FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. THOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE SUBSCRIPTION - RATES: One Year ■ $1 50 Six Months '■'> Four Mouths Two Months Subscribers are requested to observe the figures following the name on the labels of their papers. By reference to these they ean ascertain to whut date their subscription is paid. For instance: Grover Cleveland 28June96 means that Grover is paid up to June 28, 1896. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report promptly to this office whenever you do not receive your paper. All arrear ages must be paid when paper is discontinued FREELAND, NOVEMBER 18, 1895. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington. November 15, 1895. Does President Cleveland desire to be renominated? That is about the first question asked by every Democrat who has arrived in Washington since it was published that Vice President Steven son had said that Mr. Cleveland would bo nomiuatcd again if ho wished to be. It is probably because many Democrats have regarded Mr. Stevenson as a prob able candidate for the nomination him self that his opinion has attracted such wide attention. Mr. Stevenson has the reputation of being an unusually shrewd obsorver of events in the political world, and, although ho has never had an open rupture with the administration, it is known that he has differed witli it in a number of notable instances. It is be cause Democrats know these things that they regard his words as significant, and are asking whether Mr. Cleveland wants to run again. It can be stated upon the highest authority that he does not; but tho number of Democrats who believe that he will accept if the convention nominates him is much larger today than it was before the recent elections. Nobody would be surprised if the story placing Secretary Carlisle on the vacant seat in the supreme court turnsout to be true. President Cleveland thought enough of Secretary Carlisle as long ago as during his first administration to make him a justice—the chief justice, in fact—of tho supreme court, and would have done so had not a gossiping tongue repeated whero he would bo sure to hear of it a bit of scan dal connected with a night's episode in the private life of Mr. Carlisle. Since that the president's admiration lias been increased for Secretary Carlisle in numerous ways, not the least of which was his unqualified endorsement of tin; president's financial position, and it would not be strange if ho carried out the intention ho first had, provided, of j course, that Secretary Carlisle desires It. I Secretary Olney has received a letter from Rev. Dr. 11. O. Dwight, whose duty it is to watch over tho American mis sionaries in Turkish territory, highly commending the promptness and energy j which have been displayed by Mr. ! Terrell, the United States minister to ' Turkey, during the Armenian troubles. Dr. Dwight says he speaks from person al knowledge and adds to tho force of what he writes by informing the secre tary that Mr. Terroll has no knowledge of his having written. This ought to be a sufficient refutation of tho charges of Indifference and carelessness which have been made against Mr. Terrell by his enemies in this country. It would be interesting to know whether any politics was talked whin President Cleveland went to New York to attend the marriage of ex-Secretary Whitney's daughter. It was the first time the president and his ex-secretary of tho navy had met for several years, and there was much they might have said to each other that would have in terested Democrats everywhere. No man in this country is a bettor judge of trend of political sentiment than William C. Whitney, and no man is bettor quali fied to be a safe adviser of the adminis tration. Secretary Olney lias received a copy of the proceedings of the French court mar tial which sentenced tho negro Waller, who is an ex-United States consul, to twenty years imprisonment under the charge of having betrayed French mili tary movoiuonts in Madagascar, and tho wife of the imprisoned man has given tho secretary all tho information in her possession, documentary and otherwise. It cannot he stated what Mr. Olney thinks of the case, but others who have had access to the information regard the outlook for Waller as a bad one, and say that the case had boon misrepresented for political effect. All tho members of the cabinet, ex cept Secretary Carlisle, have completed their annual reports, and the president is daily working on his annual message to congress. Secretary Carlisle's report, like the president's message, will not be made public until after it goes to con gress. Tho others will bo given out in a few days. S. When Baby wan sick, we gave her Castorla. When she waa a Child, she cried far Caatoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Caatoria. When she bod Children, she gave them Caatoria Old newspapers for sale. ART IN ARCHITECTURE. Description of a Modol House at Moderate Cost. What Can lie Done with Seventeen llnn< dred Dollar* —A Home of Which Any Man or Woman Might Be Proud. Written for This Paper. This very pretty home will cost $1,70Q There are four rooms 011 the first flool and three rooms on the second floor. The parlor is 12 feet G inches by 12 feci 6 inches; sitting- room, 12x16 feet; dim ! ing-room, 12x13 feet; kitchen, 11 feet { I inches by 12 feet 6 inches; pantry, 4xs j feet; front veranda, 8 feet 6 inches by 21 feet;rear porch, CxlO feet. The size# FRONT VIEW OF HOUSE. of the chambers are 13x14 feet; 11 feet 6 inches by 14, and 12x16. All chambers have large closets. The bathroom is Bx9 feet. The painting ; s three-coat work and plastering two-coat work. The house has stone foundation, brick chimneys, shingles on roof and gable. All gutters and conductor pipes are galvanized iron. Glass is American, double-thick. The basement is cement ed, and has laundry, coal bins, fruit rooms and storerooms. The studding is 2x4; joist, 2x10; beams, 8x10; posts, | i ■ i PLAN OF FIRBT FLOOR. 8x8; supporting beam, of necessary strength. The siding is 4-inch. The best of sheathing, fence flooring, roof boards of fencing, subfloors of fenc ing and iron chimney brace are used. Composition carving is used in front gable. Tar paper is laid on outside walls and between floors. Additional features are electric bells, red oak man tel, porcelain-lined sink, drawers and shelves in closets, and washbowl, closet and bathtub in bathroom. The house is to be piped for gas and furnace. Bevel plate glass is used in front door. f i I phamAer z] //*//# I ! &' < *jJ | ||= i- a//* ~~ PLAN OF SECOND FI OOR. Georgia pine finish throughout all rooms and neat hardware for all doors, etc., are essentials. The size of the house upon the ground is 22x38 feet, not Including projections or porches. The art glass in transom over large front window adds much to the attractiveness of the place. The walls of first and second stories will be back plastered. Tint the walls and coiling of hall maroon, of parlor yellow, of sittting-room blue, dining-room terra cotta, kitchen green. Maple floor is laid in kitchen, pantry and bath* room; all other floors will be of pine. The color of the exterior of the house may be brown with white trimmings. The cistern will hold 30 barrels of water, and the galvinized iron boiler will hold 30 gallons of water. All doors are 2 feet 8 inches wide, 7 feet high and 1% inches thick. The shin gles for the roof are to be dipped in stain made from mineral paint and boiled linseed oil; and when the shin | gles are all placed on the roof apply | a brush coat to them. The square 1 columns on front veranda will be 5x5 ; inches and have %-inch fluting extend- j ing from the base to cap mold. The height of first story is 9x6 inches; I second story, 9 feet. The gutters will be made on the roof. Ridge boards j are 1% inches thick. All sash to have weights and Silver Lake sash cord. GEORGE A. W. KINTZ. AN ANATOMIST'S IDEA. Ho Demonstrate* Srientideally That Wom en Aro the Weaker Rex. In ft paper read before the recent Anthropological congress at Cassc! Prof. Walreyer, of Berlin, a very dis tinguished anatomist, attempted tc prove scientifically that women are thr weaker sex,and his arguments have al ready aroused an immense amount oJ antagonism among the women of Ber lin and Vienna. The learned anatomist v.ent on to discuss the general pointf of difference between the two sexes, dividing them into primary and sec i ondary, after which he set Jiimsolf to ' show that the human mule has a much i more developed muscular and bone sys tem than the female, and has more seri ous claims to be regarded as a powerful machine. Among differences of great er or lesser importance, he noticed th fact that the index finger in the femab often extends beyond the middle finger that her teeth formation is very differ ent from that of the male, as is also thr skull. He laid special stress on thr difference in the weight of the brain ' and the development of particular part? of that organ in the two sexes, differ ences which are noticeable from the first day of the birth of a boy or girl. But the question of the difference in the blood was that which seemed tc clinch the matter, over and above which it has caused no end of bad blood out side the walls of the museum in which the congress held Its sittings. It ap pears that there is a difference in the "thickness," and it is not by any mean?- to the advantage of the female. As n matter of scientific fact, indeed, accord ing to the professor, one cubic centi meter of blood taken from a man con tains an averugo of 5,000 red blood corpuscles, whereas the same quantity in a woman lias no more than 4,500. Amd these red blood cells are absolutely , indispensable to the processes of ani mal life, the very quintessence, so to < say, of existence. This, according to the leurned professor, is one of the most characteristic of the differences be tween the male and the female, and the 1 one which recurs with the greatest ■ regularity. The practical conclusion 1 < be drawn from it, concludes the Ger man anatomist, cannot be too strongly recommended to the attention of the women and the men who are now at the head of the movement the object of which is to widen woman's sphere by extending it to occupations and pro fessions now confined to men. They should, he added, be extremely careful not to overstep the limits clearly laid down by nature herself in the physica' organization of the female. THERMOMETER TESTS. llow You Can Tell Whether Your neat Marker 1B Kellahle or Not. To tell whether a thermometer ac curately does its work, invert the in strument. If the mercury does not fall to the end, or if it breaks into several small columns, the thermometer con tains air and is inaccurate. If perfect made, the slender thread should fill the tube, or should break off at the bulb ; and fall to the end of the tube. There is another interesting fad about thermometers. Nine persons out of ten think the mercurial column round, but that is not the case. Thr thread of mercury in thermometers Is flat. If it were round the column could hardly be seen, for the opening of the tube is as fine as the finest thread. Rome eight or ten years ago a Boston manu facturer introduced the scheme of coat ing the back of the tube with white siz ing. That makes the column of mer cury stand out plain and distinct. Thermometers are cheaper and bet ter than ever before. You can now buy a heat-marker for 25 cents, but a first class instrument will cost you $2. A cheap instrument Is like a cheap watch —it is unreliable. The reason for this is that a perfect thermometer has a scale of its own. The cheap thermom eter is made on guesswork. Hence, you see a difference of two, three or five degrees between thermometers in the same locality on the same day. The most sensitive heat-marker is the radiometer, which was invented by r Mr. Crookes. It consists of four arms suspended on a steel pivot, rotating like a miniature wind gauge, and the whole affair is inclosed in a glass tube from which the air has been exhausted. The light |,of a candle one or two feet ft way causes the arms to rotate. Quite as sensitive is the thermopile, which is used to detect the faint rays of heat transmitted from the moon and stars fo this cold world. The Earth'* Gigantic Shallow. The length of the shadow which the earth casts intospacc has attracted some 1 attention since the eclipse of the moon. , This shadow is in the form of a cone with the diameter of the earth as its 1 base. It is 864,000 miles long. That i is If you travel into space, away from the i earth, more than three times as far as > the moon, the shadow would still shield you from the sun, provided you re l mained on what muy be called the night I side of the earth. The diameter of the . sun is 866,000 miles, that of the earth is 7.92G miles, and the distance from the sun to the earth is 93,000,000 miles fetatlstlcs of .Sole Leather. The average wnlker wears away two inches of shoe leather in a year. A pair of boots that would "last a life time" would, consequently, have to be , provided with soles from eight to nine t feet thick. Underground Wire* in London.* i In 18G9 there were in London only I 500 miles of underground wires, where as there are now 13,000 utiles. i HEAVY FAILiE!^ One of the largest clothing manufacturers in New York City failed recently for 106,000 dollars. Owing to a disagreement among the creditors a, satisfactory settlement could not be made, so the goods were ordered sold at auction. Victor Morris, auctioneer and commission merchant, of 5 and 7 White street, New York, conducted the sale, and through him we have se cured a tremendously large quantity of first-class, stylishly-made goods at about one-third of their wholesale value. These goods are all of the latest styles, having been made up for this season's Fall and Winter trade, and are of the finer grades of cloth and the best workmanship. The purchase also includes a large line of fine piece goods, both for suitings and trouserings, many of them being imported goods. , ////iS 7iS 01 A LIFETIME! We have been wide awake to your interests—be wide awake also known of sacrifice many years in the clothing business we can positively state that never before have we THESE GOODS WILL EE PLACED OUST SATE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1895, -A_T 9 O'CLOCK IML, and will continue 30 days or until the entire lot is sold. A dollar saved is a dollar earned. Just cast your eye over these few prices and ascertain how much you will earn by taking advantage of this monster sale. One man's loss is another man's gain. Every Inhabitant of the Coal Regions will be the Gainer! SUITS: OVERCOATS: Mc "'" sin f' nan ? double-breasted heavy winter salts, that are sold In Just think of buying a man's heavy chinchilla overcoat, black and - any other clothing store for not loss than 8(1 o-$7, $2.00 bl 10, worth ?n, for only $3 76 Men's magnificent all-wool business suits, bluo and black, single and - __. ~ , double-breasted, worth $lO 4.58 ? heavy boaver black, blue or brown, single and double-breasted A - Men's all-wool cheviot suits, all colors, In slnglo and double-breasted, - Q overcoats, good enough for anyone to wear, worth sl2 tosl4 for only 4.54 guaranteed strictly all wool and fast colors, worth 810 ' 4.58 Mon's English Molton, blue and black, strictly all wool overcoats, made „ Mens elegant silk mixture casslmere suits, wed niado In the latest In latest style, oxtra long, worth fid to *lB 8 48 styles, worth 814 6.28 , Men's extra heavy twilled and Scotch plaid chovlots, single and donblo- _ „ _ Men's oxtra fine Carrls melton overcoats, made In tho very latest eat , . breasted, guaranteed all wool, worth 818 7.48 ai d style, fully worth 820 to 823 1U.24 Men fiinl a wniTh r Q e^>io 9^ ' the klnd of a ,hlft| ng 9uit y° u wont, „_ . Men's heavy ulsters—you never saw such quality for the money—extra „„ . fully wortl 89 to 810 O. / f length, worth 87 to ?8 1 2 24 Mens splendid black and bluo corkscrew suits, sacks and cutaways, „ „ ... , worth 814 6.48 Mens extra heavy all wool Shetland ulsters, wool . oc> _ Men's Imported French clay diagonal dress suits, well mado up, equal ,_ _ 0 Hied, extra length, worth 89, sl2 and 16 4.28 5.28 7.48 to custom made, best trimmings, worth 826 12.98 Boys' suits, extra heavy and serviceable, long pants, agos 14 to 30 years _ „ Men s extra fine clay diagonal and fancy mixed w irsted coat and vest, < < A 0 w.irth anywhoro from $6 to 87 1 T4 workmanship equal to best custom work, worth 82# 11.40 Children's suits, of good quality and up to date stylo, 8.69 81.39 $1.99 Boys'oxtra heavy all wool cheviot suits, single and double-breasted, _ _ worth 1.50 2.50 4.00 blue and black, fast color, well worth $8 to $9 ' 3.68 $3.28 will buy a child's oxtra fine suit, worth $6 to $7. Children's capo overcoats v , . „ , from 74c up. * on ,an uuy an oxtra fine, all wool, silk mixed casslmere suit, that Is r- oo Men's pants, all sizes 8.48 8.78 $1.48 $1.98 82.69 $3.24 fully worth sl2, for 5.28 i,y ort ,'' . . 100 1 - 50 8 - 30 # - 50 *- 50 6°o Boys'overcoats, first class, ages 14 to 19 _ Children s knee pants, lined all through, 17c; worth 95c. yam, worth $4, $6, $8 and sll 1.74 2.28 3.28 5 48 AS AN EXTRA INDUCEMENT^ to show what we can do in our custom department, we will include the piece goods secured by us in this lot, in this sale instead of placing them with our regular stock of suitings. Men's all wool cheviot suits to order, worth S2O - $lO 98 Men's all wool fancy mixed cassimere suits to order, worth S2O - 10 98 Men's blue and black all wool corkscrew suits, to order, worth $23 - 14 -4:8 Men's heavy twilled vicuna cheviot suits to order, worth $25 - - 15 4:8 An extra fine imported clay diagonal suit to order, worth $27 - - 15 78 Overcoats to order, worth eighteen, twenty and twenty-seven dollars, for $11.48, $13.68, $17.48 Remember those goods will be cut by our regular cutter, who has had years of New York City experience, and will be made up by our own experienced hands, who are employed by us all the year. The same workmanship and trimmings as we have been sing on our regular goods, before inaugurating this enormous sale, will be continued. If a garment docs not fit you are not expected to take it. All garments fitted on before before being finished and all made on our own premises A PERFECT FIT AND BEST TRIMMINGS GUARANTEED TO ALL! ~Y T^ X T, foT this "Pl> ortu aity and then come 50 miles to take advantage of this sale. Store open from ,a.m. to 10.30 p. m. Look well before entering so you do not miss the right place. If you are a stranger in town and don t know where our store is located, ask any little child you meet on the street and he will toll you Br leaving a small deposit with us we will lav aside any article you wish for a period of 30 davs. If you are not able to attend thu great sale on the opening day you can call any time during the sale and we are sure you will be pleased. "menu ni Men's 4-ply linen collars, all the latest styles, - 8c euffs, " " . Ho Men's genuine celluloid collars, latest styles, - 6c cuffs, " - 8c Men's 4-in-hands, tecks and bows, worth 50c, now 18c Seventy-live cent neckwear, now - 26c Men's heavy gray shirts and drawers, each - 19c That the material alone in every article herein mentioned cost, without workmanship, much more than the prices we are offering them at. We have only space enough to mention but a small number of the bargains we secured, and therefore we advise you one and all to call and examine our stock. Wo will not ask you to buy, for the goods at these prices will sell them selves Wo will pay carfare and incidental expenses to any person living within a radius of 50 miles, who does not find everything as advertised. To make a complete bargain sale we have marked down the prices of all our hats for this sacrifice! Men's Derbys, all the latest styles, 38c, 79c, 97c, $1.24, $1.48, $1.98. These hats sell regularly at from $1 to $4, and are fully worth the money. Remember this is no bankrupt sale, no sheriff's sale, no fire sale, no railroad wreck sale, no old stock But a legitimate bargain sale, held by a citizen and property holder of the borough of Freeland, who has been in businAm here for the past 10 years, and expects to remain here a great many more. We do not hold this sale back until you have hnvitvh* your supplies, but have it going on when you are most in need of them. Carfare Paid to Anyone Purchasing Goods to the Amount of $lO or More. Don't forget the date of this sale, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1895, at 9 a. m., to continue until the entire lot is sold —FREELAND'S--K: LEADING GLOTHIER AND TAILOR, I. REFOWICH. 49 Centre St ~ Two doors Above Wear Well Shoe House, Freeland, Pa.