FREELAND MI. Published Every Thursday Afternoon —BY— TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TEKMS, - - SI.OO PER YEAII. Address all Communications to FREELAND TRIBUNE, FREELAND, PA. Olllce, Birkbeck liriek, 3d tloor, Centre Street. Entered at the Freelaml Postoffiee as Second Class Matter. FREELAND, PA., AUGUST 1, 1889. THERE seems to lie something queer about this protection to infant indus tries, for the older the industry the more protection it wants. Just like a sucking calf. The older it gets the more it sucks, ami the more it sucks the more it hunts for more milk. It's good for the calf, but it's death to the cow. See?— Dubuque Industrial. THAT news about the resolution of the Soldiers' Orphans' School Com mission to abandon the syndicate's schools appears to have been of the kind classed as "too good to be true." At least it seems to be somewhat pre mature. A member of the commis sion states that final action has not yet been taken. The commission, however, ought to hasten at its next meeting to make good the announce ment already published by shutting out the syndicate altogether from all connection with the care and educa tion of soldiers' orphans. SEIZINO all British or other vessels on the coast of Alaska that happen to have Bclning Sea seals on board, may be an alluring and exciting sort of exerciso for the United States rev enue cruiser Rush's crew, but it is a thing over which the government will do well to hold a taut check rein and about which the commander of the Bush should be instructed to go back o>2 his name— and, instead of rushing, 10 go very slow. Smaller things than that have led aforetime to ugly and angry altercations. The people are not in favor of such foreign policy, and Secretary Blaine should under stand it. THF. Philadelphia Press, comment ing on our approaching judgeship contest, says: "The Democrats of Luzerne County would show excellent judgment by endorsing Judge Bice if lie is nominated. His impartiality on the bench and his ability as a jurist has been amply demonstrated during his career on the Common Pleas bench of Luzerne County." AVe doubt if his impartiality or ability could be questioned, but a Democratic county is not likely to endorse a Be publican, while there are plenty of competent men ready to step into his shoes. Ex-Judge Bice would sound just as sweet. Tire decay of New England's iron and woolen manufactures has led to the revival of the demand, once earnestly supported by Henry son, Senator Hoar and other Repub lican leaders of that section, for "free iron, free coal, free lumber, free wool." But no, say the modern protection organs, Pennsylvania will not consent to free pig-iron, nor Ohio to free wool, nor Michigan to free lumber. The manufacturers may be so handicapped ! by the enhanced cost of raw materials , that they cannot compote with foreign J producers even in our own market, j but no link of the tariff chain must; be broken. There will be "tariff- i smashing" in earnest one of these | days.— iY. Y. World. How quickly a threatened reduction j in wages makes men scamper back to j their organization? An illustration of this was seen in New York last I week when Typographical Union No. j 0 was notified that a new scale (com monly called a reduction) was soon to j go in effect. At the monthly meeting 1 on Sunday afternoon, which is usually attended by only two or three hun dred persons, nearly every one of the seventeen hundred members were present, and they sent back an em phatic "NO" to their employers. That settled it; there will be no reduc tion there for some time. The "Big Six" will submit to no encroachment upon their rights, and why should they, with the most compact organi zation in America standing behind him? Workingmen, organization is your only salvation, and not high tariffs or low tariffs, which have no more to do with wages than the moon. A JOUBNAI, like the New York JSreti iufi Post cannot well be accused of treason or even of disrespect to our country's fiag, and in speaking of the efforts of some people to put Hags on all public buildings, school houses, etc., it says: "This has been recom mended by some Republican organs, ami a bill providing such a llag for every school house in Pennsylvania came near being rushed through the legislature thoughtlessly last winter, but was finally defeated when its im propriety came to be recognized. Schools are supported by the State, and if any flag were to be displayed over the school house it should be the state flag. But it would be absurd to display any flag over a school house every day. If the national llag were to bo displayed everywhere all the time, it would lose nine-tenrs of the impressiveness which it now possesses when brought out on proper occasion. The poorest compliment the flag has met of late was its use last year as a pocket-handkerchief by members of a political party." Two hundred factory girls at AVilkes- Barre will probably strike to-day. War on Internal Taxei. The declaration of the North Carolina | Republican Representatives-elect that they will vote for no man for Speaker who does not favor an early repeal of the internal revenue laws, naturally ex cites great interest among Democratic as well as Republican leaders. Of the six teen Southern Republicans in the House three are from North Carolina, two from Virginia, three from Tennessee, two from Kentucky and one each from West Virginia and Louisiana, which makes twelve, or three-fourths of the total number. The five members from Ten nessee and Virginia are as much inter ested, for local reasons, in the repeal of the internal taxes as those from North Carolina, and may be expected to co operate with the latter in an effort to force the Republican caucus to declare for abolition. Whether the others will unite with them in dictating to the cau cus is uncertain. Of the earnestness of these crusaders against internal taxes there can he no doubt, and as five or six votes subtracted from the Republican column would leave that party without a majority, it may he relied upon that a sufficient number of Southern members will take advantage of this fact to force an authoritative declaration from the Republican caucus on the internal rev enue question. The hold declarations of Representa tive Brower on this question are answered by some of the party leaders and news papers with the allegation that Brower, having voted for the Mills hill, is not in accord with the sentiment of the Repub licans of his district and state. This is not true. Brower was returned because he voted for that measure, as the hill struck a blow at the hated internal rev enue system. Representative Nichols | voted against tlie Mills hill, and was de feated, and it was mainly for his vote on that measure that he was not returned. The Republican leaders should not de ceive themselves with the belief that Brower does not represent his people in liis expressed purpose to insist that the power of that party in the House shall he driven against the internal revenue system. It is because he is confident that his people are in full accord with him that Brower is so hold and persis tent. Representative Ewart, from the same state, also declares that he will vote for no man for Speaker who is not pledged to the repeal of the internal rev enue svstem. In assuming this attitude, these men are governed more by the un mistakeahle sentiment of North Carolina than by any feeling of their own. That Brower and Ewart represent public opinion in North Carolina on this question is further established by the tone of the newspapers of that state. Perhaps the leading Republican paper in North Carolina is the North State, pub lished at Greensboro, which is in Brower's district. In the last issue of that paper, discussing this question, it says: Our state is drained of money through the internal revenue laws. Our farmers are impoverished. They have no money, i and not much credit. Hanging over us i like a great pall is the obnoxious and oppressive internal revenue system. Now, that the Republicans control both branches of Congress, we must have it repealed. Our party is pledged to it. The Southern members of Congress should proclaim that they will vote for no man for Speaker who will not pledge himself to form a Committee on Ways and Means that will at once report a bill to repeal the internal revenue laws. Our Southern members can dictate the orga nization of the next House of Represen tatives and its policy on the great ques tions affecting the Southern people, and they will he arrant cowards and hoot licks if they do not do it. .Sixteen Hours a Day Sweet Protection. A committee from tlie Boston clothing trade unions has been investigating the condition of the clothing manufacturing trade in New York. The wages of the clothing workers have been steadily de creasing in Boston and work has become scarcer there. The Boston unions heard that New York had been taking away much of the business and a committee was sent on to investigate. What the Bostonianß have done and learned tlie New York Times thus tells : They visited the east side districts where clothing is given out to work and have eome to the conclusion that the sweating system which was exposed some time ago was the cause of the de cline of wages and the withdrawal of much of the trade from Boston. They describe the condition of tlie working ! people who are engaged in the sweat j ing work as miserable in the extreme, worse than that of plantation negroes | during the time of slavery in the South. ! Men women and children crowded into j small, hot rooms, where they live and j cook and work for starvation wages 14 : hours and more out of the 24. Among i the places visited by the committee was j a five story house, occupied by several I sweater contractors. One man employed eight men in a small room and worked ; them 14 hours a day. Some people in I this building worked from 4 o'clock in . the morning to 9 o'clock in the evening. ! Other sweaters paid their hands 50 cents for making a coat, and others paid their I hands from $5 to $8 per week. One j man, who employed 15 men and mado I them work 1G hours a day, paid them j not in money, hut in clippings of the cloth, which they had to pawn for money. How grateful those poor miserable things—incorrectly called human beings i —must feel to the greatest protective ! system the world has ever known. Did | slavery worse than this ever exist? And ! yet we are told that protection (oh, thou : most delusive snare) is for our benefit. Away with such benevolence, Americans want none of it. Send it hack to the barbarous Algerians, from whence it came. Divorce Mml*! Lanier in Chicago. The ease with which a divorce may he procured in Chicago lias long been a fruitful theme for tlie newspaper para graphed Last week another bar was removed. It has been the practice of the courts to hold that the applicant for j divorce must he a resident of that state, and must appear in person. Both of these requirements were waived in the case of Mary (iottschalk, a resident of Pennsylvania. She was never in Chicago in her life, and on her affidavit that her husband (Herman) had ! deserted her for two years, during which J time she had lived in Chicago, she was j granted a divorce. Her attorney secured this result by fishing up a forgotten de cision by the Supreme Court of the state rendered about 20 years ago, in which the Court held that "in contemplation of the law the residence of the wife fol lows that of the husband," and "deser tion for the period of two years by the husband residing in this state, although commenced in a foreign jurisdiction, will enable the wife to obtain a divorce." lee Cream u XeceiMity. Tlie law against Sunday liquor selling | in Cincinnati has been enforced so rigidly ! that the saloon keepers determined to i make all Sunday laws obnoxious. "With 1 this end in view they had all the sellers ; of ice cream in that city arrested. Justice Ermstein, in deciding the first ! case brought up, said : The use of ice cream has grown to such 1 an extent that it is no longer to he I claimed as a luxury, and in the liberal view the court is inclined to take of the I statute its sale on Sunday can easily be regarded as a necessity. Certainly no I man was ever incited by the eating of ice cream to go home and heat his wife ami break up the furniture, and I have no sympathy with the effort of saloon men to make the law against them odious by pushing the enforcement of the common labor law. Southerner* doing on Strike. The Southern Republican members in the next House have determined to take advantage of the fact that the Republican majority is now only theer, and is not likely to he greater than seven, to put a candidate of their own in the field, ami to make support of him the condition of their support of a Republican condidate. They propose to have a Southern Repub lican for Speaker or else to refrain from voting. It is maintained by these dissatisfied persons that the administration, in so far as it could, lias placed tlie Republican party in the attitude of being sectional. They declare that the president has persistently ignored tlie south, not only in the selection of his cabinet, hut also in the selection of men for every place of prominence under the government. Of all the chief secretaries, all the commissioners hut one, all the law officers, all the ministers to important posts, not one is a southern man. It can scarcely he claimed, say these southern men, that in all the south there is no Republican competent for any of these positions of honor. The only policy mapped out by the president seems to them to consist of deliberate and studied neglect of the party in that section. These southern members feel that that section of the country which furnishes 17 members in a House which has a majority of only three is entitled to some consideration as a matter of right and justice, to say nothing of good, sound party policy. They assert that they have refrained from making any extravagant requests, but think it unfair to he placed in the position before the country of being re pudiated by the party they have served loyally, if not successfully.—New York Times. "Man's Inhumanity to Man.*' A sad accident happened at Prospect colliery, Wilkes-Barre, about 1 o'clock Tuesduy afternoon. John Rush was working in a breast and encountered a body of gas which had suddenly formed by escaping from a crevice. The light on his hat ignited it and in the explosion which followed he was so horribly burn ed that death followed almost immedi ately. His dead body was placed in an ambulance and conveyed to his boarding house, kept by William Deverish. There they refused" to receive the body, alleg ing that they would not incur the expen- j ses of the funeral and demanded SSO as a guaratec fund before they would allow the remains to enter the house. After waiting for a few hours in front of the house the ambulance was driven to the Prospect colliery barn and there the body lay for several more hours. Later in the evening the hoarding house keeper consented to the removal of tlie body to his house over night. The particularly sad circumstance about the case is tlie fact that the wife and children of the dead miner were expected and arrived yesterday from Russia, he having sent, for them in order to live with his family in this country. DEATHS. Duo AN. —At Drifton, on Jttly 26, Mrs. Bridget Dugan, aged 50 years. Inter ment at l renchtown cemetery on Sunday. KNISE.—At Drifton, on Julv 29, Andrew Knise, aged 47 years. Interment at the Greek Catholic cemetery yester day. McNulty, undertaker. DEBATT. —At Drifton, on July 29, Lizzie Pebatt, aged 3 months and 2 days. Interment at St. Ann's cemetery yes terday. McNulty, undertaker. MREHAN.~At Frceland, on July 30. Bertha, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Meelian. Interment yes terday afternoon at St. Ann's cemetery. Brislin, undertaker. GALLAGHER. —At Frceland, on July 26, Bridget, daughter of Frank and Ann Gallagher, aged 10 years. Interment Sunday afternoon at St. Ann's ceme tery. Brislin, undertaker. Unclaimed Letter**. ; The following is a list of unclaimed letters remaining in the Freeland Post office, July 31, 1889: Fellen, Lizzie Gill, Stefan Kuntz, Thos. Lijewski, Stephan Lukacs, Kris McLean, Hugh Nydem, James Pelyak, Mike Waznials, Yerzy Wildman, Elias P. Persons calling for any of the above letters should sav Advertised. WM. F. BOYLE, P. M. THIRTEEN thousand fourtli-claas postmasters have walked the plank since First Assistant Postmaster Gen eral Clarkson entered office. The silence of Kepublican organs upon this advancement of civil reform is almost oppressive. Advertise in the TRIBUNE. "JOHN BROWN'S BODY." The Origin HII<I Orowth of the Famous ••Folk-Song" of the Civil War. In the song "John Brown's Body" we have an example of melody and a set of words which seem never to have beon written or composed by anybody. It is a genuine "folk-song," growing out of n widespread senti ment, as many old folk-songs have done, which far moro closely respond to the musical wants of the common people than any carefully prepared aud cleverly composed song could be. Iu the case of this song, however, its recent origin aud almost instant growth into common use give us an opportunity to understand its begin ings and development in away which is impossible with older songs. The tune of "John Brown's Body" ; had its origin before the words that are now kuown orremembered in con nection with it. It was sung before the War of the Rebellion, as long ago, at least, ns 1850, to words which do not now remain in use, at certain New England camp-meetings and revival services. Two members of the Boston militia company called the "Tigers," happen ing to be at a camp-meeting in a small town in New Hampshire, heard the song sung to religious words, and remembered the air. The name of ono of these men was l'urington, and of the other John Brown. Not not long after this the war broke out, aud tlio "Tigers" were made a part of the Twelfth Massa chusetts Regiment of Volunteers, which rendezvoused at Fort Warren, in Bos ton Harbor. Here the two men al ready named, l'urington and Brown, formed with twoothers, named Edger ly and Greenlcaf, a quartette, and the quartette sang, among its other songs, all sorts of words of their own "get ting up" to this tune. John Brown was a good-natured Scotchman, and tlio members of the quartette say they sang "John Brown this and John Brown that" to the tune, until,by an almost unconscious change, the hero of them was changed from John Brown, of the "Tigers," to John Brown, of Harper's Ferry, and the graud aud simple verso came into ex istence: "John Brown's Hotly lies mouldering iu the ground, Hut his soul Is marching on." Before this time tho masses of the North had not been iu exact sympa thy with tho purposes of John Brown, but tho excitement of the early days of the war called out a sentiment which these words exactly fitted. Whenever the soldier quartette were in Boston they were called upon to sing this song. The Twelfth Regi ment took it up. Samuel C. Perkins, of Brockton, a member of Maitland's Band, which was stationed with tho llegimont at Fort Warren, wrote down the air while a soldier whistled it. I Then the band played it every day. When Edward Everett formally pre ! scntcd the set of colors of the Twelfth Regiment on Boston Common, the speech of acceptance being made by Colonel Fletcher Webster of the regi ment, the tunc was played, aud the multitude fairly went wild over it. i The band played the tune going up State street in June, 1861, ana the soldiers sang it as they marched along. The crowd along the sidewalk took up : the air and joined in the chorus, Glory, glory, hallelujah. Ills soul is marching on. Soon after the regiment sang it in marching through New York ou tho way to Baltimore, with tho same ef fect. It spread at once through the ! army and throughout the country, and ! became the anthem of the Union. I In December, 1861, Mrs. Julia Ward i Howe wrote for the air the words be | giuning: "Mine|eyes have seen the glory ol" the coming of the Lord," which was called "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," which soon became immensely popular, nut never sup planted in common use the old simple words. This is the story of tho origin of "John Brown's Body" ns told by tho members of the band and the regi ment with whom it had its use as a popular sotig. Youth's Companion. Spooks on Board Ship. "Well, yes," said an officer of the United States coast survev schooner Eagre, "I believe this ship is consider ed to be more or less haunted. At least she used to be, but this year its ghosts seem to linve deserted her en tirely. When the memory of her cap sizing was fresh in every one's mind tho men used to tell stories of meeting a black-robed figure flitting down the gangway that leads between the cabins and the state-rooms. The quarter master, too, coming down in the ward room at night used to see a shadowy form fade away into nothing. The slicl- I ing doors, opening into tho ward ! room from the compauionway, have a ; knack of shutting of their own accord in a manner which looks as if spirit hands were pushing them. Just look at this." The officer slid back the mahogany doors, with theirbroad lights of beauti fully otclied glass, amt left them so. In a minute or two they slowly slid to gether again. "Tho fact is," explained the oflicer, "that while apparently the ship is perfectly still, tho swash of a passing ferryboat or the action of somo stray wave is enough to cause a motion to tho ship which, while al most imperceptible, is enough to cause the nicely-balanced doors to slide to gether. I myself, while sleoping in the port state-room off the companion way one night, was startled upon waking suddenly to seo seated by my bedside a benovolcnt-looking old gen tleman with a long white beard. He was such a good-natured looking old person that I was not so much afraid as I ought to have been, and while I gazed at his kindly face he grinned and faded away, leaving only tho light of tho lantern iu the compauionway streaming into my room through the glass door. The next morning at the breakfast table I related my experience ot the night, and one of the officers who had occupied the room boforo me said ho had seen the same thing. An investi gation ensued, and it was found that when lying in bed in a certain posi tion the eye naturally rested on a small figure of Neptune, it was found to be identical withthatof the old man who had been sitting by tho bed. At night his face was in the center of tho light streaming through the door. The sudden awaking and imagining did tho rest. The other ghosts or the Eagre are as real as this one." "Don't you think it extravagant, Henry, to pay SSO for a diamond ring foryour wife?" Not at all; you seem to forget how much I shall save on her clove bill."— Boston Transcript. THINGS ARE NOT WHAT THEY SEEM. Taking a Stuffed Club to Some of the Ro mance's of l.ife. It was quite a romance. It might have made a srtoct, pretty, tearful novel, only it didn't. But it was quite a romance. She was a pretty girl, just about twenty, and of course she was charming. Sho had a very serious illness. For some time they did not think she would get well, hut she had a strong constitution, and was alto gether too well litted for life to lose it so easily. She got well enough to be angry with the doctor and accuse him of deceiving her because he did not tell her she was going to die when she was so ill. Just as sho was convalescing the doctor told her he had a young man, interesting, a stranger patient living exactly opposite. She immedi ately became wild to be allowed to get to the window and see him. But the doctor forbade her for several days, at last ho said she might get out of bed and—well, well, just think of it. When the sun was shiuing, and the world was all so fair, the first thing she wanted to see was that interesting young male invalid opposite. She saw him, and he waved a worn hand toiler, for lie had been told about her. Then there came over little bunches of flowers and sho would wear them in her wrap per, and he would smile a wan smile of pleasure. They did not send any other communication, but every morn ing they would greet one another from the window. She was well first, and the doctor could hardly keep the young man patient iu his room, he was so mad and wild to get out. And so between these two interesting young people there sprang up a sympathetic feeling that seemed to grow stronger every day. They both got well. Ah, was it not romautic? Picture to your self what came out of this strange and touching acquaintance. Can you not see the two mocling after the illness? Can you not hear that gentle voice that congratulates him, and the earn est tone in which he replied? Well, ho got well, and twelve hours afterward tlio doctor called aud told her he had gone Kast. 1 toll you, there would bo a great many more romances if they did not end in such a matter-of-fact way. Fate is with people's lives like the young woman who begins to write a story. It seems to go a certain way with them and then it drops them, or else it suddenly becomes practical and makes everything prosaic. Komance docs not last. You go to a picnic aud you meet a lovely girl, and you have just the sweetest time in the world under the trees and by the brookside. And you are in a kind of poetic dream, until it conies time to go home, aud when you get to the ferrv you make a break for your dinner. You'reloo hun gry to be poetic. The human stomach, come think of it, is a sad destroyer of your romance. Its prosaic call is so recurrent and so imperative. I don't like to think of the shepherds aud shepherdesses of Acadia sitting down to a meal of bread and buttermilk; tliero may be poetry compatible with eating grapes, but even pears, and apples, and oranges are only poetical when they are part of the landscape. Few people can eat oranges aud feel comfortable without a linger bowl. When you come to think of it every thing in life seems to conspire against poetry. It's all well to fancy your sweetheart laid on her suow-whito couch dreaming of you, or standing in a gauzy costume by the window look ing at the moon aud apostrophizing you as Honico. But then you know that she has to take the hairpins out of her hair, and when her dainty little feet touch the cold floor you know that she screams, "Ouch! how cold it is!" and in that single instant poetry is dashed to pieces. And you! \Vcll, you have lots of poetry internally, I don't doubt, but you aro not poetic iu a robe de nnit; you know you're not. I know a fellow who reduced every thing to prosaic. We walked up Market street one afternoon. A pretty girl was coming down. There are plenty of them. "What a pretty girl," I said. "Yes." "That is as pretty a foot as I havo seon in a long time." "Yes. What a pity such a lovely angel as that has to cut her corns." "No," said the melancholy fellow. "You can't tell about these things. I used to bo very sentimental when I was young, but I got it all knocked out of me. I thought the actresses who played pretty, tearful parts wero such true, gentle, sentimental women. I went once to hoar a young lady give recitations, aud they were sweet, ten der things sucli as touched me. and she was pretty, with soft, meaningful eyos and a sad expression about the mouth. I fell in love with her and got intro duced to her. I asked her to come out to supper with me after her reading one night- I was poor, but I had massed all I had to give her a dainty ethereal supper to wake up all the poetry in her, so to speak. I thought that sad mouth must bo a portal for only dainty food and wo went to the swell restaurant. " -What shall I order, sir?' said the waiter. "They don't often say 'sir' now, but those were days of politeness. " 'Wo will have ' 1 began. " 'For me,' she broko iu with her deep, meaningful eyes aud the same sad expression about the mouth, 'I want a beefsteak and a bottle of English porter. I find that suits me best after a night's recitation.' "ft saved my money, but O! how it burst up my dream of happiness."— San Francisco Chronicle. The Women of Corsica. The women of Corsica are devoted to their husbands, and willingly sacri fice everything to their demands. A wife considers herself the complement of the man, not his equal. In the house she keeps discreetly in the back ground. Says the London Queen: "At mealtime wife and daughters will not sit down with her guests, but hover about as attendants. Out of doors the men go forth to work gun in hand, while the women walk behind carry ing the heavy tools. If the happy couple have to climb a steep and stony path, aud they happen to possess only ono horse, it is the man who bestrides the wiry-limbed beast, while the wife may consider herself lucky if she be permitted to catch hold of the stirip leathor or the horses' tail." A Dog JHe Knew, Miss Silly (to her lover) —You had better be careful when you come up to the house now, Charley. Father has got a big dog. Charley—When did he get liini? "Yosterday. He bought him of Miss Flirtey's father." "Oh, that dog, hey? I an't afraid of him: lie hasn't nny teeth." -Aui > < LOST! LOST! Anybody needing Queensware and won't visit our Bazaar will lose money- Just See! C cups and saucers, -25 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; 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. Fnrniture 1 We have anything and everything and won't be undersold. Straw hats ! Hats to fit 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. Yonr 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 Stork of Hoots, 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 IfctAJLLCrY", Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Freeland. BE JUST AND FEAR NOT. J. J. POWERS haft opened a MERCHANT TAILOR'S and GENTS' FURNISHING ESTABLISHMENT at 110 Centre Street, Freeland, anil is not in partnership with any other establishment but liis own, and attends to his business personally. Ladies' outside garments cut and fitted to measure in the latest 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 to all points in the United States. Agent for the transmission of MONEY To all parts of Europe. Cheeks, Drafts, and Letters of Exchange on Foreign Banks cashed at reasonable rates. B. F. DAVIS, Dealer in Flour, Feed, Grain, HAY, STRAW, MALT, &c., Best Quality of Glover & Timothy SEED. Zemany's Block, 15 Bast Main Street, Freeland. O'DONNELL & Co., Dealers in —GENERAL— MERCHANDISE, Groceries, Provisions, Tea. Coffee, Queensware, Glassware, &c. FLOUR, FEED, HAY, Etc. We invito the people of Freeland and vicinity to call and examine our large and handsome stock. Don't forget the place. Next Door to the Valley Hotel. For Printing of any Description call at the TRIBUNE OFFICE. Posters, Hand Bills, Letter Heads, Note Heads, i Bill Heads, \ Baffle Tickets, 1 Ball Tickets, \ Ball Programmes, Invitations, 'J Circulars, * By-Laws, * Constitutions, Etc., Etc., Etc. Call and See XTe. XjHSTCT LEE, CHINESE LAUNDRY, Ward's Building, 4!l Washington St., FREELAND, PA. Shirts one, 10 Bosoms H New shirts 1!) (.'oats 16 to 50 Collars I! Vests 30 Drawers 7 Pants, w001en.35 to $1 Undershirts 7 Pants, linen—2s to 50 Nightshirts 8 Towels i Wool shirts 8 Napkins Hooks :i Table covers...ls to 75 Handk'reh'fs,:!; 2for 5 Sheets 10 Cuffs, per pair 5 Pillowslips—lo to 26 Neckties 3 Bed Ticks 50 Work taken every day of the week and returned on the th ; "d or fourth day thereafter. Family washing at the rate of 50 cents per dozen. All work done in a first-class style. Wua . Pi# ° H ' It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of cases pronounced by doctors hope less. If you have premonitory symp toms, such as Cough, Difficulty of Breathing, Ac., don't delay, but use PISO'S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents. W Piso's Cure for Con- E9 ESI sumption is also the beat Egl ra Cough Medicine, g M If you have a Cough H H without disease of the H La Lungs, a few doses are all E9I H you ueed. But if you ne- Kg Q gleet this easy means of IN Es safety, the slight Cough IX] U may become a serious SSI EJ matter, and soveral hot- Q M ties will be roqulred. Ej ■ Piso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the WM Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ Sold by druggists or sent by malL H 50c. E. T. Huzeltlne, Warren, Pa. Advertise in tlie "Tribune."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers