FREELAND TRIBUNE. Eit&tlishoi 1888. PUBLISHED BVEUV MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. J SUHSCLLII'TION KATES: Hue Year JL.OJ I Six Months ?." Four Months Two Months ST The date which the subscription is paid to is ou the uddress label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent dute becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the iigurcs in I advance of the present date. Heport prompt- ! Jy to this oflice whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid wheu subscription ; is discontinued. Make all money orders, checks, etc., i>ayahie t< the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. IKE ELAND, PA., JANUARY 2, 180 V. PHILOSOPHIC BREVITIES. Fortunes and misfortunes are har vests. Time Is a tine stream, but it runs the I wrong way. Satan pays in advance, God when the 1 uork is done. Custom is a miserable cage in which one forgets liberty. Life is a journey by night to see the sun rise in the morning. Souls and bodies are to be let that cannot be bought outright. All might have a fair sum-total of 1 life if they would not squander faculty, i We cannot go back on nature suf- | ficieutly to entirely and sincerely re- j pent. No man can be warranted sound: practically sound is the only safe guar- r fliitee. No matter how many years we spend a in scoring if we make the race at last, r l'rlde is the moment of frost that ; kills a whole summer's growth of af- ! lection. Equality is impracticable; that any \ two men are equal is the opinion of only one of them. If we knew the day of our death it would over-stimulate the wise and paralyze the fool. Sentiment is to feel when we ought | to feel;'sentimeutlality is to feel when , we. tfiiglit to act. It is with men as with watches— j the worst movements are often found ; i in the best cases, and vice versa. I i All are handicapped by nature. It is fatal to add anything to the burden, tlie course being so long and the pace j so terrible. POINTS AND MOOT POINTS. 1 Our dreams of perfection are ridicul- 1 ous exercises of fancy. What we call our virtues are merely Inartistic daubs of imagination on the I canvas of conceit. Conceit has not a leg to stand on—it is a miracle of unreason. Wo are equal to sincerities, not to verities. Are you lazy? then you are lost. ! Men vary more in energy than in virtue. Moderation is beyond price and, con sequently, beyond our means. The ghost that haunts us most is neglect. Roses in June, thorns all the year | round. A druge is the slave of a fool, either himself or another. Action is salvation, for passion was originally sin. If action had no other recommenda tion than getting rid of passion it would tJ e enough. The weak arrogate to themselves Ihe gentle virtues, very unjustly. We do not love one another long be fore God credits it as love to him. Self is a sincere sufferer from the cradle to the grave. Although heaven is without money and without price not all the poor wiil win it. BLASTS FROM RAM'S HORN. Opinions cannot overthrow facts. A bail man's hate is a good man's I reputation. ir takes a windy man to blow his own trumpet. The root of all evil is flic cause of much digging. Fads never blink under the sunlight cf evidence. No man ever stumbles over an object in his rear. Hope is a staff in the morning and a couch at night. The last blow brings the crash, but | all that went before were needed to fell the tree. The man who boasts of Ids virtues i has to boost them up in order that they may he seen. The cobbler sets us ail a good ex- j ample; as long as he lasts he uses his ; awl to save the souls of his fellow men. DEVIOUS DEFINITIONS. Kleptomania—The most lucrative ' form of insanity. Sanctified—The man who smiles i when he pays his taxes. Helpmate—The kind that seldom ae- I companies one on a tandem. Misery—A lover of company whose tender feeling is never reciprocated. | Trouble—Something that a man's fool friends are always getting him into. Vacuum—A physical impossibility that exists only in the minds of some people. Magizinery—The peculiar quality of a verse that brings the poet more than it is worth. Opinion—Something that should be formed with great caution and cluing ed with still greater. Autocrat—The meek little woman who never hail an opinion of her own during courtship about twenty-four! hours after marriage. DRDAVID {Favorite KtHNfovsßemedy Tbe one sure cure for J The i\idneys, liver and Blood RICHEST WOMAN IN UTAH. foor Widow Six Year* Ago, llor Income Now Nearn HHOO.OOO * Year. j Mrs. Susanna Bransford Emery is the richest woman in Utah and perhaps of j the entire west. About five years ago her husband, A. C. Emery, died, leaving his widow ! a lot of supposedly worthless mining I property with which to make a living. Being in great financial difficulties she MRS. SUSANNA UKANSFOKII EMLIRY. went to work, developed the property, and to-day Mrs. Emery receives over SO,OOO a month in dividends. Her mine is known as "Silver King." The prop erty adjoins the Great Ontario, the richest silver proposition in the world. An income of $75,000 a year ought to satisfy any woman. But this does not represent the amount of Mrs. Emery's "spending money" by any means. She became interested in the Grand Central, a gold prospect in the great Tintic or Eureka mining district. In one year this has paid the rich widow something like SIO,OOO, and she has recently refused to sell her interest in the mine for SIOO,OOO. To Kleniitlfy ScrHivny ftcclt*. Now that it has been discovered that the linen collars worn by women for several years are ruining the beauty of their necks, remedies for scrawny and wrinkled necks are in demand. If there be a general absence of flesh on the body, careful dieting will do all that is required. As many as five meals a day may be indulged in, but they must be taken at regular hours, allow ing sufficient time for digestion in be tween. Plenty of milk, milk puddings, eggs, bread, cake 3, sweet fruits and all kinds of vegetables, meat well cooked and fisli should be partaken of till signs of improvement are visible. Then care must be observed that one does not ;rr in the other direction and become itout. When trying to put on flesh, ivoid everything acid, take plenty of warm baths, and sleep and rest as much as possible. But if it be only the neck and sliot.l iers which are scraggy, and more flesh s not required or desirable on the re t if the body, a different method must le pursued. Cod liver oil can be easily .aken in a little cold water, with a pinch of salt afterward to remove the .aste. The neck and shoulders must be lathed in warm water before retiring 'or the night, and olive or sweet oil well rubbed in. In the morning, after lathing, rub gently and in a circular lirection for about ten minutes, follow id by ten minutes' exercise with dunib lells. Singing lessons always greatly im prove the shape of the throat, as this las a great deal to do with breathing properly. Take a deep breath and hold t as long as possible. Keep the neck llways well and warmly covered. Danger oft'hlldreii Sucking Tlinmlm. Although many babies throve and grew up in spite of sucking their humbs, perhaps many who died might nave been saved if their mothers had prevented their doing so. At least that s the theory of Dr. Monae Lesser, w ho lays that fever germs and all sorts if other germs may be carried to the t system by putting the fingers in the mouth. The careful mother of to-day, in her wholesome fear of deadly germs, must nave no sympathy for her little one's determination to suck its thumb. She should exert all her self-control, when .he temptation comes to her to yield o the little tyrant, to keep him quiet. I Jhould the habit be a fixed one, she { .hould treat the rebellious thumb to a J mating of aloes, or its possessor to he more heroic remedy of a good ] spanking. Can Abuse Their Husbands. In the matter of woman's right! Abyssinia is far ahead of Europe. Ac cording to an authority, the house ar.d ill its contents belong to her, and if the nusband offends her she not only can \ out docs turn him out of doors till he s duly repentant and makes amends •jy the gift of a cow or the halt' of a | 'amel—-that is to say, half the value if a camel. On the other hand, it is he privilege and duty of the wife to ibuse her husband, and she can divorce herself from him at pleasure, whereas j the husband must show reasons to jus j tify such an act on his part. AVntcb Children'/. Earn. ! Mothers should be careful in tying a i cap or bonnet down over the little | one's ears. The cars should be laid ! flat against the side of the head instead I of carelessly folded forward. It is this carelessness on mothers' part that re t suit in the wide spread ears that de -1 form so may grown people s heads. • WITH TIIE_HORSES. TROTTING RECORDS. 1 Npfed Made by Ibe World's Greatest Trot tera unci Pacers, A well-known horseman writes: "Has the limit of trotting speed been reached? Will the present generation j live to see a mile . otted or paced in j two minutes? Is it not true that only two of the horses credited with cham pionship records cquuled their best time? What horses reduced existing marks and is not the trotter going j backward instead of forward?" I All of the horseman's questions are lof vital interest. A glance at the history of the trotting turf shows that the slaughter of time has at periods dragged painfully slow. Lady Suffolk in 1845 created a sensation by trot ting a mile in 2:29%, and was the first performer under 2:30. At that period the time was regarded as phenome nally fast. It was not until 1849 that IVlhnni reduced the marked to 2:28, a reduction in four years of oue and n half seconds. Four years more pass ed and in 1853 Highland Maid cut off another full second. Tacony equaled this record the same year. The year 1859 was a red-letter one in turf annals. In that year the glori ous Flora Temple astonished the world by clipping the record six and three quarters seconds. Her mile in 2:19% was a shining target for nearly eight years. In 1897 Robert Bonner brought out Dexter, and Flora Temple was robbed of her well-earned laurels, the mark being reduced to 2:17%. a cut of two seconds. Seven long years passed before Dexter was robbed f Ids crown. In 1874 the queenly Gold- | smith Maid set the world agog with her wonderful mile iu 2:14. Four more years passed before the wonder- j ful Ranis created another sensation, passing under the wire in 2:13%. Next came the peerless Maud S. Ou July 22, 1885, she trotted a mile iu 2:08%. It was thought that this was | certainly the limit for speed and for ! more than six years it stood as the world's record. On Oct. 20. 1891, over :i kite track at Stockton, Cal., Suuol clipped the record half a secoud. The kite track is regarded as more con ducive to speed than the regulation track and the performance under the eircumstaiicis can hardly be regarded ;is equaling the splendid performance made by Maud S., over a regulation course. After Sunol came Nancy Hanks, who, hooked to a bike sulky, reduced the record to 2:94. The pres ent champion, Allx, 2:03%, stepped a mile in 1894 attached to a light-running hike sulky. Lady Suffolk, Pelham, Highland ...aid, Tacony and Flora Temple made , their records in competition. The | rtlier records were made in exhibition heats against time. Of the 14 in the championship class, all tried, with the possible exception of Ma ml K., to equal their own records, but only two reach ed the goal they aimed at. Lady Suf folk equaled her record twice iu 1849 and also trotted a mile heat in 2:29 ! to saddle iu the same year. Gold smith Maid was the other. The Maid was nearly 8 years old before she was completely broken to harness. , ie made her record of 2:14 in har ness over the Mystic park track, Sep tember. 1874, when 17 years old. At Philadelphia in ISiG, over Belmont park, she equalled her record of 2:15. | At Hartford, Conn.. September, 1875, she trotted in 2:14%. At Belmont park, Philadelphia, November, 1879, she trotted u lieat in 2:14%. Those ! records were all against the watch or ! exhibition heats. At Cliico, Cal., May, j 1877, she trotted the second heat in a i race in 2:14'%. This race was against Rams, the Maid winning in 2:19%, 2:i4%, 2:17, and she was over 20 years i Did when she trotted that. race. She trotted 332 heats in her career in 2:30 ar better and earned for her owners Dver $250,000 in purses and matches. She was on the turf from 1899 to 1877. I She made her last, appearance at To ledo, ()., Sept. 27, 1877. to beat 2:14. | She went in 2:23%, 2:21%, 2:22. She was then retired from the turf and bred. Ilere are the records, of 14 of the greatest trolters and pacers the world has produced: I Lady Suffolk 2:29%, 1845 i Pelham, 2:28, 1849 ! Highland Maid. 2:27, 1853. Tacony. 2:27, 1.853. Flora Temple, 2:19%, 1859. Dexter, 2:17%, 1867. Goldsmith Maid. 2:14, 1874. Kurils, 2:i3%, 1878. St. Julien, 2:11%. 1880. Jay-Rye-See, 2:10, 1884. Maud S., 2:08%, 1885. Sunol, 2:08%, 1891. (kite track). Nancy Hanks, 2:04, 1892. (bike sulky). Alix, 2:03%, 1894. (bike sulky). S'nr I'olnter Sold. Star Pointer, the famous pacer, was sold to W. J. White, of Cleveland, Ohio, for $15,000. This is less than the horse brought in 1897, when sold to James A Murphy, of Chicago. Star Pointer holds the world's record for a mile, 1:59%. An Imported Mure Given Away. ! At a sale of thoroughbreds at Lex ington. Ky. an imported mare was given away and the man was handed a $5 bonus to lead her out of the ring, i Get of I'rlnce Warwick. The get of Prince Warwick have won $30,000 on the Austrian turf. Prince Warwick is an American horse. Unsafe. "There must be a good deal of danger In one of those tall bicycles where the rider sits eight feet or more above the ground." "There is. While I was watching one the other day I was neary run over i by a cab." An Object Lemon. A great football game would be nr excellent object lesson for any foreign er who had any doubt as to the sor of stuff that the young American wa made of. A Modern 'Perplexity. "The hero comes!" grose the cry, With loud and general acclaim. "Wlmt was he In?" one paused to sigh, ' "A battle or u foot ball game?" I AN ASTONISHED DIVINE, j Tn. Mlni.tnr 1 . Kxperlouce With IheTotiph I Waiter. "Ahem!" remarked a clerical looking' gentleman as he carefully deposited a well-worn leather grip on the floor and gingerly parted his coat-tails prepara tory to seating himself on a stool in the restaurant. "Ahem, waiter! you may bring me a couple of eggs fried on both sides, a plate of buckwheat cakes and a cup of cofTee. And hurry .please." "Yessir," replied the white-aproned functionary deferentially, then, to wards the kitchen. "Two in the air, a stack of bucks, draw one in the dark and get your skates on!" The clerical looking gentleman was visibly startled and glanced dubiously at the waiter. "Just at that moment a rough-look ing individual to his right sung out: "Gimme one of them A. P. A.'s, will you?" The man with the Prince Albert and white choker looked nervously at his companion and then towards the door. He seemed relieved, however, when the waiter picked out a little round coffee cake and passed it over the counter. "Plate of hot devils here!" roared an individual near the door. The clerical-looking man gasped and reached for his grip. "Dat de guff fer a plate of deviled crabs," volunteered a weather-beaten chap on his left side, who had been siz ing up his dignified neighbor, with an amused smile. "But surely such awful jargon is not the language commonly used here for such edibles," ventured the convention al-looking personage. "Well, dat depends on who you are," responded the weather-beaten chap. "1 don't suppose a gent like yerself would jiss catch onter what is meant, but most of us here are on to th' spiel alii right. See them san'wiches over there —them big, heavy ones? Well, them's, 'boxing gloves. Dat feller over dere at t' end in eatin' 'scrambled' eggs— dat's 'shipwreck tree.' Dat guy nex' t' him is fillin' his face wid doughnuts— 'sinkers,' dey calls 'em here, 'n some times 'life-preservers.' " At this moment a sepulchral-looking chap with tuberculous whiskers, who had just come in, shouted out hoarse ly: "Gimme a grave-yard stew, Bill!" "Now that stiff wants er plate uv [ milk toast, partner," begun the weath-! erstair.ed chap. But the clerical-looking gentleman had seized his grip and with horror stricken features was making for the door. NnminK the Chicken. "Madam, what was the name of this spring chicken?" Mr. Golightly stared hard at the landlady as he spoke. The bird in 1 question, skilfully eluding the fork! with which he supposed he had im paled it, had leaped from under the carving knife and struck him squarely in the shirt front. "Name," Mr. Golightly," said the landlady; "I don't think it had a name." "You should have called it Hope, ma'am," said the unhappy carver. I "And why Hope?" "Because," he bitterly answered, as he scraped the gravy from his necktie, "because the poet says that 'Hope; springs eternal in the human breast.'" A Moan Alan. Mrs. Suburban—l'm afraid to stay here alone all day. So many tramps have been seen around this part of town lately. Mr. Suburban—Well, if any of them come to the house, get rid of them the best way you can. Mrs. Suburban—But supposo they de cline to leave? Mr. Suburban—Oh, well, if the worst! comes to the worst, just ask them lm and give them some of your angel cake| • —then telephone for the undertaker. A Painless Twist. When the lodging house was afire one night Mike hurried his breeches on wrong side before and threw himself out of the window. One of the first persons he encountered was his em ployer. "Are you hurt, Mike?" "I feel no pain, sor," was the reply, as Mike took a puzzled front view of himself, "but I must have received a moighty bad twist, sor." An Front Approaches "Did I see you comln' out o' my white folks' backyahd late last night?" in quired Miss Miami Brown. "I dunno," answered Mr. Erastus Pinkley. "Mebbe you might have." I "Is you got any possessions dar?" | "No; I ain't got no regular posses sions; only jes, a ctalin' station." The 011 l e lloy. "I see you've still got your old office' boy." "Yes." "Improves with age. does he?" "Well, he seems te.be getting fresher every day." A I'oxnlMr HeiMon. >le—l can't underitand why my mus tache doesn't grow under my nose as well as at the cornirs of my mouth. She—Has it nevc.r occurred to you that there might be too much shade? Queer '.(olaea. First Guest (at grand ball) —Hark, isn't that the champagne popping in the supper-room? Second Guest—No; I guess It's the young couples in the con servatory. WORLD OF SPORTS. SIMPLY BY BREATHING UP. V Milwaukee Alan Itccouieß an Athlete by This IToce-s. Hugo Pruesslng, one of the best known athletes of Milwaukee, is a wonderful example of muscular de velopment produced by breathing ex ercises. Two years ago he was narrow chested, stoop shouldered, consump tive. It was predicted that he could not live a year. Hearing of the treat ment of a Washington physician, who required his patients to undergo a regular system of breathing exercises. Pruesslng determined to try it. The results have been truly astonishing. At the outset lie weighed 110 pounds, measured 3&34 inches around the chest, with an expansion of inches. To day he weighs 150 pounds, measures 38 inches around the cnest when normal. 43 expanded and 31 empty. Ills lower chest is 2SV£ inches normal and 35 ex panded. The extraordinary muscles under his arms are those possessed by few other athletes in the country except Sandow. It will be remembered that Sandow, by similar treatment, built himself up to ! ins present marvelous strength. I The breathing exercises are largely a matter of will. lie commenced breath ing with the upper chest. The ordin ary method moves the shoulders and uses involuntary muscles instead of the voluntary ones. Pruessing's meth od of training keeps the chest raised and gives a longer range to the dia phragm. After the shoulder movement upper chest breathing is practiced, and then abdominal breathing; then the lower chest breathing, the effect of it ill being to build up the chest, should ers and diaphragm most notably. Endurance Club Swinging. Tom Burrows, x\bo claims to be the •hainpion endurance club swinger 01* he world, was born Jan .2d, 18(18, at Bullarnt, Victoria. To-day he weighs 140 pounds, has a chest measurement if 40 inches and is 5 feet (J : )i inches all. He beat all records for endurance •lull swinging at the National Sport ug Club of London. May 23 and 25. when he swung clubs weighing two I pounds each for thirty-six hours with DUt rest, making no less than sixty revolutions an hour. Burrows is also in accomplished boxer, having defeat- TOM BLUROW9. 1 m 1 many of the prominent boxes of | Sydney and Melbourne, and having won a victory or two in London. Bur •nws will come to this country shortly I where ids backer. George Please, of I London, intends to challenge all club 4wingers to compete with Burrows in a | dx-day twelve-hour contest, for .55.000 ! 1 side. Nick Long will look after Bur row's interests during the hitter's stay 11 this country. O'llPH One* to Harvard. Andrew M. O'Dea, who lias coached the Badger crews for years and through whose ability Wisconsin lias attained a considerable reputation as a boating institution, has gone to Cambridge to assume charge of Har | rnrtl boating interests. The most.siren-. nous efforts have been put forth to tiold the Australian oarsman in Mndi j Hon, Wis,, but have been unsuceess- I ful. O'Dea has for some time been I mxlous to obtain a wider sphere in which to work. None Too Popular. While there are good points to ad mire about the Boston team as it stands to-day, and in fact as it has stood for a number of years, yet the Beaneaters are anything but popular with the large majority of the cranks ill along the circuit. Some argue that :he national game would be stimulated were Hub representatives to fall from their lofty perch. Players In general i have little use for the Boston club I awners, because of their tight-fisted policy. President Soden usually ped dles out tickets from the box ofiles window thereby saving a $lO per week | salary. Yale and Princeton. I For the past seven years Yale and Princeton have alternated in their vic tories, with the exception of Yale's con- I secutlve victories in 1804 and 1803. in 1805 Yale beat Princeton 20 to 10. I but the next year Princeton evened up i the winning, 24 to 0. Since 1870 Yale i has won seventeen games and Prince . ton six. but of late years old Nassau I has been more in evidence. College Athletic*. ' I'rlnceton makes move money out oi' athletics tlinu tlie other hie eolieges Itc i muse the Tigers have no crew. Penu sylvunnla spends $7,000 on her crew, while Harvard goes oven deeper In the treasury on the same account. There is no chance to nutke the crew self | supporting, us the races are free to all. so the football ai.tl baseball teams must make money enough to run the Don-paying branches of college sport. A Heary Lift. Pat McCarthy, the St. Louis strong nan. is credited with lifting a pile T stones weighing 5!t1!6 pounds at the above city. The Stroii|{ t XVrentier. Adall. the Turk is doubtless the strongest man who has ever appeared ! an the wrestling in: t . How to Prolong Life No man or woman can hope to live long if the Kidneys, Bladder, or Urinary Organs are diseased. Disorders of that kind should never be neglected. Don't ielay in finding out your condition. You can tell as well as a physician. Put ome urine in a glass or bottle, and let it stand a day and night. A sediment at the bottom is a sure sign that you have Kidney disease. Other certain signs are pains in the small f >f the back—a desire to make water often, especially at night—a scalding sensation in passing it—and if NT, urine stains linen there is no doubt that the disease There is a cure for Kidney and Bladder Diseases. It is Dr. David Kennedy's favorite /ffy Remedy. It lias been for thirty years, and Jsly the and I was takon \vi:li Khlncy jj disease very badly; at times f 11 I was completely prostrat- I t/^ ed; in fact, was so bad that / J a day was set for the doc- / [ fT| H tors to perform an operation f Aj til ! upon me. Upon that day I com- ' I PI I rnenced the use of Dr. David Kennedy's I ' Favorite Remedy, and it was not long before I was entirely cured, and I have had no return of the trouble since. My weight has increased, and I never was so well as lam now. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy saved my life." Favorite Remedy acts directly upon the Kidneys, Liver and Blood. In cares of Nervousness, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Ulcers, Old Sores, Blood Poisoning, Bright's Disease and Female Troubles it lias made cures after all other treat ments failed. It is sold for SI.OO a bottle at drug stores. A teaspoonful is a dose. Sottf**]* Rntffo f Send your full postoffice address to the DR. DAVID iflblLiW 1i WW • KENNEDY CORPORATION, Rondout, N. Y., and mention this paper, and a sample bottle of Favorite Remedy will be sent free. Every sufferer can depend upon the genuineness of this offer, and should send at once. j_ ! f I Always Bosght AVeCetablePrcparationfcrAs- m . similatinglhcFcodandßegula- ® _ ~ 8 tot'the Stomachs and Bowels of ® KOOM TnP w BBS , : Atfr =^~-—-' \ I (Signature / ft *r Promotes Digestion, Cheerfu- ® & / saP ness and Rest.Contains neither ! o $ vg a is Opium, Morphine nor Mineral, m L>i fa s\ If NOTNAHCOTIC. 1 TIZTFIC CFCLD jfl J\anpfcm Seed" jfi \ jllx.Scnna * I M fi \ IfocAal/e Salts - f ffl iS.-. M, . s&ss-. I I A .fy Thp [ 1 \\ y| ■ OmUud Sugar. ) $ \JL 5* : n J Apcrfect Remedy forConstipa- || u |p S\ I 1! U lion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, m a WfhY Worms .Convulsions .Feverisli- Hi & fct, V—.., SS „ - ncss and Loss OF SLEEP. jffl 800 IsBVO TacSimile Signature of |B Bought. DePIEBRO - BROS. -CAFE.-I Corner of Centre and Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock, j Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, Hoeenbluth's Velvet, of which we h ve EXCLUSIVE SALE ID TOWN. Mu turn's Extra Dry Champagne, Hoiincssy Brandy, Blackberry, Gins, Wines, Clarets, CordtaUi, Etc. ; Imported and Domestic Cigar*. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, | Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. [ Bullcutine and Huzieton beer on tap. R.'it.lm, Hot or Cold. 25 Cents P7 ¥. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALIVIER. Kmbiilniiiur of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. P. F. McNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre strcot, Ffeeland. Rent Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use *| J* in t ime. Bold l>y druaglstg. *1 I T.CAMPBELL," dealer in I> 13.Vl 3 .V fix;© OilM 9 Bodti un