Royul makes the food pure, wholesome und delicious. mi Jt* POWDER Absolutely Pure FREELAND TRIBIM Esta'clishod ISBB. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY ISY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STKKKT ABOVE CENTRE. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable t<> the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Your sl.">o Six Months 75 Four Months 50 j Two Months 25 1 The date which the subscription is paid to is j on the address label of each paper, the change . of which to u subsequent date becomes a j receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in | ad ranee of the present date. Report prompt ly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must bo paid when subscription is discontinued. FREELAND, SEPTEMBER 1(1, 1807. | —: —. . Public .Sympathy lias Not Erred. From the Philadelphia Record. In discussing the Lattimor carnage some insidious appeals have been made ; to national sentiment with the assertions j that the strikers are only ignorant Huns j and Sclavs, ami that thtfrn would have been no bloodshed if the minors had boon of English-speaking races. Possibly. Yet the injunctions of the courts seem to have been sufficient to prevent bloodshed in the bituminous ' coal regions of western Pennsylvania, j where the samo ignorant Sclavs and lluns work the mines. Rut who have supplanted the English speaking miners in the anthracite regions with these forbidden races from South crn Europe? When the coal corpora- ! tions could not secure the labor of Irish, Welsh or English miners at their wages they imported the Huns. The Huns in their turn, having learn ed the value of their labor as well as felt the needs of a better mode of living for themselves and their families, have struck against the meagre wage that is j doled out to them. Their ignorance of the language of • their employers and of the official authr- j ities seems to alTord a reason for more j rather than for loss consideration in deal- ! ing with them. Public sympathy has not erred in re- ! lation to the miserable condition of the | minors In both the anthracite and the . bituminous regions. Nor is this sympa thy likely to be. lessened by the carnage at Lattlmer. Resoluteness in suppressing riotous demonstrations in their very inception is sometimes mercy to the mob. Rut there is an energy that often partakes of fear or of reckless disregard of human life; and the question is whether the sheriff of Luzerne county has not dis played an energy toward a body of un armed strikers altogether out of propor tion witli the gravity of the occasion. Rut the blood at Lattimor will not have been shed together in vain if it shall impress upon the striking minors the danger of tampering with the laws for preserving the peace and of infring ing upon the personal rights of others. It should at the same time impress upon the great coal corporations tin* truth that they are not wholly exempt from obligations toward the ignorant strangers who have been imported from far to work their mines. Those companies which still keep stores at the mouths of their mines to filch from labor a part of its slender earnings could not seize upon a more fitting occasion for giving up this iniqui tous system. That there is no excuse for their prac tico it seems by the fact that other com panies pay weekly wages in cash, and that those corporations have the least trouble with their miners. The coal companies would also do well to remember that iu the condition to which they have reduced labor no other is within their reach than that of the ignorant but fierce and inflammable Huns. In tills situation they owe it to tho people of Pennsylvania to so manage their busines relations with these strangers as not to involve tho frequent expense of sending a large body of militia into the coal regions in order to maintain the supremacy of the law. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. Tho fit- /? 3. Kriucatfl Your llnuel* With Cascaretn. Candy Cathurtlc, cure constipation forever. 10c. If C. Ow C. fail, druggists refund money. NEWS OF THE WEEK. Wednesday, Sept. 8. Some Important evidence against Luetgert was given by two witnesses in the murder trial at Chicago. One witness testified to hearing the screams of a woman in the Luetgert sausage factory at the time the murder is al leged to have occurred The United States team was beaten at cricket by the Canadian team in Torontar-A lloral fete, consisting of a parade, a battle of flowers and a ball, was held in Sara toga Two women, caught by a train on a railway trestle near Keyport, N. J.. Sunday, saved their lives by leaping to the ground, 20 feet below Grover Cleveland told the tax assessors of Princeton, N. J., that he owned $20,000 worth of real estate and $1:10,000 worth of personal property Richard Croker arrived In New York from Europe. He said he had expressed no preference as ! to Tammany's candidate for mayor and 1 declined to discuss his own candidacy Six persons were killed by the ex plosion of 120 pounds of nitroglycerin at Cygnet, a small oil town near Finley, O. The explosive was being used in torpedoing an oil well A team of horses ran away In Fourteenth street, ! New York, knocked down three people 1 and seriously Injured a woman 76 years Did before they were caught Natural gas has been struck near Warrensburg, ; Mo. A party of Chicago men who ascended the Enchanted mesa, In New , Mexico, say they found traces of an- j clent Inhabitants on the summit Sev- ! eral southern congressmen and iron manufacturers will urge the naval ar- • mor plate committee to examine the 1 south's facilities for making armor plate The dervishes have evacuated Berber, on the Nile, and the Anglo- Egyptian Khartum expedition Is mov ing to occupy It It was reported in San Francisco that the Chinese port of Tung Yung Kow Is to be sold to Ger- , many as a naval station Barril, the Spanish anarchist sentenced to 40 years' imprisonment for shooting police offi cials, was resentenced to death. TliurHtlay, Sept. 1). Twelve people were killed and nearly as many injured In a collision of two fast trains on the Santa Fc railroad near Emporia, Kan. William J. Bryan was a passenger on one of the trains, but was uninjured General Fitz- Ilugh Lee arrived in New York from Cu ba. He declined to discuss Cuban affairs until he had reported to the state de partment. He said the stories of the ill treatment of Miss Cisneros were untrue, apd that but for the noise made by American newspapers she would have been pardoned long ago——Horace S. Perry, who killed Rely Lanier, a theo logical student, was executed at De catur, Ga. Perry claimed the dead man had assaulted his wife Surgeon Gen eral Wyman of the marine hospital service reports the yellow fever situa- ' tlon in the south to be greatly improved Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews sent a letter to the corporation of Brown uni versity declining to withdraw his resig nation of the presidency The Penn sylvania League of Republican Clubs held its state convention in Williams port The New York Prohibition state convention in Syracuse nominated Francis E. Baldwin of Elmira for chief judge of the court of appeals Gov ernor Hastings of Pennsylvania asked for and received the resignation of Gen eral Frank Reeder as secretary of the commonwealth The Bank of Com merce of New York gave a messenger : drafts of the face value of $30,000 for collection. The boy disappeared after 1 collecting $1,500 Four boys—three from Staten Island and one from Brook- j lyn—-are missing, and it is thought they were lured from their homes by a stran ger whose motive Is unknown, but who is said to have premised them handsome wages to go to the Klondike In the j Luetgert murder trial in Chicago a sensation was caused by the introduc- j tlon as evidence of the prisoner's stain ed and rusty knife and by the identifi cation of some of Mrs. Luetgert's cloth ing. Expert testimony was Introduced as to the nature of the matter found in the potash vat, and the defense assert- j ed that it favors the accused. Friday, Sept. 10. The big bucket shop firm of J. R. Wil lard & Co. of New York, having branches in Washington, Philadelphia Buffalo, Chicago and other cities, mad* un assignment. The liabilities are said to be nearly. If not quite, $1,000,000 George Smith, a wealthy resident <.l Churchvllle, N. Y., near Rochester, was robbed and sandbagged, and his wlf* was shot by burglars Mrs. Mary Crowley was attacked by a burglar in her home near Tarrytown, N. Y., and beaten into insensibility Three ruf fians overpowered Mrs. Languid In hoi home In Perth Amboy, N. J., and left her unconscious. They were arrested James C. Pitts, an old resident ol Summit, N. J., was killed in Ills home near that place by a masked man, and his housekeeper, who was the only cthex occupant of Ills home at the time, was so badly beaten that she Is expected t die The Rev. George Deshon was chosen superior of the Paulist father* at the final session of the general chap tor, held in New York Queen Victo- I ria has written to the lord lieutenant expressing her satisfaction over th< visit of the Duke and Duchess of York to Ireland Dr. Guiteras reported that there were a few cases of undoubted yellow fever In Ocean Springs, Miss. One more death from the disease is re ported at Ocean Springs, making three in all at that place, besides the one ;t Now Orleans. The marine hospital service is actively engaged in prevent ing the spread of the scourge, and it is believed that it will be held within Its present confines Official dispatcht from Havana confirm the report that Callxto Garcia and Jesus Rabi, two ct the insurgent generals, have captured the town of Victoria de las Tunas, prov ince of Santiago de Cuba Secretary Bliss decided against the Pacific rail roads in their attempt to secure m- .il liferous lands occupied by settlers on the Pacific coast Rich gold bearing quartz has been found on Judge Henry Hilton's Saratoga estate, Woodlawn Park, New York The British trades union congress denounced the British system of child labor as a crime against the human race Alaska salmon ves sels reaching San Francisco report heavy catches A rich gold strike Is reported in New Mexico, near Santa Fe Natural gas is believed to have been discovered in the Philadelphia a lock yurds. Saturday, Sept. 11. Governor Black issued an order Hu me exchange of the national guard rifles for Springfield rifles now In pos session of the federal government Peace nas been concluded between tho government of Uruguay and the insur gents The Spanish minister of war called on Captain General Weyler to explain the capture of Victoria de las Tunas by the Cuban insurgents The British trades union congress at Bir mingham adopted a resolution favoring a national federation of all trades and industries Bombs were exploded In St. Martin, near Ferrol, Spain, and great damage was caused The Hop kins-Thayer-Hight company, which held the lease of the Great Northern theater at Chicago, made an assign ment. after a series of disasters John P. Elkln resigned his office as deputy attorney general of Pennsylvania at the request of Governor Hastings Two men were killed by the fall of an ele vator in the American Tract society building In New York A Denver and j Bit) Grande express and a Colorado Midland freight train met on a joint track near New Castle, Colo., and 17 i persons were killed and 17 Injured ; Passengers on the steamer Cleveland from Alaska brought news that Daw son City, in the Klondike region, was threatened with famine, with little prospect of relief reaching it. Monday, Sept. 13. j Emperor William of Germany arrived , at Totis, Hungary, and was cordially welcomed by Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria-Hungary It is reported in Madrid that the Oarlists are watching ! to take advantage of the Spanish gov | ernment's embarrassment over Cuba 1 A severe gale occurred on the coast : of Japan, during which a Norwegian ! bark was wrecked, ten of the crew being j lost The board of yellow fever ex perts in New Orleans diagnosed spven suspicious cases in that city as afflicted with that disease Three prisoners on Blaekwell's island. New York, tried to ! escape by swimming the East river. A ferryboat pursued two, one of whom was drowned obeying his comrade, who ordered him not to touch a life buoy under penalty of death The Rev. Dr. Abel Stevens, the historian of Metho dism, died in San Jose, Cal. There are | six„candidates in Jefferson county, N. Y., for the senatorship made vacant by the death' of Joseph Mullln Judge Augustus H. Fenn >.i the supremo court of Connecticut died in Winsted Paul Forkus and more than a dozen other poor residents of Dundee, , Passaic, N. J., have been fined $23.00 apiece for keeping robins contrary to the game laws of New Jersey Friends of former Mayor Hugh J. Grant of New York announced that his claims to the nomination for mayor are being seri ously considered by Tammany leaders Juan Vivo arrived in New York from a Spanish penal settlement to which he was sent as a political prison er. He says that Ills hardships and suf fering were very great The En chanted mesa in New Mexico has been | climbed again, and evidences of civili zation have been found on the summit by F. W. Hodge of the Smithsonian in- i i stitutlon. Professor Libbey, who made the ascent In early summer, reported ! no signs of early occupancy On her j trial trip the machinery of the new tor- I pedo boat Rodgers went to pieces and I five men were seriously scalded, among | them Chief Engineer J. R. Edwards A woman has presented to the Church of the Strangers in New York land and buildings representing all her savings for 12 years Thirteen thousand dol lars was raised l>y the Christian Alli ance at its meeting at Nyack Heights, N. Y., to help pay for the now training institute for missionaries. One young ; 1 woman contributed a gold watch. Tuesday, Sept, 14. i President McKinley returned to 1 ! Washington from Somerset, Pa., In company with Mrs. McKinley and At- j torney General McKcnna- William Fox was arrested in New York, charged with having induced Winnie Sheehan, a 19-year-old girl, to take carbolic acid I A force of 1,000 Orakzals captured the Sarhargarti police post, which was J gallantly defended by 21 Sikhs The | Duchess of York is said to be preparing j to issue an appeal in behalf of the Irish, | i who are threatened with famine Bbth I chambers of the Uruguayan congress ; j have ratified the terms of peace made with the insurgents The National Republican league offered its services to Senator Hanna to aid In securing his re-election It has been ascertained that some one dosed Elsie S with strychnine before her recent race with Limerick at Goshen, N. Y. Lady ; Randolph Churchill, her two sisters and i other ladies of London were Induced by Captain Cruikshank to Invest $75,000 in I ventures which are believed to be fraud ulent Louise Michel, the notorious ! French anarchist, has announced her 1 intention to visit the United States in , October. The authorities at Washing ! ton may not allow her to land The strike situation at Hazleton, Pa., re -1 mainod unchanged, the state troops still being retained there to maintain the 1 peace. The funerals of 12 of tho strik ers who were killed at Lattlmer were held, but there was no disturbance— Seth Low's letter accepting the nomi nation of the Citizens' Union for Mayor of Greater New York was made public. The City Vigilance league passed reso |. lutlons indorsing his candidacy. Hugh 1 J. Grant said positively that he was not a candidate fur mayor General Wood : j ford was received by tho queen regent 1 | of Spain ami presented his credentials 1 Tlu Rev G. F. B. Howard, a notori ous swindler, escaped from the Ohio pen itentiary at Columbus A famine in Ireland Is Impending, and it is predict -1 ed that the suffering will be as great 1 as it was In 1879 Forty lives were lost In India by un accident In a mine A bather saved Sarah Ilernhardt's life at Belle-Isle-en-Mer, France, while she was descending the cliffs to the 1 shore, according to Le Figaro of Paris '* A party of natives with a trading 1 ; expedition were massacred on the upper Kor.go. CASTOniA, The fit- /? Beauty IK Itlood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skip. No j beauty without it. Cuscarcts Candy Cathar tic eleuu your blood and keep it cloan, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving till im ' purities from the body. Jiegin today to 4 banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, und that sickly billons complexion by taking i 1 Casuurots- beauty for 10 cents. All drug - i gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 35c, 50c. CASTOIIIA. : c,^r 8 3*. LABOR-SAVING DEVICE. Intended to Hold Flooring Cefoi e It Hun lieen Nulled. Many carpenters, when laying u floor find it possible to tit the strips of stuff closely enough by placing a block of wood against the outer edge of the free board, und strikingly kt smartly with a hammer. Then when the tongue of one strip has been wedged into the grooves of the other the nail is driven which holds the newly laid board in place. But with some kinds of stuff, especial ly hardwood, it is desirable to hold the strips temporarily with some sort of a jack or with a chisel until the work man is ready to drive nails. Ira A. Smith, of East Berkshire, Vt.., who is an archi tect and builder, has been so dissatis fied with the usual methods adopted in such cases that he has invented a "squeezer" of his own. The sketch re produced herewith tells its own story so well that little need be added. The lower, horizontal piece, like the notched THIS IS A YANKEE INVENTION. hand-lever, Is three feet long. The slanting brace in which the liand-lover is fulcrummed has a length of two feet ten inches. The short upright lever is only u foot long, and the horizontal shoe which comes in contact with the flooring is sixteen inches long. The check rod, in the reur, is hinged to the frame,and trimmed to lit in t-kenotches. The dog must be sharp enough to take hold of the floor lining or joist, as the case may be. It will be seen at a glance that this "squeezer"- affords a great leverage, and when it Is set at ar:y particular notch can be left there. It will stand alone. Mr. Smith says that lie never yet saw any plun for hardwopd flooring that did not require an extra hand. But with this device a carpenter can dog the stuff himself. The material employed in this "squeezer" is hardwood and iron, which together cost 30 cents. The labor out on it costs about as much more.—X. Y. Tribune. UNIQUE TELESCOPE. Harvard's New Instrument Will Di> Wonderful TliInKN. It is expected that Harvard's new eight-inch rectangular telescope will l>e in full working order by the middle of June. Without the assistance of any person, it will change and expose plates, and take, automatically, photograplus of the tars. W. 11. Atvvill is supervis ing its construction. Within a drum attached to the focus of tllie telescope is a revolving frame, which carries eight, photographic plates, octagonally ar ranged, lilms outward. This frame is turned through one-eighth of a revolu tion, in the return of the telescope to the meridian, thus bringing a fresh plate into the field of the telescope. Each region is photographed 20 min utes. The supply of plates lasts a little less than three hours. A large part of the work of Harvard observatory Is devoted to systematic charting of the heavens by means of photography. The new telescope will save the observer many hours of tiresome labor, which has been In-fore required in changing plates. .'4 some time during the year, all portions of the sky visible in our latitude come to the meridian,charting being confined to the zones lying on the meridian. Taking the regions a.s they drift through this zone, eventually nil the heavens visible in our latitude will be photographed. The new telescope is designed to work in this narrow belt of the sky, which has the meridian for its center. The telescope starts near the meridian and follows a region for 20 minutes, at the end of which time it quickly and automatically returns to its starting point. Ihiring this return it is also pointed automatically ten degree® further north, or toward the zenith, a region just above the one last Liken. Owing to cloudy weather and other causes, some regions jxiss the telescope without l>eing observed. This telescope is provided with an adjustment which will enable it to start one or two hours west- of the meridian, and thus recover regions which might otherwise be losL Tiie telescope turns at a rate which neutralizes the effect of tlie earth's ro tation on its axis.—Chicago J liter Ocean. Electricity and Insanity. lii his report to the directors of an insane asylum in Pennsylvania recent ly the physician stated that the in troduction of electricity had wonder fully lightened his labors; that the effect upon moody patients of , the change from oil lamps was magical. These poor unfortunates now resort to games and music in the evening in stead of sitting around in gloomy si lence. The improved ventilation by means of electric fans was also a great advantage. He believe t s that the in vestment In an electric plant has im j proved the coudition of patients 100 par cent. Sn'.t Central Africa. In Central Africa the greatest of all luxuries is salt, the long-continued use of vegetable food creating so painful a longing for that mineral that na tives deprived of it for a long period have been known to show symptoms o f insanity. §|fiHv£@^ SIGHTLESS PERSONS. There Are Just One Million Now Liv ing lu Civilised Lands. It is stated that there are 1,000,000 blind people in the world, or 1 to every 1,500 inhabitants. A great German oculist believes that a majority of the cases are due to fever, and that 75 per cent, of the afflicted persons could, by proper treatment, have retained their sight. Last reports show 23,000 blind persons in England, or 870 for each 1,000,000 inhabitants. Blind infants of less than 5 years, 100 for each 1,000,- 0(50 inhabitants. Blind infants of less than 5 years, ICG for each 1,000,000; be tween 5 and 15, 288; between 20 and 25, 422; between 45 and GO, 1,625, and above 05 years, 7,000 for each 1,000,000. Of ficial figures in France show that only one-sixth of the sightless were born blind, that of these G5 per cent, were male and 35 per cent, female children. Less than 10 per cent, of sightless peo ple in France were under the age of 21. Russia and Egypt are .the countries where the blind constitute the largest proportionate number of the total pop ulation, in Russia on account of the lack of experienced medical attention, and in Egypt because of ophthalmia due to irritation caused by movement of the sand by the wind. There are nearly 200,000 blind persons in European Rus sia, the largest proportionate number in Finland and the northern provinces. This is ascribed to the flat country and imperfect ventilation in huts of the peasantry. Though more than half of the blind population of Europe is found in Russia, there are only 25 asylums for the blind in the empire, one-tenth of the total number in Europe. While the blind population in the United States Is less than one-third as large as that of Russia, the number of inmates of blind asylums is larger here than in an}'other country. The tolol number of pupils in these institutions was, by last re l>orts, 3,489, and grounds and buildings devoted to their use are valued ut SG,- 000,000. BED FOR THE SICK. Can He Raised or Lowered Without Disturbing? the I'atlcnt. A new bed, particularly udapted to the uses of the sickroom, has lately been invented. The secret of its efficiency is that by its means the patient can be raised into almost any position without disturbance or lifting, allowing the bed to be made and aired and the patient-ex amined, without any exertion either on the part of the latter or the nurses; moreover, the tedium of illness may be relieved by so raising the sick persons us to allow of their engaging in uuy i-Ai . ■ BED FOR THE SICK, congenial employment without strain or fatigue, and what this mental di version means in the way of lightening anxiety and labor only nurses can ade quately realize. When not required for sickroom purposes the bed makes an admirable bed or lounge, as may be re quired.—Chicago Tribune. THE LOSS OF SLEEP. It CuuNt'N Latitude and a Dei>reM liiK IntcrcMt In Life. In a paper by Prof. 11. C. Warren, of Princeton university, there are accu rately described some experiments on the effects produced by loss of sleep, conducted by Prof. Patrick and Dr. Gil bert, of the University of lowa. These gentlemen tested three normal subjects, eomjiosod of instructors, men not easily susceptible to Influences. They w ere kept awake 90 hours without stim ulants. During this time they were en gaged, as far as possible, in their usual occupations. After the second night the first subject complained that the floor was covered with a grcasy-lookingniolec ular layer of rapidly moving particles. •T.lie.y rendered him nearly desperate. Sometimes the layer seemed u foot above the floor, and parallel with it. As lie tried to step upon it he staggered and tumbled, could not obtain a sure footing. Later the uir became full of swarming particles, which developed into red, purple and black gnats. lie fre quently climbed into a cliair to brush them away from the g;ts jet. The ap pearance of all these men was the same as if an overdose of liquor had been ad ministered. Those who have lost their normal rest for several nights feel a lassitude and depressing interest in life. They seem to lose an equitable judg ment of things. Events seem out of proportion. Novelty In Lnmp Wicks. A remarkable lamp wick has been in vented, which iif made entirely of clny. !fc is perforated by very minute holes, through which the oil passes upward t hrough the action of capillarity. This u ick, needless to state, does not need to he trimmed, nor docs the oil, which has a perfect passage upwurd, emit any odor. The inventor says that its con sumption of oil is but one-third that of 'he cottou wick, while producing the same amount of light. AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "CASTORIA," AND " PITCHER'S GASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK. J, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hijannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now y/%7> —r"" - on every bear the facsimile signature of wrapper. This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper ancl see that it is the kind you have always bought -—— r — on the and has the signature of wrap per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex cept The Centaur Company of which Clias. H. Fletcher is President j yi, J March 8,1897. ,p. Do Not Be Deceived, Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in gredients of which even he does not know. "The Kind Yon Have Always Bought" BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed You. GREAT BARGAINS IN Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. Notions } Carpet, Boots and Shoe*, Flour and Feed, Tobacco, Cigars, 2Y/i and Queewnoare, TfWrf a/wZ WiUoioware, Table and Floor Oil Cloth, Etc. A celebrated brand of XX Hour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. My motto is small profits and quick sales. 1 always have fresh goods and am turning uiy stock every month. Every article is guuruntccd. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Fi ontßts., Freeland. P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director and Embalmer. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. VIENNA: BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. CHOICE nit EM) or ALL KINDS CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES BAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery # Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply wagons to all parts oj tmon and surroundings entry day. Are You a Roman Catholic Then you should enjoy rending t he literary productions of the best talent In the Catho lic priesthood ami laity (and you know what they CAN do), as they appear weekly in The Catholic Standard and Times OF PHILADELPHIA, The nhlest and most vigorous defend r of Catholicism. All tho news -strong edito rials—a children's department, which is ele vating and educational. Prizes ollered monthly to the littloones. Only ft'-1.00 per year. TiieOramlest Premium ever issued by any paper given to subscribers for IM7. Send for sample copies and premium circular. The Calholic Standard and Times Pnb'g Co 508-505 Chestnut St. Plilla. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Centre street, Freeland. FINEST LIQUOR, RE Ell, PORTER, ALE. CIGARS AND TEM PERANCE DRINKS. | sua® Wheels, I f Too! | STYLES: ► | Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. . J Tho Lightest Running Wlioeis on Earth. £ I THE ELDREDBE | | ....AMD.... I 1 THE BELVIDERE.; % $> £ ft J Wo always MatfoCcod Sowing Machines! % Why Shouldn't wo Mako Good Wheels! V & | National Sewing Machine Co., & ® .v 339 Broadway, Factory: > New York. Celvidcrc, Ills, j? POWER! liu.l bylishig The Victor Vapor Engine manufactured by Thofl. Kane Sc Co., Chicago. Steady speed, easy to start, always re liable, absolutely safe, till parts inter changeable, adapted for any class of work requiring power. J. D. MYERS, Agt, FREELAND, PA. Call or send for catalogues and prices. i Caveats,and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-? ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. * OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATCNT OFFICE' and we can secure patent in less time tlian those J remote from Washington. £ Send model, drawing or photo., with dcscrip-# tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of i charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents," with' cost of same in the U.S. and foreign countries? sent free. Address, £ ,C u A„SfI2OW&,CO.: OPP. PATENT OFFICE. WASHINGTON. D. C. G. HO RACK, Baker & Confectioner. Wholesale and Retail. CENTRE STEEET, FREELAND. Dr. N. MALEY, mmswm Second Floor, Birkbeck Brick. OVER BIttKBECK'S STOIiK.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers