FREELAND TRIBUNE. Establisfcoi 1888. PUBLISHED EVEKY MONDAY AND THURSDAY HT THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE; MAIN STIIEET AMOVE CENTKE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four Months 50 Two Months 2o The date which the subscription is paid to is ou the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the ilgures 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. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Prlntiny Company, Limited. j FREE LAND, PA..NOVEMBER 14,1808. I 1 OH 1 THE BEAUTIFUL WRETCH. He had been going there for a month now, and had not progressed any fur ther in his race for the girl than when he first began. True, she was cold and haughty; true, too, was it that she treated him with disdain, but what mattered that to him. Was she not ; worth millions, and were he not al most penniless. He was working, but at what? —a six-dollar a week clerk in a drygoods store —and he could not hope to marry on that. As a matter of fact she was one port in a storm and possibly a haven. At length he de- j termined to find out how much she car- . ed for him and with that object in view put on his best suit, placed a four-inch collar around his neck, doff ed a new hat, patent-leather shoes— for which his last week's earnings had been expended—and with a new pair of gloves, borrowed from the store for the occasion, went to visit her at the magnificent home of her parents on Girard avenue. The evening was spent pleasantly enough until 10 o'clock, when a remark that she dropped brought to his mind what he intended to do. He began timidly at first, and after some he-hawing managed to usk ber "may I —er —press my suit?" "Of course," came her answer instantly as she reached for and pressed the butler button. "James show this gentleman to the kitchen and give him a flatiron." l'olnteil l'.ruKrni)li,. The man who invests in green goods must want money bad. The lass whose lover goes to sea sheds many a private-tear. What men call firmness in them selves they call contrariness in others. The man who Is employed by his wife's father don't worry about losing his job. It's a curious anomaly ol war that both contending parties are always iD the right. Men and clotheslines become un steady when they have too many sheets in the wind. A man's success often depends on his ability to prevent others from pre venting It. When the average young man gradu ates from college he knows more than he ever will in the future. Men convinced against their will are of the same opinion still, but no wo man is ever convinced that way. There's a screw loose somewhere when a minister gets the princely sal ary of SIOO per year, and a baseball player only gets $4,000. On the Merrick ltoari. A "Hi, there! Got a monkey wrench?" "Naw; this here's a sheep ranch." Wanted to Surprise Him. A thrifty man went to an auction to bid for a bookcase which he was sadly In need of. In due course the thing was put up, and there were several bid ders for it. The man continued to bid, but he was harrassed by some woman who was bidding against him. The wo man was in the crowd on the other side, and he could not see her, but he was determined to have it, and he bid up pretty high. Finally it was knocked down to him and the auctioneer asked his name He gave it, and arranged to have the case sent home. Just as he started out of the door some one tugged at his sleeve. He turned, and there was his wife. Knowing that he wanted a bookcase she had come down to buy one cheap and surprise him, and It was she who bad been bidding against her husband Ao Alliance for lllm. Tired Treadwell—"Wot, an alliance wid Kngland? Not any fer me! I'm agin it, first, last and all de time." Weary Walson—"Ain't yer got no pride in yer country? T'ink how we could swipe de rest of de powers. We'd be do whole t'lng if we had dat kind of a combination." Tired Treadwell—"Dat's all right, but I seen an item in a paper dat dey use 400,000,000 pounds of soap every year in England." COST OF MEAL SSOO 000,000. Where the Material Came From onl the Investment Necessary for a Meat ' Recently, a man, who is fond of ar ithmetic, made up his mind that ha would find out how much a dinner real ly cost. He first ascertained that the dinner he was eating cost seventy-five cents, presumably. He contradicted this, and then made out the following statement about the cost of that simple little dinner: The pepper, he said, came from ten thousand miles aw iy. It grew on a little bush about ei: ht feet high, which must have had a growth of at least five years. The pepper was picked green; it had to b; dried in the sun, and this meant em ploying women. It took one ship and one thousand milea of railroad to bring the pepper to the 1 United States. The flour of which the bread was made came from Dakota; some one owned the land, and that meant the investing of capital, and then he had also to pay wages to workingmen. The flour had to be ground, and the building of the mill, and the plant, or machinery, meant more money invested. The millers had to be paid, coopers had to be paid for making the barrels, and, of course, the wood of which the barrels were made had to be cut and sawed and shaped, and this meant the employing of more men. Then the flour had to be shipped over the railroad and handled again by cartmen before it came into the house. The tea on the table came from China and the cofTee from South Amer ica. The codfish had to be brought from Maine. Men had to be employed to catch the fish; then other men and women were employed in drying, pack ing and boxing it, and it, too, had to make a long railroad journey. The salt came from the northwestern part of New York State. The spices in the cake came from the Spice Islands, over in the Indian Archipelago. The can ned peaches came from California, and they, too, represented the employment of capital and labor. The simple little dinner represented, directly or indi rectly, the employment of $500,000,- 000 of capital and 5,000,000 men. Wnrnlim to Younw Men. j The bicycle face is old. The bar gain-counter face, the quick-lunch face and the war-bulletin face are more re- i cent. The newest discovery in this line is the pipe face, which is grown by men who smoke pipes. The staid old ! Medical Record saw it first and said ! this of it: THE PIPE PACE. | "The habit of smoking the pipe has a perceptible effect upon the face. The pressure of the lipe to hold the pipe i in position increases the curvature of i the lips round the stem, and the mus cles become more rigid here than in other parts. Thus the lips at a cer tain point become stronger and the pipe is unconsciously held in the same habitual position. After long continu ation of the habit small circular wrtn i kles form parallel with the curvature of the lips around the stem. These are i crossed by finer lines caused by the pressure of the lips to retain the pipe in position. In the case of old men who have smoked a pipe for years the effect upon the lips is very mark ed." All Historic I'arrluKC. An historic carriage owned by the late Dr. Evans has been offered for sale at the Paris Tattersall establish ment, but it was decided at the last moment to retain the vehicle as an item of the estate. In it the doctor left I Paris with the Empress Eugenie on Sept. 4, 1870, when he was assisting ■ her to reach England. It is intended by the heirs of the noted dentist to transfer the carriage to the Evans Mu seum, which is to be founded in Ameri ca under the clauses of the doctor's will. The vehicle will be temporarily handed over to the care of the old coachman who drove the Empress, her attendants and the doctor to the coast in 1870, when she was about to em bark for England in Sir John Bur goynee's yacht. The vehicle is a lan dau with accommodations for four persons, and was built in 1867 for the Exhibition. About ten years since Dr. Evans had it recleaned and reembel lished, In order to make a Journey to Granville over the same ground as that traversed by him with the Empress In 1870. During that long drive he stop ped at the same places en route as those selected on the memorable Jour ney. A (inod I>IMPIHII lon. Some day it will be found that to bring up a man with a genial nature, a good temper, and a happy frame of mind, is a greater effort than to per fect him in many accomplishments. "How is it that your baby drops asleep at such a regular time? What do you give her?" "Nothing. Her I father Just stops singing to her." AN EXTRAORDINARY MEASLY TALE; A certain well known Clevelander J lives out on the Crawford road and can be further Identified by the fact ! that he la a confirmed bachelor. It might be too humiliating to mention his name, and possibly too annoying, if the experiences of other eligible bachelors is remembered. The letter carrier out that way has all he cares to do now, without adding to his bur den the countless applications of mat rimonially inclined females. The fact that he has no children does not lessen thiß bachelor's Interest in the children of others, and the other afternoon as he was walking down Oakdale avenue his attention was at tracted by a pink card on the front of a friend's house. The card bore this legend:— MEASLES WITHIN. The mistress of the home happened to be in the doorway, and out of the sympathetic fulness of his heart the bachelor called to her: "I am sorry to hear about your lit tle ones, Mrs. 8.," he exclaimed. "Thank your for the sympathy," Said the lady. "But the children are no longer in any danger. They are getting well nicely." "How can that be?" said the bach elor. "Their symptoms seem to me extremely ominous." "What do you mean?" cried the lady. "How can that he?" said the bach elor. "Measles should be brought out. It is a very bad symptom if they are not brought out. Why don't you do something to bring them out?" "B-but," stammered the astonished lady, "who told you they were not"— "Your sign," said the bachelor. And pointing to it he read aloud: ' "Measles within.'" The lady giggled. "That's so," she said. "It's a false statement. Take it away." And he did. —Cleveland Plain Deal er. lu the Garden. "Come into the garden, Maud, For the wintry days have flown; Come into the garden, Maud, I And see how things have grown. I have planted pansies and sweet peas And morning glories there— Come into the garden, Maud, And see how my seedlings fare." He took her little hand in his, And they sauntered out to see, But not a pansy had come up, i Nor a solitary pea; i He took one look around and then j He wildly tore his hair— ; His next door neighbor's chickens had Preceded Maudie there. One of Many. Hamlett —"Miss Pinkleigh is a mem ber of the chorus, isn't she?" Eggett—"Oh, no; she's the leading lady." Hamlett—"ls that so?" Egglett—"Oh, no; she's the leading one until I proposed, and then refused me." Hamlett—"Well, if that's the case, I would class her as a sleight-of-hand performer." A Wonderful Wouitiu. Bilkins—My wife used to be rather foolish, but she's one of the most calm and sensible women in this town now. Why, say, do you know what she did yesterday? Orcutt—No; What? Bilkins —Saw a telegraph boy coming across the street toward our house and never fainted or hollered that she knew 'something had happened to mamma!" One Way or rung the Chatelaine. £ llcart-Drenklnir. Trembling Suitor—"Ah, if I only; dared to tell you what is in my heart! Can't you see? Can't you guess what it is I would say to you?" Beautiful Widow—"Yes, I think I can read your thoughts. But pray do not speak the words that are trembling upon your lips. Let us respect the dead. I have decided not to marry) again—for at least six months." Couldn't Fenze Her. A little girl who attends a Maine public school has quite an idea of no bility, as was evidenced by her reply; .o her teacher. The class had been reading about the King's family. The teacher, wishing to inculcate the cor rect idea of royal descent, said: "Now, rhildren, if the King and Queen had a, son, what would he be?" "The Jack," was the quick response. ( Not Dumb. An angry small boy was pelting stones at a noisy dog when a venerable passer-by stopped and addressed him. "Little boy," the stranger remon strated, "don't you know you should be kind to dumb animals?" "Yes," replied the angry boy, "but what's dumb animals got to do with yelping dogs?" | LIGHTS IN THE PYRAMIDS. Tomb of the Plinritohs to Re Illninln ntoil by Electricity. J The ancient Institutions of Egypt are rapidly giving way to the new order of things. For centuries old methods of transportation have been in vogue un ] affected by the rapid strides in other parts of the globe, the camel being the only means of conveyance of freight and passengers, and crude agricultural I implements of Biblical times have only j recently been laid aside for newer | machines. Idle waterfalls have been recently made to turn mill wheels, and where no falls existed the Nile's waters are being impounded for power pur poses as well as for irrigation. There J are immense stretches of country, until recently unproductive, now covered j with cotton plantations, and their j product has become of the greatest im ] portance to Egypt. English capital is now building a great storage reserevolr near Assouan, in the Upper Nile re gion, in which will be caught the water of the river during the freshet season, to be released in the dry times. This will feed a great Irrigation system, which, it Is hoped, will reclaim vast stretches of desert land and what was once a barren waste of sand will be transformed into blooming plantations, growing wheat and cotton. Thus will be restored to the ancient country its old reputation and standing as the "granary of Europe." The latest and not the least novel of : these innovations is the illumination : of the pyramids by electric light. Al ready the trolley car has invaded the ancient precincts ,and it is possible to ride to these old structures from sev eral points by electric vehicles. Wires will soon be laid from the Assouan cataract, where a modern power plant will be constructed, to the pyramids, and the interior rooms and passage ways as well as the exterior will be ablaze with electric light. Many timid persons have heretofore been deterred from making this trip because of the gloomy interior. The tour was for merly made with the assistance of sev eral natives, who acted as guides and torch-bearers, their flaming lights serving only to enhance the darkness of the passageways. Novel Automobile. A particularly novel type of auto mobile, advertised in an English jour nal as light and gracefully constructed, is shown in the illustration, which rep resents a combination coupe and motor tricycle. The motor cycle is detacha ble from the carriage and can be rid den by itself, but when attached as shown it serves the purpose of a horse. 1 The groom or footman Is supposed to COMBINATION COUPS AND TRICYCLE. sit In the motor-tricycle saddle and to start the combination by two or three turns of the pedals, after which the petroleum-driven motor attached to the rear of the tricycles develops sufficient j power to propel the cab without any further assistance. The oil reservoir will hold a sufficient quantity of oil to carry the cab between fifty and six ty miles. The cab is said to hold two persons comfortably. Tlie Moumc and the Banknote. I A country vicar tells a curious story about a mouse and a banknote. The [ note, which was left on a shelf in a store-room, always kept locked up, suddenly vanished. The servants : were quite above suspicion. The fact j that the note had been laid in that | particular place and had disappeared, ! admitted of no doubt whatever. After some search it was noticed that there was a mouse-hole in a corner of the floor. A carpenter was sent for, and a board taken up. A large quantity of minute bits of paper were drawn out, j the accumulation, probably, of very J many years. Strange to say, in one ' corner of the heap, a nest of young j mice was discovered lying on a bank note! It was uninjured, no portion had been nibbled away, and was the only piece of paper left entire in all the heap. It happened, then, that the mouse had carried the note, folded up as it was, through its hole, and then unfolded and spread it out as a lining to its nest, and had used it as a blank et, evidently conscious of Its softness and flexibility. The wonderful part of the story Is the leaving of this one piece of paper entire, apparently be cause it was of a different texture from the rest. New liiflu.tr y in Vlr K lnin. I A new industry in this country is to , be established near Norfolk, Va. It Is • an institution for extracting the oil i from peanuts. The prospectus of the company announces that the product I from five tons of peanuts will be 225 , gallons of oil, worth 50 cents a gal , Ion; 3, 680 pounds of peanut flour, , worth 2 cents a pound, and 3,680 pounds of meal for stock feed, worth j 60 cents per 100 pounds, which will i make the value of the product $450 for I each day's operations , | The peanut flour is used for making bread cakes, etc., which are used in I some of the hospitals in Europe. It is 1 claimed that much of the castile soap of commerce is made from the oil of ' the peanut, and to that purpose the ' product of the Virginia mill will be devoted. , No fewer than 1173 persons have , been buried in Westminster Abbey. I ~ ti&aßxr ~atLx I ...... THE TEST. Diana Garland was what the world calls a fashionable young lady 19 years old. "Harry," said Miss Garland to her betrothed, one evening, "I've been thinking!" "Is that such a very unusual mental process on your part?" said Mr. Ernes cliffe, gravely. "About our engagement," said Di ana, "Harry, what made you like me at the very first?" "Well—at the very first, I suppose it was because you were so pretty." j "And now?" I "Now, it is because you are my Di ana." "But, Harry," with downcast eyes, "suppose I were homely and unattrac , tive —" I "Well?" "Then would you care for me? Would you love me as you do now?" | "My darling, 1 should love you just as well if you were as ugly as—as old Miss Hilsey," asservated Ernescllffe." | "Are you quite sure, Harry?" j And his laughing, loving glance reas sured her for this once. ! Miss Garland scarcely knew what had inclined her thoughts toward this strange and unusual channel. She for got it again the next minute, but she remembered it again with all the swift j Hess and suddenness of a revelation 1 some two weeks subsequently, when she happened to be taken ill and old Dr. Vivian was summoned to attend , her. i Dr. Vivian looked intently at Diana. He asked one or two questions and then looked at her again. "Doctor," cried Di, "what is it? There is something in your eyes that you do not speak out." | "Miss Garland, when did you last i visit that blind protege of yours in the Simond street tenement house?" I "About two weeks ago, doctor. . Why?" ! "I thought so," said Dr. Vivian. "Since then I have sent three children from that house to the hospital." | "Doctor," gasped Mrs. Garland, "not ! -small-pox!" ! He nodded his head. "Very bad cases of small-pox," said he. "And I \ery much fear, my dear young lady, that | you have contracted the same dis ease!" "I told you so, Di," wailed Mrs. Gar land. "I always knew how it would turn out, all that poor district business of yours. Oh, my child, my child! your prospects in life will be ruined, and—" "Mrs. Garland," ifiterrupted the doc tor, "re-collect yourself. My patient must not be annoyed or excited. These regrets come too late to be useful. What we have to do with now is the present." Diana looked up with a smile. "Do not fear, doctor," said she. "Smail-pox—l have always had an un defined dread and horror of it. Now that it is so close upon me the fear seems to have ail passed away. Mam ma, don't cry. Beauty is only skin deep after all, and—and if there be any among my friends who loved me for ! that alone it is perhaps as well that I should find it out at once." "But Harry Ernescliffe, my darling?" "Mamma, we won't talk about that just now," said the girl, in a low voice. But Diana Garland thought within herself how fortunate it was that Har ry had Just started for that business i iourney to New Orleans, which would certainly detain him there for a month | at least. "No one must write to him. It would be of no use," said Diana. "And, ! mamma, if death should come to me, I shall not be sorry that my last work :on earth was ministering to God's poor." "May I go to her, Mrs. Garland?" I Harry Ernescliffe had known noth ing of it all until, returning from his Southern trip, he heard of Diana's ill ness. And this was the first occasion upon which he had been admitted to the house on Madison avenue. "Harry," faltered Mrs. Garland, "I— --; I have a message for you." | "May I not hear It from Diana's own .lips, Mrs. Garland?" | "It Is not fitting that you should." said Mrs. Garland, firmly. "Here is the ring, Harry—the ring you gave her. She absolves you from the engagement | and returns the token of your troth." I Harry's eyes flashed reproachful fire. "Have I asked for such absolution, Mrs. Garland?" he questioned, almost I sternly. | "No —but my daughter thinks that it Is due to you. She Is altered by the fell band of disease. She is no longer the j fair, beautiful girl to whom you en gaged yourself. She—" I But Harry Ernescliffe silenced her. | "She is Diana Garland still," he said fervently. "The Diana Garland whom | alone I love—the only woman I will ever marry. Pray conduct me to her at once, Mrs. Garland." | And the mother, trembling like an aspen leaf, could but obey. | The soft, level light of the afternoon sun was shining in through the rose colored chintz draperies of Miss Gar land's boudoir, and Diana stood in the middle of the room as he entered, robed all in white, with her lovely golden-brown hair falling in a glisten ing shower to her waist, and her large, wistful eyes turned toward the door, no seamed and scarred skeleton, no (fis figured and haggard remnant of her former self, but Diana Garland, as beautiful as ever, save that she was a trifle thinner and more pale. | "My Diana, oh, my darling!" he cried, clasping her to his heart. | "Yes, Harry, yours forever," she murmured, her soft eyes full of happy tears. "So you would not give me up —not even when you fancied me dis figured for life. But, ohl Harry, when I fancied that all my beauty was reft from me, the one thing that hurt me most was the fear that you would not love me the same. Now I know that I you ar e true as God's own sunshine. 3h, Harry, how can we ever be sufll jiently thankful that Heaven has been io merciful!" And thus all Diana Garland's fears ind doubts were exorcised forever. Saved from the Surgeon's Knife No organs are of greater importance to the human body than the Kidneys. Their duty i 3 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's Favorite Remedy, the greatest medicine that civilization has ever known for curing Kidney, t % Bladder, Blood and Liver Diseases. ia.7 James Lettice, of Canajoharie, N. Y., tells of IQ his wonderful cure: 11 Some years ago I was attacked sides that were I what came from me filled with mucus and blood. could take care of me after. I \ L/f saw an advertisement of Dr. David Kennedy'B Favorite | Remedy, which seemed to fit my raff case, so I decided to try that before I submitted to the operation. I began \S-|Bfo .^ly 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. 7 1° order that sufferers may bo convinced of J? t SVflliV II Cv I curative virtues of Favorite Remedy, a free sample bottle will be sent, prepaid, to those who send their full postofflce 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 today. * op A PIJ Bflß CUT 13 sjiiiulj run OnbD. Advertisers in the Tribune get full value for their money. T. CAMPBELL, dealer in Hry Clood/®, Boot® unci Blioe®* Also PURE WINES & LIQUORS FOR FAMILY ANI) MEDICINAL PURPOSES. Centre and Main streets, Frceland. ] DePIEB.RO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Streets* | Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty* Kaufer Club, Koacablutirs Velvet, of which we hve , EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mummhi Extra Dry Champagne, Honnensy Brundy, Blackberry* Ulna, Wines, Clarets, CordiuU, Etc. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. Rallentlne and Hazlcton laser on tap. Rut,ha, Hot, or ('old, 25 Cents. P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Embalming of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. P. F. McNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Frceland. Best Cough By rup. Tastes Good. Use ■ In ttmo. Sold by druggists. j ■ ' *A Typographical Error. Through the addition of a single let ter to a word by a typographical error a Missouri paper was led to make the following grave announcement the oth |er day: "Sedalia's mayor, having plenty of time on his hands, has de cided to begin a war against immortal ity." r A Military Swimming School. The German army has a swimming school for troops, where every one must learn to swim. The best swim mers are able to cross a stream of several hundred yards' width, even when carrying their clothing, ride and ammunition. David Kennedy's favorite Remedy I CURES ALU KIDNEY. STOMACH * I . AND LIVER TROUBLES. | Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. ? ? S BROTHERHOOD HATS Q 0 A celebrated brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDU3 OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sis., Freeland. VIENNA : BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. j CHOICE DREAD OF ALT. KINDS, \ CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY ANJt NOVELTY CAKES RAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery $ Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at, shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply wagons to all parts oj town and surroundings every day. I 1 aveats.and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-1 ient business conducted for MODERATE Firs. J ;|OUR Orricc is OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFrics* J i and we can secure patent in less time than those I remote from Washington. 5 Send model, drawing or photo., with descrlp- \ stion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of ? II charge. Our fee not due till patent is socured. I ; | A PAMPHLET, "HOW to Obtain Patents," with } I ; cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J j i sent free. Address, f jC.A.SNOW&CO.I FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 1.11 Centre street, Freeland. FINEST LIQUOR, DEER, PORTER, CIGARS AND SOFT DRINKS. State Normal School. The EART STROUDSBUHG NORMAL offers superior educational advantages. ITS LOCATION is In the Famous Itesori re</ion of the state. ITS IIUII.DINGS arc new and modern. BBUBSKI.R CARI'KT in all students' rooms. No SCIIUOI. provides such home com forts. GOOD HOARDING, a recognized filature. CoI.I.KGK PItKPAIiATOIiV. MUSIC, EI.O CUTIONARY and SKIVING and DRESS* M A KING ILKI'AHT.MKNTS. WINTBB TKK.M OPENS JAN. 2, 1880. Send postal for Illustrated catalogue, GKO. ['. liiui.K, A. M.. Principal. ipjßiisrTxisrGr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers