FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TIIOS:. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. SriISCItIPTION RATES. One Year $1 50 Six Months 75 Four Months 50 Two Months 3.' Subscribers are requested to watch the date following the name on the labels of their ])ii|ers. By referring to this they can tell at a glance how they stand on the books in this office. For instance: Grover Cleveland 28JuneQ3 means that Grover is puid up to June 28,1803. By keeping the figures in advance of the pres ent date subscribers will save both themselves nnd the publisher much trouble and annoy ance. FREELAND, PA., MARCH 20, 1893. The Andrews Wrong. The house of representatives at Ilar risburg decided on Thursday by a vote of 117 to 77 not to rectify the flagrant wrong by which Mr. Andrews holds the seat from Crawford county to which the majority of the voters elected Mr. Higby. Under the whip and spur of asunied party action where no party lines and no party summons had any rightful place, the great body of the Republicans allow ed themselves to be put in a false posi tion which the honest judgment of a large proportion would unhesitatingly condemn. Twelve Republican did themselves the honor to vote right. They will not need to wait for vindication. The im mediate and unmistakable judgment of the commonwealth will approve and uphold their manly and independent re fusal to become the accomplices of a grave public wrong. But if there were any doubt now time will justify their action. The bad , record of this unfortunate day will return to plague the organization and the managers who are responsible for it; and in that period of disscussion and reckoning the wisdom of the small hand of Republicans who sought to save the party from this wrong and this disaster will be made clear. We do not impeach the intelligence or the understanding of the majority by assuming that they do not appreciate the character of this wrong, or that they personally wish to trample upon the popular will. But they have suffered themselves to be misled by the false plea of party obligation to inflict a dead ly stab upon the party honor. It is easy for them today to shield the individual vote under the cover of a great majority, but they have made ;it hard for those who will have to uphold the Republican banner when they are lost in the dis persion of their homes. Tho Republican journals of tho state have been quick to understand what is involved in this question. Their mission must go on after legislatures are out of the way. They must fight the Republi can battles and make the Republican argument. With what force or effect can they denounce Democratic outrages upon the unmistakable will of the people when the Republican house of Pennsyl vania sanctions and sustains the inde fensible claims of a usurper who has been twice rejected by people of his county and who is seated now in spite of the indisputable fact that a majority of the votes of the district was against him? It is a blunder and a wrong which arms the artillery of the opposition, and which spikes many a Republican gun. For the honor of the Republican press of the state we rejoice that it has been practically unanimous in urgring that justice should he done and that the plain will of the people should be respected and established. It has been true to the higher principles of Republicanism. The responsibility for this reproach belongs elsewhere, and there it must rest. — Phila. Press. . TURF TOPICS. Out of 42 trotters that earned SB,OOO or better in 1892 20 were 4 years old or under. The earning capacity of pacers on tho turf is now said to be equal to that of the trotters. Ono hundred and seventy-five declara tions have been made from the American Derby, leaving 150 in. Among all the colts and fillies by Rupee (2:11, pacing) there is not a single pacer nor even a mixed gaited one. Trainer Bitlier says 2:07| is not noar Kremlin's limit. "He will trot in 2:05 ttiia year as suro as preachin," says Hither. Tlio managers of the Trotting Club de Paris are compelled by the government of France to give no less than $2,000 in purses at each of their meetings. Hon. James White, ono of Australia's greatest breeders, used to say, "We breed race horses every day, but u great Btre comes once in half a century," Warren Carliart, aged 18 years, is the youngest trotting horse breeder in the United States. His 500-acre farm on the Los Angeles river, California, is stocked with over 40 trotters of Electioneer, Santa Claus and "Wilkes blood. The Coming of IloopnklrtH. The woman who today decries tho re vival of tho m'serable mode will tomor row be wearing one of those skeletons in armor. —Indianapolis Sun. Subscribe for the TKIUUNK. MISERY IN CHICAGO. STARVATION AND CRIME VERSUS WORLD'S FAIR SPLENDORS. Thousands Drawn to the City Duly to Find Thousands of Others Out of Work—Vic tims of Hunger and Cold —Can You Won der at Crime Under the Circumstances? [Special Correspondence.] Wo as readers become accustomed to appalling rows of statistical figures nu j til they come to convey to our minds no idea of the conditions they arc meant to I portray. Thus when it is stated that 50,000 men are out of employment in j Chicago, or that 30,000 people applied | for aid in one week at the county relief offices, we may receive no realizing sense iof the actual situation. But those who see what all this means can but carry with them aching hearts and a despair ing pity for tlio fate of humanity. It means that shivering men linger about the bridges, the docks, the daily j newspaper offices, the building sites, the j doorways where the faintest suspicion of ' "men wanted" lurks, all hearing that listless, hopeless, dejected look which to I see on the faces of so many human be- j i ings makes one almost wish the world would cease to exist. It means that the headquarters of local charities are filled to suffocation with men, women and ! children desperato in their attempts to ' obtain a little fuel and food—a despera tion that often ends in death before the red tape operations of organized chari ties afford relief. It means that at night the station house cells, dirty, hard and cold as they are, are crowded with inno cent, homeless men who seek even that poor refuge from the cruelty of the weather. It means that little children are found frozen to death in hallways and nooks into which they have crept. It means that families are found hud dled together in one miserable bed with out a scrap of food or fuel in the house. It means that those scenes which cer tain philanthropic people with hearts al ways throbbing for distress in tho dis tance love to depict as occurring in effeto Europe or heathen India aro common enough right here in our midst. It is not popular to say it in this the most talked of city in the world that it contains this winter a most appalling amount of poverty and suffering. It is supposed to ho tho delight of every pa triotic citizen to paint in glowing colors everything pertaining to it, but we can not be blamed if some of us yield faint hearted responses to boasts of our pros perity and enterprise and do not enthuse over our prospects to any great extent. We prefer to tell the truth. Tho unusual destitution is due to vari ous causes—the severity of the weather, the lieartlessness of coal combines, and, most of all, to the fact that working peo ple from all over tho country have been lured hero by the prospect of plenty of work at good prices throughout the next year. That the men are not willingly idle and vicious is proved by the fact that every advertisement for help want ed is eagerly answered by hundreds of applicants. They are crowded here, and there is no place for them. Naturally there is also what is called an "epidemic of crime." Never were so many depre dations, petty thefts, sandbaggings, bur glaries, committed in the same space of time as now. The timid and shallow minded cry aloud for stricter surveil lance, more severe punishments, less raorcy to all arrested. The mayor and police are prodded on to do the brutal work of society with greater zeal. The police courts are crowded every morn ing; the criminal courts are months be hind in their calendars; the jail is full, the bridewell overflowing; the roads to the penitentiaries are worn smooth; yet there is no cessation of crime, no lessen ing of the number of offenses against person and property. Under such condi tions the methods of dealing with those arrested are hurried, chaotic, revenge ful, and in consequence many innocent people aro punished—pushed violen ly into a downward road from which there is little chance of escape. There Is but one society in the city which seeks to prevent this great wrong, and that is the Women and Children's Protective society, which employs an agent to be constantly at hand where tho young and helpless aro tried. The work of this society is marvelous and deserves a whole letter, which I will soon ho pre pared to give. But of course one organ ization cannot he omnipresent or omnip otent, and many and many a homeless, unemployed but innocent man falls into the hands of the police and is thence forth doomed. A term in the bridewell is a suro preventive to respectable em ployment. The friendship of good peo plo is lost, but the unwelcome compan ionship of old "professionals" is forever secured. These are appalling and momentous statements to make, for they force upon our minds the fact that our present proc esses of law manufacture criminals rat her tlian save them, and that something is rad ically wrong in the manner we, through out society, deal with each other. But wo will acknowledge that many —very many—are guilty, and we know that depredations aro duily and nightly committed. There is a close connection between 50,000 men being unable to find work and the presence of an "epidemic of crime." Let one imagine himself a craftsman—a hopeful, ambitious man who had come to Chicago expecting to better himself, only to find every field of employment so overcrowded that he can not approach it. Rent, food, coal, clothes, aro immediately dear, and his family is suffering for want of them. Tho most magnificent arrays of wealth are dis- j played on every side, while dire poverty lurks beneath. Before begging of people who would ! gaze incredulously and scornfully on the I stalwart form, beforo facing death clasp ! ing tho icy hands of loved ones, what would ho naturally do? Think seriously 1 before you condemn. The approaching World's fair,of course, j is tho direct cause of the unusual surplus j of laborers for whom there is no place. I ( It is to blame for a great many other un- j desirable conditions too. Wc citizens are not supposed to whisper outside any crit icisms of tho management; indeed wo are in disgrace if we do not laud to the i skies everything connected with the fair. But to those who see beneath the surface, who know of the "wheels within wheels," who understand thoroughly the workings 1 of the whole business, tho coming exhi bition of industry's products seems a mighty, a terribly ironical piece of mock ery. The achievements of skill, ingenuity ( and labor are to bo displayed not for what they are worth or to do credit to the workers, but to magnify and decorate the wealth and greatness of powerful people. Tho workers them selves are utterly ignored in every ar rangement except in so far as they be como sightseers and victims. Thousands of workingincn have been lured here, that, competing with each oth er, thoir labor might he bought cheaply. Contractors, hastening frantically to complete structures by certain dates, so that money and not human life is a con sideration, leave scaffoldings, fastenings and safeguards carelessly looked after, and men are maimed and killed at a rate of from 3 to 10 every day, yet these daily sacrifices are not mentioned or mourned in public. The workers were barred outside the gates on tho day their achieve ments were "dedicated"—a hollow cere mony that meant nothing after the bap tism of blood they themselves had given it. The drudgery, endurance and suffer ing that have made a World's fair pos sible are never remembered. Against the wishes of tlio masses of workors the exhibition is to be closed on their one leisure day. And, to cap all, real estate dealers, hotel keepers, etc., do not hesitate to say they are "into this thing for nil tho money there is in it." The manager of a certain important railway system de clared they would not reduce rates— rather they would raise them. "Patriot ism," he said, "would do to talk to the common people; wo are after the money tliero is in it." This is the spirit of everything and everybody connected with the fair. And so, while apparently a great and remark able event which is to rodound to tho credit and a lory of tho country is going smoothly forward, we know that more injustice, corruption, crime, squalor and want festers under tho shadow of tlio "fair, white city" than can be atoned for in another century, and we cannot bo enthusiastic or echo gladly Chicago's proud "I will." LIZZIE M. HOLMES. | Chicago. Tyranny Iu South Carolina. Adjutant General Buchanan of South Carolina lias made a detailed report to the governor of his findings in the inves tigation of the treatment of laborers in | tho phosphate mines of tho state. Hi's [ report confirms all that was said in tho complaint of the French and Italian consuls. Tho Italian complaint had not been received when lie left here; there- ; fore he had only tho French complaint i to investigate. He says in liis report that ho found six Frenchmen imprisoned in tho mines under guard. Tho only al leged reason for their detention was that they were in debt to the storekeeper. Investigation showed that they were forced to buy their supplies from the Italian storekeepers, and at such prices as they pleased to charge tliem; that they are worked wholly by Italian boss- I es, and are as helpless as though tliey I had no tonguo at all to make their I abuses known to tho world. The re- | port further states that at one time these i men were actually shot into by one of j the bosses with a gun loaded with small ; shot, and several of them wounded. The ! Italian who did the shooting has in the meantime run to New York. The con- j dition as described in the report is one | of thorough and complete slave iff. The j report concludes with the opinion that j the remedy is beyond the power of tho j state and should find its permanent re lief in the extension of the national law on immigration. Working In Harmony. Detroit in times past has ha<l its share of troubles between the employees ami managers of street car lines, hut now it appears there is complete peace. The present satisfactory state of affairs has been brought about chiefly by the recog nition the companies have given the or ganization of the men. Of course the employees' organization has been intelli gently directed. The agreement which was entered upon on May 12, 1891, had been faitlifully adhered to by both men j and managers. Wages have been ad-1 vanced, and conditions have been nil- i proved. The companies give full recog- | nition to the officials of the men's organ ization and confer with them for the set tlement of every grievance, no matter how small it may appear to he. The union does not shelter negligent nor dis honest employees, hut requires and se cures fair treatment for every worthy 1 man. The companies give full recogni tion to the walking delegate—called in this case "supervisor"—and, in fact, look upon that gentleman as the main sup port of order, discipline and good service. I Here is an example of tho good sense of recognizing tho right of workingincn to organize and through efficient repre sentatives direct their side of an industry. I'arU Labor Exchange. The "Bourse du Travail" or Labor Ex change of Paris is now in its sixth year, and is no longer considered by any ono a doubtful experiment. On the contrary, its Buccess is so pronounced as to already create the need of more extensive quar ters, notwithstanding the immensity of the present building of the institution. Fully 300 unions or syndicates are at j tached, with a membership of 860,000. This list includes most trades and pro j fessions, from dramatists and musicians to ragpickers. I The building is seven stories high and [ contains IGO bureaus or offices of unions, besides assembly balls, large and small. | Each of the organizations conducts an j employment bureau in connection with ■ its secretary's office, and employers gen ' erally apply first at these bureaus when | seeking workmen. Women as well as | men enjoy the privileges of the "Bourse du TravaiL" IGNORANCE AND PREJUDICE. Proof That Tliey Are the Only Supports of Opposition to the Eiglit-hour Day. I An editorial in that excellent newspa [ per, the Cincinnati Times, gives the fol j lowing illogical reasons for opposing the J 8-hour working day idea, it being the re j mark of a newspaper man to a working [ man: "If you succeed in your object" (that of reducing the hours of work to ®ight), says the editor, "you will raise the cost of the manufactured article on which you are employed fully 20 per cent, and ; don't you know that if that particular ar ticle goes up 20 per cent other necessa ries of life will beapt to follow in sympa thy with it, and will you not find at the end of the month that it will require SSO instead of $-10 to pay your current ex penses? The article you are making ad vanced 20 per cent, the price of living, of | i rent, of clothing, of food, etc., would be I likely to advance 20 per cent also, and | 20 per cent of SSO is $lO. How are you to bo benefited if your opportunity to save $lO a month is destroyed? Don't you see that the burden of 10 hours' pay for 8 hours' work will finally fall on your own shoulders?" No, we won't see anything of thokind, and the suggestion is another sample of the failure of the general run of educated | men to grasp economic truths. The re sult of a reduction of the hours of work i to eight per day would not raise the cost of manufactured articles anywhere near 20 per cent nor anywhere near the extent it would raise wages. | This can be easily shown. The cost of tho labor on manufactured j articles since the advent of improved 1 machinery is hardly a tithe of the cost of the finished article itself. In the old days of hand work the greater factor in the cost of all manufactured goods was the j labor put into them. It is not so today. Take almost anything—boots and shoes, clothing, machinery, for instance—and 20 per cent added to the cost of labor would not raise tho price of the completed arti- I cle 5 per cent. Take the labor employed to make a typewriting machine, for example. A machine that sells for SIOO costs about $lB, and of this cost not more than $lO is for lubor. Suppose we add 20 per cent to the cost of this labor, and we have $3, which would make tho price of the ma chine $lO3 instead of $l2O, as by The Times'reasoning. Take tho cost of shoes, again. A shop of 300 hands will make 0,000 pairs of shoes per day, or 20 pairs to each employee. Suppose tho average wages of all tho hands—men, women and boys—were $2 per day, and this is a high estimate. Twenty per cent on this in creased cost of labor would bo 50 cents upon each 20 pairs of shoes, or the sum of 2$ cents upon each pair. | In the manufacture of clothing wo have not at hand exact knowledge of the cost of manufacture, but it is safe to say that a factory employing 100 hands will easily make 300 suits per day. Estimat ing their wages at $2 per day—a high average—and we have about 70 cents per suit added to the cost of clothing as a : result of the increase in cost of produc | tion there, and if we add 10 cents to the j cost of tho production of tho cloth for the , suit as an additional result of the de | creased hours of work we have 80 cents 1 added to the cost of the suit. But we i will willingly allow an additional cost of $1 or $2, and then the workingman could afford to purchase it if one-fifth were added to his wages. Again, tho fact that under eight hours workmen would ultimately receive one fifth inoro pay will probably puzzle rca soners like the one just referred to. But us the valuo of everything depends upon the supply of it and the demand for it tliero should bo no difficulty in realizing that the increased demand for workers ; would raise the value and cost of their services. Eight bushels of wheat or ap pies aro not worth as much as 10 bushels, but when there is no surplus of thorn— when the demand is equal to the supply —people are often glad to pay much more for eight bushels of either than they pay for 10 when their is a glut in the market. There is not the slightest moral or ma terial rcaßon for opposition to a reduc tion of the hours of work. All objections to it arise either from ignorance or preju dice.—New York Dispatch. Working Women In Columbus. State Labor Commissioner Lewis of Ohio has made a special investigation of women's work and wages in the principal cities of the state. It appears that Colum bus makes a better showing than any of the other cities, and this is attributed chiefly to the fact that the sweating sys tem does not exist there. It is shown that women who work by the piece make bet \ ter wages than those who are employed | by the day or week. { Of the 622 women working by the piece in Columbus it is shown that 57, or 9 per ' cent, earn from $1 to $3 per week; 195, or 1 31 per cent, earn $3 to $5; 210, or 34 per cent, earn $5 to $7, and 160. or 26 per cent, ' earn $7 to $lO. Piecework is done chiefly 1 in cigar, coffee and Bpiee, knit goods, pa per box, printing and binding, shirt, shoe, ' tailoring and watch industries. The best 1 average wages at piecework are mado in 1 watch factories. None of them earns under $3 a week, and 66 per cent earn from $5 to $7. The Landlord's Iron Heel. A Kentucky coal miner, in a communi- i cation to the Louisville Courier-Journal, I in which he discusses the wrongs done to j the pool, says: "Take tho poor minersof our state, for instance. Go to their homes and you will see that they dwell in shun- j ties that are not fit for cow stables. Yet they pay most extortionate rents. I see I j miners in this county living in houses that did not cost more than $lO paving j rent at the rate of $42 per year. These , I shanties afford no comforts from either | heat or cold. The thickness of a 1-inch board between your little ones and 20 de j grees below zero does not inspire love of government, but is more apt to generate j anarchy and hatred of laws and preju j dice for alasscs." I Bills have been introduced in tho legis | latures of Illinois and Pennsylvania pro. viding for the creation of boards of nrbi ! tration' for the settlement of labor trou-1 1 bles. 1 I CHURCH DIRECTORY. I ) ETHEL BAPTIST. J } , Uidfre and Walnut Streets. Rev* C. A. Spnuidiiitf, Pustor. Sunday School 10 00 A M Gospel Teinperunce 2 30 PM Preaching 6IX) P M II EAVENLY RECRUITS. -ITI Centre Street, above Chestnut. Rev. H. M. Lengle, Pastor. Morning: Service 10 00 A M Sunday School 2 00 PM Love Feast 3 15 P M Preaching 7 30 PM TEDDO METHODIST EPISCOPAL. In charge of Rev. E. M. Chilcoat. Preaching 10 00 A M Sunduv School 2 00 PM OT. ANN'S ROMAN CATHOLIC. Rev. M. J. Fallihee, Pastor; Rev. Edw. O'Reilly, Curate. Low Mass 8 00 A M High Mass 10 30 A M Sunday School Mass on Weekdays 7 00 AM Devotions every Friday evening at 7.30 ST. JAMES' EPISCOPAL. South and Washington Streets. Rev. A. J. Kuchn, Pastor. Sunday School 1 30 P M Prayer and Sermon 7 00 P M ST. JOHN'S REFORMED. Walnut und Washington Streets. Rev. H. A. Benner, Pastor. Sunday School 9 00 AM German Service 10 30 A M Praise Meeting 7 00 P M English Sermon 7 30 PM Prayer and teachers' meeting every Saturday evening at 7.45 o'clock. QT. KASIMEII'S POLISH CATHOLIC. O Ridge Street, above Carbon. Rev. Joseph Mazotas, Pustor. Mass 11 oo A M Vespers 4 00 P M Mass on Weekdays 7 30 AM QT. LUKE'S GERMAN LUTHERAN. Main and Washington Streets. Rev. A. Bcimullcr, Pastor. Sunday School 9 00 A M German Service 10 00 A M C'atechial Instruction 5 0J PM QT. MARY'S GREEK CATHOLIC. O Front and Fern Streets. Rev. Cirill Gulovich, Pastor. Low Mass 800 A M High Mass 10 30 A M Vespers 2 00 P. M rpitlNlTY METHODIST EPISCOPAL. A Blrkbeek Street, South Heberton. 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. WELSH BAPTIST. Fern Street, above Main. Services by Rev. A. J. Morton, of Kingston. Sunday School 10 30 A M Welsh Service 2 00 PM English Service 6 00 PM Subscribe for the Tribune. MEN AND WOMEN. Ella Wheeler Wilcox dances almost as well as she writes. Mrs. Samuel S. Colgate is considered one of tho best dressed women in New York. The decorations of Mrs. Potter Palm er's music room are copied from the Al hambra. An Indian girl student at Haskell in stitute, Kansas, is named Jenny One Feather. She is a bright, intelligent stu dent mid stands at the head of her class. Lord Ashburnham is very rich and is an intimate friend and firm udherent of Don Carlos of Spain, having acted as the latter's go between in the recent dispute with the Comte de Paris. Mrs. Lease, the famous Kansas woman whose oratory aided the Populist party)so materially during the campaign, is a practicing attorney in the Kansas courts and the wife of a druggist in Wichita, where they reside. Professor. Garner, the monkey talk man, is in Africa inquiring and experi menting concerning monkey speech. He writes that ho has gathered much valu able data and was about to begin Ins real work. He expects to start homeward about August of this year. Gladstone has attained a greater age than any other prime minister of Eng land. Lord Palmerston died at 82, Chatham at 70, Fox at 57, Pitt at 47, Canning at 58, Sir Robert Peel at 62. Earl Russell attained tho age of 86, but did not hold office after he was 74. Lord Beaconsfield died at 77. Gladstone has completed his 83d year. RAILROAD JOTTINGS. The Baltimore and Lehigh Railroad company has completed arrangements to standard gauge the rond. It is stated that train 20 over the Van dalia line in 1892 paid tho largest per cent per mile run of any scheduled train crossing Indiana in either direction. The 10-wheel locomotives on the St. Louis division of the Big Four are de veloping a high rate of speed. One of them, with unfavorable conditions of weather and track, averaged a mile in 48 secondH for a distance of three milos. A road six miles long, called the Ni agara Junction, is being built at Niagara Falls by tho Cataract Construction com pany. The greator part of the line is now under way and will connect with the New York Central!? Lockport ; branch. An old project, that of building a rail road along the summit of the Palisades, has been revived. The scheme now is to run the road from a connection with tho North Hudson County Elevated sys tem at Guttenbnrg, N. J., to the north end of Bergen county. It is the intention of the New York, Susquehanna and Wostern to establish a coal storage yard at Little Ferry, N. J., so that incoming coal trains can deliver cars there for distribution instead of turning them over to the Delaware, j I Lackawanna and Western at Wt End. J. G. Berner's LATEST. 20 pounds granulated sugar, SI.OO. j 10 cans tomatoes, SI.OO. ! 10 cans corn, SI.OO. Best tiour, $2.10. Best barley, 0 pounds, 25 cents. i Blue raisins, 4 pounds, 25 cents. Oat flake, 6 pounds, 25 cents. 25 PER CENT. OFF ON BLANKETS. Special Bargains In Dry Goods and Notions. ; New goods daily. IWE HAVE THE LARGEST STOCK OF SHOES IN TOWN. Ladies' shoes, SI.OO. Men's dress shoes, $1.25. Mining boots, $1.90. Hundreds of bargains can be had in this department. Furniture and Carpets. Oil Cloth and Lenolium Wallpaper and Stationery. Complete window shade, spring roller, 25 cents. Springs, mattresses, feathers, pillows, etc. Ladies' and Children's Coats. Special bargains. Some handsome coats for less than half price. CALL AND SEE OUR STOCK. Yours truly, JOHN C. BERBER. CITIZENS' BANK OF FRE ELAND. 15 Front Street. Oapital, - ?50,00C. OFFICERS. JOSEPH BIHKBKCK, President. H. C. KOONS, Vice President. 11. It. DAVIS, Cashier. JOHN SMITH, Secretary. DIRECTORS. Joseph Birkbook, Thomas Birkheek, John Wagner, A Rudewick, li. C. Koons, Charles Dushcck, William Kemp, Mathias Schwa lie, John Smith, John M. Powell, 2d, John Burton. ISET" Three per cent. Interest paid on saving deposits. Open daily from 9 a. ra. to 4p. m. Sntunbn evenings from 0 to 8. ' I CURE THAT ! | ii Cold !! II AND STOP THAT 11 ii Cough, ii i'N. H. Downs' Elixir || !! WILL DO IT. || | | Price, 25c., 50c., and SI.OO per bottle. 11 I | Warranted. Sold everywhere. 11 I ( HINS7, JOHNSON * LOSS, Propi., Bullneton, Tt. | | Sold at Schilcher's Drug Store WEIDER & ZANG, Wo are located above Meyer's jewelry store and have on hand a tine line of goods, which will be done up in the latest styles at a very moderate price. Our aim is to satisfy and WE ASK FOR A TRIAL. Repairing Promptly Executed. C. P. GERITZ PLUMBER, Gas and Steam Fitter, Main street, below Centre. Machine repairing of all kinds done. GUN and LOCKSMITHING A SPECIALTY. Per sonal supcrvison of all work contracted for. STAHL & CO., agents for Lebanon Brewing Co. Finest and Best Beer 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 Street, Freelund. lias the most complete stock of FUFNITURE, CARPET, DRY GOODS, LADIES' AM) GENTS' EINE FOOTWEAR, Etc., In Freeland. HUES AEE TiE VEBY WEST. The Delaware, Susquehanna and Schuylkill R R, Co, PASSKNGEK TRAIN TIME TABLE. Taking Effect, September 15, 1892. , Eastward. STATIONS. Westward. [ p.m. p.m. a.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. 5 00 1 02 7 50 Sheppton 7 40 10 20 3 49 AISOOI 08 7 50 ~ . L\73410 14 3 43 LT5121 24 8 05 Oneida , { f - L> ~ ]() ;w 526 1 37 8 18 Humboldt Road 7 10 9503 24 529140 8 21 Hurwood Road 707 9473 21 535 1 47 830 Oneida Junction 700 940 3 15 - 4 i 540 L J 655 | .LHISO lto ' ln A 1 8112 5 ;>4 B. Meadow Road 28 608 Stockton Jet. 019 6 12 Eckley Junction 0 10 0 22 Drifton 6 00 "PKCTECTIOIT or " PEEE TPS-A-IDE." By Henry George. The leadinir statesmen of the world pronounce it the greatest work ever written upon the tariff question. No statistics, no tlaures, no evasions. It will interest and instruct you. Head it. Copies Free at the Tribune Office. 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