FREELAND TRIBUNE. Published Every Thursdny Afternoon —Br— TIIOS. A. liUCKLEV, EDITOI; AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS, - - SI.OO PER YEAR. Address alt Communications to FREELAN D TRIBUNE, FREE LAND, I'A. Office, Itlrklicck Brick, :kl ll<>r, Onln street. Entered at tfye Freelaial Puttoffin an Second Clan* Matter. FEE EI.AN D, I'A., AI'I i IST 8, 188!. SINCE tlie purchase of Alaska it can be snitl of tlie United States wluvt lias been said of England for the last cen tury- tliat tlie sun never sets oil her dominions. At sunset in Alaska the next morning's sun is an hour high in Maine. PENSION CosiinssioNEß TANNER is an nounced to deliver several speeches throughout the country. The govern- j ment would save money if lie were kept busy in speech-making and so precluded from touching tlie treasury surplus. THREE-FOURTHS of Harrison's time is gobbled up by office-seekers, wlio are us numerous and blood-thirsty as Jer sey mosquitoes. Although it is four and one-half months since the inaugu ration Washington is filled with the unrewarded politicians of the Dudley brand. PERHAPS it is essential to ."going through the forms" to be making all this investigation iuto tlie way in which Pension Commissioner Tanner lias misused the power and discretion of his office, as if there was any room for doubt about it, but it really does look like piling Pelion upon Ossa in the way of absurdity. OF late there seems to be a desire in many parts of the union to allow women to take part in the election of I school officers. Missouri lias just i granted them this privilege, being the ! sixteenth state to do so. In time this | franchise may probably be extended to letting them have their say in all elections. What effect such action would have upon politics remains to be seen. FEW would believe that the sugar trust has been so successful were it not for the authoritative declaration of its treasurer, who says: "Our aim has been to keep prices down." As prices have gone up four or five cents a pound since the trust began operations, it makes one dizzy to contemplate the altitude they might have attained if it hadn't boon for the trust's aim. IF the whirligig of time shoud land Murat Halstead in the senate, which body rejected liim as minister to Ger many, there will be a great rattling of the dry hones, for Mr. Halstead can take very good care of himself when he meets antagonists on even terms. The taste of the average Ohio man for office is such, however, that Mr. Halstead may find some rivals for the place when the legislature as sembles. That legislature, by the way, is not yet elected and it is by lie means certain that it w ill he Repub lican. THE life of an editor is anything but a perpetual elysiau dream, as some people seem to imagine. He who works for the public lias a thou sand masters, each of whom insists upon being served iu a different way. This is exactly the position the editor finds himself in. Do the best he can, be as conscientious as he may, and somebody will take umbrage at some thing—either done or not done by the man of the quill. He stands on the verge of an abyss, as it were, and step as carefully as be may, lie is sure to walk 011 somebody's pot corns. I'lr. THE howling of Southern Republi cans lias brought Harrison to a sud den realization of why he was elected. Ho lias already found out that there are thousands of office seekers who are yet out in the CJII! - even though flu's is flic month of August. The way lie shoveled out offices and ap pointments to the South during the ; past few weeks lias shown that Con gressman Brower's threat to turn the speakership over to the Democrats, j because the South was being ignored, worked like a charm. It also showed that Benny is easily bluffed. THE eiglit-liouv movement is tlie most important among these reforms which arc immediately attainable, be cause it lias in it flic elements of per manency and progress. I Uglier wages merely effect a temporary bettering of conditions —a depression in the market may force them back to the old standard or below it in a few months. But shorter hours is a step in advance toward the ultimate end of a vital change in the relations of labor and capitalism. It means op portunity and leisure to read and think. It gives the chance for self education. Let tlie eight-hour sys tern be once obtained and put in force all over the country for a single year, and at the end of that time the labor reform forces would lie so much Htrengthed, their manhood developed and their intelligence quickened to such ft degree that 110 power 011 earth could restore the old order of things. The reduction in the hours of labor is one of those revolutions that never move backward. *lottrtutl tinted Jjibor. f Henry K. Boyer of I'liiliuiulphin was nominated as the Republican candidate for state treasurer yesterday. , Tlie Tight i* Certainly Spreading. If the Republican newspapersthrough ; out the country continue their incessant ! growling at our beautiful system of tax ation some of them will he liable to find themselves grazing in pastures far away from Camp Harrison before the next election. From the North, East and West comes mutterings which are des tined to operate against the Republican party before long. It is the pensions which trouble them now,and that staunch G.-0.-P.-forevcr organ, the Phila. Even ing Telegraph, will jump the traces soon if it is not properly cared for. It says: The present pension system, as Com missioner Tanner has in a few months demonstrated, needs to lie entirely re- i vised, hut there is little reason to believe or to hope thai it can be justly or judi- I eiously revised. It is easy enough at present, when the prosperity of the peo ple is so great and common, for Senator Plair and his associates to talk so glibly about Corporal Tanner exhausting the surplus, as there is plenty more money where that came from with which to re fill the government's strong box, but it j will not be so easy if a protracted period of depression, such as that which ended i in 1879, should come again. The strong I boxes are filled by fureal contributiona upon the country by taxation, and for years, past, during the most prosperous years, there has been an ever increasing demand for fewer and lower taxes. The people are growing tired of filling the strong boxes for Congress in its reckless generosity to empty. They do it now ! reluctantly. Should business depression I come, as it is always likely to come, they would not do it at all; they would insist upon a material reduction of taxation. The party that in the near future shows that it is inspired by the spirit of econ omy is likely to be the best esteemed and the most successful at the polls; and the party that places the pension system upon a more equitable and patriotic basis than it now rests upon will not lose in popularity, public respect and confi dence. Abolish It -VII Internal and External. The New York /Sun, the only journal in America which thinks protection should be a Democratic doctrine, gets soliloquizing occasionally, and wants to know whether the people wish the con tinuance of protection or the upholding of the somewhat similar system of inter nal taxation. As the difference between both systems is not worth an argument, we fail to see tlie necessity of either while all revenue can he raised in a more direct and in the only equitable manner by placing all taxes upon the value of land. Nevertheless the Sun would like to have one or the other, as may be seen by the following reniaks: It is perfectly easy to provide the neccs j sary revenue by means of that system I known as tlie internal revenue system, j with which we have become familiar during the last 25 years. It is, properly speaking, an excise system, and it can easily he made to produce all the revenue that is necessary for the needs of the j government economically administered. Thus all duties on foreign importations | may at once he abolished, and the United j States may he brought to the enjoyment I <>f perfect free trade with all foreign nations whatever. The custom houses may be shut up and every product of every other country may he admitted free of duty. It is for the people to de termine which of these two systems they will have. If they wish for free trade, they can repeal the tariff and rely upon the internal revenue; and, as we have said, it can easily supply all the needs of the government. If they do not wish for free trade, then they will be obliged either to abolish the internal revenue system and to agree with Thomas Jeffer son that it is an infernal system; or else they will have to reduce it so greatly that its abolition will he a question of comparative unimportance. Free trade is now within the reach of tlie American people if they desire it. Do they? Totting llallot Itc>form. The Australian system of balloting, which in a modified form has worked admirably in Grout Britain and Louis ville, Kentucky, is to govern the election to be held in .Massachusetts next Novcm ! her. It is urged in advance that "its I effect must be to render more difficult any attempt to oppose the workings of the party machine." How is it, then, that the party machine has everywhere bitterly opposed the introduction of this system? Is the machine given to throw ing away chances to increase its power? If by any bungling or in any attempt to do too much at the start the Massachu setts statute was improperly drawn and opens the way to possible abuses while attempting to euro existing evils, the i actual operation of the law will teach other legislatures how to avoid the danger. It will not bo the first time that Massachusetts has been a pioneer in needed reforms. We do not, how ever, give much weight to the objection that "it will he possible under the new law to prevent bolting caucuses from getting their nominations on tlie official i ballot." If this were so it is quite cer- | tain that the machine managers would ; favor the law. As a matter of fact all the ballot-reform laws passed in this country have permitted (as they could not legally deny) every voter to make any alterations which he might desire in the official ballot. The "divine right" utablc editorial office is to present a newspaper clean and good, and worthy the favor of those of the best intelligence | and highest morality.— lViila. Public i Ledyer. A l-'ulscliood or Ignorance—Which ? j As the single tax theory of Ilenry ' < icorge and Doctor McGlynn has been declared in opposition to the doctrines of the Roman Catholic church by some prelates of that body, its adoption by D. ! A. 10, K. of L., at the recent convention at Carbondale may lead to some interest-' ing discussions. It would have been a wiser and more conservative course to j have let that question severely alone. , In the present status of the Knights they should be careful not to attempt any- < thing that may tend to alienate the neu- j trality if not tactic endorsement of the Roman Catholic church which it took I such a severe struggle to obtain.—Wilkes- 1 Bar re Newsdealer. The writer of the above should ac quaint himself with the single tax theory, the doctrine of the Roman Catholic ■ church and the principle of the K. of L. I before making further comment upon this question. Such statements are , made for malicious motives, with the intention of injuring the single tax cause, of which the Newsdealer is a most ardent hater. The writer will confer a favor ; upon many in this and his own vicinity if he will furnish his authority for the statement that the single tax theory has been condemned by the Catholic church. Come on, speak out. A Singular Election Het. During the prohibition campaign a well known brewer of Allentown and a machinist made an election bet to the effect that if tin; majority against prohi bition was 40,000 the machinist was to have a glass of beer for every hundred in excess of that majority. As the majority was in round numbers 188,00(1, the machinist was entitled to a glass of beer for every hundred of the 1411,000 in excess of the 40,000, or 1480 glasses, which makes over three barrels, allowing i 4AO glasses to a barrel. As the machinist did not consider himself quite competent to get away with his three barrels of beer, he good-naturedly furnished all the beer that was needed by the employes of \V; F. Mosser's foundry and machine shop at their annual picnic at llclfrich's Springs Saturday. There was a surplus left which he will dispose of at his leisure. D. A. 16 In SeHNlon. P. A. IG, of the Wyoming region, held its semi-annual session at Carbondale last week. Several important matters were passed upon at this meeting and among others the single tax question, which was introduced by P. 11. Gilleran of L. A. 222, received considerable atten tion. General Master Workman Pow dcrly spoke upon this subject, also upon ballot reform. He recommended that ballot reform be discussed in every local assembly at least once a month. Mr. j Powderly also introduced a resolution requesting President Harrison to refuse i to appoint Thomas Furlong as Chief of j the Secret Service Division of the Federal | Government. Furlong was chief of the j dctciftive force of the Gould system of i Southwestern railroads during the great strike of 188G, and it was he who gave j the order to lire upon the strikers. The ! committee on legislation reported a reso lution urging the enactment of a single tax law upon the actual value of the I land, irrespective of improvements. The committee on resolutions present-' ed a report which is here synopsized : Renewing allegiance to the principles of the Order and expressing confidence in the general officers; indorsing the Gen eral Master Workman's plan for an edu- ' cational.campaign; expressing sympathy I with the miners in the block coal fields ! of Illinois and Indiana who are now on strike, and assuring them of moral and financial support; requesting the General , Assembly to hold its next session in ; Seranton; refusing to vote for legislative candidates who will not pledge tliem , selves to vote for ballot reform, including the Australian system of voting or some I similar system, and representatives must ; also pledge themselves not to enter a caucus on these questions; denouncing Austin Corbin of the P. <& R. R. R. for denying to labor the same right to erga ! nization and co-operation that is con- I ferred upon capitalists by the state; con | dimming the Pennsylvania legislature j for its failure to enact the laws asked for Iby the workingmen of the state; con i dimming mine inspectors for their failure j to enforce the mine ventilation law and asking for an increase in the number of inspectors and suggesting that they be j appointed on the recommendation of the ! qualified miners of each inspection ilis , trict. General Master Workman T. V. I Powderly of Seranton was elected dele gate to the General Assembly, which i meets in Atlanta, Ga., in November. College Men Now Hull I'luyerM. ! The college men in the baseball pro fession are beginning to make a mark. It offers them congenial occupations and j large pay. Of the players in the nromi i nent nines many are under graduates, j who nilrslie their studies in winter and play ball in the summer, thereby earn ing enough to defray all the expenses of their education. Sanders of the Phila j ilelpliia club took a course of civil engineering last winter, Gunning of the ! Athletics was in attendance at the medical school of the University of 1 Pennsylvania, Knowlton of the Easton club is a member of the Harvard Medical | School, Garfield of the Pittsburg club is I studying at Oberlin University, Mead anil Gab ill of the New Haven team are graduates of Holly Gross College in Wor cester, Tyng is a Harvard graduate. Wagenhurst comes from Princeton, and many other instances could be mention ed. Nor must the cases of John M. Ward and James H. O'Rourke of the : New York club be forgotten. The former took the course of political science in ColunTbia College, and with the latter attended the lectures in the Yale Law I School, where t hey received their degrees j of I.E. IE, and were afterwards admitted | to practice before the bar of Connecticut. Select School ltcport. I The roll of honor for the week ending i July 2fi, in Freeland Select School is: Laura K. Koons, Lillie Williams, Annie j Carcv, Crete Keislich, John F. llart ranft, Freddy Koons, David Carey, Willie Marx and Michael Cabbage. : The enrollment for the month Is 2!) The enrollment lor the term Is :{S i Average attendance for the month Is In Average attendance l'or tho term Is 17 Per cent, attendance for the month Is 7s Percent, attendance for the term is K r > 11. L. EDMUNDS, teacher. Let tho Boys Help. Why is it that the hoys are allowed j to sit iu ilie house doing nothing, while their overworked mother is struggling against nature and fate to do about half the work waiting for her hands? Only the other day, says Household, we saw three large, able | bodied boys, lounging about the house, ' not knowing what to do with them- • 1 selves, while their mother alone, tired | and pale, was trying to do the work of Isi large family and company. Not a ! hoy's work to help about the house? | Way not? Is there anything about | washing dishes that will injure him, or that he can not learn to do well? or about making beds, or 8 woe pi ug, or 1 setting the tabic, or cooking a plain ' meal of victuals? On the contrary, there is much to benefit him in such work, tin; most important of which is | to gain the idea tiisit it is not manly to let the "weaker vessel" carry all the j burdens, while it is possible for strong 1 young hands to help. Most boys would gladly help iu the house if they were asked to do so, and were taught j how to do tho work properly. Many a smart boy wants to help" his tired mother, but doesn't know how, beyond j bringing tho wood and water. That I done, she tells him to go and play, while she plods wearily on. Not a boy's work? For shame! It is a pos- \ itivo harm to a boy's moral character to allow him to think it right for him I to be idle while his mother is stagger ing under her burdens. Let the boys help, and those who can't get help "for love or money" will see their troubles disappear. Fashionable Stationery Cards. The various ornamental, high-color ed stationery recently in fashion is already discarded by p rsons of good taste. A plain white, in cam-white or an English-blue paper are the only colors now used. Correspondence cards are entirely out of date. Three sizes of paper are used by society women; the largest is a sheet about the size of commercial note paper for let ters which may be folded ouee and fit i a large, square envelope, or twice and lit a long envelope. Tho next size is 1 about half an inch narrowor and an inch shorter. This is for notes and the tiny billet-note is reserved exclusively ; for regrets and acceptances. All invi tations are answered now in an infor mal manner on a sheet of billet-note | paper, except invitations to church weddings which do not iuclude also sin invitation to the reception. Visit ing cards for ladies are engraved in script on largo and nearly square cards of heavy, uuglazed card-board. A gentleman's card is exceedingly small sind slender, of thin card-board. Tho dinner cards are long, slender shapes of rough etching-paper, delicately painted with a wild rose or violets, or decorated iu colored metals and often tied with a ribbon to harmonize with | i the decoration. — Good Uouaekccuina. PROSPERED IN THEIR NEW HOME. Southerners Who IIHVO Accumulated Wealth North of Mason aad Dixon's Line. Little by little we see the transfer of white individuality from portions of tiie southern states to the north, says Gath in the Cincinnati Enquirer, These emigres from the south never return. Here is Inman, the genius of railway and telegraph matters in the southern states, who came to New York a clerk out of the rebel army, I think. He | is a smart fellow, though nowaud then you hear the opinion expressed that ho would make a deal with his grand mother and pick her dry. New York is good enough for him. Here is It. T. Wilson, who, during the war, was something of a contractor for beef and supplies to the rebel army. Ho csinie from East Tennessee. Since Wilson came here, a large, mild man, chielly notable for working himself almost to death in his banking-house, and for his excessive tenderness to his young children, he has married these youngsters into the Astor, the Goelet, and dually into the Herbert family, of England. His daughter's brother-in law is the earl of Pembroke, who in , habits the celebrated Wilton house, at the town of Wilton, where they make the carpets, in England, and which I visited two years ago aud described in your columns. Wilton house is full of elegant paintings.and marbles, and ; bears the record of having entertained Spenser when he wrote "Arcadia," and Shakspeare when he came down to play before King James 11., a visi tor there, with the Shakspearean troupe. Strange is this world when we find an old contractor for mule meat to the confederate army and hustler for rail road bonds in New York, and cotton factor for everywhere, linking himself i with si family which runs back to the 1 piratical ages about and before Queen Elizabeth. Where is the equality of ! this world? You do not hear of Mr. K. T. Wilson inhabiting a sunny grove somewhere in (lie bowers of his youth. Fifth avenue is good enough for him. Some years ago I had a talk with young V. K. Stevenson, whose father, of the same name, and Wilson and Duncan Keuna and one or two others were in a pool to supply the confed , eracy with supplies and take out cot- I ton,which was almost worth its weight ; in silver or gold in England. My ro ! port carried consternation, I was told, into the highest social circles of New York, where the Wilsons were about marrying among the Astors, who had i no idea, with the higher loyalty of this latter family, that they were to embrace some of the old blockade runners of the war. There were all kinds of blockade-runners, and toward the bottom you could touch Keith or Thomassen, the celebrated fiend who blew up the Bremen steamship. The elder V. K. Stevenson died, leaving a line fortuuo here, of which his son got his portion,but V.K. does not return to Tennessee, though there ho is con nected with old families like the Bells and the Catrons. These things prove that where there is liberality men llock from every land. To-Day In Nazareth. From an article by Wilson, the pho , tographer, in the Century, entitled, "Bound jibout Galilee," we quote: "One of the best views of the city is to be had from the campanile (if the Church of the Annunciation. In the distance is the brow of the hill to which Jesus was led by the enraged multitude who attempted to throw him from it. A modern house in the foreground brings to mind the time when they uncovered si roof and let down the bed whereon the sick of the palsy lay. This must be very much the same kind of a house as that his torical one at Capernaum. There is the peculiar roof, and there are tho outside stairs leading to the roof. The Eastern householder makes his roof serve for more than a protection from the weather. It is the piazza, the quiet place of tho dweller, and sonie- I times it becomes his summer residence. As 51 rule it is not very heavy or very strong. Rafters arc thrown across from wall to wall, say a yard apart; then the whole space is covered with twigs such as we saw the women sell ing in the market-place. On these tho slender limbs of trees are thrown and thickly coated with mortar. Lastly, a thick spread of earth is thrown on, rolled to a level, and oftentimes sown with grass seed. Thus by care many of the roofs become as smooth and soft as a machine-mown lawn. They | may be easily broken up and anything lowered inside from above. By some such process the four bearers of the poor palsied man managed to enlist the attention of the Great Physician in behalf of their friend. It is not hard to understand it all when vicwingsudi a house as this one at Nazareth. It would not be difficult for four men to carry a lame friend in a hammock by the outer stairway up to the roof, and, breaking through, let him dowu into the apartment or court below. I Not far from this sumo house, in a narrow street, is a little chapel erected upon the site of Joseph's carpenter shop. Over the altar is :i picture rep resenting Mary and Joseph instructing Jesus, and finding that lie knew more than they. Another painting repre i scuts the lad Jesus assisting his father at work. It contains no accessories of I the carpenter shop, but there are enough of them in the shops close by. The web-saw, the glue-pot, tho plane, and the hammer are the principal tools used in such shops, all without the i modern improvements. Yet whatever tho Palestine carpenter produces is from the fragrant cedars of Lebanon ! or from the eccentrically knotted and gnarled olive-wood. The operation of bargaining aud waiting for an article of wood to come from a Palestine car peuter's shop is a lengthy one. Arti cles of wood are a luxury there, and when the carpontor receives an order for one he usually employs the next three days of his life in soliciting tho congratulations of his friends upon his wonderful good fortune in receiving an order for something made of wood/" | Tho black mustache, which has been so long considered a sine qua non of the highest typo of masculine beauty, | has slowly and surely had its prestige sapped by its insidious and more ; aesthetic blonde rival. If the craze for I shade continues it will soon be ex tremely difficult to find any of the brown or red variety among fashion able men, as wherever the color of tho hair will permit of the blonde being possibly worn the bleach is brought , into requisition. Dudes who are fa vored by nature with hirsute append ages of tho approved hue are now in dulging in a good deal of chaff at the expense of their less fortunate fellows who have to imitate them, aud still | men continue to philosophize over the vauities of women.— N. Y. Mercury LOST! LOST! Anybody needing Queensware and won't visit our Bazaar Avill lose money. Just See! (> cups and saucers, 25c; covered sugar bowls, 25c; butter dishes, 25c; bowl and pitcher, 6!) c; plates, 4<) cents per dozen up; cream pitchers, 10c; chamber setts, 7 pieces, 5i.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 (roods: Bazoo dress goods, 8 cents per yard; calicoes, 4c to 8c and white goods 5c per yard up. Oarjiets, 18c per yard up. Furniture! We have anything and everything and won't lie 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, 1 will struggle hard to please you. Your servant, J. C. BERNEB. REMEMBER • PHILIP GERITZ, Practical WATCHMAKER & JEWELER. 15 Front Street (Next Door to First National Bank), Freeland. BOOTS AND SHOES. A Large Stock of Boots, Shoes, Gaiters, Slippers, Etc. Also HATS. CAPS and GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS of All Kinds. We Invito You to Call and Inspect Our Now Store. GOOD MATERIAL! LOW PRICES! X-ITTGHH: Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Free]and. BK JUST ANI) FGAU NOT. .r. .r. powers has opened a MERCHANT TAILOR'S and GENTS' FURNISHING ESTABLISHMENT at 110 Centre Street, Freeland, and is not in partnership with any other establishment but his own, and attends to his business personally. Ladicd outside garments cut and fitted to measure in the Intent style. L RUDEWICK, GENERAL STORE. SOUTH IIEBERTON, l'A. 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 jTo all parts of Europe. Cheeks, Drafts, I and Letters of Exchange 011 Foreign! I Hanks cashed at reasonable rates. B. F. DAVIS, Dealer in Flour, Feed, Grain, HAY, STRAW, MALT, &c\, Ilest Quality of Clover & Timothy S IE IE ID. Zemany's Block, Ifi Last Main Street, Freeland. - ODONNELL & Co., Dealers In —GENERAL— MERCHANDISE, Groceries. Provisions. Tea. Coffee. Qucensware, Glassware. &c. FLOUR, FEED, HAY, Etc. I We invite the people of Freeland and vicinity to call and examine our lurgc and handsome stock. Don't forget the place. Next Door to the Valley Hotel, i For Printing- of any Description call at the Posters, Hand Bills, Letter Heads, Note Heads, Bill Heads, 1 iaftle Tickets, Ball Tickets, Ball Programmes, Invitations, Circulars, By-Laws, Constitutions, Etc., Etc., Etc. | Call aricl See XjXOSTCS- XJEE, CHINESE LAUNDRY, AN ard's Building, -li) Washington St., FREEHAND, PA. Shirts one, 10 I BOHOIUH 8 New shirts IB Coats 15 to 50 Collars B Vests 20 Drawers 7 1 I'auts, w001en.25 to $1 Undershirts 7 1 Hants, linen—2s to 50 Night shirts 8 I Towels 4 Wool shirts SI Napkins B Socks 11 Table covers... 15 to 75 Handk'rch'fsJJ; 2for 5 Sheets 10 ! Cuffs, per pair .'> i Pillow slips —lO to 25 . Neckties B I J led Ticks 50 Work taken every day of the week 1 and returned on the third or fourth day i thereafter. Family washing tit the rate of 50 cents per dozen. All work done in a first-class style. j j lONsUMPf' O^ It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of eases pronounced by doctors hope less. If you have premonitory syinp -1 toins, such as Cough, Difficulty of Hreathimr, Ac., don't delay, but use | PISO'S CUKE FOR CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents. K Piso's Cure for Con- ■ I IS sumption is also tlio best 2 Cough Medicine, 3 If you have a Cough S E without disease of the S gj Lungs, a few doses are all 1* Eg you need. But if you no- gjj C gleet this easy moans of g safety, the slight Cough £ may become a serious K* k£| matter, and soveral bot- £f |jg ties will be required. ■ Piso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the [£3 Best, Easiest 10 Use, and Cheapest. M teg* Sold by druggists or sent by mall. 9| 50c. E. T. Buzeltlno, Warron, Pa. Advertise in the "Trihune." )