Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, October 02, 1890, Image 4

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    FREELAND TRIBUNE.
Published Every Thursday Afternoon
—BY—
THOS. A. BUCKLEY,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TERMS, - - SI.OO PER YEAR.
Address all Communications to
FREELAND TRIBUNE,
FREELAND, PA.
Office, Birkbeck Brick, Jkl floor. Centre Street.
Entered at the Freeland Postoffice an Second
Class Matter.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
STATE.
Governor Robert E. Pattison
of Philadelphia.
Lieutenant Governor Chauncey F. Black
of York.
Secretary of Internal Affairs—W. H. Barclay
of Pittsburg.
CONGRESSIONAL.
Congress John B. Reynolds
of Kingston.
COUNTY.
Judge Stanley Woodward
of Wilkes-Rarrc.
Treasurer John s - McGroarty
of Miners Mills.
Register of Wills Philip V. Weaver
of Hazleton.
Commissioner Thomas McGraw
of Reach Haven.
Commissioner Thomas Dullard
of Wilkes- Barre.
Auditor John J. Rrislin
of Sugar Notch.
Auditor Wm. E. Rennet
of Wilkes-Barre.
LEGISLATIVE.
Representative Patrick F. Boyle
of Hazleton.
FREELAND, PA., OCTOBER 2, 1890.
THIS is not a "free country" so long
as we place restrictions upon com
merce.
THE Democratic voters of this
Fourth Legislative District have a
chance to assist one of their number,
by voting for Philip V. Weaver for
Register of Wills.
MINERS and laborers of every nation
ality lie on your guard. Everything
possible will be done to divide up the
labor elements so that the Republican
emissaries can use them for selfish
ends.
THE Democratic county ticket this
fall is a strong one and one that every
right minded citiien can take pride
in votiug. There certainly Bhould he
no trouble in electing the whole
ticket this year.
THE census of 1890 is now gener
ally repudiated as untrustworthy. It
is admitted, too late for remedy, that
it was a great mistake to put such a
task in the hands of an untrustworthy
and incompetent man.— Philadelphia
Jtecord.
PATTISON is pushing Quay's man to
the wall. Pattison wishes to discuss
"home issues" in the present campaign,
but Delamater declines to tnlk on the
subject. The stealing and embezzling
of the man whose nominee he is would
not be a very pleasing subject for
Delamater to discuss before the people.
WORKINOMEN have labor to sell.
Are they protected ? No! Men are on
the free list —and they come to this
country by the half million every year
to compete in our labor market and
run down the price of labor. The
manufacturers are protected from
competition. They, not the working
men, get the benefit of protection.
No cloudß of political scandal have
gatbe-cA around the name of Robert
Z. Pattison. In the presence of his
pure official record as controller of
Philadelphia and Governor of Penn
sylvania the shafts of partisan malice
fall harmlessly at his feet. His own
political opponents, when free from
partisan fear of his candidacy, have
rendered voluntary tribute to his
worth and his fitness for the office of
Governor of Pennsylvania.
THE Republican party believes that
Protection alone will save us from
eternal smash. It repeats this state
ment with a thousand varieties of
rhetoric, pleads for it before the
working men with tearful pathos,
proves by statistics that prosperity
and protection go hand-in-hand like
the Siamese twins, and then practically
admits that the experiment is a fail
ure by introducing free trade under
the thin disguise of reciprocity.
Is it not a plain statement that he
who gets millions by piracy, or rob
bery, or fraud, or by inducing the
government to tax the people or give
him power to tax him for his enrich
ment, does not enrich the world ? By
so much as he is richer others are
poorer. The wealth he has existed
before he took it. He has impover
ished others, and instead of lifting
up society and lightening the burdens
of humanity, he has accumulated that
which he cannot use or enjoy, but
simply holds to prevent other from
enjoying,
Quav's campaign managers are dis
tributing an illustrated circular en
titled "A Scrap of History," in which
they show an illustration of a battle
field, the burial of a veteran and what 1
they purport to bo the Pattison idea |
of a potter's field for the soldier.
They, of course, forget to add that
the veteran burial bill, for which they
claim so much credit and which was
vetoed by Pattison, required three
citizens of the county, in which a
soldiers dies, to make public record to
the effect that he died a pauper before
his body can be buried at the State's
expense. The veto of a bill so wan
tonly insulting the family of the vet
eran will not be resented by old
soldiers.— Allmtoum Item.
Subscribe for the Tribvme.
A Brilliant AtldreHH by Mr. PattlMon.
The address of ex-Governor Pattison, j
delivered before the convention of
Democratic clubs at Heading, should be I
read by every intelligent voter in Penn- j
sylvania. As a campaign document it is 1
bound to make new friends for the ex-
Governor, and to greatly assist the Demo
cracy in overthrowing the rule of bossism
and corruption that has so long cursed
this State.
The address IB in marked contrast with j
those Delamater has inflicted upon
the people. Mr. Pattison's speech
deals directly with the issues now before
the voters of Pennsylvania. Delamater
entirely avoids State issues, lugs in the
tariff question, which has no connection
whatever with a purely State campaign,
and tries to arouse party enthusiasm by
appealing to sectionalism. Mr. Pattison's
address is moderate in tone, weighty in i
matter, and is a direct appeal to the
logical thinking man.
As Mr. Pattison points out, the great
question now before the voters of Penn
sylvania is the eradication of bossism and (
its attendant evils. This is not a mat
ter of party success. It is a question as 1
to whether Pennsylvania shall be re
deemed from corruption. It is to decide
whether the State Treasury shall remain j
a plaything and a loot shop for one man,
or whether its affairs shall be equitably !
or honestly administered. The election :
will also decide whether legislation shall i
be for monopolies or the people, and j
taxation shall be equalized so as to lift |
a heavy burden from the poor.
These are the issueß to be decided in j
November next. Upon the people de- [
pends the responsibility. The Democ
racy has presented a clean platform and
an able candidate. It comes before the
people as their champion, and the re- j
sponses from all portions of the State j
show that the masses recognize that j
their interests lie with the party which |
is making such a gallant stand to rid the !
State of corruption. The principal por- j
tions of the address are contained in the I
following:
There has never been a time when the i
people of our State have been confronted
more directly with the duty of rebuking J
an attempt to subvert the very basis of
i representative government. 1 would uot
I emphasize unduly a purely personal
1 issue. But men often become by reason
of circumstances the exponents of a
system or an idea.
' In such instances it is impossible to
disassociate the fortunes of the individual
front those of the cause. Hence, at the |
present juncture of our politics every
consideration of self-respect us well as of
self-government calls upon the voters to
take notice of the audacious personal
domination by which our public interests j
and political affairs are menaced. All
history teaches the danger of intrusting 1
even to the wisest and most virtuous of
men absolute dictatorship in affairs of
I the State. In a Democratic government j
such absolute power can never he acliiev- j
ed by candor, integrity, or public fidelity, |
and "cannot be retained except by the
abuse of official power and the corrupt 1
suppression of the popular will.
The present boss domination in Penn
sylvania illustrates both these truths.
The people have not willingly chosen
either the chief or his agents under
whose stigmatized leadership they mani
fest such hopeful unrest. There could
be no more severe reflection upon the
patriotism and virtue of the people
j than to say that they knowingly chose a
supremacy so haughty and so malign,
except to have to declare that they meek
ly submitted to its continuance. As to
the first statement 1 have already ex
pressed my dissent, and I have a sure
confidence that no man after the election
in November will be able to justly to cast
the latter censure in the face of the ser
ling yeomanry of this Commonwealth.
OPPRESSIVE TAXATION.
With absoulte control of the Legisla
ture for almost a quarter of a century,
the bosses have steadily defeated all laws
I proposed to relieve land of its unequal
burden of taxation; to exact of corpora
tions full compliance with their chartered
duties; to prevent unlawful and unjust
discrimination, and to prune off all need
less offices and stipendiaries as so many
leeches upon the substance of the people.
No Anti-Discrimination law was passed
until 1883, the first year of Democratic
executive control, and then it was emas
culated in its passage by boss dictation.
In 1883 and 1885 more useless and ex
travagant offices were abolished than in
the entire generation preceding. For the
first time during the same years the
Executive invoked the power of the
courts to enforce the fundamental law
and prevent its defiant violation by cor
porations; and for the first time also, spe
cific and urgent recommendation was
made by the Executive of a measure to
equalize taxation in the interest of farm
ing. How much was achieved during
those four years the record attests. How
much that was attempted was thwarted
by the bosses then in command of one
branch of the Assembly, is also well
known.
That the inequality referred to exists
cannot be successfully denied. It is
patent to every one. There is not a citi
zen in the Commonwealth paying a tax
upon his home or farm who cannot point
to some neighbor owning many times as
much in personal goods and idle capital,
who yet pays an immeasurably less
amount of tax. It is useless to answer
such undeniable facts by any intricate
theory as to the ultimate distribution of
all taxation.
Such unjust discrimination is work
ing untold evil to our people; is oppress
ing the poor; iB exempting the rich; is
day by day establishing unfortunate
social distinctions that are foreign to our
principles of government, destructive of
the happiness and energies of men, and
blasting the hopes that we have all
prayerfully entertained of our country
becoming the home of a contented and
happy people.
During the twenty years preceding
1883 the special interests favored by the
bosses thrived and expanded beyond the
most lavish expectations. Monopolies of
all kinds feasted and fattened at the pub
lic expense, and the fair fame of our
State was sullied in the eyes of the na
tion.
LEGISLATING FOR MONOPOLIES.
No difficulty was met with, however,
when the creatures and dependents of
boss power sought legislative favor. The
facility with which a measure could then
u ov t*r night, rushed through
both 1 louses undebatea and without iar,
and receive Executive approval within a
few hours, astonished the uninitiated
farmer, and municipal reformer, the
bankrupted oil producer, and the friend
of electoral reform. Let a free pipe bill
be presented, however, intended to en
able individual enterprise in the oil coun
try to lift its neck from under the heel '
of monopoly, and it met with doubt i
friction and delay at every step.
I To such a remedial measure, de
manded by the oppressed people of a '
large section of the State, constitutional |
objections were immediately discovered
I by bosses and jobbers who were never I
I
| known to mention the constitution be
fore but in scorn. The measure would
j then be referred to a committee composed
of legislators who for the first time would
; evince a solicitude for careful deliberation
j in suspicious contrast with the precipi
j tate rush with which they facilitated trie
passage of jobs in the past. Suddenly
these vigilant guardians of the bosses'
power would discover a righteous desire
to give the people "of both sides," as
they would say, "a full hearing" on the
proposed legislation.
Tlie hearing would then begin by
listening t<> fine-spun arguments from
I the attorneys of the favored corporations
raising flimsy technical legal objections,
or under the cloak of representing some
subsidized farmer's interest, explaining
liow the tish would be destroyed and the
wells and streams polluted if a free pine
line was allowed to be laid through tfie
soil. Indignation would flash from the
eyes of the jobbing com in itteemen as they
heard this statement of the wrong threat-1
ened t> the important fishing intereatsof
, the Pennsylvania farmer.
More meetings would have to be held
I to consider these profound objections;
j time would steadily be consumed, the
session would close with the measure un-
I enacted and monopoly would have an-
I other two years' lease of undisputed pow
jer in the oil regions. A similar fate be
! fell all the important reform measures—
j the Dills to equalize taxation for the re
j lief of land from its unfair burdens; to j
j abolish useless and costly offices made \
j expressly to support in idleness and fast i
Hying the bosses and their tools; to |
| abolish a Recorder's office, a Delinquent
| Tax office, to restore the streets of our
! cities from the ownership of the railways
j to the control of the citizens and to enact
a secret and official ballot to purify and
elevate our elections.
These and all other measures of re-
I form were persistently defeated by the '
I boss ridden Legislatures of the period of
1 ring control. Such of them as were en
| acted were only put upon the statute
book by the union of Independent Repub
j Means and Democrats, and after desperate
conflict with the allied power of the
1 bosses and ringsters in the years 1883
! and 1885.
We want no false pretenses, no fight -
! ing from ambush; no ambiguous and
1 shifty evasions. Let us have the real
1 leaders to the front and no masquerading
| behind false issues. Let the knight and
not bis squire enter the lists. I ask a
j trial by the record. Will our boss adver-
I saries have the courage to face the jury
lof their fellow-citizens and allow their
deeds to be passed upon, their official
acts to be investigated, and their political
methods to be exposed ? "By their fruit
ye shall know them." Nay ! By their
i fruit they are already known.
lkelaiiiuter n the Hun.
| 9 Candidate Delamater is skipping about j
the State at a great rate, as it keeps him
J busy apologizing for his candidacy, ,
1 Take last week as an uxample: He left
] Philadelphia on Monday morning for j
I Coatesville, where he was the guest of
Senator A. 1). Harlan, who gave a recep
tion in his honor. During the afternoon
he took a run over to Oxford, where a
county meeting was held On Tuesday
he was in Philadelphia, during the ses
sion of the Convention of the Republican ;
League of Pennsylvania and attended
the mass meeting in the evening. On
Wednesday he was at the Bucks County
Fair at Doylestown and on the following
day met the citizens of Tioga county at
the fair at Mansfield. The Juniata
County Fair was visited on Friday at
Port Royal and on Saturday Senator
Delamater attended the Montgomery
County Fair at Pottstown and in the
evening was present at a reception given
in honor of the Republican State eandi
i dates at Bristol. Chairman Kerr, of the
] Democratic State Committee, lias cer
i tainly got him on the run, and the pro
j babilities are that he will be run into
prison before November 4th.
j Delamater Guilty f Another Crime.
I Charge after charge continue to rain
j down upon the Republican candidate for
Governor. The latest, made at Reading
by W. U. Ilensel, will disqualify him
from taking the Gubernatorial chair if
elected. He is charged with and does
not deny that in his capacity as a banker
at Meadville, l'a., for the last fifteen
years he lias been receiving deposits of j
money from the State Treasury. lie
says in his recent speeeli: "The fact is
Delamater A Co. have been depositaries
of State money, off and 011, since their
organization, and long prior to my elec
tion to the Senate."
Article IX, Section 14, ol the State
Constitution, declares
The making of profit out of the public !
moneys or using the same for any pur
pose not authorized by law by any oflieer
of the State, or member or officer of the
General Assembly, shall be a mis
demeanor, and shall be punished as may
be provided by law; but part of such j
punishment shall he disqualification to
hold office for a period of not less than
five years.
So Mr. Delamater admits the commis
sion of a misdemeanor; but as lie lias not
been brought into Court and convicted
of his offense the eminent lawyers win m
he has consulted about bis offending tell
him that the penalty of disqualification
cannot be enforced against him before
conviction.
When he went into his Senate Cham
ber after his election as a member of the
General Assembly lie was obliged to
swear that lie would "support, obey and
defend" the Constitution, under the
j terms of which, from the moment lie
had taken the oath, lie was disqualified
to take his seat. But he kept his seat,
ami kept on hanking with State moneys
"off and on" whenever he could get
deposits.
lie thus stands in the attitude of con
fessed but unconvicted misdemeanant, 1
who, if elected Governor of the State,
could not take the oath of office required
of liiin and swear to support and obey
the Constitution without doing violence
to the requirement of the Constitution,
which disqualifies him from holding of
fice for five years.
The eminent lawyers who advised him
in effect that he could not be punished j
before lie was convicted, did not tell him
that the punishment prescribed by the
Constitution was not deserved.
Mr. Delamater has no defense; lie can
make no denial; he will not do his party
' the service to withdraw himself asacan
j didatc; he merely asks the people of
| Pennsylvania what they are going to do j
about it!— Record.
—Carpets, from 10 cents a vard and np
-1 wards, at Neuburger's, ltrick store. I
Quay's Bogus Laltor Ticket Exposed. j
Coll is Levy, of Latrobe, one of the ,
seventeen delegates to the sham conven- I
tion, which met in Philadelphia two i
weeks ago and placed an alleged labor
ticket in the field, has become disgusted
and exposes the whole scheme. Mr.
Levy frankly states that T. P. Hynder,
the originator of the convention, is
in the employ of the Republican State
Committee, ami that the tickets of the
delegates and all their expenses in Phila
delphia were paid for by Chairman
Andrews.
This exposure is another damaging
blow at the Delamater cause. It reveals
to the workinginen the trickery and de
lusive promises of the Republican party. I
A party that has to put a dummy ticket j
in the field to hoodwink labor is un
worthy of the vote of any workingman. !
Keep Luzerne In the Democratic Column. |
Let there be no faltering this year upon
the part of Democrats. This county is
Democratic and all that is needed is to |
carry the ticket through with an old
fashioned majority, is to walk to the I
polls and cast your vote for the whole
ticket.
This temporizing with the enemy has !
led to disaster in the past, and it is time
that Democrats awakened to the gravity
of the offense they commit when they
give complimentary votes to Republican
nominees. It remains with you, fellow
Democrats, whether old Luzerne, which
stood so nobly for many years, shall be
handed over to the minority. Think
very seriously before you allow your
selves to be induced to vote against any
one of the nominees of our party this
fall.
Wreck on the Central.
There was a collision on the Central i
Railroad, of New Jersey, at 8 o'clock
Monday evening that resulted in the I
instantaneous death of three men and I
the injury of six others. Southbound I
passenger train No. 9, which leaves j
Munch Chunk at 7.45, collided with a i
northbound coal train three miles south ;
of Muuch Chunk. The engineer of the
c al train Charles Bigelow, and his fire- j
man, Mitchell, were both taken dead
! from the wreck. Taylor Belford, of !
j Mauch Chunk, the engineer of the
passenger train, escaped with a broken
| leg ana other bruises about the body, I
His fireman, Joseph Dunlap, of Mauch
: Chunk, was instantly killed. Several of
the passengers were injured but none
: dangerously.
Advertise in
the "Tribune."
WORMS:!™
Sure, Safe and Speedy. This medi
cine will remove Worms, Dead or Alive,
from llorses and Cattle. Will purify
the IJlood, correct and tone up the
, stomach, and strengthen the Nerves.
DR. EMERSON'S " DEAD SHOT"
for Worms in Horses, is (he best general
• Condition Ponder in use. Dose: One
. | tablespoonfiil. Directions with each
, I box. Sold by all Druapists, or sent by
- mail upon receipt of fifty rents.
! Chas, B, Smith , 865 Broa.l St , Ncwuik.N*! J.
■ Y/ANT I
RAN O
J j
! U/E WANT TO SELL YOU ONE,I'
STADERMAN.
J SUPERIOR CONSTRUCTION 1!
STYLE ANI) FINISH. B
I |AGENTS WANTED
jjwe will offer special inducement* !
| direct to purchasers.
fl FIRST-CLASS YET MODERATE PRICED. H
j Send for Circular and Price*. jh
Y.I
7 WK™alusi%
[SPAVIN CUREyfw
The Most Successful Remedy ever discov
ered, as It Is certain In Its effects and does not
blister. Read proof below:
_ _ _ _ BROOKLYN, Conn., May 5, '9O.
Dn. B. J. KKNDALT, CO.:
SirsLata Bununer 1 cured n Curb upon my horse
with your celebrated Kendall's Spavin Cure ami it
was the best job I ever saw done. I have a dozen
empty bottles, having used It with perfect success,
curing every thing I tried It on. My neighbor had
a horse with a very bad Spavin that made him lame.
He asked mo how to cure It. I recommended
Kendall's Spavin Cure. Ho cured the Spavin In
just three weeks.
Yours respectfully,
Woi/OOTT WITTER.
DR. 11. J. KINDALL CO.:
Dear Sirs I have been Helling more of Kendall's
Spavin Cure and Flint's Condition Powders than
ever before. One man said to me, It was the best
ruwder 1 ever kept ami the best he ever used.
Respectfully.
OTTO L. HOFFMAN.
CIIITTENANOO, N. Y., May 19, '9O.
DR. B. J. KENDALL CO.,
Dear Sirs: I hove used several bottles of your
Kendall's Spavin Cure with perfect success, on a
valuable and blooded mare that was quite lame
with a Bone Spavin. The mare Is now entirely froo
from lameness and shows no bunch on the joint.
Respectfully, F. H. HUTCIIINS.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE.
„ „ MONROE, La., May 8, DO.
DR. B. J. KENDALL CO.,
Gents:—l think It my duty to rondor you my
thanks for your far famed Kendall's Spavin Cure.
I had u four year old Ally which I prized very
highly. She hod a very severe swollen leg. I tried
about eight different kinds of medicines which did
no good. I purchased a lottle of your Kendall's
Spavin Curo which curod her In four days.
1 remain yours,
MARION DOWDBN.
Price $1 per bottle, or si* bottles for $5. All drug
gists have It or can get It for you, or It will be sent
to any address on receipt of price by the proprie
tors, DLL. 11. J. KENDALL CO.,
Knovburgh A'ullw, Vermont.
JERSEY
GALVANIZED STIEL 1
FS^I^L/i^N
• is jus-k
THE THING '
where a STRONG, LASTING, SU
PERIOR fence U desired.
Is ORNAMENTAL, docs not conceal yet
protect* enclosure without Injury to man or
beast. Defies wind, time, and water.
All Intending: Purchasers
should get our Illustrated price list, showing
the superior twist and weave, and othe*
points of merit. Apply to your dealer, o*
directly to the manufacturer#,
The New Jersey Wire Cloth Co.,
FOR SERVICE. —Two young
bulls. One a full-blooded Jer
sey, the other a Holdstein. Ap
ply to GEO. FISCHER, butcher,
Upper Lehigh. Birkheck's old
stand.
SAFETY BICYCLES
JV $35 to SIOO
Sen<l >tam P t° r niu-
R - bidwell,
306 to 310 W.m St,
DANIEL J. KENNEDY,
DKAr.KIt IN
FINE CIGARS ANI) TOBAC
CO, TEMPERANCE
DRINK, CONFEC
TIONARY,
ETC.
Centre Street, Freeland, Pa.
pwmpFtl S2£
illjvvul ill illl giving more information
ft TViTflniTlTflTTitO value to advertisers
ft l! if Hnl IS I lult tl,un ,u, . v ot ber publiou
ilU if liil 1 liilitU t ion ever issued. It gives
the name of every newspaper published, liuv
, ing a circulation rating in the American News
! iaper Directory of more than 25,000 copies each
issue, with the cost per line for advertising in
them. A list of the best papers of local circula
tion, in every city and town of more than 5,000
population with prices by the inch for one
month. Special lists of daily, country, village
and class pa|tcrs. Bargain offers ol value to
I small advertisers or those wishing to experi
ment judiciously with a small amount of money.
! Shows conclusively "how to get the most ser
vice for the money," etc., etc. Sent post paid
I to any address for 50 cents. Address, GEO. P.
Itow KI.L & Co., Publishers and General Adver
tisitig Agents, 10 Spruce Street, New York City.
To Horse Owners!
Blankets, Buffalo
robes and all
lIV NISI%
reduced away down
to rock-bottom prices.
All goods needed
by horse owners have
been reduced to the
lowest possible price.
GEO. WISE
Centre Street, Freeland,
and Jeddo, Pa.
Dr. Gideon E. Moore, the noted
Analytical Chemist, of New York
City says : "A pure Cream of
Tartar and Bi. Carb. Soda Baking
Powder." One of the purest and
strongest Baking Powders in the
market." '
IIENKEL BROS., Patcreon,N.J.
TWDTWTCKT
GENERAL STORE.
SOUTH HEBERTON, PA.
Clothing, Groceries. Etc.. Etc.
Agent for the sale of
PASSAGE TICKETS
From all the principal points in Europe
j to all points in the United States.
I Agent for the transmission of
MONEY
To all parts of Europe. Checks, Drafts,
and Letters of Exchange on Foreign
Banks cashed at reasonable rates.
JOSEPH NEUBURGER
The Leading Clothier, Brick Store,
FEEELAITD,
lias an unusual rush for those Boys Suits at SI.OO each. And
it is no wonder they cannot be bought elsewhere for less than
double that figure but this is all NO COMPARISON TO THE
REST OF OUR STOCK and LOW PRICES NOW PREVAIL
ING.
Mens' Fine Corkscrew Suits
Reduced to SIO.OO. Sweet Orr overall pants for less than yon
can by poorly made-up goods elswhere.
Light Summer Underwear
In endless variety for Men, Boys, Ladies and Children. Para
sols for less than manufacturers' cost. Fancy calicoes as low as
4 cts per yard.
Dry Goods of All Descriptions.
!!§ It tlfltl,
Your ready cash will prove your best
friend at this establishment. Improve the
chance and call on us before buying else
where. Inspect our
Stock of Carpets
From 10 cts per yard upwards.
Joseph Neuburger,
BRICK STORE,
ZPZETSTHST^Y..
BOOTS AND SHOES.
A Large Stock of Boots, Shoes, Gaiters, Slippers, Etc. Also
HATS, CAPS and GENTS" FURNISHING GOODS of All Kinds.
A Special Lino Suitable for This Season.
GOOD MATERIAL! LOW PRICES!
ZETTXGKBI
Corner Centre and Walnut Sts., Freeland.
| THOMAS BIRKBECK,
"WTiolesale and. ISeta.ll.
' SHE, BUS, HAlliS,
j RRRVWRWAQ,
111 IIS, Willi, Mill
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.
•loliii C. Berner,
DEALER IN
Freeland, Pa.
RIP VAN WINKLE RECLINING
CHAIR.
! "GREATESTIN EARTB "
V U MAKES—IS—PIECES FURNITURE.
POSITIONS. HAS NEW ROCKING PRINCIPLE.
I PERFECT ACTION, MODERATE PRICES.
A BEAUTIFUL PRESENT, A COMFORT EVERY HOUSEHOLD NEEDS, BUY ONE.
BEST INVALID'S CHAIR IN THE WORLD !
WALTER HEYWOGD CHAIR M'F'G CO., NEW YORK.
THE ODELL
TYPE WRITER.
<fc9H wi " lu,y tl,t? Type Writer with 78 I
<4 characters,and sls for the Single fuse
Oriel 1 warranted to do better work tiiun any
! muchine made.
i It combines SIMPLICITY with DURABILITY,
SPEED, EASE OK OPERATION, wears longer with
i outcjwtof repairs than any other machine. Has
, no ink ribbon to bother the oiH-rntor. it is NEAT,
I SUBSTANTIAL, nickel plated, j>erlect and adapt- |
;ed to all kinds of type writing:. Like a printing
; press, it produces sharp, clean, legible inunu
| scripts. Two or ton copies ean be made at one
writing. Any intelligent person can la-come a
operator in two days. We offer * 1 ,000 to any
operator who can equal the work of the
Double Case Odell.
Reliable Agents and Salesmen wanted.
Special inducements to dealers.
For pamphlet giving Indorsements, &c., ad
dress
ODELL TYPE WRITER CO.,
85 and 87 sth Ave. CHICAGO, 111.
J. J. POWERS
has opened a
MERCHANT TAILOR'S nml
GENTS' FURNISHING
ESTABLISHMENT
at 110 Centre Street, Froeland, and is not in
partnership with any other establishment but
his own, and attends to his business personully.
],adieu' outside garments cut and fitted to
measure in the latest style.
Old newspapers for sale.
B. F. DAVIS,
Dealer In
Flour, Feed, Grain,
HAY, STRAW, MALT, &c.,
Best Quality of
Glover & Timothy
SEED.
Zemany's Block, 15 East Main Street, Froeland.
PATENTS
Caveats and Ite-issties secured. Trade-Marks
registered, and all other patent causes in the
Patent Office and before the Courts promptly
and carefully prosecuted.
Upon receipt of model or sketch of invention,
I make careful examination, and advise as to
patentability free of charge.
With mv offices directly acr<m from the Patent
Office , and being in personal attendance there,
it is apparent that 1 have superior facilities for
making prompt preliminary searches, for the
more vigorous and successful prosecution of
applications for patent, and for attending to all
business entrusted to my cure, in the shortest
possible time.
FEES MODERATE, and exclusive attention
given to )>atcnt business. Information, advice
and special references sent on request.
J. It. LITTKLL,
Solicitor and Attorney in Patent Causes,
Washington, I>. C. f
(Mention this paper) Opposite Office