FHEELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVEKY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year SI 50 Six Months 75 Four Months 50 Two Months 25 Subscribers are requested to watch the date following the name on the labels of their papers. By referring to this they can tell at a glance how they stand on the books in this office. For instance: G rover Cleveland 28JuneP3 means that (Jrover is paid up to June 28,1803. By keeping the figures in advance of the pres ent date subscribers will save both themselves and tho publisher much trouble and annoy ance. Subscribers who allow themselves to fall in arrears will be called upon or notillcd twice, and, if payment does not follow within one month thereafter, collection will be made in the manner provided by luw. FREELAND, PA., JANUARY 19, 1893. Murriage as an Option. The divorce proceedings between the artist, Mr. Stetson, and his wife have taken up some space in the papers re cently. They have differed from other like attempts to sever the marriage tie, in Mr. Stetson's profuse assertions that he and his wife had no difference except the slight but insuperable one that they preferred living apart to living together. For his late wife Mr. Stetson expresses a high respect which she reciprocates. They have no vulgar differences or quarrels. Neither charged the other with unfaithfulness. After some years of married life in Providence, R. 1., and Los Angeles, Cal., Mrs. Stetson discov ered that there was much in life she preferred to keeping house for Mr. Stet son and Mr. Stetson reached the conclu sion that it was hardly worth while to have a wife, however gifted, who prefer red living alone in California to making him comfortable in Rhode Island. Tliis mutual discovery led to a mutual application for a divorce which in less accommodating days the courts would have rejected as collusive. It never seem to have occurred to either that marriage is not a mere convenience and that its vows cannot be discharged and 1 dissolved by a common preference for single life. The duty and obligation which a man and woman owe to society, not less than to themselves, sat lightly on both. Neither seems for an instant to have realized that the marriage rela tion is in its nature and essence irrevo cable, however men and women may agree to rid themselves of its outer and apparent bonds. Although one or the other may break from its bonds or de grade them by ignoble surrender to fleshy passion, it still remains true that the vows which unite a man and woman in marriage work a change in the life and all the relations of each which make separation a frank confession of dire failure in life's dearest desire. Law, social practice and religious sanction may modify the enduring char acters of this lifelong contract in its legal obligations and relations, but noth ing alters or can alter the grim fact that a man and woman who have once lived together as man and wife can by no possibility unlive what is past. Char acter and all the relations of life are altered, and, whatever compromise and adjustment may be made, the irrevoca ble fact remains that only death brings freedom, and even this cannot change a past which has altered the future. The Roman Catholic Church has al ways recognized this fact, with results both good and evil, often oppressive and by no means deserving of unmixed praise. Up to a recent date ordinary American society looked upon marriage as so far irrevocable that it was impossi ble for a woman and difficult for a man to dissolve this bond, even for the most serious of causes, without a distinct loss of caste. This has wholly ceased to be the case,' as instances like that of the Stetsons abundantly prove. This artist and his wife evidently looked on marriage as an option, which could be called off at will. Their friends and kinsmen are evidently ready to receive both without question after the law has decently separated them. The New Y'crk woman whose mother gave a great reception with her daughter's restored maiden name on the cards to notify all the world of her di vorce, or the Chicago woman who gave a dinner to past and present spouses, may be in advance of general practice as yet, but they are only in advance. Free and frequent divorce will yet make their example common. Yet nothing can alter the fact that a society which lightly receives in good standing those who are divorced is cer tainly in no long time to find many rea>ly to treat mart iage as a mere option. —Philct. Press. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.' When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. COUGHING LEADS TO CONSUMPTION. Kemp's Balsam stops the cough at once. Mrß. Potter Palmer now knows what i fame is. Her portrait has been used to adorn a beautiful brewery advertise ment. If anything would cement the French together again and make all hands for get the unpleasant Panama scandal, it would be a war with Germany. The Federation of Labor of Washing ton city is an organization embracing twenty-eight local unions of working men. Nearly half the delegates these! unions send to the central organization are foreign born, yet the federation re cently passed a resolution asking con gress to restrict immigration for five years. Having got here, these delogates see how it is for themselves. Colonel John H. Weber, United States commissioner of immigration, is known to his countrymen as the one office holder on record who handed in hiß resignation to save the government his salary Colonel Weber has been mak ing a speech on immigration. He says it will not do at all to stop it entirely. We must have the Btrong bodied European laborers to do the rough work and develop our material resources. All ends would be accomplished in his judgment by having a national quaran tine instead of a suspension of all foreign steerage arrivals. The national quaran tine could be made effective by means of duplicate statements and a permanent indexed system of records of all arriving immigrants among other methods. Then Colonel Weber gave his audience this poser to work on. "Where will the serv ant girl of the futni o come from if you close the gates?" Perhaps Colonel Weber forgot the colored girl. The New Architecture. Mr. Burr Ferreo's paper in The New England Magazine brings us suddenly face to face with the vast divergence in the aims as well as the style of modern architecture from the approved models of the past. The difference may be briefly expressed thus: In ancient times architecture was for the gods: in mod ern times it is for men. The same re ligious idea dominated acliitocture dur ing the Middle Ages and down even to this century The churches of Europe are the structures upon which both wealth and artistic endeavor were poured out unsparingly. All has changed. Churches are still built, beautiful and costly ones, too, but the most costly and spacious do not compare with the ancient temples of the gods or even the cathedrals of the Mid dle Ages Now the architect works for man. He must expend his effort on bouses that are for use six days in the week instead of only one. The most striking mouments of Nine teenth century architecture are to be found in the factory, the bank, the office building, the railway station, the apart ment house and especially in the school and college building and the library The use of the elevator has evolved tho skyscraping edifice of the modern city Not King Solomon himself had tho com fort and convenience in his palace that the modern well to do American citizen enjoys. Modern architecture is the deification of the useful. But modern architecture is not beautiful, as Mr. Fer ree reminds us It ought to be beauti ful and must be made so. To Get on In the World. A good many thousand young men— yes, and young women, too—are wonder ing about this time how they shall fit themselves for a creditable career, or, if not a career, what they Bhall do to get at least a comfortable living. The wants of the time may be summed up in just two precepts. The first is, learn to do some thing useful and learn it thorougldy. This is a time of specializing. On the ono hand is rough labor, which is per formed by the foreigners who crowd over to America in the steerage. On the other are the hundreds of skilled trades and specialties and the few pro fessions. in the professions the special izing tendency is at work, differentiating the criminal lawyer from the civil law yer, the office practitioner from the ad vocate and the specialist, like the latent office legal expert, from both. Separate again from these is the pension shark, whose profession is not to be rec ommended to anybody. In medicine the differentiation is so great that in the large cities the general practitioner is be coming obsolete. There is BO much to be known that a lifetime is necessary to be thoroughly up in one single line of achievement. Chooso what you will do; choose carefully and make nomistako. You can in a goneral way determine what you can do best by what you would like to do best. Then go in for that work with all your powers, full of hope and ambition, of energy that does not flag, of determination that no obstacle can down. The next point is, cultivate agreoablo manners. It is said that a certain fa mous millionaire and railroad president owes his rise in the world to his courte ous and obliging manner to his employer while he was young. Keep your eyes open to see quickly where you can do little kindnosses and favors to all aronnd you, from highest to lowest. Do this not from selfish motives, but from genu ine good will and sympathy. You will receive so much sympathy in return that by and by the whole wave of good will I rolling your way will push you onward i to success. Cultivate graceful move ! ments of body, neatness of person and a j kindly, musical voice. As has been said over and again, use always in your oon- I versation the best English you know. SUNK BY PROTECTION SOME OF THE CAUSES OF THE RECENT AVALANCHE. Cleveland's Tariff' Mesnugr—Tlie McKinley Bill—Henry George's Works—Tragedy of Homestead —Reform Clubs and Peck's Report—The People Deserve Credit. Cleveland's tariff message of 1887 is generally supposed to have started the campaign of education which has al ready routed protectionism, and which will not stop until we have a better sys tem of taxation than the present one. But this famous message was only one of the milestones on the road out of the miasmic swamps of protectionism and special privilege. Clear headed men like W. G. Sumner, David A. Wells and Henry George have been pointing out the inherent and increasing evils of this monopoly breeding system. Intelligent citizens wore becoming aroused to the importance of these evils and dangers. President Cleveland was among this number, and fortunately he had the op portunity, the patriotism and the man hood to issue his emancipation proc lamation, which applies to whites as well as blacks. The monopolists who were fattening on the protected spoils of the people quickly scented danger and poured out a few of their millions to save their robber tariff system. By means of false theories and cries and by bribery they succeeded temporarily. The McKinley tariff act was the one great object lesson for the people. This blundering piece of legislative patch work, named after McKinley, but fashioned by and for trusts and monop olies, has made more converts to tariff reform than any Democratic pamphlet. It raised duties on hundreds of articles in October, 1890. Prices of many of these advanced at once. It lowered duties on sugars in March, 1891, and within one week prices dropped almost exactly as much. It ruised the duty on tin plate July 1, 1891, and prices ad vanced over 1890 prices by the same amount. The Democrats had declured that the tariff was a tax; the Repub licans denied it. Everybody was ob serving the effects of the new tariff law to see which party was right. The demonstration was complete. On three occasions prices followed duties. If McKinley had not touched the duties on sugar and tin plate the demonstration would not have attracted so much at tention nor been as convincing. The tariff is as much a tax on clothing, cut lery, etc., as it was and is on sugar and tin plate, but the nseof shoddy, cot ton and cheaper materials makes it a difficult matter for most people to de tect the tax in clothing, carpets, cut lery, drugs, cigars, etc. The McKinley bill did its own talking and cannot re ceive too much credit The Congressional Record edition of Henry George's book, "Protection or Free Trade?" was an important cause. More than 1,000,000 copies of these were sent to voters, mostly in Wisconsin, Illi nois and Ohio. The result shows that the cry of "British free trade" will no longer hold voters in Republican ranks. The wonderful effect of this book was most marked in the congressional dis tricts of Tom L. Johnson and of Michael D. Harter in Ohio. In both of these re districted districts Republican majori ties of from 2,000 to 3,000 were changed to Democratic majorities equally large. The Homestead tragedy and the strikes and riots in Tennessee, in Buf falo and in the Coeur d'Alene mines in Idaho did much to arouse earnest thought and to direct attention to the sham protection given to workingmeu by duties on goods, and the greed and hypocrisy of the Carnegies and the Fricks who receive but who neglect to turn over to their employees their share of the tariff bonus. Peck* labor report undoubtedly did much to increase Cleveland's majority in New York. It gave increased wages in industries in which all concerned knew that there had been reductions. This fact stimulated every big and little Democratic paper in the state to expose the falsity not only of the report, but of all claims of protectionists. The gross exaggerations and the lying statements of the Republican press when dealing with the condition of the tin plate, pearl button, wool hat, glove, to bacco, cutlery and hundreds of other protected industries opened the eyes of many honest Republicans and made them ashamed of their party and sick of McKinleyism. The New York Tribune and The Amer ican Economist deserve especial mention in this connection. The well developed tendency of these and other high tariff papers to credit everything good to Mc- Kiuley and everything bad to Democracy and free trade increased the odinm al ready attached to McKinleyism. Fam ines in Europe, with good crops here and consequently good prices; more wool on a sheep's back and all improvements in machinery were some of the things cred ited to McKinleyism and protection. The dexterity shown by Harrison, McKinley and other leading Republicans in trans ferring themselves to opposite sides of certain questions—as the desirability of cheapness—after the election of 1890 waa a humiliating spectacle to many Repub licans who had not forgotten the deca logue. The Reform club of New York dur ing the whole of the four years' cam paign of education did most telling work. Its semimonthly publication— Tariff Reform—gave facts and statistics in regard to each of tho important pro tected industries. Millions of copies of Tariff Reform were distributed—not in discriminately, but by means of classi fied lists of voters obtained at great ex pense. By this means wool growers were given the facts on the wool ques tion, and barley farmers learned the effects of the tariff upon the barley in dustry. Everything was read and but little wasted. These same facta in the hands of speakers made them invinci ble. Since 1890 it has been almost im possible to arrange with Republicans for deludes. Twespeakers were kept in the field the greater part of each year. The club also furnished short tariff ar ticles to thousands of country and some I city papers through several big press i associations of the east and the west. | This steady pour of hot shot accounts for some of the gaps in Republican ranks. I The New England Tariff Reform club also did excellent work. Many news papers have gone to great expense to obtain and publish tariff reform data. Some of these are The Times, Evening Post and World, of New York; St. Louis Republic, Chicago Herald, Phila delphia Record, Boston Herald, Buffalo Courier, Detroit Free Press and Cleve land Plain Dealer. It would take too much space to even mention the speakers and writers who have contributed to the downfall of Re publicanism. The intelligent, honest and well conducted fight made by the Democratic as < red with the tricky, stealthy am. rbaric warfare of the Republican managers of the cam paign has won the admiration of all, ami has made it easy for hundreds of leading Republicans to step over into Democrat ic ranks. But after all it was the people that have freed themselves from the greed and tyranny of trusts. This fact fur nishes new evidence of the value and stability of our institutions. We did not appeal in vain to the intelligence of the American people. It was due to their intelligence and honesty that Gro ver Cleveland, who had once risked and lost the presidency in trying to render faithful service, was again made a can didate and elected on a platform that had not a square inch of protection plank in it. Trusts, Take Warning! It will be remembered that as soon as Harrison's election to the presidency was announced in 1888 prices of trust certfi cates took a jump upward. The public was not mistaken. Harrison and his party have been friendly to trusts. Pro tection duties were retained or raised at the beck of trusts. The Republican at torney general has shown remarkable leniency in prosecuting these wealthy violators of law. He has prepared in dictments against several, but intention ally or unintentionally, these have been so weak that they have always been promptly quashed when brought into court. Trusts have multiplied and flour ished as never before; hence it is that Harrison's reign may not inappropriately be designated as the "reign of trusts." But now a change is promised. The Cleveland administration will consult the interests of the people, and will make short work of some of the trusts. They know this already, and before the elect oral vote is known they begin to quail. Prices of trust certificates began at once to decline. On Nov. 11 Sugar trust cer tificates fell 3% points, from 110 to 106%; Lead trnst certificates fell 1% points, from 47 to 45%; Whisky trust, \y t \ Electric trust, } / a \ Tobacco trust, %; Cotton Oil trust, 1; Linseed Oil trust, %; Reading coal combine, 1. For the first time in four years the trusts begin to fear the wrath of an out raged public. They realize that they must soon take their hands out of the people's pockets. The next attorney general will not be appointed by a president who owes his present position and future prospects to his allegiance to trnsts. The "fat frying" process i stopped, and with it ends the boodle al liance between government officials and robber tariff barons. Our manufacturers must cast off their swaddling clothes and prepare to do business in a manly way and 011 an honest, independent basis. Republican Rip Van Winkles. 1 It took the most of the leading Repub lican papers until Nov. 10 to find out what all other papers knew two days before —that Cleveland was elected presi dent, and that Harrison had received only about one-third of the popular vote of the country and would receive only about one-third of the electoral vote. On Nov. 10 Chairman Carter telegraphed the startling news to President Harrison that "we have been defeated by a pro nounced majority." This was funny, but not so funny as the performance of The American Economist of Nov. 11. This standard bearer of protection and of the ex-Republican party contains 110 evidence that a national election has oc curred, and that there has been an ava lanche, except a verv brief editorial an nouncing that the "presidential election is not decided;" that "late returns on Wednesday morning show that steady gains for protection have been made in the Eighteenth congressional district of Illinois," and that this "may save Illinois to the presidential ticket, which in turn I makes Harrison's election more than ! possible." Gracious goodness! The loss of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Wisconsin to the ; Democracy would still leave Harrison's j election impossible. But The Economist j has gotten so used to juggling with sta- ! tistics to support its protection theories I that it cannot stop the work. The Economist continues its articles | on tin plate, on the tariff not a tax, and j its tariff sermons, prophesying direful i things if John Bull's policy gets a foot- ! hold here. It will probably continne for several months to advocate a policy that has been discarded forever by an overwhelming majority. It Will Re "Revised" Down. Mr. Joseph H. Manley, of the Repub- j lican national committee, makes a con fession of the sort that is 4 4 good for the . soul. He acknowledges that the vote 1 of the manufacturing towns defeated J Harrison, and when asked as to his ex- I pectations regarding Democratic action 1 1 he said: J I expect that tho Democrats will do j just what the Republicans promised to !do four years ago. They will enact a law which will revise the tariff and give ( to the manufacturing towns free raw ! material. j The Republicans promised to revise the tariff four years ago. The people ! expected that it would be "revised" down, but it was "revised" up, as a mat ter of fact, and if the Democrats are wise they will make about the changes : suggested by those who wanted a mod ! erate revision, with a free list which in -1 eluded certain classes of raw material. M'KINLEYISM REPUDIATED. §OlllO Sensible Opinions Kxprossctl on ths Economic Outlook. The Dry Goods Economist, the leading dry goods journal of America, and which therefore represents the interests of both manufacturers ami dealers in domestic and foreign goods, does not think that this country is going to the free trade bowwows under a Democratic and anti- Mclunley administration. In its issue of Nov. 12 it comments upon the "tre mendous emphasis" with which the dom inant party has been cast out by the silent voters. It recognizes that an im portant economic change is coming in | which "it behooves every business man to seek out if possible the true springs of this peaceful revolution, the conse-! quence of which to commerce is likely to be considerable." This journal says: "It is safe to as sume that this tidal wave was raised by a combination of influences—moral, po litical and economical. It is probable that Tuesday's vote comes as a check evolved in the normal growth of our nation upon the progress of centraliza tion." It then recognizes what most Repub lican papers as yet but dimly discern that McKinleyism has been condemned in the court of last appeal and must soon die the death of a traitor. We quote the following from this excellent edi torial : Regarded from the economic side, it seems to us that the country has utterly repudiated McKinleyism— not schedule A, B or C of the Mckinley bill, but Mc- Kinleyism. They have condemned the treachery that after the sqnarest prom ises of reforming the tariff downward, reformed it upward to unprecedented rates. They have resented the insult to their intelligence of the fallacies and misstatements which were oifered in justification of this treachery. They havo repudiated the theory that the pros perity of this country is best built up by working as much damage as possible to certain other countries, and they have spewed out of their moi*h all the preach ers of the gospel of hatred. They havo denied the right to speak for them of any man who claims him to be the best American who is the most hated in Eu rope, and who has done the most to take the bread from the mouths of laborers in those countries where lack of oppor tunity practically forbids a change of occupation. They have condemned the man who quotes as the highest vindica tion of our recently inaugurated eco nomic system every failure, every strike, every famine in manufacturing Europe. Finally they have contemptuously turned down the theory that the manufacturing industries of the brightest and most en ergetic of nations must be kept to eter nity in a airtight hothouse to keep them alive. In short, it seems to us that McKin leyism has gone too far in arbitrary fa voritism, in gross selfishness, in arro gance and brazen insolence even for the patientest, because the largest and strongest, of nations, so that the people, rising, have passed upon it the silent soutenee of banishment. The concur rence of so many manufacturing and ag ricultural < ates in this verdict, even in cluding Ohio, which, next to Pennsylva nia, lias been supposed to be the very habitat of the ideas for which the name of McKinley stands, renders it difficult to give any other meaning to the event. 'Hie true policy of the American man ufacturer is to prepare his business for free raw materials and duties on manu factured goods not exceeding the actual difference in labor cost between this and competing countries, and then to use all his efforts and influence to bring about tariff revision on these lines. Once (iood Republican Doctrine. So far as national issues are concerned there is nothing surprising about the declaration of Wisconsin in fuvor of the revenue tariff demanded by tho Demo crats. The former Republicans who voted for Cleveland on this ground last Tuesday were only living up to the doc trines which they had always professed until the McKinley craze attacked the party. The Republican state platform of .1875 contained this plank: Resolved, That we arc in favor of a tariff for revenue only, BO adjusted us tube the least bur deiisunie and the most favorable to the inter esia of labor untl industry. Indeed the verdict of last Tuesday throughout the country only means that the tariff principles formerly laid down by Uurfield are to ho carried out by i Cleveland. The next Democratic presi dent could not desire a clearer line of action than was drawn by that Repub lican predecessor of his when he said, a quarter of a century agot "Duties should be so high that our manufacturers can fairly compete with the foreign product, but not so high as to enable them to drive out the foreign article, enjoy a monopoly of the trade and regulate the price as they please. lam for a protec- ; tion which leads to ultimate free trade." | —New York Evening Post. Illlnolsans to tho Front. The election of Cleveland is in effect a revolution. It crushes protection as em- ] bodied in the McKinley hill, and delivers the agricultural and industrial labor of the country from the despotism of or- 1 ganized capital. Illinois will again be 5 a factor in national politics. With the co-operation of tho west and south it ] will hereafter exercise a controlling in fluence in the policies of the country.— ' Senator Palmer. The Republican party was over whelmingly defeated two years ago on the issues raised by the McKinley act. A rehearing was demanded, and a new trial WHS granted. After two years of practical working of the law and a full and thorough discussion of all its merits the people have again repudiated it and the party which is responsible for it. | The majority is so large and the con -1 demnation so emphatic that protection is forever doomed in this country. And not only in the United States, hut in the western hemisphere Canada, Mexico snd Central and South America will not he long in taking down their bars raised in retaliation and restraint of trade. I The continent is free. Congressman Springer. j M mm m mmm m m m n " CURE THAT J| ii Cold |ii 11 AND STOP THAT 11 || Cough. || !!N. H. Downs' Elixir|| . C. "PECTECTICN cr FBEE TRA3DE." f By Henry George. The leading statesmen of the world pronounce It the greatest work ever written upon the tariff <|uestion. No staitistics, no figures, no evasions. It will interest and instruct you. Read it. Copies Free at the Tribune Office. H. G. OESTERLE & CO, manufuoturer of SOCIETY" f GOODS. HATS, CAPS, SIIIRTS, BELTS, BALDRICS, SWORDS and GAUNTLETS. Banners, Flags, Badges, Regalia, Etc. LACES, FRINGES, TASSELS, STARS, OA LOON, EMBROIDERY M ATI RIAL, HOLD and SILVER < LOTUS. WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES. No. 224 North Ninth Street, Philadelphia. A New Year Full —of— Good. Tlxixig-s For All. . We start the new year with j closing out lots of goods. Call and see Ladies' Coats. Newmarkets at half price. An $8 coat for £5. A £lO coat for $5; etc. Special Bargains In Woolen Blankets. Have them from 79 cents a pair up Remember, men's gum boots. Oandee, £2 25 Muffs. 40 cents up to any price you want. Ladies' woolen mitts. 2 pair 25 cents; worth 25 cents a pair. Some 50-cent dress goods at 25 cents. All-wool plaid, which was 60 cents, now 39 cents. Some Special Things In Furniture. A good carpet-covered lounge, £5 A good bedstead, £2.25. Fancy rocking chairs, £3.50. Ingrain carpet for 25 cents a yard. Groceries & Provisions. Flour, £215. Chop, £l.lO and £1.15. Bran, 50 cents. Ham, 13 cents. Bologna. 8 cents. Cheese, N. Y., 13 cents. Tub butter. 28 cents 18 pounds sugar £I.OO. 5 pounds Lima beans, 25 cents. 5 pounds currants, 25 cents. 5 pounds raisins, 25 cents, ti bars Lenox soap, 25 cents 6 bars Octagon soap, 25 cents 3 packages pearline, 10 cents. Best coal oil, 12 cents. Vinegar, cider, 15 cents gal Cider, 20 cents a gallon. Syrup, No. 1, 35 cents gal. No. 1 mince meat. 10 cents. 3 pounds macaroni 25 cents. 3 quarts beans. 23 cents. . 6 pun. ds oat meal, 25 cents. FHEELMD READY PAY. J. C. Eerner, Spot Cash. Promoter of Low Prices. jFreelaxici, - - 2=a. CITIZENS' BANK OF FEE ELAND. 15 Front Street. Capita?., - $-30,000. OFFICEHS. JOSEPH HIKKUKCK, President. H. C. KOONS, Vict* President. B It. DAVIS, Cashier. JOHN SMITH, Secretary. DIRECTORS. Joseph Birkbock, Thomas Birkbeck, John Wagner, A Kudewick. 11. C. Knuns. Charles Dusneck, William Kemp, Mathias Schwa bo. John Smith, John M. Powell, &i, John Burton tW Three per cent, interest paid on saving deposits. Open daily from 9 a. n. to 4p. m. Saturda> evenings from to 8. SPECIAL CLEARING Skill Here is the place to And a MAMMOTH STOCK OF HAKGAINS suitable at this season. THOI S .Ms OF I'RLTT \ NOVI.I/JIF Ladies' Coats, Fins, Gin**, Caps, llats, Cnderirear, Hosiery, Dress Patterns, Corsets, Li,.ens, Trimmings, . Etc., Etc. Childrens' a d Infants' Goods In great variety, and a storeroom tilled wiili the prettiest sort of useful and ornamental goods that you will want during the holidays. SPLENDID SOUVKNIIi GILTS to all pers-ns pur chasing to the amount of and over. MRS B A CRIMES. 1 Centre Street, - Below Front, - Froeland.