Free land Tribune. | PUBLISHED EVKKY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TIH. Mr 5 , A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year $1 50 Six Months r > Four Months 50 j Two Months &' Subscribers are requested to watch the date following* the name on the luheis of their papers. Ily referring to this they can tell at a glance how they stand on the books In this office. For instance: G rover Cleveland 28Junefl3 means that Grover Is paid up to Juno 28,1800. By keeping the figures in advance of the pres ent date subscribers will save both themselves and the publisher much trouble and unuoy ance. Subscribers who allow themselves to fall in arrears will be culled upon or notified twice, and, if payment does not follow within one month thereafter, collection will be made in the manner provided by law. FREELAND, FA., MARCH G, 1893. The Democrats now have complete control of the government—president, house and senate—and they will he held solely responsible for what may be done or left undone in the next two years- The leaders of the party have an opportunity that comes but seldom to any political organization— an opportunity to keep themselves in power for many years and to advance the interests of tho country farther than has ever been yet attempted. To do this they must obey the com mands of the people, keep their hand on the public pulse and bring about the reforms the voters asked them for ! last November. The time is past when any bedy of men, large or small, can afford to ignore the de mands of the country. The tariff was the issue upon which Cleveland and his fellow-officials were chosen, and in the platform upon which they wore elected protection was dcnounc ed in the most radical manner. Con sequently the tariff should receive attention in preferenc to every other question. What was preached before last November must be practised by Democrats henceforth, or another revolution will take place in politics by which the Democratic party will be overthrown and dropped into the obscurity that surrounds its prede cessors. The grand demonstration at Wash ington on Saturday was none too great for tho event. In but one coun try in the world can the victors and the vanquished meet together with such real harmony, and Americans may well feel proud of liviug under a government that can change the oc cupant of its White House without the loss of one drop of blood. Men and parties come and go, tbiir poli cies, ideas and opinions shift about many times during their lives, but the spirit of the declaration of inde pendence has so thoroughly permeat ed the country that its stability is never doubted, irrespective of any ordeal through which it must pass. By a strict adherence to tho principles set forth in that document the United States will continue to he the most prosperous of all nations. Its citizens must never cease to guard the liberties they possess and should endeavor to remove the restrictions which still are upon them. The monopoly of laud and transportation facilities are two burdens which, if removed, would make America the happy and content ed country that its forefathers pre dicted it should be. Even as it is, this is the greatest government that ever existed, and it is destined to become greater. Our bat is off to the editor of the! Coopersburg (Lehigh couDty) Sentinel for the five inch local-page reading ad 1 that lie grutituously gave the TRIBUNE j on Thursday. The recent cold spell i caused the Sentinel to have another ! of those fits to which Heading combine I sheets are subject, and in making an effort to answer a little question we asked on the 23d of last month it howls back with rage at our audiacity in daring to question McLeod's motives. The Sentinel writer, after working his imagination up to the highest possible point, goes on to applaud McLeod's wonderful success in the past, his greatness today and the brilliant plans he has for the future. Wages have increased, even in Frceland, he says, and every honest employe of the system approves of what lias been done. He is astounded that the TRIBUNE should mention the name of McLeod, except in reverence and humility; calls ns all the pet names that Webster put in his book, and winds up with the interesting in formation that our opposition to the Heading is caused by the company's refusal to advertise in the TRIBUNE. (See third page, sixth column, and any issue for two years past.) In conclusion he whoops up a cheer for his masters, declaring "the Reading is all right and so are we," then makes some unintelligible reference to priests, and ends his slobbering with a large dash. For his generous ad vertising of the town and the TRIBUNE we are very thankful, and if it gives any relief to the pain that the combine shouters are suffering from at present we hope he will continue in his en deavors to suck a pass from McLeod. THE AGE OFJPROGRESS. It Will Not End with the Nine teenth Century. nOtV THE WOULD WILL WAG IN 13 Happiness and Longevity Will Increase with Material I'rusperity, Says Van Huren Denslotv—Chauncey M. Depew Thinks the Republican and Democratic Parties Will Live Forever. I Copyright, 1808, by American Press Associa tion.! In 19113 there would be a population with In the present area of the United States of 580,000,000 —if it should double every thirty years. The actual figures would hardly fail below 400,000,000. This would imply an Immense progress in the irrigation of our arid lands, in tiie cultivation of our moun tains and sand plains, in the drainage of our lowlands, in the utilization for manure of the present waste of fertility through the sewage of our cities, in the restoration of soils and of forests, in seed selection and Intense plant culture so as greatly to in crease the product per acre, and in the in troduction from all parts of the world of new animals and plants and fishes for food. The average crop of wheat per acre, where plauted, will be likely to rise from twelve or twenty bushels, as now, to 125 bushels per acre, to which all ground intensively culti vated is equal. The size of food animals will Increase by 10 or 20 per cent., and uten sils and dwellings will be manufactured largely of pulps and cements, so as to util ize vegetation and stone in every stage of decay waste or unfitness. So vast a population could hardly be held under one government unless the principle of federation should be so .extended us to leave a larger measure of home rule or state rights or "local option" than would now seein possible. But 1 think the states of North and South America may by wise measures of zollvereins, reciprocity, cur rency union, arbitration and subsidized lines of transit be so interlaced and affil iated that the distinction between Ameri can states not now in our Union and those which are in it will be lessened. As to the world at large, It will be more [ clearly divided between four great lan guages and races—viz., the German-Anglo- American, which is Protestant; the Celtic, Slavic or Tartar, the African and the Chi nese. The three or four Latinized languages of western Europe—viz., English, Freuch, German. Spanish and Italian—will have bo come more nearly or quite one language by a process of constant reciprocal borrow ing ot new words aud because of their Saxon Roman blending. The functions of government will be less coercive and more suggestive—i. e., they will relate less to the preservation of order and more to the promotion of pleasure, progress and the diffusion of information and thought. They will imprison fewer felons and publish more statistics. The army navy and treasury will decline in relative Importance, while the census, bureau of agriculture and geological sur vey will contain the substance of thogov eroment's future work and the germs of its future expansion. The distinction between state and pri vate management will not bo so definite as it now is, as very much state business will be open to the influence of private in dividuals, much as the natioual mails are now carried by private contract under tho restraints of open competition. Mostedu cation is done by private enterprise through the press, and in our recent war the most effective battle was fought by the Monitor, a private ship worked by private capital. The railroads and telegraphs will in the near future be the field in which state and private management will most freely blend —the state managing on behalf of the users, aod the trustees representing private capi ti managing on behalf of the creators of these ways. Public means of cooling all dwellings in summer and warming them in winter of irrigating all lands, of supplying power, implements and workmen for all industries will in like manner exist, the capital Invested in which will be a source of private income to individuals, while the mode of use and rate of cost or tax for use shall be largely state questions. Kxperienee bas shown that gold and sil ver coin depend for their abundance, util ity and value upon the private industry of the miners and the effective demand of the commercial world, and that governments in coining can do little more than to certify lacts already existing. If any change in monetary methods shall occur, it will be to make the Issue of both coined and paper money more palpably an affair of private industry and less of state control. intemperance in The use of liquors now results largely from the custom of "treat ing." Treating results from the fact that the laboring classes get their news concern lug work, prices and the means of living in the saloons, which are also the only places where a worthless man's opinion can find a hearing or where a poor man can j drive a bargain or cater for employment i without paying intelligence office fees or brokers' fees. If other agencies can substi- I lute some different sort of clearing house for a worthless man's opinions and some ; other kind of exchange for a poor man's | labor, there will he less treating and less in i temperance. At present every introduction to a new | acquaintance in a saloon must be ratified 1 by the social glass, every bargain must bo I sealed by driuks, every negotiation is smoothed by whisky Yet out of these arise most ot the acquaintances, bargains and negotiations which help millions to earn their living, if temperance legisla tion undergoes any changes, it should be in two lines—viz., toward the substitution of pure for deteriorated liquors, of light wines for high wines, of cheap liquors in place of dear liquors and of the official sale of liquors instead of the taxed sale. The confinement and punishment of crim inals is mischievous to the criminal, wholly without reformatory tendencies, and is of little and doubtful value to society as a de terrent force. Industry is the only reformer, it is more promoted by marriage, coloniza tion. freedom and success in life than by enforced solitude, compact dwellings, con straiut, celibacy and failure. Freedom of divorce is a race element It was strong in Greece, lacking in Rome, a privilege of the male sex only in Jewry, but of woman also in Germany. Its adjust ment will depend on a species of local op tiou which will vary according as race and blood prescribe. As to the accumulation of wealth, the ownership of all the forms of wealth which are in social use must Increasingly become the basis of private fortunes, but the use or loan or enjoyment of all this social wealth must increasingly inure to the public. fcjo long as daily experience proves that society gets the use of every form of social wealth—l. e., wealth which is so invested as to earn an income, cheaply In proportion as its ownership is concentrated into few I hands—so long will great coqiorations and vast business aggregations grow in power and numbers, because through them iiwli- , viduals can best grow in efficiency, freedom ami power to utilize their time, talents ami private wealth. The laboring classes will become increas ingly dependent upon those who direct j their labor in channels in which it will con- } fer the greatest value on society, and in which it will thereby earn or win the high est compensation and the largest liberty of individual action for themselves. Tho lib erty of the laboring classes grows with the ' efficiency of the organization of labor, which holds or steers or directs their labor in those channels wherein it will be most 1 useful to society by being most largely sup- i plemented and re-enforced by machinery, ; which economic utility to society is always 1 in fact measured by the wage or profit or reward it receives. Hence, labor becomes free in the degree 1 that it is bound to serve the needs of other I labor, whose efficient demand is measured by its own capacity to produce what others ! will consume and consume what others pro- ; (luce. Present facts supply us with the means of determining that our soils and methods of agriculture will be more pro ductive per capita as our population in creases, until it shall have reached at least thirtyfold its present number. In 1992 it j will uot have passed tenfold. Society will bo seen to bo governed more by economic laws and less by judge-mode and legislative law. Medicine will be perceived to be efficient J in tho degree in which it has been mlminis- | tered to the patients' ancestors, neighbors, } family and friends. That which has to be j administered to himself, it will be perceived, j is too feeble to reach the disease. All theology will bo conceded to i>e my thology. Whatever respect is now accorded j to the former pagan religions of Greece, | Rome, Egypt, Persia and India will be nc 1 corded to Christianity, together with the I higher merit of having absorbed and util ized all the others. But the world in i getting away from idolatry will not bo- ' come materialistic. It will recognize the wondrous mysteries which underlie all the : supposed simplicities of the material uni verse and will all the more profoundly per- j ceivo that it would l>e impossible for any < heathen artificer to frame an idol of stono j or brass without successfully imprisoning ! the Godhead in the image. The principal change which will occur in j American literature will be that there will be an American literature. There will even be American art, American novels in addition to those of Harriet Beecher Stowe and Bret Harte, an American drama above "The Danites" or "Blue Jeans" and Amur lean music in addition to our plantation minstrelsy. Educational methods will be so modified as to reveal a high and fine art in broiling a chicken, but will dismiss the senseless and soulless clatter of the piano to the limbo of the obsolete. In dress men will again wear colors, and dress the legs in tights just as soon as they again have the legs to dress. Trowsers will lie relegated to bookkeep ers, barbers, pastry bakers and cripplea In the degree that women own the property they will dress plainly. The era of color in dress among women for three centuries past has been due to the fact that men held the purse, and tho dress of women certified male generosity. As women come to hold j the purse and the estates, they will dress} themselves more plainly. Men will then put } on color and wear tights to please women. | Still women will never largely control the coercive or military functions of gov eniment. But as these functions subside in prominence and the attractive functions grow toward their maximum—i. e., its gov ernments seek coercion less, and education, art and dignity more, women will come to do more reigning. Cities will become great only ILS workshops. The poor as well as the rich of cities will have country resi dences, since the transportation to and fro will be so minimized that to reside in the city will le needless. Every home will be a clubhouse and the words "boarding house" will follow the word "tavern" into oblivion. The chief dis coveries will consist in producing fire out of water, silver out of clay, strong and permo nent buildings out of paper, a locomotive force out of gravity, diamonds out of char coal, and in making it always possible bo cause profitable for every intelligent person to travel. For servants you will simply touch the button, and they will be turned on or ofT at pleasure, like water or gas by the general office. The mere fact that one isa "servant" will give less indication than now that he is poor He may be rich, yet serve. The race will he handsomer, healthier and happier, and its longevity will so in crease that lives of 120 years will bens fre quent as now are those of ninety. Our greatest city will he near the Rocky mountuius—probably Denver or Salt Lake City. The most honored American now living will probably lie iiobert G. Ingersoll, as deep odium while one lives is the surest test of a man being far enough in advance of his time to be hated by ids contemporaries and therefore revered by posterity. Generally it is essential to the broadest anil most popular worship that one's influ ence shall have been put forth to mold and modify religion rather than philosophy, science, art or government. Ingersoll in this regard stands with Lather, Calvin, Mohammed, Jesus, Buddha and Confucius —an infidel to the ancient faith and a mold er of the coming faith. Seldom can the laurels be torn from the brow of a man who successfully defends the character of God against the hlaspho mons aspersions of the majority of his worshipers. If Ingersoll shall be most honored by the multitude in 1903 it will not prevent Thom as A. F.dison from being most honored by the scientific class. VAN BUKEN DENSI.OW Cliaiincey JH. Dcpew on the Futnre or Polit leal I'artleH. I IFrom Our New York Correspondent.) i Channcoy M. Depew, in speaking of tLe , probable relation of American parties to ; the government ami to one another in the I twentieth century, said: "The issues will j of course constantly change. New ones will j arise. No man can tell exactly what form | will tuko. It is very evident that the I twentieth century is to witness a continu ance of the prodigious intellectual, commer I cial and religious activity that hjis character ized the closing years of the Nineteenth cen tury. Social, economic, commercial and very largely business questions will be rep resented in party platforms. There will he shifting of individuals constantly from one party to the other, yet I am satisfied that the essential differences which will distin guish the two great parties, and there never can !>e more than two great parties in this country, will be precisely those jwhich have distinguished American parties since the foundation of the government. "There will he one party which will be essentially what the Republican party of Uxiay is, what its predecessor, the Whig party, was, and which will contain as its germ the idea which was at the bottom of the party which Hamilton created. It may be called possibly the party which favors the paternal theory of government, al though that is not a strictly accurate de scription. It is the party which has faith in the power and the duty of the national government to do all proper things for the development of the prosperity and happi ness of the American people. Those who think its I do will call it the party of prog ress. It is the aggressive force in the no tional government. It takes abroad view of the powers and responsibilities of the government. It sees in the constitution not only permission but command to do those things which are essential for the general welfare of the people. "This underlying principle will influence this party's relation to all new questions social, economic and commercial—which may arise. "The other party will he essentially that one which was created by Thomas Jeffer son. Incongruous elements may appear in it, but they will ho overwhelmed by this mastering principle of the party as they have been in the past. It will be the logical and the healthy opposition principle to that contained in the other party as its vital es sence. "The friction between these two parties will be conducive to national health. Some times the pendulum will swing oneway and sometimes the other, but in the long run the avernge representing the extreme view in neither party will dominate the destinies of the nation. This is health. This is the harvest of a vigorous and strong government. This party will insist upon curtailing to as narrow limits as possible the powers of the general government, nnd will be sought by those who believe that the government should do nothing which private enterprise or states and municipal ities can do. "We have in this description the animat ing influences of the great political parties in the next century. I should regret to see any other party representing any distinc tion as its vital principle than those which 1 have named arise in this country. I be lieve that the political life of the next cen tury will bo as exciting, as invigorating us has been that which has enabled us, with the shifting of power from one party to an other, hack and forth, to advance as we have in a single century from an inconsid erable people to one of the great nations of the earth, so that in the Twentieth century the United States will have taken its place of destiny as pre-eminent among the gov eruments of the world." The Destiny of tho United States. The manifest destiny of the United States is to dominate the American hemisphere, not by political intrigue, diplomatic nego tiations nor tho force of arms, not by the annexation of territory nor the establish ment of protectorates, hut by the influeuce of example and commercial relations. The tie that will hind the American republics and colonies will be the tie of trade, and in 1093 American commerce to a very large de gree will bo confined to American waters. There will be a railway between Buenos Ayres and Chicago, and tho remnant of that race whose misfortunes have made the history of Peru pathetic will contemplate the blessings of civil and religious liberty under the shadows of the liartholdi still ue and the Washington monument. There will ho weekly voyages across the gulf which divides tho southern coast of North America from the northern coasts of Cen tral and South America, and tho theory of Columbus concerning a western passage to tho Indies will be realized by the construc tion of an isthmian canal. The fabled El Dorado, which was nought so persistently for three centuries among the green jungles of the Orinoco and the Amazon, will be found in the bosom of the Andes, and the gold and silver of Bolivia and the diamonds of Brazil will bo ex changed for the cotton of our southern sec tion and the manufactured merchandise of our northern states. As we must have the coffee, the sugar and other fruits of the tropic zones, so must those who raise them have the results of our mechanical industry and genius. The Creator intended there should be an ex change of products between the American continents and distributed their natural resources so that their population can live in prosperity and contentment without an ounce of European or Asiatic merchandise. The value of the commerce between the United States and the Latin-American countries in 1870 was $170,904,000; in 1890, $289,820,000; in 1891, $832,926,000, and in 1882 $881,440,000, which shows that the divine purpose is gradually becoming a fact. WILLIAM ELEKOY CURTIS. Congressman llurter en Paternal Govern ment. I believe that in 1993 the government will, ff possible, be more completely divorced from ownership in railroads and telegraphs than now. Long before that 4 faraway date it will become the settled conviction of the governing classes, the newspaper power and of those writers who are read and of the speakers who are listened to that the less the government meddles with private affairs, the less it interferes with commcr cial enterprises, and the more closely it confines itself to the few but necessary functions properly belonging to it, the bet ter. The doctrine that the government which governs least is best will much earlier than 1993 be the unwritten but fundamental law. Instead of enormously increasing our civil service list, which government owner ship of railroads and telegraphs would ne cessitate, as the nation grows I believe it will constantly but perhaps slowly decrease, and that while the aggregate may be larger the proportion of our people so engaged will be smaller than in 1893. Of course I know the apparent present tendency toward centralization, but 100 years is a long time, and it will give ample time for all great experiments in this direction to collapse, and instead of the government in 1993 taking the child nt the •jradle and rearing him under public super vision and under oflieial control at the ex pense of the community, and finally, after feeding and clothing him by law and under rule and regulations burying him in a state cemetery and putting an official headstone up for him, a wiser generation will inter fere even less with him and his Occupations thau now, and men will be left to work out theirown salvation, politically and morally, tnore than in 1893. What is true in this direction will be true of business enterprises of all kinds, and the man who in 1993 talks of the government buying and operating railroads will bo looked upon by the charitably disposed as a sort of Rip Van Winkle, and by the more matter of fact as an ignoramus, and by the scientific as sutJFering from a mild form of dementia. MICHAEL I). BARTER For a Clubman to Kvmeuibur. Don't make a bolt from your 0 o'clock dinner table to your club and leave the poor soul, who would like to enjoy your so ciety, to the horrors of an evening alone. Hememher that the tenderest mother and the most untiring housekeeper would en joy an occasional change from nursery and home duties •(• ERSEft lias the Xja,rg-est Store |in town. Bargains are prevail j ing this week in all depart nients. 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 np. Remember, men's gum boots, Candee, $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 00 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, $2.15. Chop, sl.lO and $1.15. | Bran, 50 cents. Bologna, 8 cents. Cheese, N. Y., 13 cents. Tub butter, 28 cents. 18 pounds sugar SI.OO. ■ 5 pounds Lima beans, 25 cents. 5 pounds currants, 25 cents. 5 pounds raisins, 25 cents. 0 bars Lenox soap, 25 cents. 0 bars Octagon soap, 25 cents. 3 packages pearline, 10 cents. Best coal oil, 12 cents. Vinegar, cider, 15 cents gal. Cider, 2o cents a gallon. Syrup, No. 1, 35 cents gal. No. 1 mince meat, 10 cents. 3 pounds macaroni, 25 cents. 3 quarts beans, 25 cents. 6 pounds oat meal, 25 cents. FBEELAND READY PAY. J. C. Berner, Spot Cash. Promoter of Low Prices, r'reelaxid., - - i=a. CITIZENS' BANK OF FEE ELAND. 15 Front Street. Capital, - SE>SO,OOO. OFFICEUS. JOSEPH BIKKBECK, President. B.C. KOONS, Vice Presideut. B. It. DAVIS, Cashier. JOHN SMITH, Secretary. DIRECTORS. Joseph Birkbeck, Thomas Birkbeck, John Wagner, A Itudewick, H. C. Koons, Charles Dusheek, William Kemp, Mnthlas Schwabe, John Smith, John M. Powell, 2d, John Burton. Three per cent, interest puJd on saving deposits. Open daily from 9 a. in. to 4p. in. Saturday evenings from 6 to 8. 11 CURE THAT j' || Cold ;i 11 AND STOP THAT | I i| Cough, ii I In. H. Downs' Elixir 11 !! WILL DO IT. <> j i Price, 25c., 50c., nnd SI.OO per bottle.) | | k Warranted. Sold everywhere, j | j , MNB7, JOHNSON & LOED, Tropi., Burlington, Vt. | I , * + * + + +<9+ + , i Sold at Schilcher's Drug Store, i ST. PATRICK'S DAY 1893.' Card from Messrs. 0' Callahan & Sons, Eighth and Sansom Streets, Phila. rpo SOCIETIES intending to participate in the parade on ;X. March 17, we should he pleased to send samples of BADGES. CAPS. FLAGS or BANNERS. We make a specialty of A. O. H. and T. A. B. Work, and our goods are favorably known throughout the Lehigh region. If 'send ing for samples kindly write on official headings. Respectfully, John O'Callahan & Sons, EIGHTH AND SANSOM STREETS, PHILADELPHIA, PA. I CHURCH DIRECTORY. "DETHEL BAPTIST. , Kidge and Walnut Streets. Kev, C. A. Spuulding, Pastor. Sunday School 10 00 A M Gospel Temperance 2 30 I'M ! Preaching 0 00PM IJ EAVENLY HECHtTITS. * ' Centre Street, above Chestnut. Rev. H. M. I.ongle, Pastor. Morning Servleo 10 00 A M Sunday School 2 00 p ji Love Feast 316 p M Preaching 7 30 P M J BDDO METHODIST EPISCOPAL. In charge of Rev. E. M. Chiloont. Preaching oo A M Sunday School 200 PM ANN'S ROMAN CATHOLIC. Rev. M.J. Falilhee, Pastor; Kev. Edw. O'Reilly, Curate. Low Mass 8 00 A M High Mass 10 30 A M Sunday School 2 00 P M Mass on Weekdays 7 00 A M Devotions every Friday evening at 7.30 o'clock. OT. JAMES' EPISCOPAL. O South and Washington Streets. Kev. A. J. Kuehu, Pastor. Sunday School 1 30 PM Prayer and Sermon 7 00 P M OT. JOHN'S REFORMED. O Walnut and Washington Streets. Rev. 11. A. Rentier, Pastor. Sunday School 9 00 A M German Service 10 30 A M Praise Meeting 7 00 PM English Sermon 7 30 PM Prayer and teachers' meeting every Saturday evening at 7.45 o'clock. OT. KASIMEK'S POLISH CATHOLIC. s-J ltldgc Street, übove Carbon. Rev. Joseph Muzotas, Pastor. Mass 11 00 A M Vespers 4 00 P M Mass on Weekdays 7 30 A M OT. LUKE'S GERMAN LUTHERAN. Lj Main and Washington Streets. Rev. A. Ucimuller, Pustor. Sunday School 9 00 A M German Service 10 00 A M Catechial Instruction 5 00 PM OT. MARY'S GREEK CATHOLIC. O Front and Fern Streets. Rev. Cirili Gulovich, Pastor. Low Mass 800 AM High Mass 10 30 A M Vespers 2 00 P. M r pKINITY METHODIST EPISCOPAL. F Birkbock Street, South lleberton. Rev. E. M. Chilcoat, Pastor. Sunday School 200 PM Preaching 7 00 P M Epworth League meets every Sunday even ing at 0.00 o'clock. W'KLSH BAPTIST. Fern Street, above Main. Services by Rev. A. J. Morton, of Kingston. Sunday School.- 10 30 A M Welsh Service 200 PM English Service 000 PM "PECTECTIOIT or PEEE By Henry George. The leudhtg statesmen of the world pronounce it the greatest work ever written upon the tariff question. No statistics, no figures, no evasions. It will Interest and Instruct you. Read it. Copies Free at the Tribune Office. FRAMiP BEST IN THE Itswearinßqualitiesaroun3urpo' . outlasting two boxes of anyotb •• effected by beat. E Vii ET 131 \. ' FOR SALE BY DEALERS GUNI.h . PATENT A 48-page book free. Address W. T. FITZ GERALD, Att'y-at-Law. Cor. Bth and FSts., Wushington, I>. C. WE IDE R &ZANG Tallursi. We are located above Meyer's jewelry store and have on hand a tine line of goods," which will be done up in tin- Intrst styles at a very moderate price. Our aim is to satisfy and WE ASK FOlt A TRIAL. Repairing Promptly Executed. DePIERRO - BROS. = CAFE.= CORNER OF CENTRE AND FRONT STREETS, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, Rosen 1)1 uMi's Velvet, of which we have Exclusive Sale In Town. Mil in in's Extra Dry Champagne, Hennessy Brandy, Blackberry, Gins, Wines, Clarets, Cordials, Etc. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Families supplied at short notice. Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS - AT - ALL - HOURS. Ballentine and Hazleton beer on tap. Baths, Hot or Cold, 25 Cents. C. P. GrERITZ, PLUMBER, Gas and Steam Fitter, Main street, below Centre. Machine repairing of all kinds done. GUN and LOCKSMITH ING A SPECIALTY. Per sonal supervison of all work contracted for. STAHL & CO., ugentg for Lebanon Brewing 80. Finest and Best Deer in the Country. Satisfaction GUARANTEED. Parties wishing to try this excellent beer will please call on Stalil & Co., 137 Centre Street. j. p. MCDONALD, Corner of South and Centre Streets, Freeland. has the most complete stock of FURNITURE, CARPET, DRY Goons, LADIES' AND GENTS' PINE FOOTWEAR, Etc., ill Freeland. FSICES ABE TIE VEBY WEST." The Delaware, Susquehanna and Schuylkill R, R, Co. Fasrengek TWAIN TIME TABLE. Taking Effect, September 15, 1892. Eastward. STATIONS. Westward, p.m. p.m. a.in. a.m. a.m. p.m. 5 00 1 U2 7 50 Shcppton 7 40 10 20 3 49 AJSOOI OH 750 ( v m . - J, j7AtlOl4 343 L 1512 124 H (V, Oneida A ] 7 27 10 03 338 520 1 37 818 Humboldt Road 7 10 9503 24 529 1408 21 H arwood Road 707 9473 21 535 147 830 Oneida Junction 700 940 3 15 A j 5 40 H L i 0 55 L I r. 50 HO " N A I LI 32 5 54 11. Meadow Road 0 28 000 Stockton Jet. 019 0 12 Eckley Junction 0 10 0 22 Drlfton 0 (X) W. L. DOUGLAS' $3 SHOE CENTLEMEN. tAnd other specialties for Gentlemen, Ladies, Boys and Misses are the Best in the World. See descriptive advertise ment which will appear lu Take no Substitute, but Insist on having W. L. IXM'til.AH' SHOES, with name and price stamped on bottom. Sold by John Smith, Birkheck gßrick. I Ripans Tabules | Ripans Tabules act gently . I but promptly upon the liver, ' | stomach and intestines; cure j habitual constipation and dis | pel colds, headaches and fevers. One tabule taken at the first symptom of a return of indi gestion, or depression of spir its, will remove the whole dif : ficulty within an hour. Ripans Tabules are com pounded from a prescription used for years by well-known physicians and endorsed by the highest medical authori ties. In the Tabules the stand-v ard ingredients are presented in a form that is becoming the fashion with physicians and patients everywhere. One Box (Six ViaL) Sever.ty-five Cents. One Package (Four Boxes) 1 wo Dollars. Ripans Tabules may be ob tained of nearest druggist; or b" mail on receipt of price. for free sample address RIPANS CHEMICAL CO. NEW YORK. | A N' J"D'E"A'''fAM 'ITY SI I F° r Indigestion, lllllousncas. | = Headache, Conutlpatlon, Hud ■ Complexion, Offensive Breath, | f and all disorders of the Stomach, 1 ; Liver and Bowels, _ ! RIPANS tABULES JKP A)I promptly. Perfect Iby druggists or sent by mail. Box " iyialsT,76c. Package(i boxes), $3. § I For free samples-address s s KIPAXB CHEMICAL CO., New York, oj
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers