TIIE SCI? ANTON TRIBUNE-SATURDAY MORNING. MARCH 17. 1894. , Beccham's pills are for biliousness, bilious headache, dyspepsia, heartburn, torpid liver, dizziness, sick head ache, bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, loss of appe tite, Sallow skin, when caused by constipation ; and consti pation is the most frequent cause of all of them. Book free; pills' 25c. At drugstores, or write B.F.Allen Co.,365 Canal St., New York. LI Ml OF T CLANDESTINE SCHOOLS. n (Thk Schavton TRiBfp:'s nttotun de partment is in i-harp of J. M. Fuhy, to rhon oewa item and coruplaluW msy bo referred. 1 PITTSTON HAPPENINGS. Events of th Borough Told in a Brief but Interes'lnn Maamr. St. Patrick's Day today. "McCarthys Mishap" pleased a pood z)i audience at Mtttlo hull lat evening. The test of the fire Kong Thursday night again proved it wrthlenf8. The senate confirmed the appoint ment of John H. Mallin as postmaster for thin place Thnmday. Tha.CatUolio society of till place Trill celebrate in oommtration of St. Patrick today. BeTTioei will be hell in St. John' church at U o'clock, after which they will prd, the pnneiptl thoroughfares of the town. A. 13. Brown i i-ontemplntinfr the erection of anuex to his Urn tor. It will be built at the rear and will ex tend back on a line with the alley. Pittiton divUion, No, 191, Bans of Temperance, celebrated th'ir four teenth a'uiiirersary last waning at their rooms, corner of Main anlUroad streets. A large; number of uersous were present aud au enjoyable time was had by nil. The nwetins of the financo commit -.-e of the borough council, announced to be held at the Town halt last even ing, for the purpoie of investigating bills that have not beeriacte! on by the council, did not;tak pt.toa, owiu;? to the Inability of the committeemen to attend. The Union City mission (intefully acknowledges the receipt of $J0 from Mr. II. E. Coward, tne profits of the oratorio given recently in the Presby terian church. E.i2'b9tu D. Mercur. secretary. All Pennsylvania Coal commny col ieries will be idle tolv. Collieriei No. 6 and 8, Ewen aud O.d Fore will work nest week, and all others will be Idle. The committee of council npooiatel lo udjus', if possible, the borough or d?r in dljpat between the borough auditors a::d treasurer have failed to meet and act in the premiss, and th3 matter wiil la all protubility be acted on by the council ai a whole, atn"!1: Monday ereuiug's meetiu of tn;it body. Gazette. The game of basket ball between teams from Company' C and A of the Ninth regiment, will occur this even ing in Armory nail. Today proiuUea to b9 a noUble on for the Irish and Welsh residents of this county. Tlie .bictiv peiat of celebration" will be Wilkes-Darre, and the county seat has every thing in readiness to give the visitors a royul welcome. Mauy PitUtonian ex;ect to attend. The Choral Singing'soci-ty will enter the prizi contest, "The Uivnlet," at the big oiateddfod to l held in the Armory. P. A. O'Boyle and family, of the West Side, left yesterday for New York city. They will bo the guests of H. H. Browa mid family nntil after Easter. Tonight Mr, O B y!e will de liver an ad-Ires at tbe annual bnqnt nf the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick of New York. The temlor of shift engine No. 12o Jumped the truck near Water street station this afternoon, while running Into a switch to give No. 1 pastnger train a clear track Tbe delay caused thereby was bnt momentary. The Newton Coal Mining Company paid its employes yesterday. Th Gazette is authority for the fol lowing interesting bit of gossip: Rev. J. II. Brittain attended college for two years in Washington, at Co lumbia college, with Congressman Wilson, of West Virginia, anthor of the Wilson bill. Tn latter married a daughter of the president of the college nnd wua himself a member of the fac ulty for ssveral years. Landlord Christ Running, of tho National House, an 1 Mrs. E lztbtn Ullmer, of Brooklyn, N. If., wen; united In marrisgi In the City of Churches Monday last. Pebff.ct health is seldom found, for im pure blood is so general. Huod'a Samaria 1 ilia really does purify the blood and re stores health. J RM YN AND VICINITY. A Brief Roord of Kv: ti Wonhy cf f p p al Mention. "pedal to the Scranton Tritium Jermyn, Pa., March 10. Charles C. Taylor, who recently broko bis collar bone and who had so far recovered na to be able to go out, fell and rebroke it yesterday. Rev. J. Twyson Jones, of Pittsburg, who ha been visiting friends here for n few days, will act ; h adjudicator at 1 he eisteddfod to be held in Wilket Barre today. He will preach in the Congregational church both morning and evening. Rnshbrook lodge wiil have a social in their rooms April 27. Clean up your cellars and back yards. Now is the time to prevent diptberiu, typhoid fever and et'- Charles Green, of Uilca. Louis Ver non, of Archbald, aud E A. Fink, of Buffalo, N. Y., were Jermyn visitors yesterday. J. Pryor, of Second street, who has been serionsiy ill was out yesterday en joying the beautiful weather. Lawyer Watson, of Scruntoti was a caller in Jermyn yesterday. The school board are considering the Advisability of useing the new bnlld ing about lo be erected, as a high school, it so. it will be arranged expressly for this purpose. The miners employed by the Hillside Coal and Iron company received their pay yesterday. Would you ride on a railroad that uses no danger signals? That cough is a sigur.l of danucr. The safest enro is' Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. Sold by all dealers on a gnaran tee of satisfaction. Dow the Nffoea Were Taught Iu the South lleioro the Wur. Perhaps it may hu well to ciill attention to and e.xplaiu the iiKtontHhiug fact that after tho war there could be found a few, nr rather, for thrt early period, so many colon! men and women capable of begin Ding the achtiol work even lit the A 11 0 point. This wna due to many influencea, open lud secret. Among the favoring Inllu Hues, first , was the fact that tunny hu mane ni oaten taught their slaves, nml others winked nt tbe violation of the law which forbude the teaching of slaves and permitted their children to instruct a fa vorite slave to rend aud aouictiuics to write. Men now hih iu authority In edu cational matters taught their slaves to rend and write, rendering themselves lia ble to bo punished an violntors of tbe law on the statute book. The Christian in struction of the slaves was encouraged and directed by many Christian bodice. In deed in theuct permitting the inttoduc tlonf slaves Christian training was en joined upon the slave roasters. Rev. 0. ('. Jones, father of the late Historian Jones, and Rev, Joslah Law, both among the most distinguished ministers of the state, were engaged to devote theirtime to this work. Again, it is known that when nigra slavery, ut ilrst prohibited, was finally In troduced into Georgia in urn many of tbeso slaves came from ivmth Carolina. Art in 1744 n negro school was opened in Charleston, it may bo inferred that some of these slaves must have brought with them to Crtorgia some knowledge of read ing and Writing, Tho Charleston school was still inn nourishing condition in 1759 and was taught by an educated negro, likely from England, Although it was for free negroes only, many slaves, who L'veu then hired time, sent their children to this school. In time other schools were opened, and a number of colored persons from .Savannah and Augusta, (In., scut their children to Charleston to be taught, According to tradition, some of these students returned end opened schools iu Savannah and In Augusta. No one, bow ever, was lawfully permitted to give book instruction to slaves, not even iu any one of the three KV Whatever was done In this way was done clandestinely, ami if discovered was sure to get its author into trouble. There were nevertheless several school kept clandestinely in Augusta and in Savannah. Another class of teachers nsra the poor whites, who eked out a mis erable living by clandestinely teaching free negroes and slaves. Some of them might have been denominated not "old field schools. " but "old chip schools." When I some aged, impecunious white lady would i ngreo to teuch the children of such slaves as had lured their time, the Children wero said to go toiler boUMtO ''pick Up chip. " They were busily engaged in this work when an officer was likely to he around. The most noted of these clandestine schools for colored children was taught by a colored man in Savannah, it was opened in 1818 or 1819 by n colored French man named Julian Proumoutainu from San Domingo. Up to ls"0 this school was taught openly, for before that date the lawsof Georgia did not forbid the teaching of a free person of color. In referring to this prohibitory law in justice it ought to bo admitted that the requirements of the "institution of slavery" were such that it would have been unwise to undertake to maintain the system of slavery and run the risk of having the slaves read such literature ns began then to bo circulated ty the abolitionists. It is prop'-r nlso to add that many slaveholders did not share this fear and were wiliing in the faco of slavery to give their slaves elementary teaching in rending and writing. After Dec. M, 1889, it was made a penal offense to teach a negro or free person of color to read or write. Hcnca from that time ail negro schools were clandestine. Froumoutaine's school, however, nour ished under him for more than iu years. It laid the foundation of ,the educational work among the Colored people of Georgia. Several of bis pupils clandestinely taught school to the beginning of the war. Bul letin of Atlanta University. GET STRONG 'TIS SPRING. The Tailor's Argument. In "Thrums" lived a merchant, tailor who ordered from a friend, a book agent, a completo set of nn encyclopedia which was being published in monthly parts. All went well till tho delivery of the lost volume, which proved to be about one half larger than any of the others. Deliv ery was refused on the ground that the volume was not according to sample and broke the uniformity of the set. Mr. Comrie Thompson was then artingheriff substitute for Forfarshire, and Hie result ing ease came before him. The plaintiff stated his case, and Mr. Thompson then advised the defendant to take delivery, adding i "Now, Mr.- , don't be foolish. If the book is larger, they don t propose to charge vou anything extra, aud you ought to consider you are having a bargain." "Well," pleaded the defendant, "I'm a tailor, ami if your lordship were to order a coat from me, and I quoted a price and afterward delivered the coat a half size bigger than you wanted it, you would, 1 have no doubt, refuse delivery. Aud I might then say: 'Don't be foolish, sheriff. The coat, it's true is much larger than you want, but tbeoth is tbe same, and 1 won't make any extra charge. You ought to consider you are having a bargain.' " This rather tickled the court, which ex pNasd its appreciation of tho point some what noisily. Verdict for the pluintiff, with costs. London Tit-Hits. Hone; MuJiIiik Wasps. The rardmaking wasp uf Brazil, it I said, manufactures a honey the use of which Is not without dangir, as it occa ioim vertigo. In .South America large rjnantitics of honey are collected from the rusts built in trees by un insect which is supposed to belong to the lice tribe. Then there are the bnmburos, whoso honey whole towns In Ceylon go Into the woods to gather. There are nlso in our own tountry ants which const met underground testa, but their chief peculiarity is that In iddition to the ordinary Inhabitant of an snts' nest there I n special cIosr railed honey benrers. These live entirely in the nest and receive the food onllected by the workers, store it up In thrir globulnr nb lomtnSj which nr.! capable of great expan sion and regurgitate It In the form of honey when any of their comrades desire to bo fed. rhey are, in fact, merely living honey bags. Another species of honey ant has been found In Australia, ami a species of coccus in India provides itself with a small quantity of honey. Brooklyn Engln. Paine's Celery Compound tlie Remedy That M:kes People Well. '' p Your boy. You hop he's going to great man. YOU IlilVt! tO form lliS Character ell tll03e are points he'll have to overcome, more or ' leas. HnwflVflr his nha.rant.nr io tn a. nart.ain avtont. Dflt thatS IlOt CnOUgU. unchangeable ' You can only modify, not radically change, his faults. March Is, in far', th first month in the year. January stands first on the calender only for convenience of business. Now is the tiuio to get well! Tl.rongh the long wiuter most man and women do not taste fresh air nor drink in sunlight oftenur thau unco a week or oucs a fortnight. It is no wonder so many hard-working meu and women approach spring with a feeling of weaknets and dehility aud n languor of mind they cannot shake iff without the assistance of a blood pm ificr iiuda true food tor the nerves and brain. Beyond a doubt the best spring medi cine is Paine's celery compound. With its use aUeases loosen their hold iu the spring These are tl e favorable months for attacking rhenmatism, lutnbigo, nr vou disease and weakness of the di gtsiive organs and Paiue'o celery compound cures them where every thing else fail. The most eminent profesjar, and a man of tremendous experience, Prof, Edward E Pbelpg, M. D LL. D. dis covered tne formuli for Paine's ciilerv compound in the futnous laboratory connected with the Dartmouth medical school. It is the remarkable outcome uf the contury'situdy of blood aud ner ves, and their close depetidance upon each other for health. Dot remember tne tlms-worn text: ' Spring conies l.nt one a year." Take advantage of the favorable season. GM well and strong and free from the ail ments that come from poor blood and worn-out nerves. Changes in the blond and tiervou tissues take place very rupidly ut this lime. In March and April the blood is most capable of throwing off its impurities. Purify tb blood and invigorate the nervous system with Paine's celery com pound. llHrd times and over work are best met with Paine's celery compound. Indigestion yields to a re.tsonabl care In taking Paine's celery compound. Liver and kidney troubles will uotper- sistwbeu only pure blood tl ws through thsi important organ i he cure of diseases of the stomach and nerves by i 'nine's celery cetuponud starts at the very cause of the trouble; thin, watery blond, and jaugied, shaitr nerves. Thuns'inds of overworked business men and hosts of plain, hard-working people are today strong aud happy whose lives were full of wrethedness and weukneis before tiyiug Paine's eob-rv compound. Disorders of tho liver, stomach, and kidneys c in now be thoroughly driven out of the system by Paine s celery compound, the remedy that makes peo ple well. At the hist indication of nervous weakness and a "run down" condition of the system, tone up the stomach with Paine's celery compound, regulate tho nervous system and nourish the body by thi great invigorator. Try it and be convinced. One of the best known young meu of liolyoke, Mass., Mr h. .1. Movett, whose likeness is given above, writes ,' frankly: "I have taken Fames celery com pound and found it to be tbe best m dicine that I have ever taken. I felt weak and run down and conld not eat anything in the morning, also bad a vomiting spell every morning after getting up. I took part of two bottle of P .tine's celery compound and fel better than I have for a year. I can cheerfully recomm-n t it to anv one. My wife is now taking it for weakness and nervousness, and it helps her very much. The druggist where we trude tells my wife that Paint's celerv com pound outsell any other medicine that they keep. That is the story from one end of the country to the other; because Paine' celery compound cures. Complexion Preserve;! OR. HCSRA'S VIOLA CREAM Removes Freokleo, f impfes L mr Mobs, Bisclttieidl, Sunburn and Tan, and re stores tho sit In to iti origi nal freshness, producing a riftnr and heallhv com- nlcilnn. Futwrlor to till una preparations snd perfcrtly harmless. At all urugtjlut, or mailed for SOeta. Send tor Circular, VIOLA SKIN 80AP liiy nomirDio u lltla purlfrtarc Sop, UMiiilal for U MM, and without a rind ft tVo DuhMT;. AUolnwW wn and dulkuj Mdl- drufitoi. Prion 23 Crnl. G. C. BITTNER & CO., Toledo, O, For sale by Matthews Bros .Morgan llron.auil Moi-faii St Co. m ST Indapo maae a wen Man of The Motherlesn Children. Mrs. Richard Clarke, wife of the con gressman from Mobile, Is one nf the few women brave enough to scatter witty things in the waste of five minute olTlrial calls. At the house of Mrs. Hale of .Maine tho church servico was mentioned, "There's) onn portion of the litany,"mld Mrs, Clnrke, "that always used to bother me. It's where wo pray especially for the 'widowed and fatherless.' I never could seo why they needed praying for so much, as I thought motherless children deserved pity much more, but I've just found out why the motherlean aren't mentioned. It's because there are ho few of them, as the first thing a man does when he is bereft of his wife is to look nround for a new moth er for his children." In tho laugh that followed Mrs. Clnrke clinched her argument on the litany with, "I think I ought to know, for didn't I marry a widower mysclff" Kato FMd'a Washingtor -r TRIM KM f ftaisisnato. 1 P I It 1 fJUfV I IMA mm Ilia1 OKI! AT HlrMQOO REMEDY rUOOt'TM TI1K A HOVE (C m i.i in BO IIAVN. Cup all NtT vim PlHrtuton, F ih n K Mi morj i - i' niutipiv-iiicns, .URUtir int. in- - '. -. i hy print ahiiiMn, fflven Tlrr arulp.ee ' in -I'.- " ' iiulckly but mri'ly !, 1411 Mu nhoi.fi lit olil r fOQM. Mfwily oari In VMt pOCkt. I'rtoofl.OO aimrkftOT Bit for 5.00 With n v rlii. ii gunrntttrr to citTf op in rvf-Hfed. !nn't l't unr untirlrtclplrfl druirirM you cutty kind imitation InuHton IiavIiib I1't( nnnM.1iT 11 lit has nut Rot It, wo will 'i i U )y mall npun tuot lp' of price. Pumplil'it In mmmw nvtlOM ink, Adilrrin Ortentml Htxtluol t'o , Props. , Ihlftgo, lit, orourRfvRU. SOLD hy Matthews litm.. VVhulokatr and Retail I '..:' ' SCRANTON, I'A , and utber Lead inn UtugKisti. Seeds and Fertilizers Large Medium and White Clover, Choice Timothy and Lawn Grass Seeds Guano, Bone Dust and Phosphates for Farms, Lawns and Gardens. HUNT & CONNELL CO. FREE All "Situation Wanted" ads inserted free ANNUAL CLEARIN A. B. Brown's Bae Hive, Pittston, Pa. S A. j. j YOUR BOY Your boy will be a man some day. Will he be an insig. nificant or a great man? That depends on the chance you give him. You hopa he'll succeed. It lie3 with you as to whether he will or not. You may not think so. You may think you can't do much with him. He's obstinate, perhaps hard to handle. Frederick the Great. Something ALL great mea have hid. Your boy can't be great without it, A. B. BROWN'S BEE HIVE, PITTSTON, PA. How to educate him, Let him read and choose his own career. You think education costs too much. The very best education The best edition. Only H days more. Call and examine. Titt act. The father of Frederick the Great thought his boy was a blockhead up to tha tima ha was 16 year3 of age, but he didn't stop educating him. There's one thing that all great men have had, as boys, as young men. They have had it given to them or they have given it to themselves. Had they never had it they would never have become great. They have had education. Your boy cannot possibly ba anything, become any thing, without knowing. The more ha knows the bet ter he'll ba. Knowledge is power, riches, fame. You want to do your duty by him? Give him a chance. Teach him or let him teach himself. Give him education. "Without books God is silent, justica dormant, natural science at a stand, philosophy lama, letters dumb, and all things involved in Cimmerian darkness." If you give him books he will soon chese for himself the subject in which he is most interested, which ha can most easily study. This study is tha one ha is mo3t fitted to pursue, the one in which he will make the mo3t success. It is natural that it should be so. You think: "Books, ah yes, how many hundreds of dol lars will I have to spendbafore he discovers what he is best fitted for?" True, but there's another way. Invest $4.50 and give your boy the advantage of that greatest of all refer ence libraries, the Encyclopedia Britannica. It wiil place him on a par with tha college graduate. THE TRIBUNE EDITION is the best and latest edition of this great work, with all it3 wealth of information and education revised to the present time. You have but 14 days in which to secura this great work at $1.98 per volume and on easy terms of pay ment. You will find the Encyclopedia Store at 437 SPRUCE STREET. Open during the day and evening during these 14 days. You certainly ought to think it over. We know if you think you will act. Ii TUB E. B. DEPARTMENT Sprixc Thousands Remnants of Dry Good, cloaks and Fnr Capes during sail; at 1ms than cost of material, Every inch of counter room covered with tho greatest bargains ever shown. Ludied' Felt Ilnln, thin aeanon's atylos 1 03. oiioh. Boys' Winter WniiU I0o enoh. Maftl 30c. each. Cloaki : $1.50 each. HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR AND NOTIONS AT (QUARTER OF VALUE. COME. IT WILL PAY YOU. Great Clearing Sale. Spring Ginghams. We have placed on sale our line of Ginghams for the coming spring and summer. Finer Goods, More Tasteful Colorings and Lower Prices than ever before, are what will recommend them to our patrons. GLOBE WAREHOUSE, PITTSTON, PA. THK Thatcher IS THS BEST. Get price nml feo th furnace nnd be con vinced. A lull line of HEAT ERS, Appello and Uauze Door Range. CONLAFS HARDWARE PITTSTON, PA. PUZZLE i THE GREATEST NOVELTY OF THE AGE. Valuable ns a Souvenir of the Fair. QUITE I ASY WBVN YOU KNOW HOW S300 IN PftlZKM WIM, BR DISTRIBUTED TO THosH DOINu Till: VI fi.LK IN THE HIIOHTKST HPACIO !' TI MK FOR BALB BV AUli NEWS COMPANIES STATIONBB8 AND AT TOY STOKES, OK BENT TO ANY ADllItESS I'PON KECKIPT OP PRIOR, 2.". CENTS, NY COLUMBIA MANUFACTURING CO.. ItS AND 114 SOUTH EUTAW STREET, I1ALTIMOKE, Ml).