FREELAND TRIBUNE Eotabiishoi 1388. PUBLISHED EVEUY MONDAY ANL) THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.5(1 Six Months To Four Months 5d Two Months £"• The date which the subscription is paid to is 011 tho address label of each paper, the clump of which to u subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advaneo of the present date, lteport prompt ly to this oflico whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. Make all money/ orders, check, etc., pai/ahlc ti the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., AUGUST 8, 1898. (Juay and Jenks. From the Philadelphia Record, One-half of the power and potency of Quayfsm in Pennsylvania is newspapor made. Tho astute senator does not deny the al mightiness imputed to him hy friends and foos, and as a result profits to some extent on supposed omnipotence and trades on the usufruct. As an ex ample some designing newspapers have affected to believe that through Mr. (Quay's managing hand the Democratic state convention was so manipulated as to procure tho nomination of candidates of his choice. Some stupid newspapers that cannot be accused of willful dishon esty have accepted without question this witless fabrication, and reiterate it from day to day a matter of accepted truth. There is not a scintilla of evidence on which to base such a charge. There is not a word of truth in it. Rut nothing could better suit tho purpose of Mr. Quay than to havo his enemies load upon the Democratic nominees the suspicion that tboy were his catspaws and con federates. Now tho fact is that the Democratic nominee for governor is a man of the greatest purity of character, incapable of low political intrigue. If Senator Quay and his candidate for governor were rolled into one, so that no whit of the intellectual capacity of either should b" lost in the combination, the composite man in every desirable function going to ward tli9 making of such an executive as thestateof Pennsylvania needs would not bear a moment's comparlsion with George A. Junks. A fitter man was never named for the duties of tho gover norship. The only objection to the candidacy of Mr. Jenks that has any validity is that ho is unsound on the question of the currency. There are a great many peo ple in the United States —nearly half— who share Mr. Jenks' financial opinions. The llect/rd does not; but it is not blind to the needs of the people of this state, nor deaf to tho call for better government, nor so wrapped up in self-sufiiciency that it cannot tolerate honest differences of opinion. It knows that what Mr. Jonks may think of the Chicago plat form has nothing to do with the wise administration of state affairs. As gov ernor, ho would not be called upon to coin money. The loud denunciators of Quay ism who oppose Jenks under the pretense of opposing Quay if they he not imbeciles are hypocrites. They assist in continu ing the iniquities they denounce. HOW'H This I We offer One Hundred Dollarv Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, Ohio. We the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for tho last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. WEST & THUAX, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, 0. W ALDI.VQ, KINS AN MARVIN, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hull's Catarrh Cure Is taken Inter nally, acting directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 7fic. per bottle. Sold by all druggist*. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best. A Sure Thing for You. A trunHuclinn in which you cannot lose is -i sure thliiK. IlilidiiHiiesH, sick headache, fur red tongue, fever, piles and a thousand other lis uro caused IIJ- onnstlputlon and sluggl-li liver. Caseiircts Candy Cathartic, the won derful new liver stimulant and Intestinal tonic, arc by all druggists guaranteed to cure or money refunded. C. C. C. are it sure tiling. Try a box today; 10<-, s^. Sample and booklet free. All druggists. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of _Dr. David Kennedys Favorite Remedy CURES ALL KIDNEV. STOMACH AND LIVER TROUBLES. Watch the date ou your paper. SPANISH STORY OF MANILA. Admiral Montojo'a Account of Ella Defeat by Dewiy, Tho Ilong Kong Papers contained inter * esting matter In regard to the battle ul i Manila, which was not sent by cable. 3 It seems that the Spanish were in- 1 tensely disgusted that Admiral Dewey t should not have glvea formal warning ' that he was going to enter Manila har 1 bor and that he should have entered t it by the broad channel Instead of by thu narrow channel, which had been t mined. The few shot® which Admiral 0 Dewey's ships fired at the Corregldoi j forts on the night they entered the harbor killed forty-two men, although ; r thft only target the American gunncrf 1 j had were the flashes of the Spanish t cannon. c Tho correspondent *£ the Hong Kong China Mail, who went to Manila on the c British steamer Esmealda, arrived on 1 the day after the batUe. On May 3 he ' had an interview with the Spanish Ad miial, Montojo, and abtalned his v.;r- 1 sios of the battle, ft contains some ! novel and interesting facts. The cor- | respondent describes the Admiral as "an old man about 45 years of age, slight in stature, and in appearance everything but warlike. He realized my ideal of an old Spanish grandee, i was cordiality itself, and talked with j frankness of Sunday i conllict." Ad miial Montojo said his intention was to go to Subig Bay and fortify it, but he found that it would require at leatt a month. So after (pending a week | there he returned to Manila on April 80. Had Dewey started one day earlier he would thus have caught the Span ish fleet outside Man'ia harbor. Admiral Montojo oiiid he had re quisitioned Madrid fcr ships and tor pedpes, but had received neither, so he laid tho blame of his defeat on the ; Spanish Government. In describing the light Admiral Montojo said: ".The Kelna Crlstlni and Don Juan d'Austria, as you linov, were old cruis- j ers, the Castella was & wooden cruiser, but was unable to steam owing to the ! breaking down of h.r engines. The Don Antonio d'Ulloa and the Velasco ! weie helpless and we: e undergoing re- j pairs off the arsenal. The Olympia, 1 Baltimore, Raleigh and Boston en- I gaged my flagship iij turn about G. 30, attracted by my llag. I recognized the ! necessity of getting under way and slipped both anchor*, ordering the j other ships to follow ray example. Al- ' though we recognized the hopelessness ' of fighting the American ships we were busy returning their lire. The Reina Crutina was hit repeatedly. "Shortly after 6:30 | observed fire on my ship forward and iur steering gear wa* damaged, rendering the vessel un manageable. We subjected to a terrific hail of shell ar d shot. The en gines were struck and we estimated we had seventy hits about our hull and superstructure. The boilers were not hit, but the pipe to the condenser was 1 destroyed. A few moments later I ob served that the after part of the ship wai on fire. A shell fvom an American ship had penetrated and burst with I deadly effect, killing many of our men. My Flag Lieutenant slid to me: " -The ship is in fljimes. It is lra posdble to stay on (he Cristina any longer.' "He signalled to tie gunboat Isia de Cuba and I and my staff were transferred to her a#d my llag was hoigted. Before leav ng the Cristina I my llag was hauled down. My flagship was now one mass of flames. I ordered awcy all boats I coald to save the crew. Many of the ir.en jumped over board without clothlnj and succeeded in reaching shore, oeveral hundred yaids away. Only few men were drojvned, the majority being picked up by the boats. "Jlefore jumping overboard Capt. I Caf.arse's son, a Lievtenant on board th assistant physieUn, the chief en girder and three officers were wound ed. The boatswain chief gunner wo-fe both killed. In rhe Castella only about 15 men were killed, but there wete many wounded both on the Cas- I tell* and the Don Juan d'Austria, on which 13 men were lolled. Altogether, 1 so far as we know at present, 400 men wefe killed and wounded on our ships. "JS-S soon as I translated myself from tht Reina Cristina to the Isia de Cuba, all the American shc-ts were directed upiMi the Isia de following my flag. We sought shelter behind the pier at Cavite, and, recognizing the futility of fighting more, I prepared to disembark, and gave orders for the evacuation of the of the ships. The Castella bad been on fire from end to end for some time, and waj> of course, already abandoned. The Ull a was also burning. My lust sig nal to the captains of all the vessels wai 'Scuttle and abandon your ships.' " Ite said: "The Captain of the Bost.ju ! saiij to my chief of staff, Capt. Boado, 'You have combatted with us four very bad ships, not warskjps. There was never seen braver fighting under such unequal conditions. U is a great pity you exposed your in vessels not fit for fighting.' Commodore Dewey also sent me a message by the Eng. lish consul yesterdgy, saying that, peace or war, he would have great pleasure in clasping ine by the hand an£ congratulating mi on the gallant manner in which we fought." The Ulcycle In Warfare. A new use for the b'cycle 111 warfare was developed during the recent bom bardment of San Juau. An account of the bombardment from within the city says that a volunteer corps of bicy clists greatly aided tae Spanish com mander by acting a* messengers be tween tfoe forts. _ LUCKY LARRY LONNIGAN. A Fairy Slitory fer tho Childher. Sure, childher, 'tla a larng tolme since I tould yez a fairy Bhtory. An' it's wondherlu' I am if I iver tould yez about Lucky Larry Lonnigan. Be me sowl thin, an' he was th' caution to cats. Egobs, sorra bit of bad luck 'u'd set upon him at arl at arl. He lived in that paart of Olreland that yez can't find on the map. Wliln he was a young lad about six teen the fursht of his good luck fell up on him, an' the way of it was this way: Egorry, an' a vl'lent, crass woman was his mother, always boxin' his earß for no thing at arl, an' so wan day whin Larry med the innerclnt observashin that divvle a hit more wood would be cut up, th' ould woman raiched out her oogly rolght hand an' gev' htm a cuff. "An' is It a cuff ye gev me?" says he, rubhln' his ear, an' wid that he leps out of the doo-r an' starts for town. Now some byes would ha' cried at resarln' the cuff, but Larry was not the erytn' kind, hut beln' of a shrewd tlmperamlntality he noticed that the cuff had a handsome button in It, un' he thought he'd take it an' sell it to the Jewelery man that I tould yez about one toime. An' egobs! the jew elery man gev him two shlllln's for it. Well, Larry felt that rich that he wint to the fair at Lautrlm, in the county of Buscobble. Tls the fine booths they do be hav in' at that fair, an' Larry soon spint the whole of his money until he had but a happenny. An' wld that he bought a beautiful peach. An' thin he tharght what a big omadbaun he was to be spindln' arl bis money upon the belly of him. For It was cakes an' pies an' sweets was inside of him till ye could not rist. Well, he wint on atin' mechanical loike an' wld his moind annywhero but in his head till he kem to the pit. 'Twus the fursht puich he'd lver aten, an' the pit surprised him. But he'd haird till of the fortunes made In pits an' wld out so much as sayln', "Here's an' aisy dear, to you," he wint down In the pit widout a light. 'Tls us brave as a sparrer, he was. Egobs! childher, 'tls lucky he was, for he found that at the bottom of tho pit was a mine of soft coal; coal that soft It would plulse yez to bump ag'inst It, an' he kem up to the mouth of tho pit, uu' seeln' an English capitalist handy, he sold him the roight to mine' In It for noino hundhred an' noinety nolne yairs for a hundhred thousan' pounds. CHARLE3 BATTELL LOOMIS. Tule of Two Citizens. CHAPTER I. "Hoskins, lend me a dollar, will you? I want to buy some postage stamps. I came uway from home carelessly this morning, with only 25 cents in my pocket, and that went for lunch at noon." | "Sorry, Lusk, but I've got only enough money to pay my carfare home." CHAPTER 11. A fow hours later. They met again—accidentally. At the box office of u theater where a sparring match was on the bill of fare for the evening. "It seems to mo, Hoskins," stiffly re marked Lusk, as he threw down u sil ver dollar and picked up the bit of pasteboard the ticket-seller gave him In exchange for It. "that this is no place for a man who has only enough money to pay his car fare home." Having exchanged the dollar he held in his hand for a similar pasteboard, Hoskins turned to his friend, i "Lusk," he said, In u tono of mingled sadness and reproach, "If you paid out all the money you had for lunch, and couldn't even buy a postuge stump, what the 3t. Louis are you doing here?" OASTOHIA. Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought Whnt She Needod. She was looking over a fashion pa per when he entered. "Trying to make up your mind what vou ought to have?" he usked. "No," she replied; "I know what I night to have." "What?" "Money." It le always unsafe for a man to Jest with his wife upon any subject con nected with raiment and such things. He knows that now. _Dr. David Kennedys Favorite Remedy CURES ALL KIDNEY. STOMACH - AND LIVER TROUBLES. The Old Mau Knew film. An old Georgia negro, hearing that tils former master had decided to enlist j in the Cuban army, said to him: "Marse Tom, doan you do no sich Tool thing ez dat—doan you do it?" "Why shouldn't I?" "Kaße, Marse Tom—" and here the ild man lowered his voice—"you'se got i touch er de rheumatism, en you can't run ez fast now ez you run en-durtn' er le war!" CABTOIIIA. Bears tho /f Tto Kind You Have Always Bought OR. mvid favorite KfNjDvsßemedy The one sure cure for J The Sidney's,liver and Blood HAMILTON FISH, 3D. The Youug New Yorker Who Met Death In Cuba. Hamilton Fish, third, belonged to one of the best known families of New York. His father, Nicholas Fish, Is a banker at 120 Broadway and lives at 16 Irving place. One of his uncles is Stuyvesant Fish, President of the Illinois Central railroad. Another un cle is Hamilton Fish, who was speaker of the New York Assembly In 1895 and 1896. His grandfather was the tirst Hamilton Fish, who was Secre tary of State under Grant. Young Flsli was about 26 years old. Like most members of the family he was very tall, standing 6 feet, 3 Inches In his stocking feet. He was of pow erful build, though stoop-shouldered. For two or three years he was a stu dent at Columbia University, of which his father has been a trustee for many years. He gave little attention to his studies, but devoted a good deul to athletics, particularly to rowing. He was one of the strongest oars In the Columbia 'Varsity crew of 1895, which upset all calculations by defeating Cornell and the University of Pennsyl vania at Poughkeepsle. Soon after this Fish left college and went out to Utah to rough It on a railroad. For several months he worked as a brake man, at the end of which time he Jammed his Index linger in coupling cars. He came back to New York in 1896 to have the linger amputated, and remained here most of the time until six or eight months ago. Fish was ahvuys of a roving and ad venturous disposition, and It was merely a verification of his friends' predictions when news came from the West that "Ham" Fish had Joined Roosevelt's rough riders. While the regiment was In process of organiza tion at San Antonia, Tex., Fish receiv ed a Sergeant's commission In his company. Fish's prowess was displayed on sev eral occasions while he wus in this city in list lights which he had, In most of which he was victorious. In spite of these exploits, Fish was ordinarily the best nuturcd of men, and had hosts of friends who swore by him, many of them Columbia students and members of prominent New York families. Fish was a member of the Union League Club and the St. Nicholas so ciety. He belonged to the Delta Psl college fraternity. Capt. Allyn Capron was born In Florida, and entered the Military Academy in 1803. He was graduated in 180 V, and received an appointineut us Second Lieutenant of Artillery. In 1871 he became First Lieutenant, and Captain in 1888. He was graduated from the Artillery School with honor In 1873. Capt. Capron was In com mand of Company E of the First Artil lery, and was twenty-fifth on the list for promotion. Among the wounded was Major Bell, a Pennsylvanlan. He served during the civil war in the Eighty-sixth Ohio, and when honorably mustered out he became Captain of an independent company of cavalry which he raised in his native state. Afterward he served as a Captain in the Thirteenth Penn sylvania Cavalry until in 1865 he was mustered out. The next year he was appointed Second Lieutenant in the Seventh regular cavalry. He became First Lieutenant in 1867, Captain in 1876, and in 1896 he was promoted to Major of the First Cavalry. He was brevetted Lieutenant-Colonel in 1.890 for gallant services. Capt. Knox is in command of Com pany Kof the First Cavalry. He Is a Tennesseean and entered the Military Academy In 1566. He was appointed Second Lieutenant in 1870, First Lieu tenant in 1877 and Captain In 1889. Capt. MoCormlck was born In Ohio, and entered West Point in 1872. He was graduated In 1876 and was appoin ted Second Lieutenant in the Tentli Cavalry. He became First Lieutenant in 1878 and Captain in 1895. He is u graduate of the infantry and cavalry Bchool. Lieut. Byram was born in Mississ ippi and was graduated from West Point in 1885, receiving an appoint ment as Second Lieutenant In the First Cavalry. He was made a First Lieu tenant in 1892. Largest Man H> u German. If greatness be put to the test of avoir dupois, the place of honor must be ac corded Morice Cannon, a native of the small frontier towa of Stein, in the State of Constance, Germany. This Teuton is said to "turn the Bcnle" at fifty stone, and may claim to be the heaviest man on earth. He measures over 100 inches round the waist, and 04 inches round the thigh: his enor mous weight does not apparently in convenience him, for he is active and In robust health. He is described as a well-to-do, middle-aged, good-looking farmer, who 1b also a keen sportsman, being an excellent all-round shot with the rifle. Naturally his gigantic pro portions have mad# him an object of curiosity in bis part of Germany. A Trade That Kills. Makers of wall-paper grow pale and sick from the arsenic in Its coloring and matchmakers lose strength and vitality from the excess of phosphorus used In their business. But mankind is by nature brave and very few are de terred from action because of supposed danger. If the great builders and en gineers of the world would stop to ask "How many lives will this undertak ing cost?" it is probnble that the world would be without seme of the greatest triumphs of modera thought. -- Agent—l think I can sell this place for you, but I can't get the $3,000 you ask. You'll have t take $4,008. Owner—That's queer. Why should tbo extra $2 stand in (lie way? Agent—My customer Is a woman. HIS LAST. ESCAPE. Twelve at night. A stormy, black night. Some flashes ot lightning upon a granite prison. Also a vision of a man sawing sav agely at his Iron bars In the second tier. He stops to squeeze a sponge of oil upon the glittering saw. He has sawn two above, two below and two on the left on previous nights and secreted his work with bits of soil ed bread, rubbed Into the flllngii. Now he has cut one, and is at work upon the last. The window Is far above the floor, and he stands upon a stool. He suddenly stops as a flash comes upon him; he sinks back out of sight and buries his face with his hands. An instant passes. He recovers. He reappears at the grate, seizes It in his enormous hands, and wrenches it mad ly. It yields, breaks, and he staggers back with it in his hand, and falls upon the floor, stunned and bleeding. Although a murderer, he prays to some power which he blasphemously calls his God, and leaps to his feet and grasps a bunchy, tattered coil of strip ped bedclothing, affixes It to a stump of a remaining bar, and plunges out ward and downward by the wall. It Is the work of a minute. His palms are scorched; but he forgets them, reaches the end of his rope, trembles, shuts his eyes, and —drops. It is but a few feet. He dashes for the outer wall. A shed Is one round of his ladder, a bakery is another; ho crawls across upon his stomach, gains the furthermost edge, and throws him self downward in the midst of a horrid burst of sound, a glare of light, and ten thousand shouts of alarm. Nothing stings him, no shot has struck him of the six hurled at him. He plunges through the water to his lips, gains a road and tears along; whistles shrilly with his remaining breath, is rushed upon by two men in coats and mufflers, Is seized, thrown In to a wagon and whirled away. Ills name Is Richard Starkweather. A man so fierce that they have caught and caged him for his crimes a dozen times, but a dozen times he has es caped. This last time he has been shut up and guarded with great closeness; but this time, also, like all the rest, he has broken out and is flying rapidly. Two friends have communicated with him in some mysterious way and sup plied him with the necessary imple ments, and these same friends now are driving him off to safety. He does not know where they drive for he has nearly fainted. They know, however, and rush onward and into a forest, where there is a hunter's hut. Into this they carry him and hido him. They bathe him tenderly and care for him like women. Two days pass. He is well, though weak and nervous. On each day one of the men goes away and comes back laughing at the tumult Starkweather's escape has made, and bringing food with him. They say $2,000 reward is offered by the State for his body, and they laugh all the more, and Starkweather joins them heartily. On the third day he lies partly cov ered with moss within the hut, with his eyes closed, trying to sleep off his ner vousness. One of the men comeß back from the town, and after looking at him a moment, goes outside to talk with the other, while he listens curi ously. One of them says, "He is asleep," and then they continue. As he hears what they say, his eyes open wide, they stare out of his head. He strains his ears, his breath forces Itself from him. He hears feet running, and he lies down again, and is calm and quiet. They look in upon him again, and again say to each other, "He is asleep." An hour after they awake him to say that there is danger, and they must go to-morrow, at night, and hide else where. He smiles gratefully. To morrow comes. Night comes. He hides an iron bar in his shirt, and they get into the wagon cautiously, one on each side of him, and drive off. They come to a road which forks. They take the right. He puts his hand to his breast, and says: "Take the left!" They stare at him, and keep on He orders them again: "Take the left, or halt!" They suddenly seem to comply; they turn the horse sharply to the left, the forewheel gets under the body of the wagon, and it Is hurled over, and falls with a crash. A shrill whistle bursts upon the night, and fifty men and fifty lightß are on the road at once. There is a great shout, a sharp cry, a scuffle with desperate blows, and they have him fast. He is cut and bleeding. His two betrayers stand be fore him, and all the rest about him. He glares at them and gasps. His mouth is filled with dust, and he cn say nothing at first, but finally bursts out like a wild animal: "Look here, men!" he shouts, nod ding at the two before him. "I heard them plan to turn me over to you! I heard them plan out the blood-money between them! They have played me false! they are betrayers whon they pretended to be friends. "They helped me out of Jail In order to surrender me again! Curse them! may their souls —" He Is In a horrible fury; he bursts from his captors with his herculean strength, and with the Iron bar, falls upon the two like a thunderbolt. Two crashes follow! Two dead bodies fall together upon the sod. They all rush upon him and drag him off and hold him tightly. Then to a tree, u rope follows, a knot Is seen, a pale face, a throw Is made over a limb, fifty lights darfce in the air, fifty shouts of vengeance are heard, and a pinioned form, writhing and distorted, shoots Into the air, and struggles; it becomes quiet and still. They prove that it Is dead, they toss their lights together and cheer fiercely, and disappear in fifty different paths, with one murderer and two scoundrels the less. Health for Everybody! When the Kidneys, Bladder and Urinary Organs are in a healthy state, a person is practically disease-proof. Sick ness can hardly find a foothold when those organs are well and strong. The Kidneys sift and strain from the ls x " 1 blood poisonous and waste matter. When they are weak and diseased, the poisonous particles fifth not ar,S Ut rema * n * n t * lo B y stcm - They **" !f cause pain in the small of the back, Stone jwfipSr X / * n t * l ° ladder, and Bright's Disease. fSBm / \cxV It is easy to tell if your Kidneys are Hp*g hr disordered. Put some urine in a bottle or Lij9§J ' ' glass for 24 hours. If there is a sediment, Br II J v >Ss^--/ Xs>k you havo Kidney disease. Other signs aro j ' a desire to urinate often, particularly at x\ night, and a smarting, scalding sensation in passing water. Nothing i 3 so good for curing diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder and Urinary Organs as Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, that grand medicine which has been before the public for over 30 years. It should be taken without delay by men and women who have any of the above symptoms, as the disease is apt to prove fatal if not attended to. From the Convent of the Good Shepherd, Troy, N. Y., come 3 this short but pointed endorsement, signed by the sisters of that famed and pious institution: "Wo have used Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy for Kidney trouble, and havo ! found it very efficacious." H / Sample D attic Free I If you wish to test Favorite Kcmoily before "i? \ J buying it, send your full postoffice address to tho - / DK. DAVID KENNEDY CORPORATION, Rondout, N.Y., and mention this paper. You will then receivo a sample bottle, free, and circulars giving full directions for its use. You can depend upon tho genuineness of this offer, and all sufferers should take advantage of it at once. The regular size is sold by all druggist 9 for SI.OO a bottle, and it is well worth the prico, 'G^SE OH AOP PflTl OATP Large and small blocks SPACE FOR SALE. Advertisers in the Tribune get full value for their money. DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre HUII Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Slock. Gibsoni Dougherty, K tinier Club, Knseubluth's Velvet, of which wo h vu EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mutuin'B Kxt.ru Dry Champagne, lleinichsy Urrndy, Blackberry, Gins, WHICH, CIUIOIH, CordiulJ, Ktc. Imported and Domestic Cigars, OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Ktc, MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. Hullcntitie and Huzleton beer on tap. Baths, Hot or Cold, 25 Cents. P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Oirector and Embalmer. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. ! Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat I cent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. # '|OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. 3. PATENT OFFICE' I, and we can secure patent in less time than those J , i remote from Washington. 4 ' | Send model, drawing or photo., with descrlp- P ] ,tlon. We advise, if patentable or not, free of J i charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. S 'I A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents," with } cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J 1 sent free. Address, 4 C.A.SNOW&CO J OPP. PATENT OFFICE. WASHINGTON. D. C. J WANTED 5000 CORDS POPLAR |j WOOD I W. C. HAMILTON A SONS, 1 ' | Wm. Penn P. 0., Montgomery Co., Pa. ! of every description executed at short notice by the Tribune Company. Estimates furnished promptly 011 all classes of work. Samples Tree. Ami Boat Cough Syrup. Taates Good. Uso P" 1 use- Wheels, | I (Mil? ~,r Tool | J STYLES: f | Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. I % y 4 is, The Lightest lwunnlug Whoels on Earth, J | THE ELDREDGE | I ...AND.... ; j THE BELVIDERE. I I i * We always Mcdo Good Sewing Machines! * % Why Shouldn't wo MakoGood Wheels! I - 3 | National Sewing Machine Co., > 1 3.19 Broadway, Factory: j 5 New York. Uclvldere. Ills. 5 VIENNA: BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Btreot, Freeland. CHOICE II It BAD OB ALL KINDS, CAKKS, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOYKLTY CAKKS BAKKD TO OliDKlt. Confectionery # Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and rnpply i rayon* to all pari a oj town and eurrmindiiig a every dny. Anyone sending n Bketch and description may quickly uscurtuln, free, whether an Invention IN probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency form-curing patents in America. Wo huvo u Washington office. Patents taken through Munii A Co. receive Bpcciul notice in tho SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of any scientific journal, weekly, termssß.oo a year; Hlx mouths. Specimen copies and LLAND lloou ON PATENTS sent froe. Addresa MUNN & CO., 3tl ISroadwny. New York. Are You a Roman Catholic Then you should enjoy rending 1 bo literary productions of tho best talon t in tho Cat ho* lie pr lent hood and laity (and you know what they CAN doj, an they uppour weekly in The Catholic Standard and Times OF PHILADELPHIA, Tho ablest and most vigorous defender of Catholicism. All the news -strong edtto riulH—ix children's department, which Is ele vating and educational. Prizes offered monthly to the little ones. Only per your. Tho Grandest Premium ever issued bv any paper given to subscribers for IWI7. Bend for sample copies and premium circular. 11:3 Catholic Standard and Times Pub'g Co 603-605 ClioHtnut St. Plilla.