RAILROAD TIMETABLES LEHIGH VALLEY KAILROAD. November 14, 1897. ARRANGEMENT OF PASHENOER TRAINS. LEAVE FREELAND. 6 05. 8 45, 905 a m, 1 40, 3 ;$4, 3 15. 5 35. 7 07 p ra. ! for Drifton, Jeddo, Foundry, Hozlc llrookano ( Lumber Yard. ~, , ! 6 ur>, 8 45.>•" :i Ml. 1 40. 0 15. (53"> p 111. lilack Dm- j mondi lor Wetitlierly, Munch ChuuK, Allen town, Huston. Philadelphia and New York. 7 07 p in lor Weuthei ly. Mnueh (.'hunk, Allen town, Easton and intermediate stations. 935 a in, 3 54, 535 and 07 n m. lor Lluzle . ton, Delano, Mahunoy City, Shenandoah, Asli land, Mt. runnel. Shamokui and i'ottsville. 7 38, 10 51, 11 54 a m, 5 33 p in, for Sand} Run, White Haven and Wiikeabarre. SUNDAY TRAINS. 8 38. 10 51 a m lor Sandy ltuu. White Haven and Wilkesbarre. > 1043 a in and 138 pm lor Jeddo. foundry, Ilazle llrook, Stockton and Hazleton. 10 43 a in lor llazleton, Delano, Mnhanoy City, Shenandoah. Mt- Carmel, Shamokiu and i Pottsville. . ... 1 38 p in for Weathcrly. Matieh Chunk. Allen town, Easton, Philadelphia and New York. AHIUVE AT FREELAND. 5 50, 7 38, 9 30, 10 51, 11 54 a m, 13 58, 3 30, 3 51, 533 and 001 p ra, from Lumber Yard, Huzle 11 ook, Foundry, Jeddo an<l Drifton. 7 38, 9 30, 10 51, 11 54 am, 13 58, 3 30, 301, 533 p ra, from Ha/.leton. 930 1051 a in. 13 58, 0 01, pin, lrora Phila delphia, New York, Boston, Allentown, Muucli ■ Chunk and Weaih rly. 935 am, 3:U, '.07 pm, from \\ llkesburre. White Haven and Sandy bun. 7 38, 9 30, 10 51 a in, 3 30, 5 33 \> ra, from Delano, , Mahanoy City. Shenandoah. Ashland, Mt. Car- | rael, Shamokiu and Pottaville. SUNDAY TRAINS. 8 38, 10 51 a m and 13 5) p ra, from Hazleton, ! Stockton, Lumber Yard, lla/.le Brook, foun dry, Jeddo and Drilton. XT i 10 51 a m, 13 55 pm, from Philadelphia, New j York. Huston, Allentowo, and Maueh Chunk, 10 51 a ni, from Pottaville, Shaiuokin, Mt. Carmel Ashland, Shenaudoah, Mahanoy City und Delano. 10 i 3 a in, from Wilkesbarre, White Haven and Sandy Run. For further information Inquire of Ticket Agents. CHAg g LEE Geu , l Pftga Airent, Phila., Pa. ROLLINII. WILBUR, General Superintendent. A. W. NUNNEMACHER, Ass't• O. P. A., Philadelphia, Pa. THE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA ANL SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect April 18, 1897. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, Huzle Brook, Stockton, Heaver Meadow Road, Roan and Hazleton Junction at 5 30, 800 a ui, daily except Sunday: and 703 a ra, 3 pm, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Harwood, Cranberry, Tomhickcti and Deringer at 5 30, 0 00 a ra, daily except Sunduy; and 7 03 a ra, 338 p ra, Sun day. Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction, Harwood Road, Humboldt Road, Oneida and Hheppton at 000 a ra, daily except Sun day; und 7 03 a in, 3 3* p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction lor Harwood, Cranberry, Tomhicken and Deringer at 035 a m, daily except Sunday; and 8 53 u ra, 4 33 p ra, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junotinp lor Oneida Junction, Harwood Road, Humboldt Road, Oneida and Sheppton at 0 33,11JU a m, 4 41 p iu, daily except Sunday; and 7 37 a in, 311 p ra, Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tomhicken, Cran berry, Harwood, Hazleton Junction and Roan at 3 35, 5 40 p in, daily except Sunday; and 937 a m, 5 07 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt Road, Harwood Road, Oneida Junction, Hazle ton Junction and Roan at 7 11 am, 13 40, 533 p m, daily except Sunday; and 8 11 a in, 344 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow Road, Stockton, Huzle Brook, Kekloy, Jeddo and Drifton at 5 33 p in, daily, except Sunday; and hlla rn, 3 4-4 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Huzleton Junetion for Beaver Meadow Road, Stockton, Huzle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 5 45, 038 pin, daily, except Sunday; and 10 10 a ra, 5 40 p in. Sunday. All trains connect at Hazleton Junction with electric ears tor Hazleton, Jeuneavllle, Auden ried and other points on the Traction Com pany's line. Trains leaving Drifton at 5 30, 0 00 a ra make connection at Deringer with I'. It. R. trains for Wilkesbarre, Sunbury, llarrisburg and point?- west. For the accommodation of passengers at way stations between Ha/.leton Junction and Der inger, a train will leave the former point at 350 p in, daily, except Sunday, arriving at Deringer at 5 00 p ui. LUTHER C. SMITH, Superintendent. An I'nuTish t in lire lln Joke. A gentleman calling at a hotel left his umbrella in the stand in the hall with the following inscription attached to it: "This umbrella belongs to u man who can deal a blow of 250-poun<! weight. J shall be back in ten inin Utes." On returning to seek his property lie found in its place a card thus in kcribed: "This card has been left by p man who can run 12 miles an hour. I shall not come back."—Tit*Bits. In Doubt. "1 don't know exactly what 1 had better do with this advertisement," .said the man in the newspaper business ot fiee. "A politician wants to put in a long statement of his grievances un paid matter. How shall 1 classify ItV "I guess," replied the cashier, afte.i some study, "we had better put it un der the caption 'help wanted.' "—Wash jngton Star. Never Touched llim. "It looks like rain to-day," said the nfTahle milkman, as he damped the reg ular quart into the pitcher. "It always does," said the woman, and the milkman drove off wonder ing why some people take such gloomy views of everything. Detroit Free Press. iiy the Box. lie—nasn't Miss Cutely a lovely com plexion? She—Yes. He—Her mother has a beautiful com plexion, too. 1 suppose she gets it from her. She—No; she gets it from the drug gist.—N. Y. Journal. Grcnt American Moth Core. Mrs. JJrown—John. I want you to buy me some tobacco to put under the carpets. They say it's the best thing in the world to keep moths out. Mr. Drown—Here's that box of cigars you gave me last Christmas. I think that will be even more effective than tobacco. —N. Y. World. t'y nlclHin. "There's one thing 1 will say foryour friend," said Miss Cayenne. "He is very truthful." "How do you know that?" inquired Willie Wishington, "Because there is no excuse for his being otherwise. He never says any thing interesting."—Washington Star. Madge—l'm miserable. Lulu—Why ? Madge (absent-mindedly)—Josie Den ton told me a secret and—- Lulu—Oh, do tell nie what it was! Madge—That's why I'm miserable. I've forgotten the nui:\ : of the man who kissed her. —N. Y. Journal. Subscribe for the Tuint Ni:. FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1885. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE ' TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited, OFFICE: MAIN STREET AHOVE CENTRE. Make all money order*, check*, etc., payable It. the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. ■ SUI S KIN ION K.YTKS: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four Months 50 ' Two Months 35 ; The (late which the subscription is paid to is I 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 ly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. FRED LAND, DA.. DEC EMDER 1 :. js7. Talked Through the Cat. I From a recent report we learn that I John Stewart and his wife, of Matawan, | N. J., have not spoken to each other in 18 years. Mrs. Stewart is a devout | 'Methodist. Her husband, to whom she has been married 30 years, is an atheist. For love of this man, whose views are ho radically different from her own. she has continued to live and work that he might have a home, but for 18 years they have not exchanged a word. All Miis time the two have lived in a tiny house, where they were constantly thrown together, and yet each has car ried on a separate existence. For many years they lived as happily as any man and wife could live, and then the ser pent entered their paradise. It came in the form of doctrines of anarchy, which the husband began to stiuly. He be came an enemy of law and order and loved to argue on tke points of his new belief. Then, to be stiill more nt vari : atioe with his rural kind, he read Vol taire and other writers opposed to the Christian religion, and next he was.an atheist. These departures into so-called lidvaneed thought were n great sorrow to his devout helpmeet, and gently did she try to win him back to the belief in which he had been born and bred, j The husband resented these pleadings. The wife feared that her husband would cease to Love her if she continued to , play the missionary. She made a com pact with him. They were never to speak again. There could then be no quarrels about anything. He agreed. ' glad, he said, to he exempted from what i lie called her nagging. That was more | than 18 years ago. and as yet they have • iot exchanged a word. A eat has been their intermediary all the years of si lenee. Not the same cat all the time, for eats would come and go, but they bad always had one cat or another to act as the go-between. If the meal was ready the w<ife told the cat. The hus band heard the message and sat nt the table. If the man wanted unyttfhing at the table he made his wishes known to the cut, and so it has been for 18 years. If Diogenes were still on earth, hunt ing with liis lantern for an honest man, Monrovia, Intl., would be the place for him to turn his steps toward. Clark Geare lives there, and if one recent act of his is an index of his nature, he is just the sort of man Diogenes was look ing for. Geare is a veteran of the late , war, und some time ago applied for a pension because of rheumatism, lie got it, but recently returned his certi cate and $350 in buck pension to the department at Washington, saying that his rheumatism had gradually improved and finally left him completely, ar i that he w as therefore not entitled to tli • pension. A policy holdfer thus writes to the western department of an American in surance company: "Dear Sir —1 ha v. given up intentions of insuring because I think a man is doing rong if man has the right thought toward god he need not be afraid of anything when we know god wright and mortal man rong there is nothing but mortal mind ideas surrounding tlie world what we need is spiritual ideas and then we will be all harmonious for the llgl# of the world is jeasus for god is the same yes terday today and forever in him we move and have our being so Dlease step my insurance policy." Believers in the wooden nutmeg le gend can say once more that time makes all things even. A stranger has ap peared iu Connecticut with a prepara tion warranted by him to keep flies and mosquitoes away from domestic ani mals. One package dissolved iri ten quarts of water was said to be sufficient to protect 12 oxen or 25 horses. Aft r the seller had disappeared the stuff was examined and found to be ook sawdust scented with camphor. Another proof of tlie assertion that 13 is an unlucky number is furnished by the Philadelphia school authorities, w ho tested a pile of coal delivered at one of tlie school houses and fo tnd that it was 13 tons short. They have dragged the contractors into court. Near the Maryland border of Pnn pylvania. on the farm of a county com* missioner. 800 bushels of apples were picked from 24 trees. CASTOIIIA. Thafae- /J . iST Si- MY BOY S WHISTLE. You may talk of the pleasure that opera makes, And the thrills so ecstatic It grandly j awakes, j Hut there Is no music to give me a joy I Dike the light-hearted whistle of my Bonnie boy. It isn't a tune, but a Jumble galore of all the notes in the musical score, And while to another it's nothing but noise. To me it conveys a heart's volume of joys. Many times in the day I am straining my At the door or the window that whistle to hear, And when from the distance comes float ing the sound, I know that ray boy on his homeway is bound. It tells me he's well long before he's in sight; It says he is happy with childhood's de light: Then, as it grows louder and nearer, 1 see My Bonnie brave boy wave a welcome to me. When he whistles while marching so gayly from school I know he has missed neither lesson nor rule. And when from his play he comes whistling along, I am sure not a thing he has done that is wrong. Whenever that blithe, merry whistle is still I know that my darling is i mainly ill, And none but a mother's so joyful as when His lips sweetly pucker to whistle again. Some day when- the cares of the world he must share. When his heart is no longer as light as the air, ! I is happy-go-lucky shrill whistle no more Will gladden my ears while 1 watch from the door. Dut I pray that the time may be long until then, And that when he marches through life with thi m< n He ever will give his de'ar mother the joy She had when lie whistled the tunes of a boy. —II. C. Dodge, in Chicago Daily Sun. P. 1\ POUICEWS PLUCK. 1 o # . y THE popular supposition that a police officer is never, never on hand when he is wanted and that the ; sound of alarm is his signal of retreat received a severe shock when the story of Sergt. Howard's chase after themur- ( derer Rohan was published a few days ago. The comic papers, with their clever illustrations, the dialogue-writ ing jokers and' the others have taught some persons to look upon the police man as the pnuneby and pusillanimous tyrant of small boys and shrir.ker from contention. Which is wrong in a great many cases. Sergt. Howard," with two loads in his revolver, crouching on one side of a garbage box, on the other side of which stooped an escaped murderer, with three weapons and unlimited ammuni tion, is not the first officer who lias gone with open eyes into danger and has persisted against great peril for the sake of the law. Indeed, this was not tfle first ease of the kind in which thin particular policeman figured. But the glory of his conduct in the Rohan case is enough without raking out of the past old stories of his cour ageous adventures. Other wearers of uniforms have performed similarly nervy feats and have made the silver 6tar a sign of valor. As, for instance, Tom Orrasby. Orinsby was a patrolman in the days when the police department of the city of Omalia was first gladdened by the presence of a "wagon." Nowadays the patrol wagon has its own crew just the ; same as n railroad train—its conductor j to convey the prisoner to the station with proper decorum-—but at that time the necessity for a conductor was not known, and an arresting officer rode to the eit\ jail with the culprit and helped the man nt the desk to book the offen der. Orin by one night arrested some ! malefactor who was wanted for a rather serious offense elsewhere, *i great giant <f a i- an hicienough to eat two or three ordinary policemen. The ; wagon being Under way. the prisoner 1 look; d about him. and. seeing the man ner of man with whom he was traveling | —a rather small-sized individual, who seemed pitiably unable to help himself ' against the charge and thunder of such j a big i .an as lu-—turned upon Orsmby, and in at icnir :t that patrc! wagon was j the receptacle if a most magnificent fight. The ncise of the onslaught • Part led the horses, and caused them to swerve out of their course. The jerk threw Jim O'Brien, tic driver, to the street, stunning him, anil as the loos er.i d niiis tiapped over the haunches of the horses, already nervous because of tlie unusual clamor behind them, they !:olle cl furiously. Weaving across and z'pna.r;.' ing hack nlnng 1 Pi- wide street they thundered on, dragging the sway ing v. agon load of fight after them. One or two other pi liceman. seeing the runaway as it Has,hid under the gas light and then flitted into the darkness beyond' the corners, tried to stop the team, but before they could get to the center of the street the maddened I horses were far away. They were hastened on their fugitive ; course by the ever-increasing noise be hind from which they wen fleeing, but from which tiny seemed unable to withdraw. Fiercer, fiercer the battle between the two men raged in the nar row confines between the seats of the patrol wagon, the huge bulk of the aroused crook meeting tlie stanch grit and courage of Ormsby, the lesser man. Blows were battered upon the face of the struggling policeman, but still he clung on. The prisoner tried to throw him out of the whirling and swinging wagon, but the cfficer fought back and wrapped himself closer. With his own club Ormsby was beaten, and the gigan tic prisoner centered every effort on reaching the policeman's revolver, his own having already been lost over board. He caught a fleeting grasp upon it. once —a grasp which was enough to . send a ball flying nt random through the air. scarring Ormsby's leg in its | transit and increasing- the fear of the I hors-.fs by its discharge; but the police | man, recognizing his own inferiority in i strength, with a jerk of his wrist threw I the weapon out from him. It fell 011 the I stone pavement, and another explosion ( added to the insanity of the horses. | They flow through the town and ! struck the country road which leads to the fort on the heights four miles away. | The danger of a broad, clear midnight | street was many times multiplied on the narrow dirt road cut by gullies and I broken by ridges, but nil the danger seemed insufficient to cool the ardor of j the battling men in the blue wagon. Ormsby heard the hollow sound of their passage over wooden bridges, and felt J the careening of the big vehicle as it crashed from side to side; momentarily lie caught dizzy glimpses of night | lamps in the outlying houses which j shot past them as they progressed; he i heard the yelping of the dogs, which, j roused from contemplation of the : moon, tailed behind the wagon, bark ing new frenzy into the unwearied horses. He heard the challenge of the sentry at the gate of the fort, and al most before the hail was uttered the wagon with its attendant clamor was inside tlie lines of the garrison, and ! was over a ditch and across a sidewalk and out into the parade ground, and, J crashing against a tree, was shattered ! and overturned and loosed from the ! trappings of the horses, which, with a lust bombardment of kicking at space, broke away and disappeared ! down Officers row, clanging and clat j tering as the singletrees and the at | tached fragments of 1 lie vehicle struck j the flagstones. Ormsby and his herculean prisoner ! were thrown out by indescribable twin ] somersaults, remaining strangely close together through it all. The officer of | the guard csune rushing, and found them gory and tattered where they had fallen, the big man unconscious from | the concussion and Ormsby grinning weakly through blood as the lamplight fell on him. j "What's this?" said the military man, ! after the policeman had briefly told of the adventure. "You're handcuffed." "Yes." said Ormsby. "You see, I was i afraid lie might get a gun to my head j and make me lot him go, and to be sure ! that he couldn't get- away, no matter j how he licked me, I snapped the irons on him and me when I saw he was doing me. But in the hurry I got his lefit |jT " WHAT'S THIS!" SAID THE MILI TARY MAN. hand locked to my right., and lie kept i iglit on putting up too much fight for me. Still, it didn't worry me much, for ! 1 knew that even if I was killed he I couldn't get away. 1 threw the keys I away with my gun." j The officer of the guard, who was n captain and who had been through i nearly 30 years of fighting, looked ad | miringly at the little scrub of a police man. "Would you mind," ventured Ormsby. "letting me put this fellow in your guardhouse till our chief comes out to get us? I'll have to go with him on account of the cuffs." "You won't as long as there's a black smith's) tool in this post," said the military man. And although the hos pital was convenient he insisted that Ormsby be carried to his own quarters for stitching, bandaging and tying up. —Chicago Record. The Cake Woulil Do It. "You seem to be enjoying the cake this evening, James," said the young wife, watching the disappearance of that luxury with a look of the greatest satisfaction! "Er-—yes," was the rather confused reply of the devoted husband. "Don't curb your appetite on 1113* ac count; 1 shall not think you are greedy, dear." "1 am going to eat as much as I can," mumbled James. "I am so glad you like it. I was afraid I that I was not mafcing ray cakes to your liking; you have always eaten so iittle of them on previous occasions." "This one is just what. I want to-day," jerked out the husband. Then she was very, very happy—until she discovered that he had wagered Brown that he was the heavier, and was eating as much of her cake as possible so that he should win the bet.which was to be decided that evening.—Pearson's Weekly. Itoynl Dimlcni*. The value of the jewels in the British crown is about $1,800,000, or a little over I one-fifth of the cost of the crown of j little. Portugal, which is estimated at i $3,500,000. The sultan of Jahore. how j ever, on state occasions glitters in dia j mends, tlie? value of those in his crown I and worn upon his person being not less j than $12,000,000. I —"ln about 2SO years," said the scicn -1 t'st, "when the world's population ex j cccds 5,994,090,000, the earth will be un | able to find nourishment for her pe<o i pie, and they will be forced either to cannibalism or starvation." "And just tt.ink, papa," said the daughter, "what j trouble there'll be for us toed through the crowds on our bicycles!"—Yonkers Statesman. CHAT FROM ABROAD. Caedmon, the first English poet, is tn have a statue at Whitby, where he lived and died. Lourdes saw its first exclusively Brit ish pilgrimage this year. There were GO persons in it, including a bishop and eight priests. Abyssinia's social code provides for a fair chance to young married couples by forbidding the bride's mother to vis it her daughter till a year after the mar riage. What is called malaria, after raging for four years in central Asia, where it was attended by great mortality, has reached the Caucasus, and is spreading. The military hospitals report 400 cases a day each. A John o' Groat's to Land's End rec ord for motor carriages lias been estab lished in England, the first carriage to make the journey having covered the distance in 93 hours. The time can easily be beaten when a record for speed is sought. At Luebow, in Germany, 129 fathers have been fined one mark apiece for al lowing their children under ten years of age to dance at the harvest festival of a village near by. The village pastor objected to the dancing and reported the case to the police. It was discov ered, however, that, his children had danced, too, and he was fined with the rest. Verdi, w ho objects to hand organs, I has an effective though expensive way of suppressing them at Moncalieri, where he spends his summers. lie hires • all the organs in the district for the | season and stores them in his house, j A reporter of Le Figaro counted 95 in struments, and the composer told him j, that it cost him S3OO a season to sup ; press them. Gabriele d'Annunzio cannot become a j member of the Italian parliament, as i I his political opponents have shown that I | his record inclui'+t a sentence to six j months' imprisonment for adultery, I j which makes him not only ineligible, ! | but deprives him of the right to vote, j In commenting on this Le Figaro as- I sorts that such a law in France would j be equivalent to suppressing universal ' suffrage. THOSE WHO WRITE. Mr. Donald G. Mitchell (Ik Marvel) is I preparing a second volume of "Ameri j eun Lands and Letters," which will ap | pear early next year, i Thomas Whittaker announces the ! | publication of a new story by Charlotte i j M. Yonge entitled "Founded on Paper, ' or Uphill and Downhill Between Two : Jubilees." I It may interest the readers of E. W. ; Horn ling's Australian stories to know that he is a brother-in-law of Dr. A. j Co nan Doyle. A monument is to be elected in Paris, in the Place Malesherbes, to Dumas the younger. In the same, square there is a statue to the elder Dumas, and the name of the little park will be changed i to "Dumas." Sir Lewis Morris, the English poet, | who is to make a lecturing tour in j this country, commencing early this : month, began his career as n lawyer, j and now leads the life of n country gentleman, possessing ample private . means. His last volume, only just out, j is called "The Epic of Hades." The publishers of the complete edi- j tion of Miss Jane Austen's works re- i cer.'tly received a letter addressed to i "Miss Jane Austen," and regard it as a I good joke to tell. But the lact is that j many people who enjoyed Jane G. A us- ! tt n's stories, "A Nameless Nobleman," "Nantucket Scraps, The Desmond i Hundred" and other modern novels, i have imagined that the novels of the Jane Austen of our grandfather's time were by her. Hence the amusing oc currence recorded above. GOSSIP GF THE STAGE. De\Yo!f Hopper has accepted a new opera, "The Charlatan," with which he will open next season. Allele Ritchie will follow up the suc cess she ha: made in Loudon as a com ic-opera singer in "The Wizard of the Nile" by proceeding to Paris, where she will study for an operatic career. Countess Magri (Mrs. Tom Thumb) attended a food show in Boston recent ly and gave a demonstration of cooking, which was attended by an enthusiastic crowd'anxious to see this liny person age handle pans and kettles. Rose Coghlan will probably play the leading character in the melodrama "The White Heather," to be produced Thanksgiving week in New York. She will return, however, to "The Sporting Duchess" for its engagement in Chica go in January. An old French actress, Mile. Rous seil, is about to begin a tour through Italy in the play of "Judith," written by herself. She was already well known in ISGI and was considered tlie ' best Chimene whoever played the part j at the Comedie Francaisc, and foi I' which she was allowed a pension of 1 $10,090 a year. She now renounces that pension in order to return to the stage. , She is announced to make her first re* 1 appearunee in Florence. LITERARY GOSSIP. A posthumous work of the late Phil- j ip Gilbert Ilamerton is 011 the press. It is entitled "The Quest of Happiness." Mr. Maurice Thompson has three books nearly ready for the printers; "Stories of Indiana," a novel, and a col lection of out-of-door papers. Miss Mary Rachel Dohson,a daughter of Austin Dobson, is one of the most-ac tive workers in the university settle- 1 ment for women in Bombay, India, j Their work is principally among the Pursecs. 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Oibson, Dougherty, Knufer Hub, Roscnbluth's Velvet, of which we have FXCIUSIYE SALE IN TOWN. Muinm's R.xtra Dry Chnmpagnc, Hentiessy Brandy, DlaektKjrry, Gins, Wiues, Clarets, Cordials, Etc. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ilam and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. Baiientine and Huzlcton beer on tap. Ruths, Hot, or Cold, 25 Cent?. P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director and Bnba^er. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. VIENNA: GfIKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Btreet, Freeland. Vl/OICK BREAD OK ALL KINDS CAKES, AND PABTKY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKEI BAKED TO ODDER. Confectionery '$ Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and intpply vtayon* to all parte oj town and xurrouridinge every day. Are You a Roman Catholic Then you should enjoy rending the literary productions of the best talent In tbe Cat bo* lie priesthood and laity rand you know what they CAN do), as they appear weekly in The Catholic Standard and Times OF PHILADELPHIA, The ablest and most, vigorous defender of ('atholiclsm. Ail the news strong edito rials—a children's depart mint, which is ele vating and educational. Prizes ottered monthly to the little ones. Only 83.00 per year. The Grandest Premium over issued by any paper given to subscribers for lsi7. Send for sample copies and premium circular. The Catholic Standard and Times Pub'g Co 603-505 Chestnut St. Phlia. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Centre street, Freeland. FINEST LIQUOR, DEER, POIITER, ALE, CIGARS AND TEM PERANCE DRINKS. JSPLPRF j ™ Wheels, j i Quality SioTcst! 6 " TOO! \ | STYLES: £ | Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. | | The Lightest Running Wheels on Earth, f, J THE ELDREDGE 3 | ....AND.... p I THE BELVIDERE. G II Wo always Made Good Sewing Machines! £ Why Shouldn't we Make Good Wheels! $ 4 I National Sewing Machine Co., a 339 Broadway, Factory: i | New York. Belvlderc, Ills, f ojt m gyro Anyone sending 11 sketch and description may | quickly aacurtuln, free, whether an Invention la probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency frsecuring patents 1 in America. We have u Washington office. Patents taken through Mutin Jt Co. receive 1 special uotice in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of any scientific journal, weekly, terms |3.00 a year; 81.50 six mouths. Specimen copies and lIAND ' BOOK ON PATHNTS sent free. Address MUNN A CO., 3(11 Broadway, New York. I Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-1 , gent business conducted for Moderate FEES. # * OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U.S. PATENT OFFICE <* J and wc can secure patent in less time than those J 5 remote from Washington. J : £ Send model, drawing or photo., with der.crip-P Jtion. Wc advise, if patentable or not, free of£ 5 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. $ Jj A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents,'' with# , J cost of same in the U. S. aud foreign countries i 4 s-.-rit free. Address, 1 jC.A.SIiOW&CO.: I* OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, D C. J I VVVVWM# FE.XITTXiq-G!- of ovory .I,'TOriptloni executed at short notice by the Tribune ('onmnnv Ksti mates fiirnlHlicd promptly on all classes of work. SamplesYroo. G. HORACK, Baker & Confectioner. Wholesale and Retail CENTRE STEEET, FREELAND.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers