FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED F.VKIIY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. THOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STREET*ABOVE CENTRE. SUIISCIIIPTION RATRS: One Year $1.50 Six Months 73 Four Months 50 Two Months Subscribers are requested to observe the tltfurcs following the name on the labels of their papers. By reference to these they can ascertain to what date their subscriptions arc paid. For instance: Grover Cleveland 28JuneiM means that flrover is paid up to June IK9O. Keep the flKures in advance of flic present date. Report promptly to this office whenever you do not receive your paper. All arrear ages must be paid when paper is discontinued. FREEHAND. PA., MARCH 19. 1890. An All-Roumi Teacher. The big* schoolboy who attempts t.) bully the slig-ht, delicate-appearing "sclioolmarm" sometimes makes a mis (take. The "sclioolmarm" may not have the appearance of possessing great physical strength, but occasionally we hear of instances of her subduing the most unruly. Such a case happened out in Sod us, Wayne county, the other day, when George Ilardy, 19 years old and the biggest boy in school, undertook to overawe Miss Maynard, the teacher,who is barely live feet in height and quite slender. Trouble had existed for some time, but one Monday Miss Maynard ordered Hardy to her desk. When lie refused to come and dared her to touch him she overpowered and thrasjied him (Soundly, despite the fact that lie weighed nearly 200 pounds. Hardy seemed cowed, but on the following morning he got two other youth? named Dunbar and Pulverto help him lock the teacher out. Summoning a trustee as a witness, Miss Maynard broke in the door and thrashed all three boys in less than live minutes, so Trustee Mason declares. He says their combined weight is 510 pounds, and her weight is only 120. She was the crack female athlete at the Fredonia normal school when she graduated. The dis trict trustees, who are uow very proml of her, believe that her strength, like Samson's, lies in her hair, which is as led as it can be. Cigarette-Smoking Schoolboys. The school board of Santa Ana,CCal f found that for some reason the boys in the public schools were not nearly so proficient in their studies a.s the girls, and an investigation was instituted to discover the cause—whether the boys were being neglected by their teachers or whether a lack of discipline was chargeable with the fact that the boys were not doing well. The investigation was had, and it was found that 90 per cent, of the boys between the ages of 12 and 15 years who attended the pub lic schools smoke cigarettes. The in vestigation did not require to be pushed r.ny further. It is sufficiently well known that cigarette smoking blunts the intellect as well as undermines the constitution. I IT is related of a well-known Mary land merchant that, after making his will and leaving a large property to a trustee for his son, he called the young man in, and, after reading the will to >him, asked if there wa.i any improve* incut or alteration he could suggest. "Well, father," said the young gentle man, lighting a cigarette, "I think, as things go nowadays, it would l>e better .for me if you left the property to the other fellow and made me trustee." iThe old gentleman made up his mind /then and there that tine young man .was quite competent to take charge of fhls own inheritance and scratched out the trustee clause. THERE is only one colored man in all of Deer Isie, Me., which has a popula tion of about 5,000 persons, including /the sailor.nen who sailed the Defender last fall. The colored citizen is Oliver iVan Metei He is 77 years old, and he distinguished himself last week by (getting married. Colored folk are rare in many parts of Maine. Many towns and villages have not one colored resi dent, and the children regard any jncgro who may stray into their neigh- borhood as a great curiosity, and will •follow him about open-mouthed. ( MUCH lias been written about the new •experimental* colony established at (Fitzgerald, Ga. One of the notable fea ftures of the colony is that negroes are mot allowed in it under any circum stances. Another colony, with similar restriction, is soon to be established in "Ware county, near Fitzgerald. Mean time a colony of colored people is being established on the & Way cross railroad, adjoining the Fitzgerald •colony. In this no white people are to be allowed under any circumstances. ALBANY, On., has a quaint, advertiser, •whose specialty is roof fixing, and style is shown in this paragraph: "Lots of men would be upstuckin and higgety when everybody pruirfhd their •work. Hut lam not that way. J speak just as politely to a poor man as I do jto one who owns a metal roof. That's fny way." Now there's the true demo cratic spirit.. There is nothing like keeping your feet on the earth if your Jicad is in the clouds. LShoes, shoes, shoes, at McDonald s. PATROLING THE BEACH. A Duty Which the 1,1 re Savers Are Culld Upon to I'erforui. The patrol from sunset to sunrise is one of the most important duties in the service, and the most careful rules are laid down in regard to its performance. When stations are near together, as on dangerous coasts, the two patrol men l'roin Station "B," starting along tlie beach in opposite directions, walk until they meet patrolmen from "U" and "D," with x\hom they exchange checks, and return to thetir own station. At the end of a week the checks are re turned to their proper stations, and tins is kept up during the season, week after week. The keepers of lonely stations pro vide the surfmen with time-detectors. A time-detector is similar to a clock with a hinged cover, fastened by a PATItOLMEX EXCHANGING CHECKS. lock—the key to which is retained by the keeper; beneath the cover a revolv ing plate supporting a paper dial is 1 placed and a die so arranged that when a patrol-key is inserted and • turned in the clock a mark is niadc upon the paper dial recording the hour | of striking. At 1 lie end of the "beat" j is a post to which a key is affixed; when the patrolman reaches this lie winds the clock—the dial-plate is marked; , failure to be at the clock, without good j and sufficient reason, is punished b3' dismissal. At midnight, at such a station, the keeper gives to the two patrolmen a ! clock containing fresh dial-plates, and i these two men, going in opposite direc tions, patrol the beach till four in the I morning. When these return to the station, two other men take their ' places till sunrise. The next night, at sunset, two new men keep guard until eight in the evening, and at that hour their places are taken by two othrcs until midnight. Then, returning to the station, the keeper is called, new dial-plates are inserted in the clocks, they are locked and given to two new patrolmen, who walk till four in the morning. So from sunset till sunrise ! our American coasts are patroled by solitary watchmen, on the lookout for vessels in danger. No weather is severe enough to daunt these brave men, and they trudge all night in rain, hail, wind or snow, while we are comfortably sleeping. The patrol duty at a station is so ax- j ranged that those men who have the j long patrol one month are put on The short patrol the next; the night- j watches are divided into three watches I of four hours each.—"The Story of a Life-Saving Station," by Teresa A. Brown, in St. Nicholas. HIS MOTHER'S LOOK. How u Wild Roy Repented and llccame a Most Worthy Man. The following touching incident was once related by a Jesuit father: "I have known a stud, lit whose disso- ! lute and wicked life had caused him to I be cast into chains and locked up in j tl.e for'tress of Elnenbivi tein. His fa- j ther was long since dead. His mother, therefore, hud to bear alone the grief caused by the degenerated child. "Jl is difficult to express how keenly j it gnawed on the mother's heart; in ;he soul of the criminal, however, it j was, and remained as dark as in file j prison where he was chained, not the ! hast sign of repentance. No wonder that such sorrow, which by day and by night- afflicted the poor mother of the impenitent son laid her on the bed of j death. "Seeing tin- hour of dissolution ap proach, she sent a petition to the com- I mandcr of the fortress to bring her | child once more before her dying bed. t He granted her icqucst. '1 he next day S the son appeared, escorted by armed j soldiers, at 1 lie bed of his mother. But \ ; lie, pale and consumed with grief, spoke 1 no words no, not a word, but long and piercing she looked at him, and, having penetrated him long and deeply, she! turned her face and signaled to lead him away. "As he came, so he went—cold and sulky, like as if there was in him an in caniate obstinacy. But in the prison il came, upon liini the look of his hug- j gard, dying'mother, thin and wasted, and with this look everything re-i proacli, punishment, admonition, en-1 treaty, mother's anxiety, mother's love. Had she spoken to him the w hole j month long, unceasingly, she could not ' have spoken so earnestly and t.hrilling ly to his heart as she did with her-dumb look from her deathbed. "What a storm of emotion agitated the soul of the wicked youth. As never before he was moved, and broke forth in such vehement ejaculations that one would think that his heart must break. We need not be astonished that, all at once, he struck his brow, burst into tears and loudly exclaimed: 'O God! to what have I come!' He stopped, not with recognition—no, lie converted sincerely; he even entered a monastery and bpcame a Jesuit missionary, and now we see him—the young criminal— ; here standing before you in the pulpit." It was Father Ilasslaeher himself, the | celebrated German Jesuit, who died in IbTO. -Boston Herald. BITS OF MIRTH. | Miss Passe—"How do you like ni,) new photograph?" Little Girl—"lt's perfectly lovely. Did you really sit for it yourself?"—Tit-Bits. "Bridget, why didn't you heat my room better? It's only 50 degrees." "Oh, I thought that for such a sinalJ room 50 degrees would be enough."— Fliegende Bloelter. A Criticism.—"l don't like her sing ing. Her notes come from her chest." "Well, ought they not?" "No, indeed. They ought to stay there."—lndian apolis Journal. "Ebryt'ing am all right in its place," said Uncle Ebcn. "Er slia'p rnzzer meks er man a good bahber one minute, an' a ter'ble tough citizen de nex'."— Washington Star. Explained.—"What makes you wom en kiss when you meet?" "It is a sort of apology in advance for what we menu to say al>oiit each other after we part."—lndianapolis Journal. "Excuse me, sir," said Barker to a boorish traveler, "but what is your business?" "I am u gentleman, sir. That's my business." "Ah," said Bar ker. "1 see. You are taking a vaca tion."—Harper's Bazar. "What did you see in America, un cle?" cried the boys. "Oh, 1 saw the Catskill mountains," said Uncle IVter, jocosely. "I expect it was one of those mountains that, brought forth the mouse," said Jock, . thoughtfully.— Household Words. Always Moving.—"John," said the frightened wife in the middle of the night, "there's something moving down cellar, I'm sure." John listened intent ly. "Oh, it's nothing but the gas meter pegging away," he said with a sigh of relief.—Harlem Life. "Really," said Mrs. De Porque, "it's very distressing to sec how common things are getting." "Yes," replied her husband; "luxuries are a good deal cheaper than they were." "It's posi tively shameful. Why, it's getting so that anybody can afford a diamond robbery nowadays." Washington ; Star. SMILES IN BRIEF. "Isn't Scribbs a hack-writer?" "Hack-writer? Not much; lie doesn't even earn street car fare." —Chicago Record. "Are you on intimate terms with your neighbors?" "No; but they are I with us. Why, they know dreadful secrets of ours that we never heard of even."—Harper's Bazar. "What's the matter, Uncle Rufus?" he asked facetiously as the old isnn came limping in; "got the gout?" "No, sah, I'se got de bill fo' dat whitewash in' what 1 did fo' yer las' yeah."—llar '.em Life. Sad Experience. The Doctor— "You'll come, around all right, judge. Any physician would tell you the same Ihing." The Judge "Yes. doctor; but I've heard so much expert testi mony!"— Brooklyn Life. Arizona Editor—"l see that the east ern cult still sticks to our new report er." Assistant—"How's that?" Ari zona Editor—"ln writing up that taf aud-feather racket he mentions the | cictini as being clothed in 4 a garb of : some soft, clinging material.' " —Puck. Foiled.—"Madam," said the wander er, "perhnps you may notice that 1 am almost di sea located—" "I don't talk Dutch," said the lady, as she slammed the door. "And 1 sized her up for ; Boston raised," sighed the wanderer, and plodded oil.—lndianapolis Journal. ART, MUSIC AND SCIENCE. Trilby bus reached Paris. It is to be made there into iiu opera comiquo. Eugene d'Albert opera (Jhismondu was very coldly received at its first performance in Dresden. "Jack the Kipper" is the subject of | a new opera about to be produced at. Verona, music and words by an Italiau uuiued (Jioma. Leo XIII. and Due d'Aumale have ; been made honorary members of the St. Petersburg- imperial Academy of I Science. Prof. Knack fuss, who executed Kaiser Wilhclni's allegorical cartoon, has been appointed director of the Berlin Na tional museum in succession to Dr. Jor dan. Lassalle, the baritone, has set up a ! cement manufactory at Chantemelle on the Seine. lie attends to the busi ness himself, and has been made mayor of the town. MIND YOUR EYE. Don't read lying down or In a con strained position. Don't read by firelight, moonlight or twilight. Don't read by flickering gaslight or candlelight. Don't read books printed on thin pa per. Don't read books which have no ap preciable space between the lines. Don't read for more than 50 minutes without stopping, whether the eyes are ; tired or not. Don't hold the reuding close to the ! eyes. Don't study at night but in the morn - •ng when the eyes are fresh. OLD AND SPRY. Twin sisters, 70 years old, were pres ent us witnesses in court at Columbus, Ind., a few days ago. Mrs. Annie Merifiekl, of Limington, j Me., who is 94 years old, is making con siderable pin money knitting socks for the Portland market. Two hale nonagenarians, Mr. and Mrs. Moulder, of Iloney Creek, Ind., celebrated the 69th anniversary of their marriage recently. I Probably the oldest railroad engineer | in New England is Squire Wilson, of i Lyndonvillc, Vt. He has been running . an engine on the Boston and Maine i J system since 1852, and is still making a daiiy run. PRESIDENTIAL POSSIBILITIES. JOHN O. CARLISLH. v? A PROMINENT DEMOCRAT. NOT AT HOME. A Serf Way of (letting Rid of A BUI Col lector. The death of Tom llannum, one time a well-known habitue of the press gal leries ou both sides of the capitol, was sincerely deplored among the old timers the other day, and some amus ing anecdotes were told of the popular newspaper man by his friends in the course of the day. One of the best is worth repeating. llannum was in the habit of taking a late breakfast at the Press club every morning. On one occasion, while he was vigorously discussing a hearty re past of ham and eggs, a bill collector suddenly walked up to Ilannum's side, and laid his account before him. llan num looked at the bill and then at the collector, and in a deliberate tone be gan: "You blamed fool, can't you observe the amenities of ordinary civilized so ciety. Don't you know that a man's clul) is like his home, niul that you ni*e in danger of being summarily ejected for coming in her without a card of membership and without being intro duced? The rules of this club require that if you have business with a mem ber you wait in the lobby outside until a waiter takes in j our card and ascer tains whether the gentleman with whom you have business is present. Now, you go out into the lobby—take this bill with you—and comply with the rules of this club." The collector apologized for the in fraction of the rules of the Press club, which, to tell the truth, were lwver en forced on anything, and waited until the steward came to ascertain hij wishes. "Please announce me to Mr. llan num," said the collector. The steward told him to wait, and he carried the man's card to llannum, who looked at it carefully, then handed it back to the steward, and said: "Not ut home."—Washington Post. Brittle Finger Nulls. Many women who have pretty hands are constantly mortified in cold weather by the rough appearance of their fin ger nails, caused by the fact that they break and split. The intense cold causes the nails to become so brittle that it seems impossible to trim them so as to make them smooth. The possessor of such nails should cut thein with nothing except wcil-shar[Kjned manicure scis sors, and the nails must never be cut or filed uuless the fingers have first been soaked in warm water. Tliebrittleness may sometimes be lessened by rubbing almond oil thoroughly into the nails and finger ends on retiring at. night. An old pair of kid gloves must then be pulled on. The housekeeper whose nails break easily should never stir anything on the hot range without lirst slipping on a loose glove, as the. dry heat from the fire will make her nails more brittle than ever. Neither must she allow her self to stay out of doors for a moment without having her hands protected from the cold, which is even more in jurious than the heat. All these pre cautions may seem to be a bother, but. in the end are worth while.—Harper's Dai or. STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, \ LUCAS COUNTY, F FRANK J. CIIENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State afore s id, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every ease of CATARRH that cannot be cured bv the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before mo and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. \ an 12 A. W. GLEASON, I J?- % . Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Druggists, 75c. When Bnby was slclc, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she hod Children, she gave them Castoria PLEASURE CALENDAR. March 21. —Fair of Division 20, A. O, 11.. at Eckley. April o.—Annual ball of St.. Patrick's cornet band at Young Men's opera house. Admission, 50 cents. WILLIAM M'KINLEY. A PROMINENT REPUBLICAN. FASHIONABLE RIBBONS. The Correct Thing for Trimmings of the Coming Heason. The new ribbons are gay and fascin ating, with colors put on as delicately as if done with the brush of an artist. And as they are five inches to six inches and a half wide, importers thereof tuke great pleasure in announcing that next summer will b' lug in a "ribbon season/' This, interpreted, means that summer liats will be trimmed with ribbons in great part rather than with bias velvet or lace. Crisp taffeta ribbon is the correct tiling, and is shown in a variety so great that it defies description. Warp-paint ing giving chine blurred effect# is a feature of taffeta ribbons, as it is of many of the fabrics of the near future, and is very attractive in its soft, low toned blossoms on clear grounds of this glistening silk. Sharp contrasts with the grounds are liked. The designs are larger than those of last season—mam moth clo- or heads, large flowered viue3 in trripes, marigolds, poppies, carnations and roses; always roses, and yet again roses. Plain colored taffetas with satin edge, or perhaps faintly shot with white, will be used in great widths on fancy straw hats. Ombre taffeta ribbons of very French coloring are the novelty in shaded ribbons, as the)- change across their width from moss green to Parma violet, from red to turquoise, from rose pink to yellow, from blue to morodore, and from blue to green, a favorite blending of which tickle fashion does not tire. Louip Seize flower stripes are in many lovely colors on white of delicate grounds, somctimer accentuated by line stripes of black. A special novelty is the large cheeks or plaids of gn}' colors on white grounds, which are also strewn with flowers.—Harper's Bazar. USES OF BORAX. Ererj Day It Grows More Indispensable to Housewives. Borax has become almost a# indis pensable an article in every household as salt and pepper. Nothing will so suc cessfully soften hard water as borux. Use it in the proportion of a large hand ful to ten gallons of water. The texture of the finest linen and cotton will not be injured by its use. Stains upon tablecloths and napkins can be readily washed out if borax is put in the water. A little borax water boiled in the coffee pot twice a week for 15 minutes sweet ens and purifies it. To cleanse window gloss simply use warm wnter and borax, no soap. Wipe dry and polish with crumpled newspapers. For the shampoo use one teaspoonful to two quarts of warn water. It acts directly on the scalp, keeping it in a healthy condition. As a dentrifiee and mouth wash borax is unexcelled. It cleanses the mouth, hardens the gums nnd relieves cankers. On using it for the teeth make u powder of one ounce each of powdered borax and pulverized enstile soap and two ounces of precipi tated chalk. Bags made of cheese cloth, about eight inches square, filled with oatmeal, some powdered borax, nnd a little powdered orris root and used in the bath are delightfully refreshing. A box of powdered borax is indispensa ble at the toilet table and as a disin fectant, will prove a valuable aid in procuring cleanliness at the kitchen sink. And if it were more frequently used a great amount of waste might be prevented in the larder.—Chicago Inter Ocean. The Test. "Old man, 1 want you to be the best man at my wedding." "Er—l—" "What! I thought you would surely stand by a friend in his hour of trouble." —lndianapolis Journal. LIVE QUESTIONS! "Industrial Conciliation," by Josephine Shaw Lowell, of New York. "The Local Paper," by Anthony Murdock. Monday Next, - - March 23. WANTED-ANIDEA of some simple thing to patent? Protect your ideas ; they may bring you wealth. Write JOHN WKDDEIi- HURN & CO., Patent Attorneys, Washington, D. C.. for their SI,BOO prize offer. AFFAIRS IN CONGRESS. Senator Morgan To Speak on Cuba—Bay ard Resolution* In the Douse. Washington, March 17.—1n the sen ate this afternoon Senator Morgan, dem., Ala., will resume his speech, in terrupted yesterday at adjournment, on the acceptance of the conference re port on the Cuban belligerency resolu tions. Two other speeches on differ ent subjects occupied the attention of the senate to the exclusion of all else. The first was by Mr. Lodge, rep., Mass., and was in favor of such a change in the immigration laws as will keep out illiterate and ignorant immi grants, The second was by Mr. Pugh, dem., Ala., and was in favor of the coinage of silver at the mints of the United States with the same rights as gold. The house this afternoon will take up the resolutions reported from the foreign affairs committee regard ing the speeches delivered at Edin burgh and Boston, Eng., by Ambassa dor Bayard. Among the bills passed under suspension of the rules, the only one of general interest was that in creasing the penalty for mutilating or defacing coins and making the passing of such coins a felony. YALE BASEBALL DATES. Manager Miller Anuounnea Hi* Official Schedule of Games for the Year. New Haven, Conn., March 17.—Man ager Miller of the Yale Baseball asso ciation has announced his official sched ule of games for the year. In addition to those alreadj' given out, the follow ing dates have been arranged: April 3, Hampton at Hampton, Va.; April 7, University of North Carolina, at Gainesboro, N. C.; April 8, George town university, at Hampton, Va.; April 28, Amherst, at Yale field; May 1, Andoveracademy, at Andover, Mass.; May 13, Yale graduates, at Yale field; May 20, Oritani Field club, at Yale field; June 17, Amherst, at Amherst OLNEY'S TRIAL POSTPONED. The ex-School Coinmliiloner't Case Goes Over to the May Term. Hartford, Conn., March 17. —The criminal case of the state against Jere miah Olney, ex-comraissioner of the school fund, which was assigned for trial at Williniantic on Thursday of this week, will go over to the May term of the court State Attorney Hunter had a conference with Judge Prentice regarding the postponement of all the cases assigned for the week, owing to the dangerous illness of Mrs. Hunter. Judge Prentice decided to postpone all business, and telephoned to Putnam to discharge the jurors serving for the term. WAR CRY'S EDITOR RESIGNS. !i. It. Mautz Will Have Charge of Bal lington Booth's New Organ. New York, March 17. —E. R. Mautz, who was in charge of the Salvation Army's War Cry, who resigned from the army .Saturday, has joined Ballington Booth's God's American Volunteers, lie will have charge of the new move ment's newspaper orgau, which will appear next week. The t3*pe, presses and other material for the printing plant are ready to move in whenever a location is secured. The printing office will be near the headquarters, in the Bible house. LUCK. A Now lln von Widow Fall* Heir to Lund Worth Over 8100,000. New Haven, Conn., March 17.—Mrs. Ine/.etta Mi lander, widow of a once prominent merchant here, has been notified that she is heir to a tract of land near the city of Galveston, Tex., the value of which is estimated at from one liundcrd thousand to five hundred thousand dollars. The property comes to Mrs. Milander through her grand father, Peter Grayson. The tract is said to be four and one half mile? square. Hartford Baseball Club A 2f.il rf, Hartford, March 17. —Manager Bar- Die has signed two additional players for the Hartford baseball nine, as fol fows: D. Houle, who formerly played with the Scranton nine, and D. Duxs, formerly of the Sidneys of Brooklyn. Grounds have been secured on Wethers field avenue, opposite Union Grove, eleven minutes' trolley ride from the city hall. NEW YORK MARKETS. Wheat—Spot prices have weakened. March, 71}* c.; April, 71** c ; May, 69 %c. Corn—Spot slow; values unsettled. March, 38c.; May, 35% c. Oats—Spot dull and prices doubtful. March, 25>*e.; April, 24j*c.; May, 25 c* Lard—Contracts are dull and prices unchanged. May, 65.70. Pork—Spot poor and trade quiet- Extra prime nominal, short clear, f10.75@312.25; family, $10.50@$11.00; mess, $ 10.00 @510.50. Butter—Demand for high grades fair. Prices are still unchanged. Crcameay, western extras, 22c. State and Penn sylvania, seconds to best, 16@20J*c.; creamery, western seconds, state dairy, half firkin tubs, fresh, facy, 20c; state dairy, half-firkin tubs, seconds to firsts, 13a18c.; western imi tation creftmery, seconds to firsts 11 >* alGc.; western factory, firsts to ex tras, ll>*al3. Cheese—Desirable grades fairly held and the receipts are fair. State, full cream, large size, September col ored, choice, 10®*c.; September white fancy, 10@10?*c.; large common to choice, 7 @ 10c. Eggs—Market steady with fair de mand. State and Pennsylvania, 11%@ lHi*K; ice house (case), $2.50@52.75; western, fresh, Io9*@llc.; southern, 105* c.; duck, 23c. Potatoes Moderate demand and steady prices for choice stock; market quiet State Burbank, per 180 pounds. | 60@80c., and state rose and Hebron per 180 pounds, 85c. @51.19. Must Use The-Knife Saltl the Surgeon, but Br. David Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy was taken and the Knife Avoided. The Union and Advertiser of Roches ter, N. Y., recently published the follow ing interesting account of how William W. Adams, of 127 South avenue, that city, was saved from a painful operation by the use of Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy. Mr. Adams said: "Three years ago I * was taken with kidney disease very badly; at times I was completely prostrated; in fact, was so bad that the day was set for the doctors to perform an operation upon me. But I decided I would not submit. I had been put in hot water baths, and. in fact, nearly every means was tried to help me. Upon the day set for the operation I commenced the use of Dr. David Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy, and from that moment began to gain, and it was not long beforo I was entirely cured and have had no return of the trouble since. My weight has increased and I never was so well as 1 am now. I have recom mended DR. OrviD KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY to many people, for it saved my life." In speaking to Mrs. Adams, she said "About a year ago 1 was in a very feeble stuto of health, being completely run down. \ had doctored considerably .-tout without permanent relief. One day one of my neighbors advised mo to take Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, which I did. My trouble was dyspepsia, and for a long while I was unable to be about at all; but after laking'a few doses I was completely cured, and now enjoy good health." Hundreds of men and women with that "run down" condition, unable to work, have recovered health and strcnght through this remarkable remedy. It purifies the blood, stirs the liver and kidneys to a healthy action. In cases of rheumatism, kidney, liver and urinary troubles, it is a well known specific. \ GET THE BEST When you arc about to buy a Sewing Machine do no* be deceived by alluring: advertisements and be led to think you can get tho best made, finest finished and Most Popular for a mere song. See to it that h you buy from reliable manu- frTfWP tacturers that have gained a reputation by honest and square WyftTTWra Sewing' Machine that is noted the world over for i's dura- bility. You want the one that 4 is easiest to manage and is Light Running There is r.onc in the world that 1 :,^s£b struction, durability of working P {irts > fineness of finish, beauty yFrjimprovements as l-fce NEW HOME It has Automatic Tension, Double Feed, alike on both sides of nacdlc (patented), no other has it; New Stand ( patented ). driving wheel hinged on adjustable centers, trhus reducing friction to tho minimum. > WRITE FO:? CIRCULARS. * THE HEW KOBE SEISIIKG MACHIKE CO. O&anoz. M am. Boston, V 28 Union Bqjjam, N. Y Ciuciuo. lu.. St. Lotus, Mo. L>ai.:,ap. ,hxas. Hah FBA*cr< <, ' 'h. Att.ij.tA, Ga. r 'ALE BY D. S. Ewing, general agent, 1127 Chestnut street, Phila., Pa. Danger Signals More than half the victims of consump tion do not know they have it. Here is a list of symptoms by which consumption can certainly be detected :— Cough, one or two slight efforts on rising, occurring during: the day and fre quently during the night. Short breathing after exertion. ' Tightness of the chest. Quick pulse, especially noticeable in the evening and after a full meal. Chilliness in the evening, followed by Slight fever. Perspiration toward morning and 'Pale face and languid in the morning. , Loss of vitality. If you have these symptoms, or any of them, do not delay. There are many preparations which claim to be cures, but Dr. ffektr's English Rcmcivfor Consumption lias tire highest endorsements, and lias stood the test of years. It will arrest con sumption in its earlier stages, and drive away the symptoms named. It is manu factured by the Acker Medicine Co., 16 and 18 Chambers St., New York, and sold by all reputable druggists. MANSF ILLmv>to\ 1. school." Intellectual and practical training for teachers. Three courses of study besides preparatory. Special attention given to preparation for college. Students admitted to best colleges on certificate. Thirty giadu atcs pursuing further studies last year. Great advan tages for special studies in art and music. Model -v school of three hundred* pupils. Corps of sixteen ' teachers. Beautiful grounds. Magnificent buildings. Large grounds for athletics. Elevator and infirmary with attendant nurse. Fine gymnasium. Everything furnished at an-average cost to normal students of sl 4j a year. Fall term, Aug. 28. Winter term, Dec. a. Spring term, March 16. Students admitted to classes at any time. For catalogue, containing full information, apply ,o Si H ÜBROi p rinc|pali Mansfield, Pa. ( who 'admixture }ma added ™ el !H Batis,ied ' c * ou N *>uy more \ little of Seel- for it wi ,f touch \ig s to ordinary the spot. Grocers /coflcc knows a have SEELIG'S. f grand drink that \will please her husband. 1 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers