\The Cure that Guresi P Coughs, &j \ Colds, j no Grippe, Whooping Cough, Asthma, 1 Bronchitis and Incipient A gz Consumption, Is for {oUosl ■h The GERMAN remedy* £ Sr Cure.ttwoA-awi 4\seases. J Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. S BROTHERHOOD HATS 0 ij A celebrated brand of XX Hour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sin., Freeland. P. F. McNUITY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Embalming of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. I'. F. MoNulty. %lf Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. VIENNA BAKERY J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. CHOWS BREAD OF ALL KINDS. CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKEf BAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery $ Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, wit! all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply wagons to all parts <o town and surroundings every day. High-Class Tailoring A lino lino of sample Spring ami Summer Suitings, Being a gran tinu of Mitchells' Celebrated Cutting School, of New York, I guarantee every garment to tit. We use nom but the best linings and trimmings Every (raiment being made by ex perieuced hands you can depend 01 getting the very finest work. Repairing work of all kinds done In a practical manner at reasonable prices. ROCCO DePIERRO. DOYLE BLOCK, CENTRE STREET. HRUI! of a Family of 105 Person*. To be the bead of a family of 102 persons Is a record seldom falling to the lot of man. But SUCH is the case with John Chandler, who resides in Allen county, Ky., just over the Sum ner county line. This gentlman is the father of twen ty-nine children, twenty-one of whom are now living and have families. These twenty-one children have an average of five children to each fam ily, thus making Mr. Chandler the grandfather of 105 persons. But this is not the full extent of his offspring, for he has thirty-five great-grand children. So it will be seen that Mr. Chandler stands paterfarailies of 102 —an achievement rarely equalled. It certainly is not paralleled when the fact is considered that, the members of this large family are all living. Growth of SiiiitlnwftrA. An eminent Indian medical officer Is satisfied that the growth of sun flowers in malarial soil is belter than eucalyptus as a preventive of malaria. The government of India is making e* tensive experiment* tu determine this point. Uow'B This I We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, Ohio. Wo the undersigned have known F.J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. WEST & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. WALDINO, Kin NAN* & MARVIN, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per boitle. hold by ull druggists. Testimonial a tree. Hall's Family Pills are the best. FREELAND TRIBUNE. Estafclishol 13E8. PUBLISHED EVEKY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STHKET ABOVE CKNTKK. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year Sl.'iO Six Months 75 Four Mouths "A) Two Months The date which the subscription is paid to is on the address lubel of each paper, t he change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to this oliice whenever paper is not received. Make ail money orders, checks, etc.. payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. TREE LAND, PA., MAY 8, 16D. First lllack Eye for Beef. The contemptible discrimination made by the administration against Demo crats of the army and navy lias received its lirst rebuke. Raltfinoro, at its I icaj election last week, returned huge majorities against the party in power, and the only reason assigned by the Washington politicians -of both parties was that the people voted that way to show their displeasure at the effort made by McKinley and his clique to discredit Admiral Schley. In refusing to award common justice to this brave old sea-dog the Wliito House cotorie sank beneath I contempt in the estimation of the American people. The avowed intention of the man | killers who furnished soldiers poisoned I beef to procure the dismissal of General Miles because he exposed their murder- Mis business may also succeed. At least there is little hope that the figure-head who occupies the presidential chair will do anything to prevent Miles' dis charge. In the event of their success, then the country should and will be heard from at the following elections. The Baltimore rebuke will bo insig nificant when compared to the avalanche if popular disapproval which will sweep iver the United States. There is one tiling which Americans love, and that is fair play. Fair pla\ lias been denied to Schley, Miles and 1 many other Democrats in the military ! and naval service, and upon that rock, if there were no others in view, Mc- Kinley will perish in 11)00. Shook the Stock Market. The proposed extension of tho Jersey j Central Railroad to Freeland made itself felt In an unexpected quarter last week. In the Now York stock exchange ' MI Wednesday the issues of the Phila delphia and Reading Railway Company were very weak and dropped in price, j This is accounted for as follows by a i New York brokerage linn in their news letter of that evening. They said: It i> reported that the Central Railroad d New Jersey has under consideration a plan for building an extension which , will open up a largo territory, and so- i euro for that road a large increase of oal tonnage and general traffic. In addition to an extension from Upper Lehigh to Freeland. a survey has been begun for a route to Silver Brook, which is now covered by Reading ex clusively. The proposed line will run ' from High Bridge at Hometown over ; Round Top mountain, and will give, the company an entrance into the liu/.leton listrictr. Tills, doubtless, accounts for the weakness in Reading stocks today. , It is not every town that can cause) • stock values to dance tip and down \ in the New York stock exchange. | Score another for our Board of Trade. ! Coal Trust IH Reforming. An item in our news columns today j Mates that the anthracite coal t rust will permit 0,000,000 tons to bo mined lie- | t ween May 1 and July 31. Should this j prove true, and the TimirxK's coal pre- j dictions are generally correct, the out- i look in the mining region for the com- ! ing summer is much brighter than at any similar period for three years past, j An average of 3,000.000 tons of coal per j mouth should give the mine employes at least four and one-half days work each week, and this, as all know, is very good working time in summer. If the trust will continue to behave itself and give the coal region people a chance to live, some of its past black sins might, be forgiven. General Alger's boasted experience of the bad beef which he consumed in the civil war was surely never gained when he was in t lie line of the "coffeecoolers," far in the rear, or when he was enjoying the floshpots of Washington, without leave of absence, while his cavalry regi ment was away in the front of battle. ! "Embalmed" beef had not been Invented | when Alger was gathering these peren nial military laurels.— Phila. Record. The governor of California lias ap pointed Daniel Burns United States senator. Burns has been twice under charges of embezzlement as a state of ficer. Evidently the governor of Cali fornia means to follow as closely as possible In the footsteps of the governor ! of Rennsy 1 vania.— Y/ilkcsba vre Record. "IT JUST HAPPENED." Why u Girl'* Kugiigt lueul \v n g Not An nouncnl Sooner. Tlio other night- or, rather, it was very early in the tnoruiug—the tele phone in a certain newspaper office ! rang loud and long. Most of the work [ ers had gone home 'or the forty winks that newspaper people contrive to put in between times, but there was one man 011 the "dog watch"—that is. you know, he was the one person detailed to stay around the office and be ready for anything from a murder to a tire. At that hour of the day—about, well, somewhere around X o'clock a. 111. when the telephone in a newspaper office rings it generally means a po lice story that is worth looking up, 00 the "dog watch" hastened to ai nwer the summons. "Hello," said a voice. "Is it too late to got something in to-morrow morn ing's paper?" "Not if it's importnot," was the n* ply. "Oh. it is." assuriugly. The reporter rushed for a pad of paper and a pencil, screwed his ear up to the telephone again and said: "All right. Fire away there." Then the voice was heard again "The engagement of Miss to Mr. is announced." There was an explosion of wrath at the preps end of line and the rules of the telepone company restraining irate persons from indulging in profanity were smashed into smithereens. "Why under the blankety-blank blnnk" (that wasn't exactly what was said, hut it will do, you kuow) "didn't you send in such stuff earlier in the day?" "Hut I couldn't" said the voice apo logetically. 'You see, it just happened.' Know Whut Ho Win Talking Alton*. <P Mrs. Ullnks—('oodness. this jar is scaled so tight 1 can't break it. Mr. Blinks—Give it to the baby to play with. Hi* Sure Tiling. Three negroes not long ago made a bet among themselves that each could name a supper that would be better than the others could name. They put up one dollar each, and the one that named the dishes that would consti tute the best supper was to take the three dollars. They drew straws as to which one should bo the first and the last 10 uiake up the menu for the im aginary meal. The tirst man said he couldn't think of anything hotter than than greens boiled with hog-jowl. For side dishes he would take eornbread. souse and black-eyed peas and wasli them down with buttermilk. The other two smacked their lips. "Well, for me." said number two, "I'd take fried chicken, hot biscuits but tered and spread over with preservs— and den, 'n den—let's see—yes 'll ; 'simmon beer ami ginger cakes." The mouths of the other two spilled water, and it was apparent that they were hungry. It came number three's time. "W'y. youso niggers don't know what's good." said he. "Tell me, fools, I what's heter 11 possum baked sweet 'tutors scattered all 'round it, swiiu inin" in <le gravy? Hey? 'N den utter ; youso done nibble at do bones tell ; dey ain't no moit meat on 'em, derset i do watermlllyon staring you in do face 1 ik*. Hey?"—and with that he 1 started to pick up the money. "You leave dot money alone," the other two yelled in chorus. "We 1 weren't bettiu' agin no sure thing."— Chicago Tiuics-Hernld. Papa's Humor. ! "Why were you sitting in the dark when I came in?" inquired her father. ] "The electric held went out," re plied Mnhel. "George snld he thought it was someti..ug. the matter with the | armature." "Well, it did seem it little out of place," said the father thoughtfully. "What seemed out of place, papa?" "The arm-at-your waist." And the pleased old man went down to tell his new pun at tile club.—Clove laud Plain Dealer. A I.ucky Muu, "What will she say when you get home?" "Not a word." "Kb?" "That's right. She's wearing one of these rigid beauty masks. Hut you can bet your life 1 don't light up any thing." "Why not?" "I wouldn't want to see the expres sion of her eyes." li'ving Up to 111* Principle*. "Look here,' exclaimed the woman had made the sandwich for a I tramp and then thoughtlessly left hir.i alone for a minute within the reach otj two whole pies, "what do you mean by eating all that pie?" "Madam," replied the tramp polite ly, 1 am a believer in expansion."— Chicago lost. Another Ancient Myntnry. Johnny—Pn. is there anything more valuable than diamond*? Ills Pat her—No. son; why? i Johnny—Oh, I was Jnst wondering ! what they gave Methuselah on ids uOOtli wedding anniversary. POINTS AND MOOT POINTS. If you fish for love don't bait with pride. Love is a delicitus spur to action; ' other incitements ire more or less 1 cruel. Love is the clew to the labyrinth ol all times and eterrlties. To refuse to love Is the unpardonable sin. Jealousy is a thorn we plunge into our own self-loving hearts and leave there to fester. One adores little hearts—but not small ones. There Is yet time for love and justice ! —Qod has not made moral laws for a moment. God poetizes and philosophizes as well as geometrizes. A true thought is from heaven —It flashes through the brain of man, but was not born there. Most minds are impregnated by mind, few are fecund of themselves. The best authors are the most lively, the least literary. Good has a strong affinity for letters, evil for life. We can make assays and appraisals, we cannot make values. Words are sometimes married to : ideas, and that excellent union con- j stitutes style; verbal flirtations and misalliances are much more common, ' however. A FEW SAYINGS. The gambler's life is an I-deal one. Life's harvest is best when the j ground is rocky. We seldom have any illusions in our j second childhood. . The cruelest thing a woman can do to us men Is to marry us. The piano next door must answer for a good many of our sins. We always reap more than we sow; | that is, when we sow tares. -A diplomat is one who can lie and | look right into your face when he does 1 it. A single man's ambition is to get j married; a married man's ambition is to make the most of a poor job. Man has his true affinity, but he never really finds it out until he is married and can't have it. If Love would only light the kitchen fires as well as he does those of pas sions, life would run smoother. The best tonic in the world for a sick man is to go around to his house and let him win your money at poker. Whenever a wife wishes to make her husband feel cheap she lugs out some j of his old love letters and reads them to him. SOME NEEDED INVENTIONS. A bike lamp that will stay lit. v ' A book-shelf that won't fall down. J An Ice-pick that will break the ice I where you jab it. [ An angler's scales that will do the ; lying for the fisherman. A servant's alarm clock that won't j wake up the members of the family. A safety catch in a passenger eleva- j tor that will work when there is an i accident. An automatic peach basket that will I make all the small peaches come to the [ top. A piano that will sound the same to the girl playing it as it does to the I neighbors. A palatable health food that your | children will eat without being forced j to do so with a stick. An adjustable ring that will fit the usual number of girls you become en- ■ gaged to during the summer. An ambulance surgeon who can tell ( the difference between a drunken man | aud one with a fractured skull. DON'T. J Don't work yourself to death in or- j der to make a living. < Don't envy your neighbor's luck; envy his pluck, if anything. . Don't expect your opinions to fit if you obtain them ready made. Don't attempt to talk if your mouth is full or your head is empty. Don't forget that quitting a fault is the best way to correct it. - Don't forget that nothing appears or disappears quicker than tears. Don't deride the vanity of others. It isn't modesty that creates a censor. Don't think because a man never knows what he can do until he tries that it's always expedient to try. SEVEN GEMS OF MEDITATION. ! The quickest lunch is not the soonest I mended. j When a man confesses to a skeleton in the closet he makes no bones of it. "Merely a side issue," observed the marketmon, looking at the rib of beef. Isn't it true that the cable road is I always in a stranded condition? Old Sol takes good care of the beam j that's in his own eye. The cross-country theatre troupe is closely related to the overland stage. "Drifted apart," mused tne lover who ■ found ten feet of snow before his sweetheart's door. FIGS AND THISTLES. ~ ' Knowing how to think aids in know ing what to think. No church is christian, If it falls to go out doing good. The fuel of knowledge must be ■ touched by the holy spirit torch be fore it will give heat. The devil is not greatly disturbed by j church services; it is Christ-service ha fears. RESOURCEFUL ENGINEERS. Qualities Exhibited by a Corps of Kleotrf cinni In un Kmergency. It hns boon stated that ono of thi loading qualities exhibited by electrical ouglneers during the war was readi ness of resource. Tills is well illus trated in a story told by one of the officers of the corps. There was a good deal of uneasiness about That time around Boston, as no one knew lu:t that the Spanlsn fleet was sailing straight for the city, and shells might be flying witliin twenty-four hours. On Saturday morning orders came down to a squad of engineers to set up before night a complete isolated plant for searchlight work on one of the fortifications in the harbor. The men in charge o* getting the boiler down the uay could get no suitable boat anywhere, so they simply plugged the holes in the holler, rolled it off the pier, hitched it to a tug, and towed it down the harbor, kept afloat by the air inside it. The men who had to take down the tngine and dynomo managed to get tb*lr machines landed, hut there they waited, with apparently no prospect of gorug further. Un the whole island there was only one truck strong enough to carry the machines from the dock to the fort, and that was in charge of an Irishman in the employ of tiie city of Boston, who doggedly maintained that he took no orders except from the city officials, and the authority of the United States government was nothing to him. It . was already late in the afternoon, and there was 110 possibility of reaching the office of the authorities in time to secure the perm It. The men simply took the driver to their barracks, got him dead drunk and did their own driving. And the searchlight shone down the hay tha; night. It)>orl of Kill Illim. Willian Blue wn.a an engineer in the employ of one of the trunk lines in Missouri. -10 of his duties was to haul the through freight over the Western d'vis'on, and his pet engine was No. One night he had an ac cident. One of th.* flues in the boiler <. liis pet engine blew out and he was stalled, blocking the main line. He reported the matter to the division superintend, nt unwittingly as fol lows: ! "Engine two blew out a flew; | what'll I do V—-Bill Blue." Then he sat down to await instruc tions. This is what came over the wires from cue superintendent's of fice twenty minutes later: "Bill Blue: \ou plug that flue in engine two and pull her through in time to get out of the way of twenty two." This order is stuck up in the cab of Engine 1. Sorting Walnuts Recently two walnut shippers of j Anaheim county, California, found I that many of tin* walnuts in their pos- I session were light and empty, and I they cast around for some means to I rapidly handle the goods, as it. was an I almost endless Job to do il by hand, j They Anally evolved the machinery to i do it with, consisting of a four-foot | blast fan, twenty inches wide, pro ! ; polled by a three-horse power gaso- : line engine. The fan is set revolving ; I very rapidly and the nuts are precipi tated into a trough leading down to I the fan, whence the heavy nuts drop into the pin made to receive tliem. : while the light ones are blown into a I receptahle arranged for them further j on. The force of the wind is sufficient to blow the llgi.ter nuts aside, while I the good ones fall straight down. Urokft Into Prison* At last a man has literally broken j into priso". We are always hearing of men who break into it figuratively by committing a crime which lands i them there, but Jefferson City. Mo. | I toasts of a man who broke into prison t just as many another man has broken into 11 house or a store. No one knows why he did it just the same. When i discovered he had scaled the wall and was ready to drop down on the Inside, aud in spite of the sentry's challenge he did drop down. Practical rhllanUnopliy. A young Philndclphian went to n mil ' lionaire friend and asked pecuniary ! aid to start limi in business. "Do you drink" asked the millionaire. "Once in a while." "Stop it! Stop it! Stop j it for a yVar, and then come and see I me." The young man broke off the i liahit at once, and at the end of the year ennie to see the millionaire again. "I)o you smokeV" asked the success ful man. "Now and then." "Stop it! Stop it for a year, then eotne and see me again." The young man stopped smoking, hut he did not go hack again. "Ile'd have told nic." lie said, "that now that I have stopped drinking and smoking I must have saved enough to start myself in liusiuess, and I have." Cotly Setting for a Tooth. Tin 1 solitary tooth of Buddha Is to be contained In what will probably be ~,e most valuable coffer in the world. A Shan chieftain recently sent to Mouluiein, in Bnrmiih, an emerald worth, it is declared, two lakhs of rupees, in order that the Burmese Buddhists might include It among the jewels which they are going to send tit Ceylon ill order to adorn the tooth holding coffer. Jewelry worth 50,000 rupees liuu been already received from Rangoon and Mandalay; aud the Moul meln Buddhists have themselves se cured Jewelry to the value of 85,000 rupees. Titus the total value of the Jewelry adorning the coffer will be about three anil a half lakhs. Clow figuring. ; The friends of a popular preacher j who recently died in Louisville, Ky„ I undertook to raise a fund for his family, one man gave his note for ninety days for a certain amount, and when the committee explained to him [ that cash was needed he agreed to I pay the note in cash If the committee | would discount it, which was done. The Hngfl.li. ! There Is a creature known as the hagflsh. or myxine, which is in tie habit of getting inside eod and simila fish and devouring the interior nut' only the skin and the skeleton at left. Observer—Do you think that yot can ever learn to ride a wheel? Beginner —Indeed, 1 d>. After th difficulties 1 have surmounted in gel ting one, 1 feel competent to accutup ■ li.-li anything. I KEEPING IN TOUCH. I pi pi j3| We keep in touch with the markets. We j=n| En keep in touch with the styles. We keep in touch 15 L. with the public by a careful study of their wants, 15 |E and supply those wants in a satisfactory manner. [E P We're wide awake to every move that is going to be Pl raj] of mutual benefit to the store and its patrons. We &J pl wa 'it you to have the newest and best in Hats, rajjl jgl Shoes and Gents' Furnishings, and we don't want 3 S >°u to pay one cent more for it than it is worth. lS P Our constant effort is to improve qualities and keep P [ftll down prices to their lowest legitimate level. Don't fflj | Eg] you think it will pay you to trade in a store of this |[g| iSI kind? tn || Hats, for Instance, jjSJ We have several well-assorted lines which we M pl place before our patrons without evasion or subter- pi |s[] fuge. Some we will guarantee, some we will not. raj] I®l s ' low y ou difference in qualities, as well as |™i Ljj the difference in prices. No deceptive practices S IE permitted in this store. Should you desire a [E 1 GOOD, WELL-MADE HAT, 1 Sj =Bny the @ m BLACK DIAMOND. jfj pU Only $2.25. fiSj S Our $2, St. 75, $1.50, #1.25 and Si llats are of S E value in proportion to the price charged, beginning IE P with a line, serviceable Hat at Si, and raising in [Ej| [frJ quality and durability as the cost increases. Dun- [SJ pl lap and Youman Shapes in Stiff Hats, and a Full pl jsj Line of Crash, Fedoras. Felts, Alpines, Etc. Hats }=p S and Caps for Boys and Children in profusion. S |E9 |fi]| 1e Siice XDepartxxiexLt. Ie P , ~ • t c ci I®l fs] Let us sell you a pair of our Summer Shoes. brj S We have Men's and Boys' in Black and Russet, Lace CE: LS and Congress, All Styles, All Prices, and we give P Jft-j our guarantee that you will get your money's worth RU pl in the wearing. Is not this a fair offer? Come and pl ra]] see us and we will tell you more about Our Shoes. njpj McMEN AMIN'S Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, 86 CENTRE STREET, FREELAND. A Word of Warning The trouble with thousands of women is not "female weakness," although many physicians suppose it is. The real trouble lies in the Kidneys, Liver and Bladder. Doctors often fail to effect an cure, simply because they don't give the right remedy. Women as well Nty as men can ascertain for them selves if their Kidneys are diseased. ) S Simply fill a bottle or glass tum -1 / \ / / D er with urine and let it stand a \ U/7 v li / day and a night. If there is a S J sediment at the bottom, something is n S with the Kidneys. if there is a ' _Br / /t desire to urinate often—if there is a f 1 ,V** L \ pain in the small of the back—iftheurino 1 S tfj* stains linen—lookout! The Kidneys are y? bapEMßty', diseased. Vs. I'/ V*£ Ladies can take Dr. David Kcn amm nedy's Favorite Remedy with perfect as- W surance of relief. It will cure them of Kidney, ' f Liver and Bladder disorders just as certainly 1 /" (/'* as it cures men. \^ rs * )avenport . of West Troy, N. Y., says: "I Mas troubled with my ICid \\ \ Wgp&MHBfA ney.%|.nd suffered intense pain in my back and 1 loins. The wife of Dr. Robinson, pastor of the MMWSbI First Avenue Methodist Church, recommended Jffir.yffl ill Dr. David Kennedy*B Favorite Remedy. flBwM JhL StW W 1 * ot some an( * have used it ever since, with ptS ' the result that I am greatly benefited. All pains • ™ have left me, and I am like another person." Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy is a perfect blood and nerve medicine. It restores the liver to a healthy condition and cures the Worst cases of constipation. It is a certain cure for all diseases peculiar to females. Sample Bottle Free Favorite Remedy is such a certain cure that the DR. DAVID KENNEDY CORPORATION, Rondout, N. Y., will forward, prepaid, a free sample bottle to every sufferer who sends his or her full postoffice address and mentions this paper. The fact that our liberal offer appears in this paper is a guarantee of its genuineness. All druggists sell Favorite Remedy at SI.OO a bottle. DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre end Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, KJbenbluth's Velvet, of which web vi EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumm'i Extra Dry Champagne, Heuuenny Brandy, Blackberry, Gins, Wines, Clarets, Cordials, Bte. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ham and Schweitzer Cheete Sandwich tt, Sardinet, Etc. MEALS - AT - ALL - HOURS. Bnllcntine and Hazleton beer on tap. Baths, Hot or Cold, 25 Cents. M beet Cough Syrup. Teetea Geo<l. Use J in time. Bold by dnucglata. ■ Anyone aendiug a aketr h and description inav quickly ascertain oar opinion free whether mi iuvontlou la probably patentable. Communica tions strict ly confidential. Handbook on Patenta aeut free, oldest agency for securing patenta. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely llluatrated weekly. Joirgeat cir culation of any acientlflo Journal. Ternia. $3 a year; four montba, |L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co l 36,Br ° 3dwa y. New York Urauch Office, G25 F St., Waablngton, D. C. KfNWvsßemcdy The one sure cure for J The and slood
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers