' i will exhibit in Freeland Friday, / 7 August 21. i' ' w "\ •" ii' 1 i> Admission, - - 20c Children Under 9, 10c . -■ -- A V. : '' v ' / > J O KM - /••■-■-' ' t ft V ... :u,i A:7? •.•: - ■ , 7. A \ ?" •' -'s *&, V i v 1 7: Performances at 2 and 8 p. m. Crand street parade at 10 a. m. I'OLITIC AI. ANNOUNCFM 10NTS. "LjlOU COUNTY COMMISSION Ell— TIIOS. M. DULLARD. of Wilkcsburre. Subject to the decision of the Democratic county convention. Cut'NTV ( 'OMMISSIONEU HENRY MARTIN, of Ha/.loton. Subject to tin- decision of the Democratic county < oii\> ntion. tpOit SEN A i • l; DANIEL J. MCCARTHY, of Freeland. Subject tot he decision of the Democratic LAOLT lIEHISTKi: OR WlbbS AND CLEILK V or OKI'H AN> COl'ltT JOHN J. RUTS LIN, of Sugar Notch. Subject to the decision of the Democratic PERSONALITIES. While at New York last week A. (leojijpert ami wife made arrangements to have, their daughter, Miss Annie, enter the lloston Conservatory of Music next month. Misses Susie Mundie, Dolly Mackin and Mrs. .lohn Turnhach, of Wilkes harre, arc the quests of Attorney .lohn M. C'arr and wife. William F. BauclnT and family remov ed from Berwick to this place last week. They were residents of Freeland several years ago. Miss Sallie Roth, bookkeeper at Dau bach's confectionery establishment, is enjoying her vacation at Harvey's Lake. Henry Krause and Miss Maggie Jami son, hoth of South Heborton, will be married on Wednesday of next week. Mrs. Callahan and son Patrick and daughter Sadie of Plains, are visiting Hugh Malloy. A young son arrived last week to brighten the home, of Jerry McCarthy and wife. Ulysses (I. Fetterinau and Miss Diddle Moses will 1)0 married on September 10. There is nothing cheap about the Wear Well footwear except the price, it can't be lower. Try their shoes. FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established IC3B. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE ! TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year sl.ft) Six Months 75 Four Months ... .fit) I'wo Months St The date which the subscription is paid to is HI the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. For instance: (i rover Cleveland 28June97 means that Orover is paid up to June 28,1897. Keep the figures in advanee of the present dat e, lteport promptly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. I'll i: FLA NIL PA.. AUGUST 17. 181)0. ltryan lias Made Them Desperate. The unprecedented ••audaciousness" exhibited by William J. Bryan in going within a stone's throw of Wall street to receive hi* formal notification, and there delivering a masterly and un assailable argument in dofonse of every plank of the Chicago platform, has arous ed the gold men's press as no other man lias ever done. With one accord they ilcw into a rage the following day, and denunciation, abuse, vile epithets and disgraceful caricatures have been the predominant features of their columns since. Bryan's speech stunned the in for the moment, and when they recovered thorn delves they found his words were indis putable. Maddened and chagrined at the thought that 00,000 American voters battled for admission to hear the issues of •he day discussed honestly, truthfnil\ and iiit• l.igently by the standard bearer f tin* common people, the press of the bondholders, hankers and brokers could not conceal its disappointment at being unable to refute his words, and their frothings, ravings and scurrilous attacks proclaim them to be in a plight that is pitiable. Powerful as gold may be, there is not "iiough of it on earth to buy arguments with which that speech can be refuted. Truth cannot be overthrown by dross, and the frenzied condition into which ihe monicd press of this nation has worked itself is plain proof of this fact. If a single sentence of Bryan's address could be shown to be false, it would have boon don© ere now. But no, not one word of that lengthy oration has been proven untrue, and so liis enemies and their representatives in the news paper world, finding that the nation at whose throat their grasp has been for many long years is about to rise in its might and cast oil the bloodleeches, have resorted to the weapons of the coward. They hurl at Bryan and his followers every known word that stands for dis honorable dishonesty, but they dare not make a truthful comment upon the grand address he lias delivered. They try to hide from their duped readers the magical effect his speech has had upon the voters of the United States, but it will all bo to no avail. The peo ple have learned to suspect some men and their motives, and arc doing their own thinking in this campaign. A Warning Which Should He Heeded. Front the Wilkcsburro Telephone. It is well known that the ordinary dangers incident to anthracite mining in nearly all the collieries of tho Wyom ing region is becoming greater year after year, as the workings are extended into tin- underlying veins, and the overlying veins are being rapidly worked out. On the west side of the Susquehanna from \\' A Nanticoke all the way to Plymouth, and the Woodward and Fast Boston mine.- near Kingston, the upper work ing- of at least a dozen of the collieries in that line of territory are connected with each other. The area of workable coal in the lower veins extends underneath the river, and at several of the collieries mentioned oal i> now being mined in the Red Ash ami overlying veins, directly under the vicinity of the river bed. It is very evident, therefore, that the mine law should make it incumbent on the land owners and operators to take every possible precaution to secure the safety of human life and property in the time to come; otherwise it is not altogether improbable that the Sus quehanna river may some day inundate t he mines, and forever put an end to the mining of anthracite in the Wyoming valley. The "Tribune" Is Never Behind. Fast. Monday the TUIIUNK announced that the New York speech of W. J. Bryan, the Democratic presidential nomi nee. would appear today. On Thursday, however, wo surprised the greater part of our readers, and ourselves somewhat, by giving in the issue of that day the complete address as delivered by Mr. Bryan the previous evening. This was done without delaying the issue one minute, the entire edition having been sent on its way to subscribers before noon. We did not expect to be able to devdope such enterprise, but, since it has been done, we presume our readers will overlook our misstatement made a week ago and feel satisliee that the Tiu lUM-: did its duty to them by placing the entire speech in their hands before j it was printed by any other newspaper in northeastern Pennsylvania. To the few subscribers whoso papers did not contain this feature we make amends by publishing it in tho papers ' scut the in today. MUST OVERTHROW GOLD. That In the First Step in the (treat Hat tic Tor Industrial Emancipation. The single standard appears to have ranged upon its side an apparently im pregnable array of forces and nothing will bo left untried to bring victory to its banner. The members of one fat-frying com mittee in New York city alone are cred ited with controlling over $550,000,000 of capital, the great railroad interests are openly dictating apolitical creed to their millions of employes, throughout New Fngland and the Middle States thous ands of men and women are thrown out of employment, manufacturers in many instances seek deliberately to intimidate their workmen, and in the East and West there every day arises some clergy men. a reputed teacher of the Word, who hurls his anathemas against the cohorts of free silver. Dies of almost every name and kind are spoken from the rostrum or.scattered broadcast through the mails, all with the one object of terrifying the voter with a most alarming picture of what is in store if victory comes to the white metal. It is more than passing strange that, in all this weary waste of wind and ink, there should not be a solitifK* line of honest attempt at argument; not one of tho satellites of Doinbard and Wall streets makes a single proposition that will for an instant stand alone; there is nothing but the reiteration of what will occur —what they propose shall occur—if their views are not upheld by free Amer ican voters at tho polls. Wo are warned that the silver of the world will he dumped upon us, when the prophets of evil know that all tin rest of the earth depends for its silver currency upon the mines of the western hemisphere. The song of tho "50 cent dollar" Is sung in every gold speech when the talker knows, or ought to know, that in all the years America kept silver in its place, as a money metal, there was a continual drain of silver to other nations at a constant premium over gold. The fall in the price of silver and tho consequent advance, or appreciation, in gold was deliberately maneuvred by the men who now howl longest and loudest for "honest money'' and against "depreciated metal. *' The claim is made that wages will fa 1 and the price of commodities rise,, with tho advent of free coinage, when the pre varicators know in their hearts that such a state of things never has and never can exist in this or any other country. The trump card they play is the threat that a panic will be forced upon the country; in the words of Henry Clews, "Wall street relies upon her reserve power to bring about such a state of things as no congress and no people will dare defy." This is the whole situation in a nut shell. Wall street and her tributaries see their grasp slipping from the control of the currency, and Wall street will use every desperate measure to prevent this defeat. The triumph of free coinage will bean object lesson to all the people. It will be a long step in advance on tin; road to tho time when Uncle Sam will issue all his money direct to the people without the intervention of hanks, and tho banks that have fought off this day of reckon ing for thirty-four years, and have almost succeedod in making its com ing impossible, will bring every engine at their command to make a last deter mined stand against the abrogation of tho most valuable of their long-enjoyed privileges. Victory now for the people means the beginning of the end for tin; batiks, therefore no lie is too gross, no misrepre sentation too huge, no method too des picable. if it only offers a hope to them of final success. They have already sent out notices of a squeeze to mortgage farmers, merchants large and small will have their credit withdrawn, money tightening of every description is in full swing, the spending capacity of the con sumer is narrowed by wholesale shut downs or curtailment of production, and measures are completed for the accumu lation of the most stupendous corruption fund this country ever saw. This is what faces over 75 per cent of the population of the United States to day. Twenty-live per cent hold all the wealth and are all intimately interested in a continuance of the gold standard. We have in round niimhers 14.000,000 family groups in America; of this number 1 per cent, or 140,000, are worth from SIOO,OOO to $125,000,000 each and will average $300,000; 2 per cent, or 280,000. are worth from $20,000 to SIOO,OOO, an average of j SOO,OOO each, which gives u5420,000 fam ilies owning $59,000,0000f all the wealth. The small capitalists, averaging say $4,000, number 20 per cent of Lite, whole or 2,800,000, owning $11,000,000, the grand total being $70,000,000, the full estimated wealth of the country in the hands of less than 25 per cent of the population. Of the $50,000,000 in thchandsof three per cent of the people, not less the $30,- 000,000 is embodied in real estate and monopoly franchise values, through which this small number control all pro duction and all commerce. Controlling commerce and production and approximating every year the larger share of all produced to increase their hoard, even free silver is not going to emancipate us entirely, but it is tint first step that tnust he taken in tiie great battle for justice. We are about to enter into n death struggle with this "power for evil" anil the most certain way to deal a crushing blow is to see that your vote is not cast upon the side where aggregated wealth is strongest. Scotch the octopus at this election and, feeling your power, you will be encouraged to go forward and insist upon the other reforms which must come ere wo see the goal. Free coinage is a step in the right direction, in that it recognizes and emphasizes the right of the people, through congress, f,n issue and control money: it kills the claim of the goldbug army that we must hold ourselves at the beck and call of those who dictate England's financial policy and have so long controlled our own, in a word it is the first blow fi freedom from ruinous rule, and will be followed in the near future by full and complete industrial emancipation. M. J. llishop. Scltuatc, Massachusetts. A Few Words About Repudiation. From the Wilkcsbarro Leuder, In an article attacking the Chicago platform the Philadelphia Press says. •'Paying a debt in the money in which i,t was borrowed is a matter of common honesty." This has reference, of course, to the bonded debt of the United States. It cannot always be told what kind of money was loaned. The bonds of tin United States have been sold for gold, silver, greenbacks, silver certificates and other kinds of money. Jhit the bonds themselves, the orig inal contract, tell in what kind of mone\ they are redeemable, and every one of them says "coin." Every resolution in troduced in congress to make them pay able in gold lias been uniformly voted down, both before and after their issue. The buyer of every bond has had fail notice, botli by congress and the word ing of the bonds themselves, that the\ are payable in coin. When the last issue of bonds was imwh the bankers offered to take 3 per cents, if the government would make then payable in gold. Congress refused to do this, and the bonds were issued as 1 pei cents, payable in coin. The latest fad in New York swell dorr is the pet lamb. For the nonce the pug't nose is out of joint and the poodle hide.** bis diminished head in sorrow. Ever\ l>clle in Gotham who aspires to the ranks of the 400 has ci young sheep, per haps not the precise counterpart of tin historical animal that followed Mary ti school one day, but something similar, which accompanies her in her daih promenades, h>d by a silken leash. Thesi animals are said to be so abundant in the metropolis as to give certain fash ionable thoroughfares quite a pastoTn 5 appearance. Fifth avenue especially seeming to be nil yvool and a yard wide. Tn consonance with the new move, merino dresses are having a boom, and every society young man, with vitality encugh, is sporting mutton-chop whisk ers. A German town woman who is in rc duced circumstances lias hit upon a novel scheme for earning n livelihood which has worked very successfully A number of her married female no quaintunc.es yvho are anxious to post as society women, but yvhose financial circumstances yvill not admit of the luxury of nurses, readily engage her services when they wish to attend tens and other social functions. She charge? CO cents an hour for looking after the children in the absence of their mothers, and it is said that her services are ii: demand to such an extent as to render necessary the booking iiradvance. All international disputes are liable to wlmt are called "complications.'' Here is one, cited by the Washington Post, in connection with the Venezuela matter! A western congressman i said to have received a letter from one of his constituents, \\ho believes in los ing no chances. "Everybody here," n< wrote, "is talking about the Monro* doctrine, and nobody knows what it i I don't know myself, but if the govern incuts is giving it &\*uy, send me what you can." An incendiary with a mania for burn ing sayvmilis lias broken loose in the neighborhood of Farmersburg, south of Terre Ilaute. Within the past month four mills have been burned, entailing a total loss. The fires have left the en tire country south of here, for a radius of 20 miles, without a mill, uiul as the country is heavily wooded the de ficiency is keenly felt. No insurance WHS curried upon the majority of the mills, and their owuers find themselves unable to rebuild. Compressed air is now used to run street railways, mine coal and gold, dig canals,operate block signals, carry mail in tubes, propel locomotives, operate canal locks, raise sunken vessels, act as a refrigerator, shoot dynamite, shear sheep, dust carpets, clean cars, run clocks, paint buildings, run sewing innchhnes, steer ships, dump cars, mix chemicals and carve stone. The month of May, 1890, will be re membered for its weather vagaries and remarkable atmospheric disturbances. Southern California had a record breaking hot wave last week, the mer cury ut Los Angeles going up to 109 In the shade. A few days before a snow storm of ten days' duration came to an end in one of the towns of Montana. A story comes from Indiana of the shooting of a bullfrog weighing nearly 12 pounds and sporting legs as long as :i man's arm. This comes as a welcome change from the time-worn fish and snake fags. It is said that an Arkansas farmer recently wrote to an eastern florist for some electric plant seed—"them kind what lias such powerful currents. My old woman wants to use 'cm for mukin* RAILROAD TIMETABLES DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AM SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect December 15, 1895. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Euklcy, Hazli "rook, Stockton, Heaver -Meadow Itoud, iioiib and lia/.ieton Junction at 5 80, OUUa m, 415 i in, dailj except Sunduj; and 708 a m, 288 i> m Sumluy. Trains leave Dril ton for Garwood, Cranberry I oinhiokeii and Deringer at 5 00 a in, i> m, daily except Sunday; and *O,l a in, 28e i> m Sun day. Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction, liar wood itoad, Humboldt Itoud, Oneida unu Micpptou uto uu a m, 4 15 p m, dully except Sun day; and , 08 a in, 2 88 p in, Sunday. i rains lea\e Ha/Jctou Junction tor Garwood, 1 ran berry, L'oinhieken und Deringer at 0 L> a ii, daily except Sunday; and b .*;> u m. 4 22 n m Sunday. Trains leave lia/Jeton Junction for Oneida Junction, Garwood itoad, iiumboidt itoud, Oneida and Shepplon at 0 20, 11 10 a ui, 4 4t p m daily except Sunday; and * 87 a m, 50b oui Sunday. Trains leave Deritiger for Torahieken, Cran oerry, Garwood, lla/.leton Junction, ltoun, iJenver Meadow itoad. Stockton, Hu/.lc tirooa, hekley, Jeddo and Drilton ut 2 2a, 540 p u, lady except Sunday; and ÜB7 a in, JU7 U in' Sunday. 1 I mills leaveSliepptun l'urOncliln, Humboldt ttoad, llarwood lioad, Uueida .11111011011, ila/.it con Juiieuon a id ltoun ut i 11 m, Ix4o, i> 111, daily except Sunday; and bua a m, 844 P tu, bunuuy. 'i rains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow ttoad, Stockton, lia/.le brook, hekley, Jeddo uui Drilton at 5 2. p 111, daily , except ounouy; md ovi a 111, 8 41 p 111, Sunday . Trains leave lla/.leton .Junction for Beaver Meadow Itoud, btoekton, llu/.ie brook, tick ley, Jeddo and bruton at Btr., 54V, 020 |> tu, daily except bunday; und 10 u* a m, sa p in, suiuiuy! All trains connect ut Jla/Jeton Junction witu dcctric curs tor ilu/Jcton, Jcaucsviiic, Audcu ried and otlier points on Hie Ti action Com pany's line. Trains leaving Drifton at 0 00 a in, Ila/Jctou Junction ut 0 2si a IU, and Slicpplon at • J J a IU, mnnectatUncida Junction with Lclngh Valley (.rains cast and west. 'Train leuwng Drilton at 5 iR) a m makes con lectmn .(I Dcniiaer wuii I', k. R. train lot -v like? banc, sunoury, J1 arris burg and points vest. I'or the accommodation of passengers at way -tutions between Ha/.letou Junction and Der nger, an extra tram will leave the former •oiiil at J iAJ p 111, daily, except bunday, arriv ing ut Deringer at i (Hi p in. Lll Til Kit t'. SMITH, Superintendent. / EIIIGII VALLEY RAILROAD. •*—4 May 17, 1890. Anthracite coal used exclusively, insuring •lean lines?, and com tort. A Rlt A NULMENT OF PASSENGER TItAINS. LEAVE FitEELAND. 6 05, 8 45, 0 80. 10 41 a in, 1 40, 2 88, 8 25, 4 81 12, . lii, , .*>, b 15 p 111, for Drilton, Jeddo, Luiu er i aril, btoekton and iiuzlctoii. 0 05, b 45, 080 a 111, 1 40, 8 25, 4 84 p m, f'< • Muuch Chunk, Allentown, Bcthlcliein, Philu., huston and New York, our,, o .ib, 10 41 am, 2 81, 4 34. 710 pin, for 'iauanoy City, bhenaudoah and I'oltsvillo. b' i,u 11 11,1 H 5-4,5 15 pm, lor Sandy iluti, \\ lute Haven, (Jlen bumiiiit, \\ ilkesbarre, < ittatou and i.. and b. Junction. 8.45 p in lor i la/Jet on and Audcuried, SUNDAY TRAINS. 10 50 a ill for Sandy bun, White Haven, Glen Mimmit und Wilkesbarre. II 40 a in and 8 24 p m lor Drilton, Jeddo, Lum ber Yard and llu/Jeton. 824 p in l'or Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenan doah, -New York and Philadelphia. AltltlVE AT FREELAND. 7 20, 7 54, 0 20, 10 50, 11 54 a in, 12 58, 2 20, 5 15. ,07, 0 58, 836 p in, from lla/Jetoii, Slocktou, -.umber i urd, Jetldo and Drifton. 7 20, OfcO, 10 41 a in, 2 3:1, 7 10 p in, from .Jelaiio, Mahanoy City and Shenandouli ivia Vew Boston brunch). 12.V., r, if) 835 p iu, from New York, Easton, iliii'lelphiu, Beihleheiu, Alleiitown una Muueii Chunk. o u, Usfi a rn, 12 58, 5 15, 7 10, 8 85 p in, Iroin -lustoii, Pliilu., Bethlehem and Maueii ( hunk. J3O, 10 41 uui,2 83, 7 10 p in I rum Sandy Run, " bite Haven. Glen Summit, Wilkcsourre, Pitts ton and L. and B. Junction. SUNDAY TRAINS. 10 50, 1131 a in and 3 10 p m, from liu/.lcton, .amber Yard, Jeddo and Drilton. 11 31 a in lroiu Delano, iiuzlcton, Philadelphia and E.iston. P iu p iu irom Delano and Mahunoy region. For further information inquire of Ticket Agents. CHAS. S. LEE, Gen'l Puss. Agent, ItOLLIN 11. WILBUR, Gen. Supt. Ernie pil I '"' A. W. NONA KM AC IIKU, Ass'tO. P. A., South Bethlehem, Pa. VT OTICE is hereby given that P. M. Swcc . > noy, of Freeland, Pa., will ille in the office of the secretary of the commoiiwealtli tor the purpose of registration under the acts of assembly approved May 8,1881), the follow ing described bottles owned and used by him and of the names and marks impressed tbere- FIRST CLASS: Made of white flint glass known as quart syphon, having impressed upon them the following names or marks in circular form, "P. M. Sweeney, Kreelaml, Pa." SECOND CLASS: Made of light green glass and known as a half-pint soda waer bottle, having impressed upon them the following mines, "P. M. Sweeney, Kreelaml, Pa.." and on the reverse side, "This bottle not to be mid." THIRD CLASS: Made of light green glass, • -yliudrieal iu form and about leu inches high, 'nrving on one side the following ntmics im pressed upon them: un one side, in circular form, "P. M. Sweeney, Free I uul, Pa.," and on :he reverse side near the bottom, "This bottle not to lie sold." K< it'll i u CLASS: Made of whito colored glass, I one pint capacity, having impressed on one side iu elliptical form the following names, "P. M. Sweeney, Freeland, Pa.," and under neath the above the word "Registered:" the lower portion of the bottles is encircled by a sen Hoped design. All persons are cautioned against tilling, using, buying or selling said bottles or having lie same in his, her or their possession for the purpose of dealing or tralliukiug therein, as doing so is a crime punishable by line and Im prisonment. has. Orion Stroll, Attorney. Freeland, Pa., July 80, lssto. Harness! Harness! Light Carriage Harness, $5.50, $7, $0 and $lO 50. Heavy Express Harness, $10.50, $lO, S2O and $22. Heavy Team Harness, double, $25, S2B and S3O. GEO. WISE, Jeddo and Freeland, Fa. LIVE QUESTIONS! "Competition vs. Co operation," by J. S. David. "Canned Sunshine," by Edward E. Halo. Thursday, - - - August 20. ICASTORIAI "" ltaa - v VX .X .X for Infants and Children. SyjOTHERS, Do You Know that Paregoric, b9 aC M Batemon's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and most remedies for children nre composed of opium or morphine ? P° Yon Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons t Y° w Know that In most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics without labeling them poisons ? Yen Know that you Bhould not permit any mediciuo to bo given your child unless you or your physician know of what it is composed t You Know that Costoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of its ingredients is published with every bottle J You Know that Ca::toria Is tire prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Fitcher. That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than of all other remedies for children combined f # You Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to uso the word Clisteria " aud its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense ? Yon Know that one of the roasons for granting this government protection was because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless? Do You Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 cents, or one cent a dose f Yon Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest t 3S things are worth knowing. They are facts. The facsimile // fTF'™ is on every iduimtiii'o of C&ajtyy /.wrapper. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria<> ' A representative American Eusiacia School for both sexes. R.ICOP.C CUILCING, 917-919 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. THOMAS MAT PEIRCE, A.M.,Ph.D., Pounder end Principal. 1 CGC-'CCG. A Systematic Business Training Coupled with JI practical, sound and useful English education. Three full courses: CUOIN EG3, SHORTHAPJD AMD TYPEWRITING, ENGLISH The whole constituting an Ideal Combination. Graduates Cheerfully Assisted (o Positions. Visitors welcome, especially rbulii'f school hours, day or evening sessions. Call or write for School Literature. East Stroudsburg, Pa. A Famous School In a Famous Location. Among: tin- mountains of the noted resort, the Delaware Water (lap. A school of three or four hundred pupils, with no over-crowded classes, lint where teachers ean become ac quainted with their pupils and help them indi vidually in their work. Modern improvement. A line new gymna sium, in charge of expert trainers. We teach Sewing, Dressmaking, Clay .Model ing, Freehand and Mechanical Drawing with out extra charge. Write to us at once for our catalogue and other information. You gain more in a small school than in the overcrowded schools. Address GEO. P. BIBLE, Principal. A Scientific American TRADE MARKS, N DESIGN PATENTS, COP VRICHTB, etc. For in form at lon and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., .361 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Oldest bureau for securing patents In America. Kvcry patent taken out by IIH Is brought before the public by u notice given free ofcharge iu tlio Jftiwfific Jtowetiftm largest clrculnt lon of any scientific paper In tlio world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent limn should be without It. Weekly. tt.'t.OO u year; $1.50 six months. Address, MUNN' & SALE BY D. S. Ewing, general agent, I 1127 Chestnut street, Phila., Pa. Printing! The TRIBUNE has the best fa cilities in Freehand for print ing stationery of every kind used by business men. Let terheads, noteheads, cards, billheads, statements, enve lopes, etc., turned out in the neatest manner at the lowest rates- Let us estimate for you ou your next order. J Caveats,and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-J # cnt business conducted for MODERATE FEES. 0 T OUN OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U.S. PATENT OFFICE * J and we can secure patent in less time than those J * remote from Washington. J € Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- # ition. We advise, if patentable or not, tree of t 0 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 0 T A PAMPHLET, "Mow to Obtain Patents," with* , cost of same in the U. S. aud foreign countries i 0 sent free. Address, S iC.A.SKSOW&eOJ OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON^D^C^^ B?CYGLES! BUGGIESi B'sh-Orartn, aold direct to users at wholesale. I W" w 11 "!V™ {rum SI" 10 sr,u. Everything in ihcyclo and Vehicle line. Cutlog free. Beauti ful suhstancial Bicycles at half price, guaranteed 1 your. No ndvatico monoy required. We send by express and allow a full examination, if not right return n tour expense. Now isn't that fair? 1 Write us. ISreWHter Vehicle Co., Holly, Mich. BICYCLISTS! Encyclopedia, how to euro for and ropnirTiroß, < hiuns, Bearings, etc. 150 valuublo pointers for riders. Price SJ5c; sample by mail 10c. It eells on night. Agt. wanted. J . A. Slooum, Holly, Mick a day. Agto. wimtod. 10 fast seller* Big money for Acts.Catalog FKl'.ft, E. E. Brewster, Holly, Mioh. WANT n sfm?lß thing to patent? Protect your ideas . they may i you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDER ! JiuKN & C'O., Patent Attorneys, Washington [ D. C.. for their gl.boo prize ohcr. 7/