FREELAND TRIBUNE Establlaho i 1838. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY IIY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited OFFICE: MAIN STHEKT ABOVE C'ENTKK. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: OIIC Year slJii Six Months 7 Four Months 6 Two Mouths The date which the subscription is puid to i.- ou the address label of each paper, the chung< of wliicli to a subsequent date becomes i. receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to thisollice whenever paper is not received Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. Make all money orders, check*, etc., payable the Tribune I'rintim/ Company, Limited. FREELAND, SEPTKMHER 19, 1898 Another Instance of Meanness. For some time past the Cross Creek Coal Company has missed no opportunity to let its employes fuel its power, and many of the orders and edicts issued b) this corporation recently should make those who profit by them feel ash&mod of wealth gotten by such ignoble moans. The acts of petty meanness which are visited upon the unfortunates who b\ force of circumstances must work for this firm are in many instances ridh u lows exhibitions of tyranny, because they serve no good purpose, are often of n > financial or other benefit to the com pany and simply salt the sores which the lash has previously made. One of the latest of these mandates from tho headquarters in Drifton was delivered verbally to numerous residents of Eckloy last week, when notice was served upon several householders that hereafter they shall neither harbor nor board any able-bodied man who is not employed by tho Cross Creek Coal Com pany. At first thought It might be suspected that this order was issued to clear the village of idlers and non-workers. Rut this is not its object. In Eckley there are several young men who live with their parents and a number of foreigners who hoard with fellow-countrymen. They have obtained employment at collieries other than those operated by the Coxo company, the majority working at No. 5 Joddo, but for reasons which con cern no one but themselves they prefer to remain residents of Eckley. It is the people who board these men who have notified. From pure cussodness and to have re venge upon them because they dared to better themselves (we judge so inasmuch as no other motive can be imagined), the Cross Creek Coal agents will drive these thirty or forty men out of the homes they occupy. The houses they live in are rented by people who work for tho company, but tho privilege of the renters to take in as guests or boaaders whom they will is disregarded by the powers that rule at Drifton. Young men who wore born In the town and have lived all their lives with their parents must now leave their homes and seek shelter elsewhere. There can be no gain whatever to tho corporation in carrying out this order. The rooms and beds occupied by the greater number of those affected will naturally remain vacant, for they who beard them will not give tho places of their sons to strangers whom the com pany may employ. The order is a piece of petty spite work, too small and too mean to bo fathered by a firm composed of such persons as are generally understood to compose the Cross Crook Coal Company, and, in justice to the reputation of the firm, it and other similar decrees lately originated and enforced by the small fry in charge of the Coxe interests should be promptly repudiated by those who possess that power. Why l>il Graham Withdraw? Two years ago, in August, 18%, the Tin HUNK called attention to tho remark able silence of every newspaper publish ed in Philadelphia on the disappearance and unknown whereabouts of District Attorney GeorgeS. Graham. His flight, or visit for tire benefit of his health as he termed it upon his return, was sur rounded with sensational street rumors of embezzlement of funds intrusted to his care as recolver of the Order of tin- Iron Hall. The TitinuNE was the first paper to make known the cause of his disappearance and the article was copied from one end of the state to the other, except in Philadelphia. Notwithstand ing that no denial was ever made, mauv friends of the TIUIIUNK feared we had wrongly accused tin; papers and the official, but recent developments in directly vindicate our statements of two years ago. The district attorney early last week announced himself us a candidate for renomination. The announcement creat rd a storm of indignation in Philadelphia such as lias never bofore been equalled in politics. The liar, the judiciary, tin press (in a half-hearted way) and the entire business community denounced his candidacy. Graham has powerful influence in Philadelphia, lie is the favorite of every political rounder in tin) city and is hacked by the corrupt machine which controls every public department, yet, with this unparalleled support behind him, he on Friday last withdrew his candidacy. As before, not a newspaper in the city stated why tho people rose en masse in indignation at his announcement, nor why lie feared to test tho voters' sense vt honor at the polls. THE CONVICT'S STORY. Straugc Connection of a White Cat With a Burglar's I.tfe. "It's no secret that I've been In the ! penitentiary," said the old man. "It was a white cat that took me there, and a white cat that saved me and made me a better man. "One winter, a good many years ago, ] I was in Houston, sick and dead broke | An old pal of mine meeting me on the street took pity on me and soon helped me out of my troubles. But not for nothing. As soon as I recovered he wanted me to join him in some bur glaries that he had planned. At first I refused indignantly, for I had some rough notions of honesty; but a little talking—he was a fine talker—and a few drinks did the work and I agreed to go in with him. "Conscience makes cowards of us all, and I guess that was why Ed trembled like a leaf when he saw a white cat flash past us as wp stood shivering in the garden of a house ou Harris street that night. It was aD easy matter to break in, and we soon had all there was worth taking. In a little room at the end of the hall a child was sleeping. The dim light oi a lamp showed the pretty cot, the fair flushed face of a little girl, her golden liair streaming over the snowy pillow, and crouching by her side a white cat, whose pink eyes glittered like stars. We had to pass through this room, and I could not for the life of me help bend- j ing down and touching that beautiful hair with my lips—it looked so liko the hair of my darling who died only the year before. It was her death that drove me to drink and trouble," and the old man wiped away a tear. "Well, I don't know exactly how it happened, hut the cat gave a terrific squall, and I had only just time to seize it and stuff It in my hag when a bullet came whistling by my head. I got out of the house somehow, still carrying my bag of plunder, and ran down the road, out of town, Anally tak ing refuge in an old barn. I was badly | wounded, and, to make a long story j short, they arrested me and took me to ' jail. My partner was dead. "They told me afterwards that in ray delirium I cried continually for the white cat, and when they brought the animal into my cell—for they found it unhurt in my bag—l nursed it and was quiet. It was a strange fancy of a sick man, but it led me back to health. The story was told at the house which we had robbed, and the little girl and her father came to see me. He was a good man, and she was an angel—God bless her for her innocent prattle and sweet eyes of pity. "The penitentiary was a rough place in those days, and I believe I would have died in a few months if the child had not sent me a tiny white kitten, which I was allowed to keep, and it saved, me from despair and death. Every time I looked at it I thought of the little angel that gave it, and of that other little angel—my dead child and made a new resolve to be a better man. "Two frail atoms of life—a kitten ' and a child but they were strong J enough to raise me out of the very [ depths of hell," An Unfortunate Z.liijrul.t, John was an ambitious Chinaman. | He had made money in Chinatown. San Francisco, but had devoted him self to business so thoroughly that he remained totally ignorant of English, j He came to New York determined to avoid his fellow-Chinamen, so that he might learn to speak English during his six months' stay in the metropolis, i He took a room in an East Side house, paid promptly, made himself | agreeable to his landlord, who allowed j him to wait on customers In his little grocery store, and he never went near Pell or Mott street. After several j months' residence in New York and ! many hours of study, the Chinaman ventured forth among his people, | where he proceeded to give an exhihl- j tion of his proficiency In the English i language. What he said sounded strange to the other Chinamen, and the | ambitious one nearly swooned when ho discovered that he had learned Ger man by mistake. His New York home was in the Ger man part of the city where English Is an unknown tongue, and the poor fci- j low had to begin his linguistic work over again. I'aper Floors in Germany. Paper floors are enjoying n steadily Increasing popularity in Germany, which is readily explained by the many advantages they possess over wooden flooring. An Important ad vantage consists in tho absence of Joints, whereby accumulations of dust, vermin, and fungi, dangerous to health, are done away with. The now paper floors are bad conductors of heat and sound, and in spite of their hardness have a linoleum-like, soft feel io the foot. The costs are con siderably lower than those of floors made of hard wood. The paper mass receives a small addition of cement as binder, and is shipped In hags, in powder form. The mass is stirred into n stiff paste, spread out on the floor, pressed down by means of rollers, and painted with oakwood, nutwood, or mahogany color, after drying. Notable Centennials of the Ycnr. The following centennial celebra tions will be held this year: The 400 th anniversary of Vaseo da Gama's discovery of the way to India byway of the Cape of Good Hope, at Lisbon, in May; the burning of Savonarola, at Florence, in May; the birth of Hol bein, at Basle, in Jane; Montpelier will celebrate the 100 th birthday of Augus te Comte; Ancona that of Leopaydl, and Paris that of Mlehelet, the histor ian. DISPLAY OF FLOWERS BEST RECEPTACLES FOR MOST EFFEO TIVE ARRANGEMENT. Choloe of Vases M Repaid* Stinpe n< Color of Ftrftt Importance—Slender Flow er* Require Hlgh Receptacles and Sliori Stems Low Vase*. The choice of vases, as regards both shape and color, is of the first import ance. Tall, slender flowers, such a! daffodils and narcissi, should havf holders, if possible, half as high agair as their own length. Tulips and othei flowers of the same type, on the con trary, require to rise from a low, broad base. It is a great assistance in tyr ranging flowers which it is desired should stand upright by themselves like the last mentioned, to fill the re ceptacle loosely with wet moss, into which they may be stuck as seems requisite to the artist, besides which the flowers go twice as far if assisted In this way. A branch of pink almond blossom blackthorn or wild cherry, allowed tc stick carelessly, or apparently care lessly, in ail its lovely natural splkl ness out of a big, fat, blue pot, will al once bring a hit of living spring intc the room, but the same flowers, when broken up into uninteresting small sticks and placed in slender recepta cles, at once lose all character and be come unimportant and meaningless. In the case of violets and snowdrops and such other frail beauties a low bowl, uot more than three inches in height, is the most satisfactory ar rangement. Here, again, the use ol moss is invaluable. There are at pres ent on the market some inexpensive modern, shallow Delft bowls, which seem made for the accommodation oi violets, hyacinths and other wofully short-stemmed blossdms. Roses must be treated according to their variety. Some spirited, stiff ztocked kinds consent to lend them selves to lofty designs, while tea roses and others of a more yielding, drooping disposition yearn for howls and the support of one another's company, and Sven so It Is necessary to place a wire support in the bowl to keep them from slipping. Can anything be lovcliei than old-fashioned silver bowls filled with mixed roses? Useful Love Letter.. There is u very amiable lady who uses her love letters to score off her husband when opportunity occurs. It Is her custom when her husband says anything disparaging to her to fetch out one of these relics of courtship days and reel off the glowing tribute to her virtues which is therein con tained. These letters originally num bered soir.ewhere about 200, but owing to sundry successful raids which the poor persecuted husband has made up on them, the number has been consid erably reduced. When he penned the tender missives little did he Imagine what instruments of torture they would in later years become. , - Wainscot ting, <^> ogb Made of Deniu and Webbing. To .Munlciii-e the Nail., To manicure the nails thoroughly hold the tips of the Augers in a bowl of hot soap suds for a few minutes. Then, with an orange stick (never a stoel instrument), push hack the cuti cle, which must not under any circum stances be cut. Trim and file the nails to shape thsm, and the sliapo must be a delicate oval, uot a point. If a high polish is desired, put the pink salve on flrst, then powder and polish; add more salve end powder, polish again and wash tho hands. After they are dry rub the nails with a polisher that has not been in powder, and, as Byron says, they will look like "the petals of a pink rose." How to Remove Freckle*. Very delicate skin freckles easily. A few of these "klssss of the sun god" are supposed to accentuate the white ness of a pretty complexion, but too many arc most harassing to the soul of woman. If a mask of thin muslin, dip ped in buttermilk frequently, is worn for a day Immediately after the freck les make their appearance, all trace of them will vanlah. Holes for the mouth and eyes must be cut in the mask. A wet day might be chosen for the cure, during which the fair patient would undergo tie fashionable rest cure, "a day in bed." For That Tired Feellnu. Ardent lady cyclists may he pleased to know that when they return stiff and tired from a long country ride they will derive great benefit and re lief from taking a warm bath into which has been po'ired a good teacup ful of white vinegcr. Ammonia usee! liberally in the same way also has ex ceilent results. To Make tie Skin Dry. For an oily skin, a most unattractive possession in woman, put a little borax in the water and i se at night a mix ture of rose water and simple tincture of benzoin. The face may be washed in warm water. j TROUBLESOME AGUINALDO. Hong Kong Correspondent* Think It Wiu UnvvJae to Take Him llack to t'avlte. San Francisco, Sept. 15.—The re ( ports of Manila correspondents sent to the Hong Kong papers, which ar i rived to-day by the steamer from China, show that the attitude of Agui naldo has created great uneasiness on the part cf American and English ob servers. ThJo correspondent of the Hong Kong China Mail, after speaking of the great skill shown by Aguinal do in avoiding friction with Gen. An derson, says: "There can be only one construction placed on the latest developments of the navy policy. Agulnaldo and his supporters evidently imagine that tie United States will withdraw her troops as soon as Spain is conquered, leav ing the revolutionary troops in pos session. Yet all observers admit that there can be no dual control. As time goes on it becomes more clearly evident that the United States offi cials who were responsible for taking tne insurgent leaders to Cavlte may have made a grievous mistake. #5,,100 for His Injur lea. New lirunswfck, N. J., Sept. 15. Justice Van Syckel, of the Supreme Court of New Jersey, decided yesterday that James Corkery, for many years superintendent of schools at South Amboy, is entitled to $3,300 for in juries received while attempting to b ml a train of the Central Railroad of New Jersey at Toms River on De cember 18. He contended that he stepped on ttoe train while it was standing still and that it started be fore'he could got up the stepr. The railroad company declared that he tried to board the train while it was moving. His injuries have unfitted him for teaching. ItiiHMlun I'rnlfle of Our Navy. Washington, Sept. 15.—1n an official report presented to his government on the operations of American fieets dur ing the war, Prince Lieven, a captain in the Russian Navy, writes most en thusiastically, of the conduct of both officers and men and of the marvelous discipline that was enforced, which en abled the ships to be so magniflcgently fought when the opportunity arose for a clash with those of Spain. The prince early in the war applied for permission to accompany the fleet under Admiral | Sampson, and was present with it throughout the greater part of the war. itody of Burgogne Victim Found* Washington, Sept. 16.—The State Department has received a letter from 1 Consul-General Osborn, at London, re porting that he has l*en informed by tlie Receiver of Wrecks that the body of Alfred R. Jacob, an American citi zen, one of the victims of the wreck of La Bourgogne, was picked up by the British steamer I-ondontan. The re ceiver said he held certain property j found on the body and desired an In quiry to be made to ascertain If there are any legal heirs of Mr. Jacob living In the United States. Letter's Father Hat Paid All. Chicago, Sept. 15.—Joseph Loiter has | cleared up his famous wheat deal. Ev ery creditor has been paid, obligations to banks whose assistance was enlist ed have been cancelled, and 14.000,000 bushels of wheat have been liquidated | since the announcement of the volun : tary assignment, nearly three montlit | ago. ! This has been done only by groat sac- J rlflce. Including the giving of mortga ges on property belonging to the Lelter | estate aggregating nearly $5,500,000 In value. FlnC Season for Hops in Washington. Seattle, Wash., Sept. 15.—The hop picking season in the Puyallup and Yakima valleys is on, and pickers are gathering from all portions of the State and British Columbia. The crop be lngton in the past six years Is also the sides being the largest raised in Wash best, the hops being bright, free from insects, and very superior. The yield Is from 15,000 to 2,000 pounds per acre, and dealers ere generally engaging the crop at 10 cents. It will require 4,000 pickers for a month to gather the crop. The Nicaragua ( anal. *City of Mexico, Sept. 15.—'The Mexi can Government has been officially no tified that the Diet of the Greater Re public of Central America has asked the Government of Nicaragua for all the documents In the archives relating to the construction of an interoceanlc canal across Nicaragua "for the pur pose of investigating the reasons why the United States of North America appear to be decided to construct the canal." Dfttfiii'ss Cannot be Cured by local applications, as lliey cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the eustachian tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it iscutire ly closed deafness is the result, and un less the inflamation can be taken out and ibis tube restored to its normal con dition, hearing will be d stroyed for ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrah, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. _F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, 0. t2?~rio!d by druggists, 75c. HaUWainily Tills are the best. PR.DAVID favorite Remedy The one sure cure for J The Sidney's,liver and Blood Watch the date on your paper. AN ELECTRIC CHAPEL. A VILLAGE CHAPEL LIGHTED WHOLLY BY VACUUM TUBES. It tVas thai Star Exhibit at the Keren 1 Electrical Exposition in New York Clt] —The lleauty and Purity of the Eight ant Perfect Lighting System. One of the most attractive exhlblti at the recent New York electrical exhl bltlon was a chapel lighted entirely bj the vacuum tube Invented by D. Me Parian Moore. The visitor waa Intro duced Into a passageway leading to thi chapel, along whioh Mr. Moore sought to give the pilgrim a flve-mlnute prae tlcal course In the applications of elec tricity. Emerging from a bend In thl passage the front of the chapel sud denly loomed up a perfect reprodue tion of a stone village church, steeple clock and all. Within was seen th vaulted roof ribbed with verltabl arches of light consisting of long curv ed tubes of glass about two Inches It diameter and glowing their entiri length with a pure white light. Thl harmony of the surroundings wai everywhere observed. The ear wai TIIK MOIITKD CHAPEL. gratified with melodious strains from a magnificent pipe organ, which filled the far end of the chapel behind the altar fully equipped, even to the lec tern. The tube arches sprang from pilasters, each capped with a highly polished, specially designed brass fix ture. They took the form of a crown while at the apex of the chapel celling, where the tube arches met, they were Joined by a highly decorated brass cy linder bent at its center. These were the first vacuum tube lighting fixtures ever designed, and are a striking exam ple of the manner In which Mr. Moore has worked out the thousand and one details of his lighting system. In thle connection it should be mentioned thai the chapel was wired completely with Iron armored conduits. Over the rear door in colored vacuum tubes was the Inscription: "Let There Be Light." The photograph which served as the original for the accompanying Illustration was taken entirely by the light from the vacuum tubes. Tlie Very Oddest Hobby. Probably the strangest hobby In thl world Is that of Ileury Woolridge of Mnyfleld, Ky„ who devotes all hit money and tluie to developing his plot In the local cemetery ill away which is as grotesque as It is, happily, orlg lual. His first modest and laudabli effort was to erect u plain monument to mark the family resting place. Nol satisfied with this, however, he added to It a white marble shaft bearing on Its face a relief presentment of him self on horseback. Having tlius struck the personal note, "Uncle Henry," as be Is faniil lnrly called, had a life-sized statue ot himself erected at a cost of $l,(MtO. He then Introduced statues of Ills uiothet and eldest brother, to be followed shortly by similar statues In Indiana limestone of a favorite nieee and of a young girl who had brought him flow ers during an illness. Ills next ambition was to see him self on horseback, and tno family gathering was augmented by a life size Btutue of "Uncle Henry" on his favorite horse. Then followed pre sentments In stone of his favorlts deerliouud, "Tow Head," chasing a (leer; another of a fox pursued by his foxhound, "Hob," nud a marble sar cophagus with a carved representation of his favorite gun. The latest additions have boon statues of throe of bis brotuers In the si litest poses and the most prosaic of dress. As "Uncle Henry," although 7.1 years old, Is still bale and more enthusiastic than ever, It Is certain that this strange menagerie will re ceive many more additions before lie sleeps In tlie oddest environment with which eccentricity ever surrounded a deud man. Where Wire. Arc In Demand. Wives are wanted in Rhodesia. The British South Africa Company is anx ious for active colonization. For many years the Chartered Company has discountenanced marriage among the mounted police, civil servants and other employes, a measure for which Cecil Hhodes, whose misogynist views are well known, has been held re sponsible. But this policy has been en tirely reversed, and an edict has gone forth among the Chartered Company'i officials promising that preference ir prom tlon will be gl ren to married met and advising all who can do so tc enter forthwith intc the bonds of mat rimony. Wonder of a Volcanic Inle. One of the greatest wonders of Java "the fire island," a Urge lake of boiling mud, is situated algnost in the plaini of Grobogana, some distance to thi northeast of Solo. It Is nearly tw miles in circumference, and In the cen ter Immense columns of soft, hot mu may be seen continually rising ant falling, like great Mack timbers tlirus forth and then suddenly wlthdrawi by a giant's hand. Besides the phe nomena of the columns, there are tw< gigantic bubbles near the western edge which fill up like huge balloons anc explode on an average three times poi minute. Saved from the Surgeon's Knife No organs are of greater importance to the human body than the Kidneys. Their duty is to sift and strain the poisonous and waste matter from the blood, and if they fail to do this, the trouble shows in the nervous system, and even in the brain. Your life is at stake when there are pains in the small of your back when you are compelled to get up at night to urinate—when the passing of water causes scalding pain—when there is a sediment in the urine in the vessel, or when it appears white or milky. When so afflicted, you can conquer the trouble with Dr. David Kennedy* 8 Favorite Remedy, the greatest medicine that civilization has ever known for curing Kidney, . Bladder, Blood and Liver Diseases. jTO y James Lettice, of Canajoharie, N. Y., tells of |p /Q his wonderful cure: "Some years ago I was attacked IKI trol my kidneys, and V \r~l I -4 what came from tne was saw an advertisement of Dr. '< iT David Kennedy's Favorite R@SiBBHiKBfIB3Bf MWBBBI Ii I Remedy , which seemed to fit my 11 case, so I decided to try that before I ggBKSBKSk submitted to the operation. I began its use. When I had taken about two bottles the flow from the bladder grew cleaner, and the pain stopped, and in a short time I was saved from the surgeon's knife, and am now well." Favorite Remedy also cures Eczema, Scrofula, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia and Constipation. For Female Troubles it is unequaled. It is sold for SI.OO a bottle at all drug stores. ftftfflA FI>AA V * n order that sufferers may be convinced of OQHIgfIV DVIBIC 11 VV I the cura tive virtues of Favorite Remedy, a free sample bottle will be sent, prepaid, to those who send their full postofiico address to the DR. DAVID KENNEDY CORPORATION, Rondout, N. Y. It is necessary to say that you saw the advertisement in this paper if you wish to take advantage of this genuine and liberal offer. Send toduy. ——-* Op APC EflD CAT]] * Oi HUE run oflliC. sx&resx: Advertisers in the Tribune get full value for their money. DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre ami Front .Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kuufcr Club, UotH'iibintli's Velvet, of which we h ve EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumiu's Extra Dry Cluunpugno, llenue&sy brandy, Blackberry, Gins, Wines, Clurets, Cordials, Etc. Imparled and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. Ballentine and Hazleton beer on tap. Baths, Hot or Cold, 25 Cunts. P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director and Embalmer. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre strtHjt, Freeland. J < aveats, and Trade Marks obtained, and all I 'at-J $ ent business conducted for MODERATE Fees. 4 J OUR Orrice is OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE' 5 and we can secure patent in less time than those J * remote from Washington. } J Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- ' stion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of I 2 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 2 J A PAMPHLCT, "How to Obtain Patents," with * J cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J 2 sent free. Address, 2 C.A.SNOW&CO.? PATENT Q WANTED 5000 CORDS POPLAR j WOOD i W. C. HAMILTON dt SONS, i | Wm. Penn P. 0., Montgomery Co., Pa. j Lg of every description exeented ut short notice by the Tribune Company. Estimates furnished promptly on all classes of work. Hum pies'free. Boat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cao IJI In time. Bold by druiralnts. |af • j wlms j I tmST' Tool | STYLEB, £ , I Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem, j ~ I 3 The Lightest Running Wliools on Earth. , 1 THE ELDREDGE ! \ 1 • ....AND.... ) I THE BELVIDERE.! i 1 , i ) 1 J We always Mado Good Sewing Machines I J j Why Shouldn't we Make Good Wheels I I i I gj National Sewing Machine Co., > j 339 Broadway, Factory: , M New York. Belvldere, Ills. I wwpwwwsmmwßPspwaaaami I VIENNA: BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. ' CHOICE IIREAD OF ALL KINDS, CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. I FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES IIA HMD TO ORDER. Confectionery $ Ice Cream j supplied to bulls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. | Delivery and mpply wayone to all pa rte oj j town and eurroundinye every day. BJCPIRIIMCK JO rTvHbMHHBm is w j. Yi a■i| Ji TRADE MARKS, PjEJWKfV* DESIGNS, r TrV COPYRIGHTS Ac. Anyone sending a Aketeh and description may quickly ascertain, free, whether an Invention la probably patentable. Communication!! strictly confident ial. Oldest agency for securing pnteuta in America. We hnvo H Washington office. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive special notice In the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, txmnMfnllr'Uluntnited. lnrewt circulation of gnr .dentine Journal, weolilj, term. a rear i ll..dnix month,. Specimen coplo, and IIANO Boua ON 1 ATENTS sent free. Addrea MUNN & CO., 301 llroiiflwnv. New York. Are You a Roman Catholic Then you Hhould enjoy rending the literary productions of the lest talent In tbo Cat lio* He priesthood and laity (and you know what they CAN do), OH they nppear weekly in The Catholic Standard and Times OF PHILADELPHIA, The nblcnt nnd most vigorous defender of <'at hollcism. All the news-Hlrong edito rials—a chlldren'H depart men I, which IK ele vating and educational. Prizes offered monthly to the little oneH. Only £v!.()0 per year. 'J'he Grandest Premium ever iKKiied by I any paper given to sulMerlbera for IKW7. Rend j for sample copleH nnd premium circular. The Catholic Standard and Times Pub'g Co ' oOU-505 Chestnut St. Pliila,
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