koyul makes the food pure, wholesome und delicious. ' j ! POWKR Absolutely Pure j | FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1388. PUJILIBHED EVERY MONDAY ANI) THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUKE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STKKKT ABOVE CENTHE. nil money orders, check*, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Ono Year $1.69 Six Months 7f> Four Months ••• .60 i Two Months -•* The date which the subscription is paid to is on tiie address label of each paper, the change 1 of which to a subsequent date becomes a j receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in : advance of the present date. Report prompt- , ly to this office whenever paper is not received. I FKEELAXI). I*A.. OCTOItER 28, 187. J __ A Republican "Ghost Story." The sensational piece of political ! chicanery set afloat in the early part : of this week, telling of the discovery of a ; plot to assassinate Sheriff Martin, and j the locking up of a wandering foreigner to give the story the appearance of truth, j is too stale a method of catching votes, i Public sympathy and public sentiment cannot be turned in favor of either the- ! Republican ticket or Republican officials by any such concoction in these days. | The people are long ago past that stag* : in life to believe that a band of assassins, j "sixty in number," it is said, are stalking : through the county looking for bloody j revenge for their comrades' deaths a' i Lattimer. The poor Hun whom the Republicans have deprived of his liberty 1 (until the election is over) deserves all • the sympathy which voters may have to ' spare, and no honest man can have any respect for the interested perpetrators | of such a diabolical tale as came on j Sunday from the office of a Republican auxiliary shout. Even the Wilkesbarro Times , one of 1 most rabid Republican organs in the j county, refuses to accept this cut-and- ' dried fairy tale, and comments on it | editorially as follows: "The alleged plot to do personal injury to Sheriff Martin, for which a foreigner is now in jail charged with being con cerned in. probably exists only in the imagination of a few overly zealous people. Plotters of murder do not issue broadcast circulars printed in three or four languages calling for an open meet ing to arrange the details of their pro posed crime. The circular found in tin accused man's pocket seems to us to be a perfectly innocent thing." Give Hi in u Rousing Majority. Frccland borough and Foster town- j ship should roll up handsome majorities j for ilie only lower end candidate on any i of the tickets to be voted for next Tues- i day—Paul Daseh, of Upper Lehigh. | This should bo done, not only because he is a lower end and North Side man, j but because his election will give the j citizens of the county an official who I can conduct the prothonotary's office I intelligently and honestly. In Mr. Dascli the people will have an office holder whom all can approach with con lidciico that courteous treatment and gentlemanly attention will be given them. Freeland and Foster should lead I in giving him majorities in proportion j to the voters cast. Here it is lie is best known, and that ought to insuro him almost unanimous support from our citizens. There is more catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years waa Blip posed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pro nounced it a local disease, and prescrib ed local remedies, and by constantly j failing to cure with local treatment, pro nounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to he a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the oniv constitutional cure on the market. It is taken in ternally in doses fr .-m ten drops to a teaspoonful. It aCs directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the sys tem. They offer on * hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Addre-s. F. J. CIIBNEY & CO., Toledo, O. JSy*"Boid by druggists, h'e. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Beauty In Blood Beep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without, it. Casearets Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep il clean, by stirring up the Inzy liver und driving all im purities from the body. Begin today to banish pimples, boils, blotches, bluckheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cnscnrets—beauty for 10 cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c,26c,50c. CASTOHIA. Thfl fac- /p j 8 ; NEWS OF THE WEEK. Wednesday, Oct. 20. I George M. Pullman, the millionaire ' car builder of Chicago, died suddenly f heart disease yesterday morning. The announcement of his death on the New York and Chicago Stock Ex changes was followed by lively lluct.ua tions in the stocks in which he was in terested The New Jersey state board •>f canvassers declared the antigam hllng amendment recently voted upon carried by a majority of 802 and denied a motion submitted on behalf of the race track men to send the returns back to the county canvassing boards on the ground that certain ballots had I been rejected illegally The steam j ship Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse arrived in New York, and a rough passag • was reported. The vessel beat the St. Paul's I best record, but did not equal her own j previous one Captain Levering has j elected to have his alleged nialr. et ; rnent of Private Hammond at For Sheridan made the subject, of a• nrt of inquiry rather than to be court m.in- Haled The Catholic archbishops < f I the United States began their an ui. 1 i meeting in Washington Armed men I are searching in the Catskills night and | day for the four negroes namedMondoi - who abducted Kate Clum, a 17-year old girl Ex-King Milan of Servia re turned to Belgrade for the first ime since his abdication in 1889, and the cabinet resigned in consequence The steamboat Favorite, with 30b mem bers of the Evans Outing club of Brook lyn on board, ran ashore off White stone point, N. Y. All on board were saved The St. Louis police claim to have located Embezzler Charles H. Cadwalader of Union City, Ind., In the jail at Janesville, Wis., where he is al ! leged to have shot a man William j Millard, ex-collector of taxes of Peoria, I Ills., was arrested, charged with th" defalcation of $20,000 Maurice E Mo ran of the Superior (Wis.) football team was probably fatally injured in a game. Thursday, Oct. 21. ! Lord Salisbury replied formally to the , proposals of the American bimetallic special commission, announcing the | British government's inability to open | the Indian mints at present and re fuses to send a representative to an in ternational bimetallic conference. The ; British government would, however, consider any other practical sugg'en : tlons from the United States The British force in India met with severe j losses in storming heights hold by rebel I tribesmen on the Samana range A French garrison in Madagascar was j attacked by natives, losing several of ficers and many men James K. Tay , lor was appointed supervising architect i of the treasury by Secretary Gage— Dr. Sheldon Jackson declared that the i use of reindeer would prove the only ; solution of the transportation question : in Alaska Mrs. Julia A. Sherman. I 90 years old. and Benjamin Hunt, wic!- : ower, 88 years old, were married in \Ya tertown, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. David ' McLane of Westchester, Fa., aged 8*; : and 93 respectively, signed a mutual ; agreement of separation The North western Miller, published at Minneapo j lis, gives the flour output last week at Minneapolis. Duluth, Superior and Mii- J waukee at 425,140 barrels A. J. Pep per, a wealthy farmer of Rush, Pa., I died from injuries received at the hands ; of thieves While a funeral sermon ' was being preached in a Little Rock j church a daughter-in-law of the de ceased arose and denounced as villain ; ously false a statement of the minister that the deceased had lost her mind be - fore death The secretary of war has created a military reservation in Alas ka which includes all the land within a radius of 50 miles of St. Michael's. This action is for the purpose of enabling the government to preserve order and protect property Governor Black. Secretary Bliss and General Tracy ad dressed a big mass meeting in Lenox Lyceum, New York City. The gover nor urged the necessity of maintaining Re publican organization in the city. Gen eral Tracy predicted that Low will not get 35.000 votes in New York or 30.000 | in Brooklyn. Friday, Oct. 22. I The jury in the Luetgert murder trial j in Chicago was discharged, having fail i od to agree upon a verdict after dellber- 1 ! ating on the evidence for 66 hours. ; | Luetgert made a sworn statement de- j i daring that he did not kill his wi! * 1 and that he was ignorant of her w here - ! | ahouts The board of directors of the ■ Catholic university voted to refer to the pope the question whether Mgr. Schroe | der shall continue a professor in ti. i university An unknown man threw vitriol in the faces of two mill girls in the street in Norwalk, Conn. One may die, and if she lives she will be totally blind. The other will be blind in ? the fls< :i y ar. lb- give* j the data of the department for that • period and makes sever U pertinent ree - onimtiidiillons. WEYLER'S SUCCESSOR. Sen. Hlnnro In Suitl to lie <> uitc a Cruel "the Batcher.** Ramon Blanco y Arenas, who sue coeds NVeyieras commander-in-chief ol the Spanish forces in Cuba and as gov ernor of the island, is no new hand at • the business he will have to do. In 1594 he was sent by Spain, to the Philip pine islands to handle the discontented subjects there, and his success, judged from the butcher standpoint, was not what lie desireck Cubans in New York have no more love for Bianco than they have for Wey ler and anticipate no relief from the bloody methods that have marked the GEN. RAMON I3L.AXCO. (The New Captain-General of Cuba.) course of Spain during 1 lie present rev olution. it is even hinted by some good friends of Cuba here that Blanco will ; attchipt to be even more merciless than ! Weyler. With an additional force of 1 20,000 men at his command Blanco will j have more power thau Weyler pos sessed. In other quarters than Cuba it is said that (Jen. Blanco is really a peacefully disposed man, inclined to use mild methods, and it is declared that to com pare him with Weyler is unfair, but ; these same persons admit that when : Blanco settles down to be brifta] and merciless he can do it in the most ap proved manner. In 1879 Blanco was commissioned cap tain-general of Cuba. This was just after the suppression of the last revo lution, and Blanco announced that he would continue the mild policy of Cam pos. But he did nQt keep his promise, lie spent t'hc years intervening between the time he was recalled from Cuba in 1881 to the time in 1594 when he was i sent to the South seas in various posts in the Spanish army. llis attempts to work certain judicial reforms ami ad i minis!native changes in Cuba did not meet with the approval of the cabinet then in power in Madrid, and his light was hidden for a season. His experi ence in the Philippines, while cruel, was not cruel enough for inquisitorial Spain, and he was replaced by Bolavieja. who was mereilessness personllled. For his services in the islands he was raised to the rank of marshal in 1895. and returned the compliment by re porting to Spain the plot whereby the ! islanders hoped to escape the thruil dom of Spain. Blanco practically re signed from the governorship of the islands owing to his inability to devise means cruel enough to burn out the , lire of rebellions. Such is the man who will lake "Butcher" Weyler'splace in the devastated island of Cuba. STANDS VERY HIGH. 41. .J a ION Cnmliott, Frnnoe'w New Amer ican Ain list Nsn ilar. Jules Cambon, the newly appointed French ambassador to the United States, is at present the governor-gen eral of Algeria. lie is to succeed M. i'atenotre, who for diplomatic reasons will be sent to another post. M. Cam boil's present position is the highest in the diplomatic service of France,and 1 his embassy would be construed as a / w/,/ m r-v JUIjES cambon. (New French Ambassador to the United States.) reduction in rank were it not that the government, in order to leave no doubt j bout the matter, lias appointed liim honorary governor of Algeria. This is the first time such a distinction lias been conferred on any man. but there is no question as to the fart that M. Cambon deserves it. lie is a diplomat ;>f the very highest order, and his suc cesses have been noted. His appoint : ieut. all things considered, is one of the strongest marks of the importance which his new government attaches to I .lie American embassy. The new am bassador is a man of strong character, •..bility and supreme consciousness of the seriousness of his work. There is to doubt that he will make u splendid impression in Washington. Flfvnrcliemtn of Onr Navy. ! Or. all the new ships of the navy the American shield has displaced us a 1 figurehead the designs carried on the elder vessels. This is carved out of solid ! brass, with the stars and stripes and the shield proper fitted close around the slender how. while scrollwork extends nackward on either side for a distance of four or live fee 4 . The New York, the ' Minneapolis and the Philadelphia have possibly t he most elaborate designs, some having ecst $ 1.000 or $5,000 each. tMlrlol.l Bible* for ( 'tor:*. A white celluloid Bible which can be washed and disinfected has been manu factured for the use of courtrooms. ESCAPED FROM HAVANA. Senorita Cisneros Rescued by a Newspaper Man. Dcnutlfnl Culinn Patriot Gets Out of Her Prison at Nlfflit—She la Now In Tliia Country and Safe from Peraecatlon. The beautiful little Cuban patriot, Senorita Evangelinu Cossio y Cisneros, heroine of the sensational adventure with the Spanish governor of the Isle of Pines, escaped the other night from the Casa de ilecogidas, where she had been imprisoned for several months on the charge of conspiracy against the crown of Spain and of an attempt upon the life of Gov. Berez, governor of the Isle of Pines. At roll-cull the next morning she was missing, ami the attendants found that one of the iron bars of the room in which she had been confined hud beeu tiled and bent outward. Karl Decker, the correspondent who iWcued the Cuban maiden from her dungeon, is a Washington newspaper man. He is just the person to have undertaken the foolhardy performance, lie is a good-natured, reck lean fellow, brave as a lion and willing to take any kind of chance. The spirit of adven ture is born in him. lie is as playful asa hig Newfoundland dognnd a Hercu les in strength, lie never knew he could light until about three years ago, when he accidentally encountered the bully of Washington. lie hammered the bully into a state of insensibility in about two minutes, and since that time he has been impressed with the feeling that no man could stand up against him. Thus far he has never met his match. Early last spring lie was commissioned to go to Unbound interview Gomez. He penetrated to the insurgents' ranks and remained with tliem three months, narrowly escaping capture and death a dozen times, lie started on his second trip about two mouths ago. He appears to have been very busy since his arrival. The case of Senorita Cossio y Cisneros bus excited the interest and sympathy cf all Cuban sympathizers in this coun try. This feeling has been the more acute because of the report widely cir- EVANGELINA CISNEROS. (Rescued from a Cuban Prison by an American Newspaper Man.) culated that if found guilty of the charges against her the sentence would be banishment to the Spanish penal col ony, although the Spanish authorities expressly disavowed ever intending to inflict this penalty. ller father, Senor Cossio, was a Cuban officer in the ten years' war, and when the present insurrection began he again took sides with the patriots. He was arrested and sent to the Is'.e of Pines. His small band of Cubans, only awaiting an opportunity to join Go mez, were left without a leader, and were about to disorganize when Evan gel! Un offered to lead them. They re creived her with enthusiasm and made her their idol ns well as their leader. A member of the band betrayed lier to tiie Spaniards, and she was sent to join her father in the Isle of Pines July 27 of last year. She had not been on the island long before she attract ed the attention of Gov. Berez, who be came infatuated with her. The story goes that she indignantly rejected his advancer., and that her father, noticing the infatuation, laid a trap for the governor. The latter called upon Evan polinn, who was civil to him for the (list time, and invited him into the house. Scarcely had he entered when Senor Coss'io and his Cuban confed erates rushed into the room to tind Evun relina struggling to free herself from the governor, and weeping hysterically. The governor was overpowered and bound, and it was two days before he was reirased. Ultimately Cossio was again taker, prisoner, but his daughter escaped and ldd herself in a large oven, it is said, where she remained a day and n night, and then, almost famished, she crawled to the house of a supposed friend, who surrendered her to the governor. Senorita Evangelinn and her father were then sent to Havana, where the firmer wns lodged in the Casa de Re rogidns, amid the unfortunate and out cast women of tlie town. And it was not until American sympathy In her i use. expressing itself through Consul General Lee and Mrs. Lee, intervened that anything was done by the Spanish authorities to relieve her desperate eon ditloit, Crrb Powder for Malnrln. A Russian Journal *?il!s attention to flie fact that for some 20 years past the inhabitants of a malarial locality in the government of Kharkov have used pow dered crabs with great success in the ease of fevers. The powder is prepared in tjie following way: Live crabs are poured over with the ordinary whisky until they got asleep; they are then put in a bread-pan in a hot oven, thorough ly dried and pulverized, and the powder passed through n tine sieve. One dose. ii teaspoonfui. is generally sufficient to cure the Intermittent fever; in very ob stinate eases n second dose is required. Each dose is invariably preceded by n glass of aloe brandy. The powder is used in that locality in preference to quinine. 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Address, # O.A.BNOW&OOJ Patent o. nct,