SOCIETY PLAYS GOLF. The English Game Hag Come to America to Stay. It tVa> Started an a Fad But Has Already Shaken the Popularity of Tenuis at Nearly All of the Kustern Resorts. COPTRIGnx, I SOB . f'HpN UDYARD KIP ~ J LI NCI is having V I golf links laid out on his es tate near Bur lington, Va. Kipling is too English to count, but everybody else who can beg, borrow or steal land enough is doing the same tiling, and so one is forced to a conclusion. Golf has vitality. It was going to be a fad. It has become a game. It lias shaken the popularity of tennis at near ly every summer resort in the east this season. Golf is contagious. One place catches it from another. Presently it will rage. The countr}' clubs are becoming noth ing but golf clubs. The chief use of the bicycle is to take you to a place where you can spend the day golfing. The man in golfing tweeds and high land gaiters takes better with the smn- L. U. STODDART. mer girl than the white duck young man; that's a pointer. The girls 3-ou pass on the country roads are sure to he discussing the wrist movements, "holes" and "drives;" that's another. Golf sprouted In earnest at Newport last summer; this year it is in full blossom. The grent canary-colored country club house out 011 the Ocean drive, that is so nondescript in its architecture without, and so luxurious within, is furnished with an eye single to the comfort of golfers. There are baths for use when 3-011 are heated, and tired with golfing. There are massage operators to rub 3*01; down when 3'ou are stiff with too prolonged following of the course. There are linir dressers to make 3*ou prett3* ngain, if you hap pen to be a woman and have gotten 3-our curls all out of order tramping over the links on a hot afternoon. The only souvenirs that Newport girls prize arc golf sticks, and if 3*ou look at the back of their frocks 3-011 will see that the Jeweled pin that catches the belt to the blouse is almost always a golf club In miniature. But at Lenox they pla3 r harder and get more out of the game. The Lenox Golf club has an eight'een-hole links and the two miles and a quarter of rough countr3' it covers gives one more than exercise enough in dog da3*s. The best girl pla3'er at Lenox this summer has been Miss Gertrude Vanderhilt., who has gone over the eutire course with eight3'-three strokes onty. Mr. James Barnes holds the record thus far this summer, with fifty-three strokes, Y-\l ."T* a* EX-GOV. WILLIAM E. RUSSELL. and that on a not very favorable after noon. There are good private links at Lenox, us well as that laid out by the Country club. Mr. Anson Phelps Stokes has a six-hole course, which is hard enough to he interesting, if not long. At Bar Harbor golf outweighs every other attraction. The headquarters of the golfers are at the beautiful Kcbo Valley clubhouse, well out 011 the Eagle Lake roud, under the mountains. and awa3* from the village. It's a sight worth a trip to Mount Desert to see Bishop Lawrence play there, his brows knit and figure poised in meditation, as I if 011 the stroke depended the future welfare of a score of souls. Even more : picturesque are the golfing attempts of the Japanese minister, Kurino. No more courageous effort to harmonize one's self with one's environment was ever seen than the speetuole of this dig '"ll v •'i THEODORE A. H. HAVEMEYER. j nified and most courteous oriental on the links, examining his golf club from end to end. Tuxedo plays golf, of course, and Mrs. Pierre Lorillard, Jr., will present silver cups for the August handicaps. j At Richfield Springs an eightecn-hole j course lias been laid out, while the ' Shinnecoelc Hills' Golf club has 11. 11. ' Bo3'esen, Elihu Root, Collector James | T. Kilbreth, and plenty of other men known all over the country, competing in "drives" and "puts," and cultivating a holy horror of "bunkers." The Shin nccock Hills'golf tournament will be gin August 20, and Judge Horace Rus sell will give a silver cup to the player making the best score over the links during the season. At Lakewood the links will be in creased to eighteen holes in Septem ber. and play promises to*hc lively all winter. Every resort of an3 f note among the White mountains has its links, and the brides at Niagara Falls forget to listen to the roar of the cat aruct in the joys of golfing. The United States Golf association now comprises ten allied clubs. Theo- ! dore A. Ilavemeycr is president, and among the most difficult and therefore most interesting links are those of the Philadelphia Country club, the Meadow 1 Brook Hunt club, at Hempstead, L. I.; : the Morris County Golf club, of Mor- j ristown, N. J.; the Chicago Golf club and the St. Andrews' club, of Yonkcrs, N. Y. There is scheduled an interna tional golf tournament to take place at Ms^ * OF.N. CHARLES J. PAINE. Niagara, September 1, and other tour- i naments will he held in Newport, Yon lcers and Philadelphia, from the Ist to the mil of October. Dr. W. Seward Webb has a good pri vate links on his Slielburn Falls farm, j though it is only a nine-hole course. And the men and women who play? Theodore A. Ilavcmcyer was almost the first American to take up the game, and has pushed it to its present popularity in Newport. He talks golf, plays golf and wears the smartest attainable golf- j ing clothes. Ex-Gov. Russell, of Massachusetts, is one of the most devoted golfers in the country, and is vice president of a golf club at Kendal Green. Gen. Charles J. Paine, who defended the America's cup with the Puritan, the Ma3'flower and the Volunteer, lias not given up yachting, hut added ; golfing to life's pleasures. The amateur golf champion of Ainer- 1 lean is Mr. L. B. Stoddart, who won the title on the links of the St. An- j drews'club at Yonkcrs, last year. In the championship tournament to he I held at Newport the first week in Oc tober, Mr. Stoddart will have for com petitor Mr. George Hunter, of the Richmond Count 3* Country club, of Roscbnnlc, Staten Island. Mr. Iluntcr holds the record over tho links of his i own club, and a pretty contest is ex- ; poctcd. There arc not many women who really play well. Mrs. W. Seward j A .'ebb is one of the best in the country. Iler record over the links at Lenox is | seventy-eight strokes. Mrs. Herman Oelriehs is a good player, but most of the girls who wield tho club do it as they play tennis, to show tartan blouses and in general, smart clothes. ! In the ladies'tournament held by the j Morris County Golf club in July, Miss ! Louise V. Field was winner. But the golf is new here yet, and twelve months ; from now the girls, if they do not all equal Miss Gertrude Vanderbilt, will have better records to show. A .-fix hole course, three Limes round, is the favorite for women. AFTER. Laugh and sing when I am gone, Gayly clock my tomb; Well ye know I do not love Aught of blight or gloom. "T Laugh and sing and drop no tears Deep the sod below It would please me best to think, Teura had ceased to flow. Gathered round my tent of green, Tell your tales of mirth; Oh, bo happy, as am I. Sleeping in the earth. And remember as you go Homeward through the grovo, That the robin's,-not tho raven's, Is the voice of lovo. —Chicago Record. A MOUNTAIN HERO. ; BY W. J. LAMPTON. tfLWiL 1 — IMBLATCH- I MAN was a moonshiner. HSH Later he be / came a murder / x j er and swung 1 / I for it, but just the same he was n*:4 it hero of tho unusual sort. Living- in the mountains of the Cum berland as he had since his birth, it was not to be expected that he could be of tlie higher type of manhood which tradition assumes to be found mostly along- the broader paths of civ ilization, yet Jim Blatchman was not found wanting when the time came, albeit there was a strange jumble in his ignorant mind of what constituted heroism. At least it may be called heroism, though Jim didn't know it by that name. Hut to the story of it. Jim was a young mountaineer of twenty-five, tall, loosely coupled, sal low of face, slow of speech, devoid of grace, and still having a heart in him which for a year or more had been wont to beat as a trip hammer when ever his eyes fell upon tho pleasant face of old Zeke Munyoti's daughter Martha. And it was noticed by the gossips of the Fork that Martha rather favored Jim, for lie owned a little farm wijh a hewed log house on it, and Martha, be ing ambitious in her social nature, felt that a hewed log house wus none too fine for her feather. True, she had not been accustomed to the luxury of hewed logs as house material, for her father's residenco was ouly of logs in the rough, but this lack rather inilamed her ambition and niado her wish the more for those things which she had not. Neither had it any appreciable effect upon her conscience that Jim made more money selling the "moonshine" that lie made than he did selling the crops that he made. It was the end, not the means there to, which most interested this moun tain maid. To Jim, however, these slight dis crepancies of character did not appeal, lie was in love with Martha, and when n man is iu that condition nothing else counts. So time trotted on, until the wedding day was almost in sight, and Martha went to the county town to spend a day aud buy herself a calico gown and a few other "weddin' lixin's." Lad day for Jim. At the tavern where Martha put up she met a fine-looking fellow, not of tho mountains, who was a deputy United States marshal by appointment, and a "revenoo" by mountain title. Usually the love of the mountaiueer for a "revenoo" is not of the kind that passeth understanding, but Martha's ambition led her in advance of her peo ple, and she looked kindly on the offi cer and listened with many a blush to his pretty speeches. \\ hen she left for her home tho officer told her lie would come to sec her, and Martha was so pleased that sho forgot all about Jim. Whether the olficer was iu love with Martha or not may not be known, but it is known that he came to see her; that he came often; that the oftener he came the better pleased he seemed to be, and the upshot of it all was that Jim felt called upon to speak to her about the officer and liis own relations to the then existing situation. "'Taiu't that I don't like you, Jim, jist ez much ez I ever did," she said to . "i'll kill tub iiound!" liim, "but, you ain't like the captain." "Hut you wuz lovin' me afore you seen him," argued Jim. "No, I wuzn't, Jim," she admitted. "I wuz try in' to, an' makin' you be lieve I wuz, but tliar wuzn't no lovo thar. Leastways, not like this IVc got for the captain." Jim got up and walked tho floor. "I'll kill the hound," ho said, and Jim had some experience in that line, and knew what he was talking about. "You might ez well kill me, too, Jim," she replied to this threat, "fer what kills him kills me." Jim sat down sobbing with a grief greater than ho could express. "Oh, Mnrthy, Marthy," he said, after a few minutes, "to think that you wuz more'ii everything in the world to me, and that thar wuzn't nothin' else 1 keered fcr ef it wuzn't you, and now jou have pive it oil up icr ft granger, And him a revengo," , . Perhaps it was not such a burst of emotional eloquence as tho more civil ized man could have poured forth at such a time, but there was all of Jim's heart and soul in it, and there can be no more than that in any human utter ance. After a long time Jim went away, and when the olficer came 011 his next visit Martha talked to liiin of this old lover of hers, and tho officer smiled softly to himself. lie knew Jim Blatchman by reputa tion, and was anxious for a personal acquaintance. Martha could bring about a meeting, and Martha did. It took place near Jim's moonshine factory in the depths of the mountains. Notwithstanding the depiity was look ing for Jim, the meeting was a sur prise to him nnd to tho one man with him. So surprising, in fact, that be fore tho officers knew exactly what hud happened Jim had them both covered with a Winchester and their hands were up in the air quite out of reach of tho guns they carried for such emer gencies. "Who arc you? What do you mean by this outrage?" stormed tho deputy marshal, not, however, taking down his hands to make gestures with, for Jim's Winchester seemed to forbid that. "I'm Jim Blatchman," replied the moonshiner, quietly, "and reckon you're the feller that Marthy loves," ; he added, gulping down a lump in his throat. Whether tho officer loved Martha did not appear to be taken into Jim's ac count. "That's none of your business," re-1 torted the deputy, who hud plenty of pcrve or he never would have held the position he did. "I reckon 'tain't," snid Jim, meeklj*, thinking of Martha all the time. The deputy was growing restive. "Well!" lie exclaimed, "when are you going to let up on this?" "And that's none o' your business," said Jim, with only tho very faintest $1 M JIM IIAD TIIEM DOTH COVERED. shadow of a smile on liis sad and sal low face. "That's a stand-off on me," laughed the deputy, nervily. "I hope, how- ! ever, you won't make it any longer than you can help, for ray arms arc getting tired." Jim passed this sally in silence. "I reckon," 110 said, gloomily, "that j you and ycr pardner thar come pokin' ! 'round here fer me, didn't you?" "That's about the size of it," admit ted the deputy, frankly. "I reckon you know what a revenoo gits when he gits kctched in these parts, don't you?" The deputy lowered his hands just a hair's breadth. "Don't do that eg'in," warned Jim, "er you'll make mo fergit my dooty. What will they do with 1110 ef 1 kill both 11 v you'uns?" ho went on. "Hang you as high as Hainan," promptly replied the deputy. "Ef it's only one of you, will it be the same?" "Exactly." Jim smiled at this as if justice were somewhat of a joker. lie stood as he had been standing ! since lie had stopped the two officers, j with his gun at his shoulder, then i without a word of warning a sharp re- ; port rang out and the man by the ! deputy marshal's side dropped dead in his tracks. The deputy was almost unnerved by the awful suddenness of it, but he ■ never flinched. Jim threw his smoking Winchester at the deputy's feet. "I'm ycr prisoner," he said hopeless- j ly, and then with a nod toward the j dead man, "it wuzn't him that Marthy ® loves." And thus Jim Match man vindicated his honor as a moonshiner, and re moved the obstacle in the path of Mar tha's happiness.—N. Y. Sun. Suicide of u Bravo Old Salt. China's fleet is now a thing of the past, and many gallant men have per ished with it, striving vainly to save l their country's credit, with fate | against them, and handicapped by cor- i ruption, treachery and incompetence 011 shore. Chief among those who have I died for their country is Admiral Ting I Ju Chang, a gallant soldier and true gentleman. Betrayed by his country- I men, lighting against odds, almost his last official act was to stipulate for tho lives of his officers and men. His own he scorned to save, well knowing that | his ungrateful country would prove less merciful than his honorable foe. Bitter, indeed, must have been the re flections (if tho old wounded hero in that midnight hour, as lie drank the poisoned cup that was to give him rest. —Commander MoGiffin, of the "Chen Yuen," in Century. —The Weslcyans were named from ' John Wesley. They were called Metli- ' odists in derision because Wesley and • his companions methodized their time ! in order to conserve it and do the more work. In England the Primitive Methodists are called "Ranters" from their habit of preaching 011 the streets or in public places or wherever they can get an audience. —lllinois is first iu broom corn, with 15,032,502 pounds. USURIOUS DESPOTISM. Shylock Methods Employed by Berlin Money Lenders. Thousands of rrusslaiis Driven to Rulu or Exile Every Year—Marry ing for Money the Sole Remedy. All Berlin sighs under the despotism of—usury. The government, or at least the pillars of tho government, sigh and suffer the most. For the past six months one huge trial for usury has followed another, and tho end is not j'et. In one of these trials last fall, says the San Francisco Argonaut, there were no less than one hundred and twenty-seven defendants, and the num ber of witnesses amounted to nearly four hundred. A number of the worst usurers have been found guilty and sentenced to terms of imprisonment ranging from six months upward to seven years, besides heavy tines in money. Quite a number of the shrewd est and most dangerous had to be ac quitted for lack of proof. The young capital of the new German empire will remain the most usury-ridden city in the world, where the vampireism of a legion of Shylocks steadily sucks the life-blood of the higher as well as lower classes, and drives annually hundreds i and thousands into ruin or into exile, i The cause is expressed by the un translatable word "standerstruecksich ! ten," by which is meant tho thou j sand and one considerations which | Germans deem due to their rank or station in life. Prussia is a poor coun try, even to-day, after amalgamating into its domain large districts of more fertile and wealthier regions, such as Nassau, Ilessc-Cassel, districts in Han- I over and by the Rhine. The Prussian nobility is the poorest of any civilized i country, with the single exception of Italian. But tho Prussian nobility, nevertheless, is as proud as the Spanish, vastly prouder than the British. ! Their poverty now and their claims to consideration, their station in life, their prominent position in the state lead to never-ceasing conflict. Their peculiar code of honor forbids tliem to i engage in money-making pursuits, least of all in trade or commerce, and nothing is left them to live in accord ance with the cast-iron notions of their mind but either to enter tho army as professional soldiers, to enter the gov erment employ, or else to till the mea ; ger paternal acres. j The latter occupation—which used to furnish to brothers, cousins and sons of j such agricultural noblemen the secret i wherewithal to live standesgesmaes (i. I c., according to their rank) in Berlin or ! elsewhere—is becoming less and less ; profitable, owing to cheap American : and East Indian wheat, cheap Russian i*3 e, and cheap Australian meat. And the pay of Prussian army officers or government employes is still so wholly ! inadequate that it does not suffice even I the most modest expectations up to tho ' age of forty or so. A "money marriage" is the sole rem edy left them to adjust their affairs under normal conditions; but "money ; marriages," too, are becoming less and I less frequent, since the number of claimants to each wealthy girl's hand is yearly becoming larger. The hunt * for an American heiress or for some other exotic "goldfish" is hence mcn- I tioned in the lcx'con of these unen -1 viable young men as the dernier ressort. This rapid pen picture of tho ; actual conditions confronting nine tcnths of the young Prussian nobles on i entering life is by no means complete. 1 But it will serve to show why the usurer in Berlin has become a power of the first magnitude. 1 Each year scores of cases occur in Berlin of young hopefuls ending their ; brief butterfly existence by a well directed bullet; of despairing fathers 1 quitting the service of that state to j which they had devoted the best years of their life at a personal and financial ; sacrifice; of middle-aged men disappear ' ing (and often turning up "again in | miserable guise in some transatlantic ! ■ country) from their old-time haunts, , and all this because the usurer at last has drawn the net close about them. And the number of poor, dowerless | girls, of sisters nnd brides of these same young men, girls who of their : own free choice abandon every hope | of wifehood and motherhood simply to ! enable their lords of tho other sex, ! their brothers in most cases, to cut a i figure for a time, to live standesge macs, is fairly innumerable. These poor girls, silent, uncomplaining vie- j tims of hoary prejudice, are the real j heroines in these tragedies of life. ! That is why Berlin is honeycombed i with usury, and that is why usury is a regular profession—or, rather, a fine art. lltcyelo Affects Summer Resorts. A new phase of the bicycle fad lias ' come to light, says tho New York cor respondent of tho Pittsburgh Dispatch, I ! and it bodes no good to the hotel men j at tho shore or at tho mountains, j j Thousands of New York wage-earners, j ! as well us more fa- ored ones, who have j heretofore spent from two weeks to ! two months in the country eacli sum- j mer, have this year invested their savings in the alluring wheel and will stay at home, speeding 011 the boule vards and through the parks of New York, Brooklyn and New Jersey. When papa says to the ruler of the household i now: "Well, where shall we go for the summer?" Mother casts an ej r c on her new bloomers and replies: "Out on the Riverside drive every day. Besides, | you must got new wheels for each of the girls when they come home from j school." So tho bicycle fever has ! caught us all. Rattler and Wild Cut. Herman Brawser, of Port Jervis, N. Y., while going to work witnessed a terrific battle between a full-grown wild cat and a big rattlesnake in a nar row cleft of rocks. The rattler won, the cat dying from numerous bites. | Brawser killed the snake. It support ! Ed fourteen rattles and measured three feet six inches, Man iMSlEawwl V Bill i 1 1> ■n"■ Ml "jUBU.- ." Vi 1- r- ■T ■ I Anthracite coal used exclusively, insuring ; cleanliness and com tort. ARRANGEMENT OP PASSENGER TRAINS. MAY. 15, 1805. LEAVE FREELAND. 005, 8 25, 9 33. 10 41 o m. 13ft, 2 27, 3 40, 4 25, t' 12, 0 58, 8 05, 8 57 p m, for Drifton, Jeddo, Lum ber Yard, Stockton and Huzicton. 0 05, 8 25. 1) 33 a in, 1 35, 3 40, 4 25 p m, for Mauch Chunk, Alleutown, Bethlehem, Pldla., ! Gast-on and New York. 0 05, 9 33, 10 41 am, 2 27, 4 25, 058 pin, fori Mahanoy City, Shenundoah and I'ottsville. 7 20, 0 10. 10 50 a in, 1154,4.34 p in, (via High- i land Branch) lor White Haven, Glen Summit, j Wilkee-Barre, Pittston and L. and B. Junction. 1 SUNDAY TRAINS. 11 40 ft m and 3 45 p m for Drifton, Jeddo, Lum ber Yard and Ha/Joton. 3 45 pm for Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenau- 1 doah. New York and Philadelphia. ARRIVE AT FREELAND. 7 20, 9 27, 10 60, 11 54 u m, 12 69, 2 13, 4 34, 5 33, 0 58, 8 17 pm, from Ilazleton, Stockton, Lum ber 5 ard. Jeido and Drifton. 7 20, 9 27, 10 50 am, 2 13, 4'-44, 0 58 p ni, from Delano, Mahanoy City and Shenai.Jouh (via New Boston Braneii). 12 58, 5 33, 8 4V pm, from New York, Easton, ! 1 hiladelphiu, Bethleliom, Alleutown and Munch Chunk. 9 27, 10 50 a in, 12 58, 5 33, 0 58, 8 47 p m, from j I Easton, Pliiiu., Bet lik-lnm and Mniicli Chunk, i I 983. 10 41 a m,2 27,0 58 pin lrom White Haven. I (ilen Summit, Wilkes-Barre, Pittston and L. uu< ; B. J unction (via Ilighluud Branch). SUNDAY TRAINS. ; 11 31 a m and 331p m, from liuzleton, Lum i her 5 ard, Jeddo and Drifton. 11 31 a m from Delano, Ilazleton, Philadelphia and Easton. 331 p m from Delano and Mahanoy region. j For further information inquire of Tiekct j Agents. CHAS. S. LEE, Gen'l Pass. Agent, ROMAN 11. WILBUR, Gen. Supt, Rust! SSiv.' A. W. NONNEM At'll Kit, Ass'l (i. I'. A., South Bethlehem, Pa. DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA ANI. JL SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in offect January 20, 1895. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Kekloy, Huzle ' Brook. Stockton. Beaver Meadow Koud, Bonn and Ilazleton Junction at. OUO, (5 10 am, 12 on, I 4 15 p m, daily except Sunday, and 7 U3 a in, 2 38 i P m, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Harwood, Cranberry, Tonihieken and Deriuger at t> (X) a in, 12 (W p ui, daily except Sunday; and 7 03 a in, 2 38p ni, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction, Harwood Itoad, Humboldt Koud, Oucidu and Shoppton utli 10 a in, 1209, 4 15 p ni, daily except Sunday; and 7 03 a in, 2 38 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Ilazleton Junction for'Harwood, Cranberry, Toinhickcn and Deriuger at 1135 a m, 1 58 p in, daily except Sunday; and 8 53 a m, 4 22 p IU, Sunday. Trains leave ilazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood itoad, Humboldt Koad, Oneida and Sheppton at 9 47, 9 37 a m, 12 40, 4 40 p in, daily except Sunday; and 787 a m, 308 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Dcringcr for Tonihieken, Cran berry, Harwood, ilazleton Junction, itoan, Beaver Meadow Itoad. Stockton, Ilazle Brook, Eekley, Jeddo and Drifton at 2 55, 007 p in, daily except Sunday; and 987 a m, 507 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt ! Koad, Harwood itoad, Oneida Junction, Ilazle- ! ton Junction a-d Koitu at 8 is, 10 15am, 115, i 5 25 p in, daily except Sunday; and 8 09 a in, 3 44 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow Bond, Stockton. Ilazle Brook, Eekley, Jeddo and Drifton at 10 15 a in, 525 p m, daily, except Sunday; and 8 09 a in, 3 44 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Ilazleton Junction for Beaver Meadow Itoad, Stockton, Ilazle Brook, Eekley, Jeddo and Drifton at 10 38 n ni, 3 20, 5 47, 0 4U*p in, daily, except Sunday;and 10 08a m, 5 38 p m, Sunday. All trains connect at Ilazleton Junction with c'ectrie ears tor Ha/letou, Jeanesvilie, Auden ried and other points on the Traction Com pany's line. Trains leaving Drifton at 0 10 a m, Ilazleton Junction at 937 a ni, and Sheppton at 8 Is a ni, connect at Oneida .1 unction with Lehigh Valley trains east and west. Train leaving Drifton at 000 a in makes con nection at. Dcringcr with I*. K. It. train for Wilkes-Burre, Sutibury, llurrishurg and points west. DANIEL COXK, Superintendent. [ EH Hi 11 Tit ACTION COMPANY. J J Freeland Branch. First ear will leave En eland for Drifton, Jeddo, Japan, oakdale, Emrvalo, Harieigli, Milriesvilie, Lit timer and Ilazleton at 0.12 a. in. After this ears will leave every thirty minutes throughout the day until 11.1.2 p. m. On Sunday lirst car will leave at 0.40 a. in., the next ear will leave at 7.35 a. in., and then every thirty minutes until i 1.0.5 p. in. ALEX. SHOLLACE, BOTTLER. Eeer, Sorter, "'Wine, ancl I_iiq.\3.crs. C'or. Wulnut and Washington streets, Frcoland. | GEORGE FISHER, dealer in FRESH BEEF, FORK, VEAL, MUTTON, BOLOGNA, SMOKED MEATS, ETC., ETC. Call at No. 0 Walnut, street., Freeland, or wait for the delivery wagons. VERY LOWEST PRICES. THE ADVERTISING KATES OF THE "TRIBUNE" AllE SO LOW AND THE ADVEUTISING SO SATISFACTORY Til \T TH E IN VES I MENT 18 SUB STANTIALLY RETURNED IN A VERY SHORT TIME BY THE BEST CLASS OF BUYERS IN THE REGION WHO READ THESE COLUMNS REGULARLY. POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT. POOR DIRECTOR - A. S. MONROE, of Ilazleton. Subject to the decision of the Republican nominating convention. FACTORY: CIIESTNVT STREET, HHTWKKN cnuno/I AI\JI I.A VJTEL, U A/. LUTON. Arc the only HIGH GRADE and strict ly first class pianos sold direct from the factory to the final buyer. Are the only pianos on which you can save the dealers' profits and enor- ' mouß expenses, agents' salaries and music teachers' commissions. Are the only pianos every agent condemns, for the natural leason that NO AGENTS are em ployed by us. Are the only pianos which are not sold in a single store in the United States, because we closed all our agencies over a year ago, and now sell only to the final buyer, dt the actual cost of production at our factory. Wo have no store on Broad street, but the factory ware room is open every day till C p. 111., ana oaturclay evenings from 7 to 10. Kellmer Piano Co. A Great Surprise Awaits You In all departments of our store. Ha ving taken ad vantage of the first oppor tunity to purchase from | the best markets, we are enabled to present to you the newest designs of the season. MACKINTOSHES i With prices ranging from $2.75 to $5.50 ■ each. Why wait until the stormy seiiß. son opens to buy these articles and tliew* run the risk of ruining a suit of good clothes or perhaps your health. Buy I now and save trouble hereafter. COATS AND CAPES We are able to offer you a finer line of I goods now than later in the season, i Greater care and more time are spent on the garments made early, because the factories are not pushed so hard with orders, whilst later in the y.ear or ders are plentiful and Coats and Capes are put together in great haste. FUR CAPES Prices range from $7.50 to $37.50. As line a selection sis you will find in the city. Ladies' misses' and children's Coats from the cheapest to the finest. We shall be pleased to show goods at sill times, even should you not wish to buy at the time. PETER DEISROTH, Mansion House Block, 41 W. Broad St., HI.A.ZLETODSr. PHILIP 7 GERmf \ ' I J 35: a LEADING Jeweler and Practical Watchmaker In Freeland. Corner Front and Centre Streets. T. CAMPBELL^" dealer In Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes. Also PURE WINES and LIQUORS FOIt FAMILY AND MEDICINAL PURPOSES. Cor. Centre and Main Streets, CC Freeland. m Harness! I laniess! Light Carriage Harness, $5.50, $7, $9 and $10.50. Heavy Express Harness, SIO.OO, sl9, S2O and $22. Heavy Team Harness, double, $25, S2B and SBO. GEO. WISE, Jeddo and Freeland, Pa.
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