FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVEItY MONDAY AND THURSDAY 11Y TUB TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STHKKT AHOVK CENTIIE. LONO DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four Mouths 50 Two Mouths 25 Tho (late which tiiu subscription is paid to is ou the address label of each paper, the chungv of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittauce. Keep the figures in advuuoc of the present date. Hei>ort prompt ly to this office whenever paper is not received. , Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. Make all money orders, checks, etc., jxiyable to the Tribune Prlntiny Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., JULY 0, 1800. SAUCE, Past reckoning—the crazy bookkeep er. Early members of the press—mum mies. Flatterers of the women—photogra phers. The Jolly cobbler keeps his good spir its on tap. Are not the stage dancer's feet sup posed to do the twinkling? We suppose the first woman was dark, seeing she was called Eve. A ship is without a "hold" to its sea sick passenegers. Different types of beauty are used in printing kisses. The doctor of music is not without pains in his practice. An extravagant wife may appropri ately be called "Dearie." It wouldn't do for the market man to sell off ills stale fish as "smelts." Renutiful word pictures must be properly framed in flue sentences. Perhaps they call locomotives "she" because they have men in tlieir train. Are not the clothes laid on the grass to dry supposed to be lawu-drled? Political organs usually have plenty of cranks to keep them going. Queer, Isn't it. that it's just at eating time that a printer stops feeding tlie press? It is Jill because they went to the frout that old soldiers are given back pensions. It seems appropriate enough for the sketch artist to do his work ut home In his own drawing room. ITEMS FROM EVERYWHERE. The world's herring catch every year is 300.000, which is all consumed be fore the next season. The price of medicine in Prussia is regulated by the state, a new price list being published every year. The United States uses the most eggs of any country—lo,UDO,ooo,oo(l be ing required during the year, or 130 to each inhabitant. Mahogany is said to have been brought to England by sir Walter Raleigh in 1505, but not to have come Into general use till 1720. A scientist lias calculated that the eyelids of the average man open and shut no fewer than 4.000.000 times in the course of a single year of his exist ence. The ink plant of New Granada Is a curiosity. The Juice of it can be used as ink without any preparation. At first the writing is red, and after a few hours it changes to black. The Swedish bride tills her pockets with bread, which she dispenses to every one she meets on her way to church, every piece she dispose* of averting, as she believes, a misfortune. Goal was first used at Newcastle-on- T.vne nbouf 1230. About 50 years later It became an article of trade between that place nud London. It was gen erally considered so injurious to the health that it was regarded as a pub lic nuisance. _____ CULLED. A man isn't likely to enjoy hearing his wife talk with a woman who re members him when he was a boy. When a man shows a woman the in most corner of his heart, she pokes around it and says: "Is this all!" Some men don't discover that they are fond of their wives till their wive 3 have got through being fond of them. Women seem to have an idea that be cause they haven't got a Greek face they have to frizz their hair all up with a hot iron. No matter how ashamed a girl feels the first time she kisses a man, it'nev er occurs to her that the man may feel j that way too. Some time before she is twenty, ev ery girl determines either to be a for eign missionary or to spend her life washing dirty babies. Lots of men who don't get married because they can't afford it give a lot of money to help the poor man along with his big family. When a girl has a grudge against a man she gives a chafing-dish party* and makes him hold the handle while she splashes little dabs all over his clothes. After a man's household goods have been carted around the streets on a moving van he feels as though his neighbors had taken an unfair advan tage of him. Before a man is twenty-five he spends most of his time trying to make the girls think be is the devil of a fel low. After that he spends most of his time trying to make them ..bink he isn't. A PAPER OF TACKS. Life is n snd riddle. There Is, at Inst, ouly one way out—to give it up. A hog may net the part of n man without knowing it. A man can never act the part of a hog without knowing It. We all regret today what wo did yesterday. Will we regret the day after to-morrow, what we do to-mor row? Is it not the only safe way to do nothing nt nil? William W. Watkins. a mine foreman, and father of ox-Prothonotary David Watkins, died at his residence, at Nes-, tjuchoning, on Tuesday. 1 ' HAND IN HAND. TJ Before our pathways met, dear, True Joy we did not know; Now we have no regret, dear, As hand In hand we go. The glad stars of the night, dear, Smile with n softer glow. And day with hope Is bright, dear, As hand in hand we go. When youth at last departs, dear, And cold the breezes blow. Love's clasp will warm our hearts, dear, As hand in hand we go. —Washington Star. THE VICTOR'S SPOILS Miss Terrence, going down the line, watched the girl who was coming to ward her. There were three men with the girl, and only Lancaster was with Miss Terrence. However, us lie was all tlie world to her, Helena-like, she lacked not words of company. The six met on the walk in front of Captain Lansing's quarters. • Lansing was a cynic who observed his kind and told the result of ills ob servations. Such are deservedly un popular, but command appreciative au dience that are the envy of the good hearted. It was to au audience of the sort that he recounted the meeting the same afternoon when the band had | stopped playing and the invading liosfs from tlie town had scattered and left the post to its rightful owners. "Dorothy Terrence," he began, laying His saber across his knees and settling back to tlie temporary repose which alone can fall to the lot of the officer ; of the day; "Dorothy Terrence came up ; the walk. She had Lancaster with her, | and she was looking happy. Miss Leeds—the bankers daughter, you know—came down the walk. She be i -Rowed a sweet and transitory smile upon Miss Terrence, but Lancaster Is not the best-looking fellow in tlie Pre sidio for nothing. If any of you linp ' :>en to share my good fortune of know ! iug her. you will understand what, in | the nature of things and of men, hap pened when she turned her eyes upon liini with a trick she has of seeming to took into one's very soul. | She lias tlie most beautiful voice outside of the heavenly choir, and she brought it into play also. Dorothy ■ stood it as long as she could, and then she tried to get him away. He never j ?veu heard her. If Miss Leeds had not ;azed soul searehingly at him nud told film that she must be going, but would i see liini nt the hop, he doubtless would i ie standing there still with Dorothy inxiously watching him. It will be worth going to the hop to see things happen. I Lancaster stood at the door of the i Irossing-room and watched Miss Leeds while lie waited for Dorothy. He saw icr throw back her gorgeous clonk and irop it from her with tlie careless dis join of a celestial creature discarding mine temporary earthly garment. That t fell on a chair and crushed other less splendid wrappings beneath it was a ietail which escaped him. lie watched her as the budding feminine mass made way for her nt the mirror, and die stood unchallenged, leisurely touch ng her glimmering brown hair and pinning a great white rose upon her j shoulder. Dorothy waited at his side for fully five minutes before he saw her. Then die laughed mockingly up into his face and wished that her laughter : might have been a blow. As soon as he could leave her he went running and sliding across the floor to where Miss Leeds stood at bay , before a besieging group. She was backed against the wall, and a sun burst of sables was just above her ; head. "There are only 20 dances." she kept repeating, "and I never divide." Lancaster took two of his fellow of ficers by the shoulders and put them >ut of his way. Miss Leeds looked in to his eyes and smiled as, it seemed to him, no woman had ever smiled before. She put her eard Into his hand. | "The two with the crosses are the :>nes I promised you," she said, and as | she had promised and lie had asked 1 nothing his heart beat high with tri umph. Not that It was a case of love at first sight. He was in love with Dorothy. But tho most faithful of men may pay the court she expects to a belle anil nnd may allow himself to be flattered i by her marked favors. Ho could honestly, then and for sev- I weeks afterward, give Dorothy the comfort she sorely needed and say that lie did not even think Miss Leeds beautiful. "She has style and charm," lie passed Judgment, "but not beauty. And she is a flirt." He meant that Miss Torrance should understand how on- I tlrely lie abhorred that. "I)ld she try to flirt when you called | upon her?" He had made a point of confessing the call directly It was made, and he , thought it tactless of Dorothy to Insist upon it. He shrugged his shoulders. ! 'She does that with every man." It was a truth which' he fully np j ireclated, but Its feeble light no longer fell upon the path of duty when the | time came that the sun of Miss Leeds' j countenance shed its glow upon tlie highway of inclination. And yet she j lid her best to make It clear to him. | "Now, listen to something I mean to tell you." she said to him. She set lown her teacup and leaned toward j him,with her elbows upon her knees mil her chin between her soft, pink | in 1 ins. Her eyes were looking straight nto Ills, and they filled ills heart with anticipation. Do you think that this | is a risky game we are playing, and hat we have been playing it for all ts wortli that last fortnight or HO?" j Lancaster knit bis brows. "It is not worth while to pretend you I lon't understand. We both know ex ictly what I mean. But I want to be uire we both know that It is only a ;nme. I am not in earnest, and you Bust not be." He gazed at her speechless. "I suppose you are thinking that the suggestion of serious intentions might , 'OHIO first from you." she said. "That nay be your way of looking at it, but I tis not mine. I don't cure to let you save anything to reproach me with. I inve had enough of that in the past. 1 |im a hopeless flirt, you know. I go I nto the thing for the fun there is in it I tnd it is ouly fair to warn you." alio leaned buck in her chair und fell to watching the passers-by upon the street and to biting at a cube of sugar I meditatively. "If you will accept matters that way we can have a very good time. If you dou't, I have warned you, and the con sequences, If there are any, must be on your owu head." Luncnster laughed rather weakly. I i nccept the terms," he said. "At is un derstood that this is only a flirtation." I Which he explained to Dorothy at much length, but which she would not understand and was so unreasonable about as to break her engagement. Lancaster was deeply deeply aggrieved and rut her more deeply relieved. But j it mude one fact plain to him—that he was seriously in love with a girl who frankly told him he was no more to her than a score had been before, than ; scores might be thereafter. And it was nil in vain that he tried to change ■ her. "I warned you quite fairly," she re minded him, bending forward to stroke the glossy neck of his black mare. It was the mare that, of old, Dorothy had considered almost lier own property, and on which she had almost lavished j the overflow of her affection for Lau | caster. "1 warned you," Miss Leeds repeated, "and nobody has suffered but yourself unless'—she glanced at him with a quizzical little smile—"unless there was another girl." "There was another girl," he ans wered. She shrugged her shoulders tolerant ly. "That was to have been expected. Most problems of the heart are in the rule of three." He frowned angrily, and his lips curved in contempt. "Are you absolu tely heartless? Have you uo pity for her? "Not a great deal. If you were the sort to desert her in a fortnight for a girl who made not the slightest effort to win you, I think, upon the whole, that she is rather well rid of you." Lancaster was biting his lips, and he was very angry. "She is a better wo man than you," he said. "That may be. But still," she laugh ed, good naturedly, "do you think I I am bad enough for you to be passing Judgment upon me? "I do, for you are doing tlie thing cold-bloodedly, and I—I," he said des pondently, "have lost my head." She smiled into his eyes. "'You don't want to do that. It Is such a hand some head. Lose your heart—lt Is not worth nearly so much." He turned In his saddle and faced her. "1 am likely to lose more than that," he burst out suddenly. "I am likely to lose my life." "Oh, come," she said; "you are not contemplating falling on the point of your saber or drowning yourself in the bay or superinducing galloping con sumption, are you? I have hud men do a great number of tblugs for me, but never quite that." "I am not contemplating doing any of those. I may be a good deal of a fool, but not enough for a woman who cares nothing for me." "Yet that has beeu done," she Bug gested. "What I meant was—and what I i intended to tell you when I asked you to come to-day was—that I am going to the war." "That was to have been expected, of course. Is your regiment ordered?" "Not yet. I am especially favored. "When do you leave?" "The day after to-morrow. And now I am going to ask you to promise me something." They had reined in their horses by the dynamite guns and sat looking out over the whitecapped blue sea. "So that it is something that I can promise." "Not that. I shall leave that until I come back—lf I do come back. If I do not—ln short. If lam killed"—She gave a little shudder. He saw that she did aud repeated, "If I am killed, I ?hall leave orders that my most treas ured possession shall be sent to you." "Do you mean this mare?" "I mean the mare. It would make me as happy as it would seem I meant to be to know that If I die you will have her and will ride hef aud be kind to her, for you are fond of her too." Miss Leeds knit her brows and con sidered. "And If I should not?" she said. "She shall not go to any one else. I will have Dartmoor shoot her ou the day that lie hears my death confirmed.' Miss Leeds switched at the skirt of her habit. "Is there uo one else who is fond of her also?" "No," he answered. "But tlie other girl you told me of?" There flashed back upon Lancaster's memory how Dorothy had been wont to stand with her arms around the arched black neck and her cheek against the warm soft nose; how the mare had followed no other but him self. Then Miss Leeds turned the sun of her questioning eyes upon him. They were serious now, and their gentle light scattered the mists of memories. She only valued the liorse for tlie master's sake, and the master Is no longer anything to her. "Will you do us 1 ask?" A little Ironical smile, the smile of an easy going cynicism, curled her lips. 'Unto the victor belongs the spoils. Yes, If anything happens to you I will take the liorse. But you must not be rash. I believe I prefer your safety to it." Two months afterward Miss Leeds, liending forward to stroke the glossy neck of the black mare that had be longed to Lieutenant Lancaster, turned and glanced up Into the face of the man who was riding beside her. "Who was the girl that you bowed to near the gates, the one with the big *a<l eyes?" "It was Dorothy Terrence," he told her. "Lancaster used once to be en gaged to her." "No wonder, then, that she looked at me reproachfully." She tried to laugh, but the laughter broke, and she grew white as she set the mare into a gal lop. "There may, you know"—she called to him mockingly above the clat ter of the hoofs—"there may lurk the adder of remorse among the victor's spoils." Not lilch Knnugli. "I wish I were rich enough to learn docutlon." "You are; a course of lessons does not cost much." "No, but I am not rich enough to make people listen to iue."—lndian tpolls Journal. ! CHICAGO NEWS "DON'TB." Don't pick quarrels before they are I lpe. Don't owe any person a grudgo; pay as you go. Don't trust a tamed wolf and recon j ciled enemv too far. Don't prolong a quarrel; make a fight of it and then quit. Don't work too hard in trying to avoid hard work. . Don't make fun of a fool unless you are in the same boat. Don't judge a woman's complexion by the box It comes in. I Don't be afraid to use good advice for fear of spoiling it. Don't think that bright men spend all their time reflecting. Don't forget that man's chief end is the one with the head on. Don't think a national debt Isn't a | blessing—to the bankers. I Don't think because an aching tootli I is little that it isn't nervy, i Don't forget that as Instructors, ac | tions are superior to words, j Don't expect to meet a self-made man who is not proud of his job. Don't think because you think you can sing that others think so. Don't attempt to borrow money on your wheel. It won't stand alone. Don't get into the habit of talking to yourself if you are easily bored. Don't take any stock in the man whose capital consists of wind. Don't acquire a reputation for truth fulness by speaking ill of yourself. Don't bother about taking aim if you want to shoot the chutes of oblivion. Don't forget that an ounce of silence is better than a pound of explanation. Don't think because you can fool some people that others can't fool you. Don't think a man appreciates a cy clone because he is carried away with it. Don't hang your head if you are guilty. That is what the sheriff's paid for. Don't think love's young dream will kindle the kitchen fire on a cold morn ing. Don't provide yourself with a wife and expect her to provide you with a home. Don't tako worry with you on your travels; you will find it ou tap every where. Don't expect a man to take water when you invite him to have some thing. Don't blame a dentist for looking down in the mouth—that's what he gets paid for. Don't turn over a new leaf unless you have something sensible to write on the page. Don't think that in order to be can did it is necessary to step on other people's toes. Don't refer to a spinster as one of your oldest customers If you want to retain her trade. Don't think your milkman has pedi greed COWB because he supplies you with blue milk. Don't get the idea into your head that with women on juries there would be fewer disagreements. Don't attempt to train up your chil dren in the way they should go unless you are going that way yourself. Don't comb your hair over the bald spot on your head and then kick be cause your grocer puts the big potatoes on top of the measure. BARON SCHIMPF'S SAVINGS. All's veil dot end's veil, but some dings iss bedder as veil. Dere's no use in qvotlng philosophy do a man vot iss in lofe. Vlien a voomnns sclimiles look oudt; but vhen she cries look more oudt A fool may make money budt id takes a vise men to shpendt id so dot de fools don'd git some. A friendt do efferypody iss a friendt do nopody, budt vhen he dies he Iss apt do haf a pig vuncral. Vhen a man looks vise und he ain't vi- . aber his face Iss bulldted dot vay or he has gramps in his shtimmick. Peaudty Iss budt shkin deeb, hut if you don'd expecd do eadt id dot is choost so deeb enough as you vandt id. All are nod dthieves dot dogs park ad. budt id iss choost as veil do gcep an eye on der man vliat a dog don'J like. De man vot satdt dot a voman iss as oldt as she looks, vas nod righdt In his headt. A voman iss more as ten yecra oldtcr. "Age iss a mndder off veeling, nodt off years." says de boot. Off some beo ples veel so had as dey looks dey moos', haff lifted a goodt vhile. Vhen a man says dot he vouldn't marry der pest woman dot lifs, chust dake der next car. Dot man vould haf to get a new face to spheak to de best voman of his oxquaintance. DEVIOUS DEFINITIONS. Essay—A paragraph padded with words. Centurion —A cyclist who makes a century run. Heirloom —The trousers that are handed down from father to son. Quiet —About the hardest thing for a woman to keep in this world. Experience—The comb $. man ac quires after he loses his hair. Adversity—The only scale that gives the correct weignt of our fiiends. Ultimatum—Something a woman Is continually working off on her hus band. Brave—The man who will stand with in twenty feet of anything a woman throws at. Census—An elaborate compilation on which we base our guesses far the next ten years. Salon—Said to be a union of intel lect and fasnlon. An additional "o," however knocks that definition silly. SOME GOOD THOUGHTS. Only tho home can found a state Joseph Cook. Cheerfulness is health; its opposite, melancholy, is disease.—Ha'iburton. Happiness is a roadside flower, 1 'ooming on the highway of usefulness. Anon. He that has never known ill fortune has never known himself or his virtue —Mallet. To be good and disagreeable is high treason againßt the royalty of virtue. —Hannah More. There are more spoiled men and wo men than spoiled children—only we do not hear so much about them.—Boston Transcript. PORTO RICO'S BRIGANDS. A Business That Has nen Abolished Since the American Occupation. The death knell of brigandage in Porto Rico was sounded when the American troops landed at Guouica. Up to that time brigands had been ac tive. Now few, if any, remain. Since early last January there has been no Indication whatever of their existence, and the band that mude a manifesta tion then was believed to be the only one that had not yet quit business. Its experience on that occasion was such as to discourage it. The brigands had no sooner begun operations than word was sent to the military post at Are cibo about them. A squad of sharp shooters was immediately detailed to look after them. The soldiers soon came up with them and opened tire. The brigands were far in advance at the time and were mounted on the swift-footed little mountain ponies which Porto Rico produces. They, therefore, escaped, but the incident opened their eyes to the fact that American troops have a different and far more unpleasant way of dealing with such tilings than the old Spanish civil guard. Prior to this, from the beginning of the American occupation, there had been few and poorly organized raids. Indeed, it long ago became evident that the great lenders or captains of tlie bandits of Porto Rico had for saken the calling. The overthrow of Spanish sovereignty was sufficient to rid the Island of them. At the coming of the American troops they dug up their gold and silver and other valua bles and fled from the island. There are holes to be seen in the ground and mounds where boles have been dug and then refilled near some caves in the Ponce district, the former hot bed of Porto Rieau brigandage, and the country people say that at these spots was hidden the plunder of these outlaws prior to the American iuv;i sion. They were brigands in every sense of the word, not merely petty male factors, but robbers, kidnappers, cut throats and footpads. They waylaid travelers, levied blackmail on planters, pillaged homes, killed for pay and even made descents upon villages for booty. Some of them made a specialty of removing hated persons, receiving for their services from SIOO to SSOO, according to the financial ability of the person hiring them and the prom inence of the intended victim or his lighting ability. The people of Porto Rico toll to-day with a certain pride that these cut-throats never betrayed a patron. The two most famous lead ers in the business up to the time of the American capture of the island were Pan Blanco, or "White Bread," and Aguila Blanca, or "White Eagle." When the city of Ponce fell into the hands of the American troops Pan Blanco fled incontinently. His record was so bad that he could expect no mercy. Aguila Blanca stood his ground and decided to see what the Americanos were like. The result of the scrutiny was favorable, so he came into the city, said he wanted to lead a better life and would reform if the Americans would permit him, and asked for and received a sort of safe conduct. Aguila Blanca's life is exemplary, fully Justifying the safe conduct which General Henry gave him. When Aguila Blanca asked for it lie wrote that he had been a man of the woods out of undying. Implacable hat red for Spaniards; and now that they had been driven from the Island he had no further incentive to war against authority, and, therefore, lie desired to return to civilized life and be a law-abiding citizen of his beloved native island. Home llreeillnn; In Knglnml, Some idea of the attention paid in England to the breeding of the useful horse as distinguished from the ani mal used for racing may be gained from the fact that at the recent London show of the Shire Horse Society the total value of the cash prizes for ex cellence in this breed alone aggregated £1,227. There were seven classes for stallions, six for mares, and two for geldings, and there were a number of cups and special prizes as well There are also breeders' prizes, thirteen in number, for stallions and mares, and twofor geldings, with first prizes of £lO in each. This is certainly an incentive for farmers to raise strong and sound draught horses, and an example that it would be well to follow in this coun try. Tit* Kant Intllun Dtiganc:. A writer in Cosmos, M. Emile Mason, argues that the East Indian dugout; or Inniatin is the natural foundation for the myths of sirens, nerelds, and tri tons. A female (lmigong recently cap tured in the Itial Sea has a head and bnst which, when seen at some little distance, might be taken for a mer maid. The lamntln lias also a vibrant voice, and these two combined make a good base for the theory which the writer has advanced with a good deal of elaboration. Nov.l M ay to Clean a Chimney. An easy way to clean a chimney of soot lins lieen discovered by n Maine man. Instead of going to the top of the chimney and probing with rods, he begins at the bottom. There an open ing is lunile, and lie tires upward a re volver charged with a blank cartridge. The concussion, it is said will clean out the soot, lie also claims that the burning of a piece of zinc in a stove will clear the stove and its fuuncl of soot. The ComprewMed-Air I>lnenn*. Dr. Thomas Oliver of England, wlio hns been investigating tin* cause of the "compressed-air disease," which so frequently affects workers in caissons, bus come to the conclusion that it Is due to the Increased solution In the blood of the gases met with in compressed nlr, anil the liberation of these gases after the person escapes from the compressed atmosphere. The Columbia lias yielded more wealth than any other river in the world. Its vast schools of salmon have enriched thousands of men and given employment to innumerable peo ple. The turkey was first discovered In America and was taken to England in the early part of the sixteenth cen tury. Since then it has been acclimat ed in nearly all parts of the world. McMenamin's. Gents' Furnishings, Hats and Shoes. 86 CENTRE STREET. LIGHT WEIGHT STIFF HATS | J FOR SUMMER WEAR. jg _ Summer Headgear. Boys' and Children's Straw Hats a specialty. Hot Weather Hats and Caps of every kind and stylo. Specialties in Alpines and Bicycling Hals. Hot Weather Shirts. In Madras, Oxfords and Silks. Silk Front Shirts a specialty. Hot Weather Underwear. In all styles, Cotton, Balbriggan, Lisle Silk and Wool. Summer Neckwear. In all the popular styles and colors. Quality the best. Prices low. Men's and Hoys' Footwear. Every description at the lowest prices at which good goods can be sold. IlmWlas, Hosiery, tools' Mings, Boys' Knee Pants, All Kinds and all Styles. One Price to All. mcmenamin's. A Cure for Constipation. I have been troubled with constipation for yearH. It was ruining my health, my com fort and my complexion, and 1 am glad to say that Celery King has restored all three, and this after trying many other medicines that wore supposed to he good, hut which were of no value whatever. Iwouldllkoto ! tell every su (ferine woman what (Celery King has done for me.—Nellie (Jould, Medinu,Ohio Celery King cures Conßtipatlon and all d In cases oftho Nerves, Stomach, Liver and Kid neys. Sold by druggists. 25oandGUc.. 3 Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. S" 0 A cclebrnted brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre arid Front Sts. t Freeland. Anyone sending A .iketoh and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communion tlons strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent. free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Muun & Co. receive special notice, without charge, In the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms. $3 a year: four months, *1- Sold by nil newsdealers. MUNN & Co. 36 ' 8 ™ 11 New York Brauch Ofßco, 025 F Bt., Washington, I), c. !fnppnip4 Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use M In time. Sold by druggists. Kit K3S3E3SEGEIEB3^p Read - the - Tribune. T. CAMPBELL, dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes. Also PURE WINES LIQUORS FOR FAMILY AND MEDICINAL PURI'OSKS. Centre mill Miiln streets. Freeland. P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. ViENNfIiifIKERL J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street. Freeland. BUSWoSBSI""-"' Confectioner}lce Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply wagon* to all pari* ot town and surrounding* every day. Condy 0. Boyle, dealer in Liquor, Wine, Beer. Porter, Etc. o r , an , ds of Do, "tlc and Imported N hlskej oil sale in one of the handsomest sa loous in town. Fresh Rochester and Hbeuau doah Beer and lcungling's Porter on tap. W Centre street.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers