room the greater portion of the m . I ! with a stomach trouble. His pi made him stay in tho house m \ precaution than because his en.-id it made it necessary. Ropresontat ley, of Texas, made a great ku- 1 speaker pro tem. Commissioner Lochren, of tho bureau, will turn over to Undo • the 30th inst., tho snng little 11 $2f>,000,000, which by economica ageuient of that bureau he hat 1 out of the amount his Republican decesser estimated would be 11c to pay pensions from July 1, ]' 1 June 30, 1894. Republicans who t J 111 wasteful and extravagant ex pet < of public money will be sure to do Judge Lochren for not having p 1 every dollar appropriated, but s> 11 L people who believe that public lmu.„u. f should he conducted on the same priucb | J pies which govern successful private e ] tahlishments will be apt to say: "We tj ] done, tliou good and faithful servant." ' ] The senate committee has about oc cluded its investigation of the sugar j 'rust. It will hear no more witnesses, J except the two or three senators ujho nave not, owing to their absence, vet been examined. It lias already lien I made plain that the report v " 1 unanimous, the Republicans tormined to try to make politic i al | 1 out of the matter. In order that no ineonvenie: i be caused by the failure of tin ; appropriation bills to become ; I the first of July the house appro if ion i committee has reported a joint reJulu- i tion extending the appropriations for ; *' this year thirty days from July 1. This [ J indicates that tho members of that fun- | rnittee are of the opinion that the appro priation bills can all be passed hi the first of August. Democrats hope to nave things in such shape that congress can J adjourn about that date. It might be suspected tHat wi'i the senate meeting daily at 10 o'clocl and not adjourning before 0, or half past, that Senator Faulkner, chairman " the Democratic congressional campaigi com- , . mittee, would be unable to find tine to devote to the work of the comn: ittee. But he does find lots of time. He spends something like an hour at committee headquarters every morning before I senate meets and he returns in thcjevi ing as soon as lie gets through his lini and remains until 11 o'clock or lati I'hose who arc familiar with tho wu i lie bus already done pronounce him j be one of the most thorough organize who ever directed the work of a cai paign committee. Senator Faulkner L. 1 experienced a political manager discuss his plans in a newspaper, but, ;ui 10 said without any violation of co' nee that he is confident the Dumi . rats will control the house in the ne> ' (ingress. S. ! i ' I , , 'ATE OF JOHN IIUDOCK, late of Fo : . tor township, dccouMcd. : f.t' ;ors k'Htamentory upon the ahove-nnine ( • '■ luivitiu- been jfruJituil tat he underHiyiu" in raous indoliteil to said estate are request* ' ;■. ko payment ami those havitiK ehiims < I ■ ids to present the same without, delu.v i I <. Orion Stroll, attorney. Mary Iluiloek. \< - riCE is hereliy driven tlmt un upplicatio ! will be innde w> the governor ol reiinsy on Thursday, the I'Mli tiny of July. IWE i o'clock a. m., by (1. I<- Halscy, John < t in, Horace H. Fry, I . .1. H. Attwootl, Isan ctisliield. Chnrles W. Wells. A. C. (Inrein 11 -1111 11 ami 11. 11. Joiiew, under tlie net ol tl)ly entitled, "An net to provide l'or tht oration and regulation of eertnin cor •lis," iipproveti April 211, 1H74, nnd tin • meats thereto, for the charter of an in corporation to be culled the "Oanogu 'oinpnny," tho clnirnetor and object ol is the miniiiK, preparing- for market , ig nnd selling anthracite eonl; iiihl hold. • .'li lands in fee simple and under louse ih •} neeesHiiry therefor, niul for these pur t have, poHsess anil enjoy all the right*, I .n i.eniH ami privileges conferred by the said 1 act of assembly and tho supplements thereto. I G-L. llalsoy, solicitor. I )S. NETTBET GEE'S. CIjS STILL ON THE 1)E( '-i \] F For this week we liiv. .Ny special bargains, which wil jLve of big interest to . NOTIONS: ree-yard ecru taped lace curtai is Lie dollar value, pri f 1 1 week, 65c per pair. od bleached towels, 5c each. dies' last black hose, twelve and , i half cent value, this < 5 pair for 25c. FURNISHINGS icn's silk embroidered fancy nightshirts, 40c; a seventy \ 3t i t value. fen's negligee percale shirts, with 1 idered collars and 1 45c; regularly sold at 75c. uadies' muslin underwear in endlesij varieties of the most pe Jet fitting and best makes. CLOTHING: Hoys' twenty five cent knee pants, lfdlper pair. Boys' two dollar knee pants suits, $1 J Men's three seventy-five all wool custAf-made trousers, $2.25 lie: pair. Men's tine all wool custom-made bouid cheviot suits, twelve do lar value, at SB. T DRY GOODS, SHCfeS, LADIES' CAPES AND JACKETS at prices on which we defy competition, visi of inspection is refuested of you. | JOS. FIEUBUMGR, 111 the I*. O. S. of A. Buildin , jFreeland, Pa. I I trials moclslxxg' CHaii I J. C. Berner, Wasliinj psfSZEHS' O.4NK CF FREELAND I 15 FRONT STREET. , bAFITAL, - 650,000. OFFICF.NA Joseph Ulrkbeek, Propldrnr. 11. <'. K ootid, Vit o I'resideiit. 11. K. Davis, C'a<lii< r. Charles liusheck, Secretary. , 1 HECTORS.—Jos. Birkheck, H. C. Koon f li.rM vk, A. Hudewlok, John Waynci, (Jims. Dubliccß, John BlTL* toil, Michael Zeuian Tlirco ixir cent, interest paid on Bavl ODDOBitB. Open daily from oa. in. to 3p. m. Saturdi close at I- noon. Open Wcduueday evonii from U to 8. GEORGE FISHER, ~ dealer in FRESH BEEF, PORK, VEAE, MUTTON, BOLOGNA, SMOKED MEATS, ETC., ETC. Call at No. 0 Walnut street, Freelund, or wait for the delivery wagons. VERY LOWEST PRICES. vm .• coal used exclusively, insuring mil comfort. KMENT OF PABBBNOKU TRAINS. MAY 13, 1804. EAVE FREELAND. 188, 10 41 a m, 105, 2 27, 0 40, 4BR 12, 8 57, 10 40 p in, for Drifts her Yard, Stockton iuid Ha/.lcti •33 a m, 185, 340. 455 p n„ 1m i k A lieu town, Bethlehem, Phi) 'Jew York. 10 41 a ui. 2 27, 455, 0 58 pm, for y, Shenandoah and Pottevtlle. m, 1158,4.34 p m, (via Hlghli 1 'hite ilnveo. Glen Summit, Wilk a in and L. and B. Junction. SUNDAY TRAINS. d 345 p m for Drifton, Joddn, Ltun ' • HarJctan. lJeluno, Mahanor City, 8h in >rk and Philadelphia. VE AT FIIEELAND. 50, 0 27, 10 50, 11 59 a m, 13 58, B 18, lory p in, from Harlcton, s< - k T.ird, Jeddo und Drifton. a m, 2 18. 1 34, 0 68. 10 SB r> m. Mahaooy City and Shenandoah on Branch). i, 10ii.i p tu, from New York, <'a*- •liia, Bethlehem, Allen town and "n, 12 58, 5 40, C 58, 8 47, 10 82 p m. Phila., Bethlehem and Mt.uoh , 2 '.rr, 058 prof rein White FT in ei i . v'likes-Barn•, l'ittatou and L. ■< a Highland 1 Hunch). BUN DAT TRAINS. J3l pm, from Hazleton, I , , In and Drifton. a liehuai. liaxloton, Philadelphia D<*:.vnr anl Mahnnoy region Information inquire of Tick t \S. S. LEE, Gon'l Pass. Agent, _ l'hilo., l'a. s Hen. Supt Eiiiit Dlv., y iIACHKU. ARB'tG. P. A., South Bethlehem, To. ~o~y Carriagres to S2O. j£>. dscaaae Hiiaae Varic :E IDesigrns Belling- Olaeap. igtun aid South Sts, H [liar less! 11 aritess iH Licit Carriage Harness. ' (), $7, $9 and He iv/ E; press Harness. Tit), sl9, s2o and Heavy TAam Harness, lunble, s2fi, S2B and G EO. WISE. and Freeland, line of summer >vay of fly nets, dusti^^^^H m • i Helper' Steam Marble Workd^^H o: . LAI KEL and MINE STREETS. JVloi t, tiic'iits, 1 leadstonos,^^^H si I lng at cost for next thirty days. •ut % mixed Fences, Sawed 1 . v t a indow Cups, Door Sills, Mantels, 1 < • i oping. Cemetery Supplies. KEIPER, PROP., Ilastieton. W \ • 'f'l I 1 I.AWABE, SUBQOEHAHJtA AMB ( . A Boh< vlkill Railboad. J 11- ■ 1 !.> )e In effect September B,ISB. 1 • Drifton for J eddo, Eckley, Ilazte J 1 i • to i'i on, Beaver Meadow Hood, ltoan, / jfl Junction at 0 00, (l 10 a m, 12 10. H 4". n dujlj except Sunday, and "Ula m, 288 ■ . H Drifton for Ilarwood, Cranberry, ■ H I ul Deringer at 000a m, 1210 p in, M di i T' Sunday; and 708 am, 2 08p 'o Drifton for Oneida Junction,, I' i v A H< ad, Humboldt Itoad, Oneida and 10 n in, 1210, 409 p in, dally eui'di 7 08 a in. 2 38 p m, Sunday. t e 11 azloton J unction for CiMi omhioken and Deringer atUB7 in laily oxcciit Sunday; and 8 47 a i. Sunday. \e Ha/leton Junction for Jo t ) iarwood Bond, Humboldt i.... 1 . i Sheppton at 0 47, 010 am, 12 40. 4 ]• m. i i xccpt Sunday; and 740 a ra, 808 ivc Deringer for Tomhieken, i'arwood, Haxleton Junction, lit .! .> Meadow Uouil. Stockton, llaxlc ]., ui .li ddo and Drifton at 2 40, (107 p di'f!\ .in pt Sunday; and 087 a in, 507 p m, uve Sheppton for Onoldn, Humboldt wood lloiid, Oneida Junction, Haxle ton aid Koan at 7 62, 10 10 am, 115. . lily except Sunday; and 8 14 a m, 8 45 ■ m 'ny. H , i euM' Sheppton for Bearer Meadow i.... ckton, llazlo Brook, Eckley, Joddo Jn at 10 lo u in, 525p m, daily, exoepi •• 1 huiiua.v • 3id 814 a in, 845 i> ra, Sunday. I leave Ma/.leton Junetion for Bcnvor M. iload, Stockton, Hazle Brook, Eckley. ■ , . o.i 1 Drifton at 1038 um, 8 11, 5 47, 638 p ■ j.,1 -xcept Sunday;and 10 08a in, 638 p in. . Sundav H 8 connect at llnzloton Junction with ri< rl re for Haxleton, Jeanesvlllo, Audeo*: rii .her points on iAihigh Traction (Jo'b; ■ ■ nving Drifton at 0 10 a m, Ilazleton ■ t U Bj u m, and sheppton at 7 52 a m. ■ •nnect at Oneida J unction with L. V. ■ i east and w;at. wing Drifton at 0 00 a ra, makea ootv. rMU i" Deringer with P. 11. H. train tor re, Suubury, llarrlsburg, etc. I ) DANIEL COZH. l*W ieuu. Superhiteudent at McDonald's for
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers