GOSSIP FBI BUI! Confidence in American Securities Revived. None Doubt a Peaceful Settlement of the Venezuela Matter ami the Stability of the United States' I i liaticlal Standing—America Now | Threatens German Insurance. Berlin, Dec. .'lO. —The reaction toward confidence in the future of American finances, especially as affecting inter national monetary relations, has been surpisingly rapid within the last few days. Berlin and Frankfort took the lead of London in speculative buy in v of American stocks and operators hero have on the whole benefitted by tile selling which was done in London, and at no time during the Wall street panic have the German bourses been so much influenced as was the English market. The buying set in earlier here and even investors took a chance in securing stocks at low values. The bourse closed notably firm on Saturday after considerable buying of American railroad securities. The belief here in the permanence of peace between tie- United States and Great Britain is ab solute and general conviction in the re covery of a healthy condition of Ameri can finances is as unshaken as at any previous time. llammorHtoin's Capture. The capture in Athens of Baron von Ilammerstein, the former editor of the Kreuz Zeitung, who absconded under charges of forgery and embezzlement created a tremendous sensation in political and social circles when his ar rest became known. The arrest of this fugitive has cut the ground from under the feet of the socialist leaders and may even he said to have carried away the feet of some of them. All along one of the chief weapons of the social ist press and the socialist parliament ary leaders has consisted of insinua tions that the government had connived at Haminerstein's escape and frowned upon genuine attempts to brirg hit: back in order to prevent disclosure affecting the conservative supporter of the government. The capture ol Ilammerstein has taken the wind out of the sai.s of the socialist craft and rendered the Ilammerstein letters which the socialists were holding over the heads of many conservative mem bers of the reichstag almost if not wholly valueless as terrorizing meas ures. Prospect of a Racy Scandal. Berlin now has the prospect of an ex tremely racy scandal season, between the Ilammerstein case and the revela tions contained in the von Ivotze docu ments, which arc now in the possession of Fritz Friedmann, the absconding Berlin lawyer. According to current report. Friedmann is now in London, where he has prepared a pamphlet at tacking high legal and political persons which lie threatens to publish if th • German authorities molest him any where. It is understood that Friedmann wants a formal permit to return to Germany, nominally incognito, in order to settle his affairs, and is now nego tiating with the proper authorities in Berlin to that end. Room in Business. The Chris'mas season, according to reports made by the leading shops in Berlin, show - a boom in business. The sale of the cheaper class of goods has been slack in favor of the higher and more costly class and the casual on look*, r would consider that the merchants as well as the public have been having a fine time all round. The North Ger man Gazette says that Berlin has re ceived and sent out Christinas parcels far exceeding in number those sent and received during Christinas week of 1894. The Poor Dlncil on Christmas. The Countess von Waldersee provied a large number of widow s and children with their Christmas dinner and had an immense tree upon which weye hung parcels of clothing. Ex-Empress Frederick visited the Kaiser Fried rich hospital on Christmas day. She was received their by Dr. Virehow and Dr. Bosse, minister of ecclesiastical affairs, instruction and medical uffairs. Tho ex-empress presided at the fete which followed her arrival and distributed the presents. Dr. Virehow interested her with a statement of the results ol the treatment of the various patients by Prof. Behrings and lleilserum of the institution, which led her to compli ment the professors upon the success of their remedial preparations. I let a I iat ion Threatened. Official information from Washing ton lias been received in Berlin that United States government will closi out all German insurance couipanie doing business in the United M. cs un less I'ru sia rescinds her measures against American insurance companies ?> • rating them from doing business here. New Year's Day Fetes. Prince Ilohcnlohe will return to Ber lin in time to take part in the New Year fetes. The New Year's day programme is as follow >: At 8 o'clock in the morn ing there will be a reveille from the castle to Brandenburg gate ami hack performed by the massed hands of the Berlin garrison. At 10 o'clock re ligious services will be held in the castle chapel, and at 11 o'clock the court ceremony of filing past the em peror and tho imperial party in the Weissen Snnl. At 12 o'clock there will be a parole in the yard of the arsenal by the kaiser in the presence of all the conimandei f th * German army corps. Wli i tlutos will be fired in the Lustgn; . .i. A S AD MAURI El> LIFE. Story Told by a Prominent English Woman in Her Suit for Divorce. Oklahoma City, O. T., Dec. .10.—A di vorce suit involving prominent English people was filed in the uist riot court here Saturday. It is docketed as Agnes M. Freeborn vs. Richard .1. G. Free horn. The petition sets forth that they were narried in coAty Sussex, Eng., June •', 1880, and that they lived to gether until April, 1892. The defend ant is a graduate of Oxford college and the wife is a niece of Sir E. John Paul of Albany, Eng. The grounds set fort h, among others, are non-support, cruelty and gross neglect of duty. The charge is made that, although in receipt of an 1 excellent salary and holding high posi tions under government, the wife had to depend upon her relatives for sup port. Freeborn spending all his money in fast living and debauchery. As an other ground she charges - that he brought great disgrace upon her by be ing guilty of theft and forgery, the course of the law being stayed only by her intercession and that of her friem'..-. and relatives. The forgery was com mitted on Sir E. John Paul. After it was hushed up Freeborn was shipped to South Australia, his wife and child accompanying him. There he acted no better, and Mrs. Freeborn left him in Tasmania and came to America to be freed from liim. GOLD SHIPPED TO NEW YORK. Coin to iho Value of $1 1,000,000 from the Mint. Philadelphia, Dec. 30. Gold coin valued at 814,000,000 has been sent from the Philadelphia mint to New York within the past week. It is believed I that most of this gold has been used in re* >nt shipments to Europe. The mint ; avived ■' .'0,000,000 worth of gold bars in Auguff and all this has been made into coin. There is now on hand gold bars valued at $20,000,000 and as the v t ■ k of . oining is going on daily and t here : s decrease in the demand, it is only a matter of a short time until it is Jill gone. Small shipments of gold bars are bei - received daily, but not in quantities sufficient to keep up with the dcmane en coin. PK CE \ SU it KD IN SICILY*. Duties of the Military Co in man (lor a Palermo Rod need. Rome, Dee. 10.—Prime Minister Cris pi has issued an order revoking tin* de cree giving the military commander sit Pe.lerino direction of both the police and military forces of the islaucl of Sicily. The revoking of the decree is due to the fact that the authorities have at last succeded in improving the condition of affairs on the island and life and property are now everywhere , secure, and no further trouble is ap prehended from the machinations of the i'..rei dei Lavoratori and other se cret socialist societies, which caused the government great trouble in 1893 and 1891. GLA DSTONE SO YEARS OLD. Many Messages of Congratulation Received at Ha warden Castle. London, Dec. 30. —Yesterday was the eighty-sixth anniversary of tho birth of Mr. Gladstone. Many of the liberal clubs throughout the unio-d kingdom telegraphed congratulations to Jlnw arden castle, Air. Gladstone's residence in Chester, from which place the mes- 1 sages were forwarded to Biarritz, France, where Mr. Gladstone has gone for the benefit of his health. DitiTiNii i:)irn<i; DASIAGKI). \ Ban on (ho Rocks and Sustained Merlons Injury to Her Bottom. London. Dec. 30. —The British steam er British Empire, which sailed from Boston, Dec. 14, for London, has put into Falmouth in a damaged condition. During a dense fog Saturday, when off the Scilly islands, the British Empire struck a rock, and injuring her bottom, j Her forward compartment is full of water. Chief .Just Ice Fuller i Chicago. Chicago, Dec. 30. —Chief Justice Fuller of the supreme court of the i United States arrived in Chicago yes- i terday from Washington and took ; apartments at the Palmer house, lie j w ill r main in the city until a ter Now Y ar'. day. To a newspaper man Justi. e Fuller had no comment to make on tin? Venezuelan situation or any of the questions of the day. For tlio Rlatr Statue. Jackson. Mich., Dec. 30.—Gen. R. A. Alger of Detroit and Dwight S. Smith ; and Gen. W. 11. Witliington of this city, comprising the Blair memorial commission appointed by Gov. Rich last spring to contract for a memorial J statue to Austin Blair, Michigan's war governor, have closed the contract ! with Sculptor Potter of Enfield, Mass., j for the work. .Itmt ion Brewer Denies the Report. St. Louis, Dec. 10.—Justice David J. j Brewer, of the United States supreme j court, was in this city yesterday en j route from San Antonio, Tex., where he has been at the bedside of a sick ! daughter, to Washington. He denies the report that lm had been asked to accept a place on the Venezuelan com- State Capitol Liable To Collapse. Memphis, Tenn., Dec. 30.—A dispatch from Jackson, Miss., says: Recent in vestigations of the condition of the state capitol have demonstrated the fact that it is in an unsafe condition, j Experts who have examined the build ing say it is likely to collapse at any moment. Bark KvcniiingHcti AY reeked. London, Dec. 10.—The Norwegian hark Svcnningscn, which sailed from Garston, Nov. 21, for Para, has been wrecked off Salinas. Her crew were landed at Para. 1 VOTE THIS AFTERHOON House Continues Debate on Bond Biil To-day. Efforts To Rush the Measure to a Vo'e Fa Hod—Johnson of Califor nia, in a Sensational Speech, Se verely Criticized the BUI Tilt Between Senators Hill and Teller. Washington, Dec. 28.—1n accordance with the decision of the committee on ways and means reached last Monday Chairman Dingley yesterday reported to the house the bill to provide for the restoration and protection of the gold reserve by the sale of three per cent, bonds and to authorize the issue of ccrtiii -atcs of indebtedness to meet de ficiencies in revenue. But under the protest.■ of a large number of republi can members, the bill was amended by the committee at a meeting held dur ing the morning, and the programme ; calling for a vote on the passage of the j bill nt 5 o'clock in the afternoon was : changed so as to give six hours' addi- | tional debate, three last night and ! three to-day. the vote to be taken ut 1 oYsu k this afternoon. The resolu tion from the committee on rules to this effect was adopted by a vote of 195 to 101, after it had been antago- : nized by Messrs. Crisp, Bailey and Mi- Millin; the republicans refraining from ; , discussing it. To Redeem Greenbacks Only. ! The debate on the bond bill was opened bv Mr. Dingley, who advocated i's passage in a speech of scarcely an hour's duration. He said its provisions would tend to strengthen and protect the old reserve by making it a fund for tin* redemption of greenbacks only, and not a fund to be drawn upon for current expenses. The passage of the ! hill was also advocated in the course of the afternoon by Mr. Grosvenor, rep., Ohio, sis a patriotic duty; by Mr. Laeey, I rep., Ohio, and Mr. Johnson, rep., N. 1 | I), it was opposed by Mr. Turner, dem.. Ga., who said the administration ; wanted sill the paper money retired, j and that if he had an opportunity to do so, would have offered to so amend the bill; by Mr. I'utter.son, dem., Tenn., who said the duty of congress was to restore confidence in the currency of tne v otmtry, and by Messrs. Swaiison, tiem., Ya. and Wheeler, dem., Ala. Johnson's Sensational < lirg.*s. The sensation of the day came afc a la to hour in the alb-moon, when Mr. ' Johnson, rep., Cab, voiced in impas sioned maun r the opposition to the the ranlcs of the majority, lie said it gave the lie to every republican speech and every republican platform, and he pleaded with liis republican associates jto vote against it. lie was cheered by! i the democrats and many republicans us he j redicted the defeat of the first sec tion of the bill, and declared that the ! ! only true relief to be found was in the free and unlimited coinage of silver. ' Before the debate was entered upon by the unanimous report of the commit- ' tec on elections. No. 1, which coin-- mended Mr. MeGann for his fairness ' and justice in waiving his claim to the j | seat, Hugh Belknap was declared to be entitled to the seat from the third llli- ! nois district, for which Lawrence E. : MeGann held the certificate. Mr. Bclk- i j n ip was sworn in by the speaker. T: < financial question came to the ' : Iron in the senate ye.derday in the 1 form of a jo ol resolution introduced jby Mr. Hill, 1 • • tri., N. Y.. to the effect t bon is lo he hereafter issued shall bo mad-* payab'e in gold coin or in stuudard silver dollars, ;; i the option of tho holders; and that no bond con- j j taming such shall bear a higher rate i 10, i.merest than nor cent. He made j la long, carefully prepared speech on | the übji . \vhiding up ith iho dccla j ration that lr.s proposition v. as a raeas- j ure simply for temporary relief, but | tha u ir. a• ure of pennant nt relief I it \v;o reavoi.ebly e ee.r that all United j ! Sta'r-. in nd i ivasury notes should j ; be redei m; d and then cancolled. I.i ii.uv.oi Tell or and HiR. Mr. Trier, rep., Col., was wrought nn ton st i • of indignation by Mr. Hill'-pv '.- :i ii iinil speech; and in his in\ v-'-i Iv. the president, the see ret av; of the treasury and treasury sub..;- . i * s made a cutting allusion to "ti ■ iter waiter who now as- ; i m'.i::." ; ole on tin* financial mat- j | ier." Everybody believed that it was ! I the Now York senator who was thus j I r ft rri I o; but when Mr. Hill subse ' pi.-m, v lookup the offensive epithet j I he win. a.-suivd in the most positive i ! manner by Mr. Teller that ho had had ! ! reference whatever to the senator | j from Now York, hut had only meant to j apply the epithet to such subordinates j as the director of the mint and the as- ; I istant treasurer at New York. Mr. liill apparently accepted the disavow • al, but avenged himself in some de gree by the intimation that the diree ! tor of the mint was sis competent to ; speak on the financial question as j gentlemen who hailed from the wilds of Colorado. No Action Taken. The joint resolution remains on the vice-president's table l • he taken up for further d . ussu in connection with a substitute offered by the n<*w populist senator fr< m North Carolina, Mr. Butler, to make the interest and I principal of alt coin-bearing bonds pay - | able in the cheaper of Vie two metals. A joint r solution for tho acceptance of ' the ram Katahdin was reported from ilie committee on naval affairs and passed. The senate then adjourned until Monday next. No News from Abyss in la. j Rome, Dec. 27.—N0 official news lias j been received to -day I rum Abyssinia. POISONED BY IODINE. fainting )f the fcikln I'ollnwed ly Small pox-I.ike Eruptions. Hitherto the use of iodine in this way has not been followed by evil couse ; <jnone s, but a '.'use lias just occurred !in Ne Irunswiek v hich seems toshow that the stuff is not altogether harm ! less. A pat'ent was brought to the Cold stream Cottage hospital suffering with double pneumonia and advanced dis ease of the kidneys. The usual treat : mcnt necessary iu such cases was car ; ried out with great care and his condi ! lion was scrupulously noted. The con ! dition of his iuugs gradually improved, beginning 011 September 14 and con tinuing until and including September 18, his back was painted with dilute iodine liniment. On the 19tli, the day after the paint ing was stopped, the patient's face 1 • ssgflse&a Vvi* *lr % * **W&MHhfiJf I■' .;/f übgrP IIAM) POISONED BY IODINE. was completely covered with pustules, or eruptions, much resembling those 1 hat appear 011 the breaking out of smallpox. At the same time an eruption of a peculiar character made its appear and; 011 the back of his hands, wrists and forearms. The patient experienced severe smarting and heat in the face; otherwise there was 110 change in his condition'; The physician at first sup posed that the ease was one of small pox, but it afterwards proved to be a malignant instance of iodine poison ing. 011 September 27 the patient com plained to the nurse of headache and chilliness nil over the body. At 12 o'clock he was seized with sickness, nausea and vomiting. A severe stiff ness of the body set in, the pulse be came very rapid, and the breathing was labored. lie became rapidly uncon scious, with twitching of the hands and frothing at the mouth and nose. Profuse sweating preceded a violent convulsion. lie had ten similar at tacks, following each other rapidly. Chloroform was administered to re lieve his sufferings without success, and he died at 3:43 p. in. of the same | day. Several physicians who were present were startled at the eruption on the bauds, wrists and forearms, and ad -1 niitted that it was impossible, except en the most minute examination,, to detect the difference between iodine poisoning and smallpox. MERITS ENCOURAGEMENT. A Movement to Repair the Ilonse In Which Dr. JOIIIIHOII Was Horn. A movement has been inaugurated in Lichfield, England, to raise a fund with which to repair the house in which Dr. Samuel Johnson was born, and convert it into a museum and literary club. Most of the relies of Dr. Johnson re maining in the vicinity of his old homo are in the cathedral. Tliey are chiefly books, but are few, most of his posses sions having been willed at his death to Oxford. The house has lately been allowed to fall into decay. ft was built by the doctor's father, Michael Johnson, on land belonging to the corporation of Lichfield, and in 1707, as a mark of respect for the doctor, a lease for 99 years w as presented to him. The house is now practically as it was 100 years ago, the present owner hav ing purchased it. to prevent structural alterations. It stands at the corner of . pJ BIRTHPLACE OF PIL JOHNSON. the market-place, and opposite it is a statue of Dr. Johnson. Lichfield, says a writer iu Colliers' Weekly, was the scene of one incident in the life of Johnson which is worth recording here, being the one remark able romance with which he is associ ated. A young woman of Leek, iu Sta ffordshiie, fell in love with Johnson, followed him to Lichfield, and took lodgings opposite his house. When he learned the story he offered to marry her, but she died before this could be accomplished. She was buried in Lichfield cathedral and the inscription over her grave was placed there by Dr. Johnson. McutH'ftt .vian In Tennessee. "Talking about muzzling the ox that trendeth out the corn, the meanest man I ever knew," said Henry Wilson, of Savannah, to a reporter for the Atlanta Journal, "was an oltl fellow down in Tennessee. He hud a cherry orchard and in the season would hire a squad of boys to pick the fruit. The boys had to do two things—pick the cherries and whistle 'Dixie' continually. The mo mor.t one of them stopped warbling he was eatled up and promptly discharged. J iy this method the avaricious owner rendered it impossible for the boys to eat any of the cherries, and 1 imagine it was the most unique and original method ever invented to counteract deficits in e fruit eroo." PHELPS AND LINCOLN Invited To Serve as Vene zuelan Commissioners. The Third Member, Who la Likely To Bo One of the U. 8. Supreme Court Associate Justices, Not To Bo Chosen Until After the Other Two Have Accepted. Washington, Dec. 27.—1t is semi ofiicially reported that President Cleve land has asked Edward J. Phelps of Vermont, ex-minister to England, and Robert T. Lincoln of Illinois, also an ex-minister to the court of St. James, to serve on the Venezuela commission. The third place, it is rumored, will not Ibe tendered to any one until Mr. Phelps and Mr. Lincoln havQ,aceepted. The full commission, it is expected, will be announced next Monday. The third member is likely to be one of the associate justices of the United States supreme court, probably either Justice Brewer or Justice Brown. The presi dent thinks that the fact of one of the members of the supreme court temporarily leaving the bench to undertake this delicate task would add dignity to the commission. The ap pointment of either of these justices, together with that of Mr. Lincoln, would give the majority of the commis sion to the republicans. This fact j would, it is stated, relieved the presi dent from any suspicion that he was j working for the aggrandizement of his own party in creating an international : issue. J. C. SMITH KETUKNS. The Buffalo Contractor Denies That Ho Eloped Willi Mrs. Tennant. j Buffalo, Dee. 27. J. C. Smith, a well known contractor of this city, returned : here last night after an absence of sev eral weeks. j| A few months ago lie was engaged ou a municipal contract in I Bingliamton, N. Y., but was obliged to give it up. Shortly after leaving > the city it was reported in the newspa pers that lie had eloped with Mrs. 11. 1). Tennant, wife of the hotel keeper with whom he had been stopping. In an in j terview with a reporter Mr. Smith em phatically denied the story that lie went away with Mrs. Tennant. "1 have not seen her since I came away from there,'' he said. "It is true that I gave up the city contract, but 1 did it in a 1 regular and legitimate way. I notified my bondsmen and withdrew in a man ner satisfactory to everybody con ! cerned." GIVEN UP FOR LOST. Schooner J. 11. Carey Has Probably Gone Down with All on Board. Gloucester, Mass., Dec. 27.—The schooner J. 11. Carey, owned by Foster & Oakes of this city, sailed from here Aug. 20 011 a eodfishing trip to Grand bank, and as she has not been heard from for a long time it is though she was lost iu the heavy storms that pre vailed in the early fall. The rest of the fleet arrived more than a month ago and this is the only absent one. All hope of her crew ever returning again is considered doubtful. She car ried a crew of eleven when she sailed from here, but it is feared her captain shipped more men in the provinces. PRIZE CHINESE SCHOONER LOST lior Deck Officers aiul Sixty Men Probab'y Perished. Yokohama, Dec., 27. —The formidable cruiser Kvau-Ping, one of the war ships captured from China by the Jap anese during the recent war, was wrecked ou the Pescadore islands last Saturday. Nearly all her deck officers and sixty men are missing and were probably lost. G. A. R. COMMANDER JAM. S. Dean, Gn. Grant l'ost, Rondout, N. Y. CURED OF DYSPEPSIA. Commander Dean writes: "As Chief U. S. Mail Agent of the U. & 1). R. lb. good health is indispensable. I found myself however all run down with Dys pepsia. 1 doctored and doctored, but I grew worse. I suffered misery night and day, for fully two years. My case was pronounced incurable. I chanced to meet Dr. Konnody about that time, and told him of my condition and he said, try a bottle of BH. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY take It morning, noon and night, and it will cure you. 1 took the medicine as directed, but bad no confidence in a cure, as my case had been tried by so many. After using it a week I began to feel bettor, and in a short while after that I was entirely cured. That terri ble distress, everything 1 ate breaking up sour in my throat, had all gone and 1 have not had a moment's discomfort since. Today there isn't a healthier man and my appetite is grand." Dr. H. W. MONROE, Jlentist. Located permanently in Birkbeck brick, second floor, room s 1, 2 and 3, over Smith's shoe store, Freeland, Pa. Gas and ether administered for the pain less extraction of teeth. Teeth filled and ar tificial teeth inserted. Reasonable prices and ALL WORK GUARANTEED. Jolt n .1 ugustaitis, dealer In Whiskey, Wine, Beer, Ale, Cigars, Etc. Elegant Pool Room Attached. Corner South and Washingtou Streets. THE UNIVERSAL 30 E. Broad Street. 29-3] E. Mine Street, Hazleton. Everything in the way of Holiday Novelties and Fancy Goods will be closed out, regardless of cost or value! Cloak Department: " e CLve still showing several pretty styles of the lat est novelties in Ladies' Jackets in complete lines of sizes, which were received specially for the holidays; they will now go for whatever they can fetch, regard less of value. Fur Capes: We will offer specially low prices in Wool Seal and X.XX.XX Electric Seal, trimmed with Marten, also a few 18-inch, 20-inch and 22-inch Trilby Capes, plain and trimmed, xhich were sent on consignment. Dress Goods: This department is teeming over with choice novel ties, in< lading a few extremely handsome Pattern Th cs, es which are marked down so low that they will* prove a good bait for the early purchaser. Neck Scarfs and Muffs: These articles in Ear afford, greater means to pro tect yourselves from the bitter and biting weather of this mountain top, at below zero prices. Extraordi nary values in Ladies' Children's and Gentlemen's Underwear. Our revised prices will give you a pleas ant surprise. Low prices on Blankets, Comfortables and Quilts. AiiW J. IAIH. r Are the only HIGH GRADE and strict ly first class pianos sold direct from the factory to the final buyer. Are the only pianos on which you can save the dealers' profits and enor mous expenses, agents' salaries and music teachers' commissions. Are the only pianos etrer y agent condemns, for the natural reason that NO AGENTS are em ployed by us. Are the only pianos which are not sold in a single store in the United States, because we closed all our agencies over a year ago, and now sell only to the filial buyer, at the actual cost of production at our factory. We have no store on Broad street, but the factory ware room is open every day till 0 p. m., *" and Saturday evenings from 7 to 10. Kellmer Piano Co. TIE I PIMOS i FACTORY: CHESTNUT STREET, 11ET WE EN CIIURCh AND LAUREL, RAXLETON. T. CAMPBELL, dealer ID Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes. Also PURE WINES and LIQUORS FOR FAMILY AND MEDICINAL PURPOSES. Cor. Centre and Main Streets, Freeland. GEORGE FISHER, dealer in FRESH BEEF, PORK, VEAL, MUTTON, BOLOGNA, SMOKED MEATS, ETC., ETC. Call at No. 6 Walnut street, Freeland, or wait for the delivery wagons. VERY LOWEST PRICES. J. F. BARBER & CO. 120 W. Broad St., Hazleton. 1 Dealers in Stoves, Tinware, House j Furnishing Goods, Roofing, Cor- j - nice Work, Mine Supplies. JOBBERS OF GROCERS' SUNDRIES. > jfc Keelev Institute 1 1 Harrisburg, Pa. FOR THE CURE OF Alcoholism, Narcotic Addic ions. The Tobacco Habit. I None but genuine Keelev remedies are used. No restraint. No risk. The treatment abso lutely removes all desire for aieoholie stimu lants and drugs. , Literature free. Correspondence confi dential. W. S. THOMAS, Mgr., P. 0. Box 594, Ilarrisburg. Harness! Harness! Light Carriage Harness, 15.50, $7, |9 and $10.50. Heavy Express Harness. $10.50, sl9, S2O and $22. Heavy Team Harness, donble, $25, S2B anjJ S3O. GEO. WISE, Jeddo and Freeland, Pa. Read - the - Tribune.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers