FREELAND TRIBUNE. Published Every Thursday Afternoon -BY— THOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS, - - SI.OO PEK YEAH. Address all Communications to FREELAND TRIBUNE, FREELAND, PA. Office, Ilirkbeck Brick, 3d Boor, Centre Street. Entered at the Freeland Postoffice us Second Class Matter. FREELAND, NOVEMBER 21, 188!). WH AT has become of F.ckley B. Coxe's boom for Congress?— Netrsdcaler. It has been stowed away with Os borne's booinlet for governor. Two of a kind, don't you know. ANNIE JOSEPH, an Arabian woman, was kept in the Wilkes-Barre jail one hundred and live days as a witness in a murder trial. She asked for pay for her time at $1 a day. Judge Woodward decides that she is not en titled to it, and she is told to go. A strange law, indeed, that will lock a person up several months for being a witness and then refuse payment for the time spent in jail. Such a law should he repealed, and a prisoner given a more speedy trial, so that wit nesses should not be compelled to wait forever on the whim of an at torney or magistrate. SUFFICIENT information lias been ] received from Atlanta to warrant the [ assertion that the Knights of Labor is now completely under control of { the conservative element, and the i work so far done indicates a return to j the advocacy of its first principles, I which were almost lost sight off for some years past. The present mem bers of the Order may be said to be thoroughly assimilated with the de signs and objects of the organization, and by strictly confining themselves to the lines of work laid down by the Atlanta convention, they can accom plish much good in the future. THE testimony of residents of the anthracite coal regions shows that a great many Hungarian jolifieations wind up in a free light, a stabbing af fray or a murder. Efforts of the au thorities to put an end to affairs of this kind are greatly retarded by such verdicts as the one given at Wilkes- Barre on Saturday in a murder case. The evidence against the prisoner, Sulgofsky by name, was of such a character as to warrant any verdict except that of acquittal, which was the one rendered. A few more ver dicts of this kind and the desperate characters in her population will begin to think they own Luzerne County.— Phila. Press. TIIE last remaining empire in South America, Brazil, passed out of exist ence on Friday and will soon become a full Hedged republic. This impor tant change was in the air for several years past, but the step was not ex pected so soon, and it is possible that the promoters may have acted some what hasty, considering that all the people are not in sympathy with them. So far, it is stated, there has been no bloodshed occasioned by the revolu tion, the ruler quietly submitting. Much sympathy has been expressed for Emperor Dom Pedro, under whose continuous reign of fifty-eight years Brazil has raised itself to the dignity of a nation. He was a good monarch and deserved better than expulsion. A MOVEMENT is under way, backed by several charitably inclined persons, looking to the relief of the political prisoners of Russia, through the in terventation of the United States Government. It is a delicate busi ness, but there is no other nation in the world that could so well under take remonstrance with the czar as the United States, as the most amic able and friendly relations have always existed between the two countries. But before obtruding their opinions on the czar it would be more consis tent for those reformers to turn their attention to the "Russia in America" —the anthracite coal regions of Penn sylvania—where thousands of serfs are daily made to feel the miseries of Siberian convicts. THE death of Hon. Lewis C. Cas sidy, who was Attorney General of Pennsylvania under Governor l'atti son, removes another distinguished lawyer and politician from the ranks of Democracy. While filling the po istion of legal adviser of the state he commanded the admiration of all hon est men by his brilliant attack upon the Reading Company for their fla grant violation of the constitution in engaging in mining and carrying coal at the same time. Ho determined to test our state constitution and see if the law could be trampled upon with impunity by any man or corporation. Success was just about to dawn upon him and the great corporation was about to be made respect and obey the law when his term expired. His Republican successor has neither the moral courage or ability to follow the work began by Mr. Cassidy and the violation continues to the present day. While also an active political worker he was not of the class known as "pro fessional politicians," but was as ready to denounce jjersons of his own party as those of his opponents, if | lts thought it would be for the public benefit. —lfon. Lewis C. Cassidy, the promi nent lawyer and Democratic politician of Philadelphia and ex-Attorney General of Pennsylvania, died at his residence Monday morning of heart trouble. He was 00 years of age. Corbin In HIH True Colors. An article written by Austin Corbin, i president of the Philadelphia and Read ing Railroad Company, in which labor j organizations were vehemently denounc ! Ed, brings forth the following from the | Locomotive Firemen' Magazine. It will repay you to read it. Impudence, hypocrisy, chicane, knav i cry and such other mental and moral defects as go to make up the modern scoundrel have no limits, and if such moral monstrosities have cash, as in the case of Corbin, they are able to push themselves to the front, and, with exhi bitions of effrontery that defy exaggera tion or characterization, play the role of ! injured innocence, and demand for themselves a verdict of indorsement in tlie face of facts which pronounce them | irredeemably vile, depraved and capable !of perpetrating deliberate crimes, richly ' meriting the title of villain, and which ought to subject them to penal servitude. ' The times, prolific of such abnormal : productions, have not brought to the 1 surface a creature of mental and moral deformities more repulsive than Austin \ Corbin, who, in the October number of the North American lie view , writes of [ "The Tyranny of Labor Organizations." ! Austin Corbin has money, a boast that ' any successful burglar, counterfeiter or I pirate can make with equal nonchalance. ( Money, more than charity, is made to l . obscure a multitude of faults, but in J Austin Corbin's case, while money para- j lyzes justice, thereby permitting him to j practice his schemes of knavery, it has not saved him from the detestation of 1 all honorable men. lie is known to be 1 a depraved wretch capable of concocting ' schemes of robbery, and this he has ! r done with such a reckless disregard of 1 j law, with such shameless perversity, 1 with such a piratical defiance of right, 1 ! justice and public opinion, that the Con , gross of the United States was called upon to investigate his deep-laid schemes of wreck and robbery, and a committee 1 of (.'ongressmen visited the "black hills," where his rule has produced poverty, 1 j degradation and famine, and, asuirected, have prepared a bill, which, if it be ! comes a law, will, in some measure at I least, check the evils his rule has inflict- 1 j ed. ; That such an abnormal combination of all that is loathsome in greed, of all that I is depraved in morals, of all that is dis reputable in business, of all that is false in profession, not content with a reputa tion for infamy which makes his name the synonym of all things despicable, should seek further conspicuousness by ; slandering labor organizations, can be accounted for only upon the hypothesis that his inherent venom, like that of the rattlesnake at certain seasons, lias so diffused itself through his mental, moral and physical organism as to render him blind to all things decent. There is not ! a labor organization on the continent that does not loathe the name of Austin Corbin, and his article published in the j lie new will serve to intensify their detes tation. Austin Corbin, more properly Austin j Cobra, starts out by saying "it is a inis- I take to assume that employers are always l wealthy capitalists." No labor organiza tion in the country ever made such a mistake. On the contrary they know, as well as does Cobra Corbin, "that in a vast majority of cases employers are not men of great wealth." Many stock | holders in great enterprises are people ;of moderate means. Such was notably j true in the case of the Philadelphia & I Reading Railroad, in which widows and j orphans and men of small means made j investments and received large divi | (lends, but when such men as Cobra Corbin got hold and dominated the j affairs of the splendid property it was j wrecked and became the most corrupt : corporation on the continent, hut never until Cobra Corbin inserted his fangs ' j into the corporation did it reach such a low degree of demoralization as to de j mand of the Congress of the United ; States an investigation and legislation to ' check, if possible, a career of unprece dented scoundrel ism. The rascalities of ] Corbin are now as well understood as the treason of Benedict Arnold, or the ! colossal boodle career of Boss Tweed. ! This superlative record of knavery is | now known to the nation by virtue of i the report made by the Congressional , | Committee. It is not given to every ; scamp to have a national reputation, nor j is eyery exposed knave proud of noto | rioty. Corbin is an exception. He seems to glory in his infamy, and has : the vanity to suppose that by denouncing . ! labor organizations his name will go j down to history after the fashion of the fool bull that tried to arrest the speed of ! a locomotive. I In his article on "The Tyranny of Labor Organizations," Corbin asserts "there never has been a time," and 1 assumes "there never will be" a time , | the worker will not be permitted to leave | "his employer's service;" and upon the J heels of this old chestnut remarks: 1 "The worker in this country at least, ' under the law, happily, is not a slave." By all the Pagan gods at once, what a discovery! Not a slave "under the law." i Ho! all ye workingmen, are you not , under lasting obligations to Cobra Corbin for the declaration? And yet this em bodiment of hate toward labor organiza i tions without law has compelled men on the Philadelphia Ac Reacting Railroad, and in the mines controlled by that cor poration, to play the part of slaves, to renounce their rights as men and citi zens, and yield to his dictation, the pen alty of refusal being idleness. "Some employers," says Corbin, and he is of the number, "employ no new men who are members of any of the labor unions; applicants are required to promise not to join any while retaining their employ ment ; those who prefer the unions are required to quit the service, and promo tions are entirely confined to those of undoubted loyalty to their employer and hix jtoUcy." It is eminently worth while for the workingmen, anu all others who are interested in labor problems, to compare the "tyranny of labor organizations" with the tyranny of Corbin's rule in the anthracite regions of Pennsylvania, as set forth in the paragragh we have quoted. But the preliminary to such , comparisons as the terms "tyranny" and "tyrant" should be defined. In ! this country the laws recognize neither one nor the other; nevertheless in defi-1 ance of laws men exercise tyrannical ! authority over the affairs of men as | autocratic and despotic as characterizes \ the reign of a Russian czar, and this has j been done by Austin Corbin to an extent that the Congressional Committee which investigated his methods did not hesitate to say he had "Russianized" the anthra- ' cite coal regions of Pennsylvania. To accomplish his tyrannical purpose he I found it necessary to attack labor organ- I izations, not because such organizations i were tyrannical in their methods of j operation, but because they stood in the way of his despotic sway. What are the methods he adopted to carry out his nefarious designs? It is in j proof that by cruelty and oppression lie ! drove his employes to resistance. He deliberately inaugurated a strike, which had these villainous purposes in view. ' characterized by hypocrisy, tyranny and j robbery. j[ e intended to advance the! - price (,f c o al and thereby rob the public. He intended to reduce wages, and there > iL u h \ B employes, lie intended to urcak U P labor organizations, and thcre y r , uce the men who would accept j employment under him, and the vile creatures who played the part of caitiffs in response to his orders, to the degrad ed position of serfs. His scheme suc ceeded. He did rob the public, he did reduce wages, and he did abolish labor organizations. Nor is this all. Corbin's villainies did reach the attention of Con gress, and a committee of that body passed judgment upon him, the first in stance on record, and now the scoundrel is known to the nation, not only as a tyrant, but a pirate as well, a brass cheeked, bronzed-faced monstrosity, who, metaphorically at least, is gibbeted before the world, and has become the target for the righteous maledictions of all men who abhor hypocrisy and de | pravity. Such is the imperfect characterization of the man who stains the pages of the North American Heview with the venom of intense hatred, but the excessive ma lignity of the attack, like the over-dose of some poisons, defeats the purpose in view, and while labor organizations are not harmed, Corbin, by a law of retribu tive justice, is made more conspicuously infamous. In what regard, we inquire, are labor organizations tyrannical? Throughout their entire history they have sought to achieve for workingmen better condi tions. Not by antagonizing capital, but by defeating the impoverishing and de grading schemes of such heartless scoun drels as Austin Corbin. To defend labor organizations when attacked by such knaves as Austin Corbin it is not required to say that they have made no mistakes; that every movement and method has been perfection, the embodiment of wis dom, and therefore deserving of approv al . Labor organizations are human, and therefore fallible. This may be said with equal propriety of all human organ izations, including the church; but it may be said, and should be said, for it is an eternal truth, as imperishable as the pillars of God's throne, that from first to last, everywhere, in all zones that belt the earth, where there has been a labor organization, their purpose has been to resist tyranny, oppression, despotism and degradation; to obtain fair wages for work; to elevate their membership in the scale of being; to obtain food, cloth ing and shelter befitting human beings, and something more for rainy days, for sickness and old age; to advance in edu cational power, consideration and influ ence; in moral excellence, in culture and refinement; to awaken noble aspirations, that in all things pertaining to citizen ship there should be such development of mind forces, such comprehension of duties and prerogatives as would re dound to the welfare of the state and be accepted as guarantees of the perpetuity of free institutions. Such are the unde niable facts of history relating to labor organizations. They have been written in tears and blood, with "an iron pen and lead in the rock forever." The chronicles are filled with records of vic tories and defeats, but every repulse has inspired defiance, and every triumph has emphasized the conquering truth that "Freedom's battle, oft begun Iteuueath'd from bleeding sire to son, Tho' bullied oft is ever won." And in confirmation of the truth, there is not a breeze nor a gale that freshens and blows in all our broad land, from ocean to ocean, from gulf to inland sea that does not touch and unfold the banner of a labor organization bearing the motto: "The final triumph of labor draweth nigh." And yet it is these labor organizations that Austin Corbin, the bloated, cash cursed representative of ideas as hostile to American institutions and to the genius of our government as over sent a head to the block or a neck to the halter, seeks to overthrow. What are the methods employed by virtue of which he has gained a temporary victory ? Ist. To give employment to no man who is a member of a labor organization. 2d. To require a pledge of every man employed that he will not join a labor organization. 3d. Men employed who favor labor or ganizations are required to abandon their work. 4th. Promotions arc entirely confined to men of undoubted loyalty to Corbin and his policy. Corbin has at least 35,000 men in his employ who have yielded to his enslav ing program. They have renounced their rights as men and as citizens; they and their wives and children are Corbin's slaves; they are reduced to commodities; they are Corbin's chattels; and this condi tion of degrading servitude, of monstrous i tyranny, conies at a time when the eman cipated African slaves and their descend | ants arc manfully asserting and main taining rights which Corbin's employes, for considerations of bread and meat, throw to the winds. It is such facts ■ that compelled the Congressional Com j hiittee to declare that Corbin was "lius- I sianizing" the anthracite regions of Pennsylvania. It must not be assumed that Corbin is the only tyrant who rushes into print with his pleas to "excuse his devilish deeds." He is not the only gold-plated giant who uses his tyrannous strength to t crush labor organizations. He may be more soulless than others of his type, t may have more rattles on his tail and , more fangs in his mouth; he may be the . representative reptile; he may take more delight than others in seeing men resign , their hopes, renounce their rights and forget their wrongs when yielding to orders from his iron lips; but there are , others, animated by his example of in fernal despotism, who, reveling in the j weakness and wickedness of luxurious \ power, have determined to break the bonds of brotherhood which bind man , to man, and, this accomplished, make ; the very sun in the heavens blush for the degeneracy of American citizens, | who resign their birth-right at a time when the school and the church, press, i poet and orator, the philanthropist and 1 the statesman would have the world be lieve that ours is the "land of the free j and the home of the brave." I The time has come for workingmen to | | rise superior to faction, to look facts j I squarely in the face, and determine to unify, to federate, consolidate, and there- : by successfully resist the encroachments | upon their rights and liberties by such men as Austin Corbin. What a Woman Itcads. Woman, in reading a newspaper, has j a distinct method of her own. 'She takes j it up hurriedly and begins to scan it over | rapidly, as though she was hunting some 1 particular thing; but she is not. She! lis merely taking in the obscure para-1 ! graphs, which she believes w ere put in i [ out-of-the-way places for the sake of > keeping her from seeing them. | Marriages and deaths are always in l teresting reading to her, and the adver-; tisements are exciting and stimulating. | She cares hut little for printed jokes, un- j i less they reflect ridicule upon the men, I ; and then she delights in them and never j forgets them. She pays particular atten-1 tlon to anything inclosed in quotations, , and considers it rather better than any-. j thing first handed. | The column in which the editor airs ! ; his opinions, in leaded hifalutin, she rarely reads. Views are of no impor- j tance in her estimation, but facta are j everything. She doesn't care for it but. makes a practice of reading it because j she thinks she ought to do so. She reads stories and sketches and paragraps indiscriminately, and believes every word of them. After she has read all she wants she lays the paper down with an air of disappointment as she observes that "there is nothing in it." White House Meditations. The result of the election indicates the existence of a profound disgust with the Harrison administration throughout the country. If Mr. Harrison is a man of teachable mind his reflections must have taken some such shape as this: That it may have been a mistake to sell the postmaster-generalship to Mr. Wanamaker, even at the price he paid. That presidential interference to pro tect "Blocks of Five" Dudley from pros ecution in Indiana was a blunder. That in appointing his relatives, his wife's his son's wife's relatives and his daughter's husband's relatives to office he has lost more than he has gained. That newspapers which are subsidized by the appointment of their editors to high place seems somehow to exercise very little influence upon the popular mind. That in violating his pledges as to the Civil Service, setting Clarson to make a "clean sweep" in the postal department and farming out his constitutional power of appointment of Piatt in New York and Mahone in Virginia, he disastrously miscalculated consequences. That in allying himself with the deep ly dishonest adventurer Mahone, to the angering of all the decent Republicans in Virginia, he paid the price of lost self-respect for soiled goods, and that the goods have not been delivered. That the famous scheme of building up a white Republican party in the South seems to have taken a wrong turn at the cross-roads. That in attempting with Tanner's as sistance, to use the surplus in the treas ury as the purchase price of his own re nomination and re-election, he offended the moral sense of the people in away not readily to be forgiven. That perhaps it did not pay to steal Montana, with its poor little pair of senators. That after all last year's Republican victory, secured by grovelling subser vience to plutocrats, monopolists and the oppressors of men, may prove to have cost more than it was worth. And finally, that in saying, "I shall please myself," Mr. Benjamin Harrison failed to estimate justly the necessity of pleasing somebody of greatly more importance than himself—namely the American people.—A r cin York World. Correspondence From the Capital. WASHINGTON, November 19,1889. Harrison is in quite a perturbed frame of | mind over the color question. He pretends to j lie quite at euse, but I am informed from a reli able source that he was very much disturbed by the publication of an interview with cx- Govcrnor Kellogg of Louisiana, in which Mr. Kellogg said very plainly that Harrison was alienating the colored people both North and South. A President is not quite indifferent nor entirely ut ease when in order to counteract one published interview he will order the pub lication of another. Vet this is what Harrison did. After reading the Kellogg tnterview ho sent for ex-Senator Bruce of Mississippi ami requested him to issue a card in contradiction. Mr. Bruce did not sec his way to the issuing of a card, even though Harrison had requested— that is to say, ordered—it, and although he en tertained for Mr. Hurrison that felling of gruti tude which arises from a lively sense of favors to come. Hut he did consent to have himself interviewed, and the result was a very half hearted contradiction of Governor Kcllogg's statement. In fact it was largely an admission of the accuracy of what Governor Kellogg had suid. It is ulso interesting to note that a promi nent loader of the Republican party in the Dis trict of Columbia, said yesterday in speaking of the matter: "Kellogg was right and Bruce knew it, but he was ufraid to say wliut he thought." It is well known that Ilruee has sumo expectations, and a man with expectionß must not always say what he thinks, especially when instructed, as in this case, to say the other thing. I The problem "Can a Congressman live on I $5,000 a year?" Is one that something like a ! hundred new members of Congress will have to i determine for themselves during the next few | months. They will have the advantage of the i experience of several hundreds of able citizens | who have already served their country in the Congressional capacity, but the question has not reached a positive! conclusion yet. In fact ( the tendency in latter days is to the opinion that a Congressman who expects to represent | Ids constituency in the best manner possible is j inadequately remunerated by the salary flxed ! by law. There are plenty of members of ex i i>erience in Washington officiul life who are | satisfied that this is the case, but they are aware j ; that while a man can think what he pleases he , J had better look out how he votes. The able legislators feel that they can vote to the l'resi- j j dent $50,000 per annum, to the foreign ministers I salurics of $17,500 and $12,500, but they dare not increase their own pay beyond the $5,000 they now receive. The fate of the so-called "salary- I grabbers" has been a warning to other Con gressmen, whatever their individual opinions may be on the subject of Congressional sala- ' lies. It is certainly a delicate matter to legis late upon, but it is surprising that more of an earnest attempt has not recently been made to j increase salaries on the part of those who be- ! lieve that $5,000 per annum is insufficient for | the proper maintainaucc of a representative of i the dear people. It I'l. US OF CHINESE ETIQUETTE. Tbe offer on the part of several society ladies ' to call upon the wife of the Chinese Minister has met with a polite but firm refusal, owing to the fact that the little lady is wholly ignor- 1 j ant of the English language, and, in order to \ I enjoy even the most formal intercourse with i ; her callers, the services of an interpreter would j | he required. This interpreter would neces ; sarily be c male, and, on that account could j not be permitted even to enter the same apart- i j ment with the Minister's wife. The rules In ! regard to the ladies of the Lugation seemed to ' have somewhat relaxed of late, as they enjoy i | a stroll through the grounds at the rear and ! ' side of the mansion every tine day, and evince I the liveliest interest in tennis as played by the ' ; young peoplo of the Legutiou in an adjacent court. The Minister's son Tsui is a bright little | fellow, who chatters away incessnntly, the harsh language of the Orientals sounding ul most musical on his tongue. THE EXPOSITION OF 1802. I The several cities that are striving to secure the proposed International Expositon of 1892 are arranging to work Congress in their indi j vidual interests. Chicago ulready has repro ! scututives here, and St. Louis will send Mayor Francis and C. H. Jones, editor of the St. Louis llcinihUc, to look after the claims of that city, j A well orguuiml committee, representing this ! elty, will see that the National capital is not | overlooked in the race. There promises to be j an interesting contest in Congress over this | question. It BUSINESS MORALITY. Among the rubbish in the store-room of the late William I. Hilton a little old faded note-book containing some odd suggestions to his boys as to how they should proceed in life after he had passed to his reward was picked up by a favorite reporter a few days since, and is now, for the tirst time, given to the public: Search the bible to find the bottom of the deceitful human heart and say your prayers at night. Think out every day's business at night. Never marry until you are 80 years old. Ihiuk three times before you speak once. Never court any girl unless you in tend to marry her. There is danger in fooling young girls. Never give them any advautage in a letter. Never buy a small place with a tine building on it. Never buy white, sprouty, crawfishy land- at any price exoectiug to make money by cultivating"it. Never sell the products of the farm you work to any man, on time, at any price. There is nothing in this world but death that is certain. Never loan money to your neigh bors, for if you should have to sue them they would be no longer neigh bors. Never let any man know anything about your business, except when you may have some difference and need to advise with a lawyer. Never keep all your money in one channel. Watch all men, as there are but few who are honest; in fact there is none honest from the heart in everything. Never let any person on earth know your business and especially how much money you have, not even your family. Never buy land of any person with out first having a good lawyer investi gate and prououuee the title clear. Ascertain if the land has passed through the hands of any insane per son, to prevent his heirs from suing you on the title. Never pay more than one-half down on the land" unless you know you are dealing with responsi ble parties. Be sure to go ask all the parties that join the land you are buy ing to show you the corners of the laud they own. M you ever sell goods or groceries bo sure to got a house on the square, and on the inside corner if you can, and live on the same lot and in the building that you do business in. Bo certain to never sloop away from the store-house. It is best to have your self and family live up-stairs, with kitcln n below. Never employ a clerk at any price; bo content with what business you can do yourself. Trust no man further than you are compelled to. Smart thieves always steal about the hours of 10, 11, 12, and 1 o'clock. Weigh all you buy and all you sell, if possibly convenient. If you ever loan money to any per son take security if you can get it. If you loan money to a firm bo sure to take each of the lirm names to the note then no one of the lirm can slip out and say that the money never came in to the firm. You may sell to irresponsible men anything that you have, but never buy claims, notes, etc., from men that are not responsible, unless you investigate and find that the parties have no off ' sols against them. Never buy any kind of stocks, it doesn't matter how low or how high : they are. Never, never, never, from j the fact that stocks nro too uncertain; j the risk is too groat; rings arc formed | and they can raise or lower the price just as they see tit, so they can make money. Never deposit money unless you take a receipt for it. Under the present law when you loan money to any person take a mortgage on the real estate and include both 1 man and wife. - Tell a lie rather than the truth when It will save a difficulty, but it must be u lie that no man knows except your self. It is better to tell a lie than to have a difficulty. The good book says: "Blessed is the peaco-maker," etc. If you have a surplus of money never, never loan it out to the people"at any per cent, but put it in good bonds; but the United States bonds are preferable, from the fact that the whole United States is bound for it. Four per cent when certain is better than than 8 per cent when uncertain. Never buy inferior articles of any kind to make money on. If you live in town never invite any company and you will always have plenty of money. Buy goods on time only in small quantities, whether wholesale or re tail. If you have land for sale have it fenced to cardinal points, so it will take the fewest rails possible to fence the ground. That keeps your laud in a square shape. Never work in wells or at any other work thatendangersyour life it matteps not how much you can make. Never endanger your life for money. Never stay in the house confined to business close, except you work in the morning and evening. Never buy property adjoining either a church or a school-house if you can avoid it. Be certain to give your children an English education at auy cost if you can. Never bo persuaded beyond your judgment.— Franklin ( Ky .) Favorite. Jack's Karl feat Memory. If you wish to make an entertaining experiment with the memories of your friends, try, sometime when a group of people are iu the mood of playful reminiscence to find out from each one the very first thing in life which made a lasting impression upon the memory. Every one has heard the assertion of Charles Dickens that ho remembered being handed hastily, as a baby, from one woman to another at the time of a carriage accident and learuing after ward that this really took place when he was only 6 months old. Very few of us can remember any thing so early in life as this, but it is odd how far back into our earliest years the memory gropes its way to some startling or charming occur rence. One Summer evening several people were seated on a vine-covered piazza, talking of this and of that, when the conversation drifted to this subject of early memories. N A lady described a walk in a country road with her mother as the first thing she could remember. A tall girl spoke of her delight at catching a butterfly as her first knowledge. A young collegian declared that his intense hatred of au oil-cloth bib, marked I "Baby" in large letters was his intro- I inn nnfi inamnrv WANTED! FINE THOUSAND PEOPLE! Five thousand people are wanted to come and see our stock and prices of ladies' and children's coats. We have all the latest styles and our prices will surprise you. We have just opened three cases of blankets, which are going from 75c up to $7.00 per pair. Dry goods : We have our cloths in now; come and get samples and compare the prices with Hazleton. A full line of hats and caps. Muffs for ladies and children. Carpets ■ We have Hemp for 18c, Ray for 30c and Brussels for 55c and up. Furniture and beddings: Have a good bedstead, only $2.50; a royal plush lounge, $0.00; mattresses, $2.75 up, and a good spring lor $1.25. Notions, etc., of every description. Y\ e can make you comfortable in underwear: Children's, 15c up; men s, 50c up; all-wool scarlet, 75c; get a pair before they all go. GIO\6S, mitts and thousands of other articles. Wall paper and stationery, also window shades; we have everything in that line. We suppose everybody^lias seen our latest prices in groceries so all we will say is to invite you to come and give us a trial. Save money by trading with the cheapest man in town. Yours truly, J. C. BERNER. REMEMBER PHILIP GERITZ, Practical WATCHMAKER A 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! UTTO-IEI MALLOT, Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Freehold. SGHOENER & BIRKBECK, 35 TX7~l3.olesa.le and detail. All kinds of plumbing and spouting done at short notice in the most approved style. We carry the largest stock of goods in Freeland and extend an invitation to the public to inspect them. ■ nnitniianaf i r r •prvwTT/RS 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. O'DONNELL & Co., Dealers in —GENERAL— MERCHANDISE, Groceries, Provisions, Tea, Coffee, Queensware, Glassware, &c. FLOUR, FEED, HAY, Etc. We invite the people of Freeland and vicinity to call and examine our large and handsome stock. Don't forget the place. Next Door to the Valley Hotel. . Job Printing Done at tlie Tribune Office, "As soon as I could talk I struck for a napkin under my cliin," said ho. One after another told their little stories with the pleasure which always goes with keen personal experience of this sort, until it came tlio turn of active Master Jack. "The first thing I can remember," he said, bringing his eyelids down and tipping up his chin in a thoughtful manner, "the very first thing 1 can re member. my father was looking for tne with a willow whip in his band, and I was cuddled down somewhere keep ing still, and my foot was asleep. Wnew!" Jack jumped up and strotchcd his legs up and down the piazza, as if to gain relief from that lingering memory. "Whew! but my foot was asleep aud I was afraid to move it. I can feel how it tingled yell"— Youth's Com panion. Queer Barometers. "I can always tell whon it is going to rain half a day ahead of any change in fair weathor," said George Slosson to a New York Sun man as he was knocking around billiard balls in the Columbia rooms just after the recent deluge. "How's tliatP" asked a bystander, getting interested directly. "Why there isp't a better barometer ' • j. ,j. J'<) w r.Ltw 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. Ladies' outside garments cut and fitted to measure in the latest style. B. F. DAVIS, Dealer in Flour, Feed, Grain, HAY, STRAW, MALT, &c., Best Quulity of Glover & Timothy SEED. Zemany's Block, 15 Eust Main Street, Freeland. PATENTS Caveats and Re-issues secured, Trade-Marks registered, and all other patent causes in the Patent Office and before the Courts promptly and carefully prosecuted. Upon receipt <0 model or sketch of invention, I make careful examination, and advise as to patentability free of charge. With my offices directly across from the Patent (ifllce, ana being in personal attendance there, it is apparent that 1 have superior facilities for making prompt preliminary searches, for the on.re vigorous and successful prosecution oi applications for patent, and for attending to all business entrusted to my oric, in the shortest possible time. FEEB MODERATE, ai d exclusive attention given to patent hus\ness. Information, advice and special references set it on request. J. R LITTKLL, Solicitor ami Attorm 7 in Patent Causes, Washington, I>. C. t (Mention this paper) Oppo die U.S.Patent Office. { in existence than an ivory billiard bail or a good billiard cue," the billiard ex pert replied; "they are bettor than a I favorite corn." "How d'ye tell?" "A ball always rolls slow and with difficulty over tlio cloth when it is go ing to rain. Ivory is so sensitive in changes of temperature, particularly from dry to moist, that the effect is felt almost instantaneously. The cue will get cranky, too, when there is go ing to bo a change, long before the dumpness is perceptible in any other wny. Another peculiarity of the ivory globes is their teudeuey to become egg-shaped. They contract at what are called the top and bottom poles and swoll out at the sides, so that you might as well play with potatoes if you do not watch their idiosyncrasies, l'liey are worse than old men iu their susceptibility to draught A draught will crack the ivorv aud make it chip off quick as a wink, and, like old folks, you can never get the spheres acclimated to these draughts. Just take a billiard ball and study its be havoir and you can beat the clerk of the weather prophesying. You can bet on your own prophecy every tiuio." A five-year-old child in Monson, Me., is said to speak tree languages.