FREELAND TRIBUNE. Published Every Thursday Afternoon -BY THOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS, - - SI.OO PER YEAR. Address till Communications to FREELAND TRIBUNE, FREELAND, PA. OIUco, lllrkbeek Ilriek, 3d Uoor, Centre Street. Entered at the Frecland PostoJJice an Second Clans Matter. FREELAND, PA., .11 I.V 11, 1889. THE Japanese Government litis lintl a weather service department in oper ation at Tokio for some time, and re ports that its predictions are excellent and can always be relied upon every time. Tli' standard indication is "clear, fail' or cloudy, with possible j rains." That is bound to hit what- \ ever way the wind blows. SEVERAL more territories are likely soon to knock at the door of the union for admission to the sisterhood of states. Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, New Mexico and Arizono are each becom ing anxious for statehood, and the question for their admission is likely to be considered by the coming con gress. There ought, however, to be no room in the union for Utah until she abandons the practice of poly ganiy. PENSION COMMISSIONER TANNER is evi dently in favor of that Democratic campaign cry, "reduce the surplus," although his methods of reducing are somewhat different from those which the Democrats would use. Since he stepped into office he has paid out the $90,000,000 appropriated for this year, wants $15,000,000 more, and has 100,000 petitions on tile for new pensions and relating. If the cor poral were a general the country would be dead broke before Harrison's ad ministration is a l ear old. THE battle of the giants is over, and the result is told in another column. There are many things to be said pro and con about prize fighting, but the stern fact remains that in nil times and ages man has reverenced bodily strength. "While the surroundings and concomitants of prize fights are not at all laudable, the fact that they encourage the cultivation of bodily strength is in their favor. Our best physicians can to-day receive instruc tions from professional trainers as to the best method of developing the highest condition of physical perfec tion. THE charter of the Louisiana Lot tery Company is about expiring, and the question of a new charter is promi nent in the politics of the state. The managers of the lottery have offered to pay the entire debt of that state, about $12,000,000, provided they are allowed in return a fifty years' license. The thousands upon thousands of dupes who contribute month after month to swell the income of this gambling corporation will be inter ested in the foregoing announcement. It shows where their money goes. In Louisiana it is said the lottery com pany owns all the Republican politi cians and a good share of the Demo crats. It lias on its pay rolls most of the members of the legislature, state officials and active politicians. VARIOUS arrangements have been proposed for the new United States llag when the four additional states come in. The present ling contains upon the blue union the thirty-eight stars arranged in five rows across the field, three rows containing eight stars each and two rows with seven stars each. In arranging the forty two stars it lias been suggested that there be six rows containing seven stars each. Another suggestion is that there be three rows containing eight stars each, as at present, anil ami two rows with nine stars. But this would necessitate changing the proportions of the blue field, which must not be done. A third propo sition is to change the arrangement of the stars altogether, and instead of in rows place them in the form of a six pointed star. THE complexion of the next Con- j gross is a cause of considerable un easiness to the Republican managers. Of the present members elect 1(M are Republicans, ICO Democrats, with one j vacancy in the 3d Louisiana district' which will undoubtedly be tilled by a Democrat. The new states will send live Congressmen. Of these, one, the j Montana member, is reasonably cer- J tain to be a Democrat, and while the other new states may be classed among i the Republicans the Democrats do not purpose to let them go without a struggle. The Republicans still need two members to have a quorum, and the ilocution is, can they secure them! 11 the Republicans carry but one of the districts the house will be a tie, and the wholesale unseating of Demo crats which the Republicans purpose to adopt in order to secure a working majority, will he frustrated. If the Republicans carry more than one they will have a majority, but it will bo so small that under good leadership the Democrats can embarras them to an alarming extent. Chairman Brice 1 has his eye on the baby states and a desperate and concentrated effort will bo made to secure at least two or three of the districts. Already the national committee is moving in the matter and the outcome will be eagerly watched for. The ninth annual encampment of the I'ennsylvania Sons of Veterans convened J at lienova yesterday. Overproduction a Fallacy. j The employment of machinery anl | other labor-saving inventions has in- | creased and cheapened productions, yet they have not, nor will ever, keep pace with the increasing wants and demands of advancing civilization. The higher the civilization, the better educated the people, the more it develops new and increasing wants and desires, and to this there is no limit. The wants of the savage can he counted on the fingers' ends, while those people in the nigh j state of civilization have wants that are j us numerous as the stars in heaven there is no end. The way out of the dilemma is not to work and throw the people into idleness and crime, but to j cultivate their desires by a higher civili zation so they will crave for more, not less, of the good things of this world. When the people desire a certain thing they will exert themselves to acquire it < and not before. It is ignominious folly to talk of an overproduction of goods while half the people are suffering for those very things which they tell us j have been produced in too great an . abundance. There has been no over- i production of shoes as long as there is one person going barefooted or with ! holey shoes, or an overproduction in j cotton cloth, woollen goods, or any other j article of comfort until every person in the land has all he desires to make himself comfortable and lmnpy. As long as there is one person ill fed or ill clothed who desires to be better provided for, and is willing to work to that end, there has been no overproduction, but an un jointing of the equitable laws of produc tion and consumption is what is the matter and what causes the trouble.— Labor Standard. Another Political Party in the Field. A new political party that wants to be- I friend and champion the working man has started in New York. Its full title ■ is the Progressive Reform Party of the | United States of America, and John! I McMakin, who was the chief of the ! i defunct United Labor Party, is to be its ! prophet. The founders of the party say ; | that they do not want to nominate any j 1 candidates for political offices—their j | membership is not large enough—but I they will hold the balance of power between the two great parties, una thus I j keep them in order. They will prevent I corrupt legislation, and, in case their j | efforts should fail in that direction, they ■ will proceed to expose the bad legislators, j j While they advocate the reduction of ' I the protective tar iff—they want to abolish 1 I duties on raw materials and reduce the ! j duties of manufacturing necessaries 50 j per cent.—they make a number of j I demands in their platform. They want ! I the United States Government to estab- j I lish a merchant marine, or to guarantee j j 5 per cent, dividends to those corpora- j | tions that may do so. Among other i demands are the repeal of all laws pro-' , hibiting the sale of intoxicating bcver- ! ages, the repeal of all license laws on the I | liquor traffic, the repeal of Sunday laws, j jor any sumptuary laws enacted by the ; ! State or municipalities. They futhcr j | demand that all corporations, such as | railroad, elevated railroad, electric light, I telegraph, telephone and canal boat, i should become the nominal property of i the General or Municipal Government, which will guarantee a dividend of 5 per cent, to the stockholders. The Irish Contribution. i It seemed almost cruel to accept such j a contribution as that which came from j j Ireland for the relief of the Johnstown ! I sufferers. The first installment cabled j was SSOOO, with the promise of more at j an early date. When it is remembered ' that a large portion of the people of j Ireland are themselves poverty-stricken | and in need of aid, such a contribution i is princely—while at the same time it I partakes of the virtues of the widow's - | mite. The American people have ever \ responded grandly to every cry of i ; distress from Ireland, but in such cases ! it lias been a great, powerful and rich | people contributing to small, weak, poor and oppressed people. Now poor Ire ! land strains herself to the utmost to j , assist in relieving a distressed American i j community. The people of this great ' I nation will not forget the self-sacrificing act. Money is even now needed to re lieve the pressing necessities of thousands 1 of poor in Ireland, but they are cheer- j fully making a sacrifice in behalf of those \ whom they believe to be in still greater I need. The SSOOO contribution from this ' poor people is more than a million would j be from Kngland, or Germany, or Franee, j —Scranton Republican. A Very Grave M lit take. j There are more young men learning i trades in the penitentiaries in this country than outside of them. The | principal cause this is that we are educat- I ing young men for idle gentlemen, trying | to make lawyers, preachers, doctors and i j clerks out of materials that is needed for ! ! blacksmiths, carpenters, machinists and I other honest "hewers of wood and j | drawers of water." It is a mistake, and | ' a big one, to teach boys and girls that! ! labor is disgraceful, and that to do | nothing for a living is more becoming in i i the society in which they have to move I ! and have respect. Hang such society! j I It is rotten to the core and is ruining our ; country to-day. There are many sons ! and daughters who are now being i 1 educated to play the part of "leading I , lady" and "walking gentleman" in the j great drama of life, who will light out : for the poor house or the penitentiary j before the curtain drops on the last sad j I act of the play to which they have been | educated by their too indulgent parents. 1 An Editor Given a Few Foiutern. After you get angry and stop your paper, says an exchange, just poke your linger in water, pull it out, and you look for the hole. Tnen you will know how sadly you are missed. A mail who thinks a paper cannot thrive without his support ought to go off and stay awhile. When he comes hack, half his friends will not know that he was gone, and the other half will not care a cent, while the , world at large kept no account of Ids movement. You will find things that you cannot endorse in every paper. Kven the Bible is rather plain, and hits some hard licks. If you were t<> get mad and burn your Bible, the hundreds of presses would still go on printing it; and when you stop your paper, and call the editor names, the paper will still be 1 published, and, what is more, you will read it on the sly. II IK Home Wan DeHtroyed. Among the many sufferers by the recent flood in this state was J. B. liae, Master Workman of N. T. A. 135. whose home at Coalmont was entirely des troyed. Mr. Rae was away from home at the time attending to the interest of bis District, and the first he knew of the misfortune which had befallen him was when he received u dispatch from his son, saying: "Home swept away by flood; saved nothing but our lives." Mr. Jtae is a hard-working miner, and his home represented the savings of a life- j time. The Pittsburg Trade* Journal has opened a subscription list, and will make an effort to raise a sum of money large enough to rebuild the home of the miners' Master Workman. WIT AND HUMOR. "My dear wife," murmured pater familias as lie looked at the dressmak er's bill.— Boston Bulletin. Queen Victoria has dismissed her j corset-lacer, but her Majesty will "stay there" a while longer.— Boston Trail- \ i script. When a girl slams the frout door in a suitor's faee she has certainly been guilty of contempt of court. — Dans \ ititle Breeze. Patti says plenty of sleep is the secret of preserving one's beauty. That j accounts for Philadelphia having such handsome polioeineu.—l 'onkers States- ' man. "Yes," said Mrs. Porcine, "I'm | mighty afraid of ghosts, but thou I keep them away from me by wearing \ an omelet round my neck." — Jewelers'' j Weekly. The Mare Island Navy-Yard is to be put in commission for repairing steel ' ships. It will be a good place for i drilling horse marines.— New Orleans Picayune. "Do you find it hard to turn your ! jokes into poetry?" she asked. "Not so 1 very," replied Pubbs. "The hardest thiug is to turn poetry into money." ! Time. South Carolina is a moral State. Divorce is entirely unknown there. When a man gets sick of his wife lie simply swaps her off for a cow.—Bur lington Free Press. Nothing takes the conceit out of ail adoring young ntau like a pretty girl, i and nothing inspires conceit in a pretty girl so much as an adoring young man. j —Somerville Journal. I A good woman is seldom the cause ] of any evil. It was not Eve, but a crawling reptile that dispossessed the j Adam family of its pleasant pre ' emption.— Buffalo Express. It is said that there are 1,200 actors out. of employment iu the country. 5 They ought to be given the places of \ some of the people on tlio stage who are not actors. — Baltimore American. j Brown —-The price of coal is fluctu- i i ating. Robinson—Yes, the price goes '' ! up and down, but the weight remains ' stationary in the neighborhood of j 1,600 pounds to the ton. — Texas Sift- j j inys. i Mr. Gabb—l see that Mind-Reader Bishop's wife wants a divorce. Mrs. Gttdd—No wonder. It must bo per -1 feotly awful to be married to a man who can read your mind.— Philadelphia I Bccord. Bloodgood—How are you getting on j witn Miss Debut, PoseyboyP llavo 1 you broken the ieo yet? l'osevboy— Yes! and got a cold bath that I shan't forget to my dying day.—Burlington Free Press. Family doctor—"Your ivifo needs outdoor exercise more than anything else." Husband—"But site won't go ! out. What am I to doP" "Give her plenty of money to shop with."— New York Weekly. An usher iu a Kansas church has turned out to bo a burglar. His down full probably dates from the time when : lie began putting strangers in pews 1 where a draught would strike them.— Burlington Free Press. Ethel—(to her betrothed) —Do learn to skate, George. I'm sure you would i look lovely on ice. George (a young and rising undertaker) —Look lovely on ice, would I? Thank you no hurry I about it.— Texas Siftingn. When a doctor prescribes wiue to a j patient who rather likes wine, but who j doesn't approve of it, the patient goes J by apothecary measure and doesn't let his scruples interfere with his drains, j — Somerville Journal. | "Did you hear about the burglar who j was arrested this morning?" "No. j What for?" "For breaking iuto song." ! "Is that so?" "Yes. He got through i two bars wlion some oue hit him with a stave."— Scranton Truth. j Mrs. Tiptop—My dear, that Mr. Nieefelloiv, who is comiug hero so I often, hasn't a penny to his name, i Daughter—lie has a rich bachelor ! uncle. "But it isn't the undo that I comes."— Philadelphia Bccord. I Young lady—Anything new in writ j ing paper? Dealer—Yes Miss, ive have one new style ugly enough to givo folks a lit and so rough that no human be ing can write on it. "How cute! Give I me a box."— Philadelphia Bccord. i Mrs. Hopeful—ls my boy improv i ing any? Professor of pennmansliip— -1 He is getting worse. His writing is now so had no living soul can read it. "How lovely! The darling! He'll be a great author some day."— New York Weekly. I A Hotel Trust is about to bo organ j ized. This does not mean, however, that travelers without baggago need no j longer pay iu advance. It means that I I where they formerly had to pay $2 they will hereafter bo asked for $4. — New | York Sun. | Dumley—There conies Brown up j ] the street. I owe that man a grudge, and I propose to pay him with in terest. Robinson—Going to pay him I now, Dumley? Dumley—No, not j now. Let's turn down this way.— New ! York Sun. First tramp—Ah, yes, I've seen bet tor days, better days. 1 used to be a manufacturer of roller skates. Second ! tramp—Same way with me, parti, same way with me. I used to be a manufacturer of pocket diaries. — Philadelphia Becord. He (departing)—l hope, Miss Smith, I will he green in your memory. She— (tenderly)—Yes, Mr. Grassley, and you will be green in the memory of every body who lias known you. But don't he sad, Mr. Grassly, you'll be ripe by and by, maybe.— Washington Post. "Sir," said she, "do you expect me, a saleslady in Tauely & Jaxon's dry good's emporium, to marry a common clerk?" "I tun not a common clerk," lie answered; "I am a salesgent." She fell into bis arms and murmured, "I am thine."— Terre Haute Express. Under the terms of a will left by an lowa man the same gold watch was left to thirteen different persons. Ho was not friendly with any of them and j lie probably did it hoping they would light each other, which they are do ing in a lively manner. tr— The announcement is made that a Paris chemist lias at last succeeded in making real diamonds from a secret composition. Good! As soon as they get down to $1 a bushel the hotel clerk lias got to answer a civil question or j stop down uud out- * ' *'~ Jones—You're coining to our con cert to-night, Snip, of course? Snip— : Well, no, sir; I 'ardly think so. I should like to, much; hut, you HOC, with all you gentlemen on tho plat form owin' me for the clo's you'll be wearin', I couldn't rightly enjoy tho music.— Time. MISSING LINKS. Kiu# Milan 1 8amnesty decree releases 10.000 prisoners. The judges of the supremo court of Pennsylvania have decided to wear black silk gowns. The Tulare (Cal.) litgister estimates that there are 3,000 professional tramps in California. A Cedar Rapids, lowa, clergyman recently took for his text: "Can a man with a family work for S3O a month aud be a Christian. A German statistician figures up that England has caused the death of j 50,000,000 people and has wrought ! $10,000,000,000 worth of destruction. A. W. Pierce, of Capo Elizabeth, | Me., owns one of the largest poultry farms in New England. He has at between 7,000 and 8,000 birds. ; The word "folk lore, 11 invented by ! the late W. J. Thomas for use in Eng- I lisli, has been adopted by the French j and appears in the titles of new publi- ; cations. A correspondent says that not only j are Maine herrings sold for sardines, j but that the alleged olive oil in which i they are packed is sitnply cotton-seed ! oil. King Khoulalonkorn sends his royal brother to China as a wedding present j a big gold foot-stool studded with i large rubies. This gift is said to be j worth $200,000. A lady in Atlanta, Ga., lost her ouly child just one year ago, and not a day has since passed that she has not gone to the cemetery aud knelt in prayer beside his grave. In its editorial department the De troit Free Press has eleven persons whose service averages over seventeen . years. The managing editor was en gaged in 18G5; the editor-in-chief iu 1801. It seems that there are now only 100,000 Germans in France—less than half the number that lived there before the Franco-Prussian war. More than one-third of these are quartered iu i Paris. It is said that in eight cases out of ten if a man gets $50,000 all of a sud den he will either go cracked in the head or make a laughing stock of him self. That's doubtless the reason why Providence keeps $50,000 away from so many of us. The advantage of technical schools has been illustrated in Crefeld, Ger many, where over $1,000,000 has been spent on its lower schools and $250,- 000 on a special weaving school. It has doubled its population and quad rupled its trade. A Frenchman has invented a new sys tem for propelling canal boats. It consists of an endless cable running along the two banks. The boats are moved at double the ordinary speed, aud can readily be attached and de- | tached from the cables. At a circus fair in Oroville, Cal., there were several mammoth exhibits of oranges. They included an im mense golden heart, covered with thousands of oranges, a grand monu ment on which were displayed 10,000 samples of the fruit, and a huge basket iu which were piled up 12,150 oranges. I Another splendid exhibit was a Jap anese pagoda, iu which nearly five thousand oranges and lemons were displayed. A Pittsburg man is said to have really married a girl under the impres sion that he was marrying her sister. His courtship of the other girl was brief, and the sisters so closely re sembled each other that he proposed and was accepted before he discovered his mistake, lie has never confessed that he made this odd error, but the girl who lost a good husband because of it insists to this day that she ought to be in her sister's shoes. The Norwegian State Antiquarian Nicalavsen has completed the excava tiou of the ruins of an ancient monast ery on the west coast of Norway. The assembly-room, sacristy and refectory | have been uncovered, and the covered corridor running along the court yard. The roof of the assembly hall seems to have been supported by a huge central pillar. All the details of the architecture show a rich aud ad vanced Romanesque style, and the in terior arrangements are gcnerall}' identical with those found in early Euglish monasteries. A few graves were found, aud iu one the remains of an abbot, judging from the cloak aud miter found with the skeleton. In many establishments in Albany, Journal , workiugmen demand the privilege of bringing beer into the factories for consumption at the noon hour, and iu at least one establishment beer is paid for by the proprietors. In the lithographic establishments of this country, where the work is mainly done by German workiugmen, a stipu lation requires the proprietors to fur nish beer as a part of the employes 1 wages. In one lithographic establish ment in New York, where 600 men are employed, each one receives, by con tract, three pints of beer per day. An effort was made to break up this sys tem, but so much trouble ensued that it hud to be relinquished. A correspondent from Italy speaks of the vast proportions aud evil re sults of the emigration from that country to the United States: It is so large that not a few districts are left without cultivation or at the price of labor which renders all produce uure munerative. It is, as it were, the mo tion of a pendulum. I remember the time when labor was so ill paid that starvation was almost the sure conse quence. Now every one is Hying to the United States or Brazil or the Piata, and comparatively few remain j to cultivate a rich and grateful soil. A lamentable feature of the exodus is that women are turned into beasts ot burden and compelled to do the work that should fall to the lot of man. More than 150 languages aud dia lects are current in India and British Burmah, with their 256,000,000 of peo ple, and the district alphabets of these countries, many of which are very elaborate, out-number all others in the I world. Some forty different alphabets i or syllable systems, each having from 250 to 500 combinations, are used to represent the sounds of the 150 lan guages, and more than 10,000 different signs and types have been elaborated from the original alphabet to represent the fifty different sounds—all that the combined Indian vernaculars contain. As these simple sounds cannot be re presented by the twenty-six letters of the Euglish alphabet twenty-four let ters of the English phonetic alphabet are captured and made to do service iu this new English phonetic alphabet, and wo then have one simple alphabet takiug the places of fort}' or more and j becoming available as the written language of 200,000,000 people who have no written alphabet, because i thev don't kuow just how to use one. SULLIVAN WINS. The prize fight between John L. Sullivan and Jake Kilrain for the championship of the world and $20,000 took place at Richburg, Miss., 105 miles distant from New Orleans on Monday morning. Seventy-five rounds were fought, Kilrain's seconds throwing up the sponge when time was called for the seventy-sixth. Neither men were seri ously injured, although Kilrain was very weak at the close. Kilrain won first fall and first blood, Sullivan got first knockdown. The time was 2 hours and 18 minutes. There was no interference and Kilrain was first to shy his castor into the ring. He was seconded by Charley Mitchell and Mike Donovan, with John Murphy as bottle holdei. Sullivan followed a minute later and was loudly cheered. His seconds were Wm. Muldoon and Mike (Jleary with Daniel Murphy of Boston bottle holder. Pat Kennick of New Orleans was suggested for referee by Kilrain, and John Fitzpatrick also of New Orleans by Sullivan. After slight wrangling Fitzpatrick was mutually agreed upon. Kilrain won the toss for position and selected the northeast corner. Sullivan took the southwest. Just before time was called Kilrain stepped over to Sulli van and proffered a wager of SI,OOO on | the result, which was promptly accepted I by Sullivan and the money placed in j Referee Fitzpatrick's hands. It was the most noted contest in I ancient or moderu times, and has at j tracted the attention of the civilized I world for months. During all the pre i mirations Sullivan was the favorite, and liis work in the ring showed that the | expectations of his friends were based upon a firm foundation. The perfection | of physical development which Sullivan attained under the instruction of his | trainer, William Muldoon, was marvel j oils, and places the latter in the front rank of instructors in the manly art. From beginning to the end Sullivan showed himself much the better man. lie pushed the fight from the start, and : never but once showed any sign of exhaustion. The management of the light throughout showed a disposition to make it a fair test of the abilities of the | two principals, and all mere technicalities ' were quickly waived by both parties, j The partisans of Kilrain did not appear willing to put up money on their cham pion unless odds were offered; but still j an enorumous amount of money changed hands. Below will be found a short | sketch of the principals. JOHN 1.. SUI.LIVAX ; was born of Irish parents in "The liigh j lands," Boston, on October 15,1858. lie j stands 5 feet 10} inches on his bare feet ' and is in perfect physical condition I when weighing about 190 pounds. J When thoroughly trained his physical : measurements are chest 14 inches, biceps 10$, calf 151, thigh 27. j Sullivan first began to spar in public .in 1879. Since then he has met all the best men in this country and several ! imported pugilists with almost unvary ing success. Three times only has the I Boston man essayed to fight with nature's weapons unadorned—in IS,SI with Flood, in 1882 with Ryan and in 1888 with Charlie Mitchell. His shortest engage ment was at Memphis, Tenn.,on May 1, 1884, where be knocked out William Fleming in two seconds alter time was j called. JAKE KILRAIN ; is also of Irish parentage, and was born j at (ireenpoint, Columbia County, New ! York, on February 9, 1859. As a young man he worked* in a rolling mill at : Somerville, near Boston. After two or j three rough and tumble fights Jake took | to sculling, and in 1883 won the junior , sculling championship at the national ; amateur regatta held at Newark. On it being subsequently discovered that the ! oarsman was also a professional pugilist j bis career as an amateur sculler was j abruptly closed. ! Kilrain then took to boxing as a ' means of livelihood, and although he I has not fought one-half the glove con ! tests that Sullivan has, his record is an 1 eminently creditable one. With the | naked fists he fought the English cham ! pion, Jem Smith, on the Isle St. Pierre, j France, on December 19, 1887, the en j gagement ending in a draw after fighting I 190 rounds in 2 hours and 31 minutes. I It was generally admitted that Kilrain I had the best of the battle when the ref eree declared it a draw owing to ap proaching darkness. Since then he has indulged in boxing exhibitions with Charlie Mitchell in this country and | England. I Kilrain stands 5 feet 104 inches high, ; and in his best lighting trim weighs about 195 pounds. His measurements I are chest 42 inches, biceps 10, forearm 14, thigh 25, calf 17. The Inn-ease of a Day. Saturday, June 29, was a red-letter day in the history of Chicago. The work of that day is aosolutqjy without prece ! dent in the history of the great munici | palities of the world, of which Chicago is now, territorially, the largest. On Friday the city contained forty three square miles. On Saturday by a vote of a large majority of all the elec tors concerned this area was increased by 131 square miles, making a total of 174. Philadelphia, the next largest city of the Union, has 129; New York, with the greatest number of people in the country, has only 49; while London, the largest city in the world, has but 124 square miles within its limits. The esti mated population of the city on Friday was, the oasis of calculation being the new city directory, 900,900. On Satur day night Hyde Park, Lake View, Lake, Jerferson, and a part of Cicero having been added, there was a gain of 200,900 at the very least, making the present population of Chicago 1,100,009. The Federal enumeration, winch will be made next year, will doubtless establish officially and beyond question that Chi cago is the second city in the United States. In the legal sense this was a day's growth. Practically, the extension has been going forward for many years, the legally added population being merely the overflow of a crowded city.— Chicuyo Time*. The addition to Chicago, it will be per-; ceived from the above statement, is larger than the whole area of Philadel phia. This enlargement will undoubt edly put Chicago in the third place among American cities for population, as it will put it in the first place for spread. But Philadelphia will bold second place in 1890 in the number of people and first in the number of dwellings for people to live in. TTOK SALE CHEAP. A double block of I? houses ami lot, situated on burton's Mill Foster Township, the property of William Itutfuns. For terms apply to William Kuinms, or T. A. Buckley Freeftuiu. Justus Troell, THE OLDEST UNDERTAKER In the region, has removed his business estab lishment to No. 12 Front Street. Freeland. E3PUndertaking in all its branches will receive prompt attention. LOST! LOST! Anybody needing Queensware and won't visit our Bazaar will lose money. Just See! o cups and saucers, 2. r >c; covered sugar bowls, 25c; butter dishes, 25c; bowl and pitcher, 69c; plates, 40 cents per dozen up; cream pitchers, 10c; chamber setts, 7 pieces, $1.75. Also grocer ies: cheap jelly by bucket 5c per lb; freslx butter 20 cents per lb; 5 lbs. rice, 25c; 4 lbs. prunes, 25c; 4 lbs. starch, 25c; etc. Dry Goods: Bazoo dress goods, 8 cents per yard; calicoes, 4c to 8c and white goods 5c per yard up. Carpets, 18c per yard up. Furniture! We have anything and everything and won't be undersold. Straw hats! Hats to fit and suit tliem all. In boots and shoes we can suit you. Children's spring heel, 50c; ladies' kid, button, §1.50. Come and see the rest. I will struggle hard to please you. Your servant, J. C. BERNER. REMEMBER PHILIP GERITZ, Practical WATCHMAKER & JEWELER. 15 Front Street (Next Door to First National Bank), Freehold. BOOTS AND SHOES. A Large Stock of.Boots, Shoes, Gaiters, Slippers, Etc. Also HATS. CAPS and GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS of All Kinds. We Invite You to Call and Inspect Our New Store. GOOD MATERIAL! LOW PRICES! HTJG-H MA.LLO"ST, Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Freeland. HE JUST AND FEAR NOT. J. J. POWERS has opened a MERCHANT TAILOR'S wul GENTS' FURNISHING ESTABLISHMENT nt 110 Centre Street, Freolund, and is not in nartnership with any other establishment but (lis own, and attends to his business personally. Ladies 1 outside garments cut and fitted to measure in the hi test style. A. RUDEWIGK, GENERAL STORE. SOUTH HEBERTON, PA. Clothing. Groceries. Etc., Etc. Agent for the sale of PASSAGE TICKETS From all the principal points in Europe I to all points in the United States. Agent for the transmission of MONEY ITo sill parts of Europe. Checks, Drafts, < and Letters of Exchange on Foreign j llanks cashed at reasonable rates. B. F. DAVIS, Dealer in Flour, Feed, Grain, HAY, STRAW, MALT, &c., Host Quality of Clover & Timothy SEED. j Zemuny's Block, 15 East Main Street, Freehold. jO'DONNELL & Co., Dealers In —GENERAL— MERCHANDISE, Groceries. Provisions. Tea. Coffee. Queensware. Glassware, &c. FLOUR, FEKD, HAY, Etc. We invite the people of Freeland and vicinity to cull and examine our lurge and hundsome stock. Don't target the place. Next Door to the Valley Hotel. For Printing of any Description call at the TRIBUNE OFFICE. Posters, Hand Hills, Letter Heads, Note Heads, | Bill Heads, Raffle Tickets, Ball Tickets, r'V Ball Programmes, Invitations, \ Circulars, By-Laws, Constitutions, Etc., Etc., Etc. Call and See TTs. XjHSTGS- LEE, CHINESE LAUNDRY, Ward's Building, 451 Washington St., FREELAND, PA. Shirts one, 10 IloHoms 8 New shirts 13 Coats 15 to 50 Collars 3 Vents 20 Drawers 7 Pants, w001en.25 to $1 Undershirts 7 Pants, linen—2s to 50 Nightshirts 8 Towels i Wool shirts 8 Napkins 3 Socks 3 Table covers.. .15 to 75 Handk'reh'fs,3; 2for 5 Sheets 10 Cuffs, per pail* 5 Pillowslips—lo to 25 Neckties 3 Bed Ticks 50 Work taken every day of the week and returned on the third or fourth day thereafter. Family washing at the rate of 50 cents per dozen. All work done in a first-class style. WLSA . Pi# It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of cases pronounced by doctors hope | less. If you have premonitory symp ( toms, such as Cough, Difficulty of Breathing, V<\, don't delay, but use ! PINO'K CURE FOR CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents. Rj Piso's Cure for Con- Ey EEfl sumption is also tbo best fc| Cough Medicine, g pi If you have a Cough Eg E8 without disease of the lg La Lungs, a few dosds are all E£J H you need. But if you ne- C 3 gleet this easy means of IN fjfl safety, the slight Cough (Si n may becomo a serious Kj EJ matter, and soveral hot- (£1 Km ties will he required. I^l ■ Piso's Remedy fur Catarrh la the Kjfl Best, Easiest to Use, and CheapeHt. Hj ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mall, mm 50c. E. T. Hardline, Warren, Pa. Kr Advertise in the "Tribune."