Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, June 21, 1894, Image 2

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    Fkeeland Teibune.
I'll BUSHED BVKHV
MONDAY AND THURSDAY.
THOS. A. BUCKLEY,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
OFFICE: .MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Tear S 1 GO
Btx Months 75
Four Months
Two Months......
Subscribers arc requested to observe the date
following tho name on the labels of their
papers. By referring to this they can tell at a
glance how they stand on the books in this
office. For Instance:
Grover Cleveland 28June95
mean* that Grovur 1* paid up to June 28,18115.
Keep the figures in advance of the present date.
Report promptly to this office when your paper
Is not received. All arrearages must Ihi paid
when paper Is discontinued, or collection will
be made in the manner provided by law.
FREELAND, PA., JUNE 21, 1894.
WJiat /"i. Congressman Hines I
ei'cr done to deserve a renomina
tiou from the JJemocrcUic jMtrli/ .■
Where the Americans Rive.
From the Atlanta Contstitution.
Professor 11. 11. Boyesen, an Ameri
canized foreigner, says that since 1820
some 15,000,000 foreigners have settled
in this country, and if we take their des
cendants into account we cannot escape |
the conclusion that scarcely one-half of
our people today are of American origin,
that is, descendants of people who set
tled hero before IS2O. The professor
thinks that many of the political evils of
the time arc due to the change in our
national character caused by so large an
un-American element, and he suggests
restricted immigration as a remedy.
It should be recollected, however, that
the foreigners are massed in the eastern
and western states. Their presence is
hardly felt in the south, where they do
nut constitute more than 2 per cent, of
the population. The country south of
the Potomac is the region where the
Americans live, and it may be that this
fact accounts for our exemption from
some of the social and political heresies
and disorders which alllict the states
north of us.
Undoubtedly, immigration should be
hedged about with proper safeguards,
but it goes without saying that a few
million foreigners of the better class
might be distributed through the south
without injury to anybody. We do not
want an overwhelming inllux of people
from other counties, but there is room
here for millions of moral, industrious
and law-abiding immigrants, no matter
what quarter of the globe they hail from.
They will find a hearty welcome in that
corner of the republic where the Ameri
cans live.
THE first suit of the kind ever
brought in New York state bus been
begun in the Kings county supreme
court to determine whether a trolley
company is responsible for a fatal ac
cident resulting from a horse becom
ing frightened by one of its cars.
Ax agricultural writer figures that
tho loss to tho farmers of the country
by the use of narrow wagon tires,
through the wear and tear of horse
flesh ami the loss of time, amounts to
three hundred million dollars a year.
IT is only in moving time that tho
average husband is perfectly willing
to let his wife have everything her
own way so long as she doesn't bother
him about It.
WOMEN are now widely employed in
the manufacture of watches. Over
eighteen hundred of them find occupa
tion in the Wultliam Watchmaking
company, and twelve hundred men.
MANY a man who howls loudly about
the "wrongs of society" and the "in
equalities of our social system" al
ways lets his wife carry the baby.
DENMARK once had extensive col
onies; now their population numbers
only one hundred and thirty thousand.
MMK. EVE, a dressmaker, and a Mr.
Adam, a tailor, happen to have places
near each other in the vicinity of Sixth
avenue and Fifty-third street, in New
York. It is reported that Adain and
Evo will shortly be married.
PEOPLE WHO WRITE.
J. M. BARRTE, the novelist, is report
ed seriously ill from lung trouble In
London.
GOT-NT TOLSTOI IS writing N "cosmo
politan drama" which he says is to be
the last of his works.
ENGLISH critics are finding fault with
Mr. Gladstone's translation of Horace.
They say that Gladstone's Horace is
very stitf and very podantio.
ROSA Yor.vo, a direct descendant of
one of the Pitcairn mutineers and a
woman of more than usual intelligence,
is writing a history of tho Pitcairn col
ony.
MRS. JT LIA WARD HOWE celebrated
her seventy-fifth anniversary recently.
She Is at this ripe age in the full pos
session of her faculties, and is rejoicing !
in a beautiful and vigorous old age.
IT is reported that some old-fashioned
English people who have met Rudyard
Kipling during his present visit to Eng
land are pained at what they consider
evidence of Americanization in hisman
ners.
UORERT Louis STEVENSON has grown
thin to emaciation. Ills wrist is now
so thin as to look, It is snid, as if a child
could break it in two. His lean body
lias becomo visibly leaner, and his face
is so sharp at the chin as to give a V
/Ji a pod appearance to his physiognomy.
Valuable Water.
The larceny of rainwater in Arizona ;
has extenuating circumstances. This
observation has its origin in an iuei
dent in Phoenix recently, according' to '
the Republican of that town. Some |
time after midnight A. 11. Barber was |
aroused from sleep by a noise outside
his bedroom window. Mr. Barber was
not concerned. He could think of 110 t- i
ing unlocked, the stealing of which
would impoverish him or enrich the
tliief, and he turned sleepily in bed. j
Suddenly he thought of some ten gal
lons of rainwater which had been la- 1
boriously diverted from the roof and
coaxed into a tub and washboiler dur
ing Sunday's rain, lie sprang from i
his bed, cursed himself for his careless- j
ness in leaving the rainwater exposed j
ami rushed out into the darkness. The
tub and boiler were gone. Mr. Barber ,
dashed into the house, and in about a ;
second returned with a revolver and
took a shot at the wide world, breath- j
ing a fervent prayer that avengingfatc i
would direct the bullet into the an a to- '
my of the deporter of the rainwater
treasure.
They Are Not All Dead Yet.
James Jacobs met Mrs. Ann Dyson
in Massachusetts not long ago, a few
days after she had obtained a divorce
nisi. He fell in love at sight and pro
posed marriage, but when she said that
she would not be free for seven weeks
he declared that Massachusetts law
did not apply to Rhode Island, and if
she would only marry him at once ho
would deed her all his real estate,
worth about ten thousand dollars. The
bait was too attractive and the woman
yielded. But in less than a month the
hastily-married couple quarreled, and
the repentant Jacobs prayed the su
preme court to free him from his wife
and restore his property on the ground
that the woman had no right to marry.
The case was an unprecedented one.
i The court told Jacobs that the mar
riage was indeed illegal, but he went
Into the business with his eyes wide
open; that he had played the fool and
must pay the penalty, and that thcro
was no redress for him.
THE fire losses of the United States
and Canada for the month of March, as
estimated from its daily files by the
New York Journal-Bulletin, aggre
gate $9,147,100. This is a very encour
aging showing as compared with $lO,-
002,850 during the corresponding month
last year, and $10,048,000 during March,
1802. The total for the first three
months in the year is given as $31,018,-
100, against $-14,540,050 for the corre
sponding period last year, and $85,-
120,900 in 1892. During March there
were 202 fires of a greater destructive
ness than SIO,OOO each. Of these, the
loss by seventy-seven ranged up to
$20,000, of forty-one to $30,000, of twen
ty-nine to $50,000, of twenty-one to
$75,000, of ten to SIOO,OOO, of twenty to
$200,000, and of four to $300,000.
Nor only has the exhibition epidemic
prevailed in all the capitals of Europe
and most of Asia this year, but it seems
that almost every city of any importance
has some big exhibition of one sort or
another open or soon to be under way.
Lyons will open a big exhibition on
April JO, which will be the first exhibi
tion held out of Paris that has been
supported by the government and sub
sidized by the state. The Belfast Art
and Industrial exhibition was opened
a few days ago, and Munich is arrang
ing an international exhibition of the
works of deaf and dumb artists.
Mor HOE, a Chinaman whose head
quarters are at San Francisco, has one
of the most curious contracts of any
existing in the United States. He is
employed by the Chinese companies at
the Golden Gate to seek out and gather
together the bones of his deceased
countrymen for shipment Hack to
China. In carrying out his duties he
travels incessantly from one extremity
of the United States to the other, lie
has collected the bones of thousands of
Chinamen.
THAT gigantic evil, the Louisiana
lottery, which is supposed to have been
banished from United States soil, has,
it seems, only changed its local habi
tation and its name. It has come to
light that, while nominally carrying
on the business at Honduras, its real
headquarters are at Port Tampa, Flu.
It Is thought, however, that the United
States officers will keep after it until
it is entirely uprooted from American
soil.
A law in New York has abol
ished the dog catcher and the dog
pound. A brutal agency is thus hu
manely done away with. Every dog
must be licensed and numbered—every
eat ditto—provided it is an animal you
wish to have come back and is worth
preserving. The enforcement of the
law is placed in the handsof the Ameri
can Society for the Prevention of Cruel
ty to Animals.
A CHICAGO woman has begun a legal
action to secure a separation from her
husband because he played croquet
with a neighbor's wife till a late hour.
This Is getting a divorce on croquet
grounds.
IT is said that among the white
mountaineers of the south, who are lit
tle more than semi-civilized, one fam
ily often consists of from fifteen to
twenty children.
AUROICA, 111., was the first city in tho
world to illuminate its streets with
electricity. The wires were plated in
position in 1881.
ORY'ANT'S EXPEDITION. !
It Will Sail from Now York oc :
tho 24th of Juno.
It* Object Is to Meet Lieut. Peary un<
Ills Party at Itomioiu Hay —The Able
Young Man in Charge of
the Enterprise.
The announcement was made at the
monthly meeting of tho Philadelphia
Geographical club that an expedition,
to bo known as the Peary Auxiliary
expedition will soil from New York
on Juno 24, 1894, for Newfoundland.
Tho party will consist of seven persons.
Lieut. Peary, before leaving Philadel
phia, deposited funds and instructions
with Prof. Angelo Ileilprin covering
this relief project.
The leader of the party, says Harper'-
Weekly, will be Henry G. Bryant.
They expect to reach St. Johns, N. P..
in time to leave that port in the Fal
con, which they will there find await
ing them, on July 4. The first stop
will beat Godhavn, on what is culled
Disko island, in North Greenland. This
is a Danish settlement, and recognition
of the expedition by tlie officials at that
point will be secured through the state
department at Washington.
Continuing north, Melville bay will
be crossed as quickly as the condition
of the ice will permit, and Cape York i
visited. From hero the run will bo
direct to Peary headquarters at Bon
doin bay, in Inglefleld gulf, in latitude
seventy-seven degrees forty-three min
utes north. They calculate to reach
this harbor by July 25.
Lieut. Peary ami his companions ar
not expected to return to this pint
from their long sledge trip through t!
I ice-floes until the last of August. In
the meantime the Falcon will be em
ployed in original research. The Baffin
bay shore of Ellosmere Land will be
explored for some truce of the young
Swedish explorers, Bjorling ami Kali
stening, whose schooner was wrecked
on the Carey islands in the summer of
1892, and who left a message on these
islands, which was recovered by
Scotch whaler in October, 1893, statin/,
wj|
'Jlk. V 0
HEN It Y O. BUT ANT.
that they proposed to seek refuge
among the Esquimaux of Ellesmoro
Land.
Jones' sound will also be explored for
a greater distance than has yet been
attempted, and tho effort made to map
out the 200 miles of unknown coast-lino
forming the northeast shore of Jones'
sound and the western border of Elles
mere Land. This triangular area of
100,000 square miles, known as Elles
mere Land, is one of the few large ter
ritories the outlines of which have not
yet been determined. A tribe of Esqui
maux are said to inhabit this land who
have not so far come in contact with
explorers.
The Falcon will be back at Boudoin
bay on September 1, and expects to
reach Philadelphia with the Peary party
on September 15. Dr. Axel Olilin, a
Swedish naturalist, representing tho
friends of Bjorling and Kallstenius,
will accompany the auxiliary expedi
tion.
The leader will be Henry G. Bryant,
who was horn in Allegheny, Pa., on
November 7, 1850. lie is tiic son of
Walter Bryant, a well-known Pitts
burgh merchant. Young Mr. Bryant
graduated from Princeton college in
1883, and after studying law in the
oflico of Hon. Robert N. Wilson, of
Philadelphia, graduated from the law
department of the University of Penn
sylvania in 1880.
He has been an insatiate traveler.
In 1881 and 1880 he visited the north
ern countries of Africa. Subsequently
he employed much of his time in hunt
ing trips in the Rocky mountains. In
1801 with Prof. C. A. Kevaston, ho
started north to Labrador, penetrated
a distance of 350 miles inland from the
coast, reached the Grand falls after
many privations and hardships, and
found their height to be 310 feet.
Mr. Bryant was second in command
of the Peary relief expedition sent out
by the Philadelphia Academy of Natu
ral Science in 180:?, under the leader
ship of Angelo Heilprin. Upon his re
turn from this trip Mr. Bryant pub
lished a volume on Labrador. Ho is now
j secretary of the Geographical club of
| Philadelphia.
Idiocy Cured by Surgery.
It is of interest to note the results of
recent experiments made by surgeons
in tho curing of idiocy in children.
Like many other things new In surgery
and medicine, these experiments
originated in Paris. The idea was
conceived that idiocy frequently was
caused, whero no congenital causes
wcro apparent, by the premature
union of the bones of the skull in
infants. Acting on this assumption,
the French surgeons removed a por
tion of the bony covering of the skull
on several patients, the idea being that
the brain had not had room to expand
commensurate with the growth of the
child. The results in many instances
proved the correctness of the theory.
In some cases the results were remark
able. In one case an idiot girl of eight
years began to show signs of recover
ing intelligence the very day after the:
operation was performed.
I'ueetH In it Ileetto'tt Ey®.
The compound eye of the Mordclla |
beetle contaius 35,000 facets.
Outnui d ami Vi.lhld Sign.
Banks—That real estate man who
has an olllce across th • street has just
made a sale.
Rivers—How do you know?
"How do I know? Haven't yon see'*
him smoking a cob pipe every day for
the last six weeks?"
"I think I have."
"Well, can't you see he's smoking a
cigar?"— Chicago Tribune.
A Woman of tlio World.
Mr. Veraricb—Ho not, do not answer
hastily. I will give you time to re
fleet, if you wish.
Miss Beauti—lt won't take long.
How many clubs do you belong to?
"Well—er —live or six, but—"
"Then I will be your wife. I proba
bly will not see you often enough to
matter."—X. Y. Weekly.
An Agonizing Thought.
Dora—Why are you crying?
Clara (ho—l mean Mr. Ni—Nicofcl
lo ki—kissed me in the—the hall.
Dora—He doubtless acted on a sud
den impulse. I wouldn't cry about
that.
Clara—But I —l slapped him for it—
and—l'm a—afraid I hur —hurt him.
800, hoo, hoo! —l'uck.
Trannforred.
Ho rubbed his face aguiust her check
Till all the color .fleet
Twas just the othei way with him—
His face turned very red.
—Judge.
DIVIDING THE WORK.
J —< s
*■ / r j-. W—■ i'X.
"Jim, I'll tell you how you'll have to
fix it. Tackle de ole woman fust, see?
'cause she's got de plunks in dat bag
wot she's carryin\ Don't mind de dog
at all; he's a bulldog, an' he'll just take
a hold in one place an' den hang on;
he won't chow you like an or'nary dog."
"Well, where do you come in?"
"Oh, I'll git de plunks while you'sc
omoosin' de dog."—Life.
A Dread Truth.
There is no adage of thorn all,
Anxious mothers know so well
As that whenever strangers call
"It's the little things that tell."
—Urooklyn LI fa
it ! ii Way of Men.
A man loved a woman, but she
laughed at him. Then, through grief,
he became ill, and was like to die, in
very despair of her love. Whereat
pity touched her heart, and pity grew
to love. When he came to know this,
having now the love he had so
yearned to possess, he rejoiced greatly,
and arose from his bed. And straight
way he began to love another woman.
—Berry Benson, in Century.
Itaauty Transferred.
He I think that often people, from
being a great deal together, come to
resemble each other. Don't-you be
lieve that beauty is sometimes trans
ferred, as it were, in that way?
She —Well, I don't know. But after
you and Miss Mnyeup took that stroll
in the garden last night some of her
rouge was oil your cheeks.—Boston
Traveller.
The Due Thing Need id.
Matilda Snowball—ls you in earnest,
Mistali Jolinsing, wid yore matermoni
al prepersishon?
Sam Johnsing I am. indeed, Miss
Snowball. I has got er shanty an 1
chickens an'two mewels an' er pig,
an'all 1 nvds is er wife tor make me
pulVee.'ly happy. -AlexSweet, in Texas
Sift ings.
(..( There Anyhow.
• 1 he oi l man run for sheriff, didn't
he?"
"And they beat him?"
"Yes; but lie's still ahead."
"How's that?"
"Feller shot the sheriff an' the old
man's coroner I"—Atlanta Const! tut ion.
I'lcni III! I'l'OHJll'f'lH.
Hotel Porter (to guest)—lley, get
up!
(Li nit—!—!—!
Is e] 1 orler I want 11st* bed sheet!
(diet i toni-'nneiit) What for?
Hot 1 I >rt r '1 here's u party ae
v. :< id. .i hri .. bstanl we need a table
cloth.-Hallo.
A pal . I ' deuce.
Pi ilessor of ('! -mil.try Gentlemen,
I held in my ha: d a phial of soda.
What chemical shall I combine with it
to produce a valuable article of coin-
Gootlsby (waking up)—Br-r-randy!
Tit-Hits.
Was Toil Timid.
"I have never had the courage to get
married."
"Haven't, eh? What's your busi
"Oh, I'm only a lion tamer." —Phila-
delphia Record.
Ths Poor Poet.
Penfield—You have no soul, woman)
Instead .of choosing a poet you should
have married a sausage maker.
Mrs. Penfield—ln that case I should,
at least, have had enough to eat.—
Puck.
Groat I'ruyresi.
Twickenham—How is your daugh
ter's French tutor getting on with her?
Bliter —Verj' nicely. He has got so
he can speak English first-rate.
Brooklyn Life.
llcr Fear.
Husband—That new bonnet of yours
just makes me tired.
Wife—l feared that it would. You
never did like cheap tilings, you know.
-U. Y. Weekly.
SIR ISAAC PITMAN.
Thi- Father of Phonography Honored hy ;
Queen Vletorla.
Queen Victoria never conferred an
honor upon a man more worthy of it
than Isaac, now Sir P te, Hitman,
whose system of phono; . , phy with its
many improvements by others, is now
practiced by the majority >f shorthand
writers of the English language. There
were many authors or teachers of dif
ferent systems preceding Pitman's, but
when his system was given to the pub- j
lie in 1887 it was immediately recog
nized as far superior to every other, j
I lis first treatise on shorthand, "Steno
graphic Soundhund," became the orig
inator of the spelling reform, to which |
and the propagation of his system of
v *
"jOy/
Sill ISAAC PITMAN.
phonetic shorthand he devoted hi
entire attention since 1848, when the.
Phonetic society was established. IE.
system of shorthand was renamed in
1 - lo and entitled 44 Phonography, or
Writing by Sound," and his "Phono
graphic Reporters' Companion" ap-.
pea red in 1840. Mr. Pitman's "Phonet
ic Institute" at Bath is really a phonet
ic printing house and a publish
ing house, from which books arc
sent to all parts of the world. lie
edits and prints the Phonetic Journal.
Besides printing his own instruction
hooks for teaching phonetic shorthand,
Mr. Pitman has issued a little library
of about eighty volumes, printed en
tirely in shorthand, ranging from the
Bible to "Rasselus." Mr. Pitman ban
received several medals and testimoni
als from various parts of the world
in recognition of his system and
of his labors for the reformation of
English orthography. Sir Isaac was
born in Trowbridge, Wiltshire, Eng
land, January 4, 1813. He was obliged
to leave school at the ago of twelve
years, and entered the counting house
of a clothing manufacturer. After a
six years' service as a clerk he received
live months' training in the normal
college of the British and Foreign
School society, and was in 1831 ap
pointed master of the British school at
Barton on llumber, lie established the
British school at Wotton Undcr-Edgo
in 1830.
DANISL H. HASTINGS.
Nominated for Governor by the Republic
una of Pennsylvania.
Daniel Ilartmun Hastings, of Belle
fontc, republican ndmlneefer ;>;<>vc rimr
ol Pennsylvania, was born in Clinton
county, l'a,, on February 2(1, lsib, and
comes of Scotch-Irish stock. In early
lifo he tanyht .school and studied law,
hcin/v admitted to the bar in 1875. He
soon made his mark In the lefral arena,
and In 1882 made his entry into stab'
politics by speaking in the interest oi
his friend, Gen. Heaver, for governor.
Gen. nesting's became connected with
the national guard in ls~7 and rose t<.
be colonel of tiie Fifth regiment in
1880. In 1887 he was appointed adju-
LJ
EF;
V/
T : T/V (i :
OEM. DANIRI. 11. HASTINGS.
tnnt general of Pennsylvania by Gov.
Beaver, and while holding this olllce
ho was brought prominently before
the public by his services at Johnstown
during the flood.
On June 1, 1889, when Johnstown
was swept away, Gen. Hast ings started
for the stricken city, and on his ar
rival there assumed charge and ren
dered invaluable service to the terror
stricken residents. In 1800 Gen. Hast
ings was defeated for the nomination
for governor. Since then he has re
mained prominent before the republic
an voters of the state, and his choice
to-day to be the standard-bearer of his
party is considered a most popular one.
J'cnmlo Colony In tlic West.
Of thirty-six women who, under the
leadership of Miss Annette Daisy, mad •
a run into Cherokee strip when it was
opened last September, twenty-two
have proved steadfast in spite of the
ililllcultles of the undertaking, and are
busily cnga fed in making a hoino with
out help or hindrance from man. They
pre hauling the timber themselves for
a house of fifteen rooms, which they
will occupy, and aro prepared to do
their own plowing, planting, etc., in
the well-watered timbered section of
four hundred and eighty acres which j
they hold. They already have three
teams, cows, chickens and other stock, >
and, neatly dressed in short skirts that
come just below tho knee and are met
by heavy woolen leggins that cover tho 1
legs from knee to ankle, they look well •
able to hold their own and carry out
their independent plan.
Don't Tell tho Rihldh.
Bumatra, whoso diameter is nine fceVu
llow's This I j
Wo offer Oiio Hundred Dollars Re- !
ward for any en si' < J ('atarrh that can
not be cured bv Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. cil i:.N I; V ('<)., Props., Toledo,
Ohio.
Wo the undersigned have known F.J.
Cheney for the last fifteen years, and
believe him perfectly honorablo in all
business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligation made by
their firm.
EST & Tin w, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, o.
WAI.HI.VO, K:\n\n & MARVIN, Whole
sale Irug:'!-ts, i oledo, 0.
Hall's .111.1 Cure is taken inter
nally, aeti : <:iic<tly on the blood and
mucous rmiTeees "f tho system. Price,
Toe. per hot:;.-. Sold by all druggi&ts.
I Testimonials free.
BUSINESS BRIEFS.
McDonald sells he dress gingham.
Go to McDonald's for $1 chenile table
covers.
Picnics supplied with ice cream, cakes,
candy, etc., at low prices by Lauhach.
Wall paper, t cents per double roll, at
A. A.-Packman's. Paper hanging done
at short notice.
"Have you seen tDo new bonnet?"
"No, I have bail such a had headache
"f late, and have been so billions that I
could not go out." Remedy—Wright's
Indian Vegetable Pills.
Catch On!
Wedding rings and wedding presents
at R. K. Meyer's jewelry store. Rest
stock. Rest selection.
Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Minutes.
Dr. Agnow'a Cure for the Heart gives
perfect relief in all cases of organic or
sympathetic heart disease in thirty min
utes, and speedily effects a cure. It is a
peerless remedy for palpitation, short
ness of breath, smothering spoils, pain
in left side and all symptoms of a dis
eased heart. One dose convinces. Sold
by William Woolcock.
I'OI.ITICA I. ANMH'NCF.M KNTB.
C).\(JHEs>
JOHN LEISENRING,
of I 'ppcr Lehigh.
Siii lent t. the decision el' the Republican
congressional conventieii.
ItKPUHSKNTATIVB- -
JOHN J. McNELIS,
of 1) riff on.
solv it t> fin- decision of the Democratic
convention oi tlk• Courtii legislative district.
- E.NTATI VE
JAMES A. SWEENEY,
of Ha/.leton.
. t to ho decision (,f the Democratic
convention ol the fourth legislative district.
DREE J TO \ PKODI - INQ BTAI.UoN.
HAWKMERE.
HawUnii-v, :i handsome dark sorrel, 1511
hands, weight I.U'di, foaled mm. Special low
rale. ->ltl, lor M-asoii oi ls!|, ( an he srcn on ap
plication t'
Joseph Schat'/.le, White Haven, Pa.
SALE. A line piano, also hod-room
I suit and household goods.
I: quire of Jacobs & Daraseh.
b"H)K KENT. A large hall on llrst lloor, suit
able for society meetings, storage room or
lor any purpose I hat a large building is needed.
Apply to (Jenrgc Malinky, Pern street.
- - - 2P1.50 - - -
"\X7"ill Bring- ""Src-u.
tire Tri'b-u.n.e
F:r - - a, - - Tear.
Complexion Presert/ad
DR. HE BRA'S '
Rcmovon Freckles, Pimples \
Liver • Moles, CMackheads,
Sunburn and Tan, and ro \ I
stores the skin to its origi-
mil freshness, producing u ' 1
clear and healthy com-dUGr- !
piexion. Pnperinrtoall faco "
preparations ami perfectly harmless. At nil I
aruggiJts, or mailed for SOcta. Stud fur Circular, i
VIOL/V SKtfl SQA? t' 'lmply Incomparable an a I
rkia i So .p, nuupntk-a f..r the toilet. I.IIJ without u !
rival for tho iiur-.ry, / ■ • lately puru uu>l delicately tucdi
c n-a. A* anu.'l Wicu *25 Cents.
G. C. BITTNER 4. CO., TOLEDO, O.
£ < 'avcats.and Trade-Marks obtained, and all 1 'at *
# cut business conducted fur MODERATE FEES. #
'Our OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U S. PATENT OFFICE'
J and we can secure patent in less time than those t
,t remote from Washington. £
J Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-#
Jtion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of I
* charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. #
' A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents," with '
# cost of same in the U.S. aud foreign countries J
i *sent free. Address, £
:C. A.SNOW&CO.:
OPP. PATENT OFFICE. WASHINGTON, D.C.J
TO IKE OPPONENTS
OF THE
KNIGHTS CF LABOR.
Villi judge our organization without com- \
pleto understanding of our principles or
our position on current questions. There
is ON LY ONE authorized organ of the
Ocncral Order of the Knights or Lntior
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The best reform weekly paper
in America.
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