FREELAND TRIBUNE. latatliihol 1883. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY ANI) THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STIIEBT ABOVE CENTRE. LONO DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year SI.SU SL* Mouths Four Mouths ,r^ Two Mouths The date which the subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in adrauoe of the present date. Report prompt ly to this office whenever paper Is uot received. Arrearages rnu9t be paid when subscription is discontinued. Makc'.ail money orders, checke, etc., payable b the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., APRIL 17, 1809. Exposing Kotteuness. From the Wilkesbarre Record. Whatever may be the result of the Quay trial, one thing that has hereto fore been unexplained has been made perfectly clear, viz.: The reason for keeping large balances of state funds in favored banks while the appropria tions to the public schools and charit able Institutions, and the personal i property tax due the counties, remained unpaid. The books of the People's bank i show that one state treasurer received ' more than $30,000 from that bank as ( interest on state funds, and he only | received a portion of the interest, at I that. Other state treasurers also re- | ceived large sums as interest. It would [ he interesting to know how many more * of the banks that held large deposits of the statu funds paid Interest to the s state treasurers and other politicians. | The People's could pay $30,000. There i were half a dozen other banks that had N state funds in sums nearly as large, t and if all of them were made to sweat c in the same proportion a sum running high up Into the hundreds of thousands } must have been gathered in by the ; state treasury ring during the past ten t or twelve years. The late Treasurer Haywood, as well 1 as his predecessors, constantly kept 1 anywhere from $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 I in favored banks, usually in sums rang- ' ing from $200,000 to SOOO,OOO. Those I who felt sufficiently interested in the ' matter to examine the statements 1 periodically published by the state treas urer probably wondered why the sums on deposit in some half a dozen banks remained practically stationary from one year to another. The People's bank of Philadelphia was one of them, and ii had for years from $500,000 to SOOO,OOO, and even though school districts were compelled to borrow money at the rate of 6 per cent, because they could not get the state appropriation, the hall million or more in the People's bank | remained undisturbed. The bank was paying Interest on the money, too, but not a cent of it went into the state treasury; it was divided up among the members of the treasury ring, except when the state's money was loaned to them, without interest, to speculate with. Yes, the rovelations made by the books of the People's bank show very clearly and conclusively why school and other appropriations remained un paid for months, and sometimes a year, after they were due. The banks that had the money were paying interest on it for the personal enrichment of state treasurers and members of the treasury ring. For years it was very generally believed that such methods were in vogue in the treasury department. Mr. Darlington, the president of the defunct Chester Trust Company, threw some i light on the subject, but it remained for the books of the collapsed People's bank of Philadelphia to lay boar the infamous methods that have been practiced in all their enormity. This has doubtless been going on for a quar ter of a century, but did not reach its fullest proportions of rottenness until the present Quay machine developed it. And now the exposure has come, as was certain it would, sooner or later. The Quay trial will accomplish something in the direction of reform. VThe Cure that Cures J Coughs, \ Colds, f I) Grippe, (k V Whooping Cough, Asthma, ) jft Bronchitis and Incipient /I Consumption, Is frg folios] \ The German & V £>urw WtoA ivsi'ases. j 25S^50C\SA GEORGE FISHER, dealer in Liquors, Wines, Cigars, Etc. FUR A GLASS OF FRESH BEER, PORTER OR ALE call at NO. 6 EAST WALNUT STREET, MRS. TRIPODS TROUBLES. ; Tlie Wife of an Amateur Photographer Write* an Opeu Letter. Prom the Detroit Free Press. Gentlemen. —A letter from you ad- I dressed to my husband has come to , hand. You ask him to write an article for your "Photographic Annual' 1 that is to be published next year; and you put in some taffy about his being a well-known j amateur, and some stuff about what he j writes being of interest, and that sort of J thing. My husband is now on a photog- j rapiling tour, as he calls It, and <f course 1 open all his letters. It Is not ' likely he will be back in time to write the article you wish. When he goes off with that confounded camera of his you ; never know when he will come home, j So 1 am very pleased to give you u , woman's view of amateur photography. ; and you can print it in your "Annual" | if you like. My unfortunate husband was stricken j with the amateur photography plague about three years ago. Up to that time I always considered him reasonably J sane. I made no objection, at the time, j to his joining the army of photographic j cranks, because, you see, I knew nothing ; of the subject. I have done everything ' I could, since that time, but. although j lie has quit smoking at my request, lie refuses to give up the camera habit. I At the time be began Ills so-called recrea- j tion uiy house, or perhaps 1 should say our house, was one of the neatest in the j neighborhood. You ought to go through it now. My carpets have been ruined I with the abominal chemicals lie uses. 1 J don't pretent to know their names, but I know the effect they have. Then the ! bath-room is something frightful t<. 1 behold. He uses that for what he calls his dark-room and has contrivances for shutting out the light. 1 noticed that in one of the books you j sent him, Daguerre was the inventor of photography. He may have been the j inventor of photography, but I think it was another sulphurous gentleman, with the same Initial, who was the inventor of amateur photography. My husband was reasonably good-tem pered until he took up your diabolical art. I one time opened the door of the j room in which ho was working. It was ail dark inside except a fearful rod ! lamp, which threw a ruddy glow on his j face and made him look as if he were going to have a epileptic fit. The mo ment I opened the door that man went perfectly crazy. He said I had spoiled a dozen of his plates, although I had touched nothing, and I came near suing for a divorce because of his awful re marks. If the evil one was not the in ventor of amateur photography, then 1 should like to know who was. The pictures my husband does turn out are perfectly awful. lie lias tried, at different times, to photograph the children; but the poor little dears looked like wooden images, in the pietiirnrs. 1 i went into the bath-room once, with the i baby, and put him in tlie bath-tub. I There was some water there alroady, and it looked clear enough, but in it was some horrible solution of silver that turned most of the baby jet black, and we haven't been able to get the color out to this day. Then the cost of the thing is some thing frightful, although my husband carefully conceals what he spends on It. I came across one of the photographic dealer s bills the other day. and it was enough to make one's hair stand on end. Pyrogallic acid, whatever that is, was 50 cents an ounce. .lust think, if I had to pay that price for sugar it would be $8 a pound, in stead of 10 cents! Fifty cents an ounce! And that wasn't the worst of it.. Now what do you think chloride of gold costs? For fifteen grains lie is charged 50 cents. Now that, as you know, is nearly S2O an ounce, over SSOO a pound! 1 don't know how many pounds of the wretched stuff ho uses every week, but if he. uses ten pounds of it. and I am sure ten pounds of sugar doesn't go very far in a house with a large family like ours, you see that is s.'i,ooo for that one thing alone, not to mention the dozen of other chemi cals he uses; and I am sure I don't know what the price of them is. I tfell you amateur photography was . invented to drive a poor woman crazy, who has a husband who is a victim of ; the villainous practice. No wonder he says he can't afford a now dross for me. when I ask him for it. The house is stained with horrible solutions from cellar to parrot, and I am always afraid to use any cups or glasses for fear there are some dreadful poison in them. The cat took some milk out of a saucer that had something or other of potassium in it, and it just curled lip and died. I am always afraid to sweep, in any part of the house, for fear it will raise a dust that will spoil something that lie Ims tacked up on a board to dry. I wouldn't mind all this if he ever took a picture that was worth looking at: but, as I said before, he never does. There, now. print that in your miserable pho tograph book, if you want to. Mrs. John Tripod. : N. B.—lf you ever write to my hus band telling him his articles on photog j raphy will he appreciated, I will burn ! your letter, and you will lose your post age stamp. So just remember that. Mrs. J. T. A POST riVE CURE for Diphthar , Cr On • , 1 Catarrh and all throat trouble. Perfectly Harm loss. Price, 50c. pbr boitle, 'or sale by | isis everywhere. THOMPSON DIPHTHER!! CUBE CO., r l- Ml Hi 111 Some Instances Where Enor mous Wealth Was Dis covered by Pure Luck. THE RICH TILDEN MINE. Was Found By a California Sherifl While in Pursuit of Two Murderers, Tlie Corona Group oi'Golft Mine. Accident lly Discovered By an Emigrant Yield Kii or 111 on* He venues—The Finder Sold tils Claim for a Few Huudred Dollars—Fatal ity of Discoverers. The stories that gold miners tel. when they are in the mood are as thril ling as a romance. Superstition enter, largely into a majority of the storiei one hears about a eumplire, but thej are generally founded uu facts, how ever wonderful they may seem. Th pure luck that attends the finding ol enormous wealth Is an exbaustlesf subject for discussion. The rich Tlldeu mine in Alpint county, Cal., was found in a curious way. Sheriff .lames W. Carter ami two men had gone over the mountains after two men who had murdered a sheep herder. The region is as lonely ; as any among the Sierras. The time was March, 1577. The Sheriff and his companions were in the saddle foul days, and when they were well u[ among the mountains the trail of tin fugitive murderers became obliterated ! They got out of their saddles anil made themselves as comfortable for tin night as possible in their blankets or j the ground. The next morniug the trio set about to find seme tracks thai would give them a clue to the fugitives j trail. The Sheriff aad his companions; went about searching for hours aluiosl \ on their hands and knees. While thui! engaged Sheriff Carter picked nf I among the mausanita chaparral a piece j of live rock. Having been a miner he put the chunk into his pocket, just as lie had done before times without number. The search for the trail ol the murderers was finally abandonee and the Sheriff and his assistants went home. A day or two later Sheriff Cartel ' came across the hi! of live rock he lino found up among the mountains. lie got out a magnifying glass and was astonished to see traces of golo everywhere in it. He started up Hit mountains immediately, and. employ ! ing an experienced prospector, a searcl that lasted three months was begun foi the ledge from which the float rock lind been detached. It happened tlmi the very day that the Sheriff and his companions set out to follow the fugi j tive murderers was the one on whirl j the Electoral Commission in Washing I ton decided the Presidential contesi against Samuel J. Tlldeu—March 2 ! 1577. Sheriff Carter was an ardent 1 Democrat and he named his mine tin Tllden. It was a good gold produce) i for a dozen years, but the Sheriff uevei | profited much by the tells of thousands j of dollars It yielded. lie wAs harassed ! by lawsuits and iu one year be spent $25,000 in law. Tbe Corona group of gold mines or the Colorado River north of Yuma Ariwas accidentally discovered lij an emigrant going in a prarie schoonei with his family to Los Angeles flop Texaß. These are among the best ol so called desert mines In the I'nitec States. C. P. Lane, the millionaire gob , miner of Sail Francisco, who gavs $75,000 to the Bryau campaign fund ii 1890, owns two-thirds of the Corotis j mines and gets a monthly revenue ol $22,000 or $30,000 from them. Tin Texau, who was named (Jeorge Harris camped one night iu the fall of 188S! ou the west hank of the Coloradc ltiver, before starting to cross tin' sandy waste known as tbe Colored) desert. He built a tire, aud wbile lib j wife busied herself with the meal In lay on the ground near the wagon am: j Idly looked at the queer pinkish loci formation elose be. Ide him. He though ; the roek had a trace of gold, but was' not sure enough of it to give the matte] much study. However, he whackec off a few pieces of roek and threw tlicm into the wagon. A friend who iiac been iu gold camps for years was call ing at Harris's home in Los Angeles t few weeks later. The conversatioi turned to gohl uu.l silver mining, anc some one happened to speak of tin curious rock on ihe Colorado River \ The specimens were limited up In tin back yard and shown the caller. "These are greai specimens of low grade ore." said the caller. The specimens were assayed as re fractory ore that ran frow S3O to SSO i ton. (Jeorge Harris lmd liltlo faitt that the mines would be worth devel opulent, and he gladly and quickly scld what title lie had in them for t few hundred dollars. The property was bought in 1893 for $70,000 and i small fortune vrus spent in the devel opraent of the refractory lodge unti i it began to pay its way. ' When it die I the returns from the smelters ran m Into thousands of dollars. A common topic in groups of golt miners is the fatnlity that spoms to at tacli In successful gold miners. Tin more successful the miner the moid closely docs a grim fate seem to stall behind him. So many eases of vlolcn death among rich gold miners may in cited, that Ihe superstition seenis b have more or a basis of fact behind i than Is eonmion with sueli notions. ; volume dealing with superstitious fail ! eles about death gives a long lisi o miners whose lucky discoveries wen ; soon followed by disaster, "(lid Vlr' ginny," the original finder of the Vlr j giuin mine of tlie Oomstoek lode. wai killed by a bucking mule. Brodie, tin ! tinder of the Standard mine in Cali fornia, died In a snowstorm. Story, i celebrated California discoverer, wai killed by the Indians. Comstock, afte: letting incalculable wealth slip out o. his bauds, became almost a paupe; and shot himself while on a search af tcr the Lost Cabin in the Big Hon range. Falrweather, tlie discoverer o: Adlcr Gulch died of exposure and ills' slpntlon near the famous mines he wai tlie first to find, and Farrell, who wai th*tinder of Meadow Lake region, diet ihsaue iu a hospital WAS ALL RIGHT AT HEART. ISnt He DM Not I'udctrHtam! the Ways ol Polite ftociet.v. For years thin man was a rough Westerner, tolling with brain a nil muscles for a fortune. He made a big one and after he had shown his fam ily ail the principal cities of the coun j try, they decided to settle in Detroit. His children are highly educated and of line social standing, but his trays ! and ideas were fixed when he settled i down to a questionable enjoyment of his remaining years. He has away of referring every thing perplexing to his lawyer, whom he hires by the year, so that there may be some understanding as to terms. The other day the old gentleman se cured an audience with his legal ad t viser aud begun business at once. "What kind of feller is that Blank?" ' lie inquired. Kind of durned fool hain't he?" "He's regarded as one of our most : exemplary and promising young men. i I know him well, and he'll succeed." j "Well I hope so. but I tell you he j hain't got the sancl. He's been sbinin. j 'round the oldest gal of mine auu the i other day he kirn sneak in' inter my private den, made a tine speech tellin' me how lie loved her and asked me j could he have her. I tole liiiu mighty quick to do his own court in', and if lie j was to doggone skcored to ask her lie j needn't look to me to pull his dies' 1 nuts outen the tire. What he thanked j me fur I hain't figurd out yit. Next | day she showed me a big dlanion' ring 1 011 her finger she said he gave her and tole as how they wcr engaged. Then 1 kicked up 'nortlier muss. If she wants diamonds I'm a durned sight abler to ' buy 'em 'an he is. When I tole her to send it back and behave herself, her j ami the old lady stampeded and 1 hain't been able to 'round 'em up 110 I how. Now, how is it?" After the lawyer had drawn on his , social code for the benefit of his client, 1 the latter swore a paragraph or two j at himself and went out to look for a nice little home he could buy for "that feller Blank and the gal."—Detroit ' Free Press. Good lino for Goo<l Money. "Will you give a poor fellow a | dime, boss?" "I suppose you want to buy whisk ey with it?" "No, boss, I want to get my hat cleaned." Not Married Yet. 1 rode up to a country store, where a young girl stood on the porch swing ing a sunbonnet aud talking to a mountaineer. 1 had left lier in that position a year before, aud her father ■ had told me then his daughter and the ! mountaineer would soon be married, j Talking to the father a few minutes later, i asked: "Is your daughter married yet?" ' "Naw, an' I don't think she will be." j "What is the trouble? I saw her talk ing to her lover just now." "Yaas—she don't do much else. Tliet i foler aiu' no 'count. He's ben courtiu' ! for three y'ar, an' axed Sal ter marry 'iin y'ar ago. 1 tol' him ter clean out. j an' s'posed he'd lope with her. 1 tol' Sal she could hev my bes' boss tei j run away with, but he never did make 110 propersitiou. I ain' goin' ter the ex pense of no weddiu' fix ill's, an' it looks like he wan't goin' ter run off with her, so it jes' stall's tliar. I ain' 1 goin' ter have no home weddiu'; kain't i afford no sicb nonsense; an' I've lied j six gals run off an' git married, ami tnnt feller don't seem to hev no appre- j elation of the sittywntion." As 1 left the girl was still talking to | her lover, while the old man watched I i them from behind a tree. A f,ong-Flt Want. j Delinquent Patient (quietly entering j doctor's office)—l judge, Doctor, by | that array of drugs before you, that you are trying to devise some new medical compound. Doctor— I am; I'm trying to study I out a new form of emetic much need ed by our profession. I Delinquent Patient—A new form of | emetic, did you say? Doctor—Yes. Something to operate on the pockets of our patients. Gatting Sonic "Trimmln*." "Where is your old man this morn ing. Auntie." "He done gone down to the tavern, sali. to git some trlmmiu's." "Trimmings? The tavern is a queer place to go for anything of that sort, isn't it?" "1 reckon not. sill. Pat's de ou'y place he oblier go ter git do kino ho done use; I mean de kiue wlia' de doc tor call delirum trininiln's." Tlie Ilrg int "Say, old man, lend me a quarter. I 1 have a sure tiling on the Stock Ex | change." j "What you only need a quarter?" ! "Yes. I want it to tip the doorkecp i or, so as I can get <fn the tloor, where ; 1 can borrow SIOO from my rich I cousin." Tl Modevn Method. "It is an awful thing not to know where one's next meal is coming from." "Yes, but a goof many of us mar ! rlod men are experiencing it since the ; grocery stores got to advertising bar gain sales."—lndianapolis Journal. The Profpgaor'* Plight. Professor—Too bad! One of my pu pils, to whom I have given two courses of instruction in the cultivation of the memory has 101 gotten to pay me, and the worst ef It is i have forgotten his name. —Fllegonde Blaettof. !i HOI 111 History of an Alsatian Who Secured Vast Sums of Money By Fraud. IS AN EXPERT CHEMIST- A Glasgow Firm Up Twenty Thousand Dollars for His Coloring Process. I ('aine to Americu \Vhere He Operated With Great Sucuemt— His Experience iu New York aud San Francisco— Said to Have llealixed Five Million Dollars in thill Where He Met His Downfall. 1 Foremost in the rauks of the world's swindlers probably stands A1 l'rec | Paraf, a native of Alsace, handsome | polished, well educated, uoted for hit keen intelligence anu ready wit, as wel. manly qualities. Lie was remarkably | proficient in chemistry, taking a genu ine delight in the study In his youth I ami following his early education witl a series of chemical experiments in his own laboratory. After lie left ; school he set out upon his travels, and : having exhausted the funds allowec hi in by his father iu profligate expend! ture he found himself stranded iu i Glasgow. This incident may be Hair. ! to have launched the clever young fel I low upon tlie career he afterward pur sued to his eventual disgrace and i downfall. He engaged the most elegant 1 suite of rooms iu the most fashionable I hotel, visited a firm of wealthy mauu facturers and announced himself as , the discoverer of a new and cheap dyt 1 for calico printing. Plunging into flic ; laboratory of the establishment tht brilliant young fellow actually succeed ed in supporting his assertions and 1 was rewarded with £4,000 in gold foi j the right to the use of his new coloring i process. This sum was soon dissipa ted Hi new extravagances, and. agate j reduced to sore straits, he compounded , a new color and sold the secret of tht dye to his uncle a rich manufacture! in Paris, for 50,000 francs, i Before this sum was entirely scat : tared to the winds he landed in New ! York, made himself known as a cilstin | guished chemist and cleared S6O,OQC I by the sale of a new "aualinS black,' succeeding iu escaping with his spoils ! before the real owner and patentee o( I the process arrived to dispute hii j claims. He next swindled Govoruoi Sprague, of Rhode Island, out of $25, | 000 011 a fabled process for the cheap ! extraction of madder, and during the I eighteen months that elasped before j the bubble burst is kuowu to have in curred expenses exceeding SIOO,OOO ; contracting large pecuniary obligations 1 of ready money, in addition to his out lay. He next invented oleomargarine and contrived to organize a stock com pan.v with a capital of $500,000 for it* manufacture. Investigation proved that he had only worked out the idea of the Parisian, Mege Mouriez, the 1 original inventor of the process, lut j then Paraf's American company dis ! patched a son of Professor Doremus tc Paris to save its own standing by the purchase of the American right, whicL which was obtained for SIO,OOO, Paraf, still a shareholder, next won! , to San Francisco to dispose of tin right to manufacture oleomargarine ii ! 1 California, and to superintend the erec fion of works. During his absence the old company in New York collapsed and a new one was founded, from which Farnf was excluded. Paraf then disappeared from San Francisco, when I his career had been marked by tht I same lavish style of living, and wa? next heard from la Santiago, Chili. lit was accompanied by his pretended ser vaut. Francisco Hogel. who afterward turned out to lie a skilled chemist, and aided and abetted by this clever ac complice he launched upon the unsu ; spectiug Chilians the most flagrant swindle kuown in history. Presenting himself to tin* highest officials and so cial leaders of the South American re public, ingratiating himself wifh then; by means of his accomplished manner* and brilliant intellect, lie confided tt 1 them the wonderful intelligence thai j be was the discoverer of a process bj which th< dreams of the ancient alche mists could be realized and the bas metals be transmuted into gold. A j series of experiments, which PnraJ j knew so well how to conduct, persua ! ded theui of the truth of liis .claims and they zealously embarked upon tin great enterprise. Smelting works wen built and preliminary experiments re ! suited in a yield of SIB,OOO worth 01 gold from a single ton of low-gradeeop per ore. The company's stock ran up t( fabuldus prices. Shares, the par valui of which was SI,OOO, sold at SI4,(H)( I apiece. Paraf. disposing of his owr 1 stock when the excitement ran high est, is estimated to have placed $5,000. 000 to his personal credit. He delayed escape from the country a little toe long. A director of the company, hav ing his suspicions aroused, conducted some private experiments in the smelt ing works during the absence of Parni and Rogel, and the discovery wnt made that all the gold recovered ha< been placed in the "reagent" whlct Paraf claimed to have discovered This substance was found to be s hyposulphide of soda and gold, whicl resists the most powerful re-agent* known, but readily yields to metal con . iwtalnlng oxide of lead or iron. Paraf* life was only saved by his rescue fronr the indignant populace by the officer* of the law. He was sentenced to tiv< year's exile the time to be passed a , hard labor under guard in the CliHiar settlement of Valdivia. \ Distance of Stars From the Karth, There are stars so far distant fron this earth that if the glad tidings 01 that first Christinas eighteen huudrec years ago had been despatched then hj an electric current which could speec seven times round our globe betwoei every two ticks of the clock, the would not yet have received t lie in. Discovered. "When did they discover that tbi burglar was a womanV" I "When she looked in the glass to see if her mask was on straight."—boston ' Traveler. Why not he well? u y° u are su^er^n S with any disease of the Kidneys, at *der or Urinary Organs, Dr. David Kennedy's iFavorite Remedy will make you well again. It has \JMS£ \) cured cases that bordered on the miraculous. <y£i ( It quickly cures men and women of inability to hold V. j> urine, and they are not compelled to get up otten and make water at night. It removes the scalding sensation in >. /sfRXT passing it, and, when taken according to directions, it x I cures pains in the small of the back. _ Favorite Remedy not only cures Stone in the ff Bladder and Bright's Disease, but prevents them Iflc] I]) from developing. S] /^V One case is that of JOHN J. NEILL, of 2011 North y 1 | Eighth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. In 1889 he began /wt to su ff cr indescribable miseries from Stone in the JTgy!" Bladder. An eminent pliysician said a surgical operation was necessary. If unsuccessful it meant death,%ind Mr. Neill put off the evil day as long as possible. y While in this frame of mind he heard of Dr. David te C,\ Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, and bought it. Before .Si / he had finished the third bottle the gravel was completely dissolved and his sufferings were at an end. -Q/Favorite Remedy is a perfect Blood and JS&r Nerve medicine. It restores the liver to a healthy .iPjS&Bftk condition, cures the worst cases of Constipation and all diseases peculiar to females. It cures Scrof u^a ' eum Rheumatism.* Your druggist -o*) • will sell you a regular full-sized bottle for SI.OO. Sample Bottle Free. _<ln" 11 Ifljti Those sufferers who wish to try Favorite V* r Remedy before buying should send their full ' postoffice address to the DR. DAVID KENNEDY COR PORATION, Rondout, N. Y., and mention this paper. A free sample bottle will be sent them prepaid, together with full directions for using. This is a genuine offer, and all our readers can depend upon it. " t/n Tlio Kind You Have Always Bought, and which lias liecn iu use for over SO years, lias borne the signature of and lias been made under liis per- PstZ. „ sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no <)!le to rteeelvo you in tills. All Counterfeits. Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex periments that trillc 'with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment, What is CAST OR t A Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Props and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms s and allays Fcverislincss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation anil Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tlio Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTOR!A ALWAYS of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. BBl——a——MHli—■MM—Bßß—M Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. S? A*! T fp BROTHERHOOD HATS C u A celebrated brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDUS OSWALD, . AT. TP. Cor. Centre arid Front Sis., Freeland 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, Freeland. X " *.LS?fARS? EcstCouKhSyrup. Tutu. Ooud. Cue K ■B ' n time. Sold by druggists. I* DePIEEEO - BEOS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. : Finest Whiskies in Stock. I Gibson, Dougherty. Kaufer Club, Koeenbiuth's Velvet, of which wo h ve EXCLUSIVE SALt IH TOWH. Mumm'fl Extra Dry Champagne, Hennopsy brandy, Blackberry, Gins. Wines, Clarets, Cordials, Etc. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS iN EVERY STYLE. 11am and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. Ballentluo ami Iluzlcton beer on tup. Baths, Hot or Cold. 2 ii Cunts. ] Ar.vonp sending & sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invent.on is probably palentablo. Conununiciv- I tlonssiricHy confidential. Handbook on Pateittu tent lrue. < Kdest agency for Hocurlng patents. I' lterfs • iken through Munn & Co. receive | special n .tkc, without charge, in the Scientific Bwican. | A handsomely illustrated weeklv. Largest clr oulatlon of any scientific Journal. Terms. ?n a year : four months, sl. BolU by all newsdealers. M'JNN & Co. 3G!Broadwa 'New York Brauch Office, (525 F St., Washington, D. r. i ~ " of every description executed at short uotioe by jtlie Tribune Company.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers