FREELAND TRIBUNE. Published Every Thursday Afternoon -DY TTIOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS, - - SI.OO PER YEAR. Address tdl Communications to FEE ELAND TRIBUNE, FUEELAND, PA. Office, llirklx-ck Drink, ilnor. Centre Street. ] Entered ill the KreeUtnil Vontuffice ox Second ! China Mutter. FREELAND, PA., JULY 18, 1889. THE NOW York legislature increased the pay of laborers on the state canals to two dollars per day and then ne- j glected to make the necessary appro j priation to pay the increase. The J result was that while 7(1(1 workers got j the increase 500 others had to be <1 is J charged. WHEN, oh when will the report of that Harrisburg labor committee he given to the public? Is it possible j that their master, the (I. O. P., will j not allow them to publish the record | of Quay's "model" legislature ? Will the chairman please throw some light | on the subject? THE Democrats may have originated j the idea that to the victors belong the spoils, but it seems to suit the present administration to a nicety. They have carried it so far in some depart-1 ments that it is like a four-rib roast— j they devour the meat and make but- I tons of the bone. THE. Pekin (China) Gazette cele- j hrated (he 800tli anniversary of its ! publication a short time ago by in- 1 creasing the wages of its employes from 20 to 22 cents per day. Such an extraordinary act has 'firmly con vinced the Pekinites that the Gazette has "come to stay." A LANDLORD in Philadelphia began reducing the rents of several proper ties which he owned, and his relatives concluded that he was insane. An examination was made and their sus picions proved to he correct, and last week he was taken to the asylum. When a landlord voluntarily reduces the rent an examination of his sanity is in order every time. A FBF.ioHT conductor on the New York Central Railroad was discharged on J illy 1, because he refused to take out a train during the tie-up last fall. His case was taken up by the local assembly of railroad employes in Al bany on Friday, and at 5 o'clock Mon day afternoon all the freight con ductors, brakemen and switchmen between West Albany and Grecnbush were ordered out. At 11 o'clock Tuesday night just as word was being sent out to tie up the whole road as far south as New York City and west to Utica, the conductor was reinstated and the strike ended. Only by or ganization can workingmen prevent imposition. THAT no one hut political heelers and manipulators of "blocks of five" have any influence with Harrison was forcibly demonstrated in the case of General Sherman. Although a Re publican of the Republicans, the general has never interfered in poli tics and has turned a deaf ear to all entreaties to permit his name to be used on petitions and endorsements of office-hunters. The only instance in which he has been known to break this habit is his recommendation to Harrison to continue in office his old time antagonist, General Joe Johns ton, who was appointed a Commis sioner of Railways by President Cleveland. He has been refused this request, and he now may meditate upon the open secret that a boodler who controls his ward or district has more influence in Washington politi cal circles than the greatest living general in the world. THE trust business has token an other spurt and they are being formed in such rapid succession that it is dif ficult to .remember them all. The latest acquisition to the long list is the salt industry. It was too much for the salt manufacturers to stand idly by after the sugar trust has been such a brilliant success. While they do not hope to reap as large a monthly benefit—s3,ooo,ooo —as the sugar trust, they will give the public purse a respectable squeeze in a few months. One of its projectors, E. D. Wheeler of Michigan, gives the consoling infor mation that prices will not advance more than ten cents per barrel until the trust is in good working order, v.kich he thinks will he about the Ist of next January. They hope by that time to liavo every salt concern in the United States under their control, and with the aid of our great and glorious high tariff they will tap the pocket hook o[ every person, rich or poor, in (lie country. So now prepare to pay your tribute to this "infant industry" or deny yourself the use of salt. It is useless to protest against such combinations, fop Jag, G. Blaine has said "trusts ar< pm \ v private affairs with which the public have no right to interfere." The only wav to check or abolish those abominations is to sweep away every custom house in America and let men buy where tliey can make Iho best bargains. We would then he a step nearer our boasted "liberty." A. M. Dewey has resigned his position as editor of the Journal of t'nitea Labor, tiie official organ of the K. of b. lie goes to Washington, D. t!., to accept a situation on the C'rnfUmn n, the Inter national Typographical Union's jour nal. | THE COAL MINER I | TBITHS OF THK COAL FIFLON IN TKKFSTINGLY TOI.D. Some of the llreaker Graduates—-Tlic Slate Picker, Mule Driver and Miner in the Pennsylvania Anthracite llegioiiH. From the New York 1 YvrUl. The groat world without knows but little of the lift? and trials of the miner. I I f it gets its fuel cheap it cares not how i or by whom it is produced. There are I j only two things that attract attention to ' the miner—a general strike that causesa j j scarcity of coal or some terrible disaster ! i by winch scores of lives are lost. Yet the miner deserves to be better ! known. He is, as a general rule, a patient in dustrious, < J od-fearing, poorly paid work- j 1 er, wiiose toil contributes to the comfort ! of many and the wealth of a few, but , who of late years has been unable to ! secure either comfort or wealth for those , near ami dear to him. , The statues of Pennsylvania say that , | children under twelve years old must not he employed in or about the mines, , hut in the case of the children of the j coal fields "necessity knows no law," and the little ones are often sent to pick ] slate in the screen rooms of the big, I black, dusty breakers at a much earlier age. Boys of eight and nine years and sometimes younger enter upon thisexact- I ing employment, which stunts mind and i hotly. This is the first step to the mines. | A few years ago little toddlers not more than six years of age were some ! times found picking slate in the screen I rooms, and accidents by which children ! were crushed to death by the massive I breaker machinery were not infrequent. People not acquainted with the condi tion of affairs naturally wondered why j children were permitted to become slate | pickers at such a tender age, but the cause was not difficult to find. < hving to } the frequency of fatal accidents in the mines, by which the father of the family i was suddenly killed at his task, the I mother and her little ones are often left penniless and without means of support. I n such a pitiful extremity the oldest I boy, no matter how young, would be I selected for the coal breaker so that his j little pittance of forty, or fifty, or sixty cents a day might help keep want from , the door. The natural pride, modesty and love of independence on the part of the poor I widow made her shrink appealing to the | poor authorities for help, and so her ! boy would enter upon the career of a ' slate picker at an age when most boys | are considered too young to begin their ! school life. Under the provisions of the present i law boys under twelve years of age are not supposed to work in the breaker, but ' a great many who are only eight or nine manage to make themselves look older for the purpose of leaping over the legal barrier, and tender hearted inspectors who are acquainted with the needs of their families will not press the little men too hard for the official record of their birth. The great ambition of the average slate picker is to become a mule driver in the mine. This is considered desir able promotion. It is a step that adds to his peril and to his pay, besides plac j ing him in authority over a mule. NVhen a boy begins the work of mule driving in the mines he has much to learn and runs many risks. The average mule is as tricky as a ward politician, but the mine mule has tricks enough for a Congressional district. The animal seems to acquire added cunning in its ungerground home, where it thrives and grows strong in the dark, and it loses nothing in this line by contact with the mischievous mule hoys, who take special delight in teaching it new antics. Many of the sturdy mules employed in hauling coal cars from the chamber where the coal is mined to the foot of the shaft along the subterranean track that grows : as the working increased have been in I the mines for years, and some of them j have become blind in this underground j service. The only light they see is that reflected from the tiny lamp which the i driver or the miner carries in his hat, except in case of a strike or protracted suspension, when they are turned out to grass in some of the fields which the coal companies own. Occassionally a boy of human nature manages to get on good terms with the mule of which he has charge, but if lie happens to he ill-tempered and the mule vicious, the combination is anything hut agreeable. Kicking on the part of the mule and whacking on the part of the lad vary the monotony of the grim, black galleries of anthracite. Sometimes a little mule driver is kicked to death, but the danger of being squeezed at the side of the car or crushed against the roof before he learns the fine points of his risky calling are much greater. Nevertheless the mule drivers of the ! coal fields are brave and hardy, and those of them who have been in the service any length of time acquire a degree of self-reliant courage that they , find greatly to their advantage in after years. They become reckless riders of ; the stubborn animals and in time man age to secure a control over them that is 1 really remarkable. When the mule driver grows too big j [ to work and longs for the wages paid to ! his class, he becomes a "laborer" if be j i decides to remain in the mine, which lie i : almost always does. He has of course, i been a laborer since lie began the busi ! i ness of slate picking, but there is a spe cial meaning attached to the term in mining coal, and a certain remuneration goes with it. This varies according to i locality and opportunity; nevertheless it ' is pretty clearly defined in a general j way. 'J he mule driver receives about I sl.lO a day, sometimes a little more and 1 sometimes a little less. The pay of the laborer runs from $1.50 to $1.75 and $2 per day. The work of the laborer is harder than that of the miner and not, so well paid, because his is what is classed as unskilled labor. It should i not be so classed, however, for the reason that none but men of intelligence ought to be permitted to work in any depart ment of mining. The work of the labor er, as well as that of the miner, calls for : ceaseless vigilance and a thorough under- I standing of his own environment. The laborer is not held responsible for the regulation of the air currents that facilitate ventilation, nor for the presence of the noxious gases that frequently ac-1 cumulate in such large volumes and scat ter death and havoc through the subter ranean work-shops upon contact with a spark, nor for the swift and fatal fall of roof, but be must, as one who is in per- j sonal danger from such things, feel deeply interested in them. His life and the lives of bis comrades are at stake. The presence of Hungarians and Ital ian laborers, who cannot converse with ! their English fellow workmen, is an 1 added danger, and for this reason chiefly is distasteful to practical miners. But the "Huns" are cheap, and nowhere is "the curse of cheapness" more strikingly manifest than in the employment of mine laborers. In their own country the Turks, Poles ami Russians, who toil at the toughest kind * .f work, can only earn a few paltry kopecks day, but when they come to this country the lowest wages the labor broker offer them is princely remunera-: lion. \ ery often the safety of the men j employed in u mine chamber depends J upon the proper adjustment of a prop t<> ; support tlie sliaky roof, and. sometimes ! the lives of all the men in the mine may be endangered by holding a lighted mine lamp a shade too high, and thus bringing i it in contact with a volume of gas strong ! enough to wreck the mine and destroy .every human being that works there. Men who cannot comprehend danger • and who are too dull to understand what ; they are told in a crisis calling for imme diate action should not he permitted to j labor in the mines, for they not only in vite their own doom by doing so, but they also intensify the natural dangers I surrounding those who work with them. 1 ! Physically the work of the mine j J laborer is about the most exacting known. lie breaks up the great bowlder of an-| | thracite that tumbling down from the , I everlasting coal seam in response to the I blast or "shot" that has been fired by the miner, and then he loads this coarse ly broken coal into the coal cars which the nimble mule driver and his mule bring along the track from the foot of the shaft to the mouth of the mine chamber. But the mine laborer is generally a cheerful being. He is up at the earliest dawn, sometimes before daylight, espe-; cially in the short winter days, and he ; hastens to his work with a light heart, even though he may be going to his last i "shift." The miner is usually a man of more than ordinary intelligence. In addition to being skilled in the requirements of ! his calling—the nature of the gases, the j effect of sudden barometric changes on the mines, the measurement of air currents by the use of the anemometer and other matters essential to the careful working of a mine—he possesses a wide range of knowledge on general topics and takes a keen interest in the news of the day. On all matters of vital current import ance in religion, education, politics and public questions, generally, he is up to the times. In this respect the miner of Pennsylvania differs widely from the collier of the English mining districts. The English collier feels that he belongs to a class and that he has no interest beyond it. The Pennsylvania miner feels that he is an American citizen and that he is interested in everything of importance to his country. Many of the miners own the homes they live in. Some of their homes are poor and plain and severely simple, and not a few show the hard lines which their occupants endured through the long siege of idleness in the coal industry, but many more are cozy, pretty and picturesque. The feudal castle of old was grand to look at, hut the shadow it cast for miles around left no room for aught else than servility and the sense of personal degradation which made poor men feel that they were constructed of commoner clay than the baron, whose smile was their sunshine, but whose frown was death. Although this species of auto cracy is not present in Pennsylvania the coal baron is there with his combinations, his monopoly, his schemes and his company store. The miner feels these influences. They creep into the price of the powder that lie uses in blasting coal and extract from him s.'> per keg for an article that can he bought in the market at $1.50 per keg; they compel liini to buy his supplies at a store where lie gets inferior goods for extravagant prices; they encroach on the standard size of the coal car and are constantly trying to make it larger, as well as to "dock" him outrageously because he may accidently have sent up a few pieces of slate among the anthracite that is so much like it in the darkness of the mine; and at election time they would like to con trol his vote in the; interest of some man or monopoly inimical to his own in terests. Resistance to these and other encroach ments 011 his rights makes the life of the miner a continuous struggle, hut lie preserves his manhood nobly through it all audit would be difficult to find in any part of the country or at any railing a braver, hardier or more upright and law abiding class of men than the miners of Pennsylvania. Few men are more courageous in the face of perils that threaten certain death than these miners. Proof of this lias been furnished time and again at the black mouth of the deadly pit, in which the terrible fire-damp or the fearful fall of roof have played sad havoc. They are generous, brave and kind hearted class, and it deserves to be said to their credit that despite the provoca tions which they have often had for hatred, anarchy has never been aide to find a foot-hold among them. The miners and laborers, with their families, derive a good deal of whok sale enjoyment from life when times are fairly prosperous in the coal fields. The men belong to various temperance, literary and singing societies and are profited mentally and morally in this way. The most proficient singers in the world are the Welsh miners of the j Lackawanna valley. When Patrick Sarsficld (Hlmore visited Serunton a short time ago with his hand ho gave a concert in connection with the Cymmrudorian Society of two hundred voices, led by a young man named Pro thoroe. Mr. (iilmore was delighted with their glorious singing. He con fessed his surprise and declared that it reflected great credit 011 the musical taste and culture of this hard working com munity. Later on when the famous Lappa came from New York with his band he co-operated with the Cymmro dorians and paid them equally high praise. The eisteddfod of the Welsh singing societies are among the most en joyable events of the year, and these musical festivals are given almost exclu sively by miners, laborers and their mothers, wives and sweethearts. Preparing for 'OSB. The question of who shall bear the standard of the Democracy in 1892, Cleveland or liill, is still being warmly, even hotly, discussed by the Democratic press. The preponderance of sentiment is overwhelmingly in favor of the ex- President. Practically the organs of his party in the West, and more especially in the South and South-west, are unani mous in urging that Mr. Cleveland shall he again nominated on the platform built from the materials he furnished in his celebrated tariff message. In the North and Fast Democratic opinion is more divided, but the great weight of it hears down the scale in favor of Mr. Cleveland. There appears to lie a few of the Eastern leaders who think it will he wisest and best that the Democracy shall return to the platform of 1884, upon which they were carried to victory in that year, but the Western and Southern revenue reformers demand that there shall he no backward steps taken, that the old party shall continue to go for ward—towards free trade, or, at least, towards a tariff for revenue only. .llonHignnr Corcoran l>cul. After an illness that lasted several months the Right Rev. Monsignor James A. Corcoran, D. D., S. T. I)., Professor of Sacred Scripture, ('anon law, Moral Theology, Hebrew, Syriac, llomiletics and French in the Theological Seminary of St. Charles Borroineo, at Overbrook, near Philadelphia, died 011 Tuesday of Blight's disease, aged about 07 years. Though Monsignor Corcoran began to fail many months ago, his ill-! ncss was not considered dangerous until within about two weeks past. A Drum. A regiment In motion and the rattle of a drum. With u "rat, tat, tat!" and a rat, tat, turn!" Fear is on tho face of some. Others stopping with aplomb. And steady is the patter and clatter of the drum. Sweeping- lines in evolution, fast the wheeling j columns come. Ami a thousand men are stepping to the tap ping of the drumb. There are cotiuteuancoß glum. There are senses dull ami numb, But n boy is stepping proudly—there is play iug on the drum, The rage and roar of battle ami the rattle of , a drum. The shrapnel shot arc flying with a "zip!" and Cruel shells exploding come. And the bullets hiss mid hum. But a drum still echoes loudly—will the tiling bo never tnum? Darkness on the Held of battle, where tlio body-seekers couie; The storm of death is ended and displayed the struggle's suin. A pallid face, a drum, There is blood, and both are dumb — A story of a drummer and a story of a drum! —Waterloo. 1 !N HONOR HOUND. In a handsome bedroom in one of the leading New York hotels, a gentle man was growling at the heat, moving about, and exhibiting in every way the restlessness of expectation or a mind ill at ease. Il<- was tall, well built, and fair, telling his nationality in face and dress, every inch an Englishman; and if he had spoken his thoughts they would have been: "llow long Rodney is gone! I won der if be found her? To think she has been in such trouble, and I did not know it! But what could I have done? Nothing! I bound myself to stand aside until Rodney came back. Why? 1 had as good a chance, as fair a right to speak as he had, but when 110 con- I tided in me, told me ho loved her, and was going home to ask his father's consent to marry her, I felt bound in honor to wait. A nice time 110 has had, he says, in winning his father over. Anyone would imagine by the fuss he made about 'representing the title' that Miss Underwood was a ' squaw wearing a blanket. Well, he will be agreeably surprised when be sees her. There is not a lady in Lon don society more refined, graceful, highly educated, and nobody can dis pute her beauty; but will the loss of her father's wealth make the old gentle man withdraw his reluctant consent? Oh, here is Rodney!' Ami the door opened to admit another Englishman, younger, rosier, more perfectly blonde than the occu pant of the room. His face was cloud ed, and there was decided temper in the way he pitched his hat on the bed, and exclaimed: ♦•What a beastly hot day!" llis companion s heart beat thickly. Hope crushed down by honor, sprang up defiantl}*. "She refused him!" Hope whispered. Aloud he only said: -Well?" "Oh, it's all over!" "She—she—rejected you?" The boyish face lighted for a moment with a conceited smile. "Well, not exactly that. I didn't ask her. You see, old man, when I saw Mrs. Vandenhopper yesterday, she did not tell me half how bad it was. She told me that Miss Underwood's trustee, guardian, and lawyer all in one, had defaulted, lost all her money as well as his own, and that of numer ous other people, and vanished. Hut an aunt, in a place on Long Island, left Miss Underwood a small farm, years and years ago, which was in the care of another business man, who, so far, bas not vanished. That was all I heard yesterday, and I went to Cold Spring full of hope, to tell Miss Un derwood of my undying affection. Hut, by Jove! just imagine—the farm turns out to be a miserable little piece of a few acres, and Miss Underwood is cul tivating it herself! Sending green peas and strawberries to market! I saw lier! A calico dress, J give you my word, gie it thick boots, a big check apron, and a sun-bonnet! She was out in the garden, actually weeding a cab bage-bed herself, and a towzle-headed boy was carting oil' the weeds in a bar row. I asked one of the neighbors who lived there, don't you see, and got a lot of valuable information that would stand the governor's hair on end. That's the deuce of it, I hail hard enough to bring him and my mother round to the heiress, but when it comes to weeding cabbages herself, you see, for a living, well-—" "So you give her up because in her misfortune she goes nobly to work, instead of whining and living on her relatives?" "Well, it's all very well for you to talk that way. I've envied you Jour independence before now. By Jove! if 1 were like you, rich, with a good old family name and estate, and nobody to control me, I might do as I pleased. Hut, after all, I was com pletely disenchanted. Hob, when I saw that sun-bonnet. Nobody knows what state her hands are in, and a fellow in m}- position must thiuk something of appearances." "Yes!" "Now you needn't look as if I had committed a crime, Hob. I never said one word that the wildest imagination could construo into love-making. I didn't dare tell I had talked the gov ernor over, and now I'm glad I didn't. I think I may look a little higher than a woman who seuds cabbages to mar ket." "You will look a long time beforo you will find a more perfect lady, in every sense of the word, thau Miss Un derwood." "Well, I'm oil' for a bath ami some clean linen. Never was so hot in niv life!" Left alone, "Hob," otherwise Robert Bcauchamp, consulted the time-table liis companion had studied with inter est in the early morning, and dressing rapidly, left the hotel. It was hot, even at Cold Springs, and Emily Underwood, the cabbage bed weeded, pushed back her sun-bou net, unconscious of the olTenec it had given, and straightened herself almost with a groan. The tovvzle lieaded boy looked on and sympa thized. "You'd hadn't oughter go in so fierce!" he said. "Folks t'aint used ' to't allers does, ma says. You'd oughter hire the weed in' done. Lor'! look at your hands!" "They are certainly very dirty, Sam," said the low, sweet, well-bred voice. "Hut working is better thau starv ing, Sam." "S'poso it is," grumbled Sam, rather awed by this view of tilings. "Well, Sam, can you clear up nice ly, now?" "I can, ma'am. I'll make it all like a parlor." And seeing him attack his work as if lie meant what he said, Miss Under wood went into the small inconvenient dwelling, nil mat was ieit or nor lost wealth. A lady, as Robert Beau champ had said, in the fullest sense of the word, poverty had found her with out one money-making art at her com mand. ller music was far too superfi cial for a teacher, her education was in 110 way thorough enough for practi cal purposes. She knew nothing of sewing or housekeeping, having em ployed servants for all her work, and a competent housekeeper for her house. It was true that she knew no more of farming than of Greek, but the farm was her own, and she paid a man to como every day to do the heaviest of her work, and to teach her how to weed, to sow, to plant. With bound less energy, good health, aud a strong will, she took her misfortune bravely, and worked faithfully to make a liv ing. Tier aunt in Now York had offered her a home, and suggested matrimony as the object for which she should work, but Emily had distinctly refused to hunt for a husband. Si'io never spoke of the two Kugiishmun who had haunted her during one entire winter, had paid her most devoted attentions, and then quittod New York—one to return to England, one to make an ex tended tour of the States. They went away in March, and in July she had never heard of or from them. She would have indignantly denied any especial interest in either one of them, yet she often sank into long day dreams, in which she wondered why Robert Bcauchurap's lips had never told her the love she read in his eyes, in his chaining color, in those fleeting signs by which a man betrays what ho believes to be a carefully-concealed secret. She knew, from his companion's frankness, that lie was free to woo and win where lie would. Why, then, if he loved her. had ho left her unsought? It was one of life's mysteries, she told herself impatiently, and she would rouse from her day-dream to take a lesson in butter-making from her ser vant. Leaning over the fence that separat ed her garden from her neighbor's was an old man, who said in a drawl: "There was a city chap here to-day. Miss Underwood, askin' questions— -110 end of 'em, bout you. Th' old 'ooman allows he's English. Shocamo from Cornwall herself, and she knows the talk." "Cornwall! Emily Underwood felt the blood rush to her cheeks, but she asked no more questions. Siio had washed her hands, examined the fresh scratches and bruises 011 their delicate white surface, wondered how soon they would be hard and brown, and was lingering in the doorway, dread ing the stairs for her lame feet and weary back when she saw Robert Beauchamp. The offending sun-bonnet still shad ed her face; the thick, mud-stained boots still covered her slender feet; the calico dress, the coarse apron, were all there, as described four long hours before. Hut her lover, her true loyal lover, saw ouly the shy brown eyes droop under bis eager gaze; the quick rich color stain the fair round checks; tlio beauty of the sweet face and graceful figure, and bis heart rose to his lips. Quick words of tender love, gentle words of sympathy, loving words of protection, all the language by which heart tries to win heart, were poured out in a rapid flow; and shy timid eyes, quivering lips, answered. He told her of his pain in learning the loss that had fallen upon her, his sorrow at her changed fortunes, and in tondcrest tones he besought her to trust her future to him—to bo his be loved, cherished wife. And she? She loved him! A little protest, cheeked by his lips upon hers, and she gave lum tiie promise he sought. She had been mistress of Hcauchamp Hail for more than a year before she knew the reason of her husband's con cealment of bis love—the check honor placed upon bis lips. "Rodney went down to propose on the same day I did, sweetheart, but your sun-bonnet frightened him. Hut it makes me shiver to think ho might have asked you." "Why? It would have made no dif ference." "But bo has a title—will have a higher one when his father dies, and six times my income." "Well," and no one could doubt the sincerity of Mrs. Heaucliamp's lips and eyes, "1 did not love him. I did lovo you." "And if I had not found you?" "I should liavo continued to weed cabbages in a sun-bonnet." Rodney, meeting her in society, sighs sometimes, and wonders if hedld not make a mistake; but lie would lis ten in incredulous amazement if lie were told his titlo or wealth could never have won Emily Underwood for bis wife, and that she would have mar ried Robert Hcauchamp if he bad not had a dollar. Religion in the Colleges. The colleges never had so many professing Church-members in them as at prescut. A few examples will show this. Yale College in 1795 had but four or live students who were Church members; to-day nearly one-half hold such membership. Princeton in 1813 had but two or three openly professing the Christian faith; to-day about one half, and among them the best schol ars. in William's College 147 out of S4B, and in Amherst 233 out of 352, are members of Churches. In many other colleges, as proved by Dr. Hodge, from whose carefully prepared tables these j figures are taken, the proportions are i still more favorable the prospects of religion.— Harper's Magazine. One Newman, of Rushville, lud., has a crow which has forsaken its kind, and associates altogether with the chickens iu the barnyard. At night it roosts with the poultry, and during the daytime feeds with * them, and altogether conducts itself as a well-dlspositioned chicken. S. S. Cook, of Fisher's Landing, has 1,900 prune trees ami 700 pear trees set out on twenty acres of land, for which he refused $20,000, says the La Camas (W. T.) News. The trees will come iuto bearing the coming season. He has also live acres of black-cap raspberries from which lie netted SIOO per acre last year. The barkeeper of one of the large New York hotels has decided the in teresting question of the value of New Year "swear-oil's." He says that he has noticed that immediately after the first of the year the receipts for drinks fall oir on an average3s per cent, but as the month advances they gain steadily and by Feb. 1 they are back to the starting point. A "swear-off," therefore, will generally last about thirty days. LOST! LOST! Anybody needing Queensware and won't visit our Bazaar will lose money. .Just See! 0 cups and saucers, 25c; covered sugar bowls, 25c; butter dishes, 25c; bowl and pitcher, 60c; 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; fresh 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 tit and suit them 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. BERNE R. REMEMBER PHILIP GERITZ, Practical WATCHMAKER A 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! ZEETJGKEI MALLOT, Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Freeland. BR JUST AND FEAII NOT. J. J. POWERS has opened a JI KUCHA NT TAILOR'S raul GENTS' FURNISHING ESTABLISHMENT ' at 110 Centre Street, Freeland, and is not in partnership with any other establishment hut his own, and attends to his business personally. Ladies' outside garment* cut and fitted to measure in the litest style. L RUDEWIGK, GENERAL STORE. SOUTH IIKBERTON, 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 |To all parts of Europe. Checks, Drafts, and Letters of Exeluinge on Foreign Banks cashed at reasonable rates. B. F. DAVIS, Dealer in Flour, Feed, Grain, HAY, STRAW, MALT, &a. 9 I Best Quality or Clover & Timothy SEED. Zemally's Block, 15 East Main Street, Freeland. O'DONNELL & Co., Dealers in —GENERAL— MERCHANDISE, 1 1 Groceries. Provisions. Tea. Coffee. Queensware. Glassware, &c. FLOUR, FEED, HAY, Etc. We invite the people of Freeland and vicinity to call and examine our large and handsome stock. Don't forget the pluce. Next Door to the Valley Hotel, j P° r Printing* of any Description call at the TRIBUNE OFFICE. Posters, Hand Bills, Letter Heads, Note Heads, Bill Heads, Raffle Tickets, Ball Tickets, Ball Programmes, Invitations, Circulars, By-Laws, Constitutions, Etc., Etc., Etc. Call ana See TXs. LEE, CHINESE LAUNDRY, Ward's Building, 49 Washington St., FREELAND, PA. Shirts one, 10 Bosoms 8 New shirts Li Coats 15 to 50 Collars 3 Vests 20 Drawers T Pants, woolen. 25 to $ I Undershirts 7 Pants, linen... .35 to 50 Nightshirts 8 Towels 4 Wool shirts 8 Napkins 3 Socks 3 Tuble covers. •• 15 to 75 Handk'rch'fs,3; Sifor 5 Sheets 10 I Cuffs, per pair 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. m CONSUMPf' It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of cases pronounced hy doctors hope j less. If you have premonitory symp- I toms, such as Cough, Difficulty of I Breathing, tVc., don't delay, but uso ! PISO'S CUKE FOR CONSUMPTION ! immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents. Piso's Cure for Con- ! £3 sumption is also the best 2 5 Cough Medicine, s rt if you iavo a Cough gSI H without disease of the I Lungs, a few doses are all 15 you need. But if you ne- tj gleet this easy means of jl safety, the slight Cough Jiy may become a serious matter, and several hot- £ ties will he required. ®EEBB2SSEaEa^ I fPiso's Remedy for Catarrh is the £33 Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. U Haas Sold by druggists or sent by mall. H 50c. E. T. llazultiuo, Warren, I'a. gS3 Advertise in the "Tribune."