mm TRIBUNE. Published Every Thursday Afternoon -BP TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS, - - SI.OO PER YEAR. Address all Communications to FREELAND TRIBUNE, FREELAND, PA. Olliee, IJirkbeck Brick, Jtd floor. Centre Street. Entered at the Freeh ml Postofflce as Second Vines Mutter. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. STATE. For Treasurer F.. A. Bigler, of Clearfield County. COUNTY. For Judge Edwin Shorts, of Wilkes-Barre. For Sheriff George J. Steigmaier, , of Wilkes-Barre. f For Recorder Joseph J. McGinty, 1 of llazle Township. Fur Coroner Win. F. Pier, of Pleasant Valley. For Surveyor James Crockett, of Ross Township. FRE EI.A XI >, PA., GCTtiBF.R 3, 1889. BITTER tears of anguish come from j Boston to-clay. The base, ball club j has dropped to second place, John L. j tvns oil a glorious drunk and the only Mike was most ignominiously dis graced at Cleveland. All in one day. NEXT month Connecticut will vote 011 n prohibition amendment to her constitution. A constitution that has withstood the ravages of hard cider and wooden nutmegs for nigh upon two centuries should be able to easily throw oft an epidemic like prohibition. THE labor unions of the state will oppose Speaker Boyer on account of bis hostile attitude to labor measures, and thousands of sincere temperance people will also oppose him on account of liis party being neither hot or cold on that question.—Minersville Free J'rrss. MAYBE the Democrats of Montana didn't neatly hoodwink the Republi can senate by letting the territory go Republican last year, thereby getting admitted to the union. On Tuesday the state came out in its true colors and elected the Democratic ticket by sweeping majorities. THE Kingston Times bad tlio Re publican state and county tickets 011 its editorial page until Saturday, when tlio state ticket was dropped. The Times, we presume, cannot condes cend to support for state treasurer a man like Boyer, whose name is synony mous with corruption, fraud and cow ardice. There should 1)0 more Hol brooks in journalism. INSPIRED by tho recent decision that permits dishonorably discharged Un ion soldiers to share in the grand pension grab, Theodore Noel, a recon structed rebel volunteer, proposes pensions for conscripted Confederate soldiers who were disabled from ser vice in a cause they were forced into, and from which the government at tho time was unable to protect them. Ho makes an ingenious argument in their behalf, ami has started out to have petitions for this amendment to the pension laws presented to con gress. ALL appointments of Harrison's ■ must, first and foremost, be accept- ! able to the powers that bo in the I Grand Amy of the Republic. The I president has practically adopted an amendment to the constitution requir ing the "advice and consent" of this | organization to all nominations, pre- ! ceding tho advice and consent of tho senate. As General Alger, a prob able rival of Harrison for the nomina tion in 1892, is at the bead of the j Grand Army, the complication is doubly increased. Between tho peo ple of the country demanding justice and the G. A. R. demanding every thing, Benny is in a pitiable plight. ONE of the present candidates for governor of Massachusetts, Mr. Brackett, was invited last year to at tend a Queen Victoria jubilee banquet at Boston, nnd, being unable or not wishing to take part, he sent his re grets. Shortly afterwards lie made a speech at a Land League meeting, and now, on account of these high crimes and misdemeanors, he is to be boycotted by the Dorchester Branch ! of the "British-American Associa- ! tion. It docs not seem to have oc ; curred to the upstarts that constitute I this branch of a foreign (in principles) 1 organization that it is an impertinence i 011 their part to obtrude these British contentions upon 1111 American elec-1 tion; yet it is an impertinence, and 11 gross one. EX-PRESIDENT CLEVELAND is not un naturally pleased with the utterances of the several Democratic state con ventions held this year. If peace liatli its victories as well as war, so defeat has its consolations as well as victory. Mr. Cleveland represents, and always will represent in Ameri can history, the idea upon which he staked his political all in November last —tariff reform. He suffered de- ' feat, but his discomfiture finffg compensations in tlio evidences,which multiply day by day, that the idea for which he fought survives aud grows in the hearts of liis fellow men. States which did not dare to assail the pro tective policy of the country in 1888 have fearlessly declared for tariff re form. The Democratic slogan of 1892 will be: "Free trade, free land, freo men." Can Hone*t Men Vote for ISoyer ? During the late session of the legisla ture Hon. S. M. Wherry, representative : from Cumberland County, made the charge that the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund had sold over a million dollars' worth of United States bonds belonging to the state which brought $60,000 interest to the state treasury every year and that the proceeds of this sale of the United States bonds were deposited in certain banks without inter est. This charge was couched in the plainest and most specific language, and Mr. Wherry moved that the house appoint a special committee to inquire into the management of the Sinking Fund and the treasury under which this achievement in financiering was accom plished. But the Republican house, with Speaker Boyer, (now the Republi can candidate for state treasurer) at its head, deliberately refused to make the inquiry. The only explanation of this remark able financial transaction which has been vouchsafed by the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund is that the United States bonds were sold with a view of employing the proceeds of the sale in the purchase of state bonds, hut that when the Commissioners appeared in the market for the purpose of buying state bonds the holders of the latter insisted upon a premium which the Commissioners regarded as exorbitant. This is simply a confession of incapacity, | not to say stupidity, 011 the part of the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund, j They knew that 110 state bonds were j overdue at the time they sold the United States bonds. They knew that as they could not compel the presentation of underdue state bonds for redemption they would be at mercy of the holders of the state bonds. They knew, too, that the state could gain nothing, but must lose, by the sale of United States bonds even if the state bonds could be bought at a reasonable premium. This explanation, therefore, fails to explain. I l)o the people of Pennsylvania approve of a management of the treasury by which the state loses SOO,OOO in interest' annually, a loss which must be made good by taxation? Are the voters of the state ready to endorse Henry K. Boyer, the Republican candidate for state treas urer, who as speaker of the house of representatives stifled the inquiry into the management of the treasury propos ed by Representative Wherry? Can fealty to party coyer quite this glaring infidelity to tlio public interest? These questions are submitted to the candid 1 and intelligent judgment of the voters ; whatever may be their political addition, i in the confident belief that they will j decide them at the polls, not as the ■ blinded slaves of the party, but as free j and thoughtful citizens. —Harrisburg j Patriot. , ( <>etting Under the Free Trade thinner. During the last presidential campaign ' very few, if any, of the trade and finan " I cial journals of the country supported ; the Democratic party. However, the light begins to dawn upon these protec tive advocates and they are calling loud ly for a change. Fibre and Fabric, the [. organ of the wool manufacturers, worked with all its might for the election of 1 Harrison, yet in its last issue it makes . an explicit demand for free wool. It i ' upbraids the G. O. P. for broken prom ises and gives a plausible solution of Re publican success when it says; ! Thousands of good, honest votes were 1 given for the Republican nominees at the last presidential election for the sole object of giving the party an opportunity Ito correct its own mistakes. Will the Republican party be equal to the emer | gency, and render justice to its citizens ' for its past delinquencies in the matter j of raw materials? One year ago there was nothing too ! good for protectionists, according to the j Export and Finance Journal. The same paper now terms protection a "canaba listic policy." The following plea for unlimited commercial relations will meet J with cordial approval: < 'onflning trade to certain sections and \ depending on the people of the one country for the consumption of that country's products is very much like cannibalism. It means that we must live off of each other. That is exactly what we of the United States are doing ! when we limit, as we practically do now, our commercial relations to the various | states of the union. This i Straight from the Shoulder. j Somebody bus been saying something j to cause the Newsdealer to pour out hot | shot like the following; We would like to know what the Republican party of this county even did for the Irish-Ameri | cans that Phil Boyle should go around 1 and ask Irish-Americans to vote for him at the coming election. The Republican j party is Bishop Newman's party, and j Bishop Newman lias said that if lie had j liis way he would bar out all foreigners. | The Republican party is anxious enough j to secure tho votes of "foreigners" on [ election day, but at the same time it I never allows an opportunity to pass to j snub this class of citizens. The Irish- American, the German-American, the Italian-American, the Polish-American and all true Americans belong in the j Democratic party because it is the peo : pie's party, and time and again has fought for the rights of the people, t irregardless of nationality or creed. Shame on these sons of "foreigners" who would ape a certain blue element in our politics. If this same element hud | their way the "sons of their fathers" would not be American citizens to-day. I It was only through the efforts of the Democratic party that their fathers were < able to land in this country at all. Unclt> Sum'* Cotttly Army. The figures compiled at the pension bureau to show the work of the last 1 fiscal year disclose that our army of pensioners had readied the - prodigious i number of 345,125 up to June 30, so that at the present time it must be about half fa million strong at its recent rate of in , crease. Yet this does not satisfy Senator j Ingalls, who calls for making every man who served in the civil war n pensioner for life upon the government, whether ill or well, rich or poor. It further appears that during the late fiscal year the payments for pensions had reached the extraordinary sum of $88,275,113, which was several millions more than the amount, then unprecedented, of the 12 months preceding. When it is re flected than the war ended nearly 25 years ago, and that the names of hun dreds of thousands of those who have once received pensions have been dropp ed, the continued increase in disburse ments is most extraordinary. A dozen years ago the total amount required for pensions annually was between $27,000,- 000 and $28,000,000 a year. Now more than three times as much is paid out; yet an outcry is made for other legisla tion which would carry the payments to more than $100,000,000 a year.—New York Time*. [ The Truth Will Prevail. Mr. J. It. Sargent, the great hardware manufacturer of New Ilaven and New York, was an ardent protectionist, and strongly opposed the reduction of the tariff which was talked of in 1873. He is now in Australia, and is freely ex pressing his opinions in favor of free trade and the single tax. He says he was afraid that if we lowered the tariff we should be ruined by the importation of pauper-made goods. "So I paid a special visit to Europe in '73, and went through all the principal manufacturing districts of England and the Continent, for the purpose of comparing my con dition as an American manufacturer employing high-priced labor with that of the European manufacturers employ ing cheap labor. Two years afterwards 1 paid another visit to Europe for the same purpose, and from what I saw during those two visits my views under went a complete change. I have since paid several visits to Europe, and have traveled in India and Japan, and have made a special study of the comparative value of cheap labor—Asiatic or coolie labor—with that of America's high priced labor, and I am convinced that the cheapest labor in the world is the high-priced labor of the states. But, notwithstanding this, I am convinced that the real interests of the manufac turer are not on the side of protection' A man may be narrowly selfish or broadly selfish. I hold that for an American manufacturer to be a protec tionist is to be narrowly selfish. Under the present system the people are unable to buy anything like what they would do if trade were free. The stimulus that, would be given to production would be incalculable ; the more goods that would be produced the cheaper they could be sold. Labor now idle would be employ ed, the consumption would increase with the ability to consume, and trade would benefit in every way. lam an absolute free trader. I am in favor of the aboli tion of all taxation on commodities, and the raising of revenue necessary to support the government from land values, irrespective of improvements. I know of no tax so just and which would be so evenly distributed or so , easily raised." I Thus the truth is gradually spreading r wherever the English language is spoken, i not only among the masses, but also > among the most intelligent of all those . classes whose best and most permanent . interests are not inimical to the general welfare. Single Tax Across the Sea. There is a curious vatility in the old superstition that those who adopt as their watchword "The Land for the People," are aiming at an equal division of the land between the individual citi zens. Yet a very little reflection would soon show that it is possible to believe that the land is the common property of the whole people, and at the same time to be strongly opposed to any such equal division. If Torn, Dick and Harry had a horse left them, they would never dream of cutting up the horse into three equal portions, so many pounds of horse beef for each man's share! Railway companies, canal compnnics and dock companies are not unknown in this country, and their existence proves that it is possible for a large number of people to enjoy common rights in a huge prop erty without feeling it necessary to assert those rights by the method of physical division. What would be thought of a shareholder of (say) the Midland Rail way who should say : "The railway is the property of the company, that is, of the shareholders; let us divide it up—so many miles of rails, and so much rolling stock to each shareholder?" Every body sees that it is impossible to divide the property of a railway company or a canal company among the shareholders without praeticnlly destroying its value. The value of the railway or canal from its owners' point of view consists in its power of earning a dividend for them. They do not divide the railway; they divide its earnings. This is exactly the way in which land restorers propose to treat the land. They are not such fools us to suppose that the equal division of the land among ull the people is as easy a matter as the division of a cake among a party of children. But if we cannot divide land equally, we can divide rent. Nor is it necessary even to divide the rent. There aro public expenses to be met, which at present are provided for by unjust and oppressive taxation upon labor. The earnings of the land—the economic rent —should be applied first of all to meeting public expenses. The "single tax on lund values" would be a tax only in name; in its nature it would be a rent—a rent paid to the people for the use of the people's property. At present the people of England are in the position of the shareholders of a railway company, who pay all the working ex penses out of their own pockets without getting any dividend, while the directors pocket all the takings.—London Demo crat. The K. of L. Executive Board is in session at St. Louis. COUNTY NEWS. —The annual celebration of the Grand Army of this district will be held at Sun bury next Wednesday. —A county fair began at Dallas yester day and will continue until to-morrow. The exhibits are reported good. —While coupling cars on the Jersey Central at Penn Haven on Tuesday Edward Green was squeezed to death. —Charles Blake, aged 53 years, was killed at a Lehigh Valley crossing in Wilkes-Barre early Saturday morning. —The hardware store of Ex-Burgess Kerr at Plymouth was closed by the sheriff on Tuesday on a S7OOO judgement note. —George Barney, a well known citizen of Wilkes-Barre, was killed by his wagon being upset in a runaway on Monday, near Miners' Mills. —The loth annual fair of Carbon County was opened at Leliighton on Tuesday. The principal feature is horse racing. The fair will close to-morrow. —The Laflin & Rand powder works near Cressona, Schuylkill County, blew up Thursday morning, killing three men, and injuring several others, two or three dangerously. —The Seranton Diocesan C. T. A. Union will parade as follows next Thurs day: First district, White Haven; second district, Pittston; third and fourth dis tricts, Seranton. —Mark King, convicted last week for j the killing of his wife, was not sentenced as expected on Saturday. It was post poned until October 28, owing to an application for a new trial. —Dr. C. M. Williams, a prominent citizen of Pittston, died there last week. He was born in Lanesboro, Susquehanna County, and was the grandson of Martin Lane, who founded the place. —The corner-stone of the new state normal school at Lock Haven was laid yesterday afternoon with Masonic cerci monies, Clifford P. MacCalla, Grand Master of the Masons of Pennsylvania, officiating. —The mine examining boards of various districts met in Wilkes-Barre on Saturday to discuss certain features of the Gallagher law. There are said to be a number of defects in the law which need correction by the next legislature. —Gertrude Newell, a 10-year-old girl at Bear Lake, was fatally injured by playing with a dynamite cartridge on Sunday. She struck it with her foot and it exploded, tearing away part of her left arm and terribly cutting her on the body. —Policeman David A. Thomas of Ed wardsville was acquitted at Wilkes-Barre on Friday on the charge of killing Thomas Kchelling on June 15. The evi dence was strongly against the prisoner and the verdict of the jury caused much surprise. —The $75,000 damage suit of Mary Cannon of Scrunton, injured in the Mud Run disaster a year ago, was amicably settled on Saturday. A few weeks ago the plaintiff refused to settle for $20,1*10, and it is believed she received more than that. —The Young Ladies' Base Ball Club of Chicago are on their annual tour through the country. They defeated a picked nine at Wilkes-Barre on Monday, and play against Tamaqna on the Wah netah grounds, (lien Onoko, to-day. The club is composed entirely of females. —William Irvin, a miner, and his Polish laborer, went to their usual work in a colliery at Mahanoy Plane on Tues day evening of last week. Failing to return home on AVcdnesday morning search was made and on Wednesday night the dead bodies of both men were found in an abandoned working, they having been suffocated by black damp. Unclaimed Letters. The following is a list of unclaimed letters remaining in the Freeland Post office, October 2, 1889: Damato, Rosa Eirisch, Joliann Yacob Ferry, D. J. Gallagher, Dan Godzinska, Marya Handcr, C. E. Haszo, Gyorgy Marjioti, Francesco O'Ronnell, Manes Shafer, Louis Szkarupa, Piter Smith, Mrs. F. M. Walters, Amanda S. Wilson, Geo. L. Ward, Charles Zeirdt, Mrs. John Persons calling for any of the above letters should say Advertised. Wn. F. Boyi.E, P. M. A Minister firings Suit. Two years ago Rev. Wm. Holden, an Episcopal clergyman of Hazleton, while riding with a lady, was struck by an engine and injured for life. He had intended bringing suit against the rail road company, but was restrained by the lady, who was wealthy and was averse to appearing in court as a witness. She tendered him a check for SIOOO if he would abandon his intention to institute proceedings, lie refused the offer and 011 Tuesday he tiled in the protlionotary's office a claim for SIO,OOO damages against the Pennsylvania and Lehigh Valley Railroad Companies. The latter is the owner and the former the operator of the line of road upon which the accident occurred. I find Ideal Tooth Powder is without exception tho best I liavo ever used. With its aid I keep my teeth very clean and white, which I was unable to do with any other powder I have ever tried before. So says Ferdinand E. Chartard, Baltimore, Md. By the way, will you buy and use Ideal Tooth Powder ? We can thoroughly rec ommend it. R. E. Nichols, Dentist, Sa lina, Kansas, says, Ideal Tooth Powder is in my estimation, just what its name indicates. Au engraving 20 x 24 is given with each two bottles. Price 25 cents per bottle. One on the Inspector. A school inspector hailiug from Glasgow has the credit, says the Dun dee {Scotland) Advertiser , of telling tho following story against himself. It ought to bo premised that he is not tall audhas not been blessed with much personal beauty, but he thinks himself, and deservedly so, an excel lent public speaker. Examining a junior class one day late ho wished to lead up to "breath" as the reply to a question. He had no reply at first, but after a pause he said, "What comes out of my mouth?" A wee little fellow promptly answered, "Gas, sir." Af terward, iu explaining what au adjec tive was, he said, "I am a man, but place an adjectivo before 'man.' "I am a " "Little man!" exclaimed one hopeful. The inspector does not liko to bo called little. Ho said, "Well —ah—give me another." "Ugly little man!" shouted a too literal bov. Origin of "We Won't Go Home. Ail interesting history of an old and well known comic tune was given by Prof. Ensel, a music teacher, in s speech in the Music Teachers' Associa tion recently. He said that when the army of the tirst Napoleon was in Egypt in 1799 the camp for awhile was near tho pyramids. One afternoon about sunset the band was playing. Tho inhabitants of the desert had col lected near and were listening to tho music. Nothing unusual happened until the band struck up a tune which we now hear under the name of "We Won't Go Homo Till Morning." In stantly there were the wildest demon strations of joy among tho Bedouins. They embraced each other and shout ed and danced in the delirium of their pleasuro. Tho reason was that they were listening to the favorite and old est tune of the people. Prof. Eusel then stated that the tune had been taken to Europe from Africa in the eleventh century by the Crusaders, and had lived separately in both coun tries for over 700 years. This is cer tainly enough to make "We Won't Go Home Till Morning" a classic. Its origin is more of a mystery than the source of the Nile.— Louisville Post, Wild Animals In India. A letter from Calcutta reports that a herd of 100 wild elephants has been captured iu Mysore. Also that there were 6,000 deuths by snake-biles in the northwest provinces last year. In Madras 10,000 cattle were killed by wild animals and 1,642 persons lost their lives by snakes aud wild beasts. Compensation. Mrs. Cobwigger—"My husband, I'm sorry to say, is a man of very little taste." Cora—"That must be real nice for you, for I heard ma say your cooking was dreadful." "Man know thyself," says tho poet; but this advice will never be regarded as long as there is a neighbor to ob serve. Correspondence From the Capital. WASHINGTON, October 1, 1889. The ebb tide has set in. From tho sea coast and mountain resorts Washingtonians are com ing home again, and it is but repeating wliat those already returned have said to remark that they are very glad to be back. They have comfort instead of more or less, discomfort, do mestic life in place of vagrnpt hotel living, and the National Cupital instead of the small life of some summer-living hostelry. It is a matter of social duty that many residents of Washing- I ton must spend certain months of the year I away from home, and it is without much doubt, a matter of regret to a large number of I them. It is so, because Washington is so com ' fortablo a place in which to live; because here i is a moderate climate, here are perfect streets, i here are shaded sidewalks, here are teeming J markets, here are abnndant connections with all the outing-places of a day, here are the requisites of pleasant living in a modern way. To desert what Washington affords and suffer to an extent beside the sea or under the eye of some mountain hotel keeper is one of the pen alties of being in the swim. Brave people and much enduring are those who are "in the ; swim." A month from now most of the suffer j ing wanderers will have returned to Washing -1 ton. A month later they will have recuperated and be ready for the season of festivity which ! comes here with the opening of Congress and the full swing of official life added to the local term of social effort occurring naturally in a city of two hundred thousand or so people. The Capital is beginning to be itself again and everybody is gratified over the fact. It should ' really be itself all the year round. It is almost | old enough and big enough. GETTING HEADY FOK THE CENSUS. j Again, ut the close of the round ten years, the Cciibus Ihii'cuu is pinching itself and trying | to wake up. Like the 17-ycar locust, between j its periods of tremendous activity, it enjoys u sound sleep of several years but it never aetu- I ally dies. About 1884 it became comatose and | since that time there has been only one single clerk on deck to attest actual vitality, llut last spring the President appointed Robert P. Poller its superintendent and signs of obun dant life were at once apparent. Already two or three hundred clerks have been appointed to prepare for the national census of next June, and within six months Mr. Porter will have appointed 2,000 clerks and 40,000 enumera tors to complete the immense work. Most of the clerks, whose tenure will be short, are alrea dy selected, and the local enumerators, whose office life will last only one month ure now being designated in the thousands of districts all over the country. Up to the present time Porter and his assistants have boen sheltered in private oflices, but the hot hive is already crowded, and in a month the workers will swarm and find new hives in different parts of the citj, which they will occupy exclusively. If any reader thinks that It is mixing meta phors to allude to these people both as cicadas and us honey bees, he ought to stumble upon the Census Rureau when it is hibernating and when it isn't. It is the intention of the Super intendent to make the eleventh census more ! complete than any that has preceded it. Some subjects not hitherto covered will be exhaus tively treated, and some interests will be repre sented much more compactly than in 1880. Hut the preliminary plans are as yet somewhat nebulous, and it would be impossible now to tell of more than tentative purposes. MAIL PHIVILEGES OF THE GOVERNMENT. If the Government of the United States had to pay for the use of the mails just as an ordin ary citizen does when ho posts a letter or a package, the receipts of the Post-office Depart ment would be increased many thousands of doUars in the course of a year. The Washing ton post-office alone sends out as much as a million pounds of matter from the Executive Departments and Congress in the course of a month, and this matter is all minus postage. The Government departments in the city are | also exempted from the payment of the cus ! tomary registration fee of ten cents, and 219,813 1 letters and parcels were sent out gratuitously by the money order office of the Washington post-office in twelve months. Resides, whole libraries of public documents are carried free for Congressmen by their Uncle Samuel under their franking privilege. Hut while a Con gressman cun send out a public document to his constituent free of charge, if he wants to write him a letter he is compelled to pay the regular charge Just as any other citizen. Veal's ngo he could send out letters free. Now he is allowed $125 per annum for stamps and station ery instead. TANNKKIBM IN FULL BLOOM. The poople view with keen dissntisfaction a shocking condition of administration that still continues at the Peusiou Office. In charge of that vust department, which is now making monthly payments to nearly 500,000 persons, is a man named Hiram Hmith. He is Assistant Commissioner of Pensions. He did not fall with Tanner. Yet Hiram Smith, and not James Tanner, put his arm into the public chest the other day and took out $0035.72 for himself. Not only did he pocket this grab but he aided forty-eight other watch-dogs to get into the same smoke-house. Forty-nine of the paying tellers of the Pension Office cashed the same kind of check. IT'S IIINGLISH YOU KNOW. The British cabinet now numbers seventeen members. It will be the ambition of some of our Republican statesmen to catch up with the mother country in this matter. The next move in this direction will probably be to make the Pension Bureau a separate department, with u secretary, a force, a fund and a policy, all its own. R. Subcribe for the TRIBUNE. LOST! LOST! Anybody needing* Queensware and won't visit our Bazaar will lose money. Jnst See! 0 cups and saucers, 25c; covered sugar bowls, 25c; butter dishes, 25c; bowl and pitcher, 69c; plates, 40 cents per dozen up; cream pitchers, l()c; chamber setts, 7 pieces, $1.75. Also grocer ies: cheap jelly by bucket 5c per lb; i'resh 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 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. 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! HUGH MALLOT, Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Freeland. IJE JUST AND FEAR NOT. J. J. POWERS has opened a MERCHANT TAILOR'S an.l GENTS' FURNISHING ESTABLISHMENT at 110 Centre Street, Freeland, and 1H not in partnership with any other establishment but his own, and attends to his business jersonally. Ladies' outside garments cut and fitted to measure in the latest style. A. RUDEWICK, 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, t Dealer in Flour, Feed, Grain, HAY, STRAW, MALT, Ac., •Best Quality of Glover & Timothy SEED. Zcmany's Block, 15 Bast Main Street, Freeland. O'DONNELL & Co., Dealers in —GENERAL— . MERCHANDISE, Groceries. Provisions. Tea, Coffee. Queensware, Glassware, &c. 4 FLOUR, FEED, HAY, Etc. We invite the people of Freeland and vicinity to call and examine our large and handsome stock. Don't forgot the place. Next Door to the Valley Hotel. F° r Printing of any Description call at tlie TRIBUNE OFFICE. Posters, Hand Bills, Letter Heads, Note Heads, Bill Heads, Baffle Tickets, Ball Tickets, Ball Programmes, Invitations, Circulars, . By-Laws, Constitutions, Etc., Etc., Etc. Call and See TTs. XjILTQ- LEE, CHINESE LAUNDRY, Ward's Building, 49 Washington St., FREELAND, PA. Shirts one, 10 Bosoms 8 New shirts 151 Coats 15 to 50 Collars 51 Vests 520 Drawers 7 Pants, w001en.25 to $1 Undershirts 7 Pants, Unen—2s to 50 Nightshirts 8 Towels 4 Wool shirts 8 Napkins 51 Hooks 51 Table covers... 15 to 75 Handk'rch'fs,!!; 2for 5 Sheets 10 Cuffs, per pair 5 Pillowslips —lO to 25 Neckties 3 Bed Ticks 50 Work taken every day of the week and returned on the third or fourth day thereafter. Family washing at the rate of 50 cents per dozen. All work dope in a first-class style. Pi# * consJmpT l^' 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. rjl Piso's Cure for Con- E9 ESfl sumption is also the best Ea ra Cough Medicine, n W If you liavo a Cough Ba H without disease of the Q Lungs, a few doses are all 6*l H you need. But if you ne- fsl C 3 gleet this easy means of 181 Ed safety, the slight Cough Hi k*J may become a serious WrX M matter, and several bot- Q U ties will be required. fla 1111 Miii i ■ Plso's Remedy for Catarrh 1b the |H Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ Sold by druggists or sent by malL 50c. K. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. Advertise in tlie "Tribune."