FREELAND TRIBUNE i Established 1888. PCIJLIS]I ED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited OFFICE: MAIN STHKET ABOVE CENTKE. Make nil money orders, check*, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year j Six Months ">■ Four Months W' | Two Months &"• j The date which the subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change j of which to a subsequent date becomes a i receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in i advance of the present date. Report prompt- j ly to this office whenever paper is not received, j FREE LAND, PA., NOVEMBER 18,189": | America's Great. City. The New York Herald calls attention to the fact that London was it city 1,500 j years before the Dutch bought Manhat- j tan island for a song; yet today the great metropolis of the Hritish empire, with its six million inhabitants and 08* | square miles, lias scarcely twice tin i population of New York, with its 3,200.- j 000 inhabitants. It is a striking ill us- i tration of the growth of this country and an object lesson of the superior j wisdom of the builders of its institutions. ! At present Paris is the third largest | city of the world, measured by popula- ! tion, and Berlin the fourth, and Chicag* | couics close upon Berlin in the number j of inhabitants and far surpasses it in | area. In other words, of the largest five cities of the world, the United ' States, notwithstanding her young ag among the nations, has already two. The following data concerning Greatei j New York are interesting. The number of men on the city pa> ' roll will be greater than the regulai army of the United States, the polic j contributing nearly 7,000 and the street cleaners 4,000. The population of the city is equal to the combined population of thirteen new states and territories, whose area i> three thousand times greater than that of the city and about two-fifths of th< j entire republic. A child is born every six minutes in I Greater New York, which means about j 90.000 a year, and. although the death I rate is comparatively low. 70,000 persons die annually, or one about every seven minutes, day and night. New York is unique in the character of its population. It is the largest Irish city in the world, its 850,000 Irish being ' twice as numerous as the population oi Dublin. The Germans are the most numerous, though, there being 900,000 of them there Thus, with the exceptions ol Berlin. New York is the largest German city in the world. The foreign born population numbers 1.250,000 or about one-third of the city's entire population. The least creditable record of Greater New ork is that there are more than ten saloons to each church, but as each church will accomodate at least ten times as many people as the saloon there is probably church room enough for the worshipers. I'oNtitl Banks in a Campaign. In the Sixth Illinois district a cam paign for congressman i> in progress to i fill the vacancy caused by the death of Congressman Cooke. The sentiment for postal savings banks is so strong in Chi cago that both party platforms pledge the candidates to work for them if elect- ' ed. In a recent speech Henry S. Bou tell, one of the candidates, said: The people demand that congress at its next session shall provide for the es tablishment or postal savings banks uu der the control of tin? postofiice depart ment. and i measure looking to this end would have my hearty support. Postal savings banks have given satisfaction to the people wherever they have been tried. Their existence in all parts of the country i- a constant invitation to thrift and economy, and wherever thrift and economy prevail ignorance and crime disappear. The establishment of such a system of agencies for the recep tion of the smallest deposits would be in exact accordance with the principle which should characterize all our legis lation—namely, the protection of the weakest. If we protect the weakest, we protect all. TYethlerhurn on the Black LUt. The postofiice department has official ly decided that the interior department was right when it disbarred John Wedderburn and John Wedderburn & Co., from practice before the patent office, for gross frauds upon gullible clients, and has issued a fraud order against John Wedderburn, John Wed derburn A Co.. and the Xational Recorder. a newspaper owned by them. This order shuts them out of the mails, and will cause all matter addressed to them to be returned to the writers, after being officially stamped "fraudulent." News papers which continue to print Wedder burn & Go's, advertisement after know ledge of tiiis fraud order may also be shut out of the mails. | NEWS OF THE WEEK. Wednesday, Nov. 10. i William Cauldwell, former state sen- I ator, was arrested in New York and ! ! placed under SIO,OOO bail, charged with j j misappropriating: funds belonging to i ! the estate of the late Jason Rogers ! ! The lord mayor's banquet was cele- I brated in the Guildhall of London. The j Marquis of Salisbury discussed the for : eign relations of Great Britain in re i spending to a toast, declaring that the i government was for peace Count ) Okuma. the foreign minister of Japan, | j has resigned, and Count Nishi has been i appointed to succeed him The report j • of the treasurer showed that last year was remarkably rich in gifts to Yale i j university Secretary Gage's son, who has recently come from Dawson, stated ; I that the first steamer from the Klon dike in the spring would probably bring' ! down $15.000,000 War on football was declared by a Chicago alderman, who proposed an ordinance forbidding t lie I playing of the game in that city The | annual meeting of the National Base ball league was begun in Philadelphia ; Three leading life insurance com panies of New York have decided to raise the price of policies on and after Jan. 1 next, because obliged to invest I money at less than 4 per cent for safe - i I ty's sake 1 The executive committee of the National Sound Money league, in session in New York, adopted an ad- j i dress asking that the government pro claim its adherence tthe single gold : standard Premier Sagasta said that i Spain would regard an occasion for war ! with the United States as a grave mls -1 fortune A native officer and 35 Sikhs were hemmed in in a valley on the In dian frontier and slaughtered by the ; j tribesmen The French minister of ' war has declined to reopen the case of j Captain Albert Dreyfus, who Is confined j on the Isle du Diable for treason against i j France, as no new evidence has been ! adduced The Hendersons of Bristol, | j R. 1., have received an order for a new SO ton racing cutter for the Prince of Wales. TliurHiliiy, Nov. 11. | The trial of Martin Thorn for the 1 murder of Guldensuppe at Long Island City was given new Interest by the i appearance on the witness stand of Mrs. Nack, who gave full details of the i confessing that she had assisted i Thorn in Its commission The will of I Charles A. Dana, the late editor of the j New York Sun. was filed for probate. It leaves to his wife all of the estate i except The Hun stock, which goes to his son Paul in trust. The estate is j said to inventory nearly $1.000.000 J The Third appellate division of New j York state supreme court decided that , the presidents of the companies oper ating in what is known as the coal com- ! bine could not be compelled to testify i before a referee, but did not pass on the ! constitutionality of the antitrust laws i The conference between the sealing j experts of the United States and Great | ] Britain and Canada began in Washing- j ; ton. but the work was only preliminary, j There were present Messrs. Jordan, Thompson and Macoun, the experts: ' John W. Foster and Mr. Hamlin for the United States and Sir Louis Da vies for Canada Secretary Sherman : made another demand on Peru for a prompt settlement of the Mac Cord j claim Miss Fink of Woodbridge, N. J., was surprised to find that the man | arrested while pawning her watch, sup posed t<> have been stolen.by burglars, was her fiance At the dinner of the Home Market club, in Boston, speeches* were made by Congressman Dinghy, Congressman Dolliver, Congressman ! Russell and others The New Yoik i State Federation of Women's Clubs opened its convention in Syracuse General Lee sailed for Culm to resume i his duties as consul general at Havana. ' He left his family behind, and in a talk with a friend expressed rather gloomy views of the Cuban situation A 9-year-old boy, arrested for setting fire to the Children's home in Jersey City, ! admitted he did it because he wanted 1 to call out the engines. Friday, Nov. 18. Secretary Sherman and Premier Lau- j rier of Canada held the first of a series i of conferences with a view of bringing l about a settlement of the various pend- j I ing questions which have caused fric- j tion between the United States a .d | Canada. The report that Great Brit- I ain is opposed to the granting of cus- j , toins concessions by Canada to th • I United States was denied. Officials < f ! the United States agricultural dopar.- ! ment are, however, opposed to any ar rangement which will admit the agri cultural products of Canada to compo- ; tition with those of this country. At the Bering sea sealing conference statistics J were presented by the representatives | of the United States showing that the ; seal herds are decreasing rapidly in numbers The trial at Long Island j City of Martin Thorn for the inur Icr of ! William Guldensuppe was declared a ! i mistrial and a new jury was ordered ) on account of the illness of one < f the | [ jurors, unfitting him for further s i vice. ' I j The other jurors were discharged , | May and Minnie Stewart, two sehool i girls, were seriously wounded by hunt- j ' ers who fired at them near Perth Am- ! boy. N. J. It was asserted in Wash > : ington that President McKinley expects j 61 senators to vote to ratify the Ha- ! I waiian annexation treaty The Call- J f fornia supreme court granted a respite | for Durrant, who had been sentenced to | die on the gallows Greek bands which crossed the Thessaiian frontier , were repulsed by the Turks, many in - ' ing killed or captured The president j of Nicaragua is sending a commissi, n to the United States empowered to sell ; I the National railroad and steamboats jof that country. Another revolution is i imminent Tod Sloane won the Liver- j pool Stewards' plate, riding D. Sey - j mour's mare Sapling Charles Pa?,! 1 t ; Bryan of Illinois was appointed minis- ; 1 ter to China, by the president— Mnr i ; shal Blanco ordered the civil and mili tary authorities in Cuba to be energ tic ; in persuading the farmers and plan is ' to resume work, promising full protec • tion and every possible aid Former j. j Mayor Fitzpatrick of New Orleans has | sent a live tiger to Tammany Hail, and " | tiie Tammany people don't know what |to do with it. It will probably be turn ed over to the Central park menagerie " ; Assemblyman Patrick F. Trainor 1 i announced that he would introduce a „ bill in the next legislature to create th* state of Manhattan out of 16 of the - eastern counties of the state of New ,- York. Saturday, Nov. l.'l. President McKinley issued a pror-la • mation suspending the collection of dis i. criminating tonnage dues on Mexican | vessels The sealing . xperts of the United States, Great Britain and Can- Ada held another meeting General | George S. Batcheller was appointed to | represent the I'nited States on the Egyptian mixed tribunal Mayor j Warwick of Philadelphia signed Die or- j ; (finance providing for the lease of the 1 city gas works The first snow of the : season fell in Maine, New Hampshire, ! I Massachusetts. Connecticut and north- i orn New York. There was a gale on the coast M. E. de Kotzebue, Bus- j sian minister to the United States, has been relieved of his post, and Count j Casslni, now at Peking, will succeed him Fifteen bodies of victims who per- | ; ished by lioods in Spain have been re ! covered. Enormous numbers of cattle I have perished Florence Stansfleld I was arraigned in London on a charge | of blackmailing Earl Carrington, joint hereditary lord great chamberlain of I England. She claimed it was a case of mistaken identity It was reported In London that the Rothschilds and other great financiers of Europe would whol ly cut off the monetary supplies on which Spain depends Henry A. Hicks of New York was unanimously elected j general master workman of the Knights of Labor, at Louisville, to succeed | James R. Sovereign Brooklyn men ha\e incorporated a turnpike company and a cross country railroad, and it is I understood that they are planning to i Guild a roadway on piles across Jamai ca bay, with car tracks and a cycle 1 path— The report that the Competitor prisoners will lie included in the gener al amnesty offered by Spain was con firmed John Bullitt, recently pros perous as a lawyer in the west and of good family, killed himself by taking acid in a room of the New Jersey Cen tral Railroad hotel in New York. He was the son of ex-Judge Joshua E. Bul litt of Louisville John O'Donnell, the Norwalk (Conn.) truckman whose sweetheart. Jennie Kinsella, was blind- • ; ed and disfigured by vitriol thrown by ; I Owen Murphy, and whose unremitting ; | care has saved the girl from death, de- j ! dared they would be married as plan- ! ned before her misfortune The Na- ' tional Baseball league, at a meeting in Philadelphia, abolished the Temple cup 1 series. * Monday, Nov. 15. Governor General Blanco has modi- i ficd the edict regarding the reconcen- j trades in Cuba, owing to the destitute I condition of many of them General Woodford, American minister at Mad- ! rid. had a conference with the Spanish minister for the colonies regarding the exportation of tobacco from Cuba, as a i result of which prohibition of exports j may be removed The Spanish gov- j eminent has postponed the publication of the decrees of autonomy for the j | West Indies until Nov. 25 at the re- j i quest of Marshal Blanco, who desires ! | time to push operations against the in ! surgents and to reorganize the colony j | The cornerstone of the Universal is! Church of the Divine Paternity in New York was laid. It will cost $330,000 | I and is to have a memorial organ to cost i : $20,000, the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew j Carnegie Tiie Roman Catholic Church of the Transfiguration, in Mott street, i j New York, observed the seventieth an- j nlversary of its foundation Alexan i der Coudol, Indian half breed; Paul | Ilolytrack and Philip Ireland, full blood- j ed Indians, the first of whom was sen- I tenced to death for tiie murder of six ! members of the Spicer family last Feb ruary and had just been granted a new trial, the latter two self confessed acces- I i sories in the murder, were taken from I the jail at Williamsport, N. D.. and ; lynched A Philadelphia museum an aconda coiled Itself around a watchman | and broke his ribs and then crushed a 1 i pony to death Annie Neidlinger, a | woman of means and high reputation. ! was arrested on a charge of shoplifting j In New York Mary Trefflinger, a | half orphan of 14 years, unable to ion- j ger bear the burden of caring for her i little brothers and sisters, tried to kill . herself with poison in New York The t ! bishop of Majorca, who recently came 1 into prominence by excommunicating 1 a Spanish minister of finance, is demi | J. Waldere Kirk, known as the Chi j eago king of dudes, who shot Richard j It. Mandelbaum at the Gerard hotel in ! New York on Saturday night, was ad- j I mitted to bail by Magistrate Kudlich in j a west side polh court. It is thought j that Mandelbaum will recover Post master General Gary in his annual re- I j port, just issued, recommends the es- I ; tablishment of postal savings depos- ! itories. Tuesday, Nov. 1<. Monuments were dedicated in honor ■ of Pennsylvania soldiers who fought at (fiiickamauga.Missionary Ridge.Orchard Knol) and Lookout Mountain Wil ! liam Sidney Wilson, a son of the late I'nited States Senator Wilson of Mary i land, and himself one of the most prominent men of the state, committed I suicide on Sunday while temporarily , insane from the effects of illness j The wealthy summer residents of New ' port are displeased at the prospect of success of a project to construct a trol ley road from Fall River to that re | sort, whit h would bring thousands of mill hands there on pleasant Sundays 1 in summer There is a feeling of re- J sentment against the Sagasta cabinet | in Spain and in Cuba on account of the attempt to establish autonomy on the ( island against the wishes of the great I bulk of the population. Annexation to I the United States is presenting itself to all as the best solution of Cuban difll . eulties- At the request of the trus tees Seth Low withdrew his resignation and will continue as president of Co lumbia university The wife of John j C. Van Schaack won a verdict for $65,- ; 000 in a suit in Brooklyn against her : father-in-law. Peter Van Schaack of I Chicago, for alienating her husband's affections Dr. Thomas W. Evans, the American dentist, died in Paris, leav ing a large fortune. He attained es pecial distinction for the part he took in aiding the escape of Empress Eu i genie from France after the fall of Se dan Katherine Stcadman, a daughter of Peter Kclsen of Syracuse, committed suicide in New York. The motive for the deed is supposed to have been de spondency. caused by separation from her husband, and poverty The thir teenth annual horse show was opened in Madison Square Garden in New York Bad • eather kept down the at tendance and helped to make the social side of the affair less prominent than : In niiny former years Frederic R. Coud* rt cf New York was appointed temporary administrator of the estate of /lis brother, Charles Coudert, pend ing the decision of the contest over the two wills left by the latter Relatives contest the will of Thomas E. Bradway of New York, who left ills entire estate to Miss Fannie E. L'Hommedieu, hia step-granddaughter. The contestants deny her relationship to him, and allege undue influence. CONFESS THEIR SINS. Convert* Tcllliik f Their Misdeed* at (i Ueorgla Revival. An extraordinary series of meeting*- is being carried ou at Ty Ty.Ga., by tdt Wesleyan Met hodists,commonly known I as the "Holiness people." Public con- I ftssion of sins is a feature ot the meet ings. Respectable persons confess sins that would send them to the peniten tiary should cases be made in court against them. One young lady who has been consid ered a model, confessed that she taught Ms / Ik & "HALLELUJAH!" school in a distant neighborhood un der an assumed name aud a license that was not granted to her. .Not being able to pass the examination, she used her ulster's license, llcr father confessed to having stolen eggs from a neighbor's henhouse. A girl of 15 told how she stole a handkerchief front the desk of a schoolmate, and bought a fan on credit and lied about the price. Other sins, great and small, are confessed by al most every member of the church. People are going about asking forgive ness of t heir neighbors for olTenses com mit ted years ago. One young woman rode through the country shouting: "Hallelujah!" and brought up at the house of the man who, she said, had wronged her, but was promptly turned down. BRUIN WAS LOADED. Will!t the llennt AnnnyeU on 111* Ar rival at UaivNon City. Bears in White Pass are having a great time of it these days. For miles ulong the terrible delile are provisions and trupsabaudoned by prospectors who have either perished or flung up the sponge. Bears coming down the moun tain side have lived sumptuously. Last Thursday, says the Chicago Chronicle, a huge bear came rolling into Dawson with his shaggy sides heaving strangely and eyes as red as a hose cart. He wabbled up to the Pinch- Me-Baelt saloon, where Sol Samuels, an Idaho miner, was sleeping oIT the ef l'eetsof needle-gun whisky and breathed in the man's face. Sol arose with a start, the breath of the bear evidently reminding him of the potations he had taken during the night. With a howl of fright Sol burst into the saloon und gave the alarm. When the loungers reached the street the bear was cavort ing about, grunting from time to time, and finally rolling over on his back. Three bullets put an end to the bear's exuberance or misery, the men "j r' ■ SOL AROSE WITH A START, knew not which. When the beast was cut up he assayed: 200 pounds moat. lfiO pounds borics. .'>•) pounds grease. pounds baked beans. in. | 1 Km onions U quarts (estimated) liquor. The hear came from White Pass. He had made away with some poor fellow's supplies. []<> Did Resign. The point long mooted whether Gen. Robert E. Lee did or did not resign after the battle of Gettysburg is now settled. In a volume of war records which the war department is about to publish, Gen. Lee's letter will appear. It is dated from Camp Orange. August 8. 13G3. one month after Gettys burg. .Jefferson Davis declined to ac cept the resignation.—Military Gazette. Animals hi K'nrnriisc. According to the Mohammedan creed, ten animals besides man are admitted into Paradise. These ten are: I. the ilng: 2. Balaam's ass; II Solomon's ant: 4, .Jonah's whale; 5. the ram of Ishmael; I (>. the(|iieen of Sheba's ass; 7. the camel I of Salet; 8, the cuckoo of Baltis; 0. the I ox of Moses; 10, the animal called AI | Borak. which conveyed Mohammed to ! Heaven.—St. Nicholas. ent Alcohol Drinkers. A learned professor at Geneva. Switz erland. states that I'Vanee drinks more I alcohol annually than any other nation in Europe. His calculation is based on i He percentage of alcoholic liquors eon j sinned. According to this standard each ; person in France drinks 18 quarts of til cohol in many more quarts of wines, beers, etc., in the course of a year. Stat I .sllcs of It cm it rr Inure. fn 12 marriages out of every 100 one of the parties has been married betore. SOME USEFUL HEALTH NOTES Burns are promptly relieved by bsush lug the burned surface over with mucil uge. Neuralgia is speedily relieved by ap plying a cloth saturated with essence of peperuiint to the seat of pain. Bowel trouble, so common in hot weather, can be cured by drinking a strong tea made with blackberry leaves. This remedy is perfectly harmless and always effects a cure. Sore throat and even diphtheria can be cured by swallowing dry sulphur. In case the patient is a child who ob jects to swallowing the sulphur it can be blown from a paper into the throat. Corns may becured in a short time by binding on a piece of fresh lemon, which should be allowed to remain on all night. After a few applications the corn will separate from the healthy flesh. Pain in the back caused by n strain or | kidney trouble is soon relieved by plac ing n towel across the back wet with alcohol and water in equal quantities, j over this place a dry towel and let them remain on all night. For severe coughs and colds saturate flannel with camphorated oil and tur pentine and apply to the chest. Use two parts of the oil to one part of turpen tine. This relieves the soreness of the chest and the cough soon subsides. For severe cuts and lacerated wounds the best remedy known is tincture of calendula, and, if used in time, there need be no fear of lock jaw. Add half a teaspoonful of the tincture to half a cup of water and keep the wound moist with the lotion.—Home Magazine. BOOKS, MAGAZINES, AUTHORS. Mrs. Burton Harrison has written a new novel of New York life, entitled "Good Americans," and it will appear in Century during the comingyear. George Moore's "Esther Waters" has recently won an enthusiastic patron in Tolstoi, who is presenting copies of the novel 'to his friends, and has written to the author congratulating him upon the work. The German edition of Mr. Edward Bellamy's "Equality" is to be followed shortly by an Italian edition. Although the book was published only recently, it is now appearing in four countries and three languages. The readers of Maxwell Grey's well known novel, "The Silence of Dean Maiitland," will be interested to hear that another work from the same au thor is now in the course of prepara tion and will be published in October. Jules Verne is ut work on a novel of which he says the scene is laid "through the whole United States." it will not be ready for two years to come. Verne has also written a continuation of Ed gar Allen Poe's "Adventures of A. Gor don Pym." Victorien Sardou, the French drama tist, was intended to be a physician, but he was so poor that he had to give Greek and Latin lessons at 20 cents apiece. He was also a bookseller's hack and made translations. It is stated that he was once paid less than $0.50 for a translation which took him three weeks to do. IN THE WHIRL OF FASHION. The things most noticeable in new millinery is the disappearance of ruch ings anil the presence of folded and swuther bands. A stunning picture hat is of gray silk (ulle, the brim composed of row after rowof tiny tucks which took three days to complete. Gray plumes and a white osprey feather complete this work of art. Fur coats will have jeweled buttons this season to add to their costliness. Heavy outdoor garments will be lined with glace silk rather than brocades. The smartest creations, however, are lined with white satin. High collars must be very high wit!: handkerchief points and frills at the back. Every spare bit of fur can be frilled with lace or chiffon and feather flowers added. These flowers are a novelty and are expensive. The low-cut bodice this winter will be worn with very long sleeves made tigbt fltting at the wrists by means of loops and jeweled buttons, the sleeves spread ing out around the hand like the petals of a flower. Fullness at the top of the sleeves should be reduced to a mini mum. A hat which is pretty, but rather startling to conservative eyes is of pale blue straw trimmed with blue ribbon edged with black. It is held in on the left side with n bunch of cherries and on the right side is a vividly blue kingfisher holding a bunch of cherries in his bill. This hat made its appearance on a Lon don stage. RECENT FOREIGN HAPPENINGS. Lord Roseberry is said to have bought the late count of Aqujlla's villa at Pos ilipo, near Naples, and to intend to spend his winters there with his chil dren. A British pauper, nged 70 years, came into a small inheritance lately and treated his friends to a champagne supper at a swell London hotel. It killed hint within three days. In repairing a cable off Cape Frio, a whale was found entangled in it by the fable ship Norseman, but it had not broken. The whale must have been there two or three weeks and had been bit ten into by sharks. Prince Victor Emmanuel of Naples is said to he an expert electrician. He I experiments on all its applications to light, sound, motive power, and phe* tography, and was one of the first per sons in Italy to investigate the Roent gen rays. Gen. Bourliaki's fathtr, who was cap tain of a Greek felucca at the time of Napoleon Bonaparte's expedition to Europe, conveyed to him Ihe message from his brother Joseph that took him back to Paris and brought about the coup d'etat of the eighteenth of Bru tnaire. 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. 7, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, ivas the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now —'— * on emr U 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 on the ! and has the signature of Ota/zwrap per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is 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. Shoes, i Flour and Feed, Tobacco, Cigars, 2Yn a/id Queenmoare, Wood and Willowware, Table and Floor Oil Cloth, Etc. A celebrated brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. My motto is small pro tits and quick sales. 1 always have fresh fronds and am turning ray stock every mouth. Every article is guaranteed. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sis., Freeland. P. F. McNULTY" Funeral Director Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. VIENNATBAKERY J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Btreet. Freeland. CHOICE BREAD OF ALL KINDS CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKE BAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery $ Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, witb all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and *upply wagon* to all part* oj town and mrrounding every day. Are You a Roman Catholic i Then you should enjoy rending the literary j productions of the best tulentintbe Cntho j lie priesthood and 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 defender of I Catholicism. All the news—strong edito • rials—a children's department, which is ele vating and educational. Prizes ottered 1 monthly to the little ones. Only ft'LOO per j year. The Grandest Premium ever issued by any paper given to subscribers for IKH7. Send for sample copies and premium circular. The Catholic Standard and Times Ptib'g Co ■ \ SOS-SOS Chestnut St. Phlla. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Centre street, Freeland. ] FINEST LIQUOR, BEER, PORTER, ALE. CIGARS AND TEM PERANCE DRINKS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. ÜBO ■ In time. Sold by druggists. S BEizmnaaiEm p I we™ Wheels, I | Morsr* Too!! STYLES: f | Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. :• Tll o Lightest Running Wheels on Earth. J !i THE ELDREDGE [ £ ....AND..., p 1 THE BELVIDERE. j ! I s We always Made Good Sewing Machines! J % Why Shouldn't wo Make Good Whoels! p e a | | National Sewing Machine Co., I 339 Broadway, Factory: L j New York. Belvldere, Ills, p Anyone sending a sketch and description may I quickly ascertain, free, whether an Invention is j protmbly patentable, t'ommunlcatlons strictly confident ltd. Oldest, agency for securing patents ! in America. Wo have u Washington office. Patents taken through Munu A Co. receive I speclul notice in tho SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of any scientific Journal, weekly, termss.loo a year: sl.sosix months. Specimen n.pl-'s and IIAND BOOK ON PATENTS sent free. Address MUNN & CO., 301 Broadway* New York. J Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- 2 ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. ? ?Oun OFFICE is OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE* 5 and we can secure patent in less time tiiuu those i J remote from Washington. J : J Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-7 stion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of? I g charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured, a i t A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents,'' with* | 5 cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries? 5 sent free. Address, J C.A.SNOW&GO.I £ OPP. PATENT OFFICE. WASHINGTON. of every flcsoription exeoilted ut short notice by tile Triliime (.'oninnnv Estimates furnished promptly eri nil classes of work. Humpies freo. G. HORACK, Baker k Confectioner. Wholesale and Retail. ' CENTItE BTEEKT, FHEELAND.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers