FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TliOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months '.5 Four Months 50 Two Months 25 Subscribers are requested to observe the figures following the name on the lubcls of their papers. By reference to these they can ascertain to what date their subscriptions are paid. For instance: Urover Cleveland 28Juno90 means that orover is paid up to June 28, 1890. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report promptly to this office whenever you do not receive your paper. All arrear ages must be puid when paper is discontinued. FREELAND, PA., MARCH 5, 1896. Spuin and the United States. From the Wilkesbarro Newsdealer. As was to be expected the more excit able faction of Spain's population is in dignant at the threatened action of tin l United States government to rccogni/.e the Cubans as belligerents. Some of the hotheads are allowing their passions to get the best of their judgment and are committing various depredations which have a tendency to wound the pride of this country. The government of Spain has promptly disavowed the in sult otTered our Hag by the impassioned Spaniards, but all the same the affair at Barcelona Is not going to help the cause of peace. Viowing the matter from a conserva tive point of view, Spain has no cause to complain of the position taken by the United States. In fact we think we have been unusually impatient under tho circumstances. After a year of war under Spain's ablest general, the rebels, with few guns, scant ammunition, no cannon, no licet and no communication with the outer world, hold three-fourths of the island and are so close to Havana that their signal rockets and camp-fires may be seen from housetops in that city. Ha vana is in effect belcagured on the land side. She has no secure communication with any island point more than ten miles beyond her walls. Spain's great army is unable to make headway even in its own neighborhood. The new captain-general, selected for his known savagery of mind, has tried to overawe the insurgents by threaten ing to treat any prisoners he may take as so many bandits. He proposes to convert the war into barbaric butchery, denying to his opponents the rights that all civilized nations accord to armed in surgents everywhere. ]And yet we are told by Spanish statesmen in cable dis patches from Madrid that our country "has 110 pretext" for recognizing the right of these men to fight for liberty and achieve the independence of their country if they can. Technically, under the hard rules of international law, it may be true that the Cubans are not yet entitled to re cognition as belligerents. Hut where liberty and humanity are involved the American people on occasion recognize a higher law than the rules laid down by traditions for the government of in ternational affairs. The American peo ple sympathize with the Cubans, and the senate resolutions only give oxpresions to the national feeling. the Wilson Itill. When the Wilson tariff bill was pend ing in congress Walter Gaston, superin tendent of the Hazard Itope Works, of Wilkesbarre, spent a great deal of time in Washington. He told the congress men that the wire rope industry of the country would be ruined if the Wilson bill became a law. In this he was as sisted by the congressman who then represented this district, an 4 the two worked night and day to have the rate on wire rope made a great deal higher than the framers of the bill thought proper. Time lias shown that Mr. Gas ton and Congressman Ilines were wrong, and the Democrats were right. The Wilson bill passed, but the wire rope in dustry was not ruined. It was never in better shape than now. One of the largest mills in the country is located at Wilkesbarre. Wire ropes and cables are shipped to all parts of the land. Gaston's mill is working day and night, and ground is to be broken for an addi tion which will nearly double the capa city of the plant. Sound Advice from Singcrlyi From the Philadelphia Record. If tli is country should become involved in activo hostilities with England over Venezuela and with Spain for Cuba, what would become of the A. I*. A.? Obviously, such an organization could not exist in a period of war, when citi zens, without distinction of creed, would he required to perform military service, and when all who should perform such services would be entitled to equal civic and political rewards. In view of pos sible contingencies, would it not be well for the A. I*. A. to disband now, when there is peace? An organization can have no reason for existence in a time of peace when it would necessarily dissolve in the midst of war. When Baby was sick, wo gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria 31.50 a year is. all the Tiiiia'NK costs. Possibilities of the Cathode Hay. Ordinary people, who don't buy bonds, are talking 1 more about the Roentgen discovery than about any thing 1 else. It is Ihe most genuinely astonishing thing 1 in science since the invention of the phonograph. llic medical aspect of the discovery, which may lead to the photographing of one's internal organs as a preliminary 1o every visit to the doctor, is possibly the most interesting side cf the matter; though the. promise of a French savant to so adapt the "cathode rays"—if they are the cathode rays—to the eyes that we can all see through solid substances, may be the most startling feature of all. If the day should ever come, says the Boston Transcript, when that should be done, what a world of hum bugs would be at an end! Clothes, of course, after that would be worn sim ply as a protection against cold. Every body could see how much money every body else had in his pocket. Skeletons would be visible in carefully-locked closets. We could begin to feel that the very secrets of our hearts were be ing laid bare. And even now we see rather more than is good for us. Let us hope, on the whole, that the cathode rays will be left to the camera. That is bad enough! THERE is probably no other city in the world where such an annual in crease of population has to be pro vided for, as in Ch'eago. The city is growing at the rate of 05,000 yearly, and 13,000 of this number are children of school age. Fifteen new buildings ure imperatively required to accommo date this increase, and 14 more for the nearly equal number of children now housed in rented rooms. But, fortu nately for Chicago, her hoard of educa tion does not have to eope with this tre mendous problem with the feeble means that are at the disposal of too many other cities. It is not dependent on councils lor school funds in Chicago, but has been empowered by the legis lature to make a five per cent, levy on real estate in the city, two-fifths of which may be used for salaries and three-fifths for building purposes—"a sum amply sufficient to provide whole some and comfortable accommodation for every child of school age in the city." Two BROTHERS who had been sep arated for 42 years, each thinking the other dead for more than 30 years, were reunited in Cochran, Ga., recent!}'. Their name is Ingram, and one is a hotel proprietor in Cochran. They parted in 1854, and at the outbreak of the war lost all trace of each other. All efforts of each to learn the other's whereabouts at the close of the war were iiiisuocess fill, and each mourned the other us dead. A week or FO since a commercial travel er stopping at Mr. Ingram's hotel in Cochran remarked that he knew a man named Ingrain in Pike county, Ala.. who bore a strong resemblance to the liotclkceper. From what the traveler related Mr. Ingram thought the Ala bama man might be his brother, wrote to him, and found that he was. Soon afterwards the two brothers met in Cochran. THE youngest daughter of a revolu tionary soldier, so far as known, was discovered at Lebanon, Conn., recently, and added to the membership of the Willimantic chapter of the Daughters of the Devolution. She is Mrs. Au gustus Avery, and is only 50 years old Jler father was 74 years old at the time of her birth. He was doubtless one of the youngest soldiers in the war. There are only eight other daughters of rev olutionary soldiers belonging to the order. CALIFORNIA and Mexico have a new competitor in tlie matter of supplying oranges to the rest of the world. The oranges grown near Jerusalem are light in color, of oval shape, and the fruit is packed with more care than that from other countries. The first consignment, which reached this coun Iry recently, attracted much attention. The oranges were grown between Jerusalem and Jaffa and are worth be tween $4 and $4.50 a ease. The receipts of the 30 largest posl oflices of the United States for the month of January, 1896, amounted to $2,9412,340, a net increase over the first month of 1895 of $215,000. All the oflices show an increa-se except San Francisco and Milwaukee, where the decreases were $723 and SS,GOG respect ively. New York city heads the list, followed by Chicago, 'Philadelphia, Boston, St. Louis, Cincinnati and Brook lyn- LIVE QUESTIONS! '•A View of Patriotism," •by John Turner White, of Springfield, Maine. "Vox Populi," by J. W. Caldwell. Monday Next, - - March 9. ROBBING A SPIDER. A Simple Device for Keeling Out Hie Web from IIN Splnnero. This is written for boys only. Girls, of course, wouldn't touch the nasty things—not for anything. Unless, in deed, there is a "new" girl, too; and I rather hope there isn't, for I um such an old boy now that 1 don't like innova tions. The old girls—that is, the sort of girls 1 used to know —seem to me hardly to cdmit of improvement. And they just hated spiders. But 1 was a boy, and to me a big, fat. sprawly spider was one of the most interesting things iu nature. One day I was watching a flue large specimen completing his web. The stay-ropes were already stretched across the open window; and begin ning where they crossed he was hob bling round and round fastening the cross-lines of fresh shiny silk. Suddenly it occurred to me that I might reel out that silk for my own use DUEL BETWEEN SPIDER AND LARGE ANT. —or amusement. Really, 1 fancied myself on the verge of a great discov cry. Why might not a most beautiful fabric be made of that glistening ma terial? Who could tell what might come of it? So 1 managed to get hold of the end of the strand, and began to draw itoul. Now if there is anything that a spider particularly detests it is to be robbed of his silk; no paek-peddler values his stock half so highly. As soon, there fore, as my victim perceived what 1 waa at, he reached back with a claw and snipped the thread. This was repeatec several times. Then I saw that I must devise some means for preventing this sort of in terference. So 1 cut a small round hole in a bit of cardboard, and made a slit from the hole to the edge—see cut This arrangement I slipped about my spider's wusp-like waist. As his legs were on one side of Ihc card,and his ab domen with the spinuers on the other he could no longer meddle with the thread; neither could he get out of the sort of pillory in which I had placed him. lie wasn't hurt in the leust, but lie was altogether helpless and in the worst ol humors. Then I got hold of the strand with a pair of tweezers and proceeded to draw out as much silk as I pleased, winding it about mv linger. But this process was slow, and did not satisfy me. 1 wanted spider's silk in bulk; my head was full of schemes for producing a new and beautiful fab ric from this bright and elastic ma terial. I therefore mounted a spool upon a spindle in sueli away that i could make it rotate with great, speed by means of a band running from a wheel—about eight inches in diameter -—which 1 turned with a crank. To this spool I attached the end of the thread, and set my machine in motion. It was a great success. The spindle sang like a humming-top as it spun on itiS bearings, reeling his precious silk from that disgusted spider until the glistening thread covered the spool :is with a sheet of varnish. An angrie" insect, I fancy, never lived; but. what, could he do about it? And afterward-' I fed him well byway of compensation. Thus far my plans had worked to perfection; but when 1 endeavored to HEELING BILK FROM TIIE RELUCTANT SPIDER. utilize tho material so unscrupulously obtained, like many another thief I l>ecame involved in difficulties. I found that the adhesive strands —so perfect ly adapted to the owner's own business of fly-catching', were not so well suited to manufacturing purposes as I had fondly hoped. In fact they had glued themselves together so firmly that 1 was never able to unwind them from the spool; and my invention, though highly interesting, did not prove re munerative —a lucky thing for the spiders. There were other experiments that I tried with these ungainly pets —some of them too cruel, as I now realize, but 1 was quite unconscious of it then. For example, I often wafted Hies against a large fresh web, and in this way 1 presently discovered that the ordinary spider, though he has eyes with num berless facets, is really almost blind, lie does r.ot trust to sight at all. lie stands waiting at the center of his web, his feet clutching the strands. When a fly strikes against tho meshes tho spider gives the whole fabric a sharp shake, if the fly remains still the owner of the web srems unable to lo cnte him, but if he buzzes or straggles Mr. Spider is down on him in an in- Riant, and hastily incusing him lu a winding sheet of silk, bears him hack j and hangs hiin up to be devoured at I leisure. Once, I remember, I presided at an ! encounter between a spider and a buin i ble bee. The bee, of course, buzzed loudly. The spider rushed upon him, i uas stung, and hastily withdrew. Again • the bee buzzed, and again the spider, unable to resist his instinct, rushed to the attack —with the same result. At hist, however, the spider managed to get his silken shroud about bis foi midable prey, aud bore him off in tri umph. He was not so fortunate, however, with a large, black ant which I treach erously dropped upon his web. The ant began to struggle, and down came the spider; whereupon the ant coolly I bit off one of his legs. The spider with drew in dismay. But being a ravenous old fellow of great size, the destroyer of unnumbered flies, lie could not for bear a second attack. He strained his mandibles without effect on the hard armor of the ant, who meanwhile nipped off another log. In the third attack the ant began to operate on his enemy's übdoraen; and the spider, escaping with difficulty, re treated utterly discomfited. Then the ant proceeded to break the meshes, and fell unharmed to the lloor. Thus were the flies avenged. C. KAY. SMART BLACKBIRDS. Gon. Lew Wallace Tells a Good Story of Their Sagacity. Gen. Lew Wallace related an incident which shows to a remarkable extent the wonderful sagacity and memory of blackbirds. "At 1113' home over in Crawfordsville," said the general, "we have a large num ber of tall trees on the lawn, and in'thc course of time these trees became the roosting place at certain times of the year for hundreds of thousunds of blackbirds. They came in great, black clouds, and in spite of all I could do they refused to leave. Of course, they were a great nusiance, and I was in de spair as to some means of getting clear of them. I stood for da 3's with my gun {•ring into them of an evening and kill ing hundreds of them, but the rest did not seem to be sufficiently struck by fear or grief to want to part company A FEW SHOTS PUT TIIE.M TO TI.IGIIT. with me and mv hospitalit}'. I thou devised a new scheme. "Procuring a number of Roman can dles one evening I l'ghted them one by ne after dark, when the boughs of the rees were bent low with the weight of the crooking birds, and I poured the •andles into the tops of the trees at a great rate. The sudden innovation -.taitled the birds a.s nothing had ever bone before, and they became panic si ricken. That night 1 was free of them. u Tlie next evening, however, tin habit of returning there to roost was stronger than fear, and they began coming in by thousands as soon as the e.ening approached. After dark I be gan with another volley of candles, nnd the birds began to realize that there wasaAletermined bombardment in prog ic-ss. They fled precipitately, tftid the third evening only a few returned. A few last shots put them to flight, and I was troubled no more. "But what do you think those birds did? My dividing fence runs between the trees on my property and the trees on the property of my neighbor, which are equally high and suitable for a home for the blackbirds. When the the birds were driven from my lot they flew over across the dividing fence to the trees of my neighbor nnd settled. There was no bombardment over there, and they stayed there ever since. "This was u long time ago, but never since the last Roman candle wus fired into them lias one of those birds settled on one of my trees. They are 'tabooed' as effectually as though they were on fire. The great clouds of birds each morning and evening fly directly over my trees, going and coming, but not a bird settles upon a tree that is on my side of the dividing fence. "Another st range thing is that if any one of an evening stands in my lawn ind makes a slight noise, as slapping his hands, there will be the wildest com motion among the birds in the neigh boring trees. They become restless nnd almost panic-stricken. If, however, the same person crosses the fence ami stands directly under them and makes twice as much noise, they pay no atten tion whatever to him. lie can even shoot up into them without driving them from their perches. "1 have wondered several times just what impression those birds have of me end my property that they have so de cidedly given me the cold shoulder. They know every tree that is on the ot her side of the fence within n few feet of the dividing line. Of course, I have not bothered them over there, as they uere not my guests."—lndianapolis Sentinel. NEWS IN BRIEF. Monaco, Fob. 88 —The Duke and Ducwebs of Marlborough and W. K. Vanderbilt have arrived at M nto Carlo. Vienna, Feb. 88. —Archduke Al brecht Salvator did yesterday after noon from consumption. He was born Nov. 22, 1871. Corry, Pa,, Feb. 88.—By the bursting of a batting saw in the pa 1 factory yesterday afternoon Fred Moffit, 27 years of age, was horribly mangled and killed. New York, March 2.—James Gordon Bennett has reduced the price of the Evening Telegram, which is the even ing edition of the Herald, to one cent. The reduction takes effect to-day. Worcester, Mass., March 2.—Hon. W. W. Ilice, ex-congressman and brother-in-law of Senator Hoar, died at his home here last evening from organic trouble .of the heart, aged 70 von vs. He was the oldest ex-jnayor of this city. .-alem, Mass., Feb. 28.—The bail of Clarence Murphy, who was indicted on 129 counts for alleged embezzlement of $17,000 from the Salem Savings bank, as been increased to $25,000, and in default of sureties he has been re manded to jail. Ithaca, N. Y., Feb. 28. —Edward 0. Wyckoff of this city has announced that he will present Cornell university with a bui ding to be used exclusively for the training of crews. The build ing will be located on the campus and coutuin a modern rowing tank. Utica, N. Y., Fob. 28. —Fred Bristol, one of the four boys indicted Wednes day for murder in the first degree for Ciusing the deaths of two men b3" wrecking a New York Central train near Rome, died of consumption at the jail in this cit3* yesterda}' afternoon. New York, March 3.—Yesterday was the lost day for the payment of the sec ond instalment on the 4 percent, bonds just issued bj' the government. At the sub-treasury it was stated this morning that all but six of the bidders whose payments were due yesterday had paid up. Middletown, Conn., Feb. 28.—Prof. C. D. Woods, vice-director of Storrs Agricultural college station in this cit}', has been appointed dean of the agricultural department of the Maine State college and director of the Maine experiment station at Orouo, Me. lie will accept. Savannah, Ga., March 2.—The steam ship Laurada dropped down the river yesterday afternoon with 311 colored emigrants bound for Liberia on board The party is seut out by the interna tional Emigration society of Birming ham, Ala., this being the second partv' sent out within a 3'ear. Wcstbrook. Me., March, 1. —The Pro sumscott river is rapidly rising. It has swollen to the height of twelve feet above the average in twenty-fcur hours. Two small bridges at da build ing, occupied as a club room and so store, have been carried away, beside* the large stone building of S. D. War ren & Co.'s paper mills. (li'c :go, Feb. 28.—Joseph Dunlop, editor of the Dispatch, convicted of sending improper matter through the m :iis and sentenced to pay a fine of $l,O Oaud servo two years in the peui- # tentiary, will now appeal to the presi dent, this being the only course open to him, since approval of the convic tion by Judge Urossoup yesterday. Albany, March 3.—The freshet of the Hudson river at this point is slowly subsiding and the real btate of affairs is just being- realized. Many poor families have lost all that they pos sessed. and Mayor Thacher has issued a jroc'amation asking for relief for die sufferers. The poliee are patroliug the lower portions of the city iu boats carrying relief to the destitute families. Middlctown, Conn., Feb. 28.—The inquest yesterday afternoon revealed tlui fact that Timothy Farmelee of Co belt was most brutally murdered Wed nesday night, his skull being fractured by a tlatiron in several places, and four ribs on each side broken. He lived alone and was eccentric. Robbery was the cause,*sloo and a goltj. watch being missed.. There is no trace of the murderers. Chicago, Mareli 2.—As a result of Ed. Corrigan's visit to Chicago the $25,000 Chicago Derby has been official ly declared off. No payments have been ma le on it, and the first declarations arc due to-daj'. There are 247 entries, and the stake was too costly to trans fer. The only Hawthorne stakes now left are the Stallion stakes of 1897 and 1898. Wilkesbarre, Pa., March 2.—Hugh J. Williams, aged 81, was killed on S.i turd ay'night by an explosion of gnir in the Franklin mine; John W. Jones was seriously injured, and Daniel llaker was slightly bruised by flyii g rock. The explosion occurred in a tunnel whore men were blasting rock. In tamping the powdor ignited, caus- # ing the blast to go off sooner than ex pected. Madrid, March —A dispatch fr m Havana to the Imparcial says that Capt.-tien. Weyler is satisfied with the progress ho is making towards sup pressing the insurrection. He beliefs that it is the best policy to strike aL the root of the revolt before lopping off the branches. The dispatch adds that Spanish troops arte constantly in pursuit of tiomez and Mateo. l a re, Vt., March I.—Never in t? e history of llarre has high water done so much damage as in the last twenty four hours. The heavy rain caused a vast amount of snow to melt und late Saturday night the ice in the river went out with a rush, shaking the heaviest blocks and tearing away many supports along the river bank. This rush of ice threw water in many basements and the occupants had :io warning. The water then receded, but rain set in aguiti in tlje middle of the night, and this morning the streets are submerged. HENLEY REGATTA. , Tale Students' Request for Permission To Jf.nter the Races Granted. New Haven, Conn., March 3.—A conference of the academic and scion tific branches of the Yale faculty was held last night, and it was decided tliat the request of the university navy man agement to enter an eight in the Hen ley regatta in July would be granted. The faculty have allowed every point of the petition of the navy. The lattei asked that permission be allowed them to sail on June 6 before the close of the semi-annual examinations, in order that they might become acclimated be fore the race on the Thames. This request was granted, and the Yale oarsmen will leave New York on that date, probably by the Cunard line. The faculty stated to the crew manage ment, after the meeting last night, that the most stringent scholarship standard would be required from the oarsmen who were allowed to cross the water, and any candidate whose schol arship was in doubt would not be al lowed to represent Yale at Henley. The navy management will issue a call for a university mass meeting to settle details of Yale's entry in a day or two. FURTHER SHORTAGE. Report of Examine™ of the Rooks of Ei- Attorney Moreland of Pittsburg. Pittsburg, Feb. 29.—The city audi tors engaged in examining the accounts of ex-City Attorney Moreland against whom a number of indictments for malfeasance in office, embezzlement, etc., are pending, have reported to City Comptroller Gourley a further shortage of 33,726.33. The comptrol ler's report of the discovery will be given to a special meeting of common council next Tuesday. The new 4 'hold out" was in the street opening account which the ex-city attorney handled himself and never reported to any other city officer. No farther informations will Ifc made against Major Moreland until city council takes action on the comptroller's report. Verdict for PerHonal Injuries Sustalnet?* Boston, Fob. 21).—The full bench of the supr me court has overruled the demur re in the case of Jennie A. Gor don against the New York, New Ha ven & Hartford railroad. In the lower court the jury rendered a verdict of $4,000 for the plnintiff, who was in jured by reason of a defoct iu the floor of the company's depot at Holbrook. Plaintiff had bought a ticket and was held to be a passenger. The verdict stan Is. St. Patrick's I)iiy Banquet. Albany, March 3. —Senators and members of assembly interested in the celebration of St. Patrick's day have arranged for a banquet at the hotel Ken more on March 17. The toasts are: "The United States," by United States Senator David B. Hill; "The State of Now York," by Lieut.-Gov. Saxton; "The Day We Celebrate,". Bishop Burke; "Civil and Religious Libcrtj-," Senator Jacob A. Cantor. Four Schooners Mining;, Philadelphia, March 2.—Great anxi ety exists in shipping' circles over the fate of fonr Philadelphia schooners which sailed from North Carolina ports twenty-fivedaysagoandof which on tidings have since been heard. The missing vessels are Franic S. Hale, the Melvin, the S. Warren Hall and the Eunice R. Dyer. The crews of the four vessels number sixty men in all. Secured by the Ul.ouit Trust, Baltimore,' March 3.—The James D. ■Mason & Co.'s steam bakery at 17 West Pratt street, the largest bakery in the south, has passed into the hands of the New York Biscuit company. The head quarters of the biscuit trust is at Chi cago, and word comes from there that two other Baltimore bakeries will shortly pass into the control of the New York Biscuit company. A. It. Leo's Sudden Death. Erie, Pa., March 2.—A. R. I.ee of the W. Ij. Hcott Coal company of Erie died unexpectedly yesterday at the ago of 59 years. Deceased began life as a oil operator and then went into the coal business. In 1870 he joined W. L. Scott in his coal operations and at the time of his death was the western manager with headquarters in Chicago, lie leaves a large fortune. Now York State Mortal ty. Albany, March 3.—The bulletin of the board of health of the state for the month of January shows that there were 10,176 deaths during the month, and an estimated death rate of 18.50, there having been an average daily mortality of 328, against one of 305 in December, and one of 354 in Jan lary, 1895. The Armenian Relief. \ Constantinople, Feb. 29.—An imperial irado has been issued permitting Miss "Clara Barton, president of the Ameri can Red Cross society, and lur repre sentatives, to travel in Anatolia and distribute relief to sufferers there. Jnited States Minister Terrell accom panied Miss Barton and her party to Selamlik, Prof. II rooks Again Honored, Geneva, N. V., Feb. 29.—Prof. Wm, It. Brooks has been awarded the medal of the Astronomical society of the Pa o fic for the discovery of his latest comet. This is the fifth honor of the kind bestowed ufou Prof. Brooks. McKiuley Ditlcgates Chosen. Topeka, Kan,, March 2.—Thirty re publican county conventions to select delegates to tlio state convention*were hold Saturday. Nearly all of the con ventions instructed their delegates in favor of McKiuley. Howling ' Cough, 1 ' a L.fl disease! V v those at- • v ! hyj- Jacked die. , 1 P The disease progresses so rapidly that | 1 1 the loss of a few hours in treatment is ( 1 often fatal. ACKER'S EnoIISII KeME- , ' t t>Y will cure Croup, and It should al- , • • ways ho kept in the house for emergencies. A 25 cent bottle nmy • ' save your child's life. , 1 , Three sizes: s3c, 50c. SI. All Druggists- j A CKER MEDICINE CO. ' 1 16 Cr 18 Chambers St., New York. | T■i> rA 1 11 >ol^ Intellectual and practical (raining for teachers Three courses of study besides preparatory. Special attention given to preparation for college. Students admitted to bestcollcges-on certificate, thirty gtadu atcs pursuing further studies last year. t'.icut adx ar tages for special studies i:t art and music. Model school of three hundred pupils Corps of sixteen teachers, beautiful grounds. Magnificent buildings. I.arge grounds for athletics. Elevator and infirmary with attendant nurse. Fine gymnasium. Everything furnished at an average cost to normal students of SHJ,a year. Fall term, Aug. 28 Winter teini, Dec. 2. Spring term, March 16. Students admitted to classes at any t me. For catalogue, containing full information, apply to g| ,| \LBRO, p r : nc | pa |, Mansfield, Pa. W&ffi ( 1 a A^wc cau °nly sell / WLmr cup y° u one package \ B of coffee' ? f H Seel ' s \ w . e 1 better stop bust /ctrnwr I ncss " we're in \ pEELIG S. yooa business because \isn t it. This ad- those who try it /mixture gives or- keep on buying, I di narycoffeea de- mmmmmmmmmmmmmrnrn Vdeliciouß flavor. pa \ c^* g ,. f 4