Royal aiukcs the food pure, wholesome und delicious. m PGPOS POWDER Absolutely Puro FREELAND TRIBUNE. Esta'clishod 1033. PUBLISHER EVE 11V MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET AIIOVE CENTRE. ' Make all money check*, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Omijiany, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 I Six Months 75 Four Months 60 j Two Months 2") The dute which the subscription is paid to is ] on the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt- j ly to tins ofliec whenever paper is not received. , Arrearages must lie paid when subscription is discontinued. FREE LAX I). PA., OCTOBER 7. 1897. j Should Not Tolerate Sucli Nonsense. From the Journal of the Knights ol Labor. There is one man in the United States who needs to be taught a very severe ; lesson, not only for his own good, but for a salutary example and warning to others of his same class. That man is Militia General Gobin. of Pennsylvania, who for over a week defied and trampled under foot the constitution and statute : laws of the state by shielding a mur derer sheriff and nearly a hundred murderous deputy sheriffs from arrest by the law officers (if Luzerne county on warrants regularly issued by the courts of that county. This hrass-iuountod Brigadier Gobin assumed that the little brief authority vested in him made him a dictator, above all law for the time being, and took it upon himself to defy the courts of the state and shield the murderers in defiance of the laws. Now, this is a mighty dangerous kind of amusement for these tin soldiers to be permitted to engage in. If they are allowed to go on unchecked, some of these fine days one of them will be liable to blossom out into a sort of Kaiser Wilholm. claiming to rule by divine authority, even as the I very Lord's annointed. The American people will not tolerate suck dangerous nonsense, and the sooner one of these brass-plated bullies is given a term in the pen with other felons and lawbreakers, the better it will be for the public peace and the welfare of the com munity generally, not excepting the "mellsli" generals themselves. Thin Is the Year to Smash it. From the Philadelphia Record. The simple question with the Inde pendent Republicans of Pennsylvania— those who can afford to have a con- j science in political matters —is whether they will seize the present opportunity to smash the Machine, or whether they will wait till some other year. There are two wuys of going about this. One way is to fight the Machine ( "within the 1 ines of the party" by vot- ' ing for its candidates for auditor gen eral and state treasurer, and thus to confirm its evil power. The other way is to vote for the Read ing ticket, and thus smash the Machine beyond the possiblity of repair. This would not only make a new deal in Pennsylvania politics all around, but it would wonderfully clear up the political atmosphere in the commonwealth. It would show that the Republican party j in this state has also a large body of in dependent members who prefer the pub lic cause to partisan considerations, arid who will not tolerate the perpetration of iniquities in their name. It is for the independent Republicans to make the decision in November in this great issue of the "Commonwealth versus Machine Misrule." A Correct View of Dusch. From the Wilkesbarre Newsdealer. Paul Dasch hails from the lower end of the county, Upper Lehigh. It is un necessary to call attention to the pa triotic wax in which for a lifetime he has discharged his duty .is a loyal Demo crat. of German ancestry, the sturdi ness which characterizes his actions is natural. lie has worked with his party for years and was never downcast even when the storms of defeat broke over the stalwart ship. He believed that the day of redemption would come. His courage in this respect was as great as was his faith in Democratic principles. Now he looks upward and sees the skies gleaming with a promise that to hitu is assuring. His nomination was a stroke of genius. The call to him to accept the prothonotary's place on the ticket was an expressive one and he realized Its significance. He answered it promptly and the spirit that he will throw Into the pending canvass will be magnetic in its in Hue lice. Making New Faces. Ilalf a century ago a child with the most distressing facial deformities was j illowed to groxv up a dread to himself and an object of pity to all Lis asso ciates. It was not deemed possible to correct these ills'; indeed, nobody gave 1 it any thought; the wretched victim suf fered out luis miserable remnant of life, and tlrat was aIL there was about it. Within the past fexv years a branch of surgery that is of the utmost impor tance to humanity has been receiving careful attention. And as the. art of restoration stand's at the present day, there is 110 excuse whatever for the hideous objects that were formerly looked upon as incurable and there fore inevitable. All manner of changes are now made in the personal appear ance. The harelip and distorted mouth are treated scientifically, and the face is restored to its normal condi tion and even greatly Improved by the operations which these blemishes ren der necessary. Crooked noses are straightened, and ears that extend out from tire head are skillfully put. to rights with the most astonishingly gratifying results. Flat, humped or depressed noses are made symmetrical and even beautifuL Of course, the j treatment is more successful upon the young than when undertaken with those xxdio have reached maturity, but even late in life it is quite worthwhile to have some of one's blemishes re moved and to present to the world as gjood an appearance as possible. Lightning lias been very fatal in the region of Fort Ogden, Fin., over eight persons having been killed. Many strange incidents are related, the most extraordinary being a story from across the Kissimmee river told there recently. Henry Myers was killed by lightning there while in a field, and buried tbe ; next day. The second, day a heavy 1 thunderstorm arose. Ilis grave j xvas struck, the lightning tearing open the grave, •throwing the coffin out und tearing i't open. It was thus found txvo days afterward by some relatives and the body reburicd. The body xvas not disfigured by the last electric boH but tire coffin bad been torn to pieces, the body being lefti 011 top of the up turned earth with t'he splintered coffin fragments around it. This is vouch- I safed for by several people from tlrat section. St. Louis boasts of a young woman xvhose matrimonial exploits break the record in that litae. ller*maiden name ! xvas Gussie Campbell, and she has been married twice and divorced twice xvith - in three months. Her fust husband. Will Spencer, xvas divorced from her about ten weeks ago. and she married a man named Winslow. They did not get along well together, and the aidiof the divorce court xvas again invoked, and successfully. A day or txvo ago > lie eloped with Spencer, her first husband, and they were married again after a separation of less than three mouths. The town of Brookline in Massachu setts has tire surprisingly large per cap ita valuation of $3,050, which is thought to be very much larger than tli.it in ! any other community in the country. Boston comes next with a per capita val uation of $1,014; Nexvton, also in Mass- ; j aehusetts, has $1,717. Washington ranks next to Newton in the table given, ' having a valuation per head of $1,137, ! ' according to the figures of 1595. Nexv j York's per capita valuation for the same j year is given as $1,058. When James Robinson killed his | wife at Fieldsboro, A T . J., a fexv days ago and then cut his throat lie expected a quick und comparatively easy death. He xvas mistaken, however, and will dr one of the most liorrib'e of lingering deaths—by starvation. He cut lis throat in such a manner that it is an im possibility for him to swallow food or drink, and the doctors in attendance say there is 110 way in< which,they ca<n relieve him. There are few people xvho would are to be struck by lightning, and Jennie Pierce, of Pine Point, Vt., was 01. e of these. She was struck a few days ago, | however, and rendered unconscious for some time, but since she recovered her senses she is very glad that it happened. The reason is that, after being totally deaf for ten years, she can noxv hear as xvell as anyone, the change having been caused by the shock of the thunder-bolt. One of the fashionable Nexv York shoe stores noxv advertises: "TIE:, limbs transformed into rounded 1> *ai:'y xvhile you wait. Price 50 cents." Jn j vestigation the fact that this , good news is exclusively for the bicycle girl. By paying 50 cents extra any pair of high bicycle boots or leggings n be so padded that there is appar t beauty in Hie rounded curves. A late dispatch says that WilL.cn Urotty, who before the war xvas • ,0 of t lie most widely Known eo n't factors of tlie "underground railxlay" f. r as sisting runaway slaves, died the other j day near MnrysviEe, O. It is said that Mr. Grotty helped more than 3,000 slaves to escape to Canada. Only four of the states *.f the union 1 use officially the term commonwealth, I these being Massachusetts. Ptnnsyl j vania, Virginia and Kentucky. | Woman's rights are surrendered to 1 her very grudgingly. A New York man committed suicide rather t.', nail >whh wife t o supporthiin. NEWS OF THE WEEK. Wednesday, Sept. 30. The Republican city convention of Greater Nexv York nominated General B. F. Tracy for mayor, Ashbel P. Fitch for comptroller and It. Ross Appleton for president of the council. Seth Low, placed in nomination by Jacob Worth, received the votes of 49 Brooklyn dele gates. Fitch was nominated by ac clamation. The St. Louis platform and the Raines law xvere approved Mas sachusetts Democrats, in a stormy | convention, nominated George Fred Williams for governor and indorsed the Chicago platform The amend ment to the New Jersey constitution : prohibiting the legislature from allow ing gambling xvas defeated Chan- j dler Hale, son of Senator Hale of Maine, xvas married to Miss Rachel B. | Cameron, daughter of ex-Senator Cam- ! eron. at Harrisburg Oscar Michaels, | a prominent citizen of Camden, N. J., ■ committed suicide Miss Trase V. j Mainz of Providence has begun a suit against B. Li. Loderer, a wealthy man ufacturing j-xvelei, for $50,000 for breach of promise to marry It xvas , denied In London that the asking of Russia and Japan to take part in the I seal conference was an afterthought ; Minister Woodford exchanged vis- j its xvith the Duke of T uan and other members of the Spanish cabinet A plot against the czar during his recent visit to Warsaw -as just come to light Seven Turkish sailing vessels at tempted unsn cessfully to land troops In Crete The Nicaraguan congress has granted a 30 year franchise to the Atlas Steamship company of London, giving it exclusive rights on the Rio San Juan del Norte It is stated in Berlin that Embassador White lias not been instructed to negotiate a reciproc ity treaty xvith Germany President McKinley visited Williams college and held a reception for the students and the people of the toxvn The unex pected return of the Spanish minister to Washington xvas taken as an indi cation that new developments in the Cuban situation xvere at hand. TliurHila**, c Vy.t 30. The Spanish minister of Premier Az carraga resigned. Senor Sagasta may be called on to form a Liberal minis try, and a less severe policy toward Cuba may follow Shortages have been discovered in the accounts of the South Dakota state insurance depart ment, and it was said that several of ficials will be criminally prosecuted Mrs. Clara Gray xvas killed and Mrs. Itosina Nelson and txvo children were seriously injured by a Long Island railroad train, xvhioh ran them down as they xvere driving across the track at Springfield, N. Y. Nexv Jersey election returns are reaching Trenton very slowly. The Indications noxv are that the antlgambllng amendment xvas lost by 3,500 votes Engineer Charles Pearson of Mount Vernon xvas killed in a collision on the Nexv Haven rail road at New Haven yesterday. The airbrakes failed to work The Re publicans of Massachusetts renominat ed Roger Wolcott for governor. The i gold standard Democrats nominated Dr. William Everett of Quincy for the same office Experts xvho testified for the defense in the Luetgert murder trial in Chicago said that several bones said to have come from the body of Mrs. Luetgert might have come from animals, and that some of them hail not been subjected to boiling potash Horatio David Davles xvas chosen lord mayor of London, succeeding Sir George Faudel Phillips A rumor was circulated in London that the United States Is negotiating xvith Denmark for the purchase of Greenland. It xvas denied in Washington President Mc- Kinley left Adams, Mass., on his re turn to Washington Four more deaths from yelloxv fever occurred In Now Orleans and many nexv cases xvere reported Fire broke out in the cen tral poxver station of the Capital , 1 Traction company of Washington and in 30 minutes the magnificent six story structure was doomed. The j building occupied the entire block from 1 Pennsylvania avenue to C street and I from Thirteen and One-half street to ! Fourteenth street. Loss, $1,000,000. Friday, Oct. 1. 1 The Democratic city convention in the Grand Central palate, New York, nom inated Robert A. Van Wyck for mayor. : Bird S. Color for comptroller and Jacob Ituppert, Jr., for president of the coun cil. The nominations xvere practically j unanimous. The National (gold stand ard) Democrats, under the lead of ex- : Mayor Grace and Corporation Counsel Scott, decided to support the Tammanv ticket. The executive committee of the German-American Reform union decid ed to support Seth Low for mayor. An alliance xx ill be made xvith the Citizens' Union. It xvas announced that Henry George, xvho was nominated for mayor by the silver Democrats, xvoula accept the nomination The Greek boule met to consider the peace treaty xvith Tur key. A vote of confidence in the Ralii ' ministry xvas lost. 93 to 30, and a crisis , was precipitated The campaign ; against the Mohmands on the Afghan frontier of India has been successfully concluded, and nothing noxv remains but to collect the fines Senator Wol cott has arrived in London, where he will await the nnsxver of the British government to the proposals of the monetary commission The London Times says China is raising a nexv loan In order to pay the Japanesq indemnity before 1898 and is negotiating xvith Eng lish and German banks and also xvith ' .1 powerful American syndicate, includ ing J. Pierpont Morgan and other linan clet'H- Russia is said to be negotiating with other states t.o check British en croachments in Afghanistan, in Africa and in the Pacific- The indications In ! Spain all point to the selection of Benor Sagasta by the queen regent to form a Liberal ministry The yelloxv fever epidemic appears to be spreading to all j portions of Nexv Orleans, but there was ; no increase In the number of fatalities , and new cases The Bostons are as sured of the League pennant. Their vie - j lory over the Brooklyns at Eastern' park and the defeat of tffi Baltimore's by the Washingtons give thurn the 1 championship The National (gold j standard) staff? convention of Massa chusetts, held in Boston, nominated William Everett for governor, J*mps E. Cotter for lieutenant governor, B. M. Wolf for secretary of state, H. P. Tobey for treasurer. Harry Douglass for au ditor and W. W. M<Clinch for attorney general. Saturday, Oct. H. j N* y) Dow, the father of the Prohlbi -1 tlon party in Maine, died at his home in that state Ex-Congressman T. E. .Miller, colored, of Columbia. S. C.. an- I nounced his intention to bring suit I against Eastman college, Poughkeep- [ ie, N. Y., for refusing to admit his daughter to that institution The pope's health gives grave concern to ihe church dignitaries in Rome The American Institute of Architects elect ed officers, with George it. Post of New York for president The appraisers have found the estate of Senator Fair to he valued at $12,000,000 to $15,000,000 Newton L. Bates was appointed surgeon general of the navy by Presi dent McKinley The Democratic Al liance of New York nominated Henry George for mayor. A committee secur !ed his promise to run Kings county { (N. Y.) Democratic leaders nominated ! the following officers: Sheriff, F. D. j Creamer; register, H. F. Haggerty: I county clerk, W. P. Wuest; treasurer. I J. W. Kimball, and borough president. J E. M. Grout Many suicides took ! place in and around New York city. ! Among them was that of Dr. Robert N. Flagg of Yonkers, who jumped from the second story of the Murray Hill hotel. Mrs. Caroline Ravinius suffo cated herself and four children at the West Shore hotel. Clark E. K. Royce killed himself with illuminating gas at the Grand Union hotel. It is sus pected that the death of Harmon S. Hurt, who was found dead in the Dev onshire hotel, was due to other than ; natural causes In a match race at Springfield. Ills.. Star Pointer defeated Joe Patchen in the third heat in 2:00 i reducing the world's record for har ness horses by one-half second E. Krausbahen, wife and two children were found starving at Thirty-fourth street and Broadway, New York city James Cunningham was run over and killed by a trolley car at White Plains, N. Y. Germany's reported threat to withdraw from the concert if Greece did not accept the peace condi tions is confirmed by the Athens white hook The consul generals of Guate mala to San Francisco and New York. | who arrived in the former city from i home, say the reports of the war are [ greatly exaggerated Earthquakes are : 1 reported from Borneo, and a new island is said to have been thrown up i i near Nempakul. Monday, Oct. 4. Henry Savage Landor, the author and traveler, has returned to India from an exploring trip in Tibet, in the (nurse of which he was arrested and sentenced to death by the natives. His life was spared through the interven tion of the grand llama, and he was re- | leased after having been subjected to severe tortures, including branding with hot irons and stretching on the rack —— Destructlve prairie fires devastated a wide section of country in Manitoba, killing live stock and burning farm buildings, implements and crops. Two women and five children were burned to death Senor Sagasta had a confer ence with the queen regent of Spain and accepted the position of president of the ministerial council By the spreading of the rails live cars of a Denver and Rio Grande train were roll ed over near Cotopaxi, Colo. Two pas sengers were killed and several injured i Ernest Haydenof Springfield. Mass.. and an unknown companion committed i suicide by gas In a room at the Broad way Garden, New York The German emperor's new naval hill calls for 410.- 000,000 marks M. Delyannis has not been chosen premier of the new cabinet in Greece. He says he will overthrow it A boy was killed in Keene, N. H., by swallowing a bee Lynchers at Os good, Ind., were disappointed by the es- | cape of their man Four persons were i drowned at Hamilton, Ala., returning ! from a party A monthly meteorolog ical chart for the benefit of seamen of I the great lakes is to be issued by the weather bureau The Jesuit fathers j celebrated the golden jubilee of their j establishment in Boston Senor Calvo, ; the Costa Rlcan minister, denies the , published statement that, by the de- ; < lsion of General Alexander of South Carolina, who was appointed to mark the boundary line between Nicaragua I and Costa Rica, the latter country has j lost the right to he consulted in regard I to the Nicaragua canal project Thir- 1 ty-one new cases of yellow fever and ; two deaths were reported in New Or leans. The chief engineer of the steam ship John Wilson, which arrived at the Delaware breakwater, died from the disease. Tuesday, Oct. S. The Citizens' Union nominated John 11. Schumann for president of the coun cil and Charles S. Fairehild for comp troller of Greater New York on the ticket with Seth Low, the candidate for mayor. The People's Party nominated Henry George for mayor of Greater New York —President Low resigned as head of Columbia university, His resig nation will be acted on Nov. 15. The new university buildings on Morning side heights were dedicated A fire at Austin. Pa., destroyed 100 buildings, caused a loss of between $150,000 and $200,000 and made 500 persons homeless. But five dwellings were left standing in the place Fire at the Central prison at Toronto did damage amounting to nearly $60,000. It destroyed the broom and twine factories, together with a large amount of machinery and stock j Four fishermen were drowned off | Long Branch by the capsizing of their boat- Paolo Ortelli, a Paterson (N. J.) 1 silk dyer, took ids life after giving up j the secret rf ills skill to a woman in Philadelphia, who betrayed him Cor- | nelius J. Healey, water register of Jor- I sey City from ISB7 to 1895, was reported $4,236.11 short in his accounts by an ex- i pert. Healey declares there is no short- ; age s. p. Hutson, a southerner, after I giving his possessions to some Bowery | children, tried suicide by inhaling gas in his room at 110 Park row, New York. 1 His landlord, however, turned oft* the gas at the meter, and Hutson is now at the Hudson Street hospital The new Spanish ministry, with Senor Sagasta. as premier, took the oath of office in Madrid The Cavendish sporting ex pedition, which was reported massacred in the Interior of Africa, has arrived at the coast alive and well Great dam age was done in Japan by a typhoon The insurgents in the Philippine is lands Inflicted - severe losses on the .Spanish— A severe battle took place in the Cuban mountains between insur gents and the Spaniards Six persons were killed at a grade crossing in Mis souri A Rome newspaper says the health f popp Geo is satisfactory Anna Stiller, a lady in walling to Oar a lottn, the former empress of Mexico, is dying nt Vienna as a result of repeated attempt* at suicide Thp constitution al amendment voted on in Connecticut, i providing that till electors must he able i ' to read English, was overwhelmingly adopted. J PREJUDICES OF ANIMALS. ! Their l.lkcN timl Dlslikem Are Very Often I naceountulilc. ' The likes and dislikes of animals are unaccountable. Some horses take a vio lent prejudice against certain men, even though they are treated kindly and though the man's moral character is fair. Between the cat and dog there is a violent antipathy, which, however, is not infrequently displaced by mutual respect, and even affection in excep tional cases. The elephant, hates dog's and rats. Cows dislike dogs, and so do sheep, for good reasons. But horses like dog's and, what seems stranger, are particularly partial to bears. On the ; other hand, horses loathe and detest j camels and refuse to be decently civil ! to them after long acquaintance. They even hate the place where camels have been, which seems to be carrying race prejudice to an extreme. Evolutionists are accustomed to ex plain these instinctive feelings as sur vivals of ancestral enmities dating from the days when one race preyed upon the other. This would account for the natural enmity of cows to dogs, for when cows were wild they were obliged to defend their calves from bands of predacious wild dogs. But why should the horse like dogs? It is but the other day that the wild horses organized to defend their colts from wolves on our western prairies. What could the an cestral horse have had against the an cestral camel of a million years ago? Above all. why should the horse approve of the bear? It must be that the horse has a dormant sense cf beauty and of humor. The ideal of the horse is grace combined with strength. He disap proves from the bottom of his nature of the hopelessly vulgar, awkward and uti | esthetical camel. The bear, he sees at | once, though clumsy, is unpretentious, j truthful and not devoid of u sense of j humor. The dog he recognizes as a good fellow, companionable and unselfish, lie therefore forgets his ancestral pre ' dacious habits. A strong bond between I .he dog and the horse is that they arc both fond of sport, whereas n camel would not go an inch to see the best race that was ever run.—Hartford Courant. BIRDS BUILD HOUSES. Ami Then They Deeorr.te Tlieni in n lieu 11 y Artistic .tinnnor. There has just been discovered by a government ornithologist a tribe of birds in the island of-New Guinea which show themselves excellent architects by building each for himself a little house on the ground. Of course, the house that the bird builds is not an elaborate pile of brown stone or even bricks. It is made merely j of twigs and pebbles, kept together by ! the interweaving of the tall, dried grass peculiar to the wild fields of New Guinea. But it answers its purpose just as well in keeping off the ruin and ' sun, and no wind can knock down the house, owing to the ingenious manner in which the bird selects a site. The birds have received the temporary name of garden birds, owing to the fact that they fence in a little plot around their houses, for no other ap- I parent reason than to let other birds : | know that the inclosed plot is private j property. . When the male garden bird takes a j mate he selects some level spot, in the | fields where lie finds a tree not more i than two inches in thickness at the base. With this tree as a center pos* ; the bird builds his house of twigs leaves, pebbles and grass, and when finished it is a cunningly wrought man ! sion, shaped like a bell, and with two stories. In the upper story several 1 small openings are left to act us win ' dows, and the ground floor has one large | opening which serves for entrance as I well :.s to let in the light. When the house is finished the bird erects a circular fence, two inches in height, around the house, and thus in closes a plot three feet distant from it at every point. The ir.teror of each hense is dec | orated with frcsli leaves, the wings of beautiful in roots, pretty feathers which other birds may have shed, gayly-col ered berries, and even the bleached skulks of birds that have died in the j fields long before. The gardens of the birds are strewn < with wild blossoms, and when these j wither they are carefully replaced.— N. Y. World. SIMPLE EXPERIMENT* It Shown How the Pnrth In Held in I Position lu Spare, A pretty experiment conducted by j very simple methods will show how this | terrestrial globe is kept in its position i (§3 , ®'£§)| EXPERIMENT. WITH MAGNETS. ! in sj ace. Secure two magnets of equai | j paw or. placing them an inch or two , ; apart. Then make a small ball of paper ; or other liyiit material, fastening on , I opposite sides bits of steel or similar j 1 metal. Place the ball between the mag- j nets, where it will assume of Its own ac- | ! cord a fixed position, held only b.v the j ! attraction of the magnets, which act ; on it as do the surrounding planets on ! !I he earth. TV till* • how -Ml Them Op. h. a western school, not very long ago. i a little fellow was called upon to read j , for the county superintendent, who was paying the school a visit. The boy was a good reader in all respects but ' one—lie gave absolutely no heed to | punctuation marks. When he had fln ( ishod the superintendent asked; "Willie, where arc your pauses?" Willie dropped his book and held uf . | bolh liamls. "Here they are, sir," he said, i Why the Owl Lock* Win*. I The owl's wise look is the result of n j physical oddity, his eyes being fixed ' Itnmo'iibly In their sockets: so when ever he passes his pyos from one object to another he must move his head. AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "CASTORIA," AND "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK. I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Eyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and docs now s/trr —T - on everi J 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 and see that it is the kind you have always bought 0,1 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 Chas. H. Fletcher is President. /> w, . March 8,1897. Do Not Be Deceived. i Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting i 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 You 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 Slioes, Flour and Feed, Tobacco, Cigars, 2'tVi a/irf Queenswtire, Wood and Willoioware, liable and Floor Oil ('loth, Etc. A celebrated brand of XX tlour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. My motto is smul] profits and quick sales. I always have fresh Roods and am turning my stock every month. Every article is guaranteed. AMANDUS OSWALD, | N. W. Cor. Centre arul Front Sh,, Freeland. I P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director I Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Frceldnd. VIENNA: BAKERY J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Stroet, Freoland. ! CHOICE BREAD OF ALB KINDS j CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. ' j FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES | BAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery t Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. ! Delivery and loijrply wagon* to all part* oj j J to an and mrroutidinge every day. fire You a Roman Catholic Then you should enjoy reading the literary I productions of the best talent in tlao Cutlio I lie prlcHtbood and laity (and you know what { they CAN do>, as they apjear weekly in The Catholic Standard and Times OF PHILADELPHIA, The ablenl and most vigorous defender of Cntholicisin. All the news-strong edito rials—a children's depart mi nt, which Is cle : vatlng and educational. Prizes ottered monthly to the little ones. Only #'.<><> per ' year. The (Grandest Premium ever Issued by any paper given to subscribers for IM>7. .send for sample copies and premium circular. The Catholic Standard and Times Pub'g Co 5011*505 Chestnut St. Phlln. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT! 151 Centre street, Freeland. ; FINEST LIQUOR, BEER, PORTER, ALE. CIGARS AND TEM PERANCE DRINKS. ggpgg?]' | KY™ WHEELS, I f Too! | STYLES: y j,'. Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. >, ; J Tho Lightest Kunning Wheels on Earth. £ I THE ELDREDGE [ | ....AND.... 3 THE RELVIDERE. G ! % ? •s | J Wo always Mado Good Sewing Machines! Why Shouldn't we Mako Good Wheels! >' I i I £ National Sewing Machine Co., U j r. s ; 339 Broadway, Factory: New York. Bclvidere, Ills. j9 power! I'ifn |. i . -j iuercaso at nu If potise can be Xw 1. ;■■ V | had by using The Victor Vapor Engine manufactured by Thus. Kane A Co., Chicago, j Steady speed, easy to start, always re liable, absolutely safe, all parts ink r cbangeable. adapted for any class of work requiring power. I D. MYERS, Agt, FREELAND, PA. I Call or send for catalogues and prices. Anyone sending n sketch nnd description nmy quicklv ascertain, tree, whether nn Invention is probably pivtontnhle. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency fornocuring patents in America. We have a Washington ofliec. Patents taken through Munu & Co. receive special notice iu the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully Illustrated, t:\rgost circulation of anv scientific journal, weekly, termss3.oo a year; 51.50 six months. Hpoeimen copies and HAND BOOK ON PATENTS sent free. Address MUNN & CO., 3GI Ilroitdwuy, New York. j | Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-i a ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. # SOUN OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE' J and wc can secure patent in less time than those 2 J remote from Washington. J ' Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- * Jtlon. We advise, if patentable or not, free of i 4 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. ? I A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents,'' with£ I J cos t of same in the U.S. and foreign countries i #sent free. Address, 2 JC.A.SNOW&CO.i I P*TENT OFFICE, WASHiworoN, D. C. I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers