FEEELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TIIOSJ. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS, - - $1.50 PER YEAR. FREELAND, NOVEMBER 14, 1892. CALIFORNIA left the Democratic col umn in 1860, after a hard struggle to keep it in line. It came back last week without ever being asked, not a dozen Cleveland speeches being made in the state, and has promised to send a Democratic senator to Wash ington. Is there no political gratitude ex tant! The Republicans lament that the "old soldier vote" the "colored vote," the "Irish-American vote" and the "German vote" have all "gone back on them." And now comes the latest and worst news, to the effect that they have lost the women voters of Wyoming.— Record. THE new ballot law undobtedly kept several voters from the polls, but there was no necessity for these men remaining away. Nothing could be easier for a man to do than pre pare his own ballot, provided he has sufficient education to read print. The new system was given a fair trial and is commended in all parts of the state. If the clause in the constitu tion requiriing ballots to be num bered had been repealed last Novem ber we would now have a real system of secret voting. THE Philadelphia Press has taken the defeat of Harrison harder than any Republican organ in the country. Its editorials since election day are of a kind that deserve the severest con demnation. It claims that the busi ness interests of the nation will unde go a depression, and a great stagna tion in every industry will lesult. To believe the Press one would feel certain that the country will go to the "dogs" after the fourth of next March. But the people don't believe the Press or take any stock in its pessimistic views. IN the Luzerne county returns there is one fact noticeable that proves the voters must have known what they were doing on Tuesday. The men who voted for Cleveland also voted for Hines, and those who voted for Harrison did the same for Foster. By doing this the citizens showed they understood that the candidates for president and congressmen stood upon the same platform, ami to split upon these two offices would be an abandonment of their principles. It is said the count will not give a differ ence of ten in the majorities of Cleve land and Hines. IF any kind of a fight had been made by the Democrats in this state the Republican majority could have been lowered to 25,000 or less. Ex cepting in a close congressional dis trict there was no attempt made to poll the Democratic vote, and in these districts, such as the twelfth, where the candidates had to talk and dis cuss the issues, surprising gains were made over the vote of 1888. Lu zerne, for instance, gave Harrison 325 plurality four years ago, and on Tuesday Cleveland carried it by over 1600, a change for which a consider able portion of the credit must be given to the newspapers which uphold and advocate Democratic principles, not only in campaigns, but from one end of the year to the other. The Meaning of the Election. The significance of the election result is unmistakable and very emphatic. It is the deliberate verdict of the people upon a question squarely presented, thoroughly discussed and perfectly un derstood, It is a peculiarly dispassionate judg ment, a judgment rendered directly in face of the partisan preferences and I prejudices of many who have joined in rendering it. The Democracy has not only carried all the Democratic and hitherto doubt ful states in which superiority of organ ization or other measurable influence is apt to determine results; it has suc ceeded also in reversing the traditions of a life time in states where political views have been supposed to be crys tallized. There can be no doubt that many thousands of the votes by which this result was acheived were those of men hitherto staunchly Republican in their convictions, and naturally still inclined to prefer their old party so far as its courses could he reconciled to their consciencies. These men have not been won over by claptrap, by brass bands or other stimulants to enthusiasm. They are not accessible to appeals of that kind and few Buch appeals have been mado. It has been a campaign of discussion, of argument, of calm reasoning upon known facts and clearly understood issues. The result is the deliberate judgment of the people upon the question at issue. It is an overwhelming condemnation of the Republican record. It is final judg ment against the doctrine and practice of McKinleyism. The next president it a Democrat.— If. V. World,. BEHIND THE OLD WORLD. WE ARE NOT IN ADVANCE OF THE NATIONS OF WESTERN EUROPE. LeKNoim Drawn from the HomeiiteaU Outrage by an Unprejudiced Editor. QueHtloiiH We Must Solve Intelligently if We Would Save Our Institution!*. In the "Editor's Table" department of The New England Magazine for Septem ber there was an able article on Home stead, especially dealing with the em ployment of an armed force to intimidate the locked out men. The article is too good to cut, but its length makes it neces sary to limit its use here to the following excerpts: The Fort Frick nnd Pinkerton exhibition which we have just been witnessing at Home stead shows that we are not in advance of the nations of western Europe, but In important respects behind them, in the securities for liberty, equality and real democracy. It is an exhibition befitting only the feudal middle age, when every little baron on the Rhine from Mayence to Cologne had his own hattle aiented castle and his own gang of archers and spearmen, and robbed and warred at his own will. It is insufferable and a thing not to be endured in a democracy, that any men or any companies of men, for whatever purposes in corporated, should have the power of organ izing and arming military and police forces of their own to act in the settlement of affairs in which they are themselves interested i parties, and to shoot men when and how they may direct. A state in which such thiugs are possible or are apologized for is, we say, but J the parody of a democracy, and if tbo savage massacre and rout of the unfortunate Pinkerton men at Homestead is the means of waking the country up to the seriousness and true sig nificance of this whole question the violence and the bloodshed will not have been in vain. It is foolish and feeble business to discuss the details of the horror; to ask what sort of brutality this one showed, or that, when the bad blood waa once up, or to ask whether this side or that fired first. It matters very little who fires first in an irrepressible conflict. That the conflict occurred when and where it did, at the river bank, and not after the force had intrenched itself behind the itortholes, is the chief thing for the humanitarian to rejoice at, for had it been so deferred it cannot be doubted that the results would have been vast ly graver than they were. It was a case of lawlessness meeting lawlessness, where con vention ceased and there was a return to the first principles of the struggle for justice, and each incident following the first collision is to he judged not as an incident in a generally legal status, hut as an incident in tbe strife of tribes who are yet in tho ignominies of faust recht. To indict tho workingmen for murder nnd do nothing to stamp the erimeof the other side as vastly tho greater, is to bring our ma chinery of justice into contempt, and this can I safely be left to tho common sense of tho coun- ! try. * * ♦ Whether the wages of the striking men were proper wages, as measured by the wages of similar workmen in similar mills, or by the particular condition of the iron industry at this time, is a question so complex that we should deem its discussion by any one but an expert with full knowledge of details an im propriety. We only wish to emphasize the fact that these strikers were not men on "starvation wages," but quite the contrary, for the sake of eliminating from the main question the issue about protection, which the politicians have thrust into it. There is an issue about protection, and we have our own opinion about it; but wo do not wish to see the American people let their attention be be guiled by that for a moment now from the much more serious question at Homestead. The collision at Homestead would have oc curred just the same had the material in the workmen's hands not been "protected" mate rial. Let "protection" and every other acci dent be put out of mind, while the American people fix their attention upon the solo two questions of moment in the case, until they evolve some wisdom to serve thein in the future: The question (1) whether moneyed cor porations may decline to arbitrate with organ ized labor, or take arrogant and arbitrary atti tudes with a view to breaking the organiza tions and compelling workmen to deal with them individually—whether. In a word, amal gamated iron shall not have the same rights in court as amalgamated gold; and the ques tion (2) whether, if collision comes and soldiers are necessary, they shall be marshaled by the corporation, by its hirelings, and get out their guns at, its discretion, or be managed by an Im portant third party called the state. * * * Let every one of us know that if melioration does not proceed from the concession of the rich, then it surely will proceed from the grasping of the poor. Let none of us need any second prompting to declare that If any man is indeed piling up millions out of the labor of discontented men with whom he has driven sharp bargains about wages, aud out of the profits is building schools or libraries or hos pitals or churches, the title of "Christian philanthropist," which It tickles him this week to wear, shall not outlast the week, but shall give place to the plain and homely label, stuck fatally upon his forehead by the lightning of ( iod—an unjust man. Let every oue of us hold to strictest account the rich and privileged man; let every one of us make every excuse and demand the most generous forbearance for the rude and strug gling man. Noblesse obligel Each serious inau among us will take anew to heart the warning word of Emerson, "It is better to work on institutions by the Bun than by the wiud." And as for this sad scene ut Home stead, where now are twenty dead men in graves instead of twenty live men in homes, the man who knows history, surveying it, will ask few questions concerning the little legal ities, but many concerning the great equities. Ho will hear the voice which trumpets across the tumults of the centuries the stern re minder that when, in the throes of the Old World's new births, the yet unstatuted justice speaks, the interfering law, else adamant, must take its place among the cobwebs. Happy the nation where discredited and threadbare law does not have to slink away, but retires with dignity and with a bow before the justice that is becoming law. Happy this I nation of ours if Its peopleareßotinielywi.se I that the historian, looking back from the fu ■ ture to today, have no prompting to remember ' Homestead, nor to trace analogies between 1 ad summer day and the April time when a royal and most legal force marched stealth ily out of Boston among the Massachusetts vil lages and farms—and marched back again. j One Day's Record. The following from the New York Evening World indicates that civiliza tion hasn't fully civilized yet, and that the "strict enforcement of the law" is the remedy suggested shows that one metropolitan editor has not discovered what the trouble is: On a single page of one of the morn ing papers this morning appear the fol lowing headlines relating to crimes and | criminal incidents in and near this city: i "Attacked with an Ax." I "Victim Dead, Slayer at Large." | "Jealous. He Attempted Murder." ' "Mrs. Meralto's Fatal Injuries." "Three Heads Laid Open." * "Quarrel Ends in Murder." "Her Kicks Caused His Death." "Slashed with a Razor." "His Skull Was Fractured." "Slashed by a Highwayman." j "Was Reese Murdered in New York?" | "Girls Fight in the Street." For one day's budget of criminal items j such a record is certainly appalling. It I suggests the imperative necessity of 1 strict enforcement of the law. Th Narrow and Prejudiced Press. In the discussion of the rights of capi tal and labor, I complain of The Times as technical, illiberal and biased in its judgment. Whether this be owing to the size of its building, the extent of its circulation or the revenue which these produce is not for me to say. But, with due deference, I beg to suggest that a re iteration of the law which prohibits force and threats as a means of dissuading nonunion workingmen from pursuing their vocations in the excitement inci dent to a strike of laborers is making slow progress in the burning question as to the rights of these opposing forces. I complain not that your law is bad; it is the law, and perhaps the least that can be said is that it should be enforced. But I am one who believes that, enforce it as you will, the remedy is wholly in adequate, for, while the question is old. it presents itself now under conditions so radically new, as compared with the past, as to demand new treatment. It is these conditions, and not the "walk ing delegate," which produce such uni versal unrest, I think. Capital is subject to the same law that labor is, but each does not feel the effect of its enforcement equally. The for mer, by the undue power which it has usurped, practically enacts and admin isters the law. It visits penalties upon the laborer for breaches of the peace committed under great provocation, while it, to the far greater detriment of the public, consolidates itself into a practical conspiracy against the exist ence of trades unions. These organiza tions are quite as legitimate as the pro duce or stock exchange, and a conspir acy to destroy them is unlawful. Far worse that this are the deeply criminal combinations of capital to swell prices by artificial means of the great bulk of those commodities upon which life depends. This is done in open de fiance of the law, with an occasional abortive effort hero and there to punish the guilty.—N. S. Murphy in New York Times. route ami Klegant Gall. "I notice that a sectarian journal is lamenting that there is yet a large sec tion of central Africa unoccupied by missionaries," said Frank C. Bell at the Laclede. "That is really too bad; still wo may become reconciled to the fact that a few naked negroes in the dark continent never heard Eve's snake story when we remember that 3,000 children in the city of Chicago can not attend school because of the lack of clothing to cover their nakedness; that 10,000 of these little ones, such as Christ blessed, die in the single city of New York an nually for lack of food. When we are inclined to lament that wealthy philan thropists do not contribute liberally to the salvation of the dark skinned pound ers of the tomtom, it might do 110 harm to remember that in the chief city of this Christian land 100,000 people, of all ages and sexes, were turned into the streets last year because they could not pay the rent of the pitiable tenements they inhabited. "I would like to see every black man now dining 011 roots and raw snakes in the jungles of Africa taught to sing "Old Hundred" and wear clothes. I would like to see the heathen Chinese weaned from his idolatrous joss house, and the primitive South Sea islander taught that dancing around a broiled enemy, with a bullring in his nose, is not now considered good form. Still I believe with Tennyson that the Chris tian child is of considerable more im portance than the 0-foot barbarian. So long as thousands of naked, starving children are hiding in the garrets and subcellars of our great cities it seems to me that our expenditure of tens of thousands of dollars annually for the benefit of people who are both comforta ble and happy must be regarded by the heavenly powers as a piece of polite and elegant gall never equaled in offensive ness by the Pharisaical frauds of old."— St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Mufllc lliitli Charms. That the walking delegate is not whol ly destitute of the finer senses, as the capitalist press would have us believe, was shown the other day in Brooklyn, when one of these "blatant and reckless disturbers'' soothed the savage breast of an employer by a liberal application of song. Nonunion painters and varnishers were employed on u building on McDon ough street, and the contractor refused to listen to the union committee or Walk ing Delegate Adams. He bluntly said ho didn't care a snap for all the unions on earth. Delegate Adams called a scratch meet ing of the men working on the buildings, union and nonunion men, and volun teered to sing a song. The workmen promised to join in the chorus. They kept their promise. Adams, who has a clear tenor voice of considerable com pass, sang "Darling, Don't Forget to Dream of Me." Over fifty men, plumb ers, gasfitters, derrick men, painters and varnishers, union and nonunion men, joined in the chorus. The effect was magical. Children screamed, dogs howled, horses tried to run away and the contractor returned to the buildings in hot haste. "Come, I can't stand this. I don't want a free concert at my expense." The contractor straightway ranked himself on the side of unionism, and di rected the nonunion varnishers and painters to join the union. Then the contractor said he hoped he would not >ee the face of a walking delegate for the next twenty years. Threaten* the Government. W. J. Gaynor, of Brooklyn, in a com munication inclosing fifty dollars for the aid of the locked out Homestead men, says: "It does not seem to me that the employment of the Pinkcrtons at Home stead has been viewed in its most serious aspect. History is pregnant with the fact that when powerful and rich indi viduals habitually hire and arm their awn retainers the downfall of the gov ernment is not far off. No government in the past ever stood up against such a condition; none ever will in the future. I trust that such a habit will not be suf fered to grow up in this country." SUNDAY CLOSING IN CHICAGO. The Clergy Taking an Active Part with the Retail Clerks' Union. The organized clerks of Chicago have for a long time been engaged in a move ment for closing retail stores on Sunday. They have met with indifferent success, because many of the merchants, who under the pressure of the moment signed the agreement not to open their stores on Sunday, violated their pledges, and the work had to be done over again. Several of the leading clergymen of the city have recently taken an active part in the Sunday closing movement, and some of them have became as radical as the regulation labor men, owing to the evidences they have seen that conserva tive methods are good enough for talk, but are not always adequate in practice. At a meeting held a short time ago leading ministers of the city took a de cided stand in their speeches in support of the boycott as a means of bringing the merchants to terms. There is a Sun day law in Illinois, but, as is generally the case where the money grubber is concerned, it is ignored with impunity by many of Chicago's merchants. At the meeting referred to Rev. A. H. Henry, of the Methodist church, said: In this ago of activity it is suicide for u man to try to keep pace with his fellows and work seven days in the week. And it is no less than manslaughter to compel him to do this work. What is the question that we are called upon to answer? One clothing dealer who signed an agreement to close on Sunday has opened his store again. We remonstrated and lie said openly that he intended to violate the law. "1 will borrow money," he said, "and open other stores. In that way I will get the Sunday trade." He laughed when he said we could not enforce the law. I don't care to talk poli tics this afternoon, but it is true wo cannot en force the law so long as the chief magistrate of this city allows the saloons to stay open after midnight. Mythology tells us that Achilles' only vulnerable point was his heel. The vul nerable point of this merchant today, who opens his store on Sunday, is not his head nor his heart—it is his pocketbook. I wish it could be agreed upon to patronize only those who close on the Sabbath. liut there is a seeming lethargy in this matter. It is time every Christian threw off this apathy and be gan to work for the laboring man, that lie may secure his rights for Suuday rest. Agitate the question, my friends; work earnestly and prayerfully for it. Bishop Samuel Fallows also made an interesting address, in the course of which he said: This is a remarkable sight for the Nineteenth century. It is remarkable, I say, to see men pleading for thfe enforcement of the law, and it is certainly time for action. Law is on the side of the retail clothing clerks. The decision of one man or two men to open on Suuday in spite of all our resolutions and action is a practical obstacle. There is only one solution —unite and demand your rights. If this is done the law will be enforced. [Applause.] I do not care to be tangled up with the saloons, but let us band together as men and demand that our rights as citizens be preserved. Unions properly used are God's best boons to the work ingman. Combine and demand what is right fully yours. Demand that you have one day in seven for yourself aud your family. Agi tate, agitate, agitate. My parting word is that you should work in harmony until you se cure your God given rights. At the conclusion of the addresses the following resolutions were unanimously adopted by the meeting: Whereas, It is contrary to the laws of Illi nois, and against the expressed wish of the people of Chicago, promulgated through the churches and labor organizations of Chicago through the agency of the daily press, for the clothing stores of this city to open their doors on the Sabbath day; and Whereas, The citizens of the West Side in mass meeting assembled on this Sunday, Sept. 25, do earnestly protest against the continu ance of this evil; therefore bo it Hesolvcd, That it is the sense of tills meeting that the purchasing public of this the West Side do agree not to purchase any goods sold by any store that may keep open its doors on the Sabbath, aud do further agree to exert our intluonce in every way practicable for the clos ing of stores on the Sabbuth. This meeting was held on a Sunday in a church, and was under the auspices of the clergy, and a boycott was in dorsed. Certainly "the world do move." Ingersoll on Liberty. And let me tell you what I mean by the liberty of the body. It is to give to every man what lie earns with his hands. And this great question of division has got to be settled even in the United States. Capital takes too much; labor gets too little. Labor will not always live in a hut with capital living in a palace. Flesh and blood are more sacred than gold, and the time will come when the law will see that every man has the right to life, liberty and the pursuit not only of happiness, but the right to catch some of it before he dies. I want to live until I find an aristocracy of honesty, of generosity; an aristocracy of intelli gence; an aristocracy of heart and brain. lam sick of the old kind. I want liber ty for every man. Ido not believe in the law of supply and demand as ap plied to flesh and blood. If they who toil cannot have some of the good things of this world, then I do not want any body to have them.—Robert G. Inger soll. Social Contrast.. Thomas E. White, of Philadelphia, in a recent address charged present dis turbed industrial conditions to the laws granting special privileges. In the course of his remarks he said: "The re sults of the present monopoly of privi leges by a few is shown in New York, where, of a population of 1,500,000, 1,100,000 live in tenement houses; one fifth of the deaths among this tenement j house population occurring last year | took pluce in charitable institutions, and I one out of every ten of the dead was i buried in the potter's field. Strikes are I the results of efforts on the part of pro ! ilucers to resist invasion and robbery in j the form of law." Worse Than an Anarchist. | At a recent meeting in Homestead an Iddress was made by Rev. Andrews, | who said that if Frick was not so rich a man, or if his acts and treatment of the ; laboring men had occurred in England, |he would have been hanged. He de nounced Frick as the "archdevil" for | bringing the Pinkertons to Homestead, i and saddled the responsibility for the fatal riot of July 6 upon him. "Mr. I Frick," said he, "was worse than an ' anarchist; was a worse menace to tliiß country than the machinations of all the | anarchists combined." At the close of j Mr. Andrews' speech the applause was I tremendous, lasting fully ten minutes. A Pcmer for DlologlstA. The members of the medical profes- ' sion in Hamilton are greatly interested in a remarkable surgical operation which j took place in the west end of the city j about a week ago. It is said that the case is in some of its features so curi ous as to Ihj unprecedented. A little girl, three years of age, was troubled with what appeared to be a tumor rapidly growing out of the small I of her back. The growth was soft, and ] had all the characteristics of a fatty . tumor, excepting that there was a well defined bone of triangular shape em bedded in it. The supposed tumor was the shape of a Rugar loaf, with an inden tation at the crown. It was about six inches in diameter, and stood out from the back fully five inches. It was de cided to have it removed. Seven city doctors were present at the operation. It was not successful; the child died thirty-six hours afterward. The dissection of the mysterious growth and the postmortem held on the child's body revealed some remark able facts. A portion of the spinal col umn was wanting, and from the cavity the growth proceeded. There was in the supposed tumor evidence of the be ginning of another and independent life, rudimentary organs having already been formed. If no operation had been performed this independent life would have continued to grow until, no doubt, it would have developed into a mon strosity and ultimately caused death.— Hamilton Spectator. Tennyson's First Home. The Somersby House estate, with its rent roll of £1,600 a year, and its incalu able if sentimental value as including the rectory in which Alfred Tennyson was born, has failed as yet to find a pur chaser. Apart from the "investment of capital" question, Somersby rectory is likely in years to come to prove the Mecca of Tennyson enthusiasts, and in that way might be made a source of perpetual profit in the hands of a private owner, although I confess that I should like to see it the property of the nation. Shakespeare's birthplace is secured to us as a national heritage for all time, and it would be well if Tennyson's first home could be equally honored. For no poet since Shakespeare has so perfectly understood and voiced the various phases, passions, heights and depths of human nature, and it might almost be said that in the Bible, Shakespeare and Tennyson alone might be found some thing to coincide with every character istic and emotion of humanity. For thirty years of his life Lord Ten nyson lived at Somersby, and no doubt the exquisite appreciation of inanimate as well as animate human nature manifest in the laureate's works was due largely to the influence of the beau tiful surroundings of his peaceful Lin colnshire home.—Lady's Pictorial. The Kaiser's Great Wealth. William II is at this moment the rich est sovereign of Europe. As emperor of Germany he does not receive a thaler toward his expenses. The reichstag, however, votes him every year a sum of 2,600,000 marks under the heading, "Funds placed at the disposition of the emperor for distribution." Of this amount, and according to minute cal culations which have been submitted to the reighstag, 2,467,000 marks are given to invalids who did not receive state pensions after the great war of 1870. As king ot Prussia he has had until recently 12,218,299 marks a year, derived from two sources—namely, 7,718,299 marks revenue from crown lands and forests, and 4,500,000 marks voted by the chamber as necessary to the mainte nance of royal dignity. This sum was quite sufficient for William I, but his grandson has larger views and cannot do with his grandsire's allowance, so the Prussian landtag has given him a sup plementary 8,500,000 marks, making his civil list in all £BOO,OOO. —London Society. Stagnation in Shipbuilding. The stagnation in the shipbuilding trade on the Clyde is apparently most serious. The North British Daily Mail estimates that there are at present be tween Glasgow and Greenock over 15,- 000 men out of work, every one of them willing to accept any occupation that might offer, although skilled workmen at their trades. This statement, how ever, only partly shows the depression. Out of 148 building berths on the Clyde only forty-nine are now in use. The in dustry employs in good times from 50,- 000 to 60,000 men, and it follows that there tire 80,000 or 40,000 men not work ing on the Clyde who would be em ployed there if all the yards were in full operation. About one-third of this num ber, it is thought, have migrated to other shipbuilding centers in Great Britain, but The Mail thinks 15,000 is less than the number of men actually idle on the Clyde at the present time. I)o Not Desire a Monument. The Longfellow Memorial garden in Cambridge does not attract many vis itors, and there is talk of putting up some monument there to draw the at tention of strangers, so that they may understand its purpose. The committee in charge wish to put up a statue of Longfellow, or some monument with re liefs illustrating his works, but the Longfellow family does not approve of this idea, preferring to let the garden, which is the open lot opposite the Long fellow mansion, remain unmarked.— Boston Cor. Critic. In the family of Philip C. Drumel, of Philadelphia, five generations are repre sented. Mr. Drumel is ninety-four years old and was a drummer boy under Na poleon, being present at the burning of Moscow. Colorado college has lately received a gift of $50,000 for a library from Mr. N. P. Coburn, of Newton, Mass., and a val uable telescope from Henry R. Wolcott, of Denver. A Yankton, S. D., family is claimed to consist of a father, mother and twen ty-four children. The mother is Baid to be not yet thirty years old. I CURE THAT | Cold • I AND STOP THAT II II Cough, ii ( I N. H. Downs' Elixir 11 < i! WILL DO IT. || I | Price, 25c., 50e., and §I.OO per bottle. 11 I I Warranted. Sold everywhere. | | I . HSKBY, JOEHSOH t LOES, Tropi., Ballngton, Tt. | | Sold at Schilcher's Drug Store. It Curea Colda, Cougha.Bore Throat, Croop. Influen < eat Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Aathma. A certain cure for Consumption in first atagea, and ■ sure relief in advanced atagea. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the flrat doae. Told by dealers everywhere. Large bottlea 50 cents and SI.OO. 1 THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor says it acta gently on tho atomaoh, llvor j and kidneys. and is a pleueant laxative. This drink is made from nerbs, and is prepared for uso as cattily us tea. It la called LAKE'S MEDICINE All druggists sell it at 80a. ami SI.OO a package. If You cannot get it.send your add roes for free sample. Lane's Family Medicine morn the bowelacaeh 4a jr. In ordTto be he.-iltliy.thialHneersHiiry. Address, OItATOIt E. WOUDiVAItO, LeKOY, N. Y. RAD etc. For Information jaul freo ITnndbook write to MIINN A <"0..Vl P.noAI>WAY, NKW YoitK. Oldest bureau for seeming patents in Amerioa. Every patent taken out by us la brought before the public by a notice given free of charge in the J>cicntifi( Jamaican Largest circulation of any pcientiOc paper In tho world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent man should lc without It. Weekly, S.'t.OO a Psar; $1.50 six months. Address MIJNN St CO, UULlSllElts. 301 lb.ad way. New York. H. G. OESTERLE & CO.. mtinufneturer of SOCIETY t GOODS. HATS, CAPS, SH I UTS, BELTS, BALDRICS, SWORDS and GAUNTLETS. Banners, Flags, Badges, Regalia, Etc. LACES, FRINGES. TASSELS, STARS, CI A LOON, EMItItOI I>ERY MATERIAL, GOLD and SILVER CLOTIIS. WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES, i No. 224 North Ninth Street, Philadelphia. !l. P. MUll); Centre and South Streets. Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions, Furniture,* Carpets, Eto. It, Is sufficient to state our stork throughout, Is the most complete tn lie tumid in the levton. We Invite you to eall and Jutltfc fur yourselves. We will compare priors with any dealer In the same line ot poods in t.u/.erne county. Try us ! when in need of unv of the above articles, and especially when you want LADIES', GENTS' AND CHILDREN'S BOOTS and SHOES. In every department wo offer unparalleled inducements to buyers in tin* way ot nigh class goods of quality beyond question, and to those we add unlimited vuriety in all new novelties and tho strong inducements ot low prices by which we shall demonstrate that the cheapest, as well us the choicest stock. Is that now tor sale by j. p. MCDONALD. Subscribe for the TRIBUNE. I J. LIMIT EMPORIUM. We Are Now Ready With Our Fall Stock of Dry Goods. Canton flannels, from 5 cents a yard up. Calicoes, from 3 cents up. All-wool dress goods, double width, from 35 cents up. We have the room and the stock. Ladies' Cools, Capes and Sha wis In Fall and Winter Styles. Mens' Heavy and Light HCight Shirts. The Most Complete Line of Underwear In Town. Blankets, Oai/fs, Spreads, Lte., Lie. Wall Paper, Stationery and School Books. Furniture, Carpels and Beddings. A good carpet-covered lounge for 85.00. Ingrain carpet 25 cents a yard up. Brussels carpet, 50 cents to 51.50 per yard. Boots and Shoes. Ladies' kid shoes, Si.oo. Children's school shoes, Nos. 8 to 10.1, 85 cents; Nos. 11 to 2, 05 cents. Candee Gum Boots. Men's for 82.25. Every pair guaranteed. Boys' Candee rubber boots, 82. For 30 Days Only. . Groceries. All fresh goods. Flour, 82.25. Ham, 1-t ceuts. Tobacco, 28 cents. Cheese, 12.] cents. Scim cheese, 8 cents. 3 pounds of raisins, 25 cents. 5 pounds of currants, 25 cents. t> pounds of oatmeal, 25 cents. 0 bars white soap, 25 cents. 3 bars yellow soap, 10 cents. Thousands of Other Goods All Guaranteed. Queens ware. We sell Deite's Lantern, 3.V cents. Milk and butter pots, a com plete line. Tinware. Washboilers, with lid. 00 cents. Blue granite ware, a complete line—is everlasting. Call and see our stock anil he convinced of our assertion that we can save you 25 per cent on any goods you may need. Terms, spot cash to one and all. All goods guar unteed or money refunded. Yours truly, J. C. BERNER. V CITIZENS' BANK OF FEE ELAND. 15 Front S'treet. Capital, - $50,000. OFFICERS. JOSEPH HIHKIIKCK, President. H. C. KOONS, Vice President. 11. R. DAVIS, Cashier. JOHN SMITH, Secretary. DIRECTORS. Joseph Birkbock. Thomas Birkbcck, John I Wagner, A Rudewick, 11. Koons, Charles Dusheek, William Kemp, Mathius Schwabc, John Smith, John M. Powell, JW, John Burton. | p*"" Three per cent, interest paid on saving deposits. OfM>n daily from 9 a. in. to 4p. m. Saturday j evenings from 0 to 8. WM. WEHRMANN, German Practical Watchmaker? Centre Street, Five Points. The cheapest ami best ropalrlnir store In town. All w a tell repairing guurnntccil for one : j oar. New watches for sale ut low prices. Jewelry repaired on short, notice. Give me a call. All kinds of watches and clocks re ' paired. ENGLISH, SWISS AND AMERICAN WATCHES. Complicated and fine work on watches a specialty. ELEGTROPOISE Gllico REMOVED to 1004 Mt. Vernon St., PHILADELPHIA. Persons dentriuy city or county agencies, addrcHa /. D. WARE, General Agent | For the States of Pennsylvania, New Jersey Maryland and Delaware.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers