TO PAY THE QUEEN. THE ANNEXATION MESSAGE BEFORE CONGRESS. An Extra Sessiuu Will lie Called if the Sherman Act I* Not Repealed—The Pros pective Secretary Has No Fear of a Gold Crisis —The Government Is Prepared. WASHINGTON, Feb. 16.—The Nicaragua canal bill, though having the advantage of being the unfinished business, had to give way in the senate to the sundry civil ap propriation bill. All the amendments to that bill reported by the committee on ap propriations (including the World's fair items) were disposed of, with theexceptiou of the series relating to river and harbor improvements, and these were in the full tide of debate when the president's Ha waiian message was delivered. Then, with out the delay of a minute, the senate 011 Mr. Sherman's motion went into executive session. The President'* Message ou Hawaii. The president sent a message to the sen ate recommeudlng the annexation of the Hawaiian islands to the United States. It is accompanied by a treaty of annexa tion, concluded between the secretary of state and the Hawaiian commissioners, and a mass of correspondence relating to the question at issue. The treaty is brief, providing merely for the annexation of the islands under the present provisional gov ernment, and leaving the details of the permauent form of government, etc., to the action of congress. The correspond ence is very voluminous, going back many years, and gives a complete history of the islands so far as negotiations with the the United States are concerned. Con trary to general expectation, the senate in executive session declined to make the treaty public immediately, but decided to first have the message and documents printed for the confidential information of senators. •20,000 Annually to tlie Queen. The laws of the United States which are in force in Alaska are extended to Hawaii. The deposed queen is to receive from the United States 130,000 a year, and the royal family, and especially the heiress appar ent to the throne, are to be fully cared for. The Chinese problem is disposed of by making it impossible for any of the Chi nese now on the islands to come into the United States. As far as the debts of Hawaii are con cerned, the treaty proposes that the United States shall assume them, but shall receive in return the various incomes of the is lands, amounting, it is said, to about flO,- 000,000 a year. Foster and Carlisle Confer. Mr. Carlisle has been in conference with Secretary Foster. It is understood that Mr. Carlisle has received instructions for a bond issue and is now getting pointers from Secretary Foster. Mr. Carlisle said that he could not see any occasion for ap prehension in financial circles, as the gov ernment would not allow gold to go to a premium. "My course as secretary is perfectly plain," he said to a friend. "One of my first official steps will be to issue bonds, and this will be followed by a special ses sion of congress. The Sherman act will then be repealed." It would surprise no one familiar with Mr. Foster's plans to see a bond issue made as soon as the Sherman enabling act passes both houses. The Sherman enabling act will probably be passed as an Amendment to the sundry civil bill in the senute. AN AMERICAN VATICAN. Movement by Eminent Catholics to Pro vide a Residence For Mgr. Sfttollt. NEW YORK, Feb. 18.—Austin E. Ford, \ editor of the New York Freeman's Journal, ' received an important dispatch, from a Roman Catholic standpoint, from the Very Rev. Patrick Cronin, editor of The Catho lic Union, Buffalo. The message informed Mr. Ford that Bishop Ryan of Buffalo has consented to act as treasurer of the apos tolic delegation building fund, the object of which is to defray the expense of erect lug headquarters for Mgr. Satolli. Mr. Ford said the last intelligence from Rome has virtually ended all controversy as to the status of Mgr. Satolli, and to question his authority now is simply to give affront to Ijeo XIII in persou, who ratified all the acts and opinions publicly announced by his representative. A WONDERFUL REVIVAL. Great Religious Enthusiasm In Which All Denominations Join. PKEKBKILL, N. Y., Feb. 17.—The Rev. Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman, John Wanamak er's former pastor, closed his two weeks' revival at the Depew Opera House last night amid a grand burst of gospel hymns and a tremendous chorus of amens. Not even the gaudiest barn storming ballet troop ever drew such an audience. Converted sinners stood shoulder to shoulder with lifelong Christians, and young and old, • rich and poor, sang "Hold the Fort!" and "Come to Jesus" with an energy which sent the echoes flying from one snow clad hill to another. A Father's Deatli Discloses a Son's Acts. HAYDENVILLE, Mass., Feb. 18.—The re cent death of B. S. Johnson has brought to light the fact that his son, Horace 8., who died in October, 1891, was a defaulter to the amount of $11,662fr0m the Haydenville Savings bank, in which he was a clerk. The death of the father, who was organizer and treasurer of the bank, revealed the fact that he left no property and that it was all deeded to cover up the defalcations of his sou. Norwich Gets a Doom. NORWICH, Conn., Feb. £2.—New York parties have bought the Versailles woolen mill property iu the town of Sprague and will establish a plant for making hospital supplies. They will spend SIOO,OOO in im provements. The town of Sprague has voted to abate taxes on improvements for a term of three years. Mrs. Cleveland's Dresses Not Made for NEW YORK, Feb. 20.-It is officially an nounced that Mrs. Grover Cleveland does not approve of the introduction of crino linesand that none of her inaugural dresses will be made to be worn with a crinoline. Coy to Be Hanged Friday. BOSTON, Feb. 22.—The petition of Wil liam Coy, the Pittsfield murderer, for a writ of error was heard by the full bench of the supreme court, and a decision was rendered denying it. Coy will therefore be hanged on Feb. 24. Died From Cigarette Smoking. BROOKLYN. Feb. 20. F. W. Lewis, 24 years old, died under circumstances that lead to the belief that his death was due to excessive cigarette smoking. HIGHLAND DOTS. James Maloney, of Oneida, was here : last week for a few hours. Miss Mary Ilallen, of Tomkicken, was ' visiting here last week. Work was suspended on Monday owing to the severe weather. John Johnson, of Jeddo, was here on business last week. That postoffice that never came. 1 Well, we will see you later and then it j may be our turn to have a say. Mrs. Patrick Ferry spent the week in town with her parents. The literary society of this place is ' still doing good work. Stay there boys. | Thos. Mulligan, of Jeanesville, was j here last week among friends. Home-brew beer is becoming all the j rage here. Like other beer it makes the boys smile. Hugh Dugan and wife were here , among acquaintances last week. Charles Grossman, of Hazleton, was in town on business last week. It is said a would-be highwayman was neatly trapped by one of our citizens on Saturday evening. He said he was only fooling, but lie should be exposed. If his intended victim bad been a Hun, the probabilities are that another rob bery would have been committed. Our citizens are anxiously waiting for that elecric road. They think the ordin j anoe sent out very good, especially that part of it which limits the time to one j year. We hope it will he accepted. The depots for passengers to wait for | trains here are an outrage on civilization. "Not fit for a beast," would be a proper monogram to have on them this weather. Mrs. O'Donnell made a flying trip to 1 Duryea on Saturday. The collieries were all idle yesterday, I it being Washington's birthday. John Gallagher, of Birvanton, lias ac cented a position as pumpman at No. 2 slope. He took a hold on Tuesday. Mr. Fisher moved his family to Jeddo on Tuesday. John H. Boyle, it is said, will give out the contract for the building of a fine residence at Alvinton in the near future. Some of our Drifton friends think it strange that tlie collieries work here and that they are idle in Drifton. It didn't used to be so. Did it? Court Records Stolen. A sensation was created at Mauch ' Chunk on Tuesday by the discovery that one of the quarter session court dockets had been stolen from tlie protlionotary's ! office since Saturday last. On that i morning an article appeared in tlie Democrat, calling attention to certain costs that had been paid into the county treasury by the present prothonotary, which he had collected at different times in criminal cases, and that no such costs ! had ever been paid over or accounted for by his predecessor. The publication amounted to an accusation of embezzle- j ment. The docket containing the ac- 1 counts of such costs collected is the one i said to be stolen. To Work in Jeddo Tunnel. | Yesterday morning fiye colored men 1 passed over the Highland branch bound , for Kbervale, where they will be em ployed in tlie Jeddo tunnel. In conver-1 , sation with a representative of the Tin-: 1 BIWE they stated that they came from 1 Niagara Falls, and were employed at the Great Falls tunnel, which is now completed. They have had good ex- j I perience at such work and are all good j ) rocksmen, but will not work in coal un- j i der any circumstances. An Orator Secured. P. A. O'Boyle, of Pittston, assistant j district attorney of Luzerne county, has been secured as orator of the evening by the Robert Emmet Social Club for its entertainment on March 4. Mr. O'Boyle | is one of the finest speakers in this part ] of the state, and with the other feature to be given, the club will have a very good programme. Seats wilt be on sale at Christy's store on Monday. BRIEF ITEMS. The wife of W. B. Koons died at her residence in Sandy Valley early yester day morning. [ B. F. Davis sells the renowned Wasli | burne brand of flour. It excels every j thing in the market. Try it. ! Philip Boyle, well known throughout | the Lehigh region, died at Kbervale of | pneumonia on Monday, aged 51 years. | The semi-annual inspection of the uniforms and equipment of the Reading 1 trainmen and station employes of this j division was completed this week. I Miss Gerda Olsho, graduate of the j Richmond, Ya., Musical Conservatory, I will give instructions on piano or organ. I Terms, popular. Apply 79 Centre street. I The company which will present W. C. Miller's play, "Under a Ban," on -March IG, is making great headway, ami i the piece is destined to be a big suc [ cess. j Tom Clark and Louis Jester, of Wilkes-Bnrre, have signed articles of | agreement to fight for SIOO a side and 1 I tlie largest purse that will be offered by j any athletic club in the county. After the Reading went into the hands of the receivers it was expected the Lehigh Valley would go back to its former owners, but the officials stated yesterday they will stick to tlie combine. .Maggie, the wife of Albert Buff, died at Stockton yeßterduy. She was 21 years of age. The interment will be made at St. Ann's cemetery on Saturday inorn | ing. Funeral will leuve Stockton at 8.45 o'clock. An electric road, thirty-five miles long, and extending from Slatington, Lehigh county, to Easton, will be built tlie com ing season. The company lias a capital of $75,000, and is backed by A1 Johnson, of Cleveland, 0. A suit for SIO,OOO lias been instituted by Jennie S. Wilson against the Wyo ming Valley Traction Company. She was carried beyond tlie point where sliu wished to get off, between Plymouth and Kdwardsville, and stepped into a hole, injuring herself internally. COUGHING LEADS TO CONSUMPTION. Kemp's Balsam stops tlie cough at once. SALE.—A horse, truck wagon and .1? buck board; UIBO one heavy und one light set of harness. Apply to John J. Gui higher, Five Points, Fieelund. ! AS BAD AS PAINTED SO SAYS WARNER OF THE HORRORS OF THE SWEATING SYSTEM. Result of the Investigation of tlie Com mittee of Congress—A Breeder of Con tagious Diseases —A Solution Must Soon lie Found. Representative Warner, of New York, the chairman of the subcommittee of the houso committee 011 manufactures, ( which was directed to inquire into the j sweating system, was interviewed in I Washington recently. The investiga- I tiou has been prosecuted in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago and Cin- I cinnati. It is stated that in the cities of | Cincinnati and Philadelphia the sweat | ing system is more prevalent and the conditions surrounding it more unfavor able than in the other cities. Mr. War ner was asked how the conditions in New York compared with those in Bos ton and Chicago. lie said: ! "They are so similar as to bo scarcely dis tinguishable, except as modified by the differ- ! ent conditions of the several cities. In Chicago, j for example, this sweating business Is carried ; on in quarters where the streets are practically ' bottomless and the buildings are rotten und disgusting, as well as inadequate and unfitted ] for human occupants. These buildings are j ; generally frame and two stories in height, with , I basements, generally below the sidewalk. ! Ilenco there is nothing like that possibility of j crowding that there would be were those quar- 1 ters more closely und substantially built up; ; The conditions of the sweating industry there, i however, are as disgusting and the liability to contagious and epidemic diseases as great as in Now York. In Boston the industry seems 10 be carried on almost exclusively in extremely ] old but fairly substantial buildings in the most crowded quarters, so that while the municipal j conditions are better tho result is an even greater liability to contagion in tlie more limit- j I ed area covered. j "in New York tlie streets are, as a whole, ! much better paved and cared for than in Chi- I cago, and much more spacious and afford more : i breathing room than in Boston. While tho j tenements in New York are, on tho one 1 hand, far more liko human hives tlian those in Chicago and Boston, they are more recently and solidly built, and therefore, 011 the average, : much less squalid and uncomfortable. Tho liu- 1 man conditions are practically identical, and , the general result varies only by essential local ' conditions." "As to dangerous contagion there Is equally little distinction. In Chicago wo saw tho scar let fever signs posted up where tho sweating system had been carried on and In a neighbor- 1 hood where it was still being prosecuted. In 1 Boston wo stumbled into proximity with tho disease in a room where tlie household manu facturing ot clot king was going on. it was not occupied by the same family, but it opened ; upon the same corridor. In New York one of tho inost typical instances was where we found 1 poor wretches working under tho most filthy conditions at 10 o'clock Sunday night, when in the next block to them typhus hud broken out only last summer. "The members of the committee arrived hero yesterday," continued Air. Warner, "and ex pect that they will complete taking the tcsti- ! mony today, and then it will make Its report | at the earliest possible moment." "What is tlie general result of your invest!- I gat ion?" WHS the next question. "We have," replied Air. Warner, "verified, j not merely as instances, but u.S a general con- , dit ion, tho worst that has been alleged. But, with one exception, we have no proof of im- 1 morality, and, speaking for myself, I have tho greatest respect for tho manliness and the vo -1 manliness of the persons employed. From the j j testimony taken wo find repeated instances j j where at 0 and 10 o'clock at night the opeia tives were still continuing their work. They had begun their work at 5 or 0 a. m., and the so called sweater or boss worked along with j them, bringing work for them the next morn- ■ ing. It was not unusual to flud eight or an people with their machines crowded into a J'-' by 10-foot room. In tho majority of cases the living room of a family was connected with the shop, and garments finished and unfinished j were scattered about indiscriminately. "Of ehild labor I personally saw but few in- ' stances, but I did see a little girl about eight years of age at 0:00 in tlie evening dragging along u bundle which she was physically un- : able to carry and acting as a human express 1 for tho transfer of goods. Children in very | condition of filth and heulth swarmed in most 1 of tho shops. In the lost one we visited every one had gone except two wornout fellows, who I had mude a pile of tho bundles of goods ready 1 to be made up, upon which, without bed- j clothes, they proposed to sleep without change j of the filthy condition of their persons or their clothes. Tho 'sweater' and the 'sweated' per fectly agreed as to tho miserably low wages paid. "It was shown conclusively by the witnesses that the evil was not diminishing in any of tho largo clothing centers with tho exception of Boston, where tho state laws have been so ef fectively enforced as to lessen It to a great ex tent." Tlio public is not so much interested j now us it was a few months ago in tho sweating system. Immigration is the fad j of tho press for the moment. It is prob- ■ able, however, that when Mr. Warner's j committee presents its report to congress | the sweater and the sweated will again i command attention. It remains to bo i seen whether anything in the way of re- ■ lief or attempted relief will bo under- j taken by the powers that be. In an editorial commenting upon the statements made by Mr. Warner tlie Pittsburg Dispatch makes use of tho fol lowing language: That human beings should bo worked to death on starvation wages and surroutilings that are a direct encouragement to the rropa gat ion of disease In any civilized country atv the close of the Nineteenth century Is matter for very deep and sorrowful reflection. That | ! such conditions of slavery are to he found in i this great and glorious republic of tho free would be Incredible were tho facts not proved. And tho facts being proved, tho continuance of the iniquity cannot bo longer tolerated in silence. Persons who ure horrified to hear of tho ab ject misery in which their less fortunate fel lows labor ure wont to think littlo of their share of tho responsibility therefor. Nothing short of conscientiousness on tho part of con sumers can eliminate tho demand for produc tions at prices dependent upon the sweating system. Let Christian men and women, let all hamnn beings who believe in the brotherhood of the raco, he thoroughly informed of the circum stances under which this white slavery exists, and they cannot fail to take measures for its eradication without being open to accusations of hypocrisy. While one section of society consents In thoughtlessness or cynicism to live at tlie terrible cost of another, tenements unfit for habitation will bo overcrowded, and many hours of labor will result In small remunera tion. Tho sweating system is simply an ex treme phase of the social questions of modern life to which solutions are demanded more im peratively with every passing year. The dis covery of these solutions cannot be Indefinitely postponed with impunity and becomes even, more obscure as it Is longer disregarded. It behooves all the thoughtful men and women to bestir themselves in the search without further delay. Tho Dispatch believes that more can be done toward eradicating tho sweating evil by arousing the buyers of clothing and thereby levying a sort of boycott than by legislation. Tho Dispatch Is probably in error. TRIALS OF A BORROWER. Improvidence Rebuked at a Loan Office, j Where Canh Is "Lent the Sauie Day." ! A gontleman suffering from financial j disability went to a loan office to nego- I tiato a borrow on bis furniture. In tho advertisement it stated that the inonoy | would be lent tho same day by a Clioc ( taw lady, without removal and upon the note of hand of the borrower. All this I looked very fine in print. I "I've got SIO,OOO worth of personal property," said the would be borrower, : "and I have to meet a wash bill of $8.50 coming duo tomorrow noon. Can I get fitted out here so as to be in a position to meet the collector without a blush?" | The manager of the loan office was strangely silent. Tho would bo borrower . became nervous and thought he hadn't : said the speech right, and so he began | over again in this style: I "I am a person of poor but honest par- I entage, temporarily embarrassed. I need ; the sum of $3.50 to meet an unjust lia | bility." | Still there was no answer. Then tho j borrower walked into the outside room ' and said to the office boy: ; "What's the matter with the manager? Can't he talk?" "I guess it's because you haven't paid the entrance fee. No person is a mem ber of this loan society until he has put up one dollar." The borrower apologized and deposit ed the money. Next he repaired to the manager and repeated his original as sertion. "We charge one dollar more for book age," said tho manager. "What's bookage?" "That's none of your business. One | dollar, please." He paid tho money, and the manager wrote down something in a book. | "Now give me two dollars to inspect the furniture." The borrower gave him the money. "Now call here next year at 2 o'clock in tho afternoon and get our answer." "But tho money is due tomorrow." "Can't help it. Put 'em off." "But you can't put people like that off. There are some fellows that won't wait." The manager mailed a superior smile. "Oh, no there aren't," ho said. "You'll know a little more about waiting when you get through with us." The borrower left the office reluctant ly and returned tho following year at 2 o'clock. Then the manager told him somewhat sternly that ho couldn't lend money on that furnituro because it had got too old. In vain the borrower rep resented that it was new when his claim was filed. The manager ended tho in terview by charging him $1.25 storage on the "papers in tho case," and then had tho janitor throw him out. This ended the whole transaction.—New York Herald. Eating Several Meals a Day. When, us rarely happens, English farm laborers come to this country, they find it extremely difficult to accommo date themselves to the current American custom of eating but three meals a day. An English maidservant and nurse, who lived to bo more than 100 years old, averred that she had always been accus tomed to "a dew bit and breakfast, a stray bit and dinner, a nommet, a cram met, and a bit after supper." Extra meals are common enough during the harvest season in this country.The hasty breakfast at 8:30 in the morning is fol lowed by a "stray bit" at 9 o'clock and by a luncheon between tho noonday din ner and the after sunset supper. In parts of southern Pennsylvania the dinner hour is 11 o'clock in the morning, and it would not be difficult to show that Americans living on the snmo meridian are dining all the way from that hour until 7 in the evening. Tho great mass of country folk still dine at noon.—New York Sun. A Very Ancient Canoe. In 1881 a canoe hollowed out of tho trunk of a tree was found at Bovey- Tracey, in Devonshire. It lay in a de posit of brick earth more than twenty nine feet below tho highest level reached by tho waters of tho Bovey. It was more than thirty-live inches wide, and its length could not be exactly determined, the workmen having broken it in getting it out. An eminent archaeologist is of opinion that this boat dates from tho glacial epoch—perhaps even from a more remote time. If this hypothesis, tho re sponsibility of which we leave to him, bo correct, this is tho most ancient wit ness in existence of prehistoric naviga tion.—"Manners and Monuments of Pre historic Peoples." Don M. Dickinson Again Possible. DETROIT, Feb. 22.—1t is rumored in this city that Don M. Dickinson, notwithstand- I ing his previous statements to the contrary, has partially promised to enter the cabinet l of Mr. Cleveland assecretary of the navy. It is believed that Mr. Dickinson's reluctance to give up his largo private practice has ; been overcome. His hurried trip to this • city, presumably to arrange his personal af ! fairs, so that without great loss he can ac cept a seat in the cabinet, and the fact that Mr. Cleveland has given no sign as to who ; is to be the next attorney general, coupled ; with his generally accepted desire to have Mr. Dickinson iu the cabinet, are oilered to substantiate the rumor. St. I.ouis Wants to Name Steamer. ST. Louis, Feb. 21.—A strong concerted movement is being made by citizens here to have the honor of naming the llrst i American line steamer built in this couu try by the new company which has bought the City of Paris and the City of New : York. The Brooks Memorlul Fund, j BOSTON, Feb. 10.—It is announced that the Phillips Brooks memorial fund ex | ceeds $70,000. A Gciitlciuun. j Mrs. Upton—l saw Mr. Newton bow ing with the most courtly grace to a j very woman. He's a gen ! tleman of the old school, isn't he? | Mr. Upton—No, a gentleman of tho ( new school. "New school?" "Yes. Ho lives in tho suburbs, and I that was his cook."—New York Weekly, BRIEF ITEMS OF NEWS INTERESTING HAPPENINGS OF THE WORLD FROM FAR AND NEAR. The Developments of Hitch Day During the Week Caught Fresli From the Busy Wires and Carefully Kill ted and Con densed for Our Readers. Thursday, Feb. 10. Henry C. Bloss, editor and proprietor of the Titusville (Pa.) Herald, died at his home of nervous prostration. The deceased was a member of the bur and promiuent in local business and political circles. Miss Susan B. Anthony celebrated her 73d birthday. She received a number of congratulatory letters from prominent peo ple all over the country. Wallace Bruce of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., United States consul at Edinburgh, has been elected to succeed the late John Green leaf Whittieras life corresponding member of the Scottish Society of Literature and Art, Glasgow. Fire at midnightat Albany destroyed the hide and leather store of F. Sternfeld & Co., the silver plating establishment of George B. Withers, the paper box factory of Paschals Dubuque and the gild works of Jesse B. Terris. William Bolton, the millionaire brewer of Lansingburg, N. Y., died of typhoid Sever. Rev. C. L. Paddock, the recent pastor of the Universalist church at Camden, Me., has accepted a call to Macedon, N. Y. Friday, Feb. 17. Congress—Both branches in session. Senate: The Hawaiian annexation treaty and correspondence were made public; the river and harbor items cut from the sundry civil bill by the committee were restored. House: The committee amendments to the pension bill were defeated. Many negroes are arriving in Oklahoma territory with bogus orders for land in the Cherokee strip, which they say they pur chased from a man who traveled through Tennessee, Alabama and Mississippi selling them at $lO each. The Michigan senate passed a joint reso lution urging congress to submit to the people a constitutional amendment provid ing for the election of United States sen ators by a direct vote of the people. TherS is no settlement in prospect in the Monongahela valley miners' strike. Since the strike began the cost to the operators has been $500,000, and the miners have lost in wages more than #1,(XX),000. The South Dakota house passed a bill re quiring that all fire insurance compauies with headquarters outside the state shall deposit $100,0(X) with the secretary of state before being allowed to do business in the state. Saturday, Feb. 18. Congress—Both branches iu session. Senate: Senator Sherman's amendment to the sundry civil hill authorizing the issue of 3 per cent bonds was discussed, hut no action was tuken. House: The pension ap propriation hill was passed; thepostoffice appropriation bill was taken up; consid eration of the railroad coupler bill was postponed till Tuesday The California state legislature is great ly concerned over Senator Stanford's health. There will bo no adjournment if there is any chance of an election of another United States senator. In the common council of Philadelphia an ordinance was passed prohibiting the employment by contractors on municipal works of other than American citizens. The ordinance will probably pass the select council and become a law. The home rule bill was read in the Brit ish house of parliament for the first time. Robert Louis Stevenson is very ill with grip. Monday, Feb. 20. The Rochester Paper company, one of the largest concerns in the world, is em barrassed. S. C. Hastings, first chief justice of the supreme court of California and founder of the Hastings law college branch of the State university, died at the age of 78 years, lie was born in Jefferson county, N. Y. Fire broke out in Paul's furniture store at West Newton, Pa., and destroyed eight buildings. George E. Spencer, ex-United States sen ator from Alabama, died at Washington. Several cows suffering from tuberculosis have been seized and slaughtered by the ' health department at Toronto. While in New York Mrs. Cleveland pur chased a span of fine horses which she will keep for her own use while in Washington. 1 The horses are a perfect match and eclipse the team owned by the president-elect. E. K. Hart, a millionaire banker, died at Albion, N. Y. Mr. llart was an ex-mem- j ber of the New York assembly and of con- . gress. Tuesday, Feb. 21. Congress—House: The New York and New Jersey bridge bill and the naval and ! agricultural appropriation bills passed; certain members of the house agreed on a Hilver compromise. Senate: The sundry civil appropriation bill was discussed, and j the public building items were approved. The priests of the Scran ton (Pa.) diocese have begun a crusade against dancing schools. The General Managers' association at Chicago resolved not to increase wages un der any circumstances, and a strike of Switchmen is imminent. The second trial of Dr. T. Thatcher i Graves for the alleged murder of Mrs. Barnaby has been set for May 22. It is reported that Mr. Neuman has sat isfied himself by his inquiries at the capi tal siuce his arrival in Washington last week that the restoration of the lately de posed queen is out of the question, but it is said that he desires to be advised of this of ficially in order to satisfy his principal upon his return to Hawaii. Wed ii end ay, Feb. 22. Congress—House: The postoffice appro- | priation bill was considered; filibustering • was carried on against the car coupler bill. Senate: The sundry civil bill was debated, j Abigail Goldthwaite, a homeless woman of 58, was frozen to death near Peabody, Mass. The Edison Electric company, which has the contract for lighting Cincinnati, is said to have been absorbed by the gas company of that city. President Harrison has been given the privilege of selecting the person who shall christen the cruiser Indiana next Tuesday at its launching in Philadelphia. In the Wisconsin legislature a resolution was introduced favoring a constitutional amendment providing for the election of the president by direct vote of the people. The Arkansas house passed a bill pro- j hlbiting the sale or giving away of ciga- j rettes in that state. It is officially announced that the pay cars of the Philadelphia and Reading Rail road company will staVt out on Thursday morning with sufficient funds to pay off all the employees of the road. 18-CRS- TOTJB — Dry Goods, Clothing, Rubber Goods, Roots, Shoes, Huts, Caps, Ladies and Gents' Furnishings, Trunks, Valises and Notions at Jos. Neuburger's If you want to save money, as you will always find the larg- I est assortment of any of the above lines in the region at our stores, with the prices lower than elsewhere. Whatever there yet remains of WINTER GOODS will be closed out regardless " of cost. Therefore it will pay you to give us a call and be con vinced that what we say are facts. When you want to buy good j goods at low prices the place to buy them is at JOS. NEUBURGER'S, in the P. 0. S. of A. Building, Freeland, Pa. ran urn mi: is~:r You can depend upon us for this. Shapely, genteel, perfect fitting Men's and Boys' Clothing, guaranteed to givelOO cents in wear and service for every dollar you < put into them. You can pick from a great assortment of strictly new and decidedly popular styles. Men's Suits, Overcoats, Boys' Suits, All Styles and Sizes, Children's Suits, Gents' Furnishings. All for the least money, quality considered. We lead with newest styles and best grades in Neckwear, Shirts, Handkerchiefs, Underwear Collars, Cuffs, Umbrellas, Hosiery, Gloves, Trunks, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes. You g*t the best of it every time you trade with JOHN SMITH, BIRKBECK - BRICK, - CENTRE STREET, - FREELAND. ♦ THE Woodman's Sj>ecific No. 4 is a scien- WORST COLDS GRIPPE tific combination of vegetable products. BRONCHITIS AND | (VIALARIA Perfectly harmless, but will cure a cold ARE QUICKLY CURED * n a * eW k° urs - They are little, tiny PNEUMONIA V AND CONSUMPTION PLUS ' B!LSY T0 TAKE ' PLEASANT T0 THE TASTE POSITIVELY PREVENTED and can be carried in the vest pocket. BY USING I WOODMAN'S 25 doses for 25 cts. SPECIFIC NO. 4 FOR To verify the truthfulness of our state- SALE BY ALL ment, it costs but a trifle. One trial DRUGGISTS PRICE 25 CTS. convince you. WOODMAN ifRUG CO. ROXBURY, MASS. Ask for Woodman's Specific No. 4. If your druggist does not keep it, and will not get it for you, send us 25 cts., and we will send it to you postpaid. Job Work of all Kinds in Original SITTINGS at tlie "TriUvme" Office.