FREELAND TRUNK Published Every Thursday Afternoon —in'- TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TEEMS, - - SI.OO PEE YEAU. Address all Communications to FREELAND TRIBUNE, FBEELAND, PA. Offline, UlrklK'i k Brick, ikl Hour, Centre St root. Entered at the Frccland Postoffiec as .Second Clans Matter. FREELAND, PA., AIRIEST 15, 18S9. FIVE murderers of women are in tlic Tombs prison, New York, with the deatb-watcli set upon them, ns tliey are under sentence to he hanged on August 211. All committed the crimes of which they were convicted before tlio law* providing for execu j tious by electricity went into effect. j THE French Senate has found Gen eral Boulanger guilty of conspiracy, hut tlic verdict was a foregone con clusion and lias therefore little weight. It may serve to keep General Bou langer out of France and cripple his powers of mischief, hut that is the most it eau do. If ho should ever come hack to rule the country, it will not ho by constitutional methods, and, therefore, the disqualification to hold office does not amount to much. It is a pity that his prosecutors should have made him appear to some people in the light of a martyr by adding all sorts of trivial charges against him to that of conspiracy of which he was convicted. THE overissue of stock l>y Eben M. Allen, president, of a surface railway in New York City, develops a painful story of dishonesty actuated by greed. Allen started years ago as one of tlie inferior employes of tlie company, and through his own merits was promoted step by step until be reached the pre sidency. But, not satisfied with tlie emoluments of liis lofty position, lie entered outside speculations, and finally sacrificed a well-earned reputn tion by betraying liis trust and making a false issue of seven hundred shares of stock, the proceeds of which he ap plied to liis own private benefit. All tlie good work of years was wrecked by that one act of unfaithfulness and dishonesty. THE location for tlie proposed inter national exhibition to be held in this country in 1892 is still a matter of much doubt. Five cities—Boston, New York, Washington, Chicago and St. Louis—arc pressing their claims forward, but the light will event fully narrow down to New York and Wash ington. Boston's claims are a mere side issue for New York and St. Louis is in the race because Chicago is there. The claims of tlie Western cities are even more inferior than those of Bos toil, and the contest between the capi tal and the metropolis of tlie country promises to be very hitter. We would not be surprised to see the Quaker City selected as a compromise, and that is the place where they can run those exhibitions to perfection. IN 1887 the Democratic candidate for governor of Kentucky received a plurality of 17,000. Last year Cleve land had a plurality of 28,000. This year, from the returns of tlio election held last month, the Democrats have a majority of .'15,000 and gain twelve members in tlio legislature. In the campaign just ended the Republicans loudly proclaimed their intention of abolishing the internal taxes. But tlie verdict of Kentucky, in spite of her large distilling and tobacco in terests, is emphatically in favor of tnx reduction through tariff' reform. The shibboleth of free whisky ami tobacco and war-taxed clothing, food, fuel and shelter has no attraction for the genuine Democrat, whether lie resides in Kentucky or elsewhere. THE discovery on the bottom of a Maine lake of an immense bed of silica, a substance of great commercial value ns a non-conductor of heat, opens the way to another tariff fostered monopoly. This is said to he the only deposit known to exist in the United States —the only other supply in the world being in Ger many. This bounty of nature ought to give America silica abundantly and cheap, but if the usual course is pursued the owners of the deposit will organize a stock company—with SIOOO in water to $lO in cash—and then ask of congress a duty on foreign silica, to give them control of the "home market" for their "infant industry." In this manner arc the gifts of nature neutralized to enrich monopolists. ABOUT a year ago one of flic most prominent persons in America WUR 1 Levi I'. Morton, who was Harrison's colleague on the ticket that the people rejected by more than one hundred thousand majority. To day Morton is scarcely ever thought of, unless it be by his most intimate friends, while Harrison's actions and whereabouts are known to every politician in the land. The cause of this difference of respect paid to the two highest digna taries in the country is solely due to the difference of their powers of dis pensing patronage. Harrison has full sway over the thousands of office hunters and his slightest wishes are obeyed with alacrity, but tlic forsaken old Moneybags of the last campaign is seemingly contented to draw the salary of his boodle-gotten office. School elections were held in Kansas Tuesday and the returns showed that nearly 50,000 women voted. Many of t hem wero elected to offices. When .Silence Is Cruel. j There are times when speech istinsea- 1 sonable, but there are also times when 1 silence is wrung and even cruel. If ( there is much said that should never 1 have been breathed, there is also much 1 that ought to have free utterance which * is never spoken. It is impossible to v estimate the amount of happiness and f benefit that is suppressed by this un- 1 timely silence. A group of persons are ( j discussing the character of one, known, 1 perhaps, only slightly to most of them. 1 j Some one speaks disparagingly of him, ! or relates some incident tending to lessen 1 him in their esteem. Another who is ' present knows this to be incorrect, but, | instead <>f vindicating him from the : false charge, he says nothing. lie may be shy of expressing himself; he may j persuade himself that it is not his affair; Ihe may dislike to appear antagonistic; ' i whatever be his reason, he does the absent one an irretrievable injury by a silence that must be deemed cowardly. 1 The unfavorable impression which he might have corrected sinks into the ' memories of those who have heard it, | and is probably never entirely effaced, j Had he simply uttered what he knew to i be true at the moment of need all this I would have been prevented. In general when the character or conduct of any | absent one is assailed it is the path of | kindness to refute it if possible, or, if | this cannot he, to present some point in j which he excels and which may turn the scale of esteem in his favor. There . | is in each one such a mixture of good , : and bad, admirable and blamable, that j the way he is judged largely depends upon where the emphasis is laid. There fore, all good-will and kindness demand ! that, while we bury his faults in oblivion, ' we should speak freely and fully of his 1 excellences. I Not only to (he absent, but sometimes to those present with us, is silence cruel, j There is a wholesome dread of flattery among honest people, which not infre -1 (juently leads them into an opposite ex treme of withholding praise where it is due. Much discouragement and many abondoned efforts may be traced to this source. Of course, it is not the ideal of manliness to require such a motive, but few approach the ideal, and few can dis pense with the motive. The young and inexperienced, tlie humble and self depreciating and all beginners especially need every sincere word of encourage ment that can be given. It is a stimulus which no parent, no teacher and no em ployer can afford to set aside. Has tlie child been faithful, obedient, studious, self-denying? Tell him so, and express the real pleasure you feel. Has tlie young man proved himself trustworthy, indefatigable, intelligent? Let him have tlic satisfaction of knowing that you appreciate liis efforts. Has the timid beginner in some enterprise done well for a first attempt? Do not deny him tlie incentive to further efforts that your approval will afford him. Silence at I such times is not a mere negative, a blank, an omission; it is a positive injury, a bar to improvement, a destroyer of well-earned happiness. "Free Wool 1" Cries tlie Republicans. Tlie Board of Trade and Transporta tion is quite right in thinking that we ought to have a larger share in the export trade to South American countries, especially Brazil and tlie Argentine Republic, but it seems to be groping in j utter imbecility after tlie means by which it is to be secured, when tlie way is as plain as daylight. Take off the duty on raw wool, which is one of tlie principal things with which South j Americans buy manufactured goods; remove all taxes from raw materials of ' manufactures, so that we can make those goods and sell them at as low prices as England, Germany and France; then cast off the antiquated restrictions upon I shipping, so that our merchants can get j vessels upon equal terms with those of | Europe, and then tlie question of trade with South America will solve itself. It! would not be long before our manufact ures would go to those countries in greatly increased volume in our own vessels and j under our own flag, to the vast benefit not only of our South American trade j and our shipping interests, but of our j manufacturing industries as well. The j only thing needed is to remove tlie! obstacles which our own laws put in tlie 1 way. — New York Times. One .Successful Boycott. E. & A. H. Bachellor & Co. of Boston,'■ Mass., have failed; liabilities upward of $1,250,000. The general community, ap- j palled at tlie magnitude of tlie suspen-' sion of tlie business of a single firm, and j the various comments advanced by tlie business men generally, attribute this | failure to sharp competition and the i speculative tendencies of this firm. We ; are of tlie firm conviction, however, that [ tlie result of flic great smash that lias startled the community can be justly at-1 tributed to the action of tlie Knights of Labor in pushing a vigorous boycott of | their goods throughout the South and West. This firm took tiie initial stand iii the Worcester County lockout of two , years ago, and were the first to introduce | the celebrated iron-clad rules, calculated ; to deprive workingmen of their manhood. ! They coerced their employes to abandon | the Order of the Knights of Labor, and j that all-powerful organization issued the J mandate that has been enforced all over : these United States over since. This 1 notice is familiar to all members of the Order. It is as follws : "Re careful when you buy men's boots and shoes. E. & A. 11. Bachellor & Co. of Massachusetts refuse to deal justly with their help." Now this boycott has been enforced con-' tinuously up to the present time, and the firm, finding that the demand for their ■ special line of heavy boots and shoes, bad almost ceased throughout the South and West, introduced the manufacture of lighter grades ; and in endeavoring to compete with other manufacturers in this line, and by a continual reduction of their help, thereby rendering their pro j duct less satisfactory, tlicy began to speculate extensively in other enter prises, and were consequently pressed to j the wall. It is hut another illustration ] of the futility of antagonism between j employers and their employes. The workingmen and women of Massachu setts, contributing as they did upward of j SOB,OOO to sustain the lives of their per- j secuted brethren in Spencer, the Brook fields, and other sections of Worcester County, have no tears to sited for the j embarrassment of this celebrated firm of slave-driving autocrats. Though they were successful in their designs for a time, still the old adage has again been realized, "The mills of the gods grind i slowly, hut they grind exceeding fine." i On calm, mature deliberation, the failure | of this once prosperous and arrogant | firm cannot he regretted, and it has met | its downfall through the courageous and dignified attitude of the Knights of j Labor.— Advocate. Truths From a Protection Journal. Wade's Fibre and Fabric (a staunch protectionist advocate) has this to say on the subject of the wool tariff: "It is idle to talk of any one section or country producing profitably all qualities of wool in quantity to fill the requirements of this country. Those speakers and writers who for political effect, or who by their faith or pride in 'lite boundless resources I of the country,' are led to claim that we can grow all the wool we want, do not I know what they are talking about. They have evidently had very little j experience in manufacturing the various fabrics that our people insist upon ' having. Wo might as well claim that j Massachusetts can grow all the food and j timber its people require. The only way to accomplish such a result in cither j case would be to bring the wants of the i people down to the supply, in entire I opposition to the spirit of the age. The j history of the past fifty years proves 1 that prices for our home-grown clip have ; never been improved by increased duties I upon tlie imported raw material; that | the effect has rather been to curtail the | demand from our own mills, the only | customers they can possibly have under : the adjustment of duties now in force. The present tariff is not only most unjust in its distinctions and restrictions, but practically it is prohibitory on a large j portion of the most desirable wools! which are available to our foreign com- petitors free from tax. It is protective to the European manufacturer, and only in name to the home wool-growers. ; These prohibited wools, after being! manufactured abroad, are exported to this country, paying a comparatively ! low rate of duty, decreasingin proportion to the labor expended upon them. This is a discouragement to tlic improvement of American fabrics, and on the finer grades gives the foreign mills a monopoly in our own markets. The above we believe to lie facts, no one of which can he ignored if we could have a settlement of the question in tlic interest of wool- j growers and consumers, which includes, i or should include, every man woman | and child in this country. Can we j expect legislation equal to the occasion?" Patti's Perpetual Youth. Patti is fast becoming the rival of the famous Niuon dol'Euelos, who pre served her beauty to such an oxtcnt up to her sixtieth year that the grand- ! sons of the men who loved her in her youth adored her with as much fervor i as their ancestors had done in their ; days. Patti is, to say the very least, a : long way from "sweet and twenty," | more like "fair and forty," without j the third qualification, yet people who saw her the othor day in Paris could see no visible change, no mark of tho i last ten or fifteen years upon her. She i was still as slim and rounded, still without a grayhair in her head, or a wrinkle upon her. There had not come under her chin that small break | in tho contour of the throat whioh is the first knell of dead youthfulnoss. | Her hair lay in rich, plentiful black locks about a brow where not one lino was to be seen, ller eyes were clear ■ aud bright as a child's, her cheeks j smooth and pink, her tcetii snowy and faultless, and the delicate lines of her figure just exactly what they wore a score of years hack. Some Impulsive ; woman seized her and demanded to be ! told the secret of her eternal youth, ■ and this is what Patti revealed to her. She said: "When lam at home I go \ to bed early—at 10:30. I l iso early, , that is, early for singers, which means j 10:30. So you see when I am not singing I sleep nearly twelve hours in | the twenty-four. Plenty of sleep, that is the secret of beauty aud freshness. I don't sleep until 10, of course, but I j make it a point not to get up at once j j when I wake, hut to take a glass of hot water and a lemon and read my j letters before I get out of bod. It's a [ j mistake to get up right away after waking. I bathe in tepid water, and | then sponge off with a cold sponge, j j On singing days 1 take a light and j early dinner at 3, and only a biscuit and a cup of hot bouillon after tho performance. No great quantity of j food and plenty of sleep, that's tho | way to keep one's complexion and figure intact. I rarely touch wine, a ; liquor-glass full of whisky after luucli ! eon or dinner, sometimes a glass of champagne. Nothing more. ! But the real aud main secret of Pat ti's perennial youth, and the ono she did not dwell upon, is the fact that | she has never given away to any emo- j j tions. She lias avoided all feelings of f every sort, as far as possible—hate, j love, everything that might make a wriuklo on her fair face. Growth of Hair After Death. A remarkable ease of the growth of j hair after burial came to light last j week at the disinterment of the body ; of Ainzi Coeyman, who died in Belle ville over four years ago and was buried in the old private cemetery of the Coeyman family on the River road. When Mr. Coeyman died Ins beard ; was about two inches long, and the hair upon his head was the usual j length worn during life. When tho j coffin was taken up last week for re- ' burial in Mount Pleasant cemetery it was discovered that the heard had I grown to tho length of two feet, and i that the hair upon the head had also grown out of tho sides and front of the face, completely obscuring tho latter from view. When brushed back it was found that not only tho face hut also i the body was in a remarkable state of j | nrauirvation,- Newark News. THE OFFICE OF PRESIDENT. Perhaps no other feature of the Gov ernment has provoked such general criticism, or been so widely misrepre- j seutod and misunderstood, as has the ollice of President of the United States. Its creation was the subject of singu- I lar comments among those who framed ; the Constitution; it was violently de -1 nounced when that instrument was put before the people for their ap- | i proval; it has been the target for sav- | I ago and persistent assault from that j i time to the present. And in regard to | lno other feature of the Government, |it may be added, have the dismal fore- i ! bodiugs of skeptics been so strangely disappointed by the results of exper j ieuce and practice. : In theory, it may be true that, as the the making and enforcement of laws ! is the great function of government, the power that executes the laws should be in perfect harmony with the power that makes them and be directly under its control—the executive being thus , simply the arm of the legislature, act ! ing thus promptly and implicitly in obedience to its supreme will. This ' idea, though to-day observed in the workings of other governments, was not accepted by our forefathers. In lodiug the cxecutivo power in the : hands of one person, the Constitution aimed to secure energy and precision i in the execution of the laws; but in es tablishing the Presidency as an inde pendent branch of the Government, j removed as far as possible from the meddlesome inlluence of Congress,and endowing it with important special powers, it suggested to many timid folk a vision of royalty in its most j i frightful shape. Nor were these j 1 thoughts quieted by events that fol j lowed in the history of the Govern- ; mcnt. Indeed, our third President lias given it as his opinion that Washing | ton himself believed the Republic j would end in something like a mon archy, and that iu adopting his stately j levees and other pompous ceremonies he sought, in a measure, to prepare ' the people gradually for the change ' that seemed possible, in order that it I might come with less shock to the 1 public mind. This remarkable state ment we need not take without proof. Whatever may have been Washing ton's secret fears, certain it is that his devotion to the Republic shielded it I from such a fate; aud had some of his ' successors in ofllce, or their advisers, been nearly as wise aud as true to the spirit of the Constitution, they would j have avoided acts which served to strengthen, rather than subdue, the popular distrust. That the actual power of the Presi dent exceeds that of some of the crowned dignitaries of earth is uni versally conceded. The Constitution did not intend that ho should be a mere ligurehead, or "ornamental cu pola, 11 to the Government. It not only conlided to him the execution of , the laws, but it armed him with a power over the making of laws which i he might deem improper. By this, i we mean the provision that every measure passed by Congress shall bo j presented to him for his approval and i signature, and that, if disapproved by him, he may return it with his ob jections. in which case it shall not be come law unless again passed by the vote of two-thirds (instead of a ma jority, as in the first instance) of each liouso of Congress. Whether this ; power was given to him solely as a ; weapon to defend his own ollice or the I integrity of the Constitution itself from attack by Congress, or whether the Constitution designed that ho should in this way have a voice in the making of all laws, of whatever na i turc, is one of the questions still un settled. The weight of opinion aud the practice at the beginning of the | Government seem to sustain the former view; the strict language of the Con stitution is in favor of the latter. The frequent exercise of the power in recent years, in marked contrast with its rare use by earlier Presidents, has aroused harsh feeling on the part of Congress aud some very sober think ing on the part of philosophers; it is plaiu, however, that the present Exe cutive has no doubt upon the subject. The power is certainly monarchical in its nature, and at iirst sight appears out of place in a Republic where the will of the people, as expressed by their representatives, should bo the law. But here comes iu the deliberate device of the Constitution. The execu tive branch of the Government was purposely so shaped as to act as a check against rash behavior by the legislative branch. The President is not the arm of Congress; lie does not owe his ollice to that body, nor is he directly responsible to it for his ac tions. Ho is elected, as is Congress, by the people; and, like Congress, he is answerable to the people. Unlike a member of Congress, lie is chosen not by the people of a particular State or district, but by the people of all the States. He is, therefore, as an indivi dual, the only representative of all tho people, and if, iu their Constitution, they saw lit to give to him, as their great national representative,this great inlluence over national legislation,— an influence equal to the votes of one sixth of all the members of Congress, —there is nothing in it contrary to the principles of republican government. From "The Routine of the Republic by Edmund Alton, in St. Nicholas. "Them Dudes is Cute." Ho was what might be safely and truthfully called a "howling swell." A microscopic Derby surmounted his smoothly-parted head of hair; a long, pale - paleontological, gray checked ulster swung gracefully from his slop ing shoulders; his loosely-cut trousers fell without a wrinkle over his bril liantly varnished shoes, aud he swung a Brobdignaggian cane with an airy ease that would lead the ordinary ob server to suppose he had the key to tho gate in the high picket fence that surrounds tho lour Hundred. He stopped alongside the leader of the usual string of cabs on the Madison square side of Fifth avenue. | "I say, cabbie, will you tako me to the seventh house around tho corner for a dime, you know? 1 ' The cabman growled a surly assent, aud tho young man was whirled around the corner in grand style, and ran up tho stoop of an imposing brownstono man sion after slamming the cab-door with noise enough to rouse tho entire block. "Do you often do that sort of thingP 1 ' asked a quiet citizen as the cabman anchored himself on the avenue again. "Do weP 1 ' was the reply. "Well, I often picks up a dollar of an cvenin 1 holpin' them counter-jumpin 1 dudes to keep up appearances. The ideaanT a new one. Them fellers walks fifteen or twenty blocks to save car fare, and whisk up to their best girl's house in away that would put a Vanderbilt to the blush. O, you kin bet them dudes is cute."— New York Sun. I Subcribe for the TRIBUNE. RIDING AN ALBATROSS. An Ancient Mariner Helntes a Queer Ad venture iu the Southern Ocean. All the southern ocean birds can be kept alive for any length of time in cold weather, and with perfect com fort to themselves, on a ship's deck, says a writer in the Boston Commercial Bulletin. They require some attention, hut there should be no difficulty about bringing the gigantic wandering al batross to Europe iu a properly cooled compartment to carry it through tho tropics, I kept an albatross for six weeks, giving it a good batli every morning and tying its feet up in constantly wet flannel bags to keep the delicato mem brane of the web from injury. It re fused to eat at first, but I overcame its objections by hitting it on tho beak with pieces of pork until it snapped at them, and getting a slice in its mouth it swallowed it from mere force of habit. I killed it when we reached the tropics and found it the fattest alba tross I ever skinned. If the wandering albatross were in troduced into our hemisphere it would indeed be a noble addition to our birds. I can see no reason why it should not be; its lesser congener thrives well enough. There is a famous story of a man having kept himself afloat, after fall ing overboard, uutil picked up, by seizing hold of an albatross that came within reach. There is nothing im probable in this. I have been over board with an albatross myself and found the bird quite manageable in the water. I was one dav catch ing cape hens and mollyhawts with a fine twine line and light hook made from a bent needle, when a large alba tross plumped suddenly down on my bait and was hooked before I could prevent him. Tho ship was barely moving through the water, so that I was able after a long time to keep him on and play the big bird right up to tho stern. Now came the crisis— would my line lift him out of the wa ter? I thought it would. I raised his weight gentfy, pulled cautiously up— another foot, and I would have been able to grasp the neck. At that moment he gave a wave of his wings; the extra resistance broko the twine anddown he flopped into the water, wing extended, but making no effort to leave tho spot. For a second or two ho lay still under me, almost within my reach and yet free. Off I went onto to him, seized a wing iu my right hand and found myself having a regular rough and tumble with the bird in tho water. It nover offered to bite. I was able to change hands and get tho struggling, brute by the feet with my right hand; then drawing my breast up over his tail I grabbed the neck with my left hand. I had a pretty hard tussle to do this, for the bird was very strong and fought from under me; but when I had the neck in my left hand I let go tho feet with my right and took hold of the right wing close to the body. I had only dropped about ten yards astern in doing this, but now the bird j swam with me on its back, and I was able to steer it after she ship. I made great way, overhauled the ship, and ; swam right alongside. A rope's end was thrown 1110, and I made the bird | fast, let it go, and saw it hauled on j board, swimming with the ship. Af terwards I went up the rope's-end my i self, having aotuslly caught and raas | tered an albatross in the water by hand, a feat in bird pursuit to bo proud of as an ornithologist or a sailor. A Calcutta Snakery. i The late King of Oude had built a snakery in the gardens of his palace at Garden Beach, near Calcutta. It was an oblong pit about thirty feot ; long by twenty feet broad, the walls being about twelve feet high and per | fectly smooth, so that a snake could j not crawl up. In the center of the pit there was a large block of rough ma sonry perforated so that it was as full of holes as a sponge. Iu this honey combed block the snakes dwelt, and | when the sun shone brightly they came out to bask or to feed. His Majesty used to have live frogs put in the pit, and amuse himself by j seeing the hungry snakes catch the frogs. When a large snake catches a small frog it is all over in an instant, but if a small snake catches a large frog, so that he cannot swallow it at once, the frog's cries aro piteous to hear. Again and again I have heard them while out shooting, and have gone to tho bush or tuft of grass from which tiio piteous cries came—some times in time, sometimes too late to save poor froggy, though the snake generally got shot. As a final story lot me tell how a frog has been seen to turn tho tables on the snako. Two gentlomenin Cachar some years ago saw a snake seize a small frog ami attempt to swallow it. But suddenly a largo frog jumped forward, seized tho snake's tail, and began to swallow the snake. How the affair might havo j ended cannot be told, because my 1 friends imprudently drew near to watch tho combat, when the frogs nnd snake took alarm, and the big frog disgorged tho snake's tail, and the j snake released the little frog and they j scuffled off. But the tale is perfectly 1 true, and both the gentlemen who saw it are still alive; and I only regret that it was not my good luck to see the affair with my own eyes.— lndia hd- I ler. Dentils from I.iglitiiiug. The majority ot deaths from liglit i ning occur in the level, open country j —trees, villages, and thickly built up j towns and cities, by their projections j iu the air, serving as conductors and ! thereby protecting the inhabitants j from direct stroke. Tho loss of life 1 annually throughout the world is very ! great. In European Russia from 1870 to 1877 no less than 2,270 persons were killed by this cause. Iu Austria during j the same time 1,700 persons were liko ; wise killed. In Prussia it is reported that seventy persons aro annually killed. Ten thousand persons aro re ported as having been struck during a perio'd of 20years, with 2,252 deaths in France, while in the United Statos during 1870 alone 202 deaths from lightning wero recorded. The Outward Indications, The little boy had come in with his clothes torn, his hair full of dust and his face bearing unmistakable marks of a severe conflict. "Oh, Willie! Willie!" exclaimed his mother, deeply shocked and grieved, "you have dis obeyed mo again. How often have I told you not to play with that Stable-, ford boy!"' "Mamma," said Willie, "do I look as if I had been playing with anybody?" The dehorning of cattle is growing in favor in Kansas. LOST! LOST! Anybody needing Queensware and won't visit our Bazaar will lose money. Just See! 6 cups and saucers, 25c; 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! We have anything and everything and won't be undersold. Straw hats! Hats to lit and suit theni 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. BERNER. 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 Invite You to Call and Inspect Our New Store. GOOD MATERIAL! LOW PRICES! HTXGKEI MA.X,LO"2", Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Freeland. BE JUBT AND FEAR NOT. J. J. POWERS has opened a MERCHANT TAILOR'S and GENTS' FURNISHING ESTABLISHMENT at 110 Centre Street, Freelnnd, and is not in partnership with any other establishment but his 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. Checks, 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, 16 East Maiu Street, Freeland. O'DONNELL & Co., Dealers in —GENERAL— MERCHANDISE, Groceries, Provisions, Tea. Coffee, Queensware, Glassware, &c. FLOUR, FEED, HAY, Etc. We invite the people ol' 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 I 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 and See Us. HiILTO- LEE, CHINESE LAUNDRY, "Ward's Building, 49 Washington St., FREELAND. PA. Shirts one, 10 Bosoms 8 New shirts 18 Coats 15 to 50 Collars 3 Vests 20 Drawers 7 Pants, w001en.25 to |l Undershirts 7 Pants, linen—2s to 50 Night shirts 8 Towels 4 Wool shirts 8 Napkins 3 Souks 3 Table covers.. .15 to 75 Handk'rch'fs,3; 2for 5 Sheets 10 Cuffs, per pair 5 Pillowslips —10 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 tlie rate of 50 cents per dozen. All work done in a first-class style. o|# P 1 "10111 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 CUKE FOR CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents. W Piso's Cure for Con- 5T Cd sumption is also the best M Cough Medicine. " M If you have a Cough 5 H without disease of the Jl L 3 Lungs, a few doses are all 15 H you need. But if you ne- J: Q gleet this easy means of Ejfl safety, the slight Cough £ H may become a serious r- El matter, and several bot- JJ M ties will be required. wffM I I I I'l I lull I l|]l ■ Piso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the EH Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. K£j ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mail. H 60c. E. T. llazeltlne, Warren, Pa. KM Advertise in the "Tribune."