Highest of all in Leavening Strength.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE FREELAND TRIBUNE. Esta'clishod^lSSg. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. Make ail money orders, checks, etc., pnyabh to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited.. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year §1.50 Six Months 75 Four Mouths 50 Two Months The date which the subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. For instance: (J rover Cleveland 28June97 means that Groverispaid up to June 38,18U7- Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report promptly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. FREELAND, NOVEMBER 2, 1890. Samuel A. Davenport, the Republican candidate for congressman-at-large, in a speech at Erie on October 17. 189(3, said: What you workingmen want to under stand is that your employers are your braiuH. Can any free? American citizen read such sentiment as that without fooling moved to the deepest indignation? Re buke that man by your votes at the polls. All Ready for the Result. After tomorrow the political atmos phere will be cleared and the result of the greatest battle of ballots that tin world has over known will be recorded. It is almost a certain fact that every in telligent citizen has already decided upon which side of the contest he will array himself, and anything that may he said or done between now and to morrow evening will not have much in fluence on the average voter. Since tin; day Bryan was placed in nomination, the country from one end to the other has rung with the praise and condemnation of the two principal nominees for president, and the plat forms upon which they stand have been lauded and assailed with such vigor as the country never saw before. It has been, in reality, a campaign of education in so far as it was possible tc make it by those who accepted the declarations made by tin; Democratic party at Chicago. The press, public speakers and individuals who have up held that platform have met every issiu honestly, fearlessly and openly, and have defended their own side with argu ments unanswerable. On the part of Bryan and those whe are with him, there has been no evasion no subterfuge, no double-meaning phrases nor glittering generalities used in expressing their convictions. Every speech, whether delivered by the great leader or by tin; humble back wood* stump-speaker, as well as the editorial* of the press of the new Democracy, have been straight, explicit and of the kinc which could not be misunderstood. About all that can now be done is tc get the voters to the polls and await the verdict. That it will be favorable tc the cause, espoused by William Jennings Bryan is the only estimate or predictior that the TRIIU NK can make. Our faitl in the ability of the; majority of the American voters to disctern upon whicl side their interests lie is too strong tc allow us to think that any other resuli is possible. The odds against tin; Democratic can didatos are tremendous, in fact they an fearful to contemplate. It is claimed by the Democrats and conceded by the Re publicans, that the allied monied power: and monopolies of tin; civilized worh are working incessantly and using every known means to accomplish the defea of Bryan and Democratic candidates fo; congress. Notwithstanding this, the Tuner M cannot believe that the American work men and farmers will disgrace the nobh title of American citenship at a time when its privileges and all it represents are in greater danger than any time ii the history of tin- United States. Tha American manhood will rise in its inigh tomorrow, and with a majority so lam as to surprise the world, will crush tin representatives of plutocracy and self interest, is the fervent hope and sinccri prophecy of tin* TRIIIUNK. The accident at the No. i mines o the Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal Com puny, which resultod in the death of si men, is a sad one. The Newsdealer stat e 1 a few days ago that the mines of tin company were being neglected. I'rolj ably if Superintendent Lawall. Genera Superintendent Morgans and Mr. lln ring paid as much attention to the intei estsof the company as they do to the pol: tics of Luzerne, the accident would no have happened. Driving men out oi parade for sound money, as the ofiieia' of the Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Com pany did, is evidently not a safe thing Messrs. Lawall. Morgans and Horrinj better attend to the interests of tin company and let politics alone.— Wilkes barre Newsdealer. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington. October 30, 1800. 1 Senator Faulkner, chairman of the I Democratic congressional committee; j Senator Butler, chairman of the Popu list national committee, and Secretary Diffenderfor. of the national committee <>f the Silver party, are unanimous in j declaring that the reports received by them make them certain that Bryan | will bo elected. Still, now when it can- i j not he used to affect the result, your correspondent does not hesitate to ac- I knowledge that he has doubts, notwith standing the confidence of the gentle- j men who have managed Mr. Bryan's j campaign. Never since this govern- | inent was established was there such a combination of wealth and influences on one side of a presidential fight as has j been thrown against Mr. Bryan and the free coinage of silver in the present ; campaign, and it is useless for anybody i to try to deny that this wealth and in- i fluence has been a powerful factor—how powerful may best bo judged when the votes of states known to have been over- i whelmingly for silver six months ago are announced. Against this eombina- j tion Mr. Bryan has had to depend verv 1 largely upon his own efforts. Although he has proved himself to be a magnifi cent campaigner and a greater man j than even his closest friend thought him i to be, he is only one man, hence mv J doubt. Fitz Lee has lost none of his old-time , shrewdness. Before coming home, in accordance with President Cleveland's 1 desires, to help gold along, ho made a ' few inquiries to ascertain the situation i in Virginia, and the result is tliG an nouncement that Fitz will not come home until after the election, in order | to show that he is not dissatisfied with i his position as consul general to Cuba, ' is had been reported. Ilad there been any chance to defeat silver in Virginia, Fitz would doubtless have been willing to take a hand in this campaign, but he would not put himself up merely to get knocked down, not even to please Presi- i lent Cleveland. Fitz expects to keep on living in Virginia and is probably not averse to accepting further political ; honors, and is too shrewd to do anything that would made it impossible to get! them. It looks like Attorney General liar- I mon's construction of what constitutes , "pernicious political activity" was the 1 result of a few whacks upon somebody's conscience, lie says that officeholders may make speeches without laying I themselves open to the charge, but to accept any committee place or chairman, or to become a candidate for anything makes one guilty, inasmuch as almost' the entire cabinet has been making political speeches it would bo difficult 1 for Mr. Harmon to convince anybody j that he was not trying to make an ex cuse for his colleagues, both for their speaking for gold and for their dismissal of subordinates who were on the silver ' side. The Republicans hereabouts are dis playing a statu of nervous excitement which is not in keeping with their claims of being cock-sure of McKinley's dec- : tion. and many of them do not hesitate to express fear that Hanna and the : other McKinley managers are not so confident as they wish the public to believe they are. I know of several ; who have put up money on Bryan, so 1 that it McKinley is defeated they can j console themselves with the cash won, : and if he is elected that will console i them for the money lost. It quiets their : nerves to know that either way thev are > bound to get some consolation. How's ! that for philosophy? Before leaving Washington to take the stump against Bryan, Secretary 1 Herbert selected names for the new : battleships and gunboats authorized to j be built by the last congress. Alabama. Illinois and Wisconsin are to be the names of the three battleships, and An napolis, Marietta. Newport, Princeton, ! Vicksburg and Wheeling of the. six gun boats. S. President Cleveland. Secretary Carlisle I and William C. Whitney, three of the \ most conspicuous Democratic bolters. I will not vote tomorrow, as all failed to ! register in person, as required by the i laws of their respective states. A London paper, discussing the ap ' proaching "American, season," says: "We ire always glad to see our cousins from the other side of the Atlantic, first, on the ground of kinship, and second, because they add to the volume of busi ness." The kinship is placed first by courtesy, of course, but it is quite safe to say that business interests weigh the 1 most with our British "relatives." Mrs. Mary L. Foote, who was recent JV elected the police justice of Gaylord, ; i ICan.', ran against her husband, and de i featcd him by a large majority. We wonder who now will be the head of the house. Wall paper. 7c per double roll, at Sweeney Ilerron's, Hazleton. • J Neat footwear for ladies is sold very I cheap at the Wear Well. THE PEOPLE • E 'H ■ SHALL GOVERN, -.x They Are to Rule This Na tion, Not to Be Ruled. They Must Assert Their Sovereign Power. Government Based on the Rights of Hanhood. ; Not on Property and Its Priv ileges. "Wo have nobody with us but the people," said Mr. Bryan the other day in closing a description of tho exodus which has taken out of the Democratic party every supporter of trusts and monopolies, every dependent on usury, every speculator on tho necessities of the people, every beuoficiury of the corpora tions which wish to substitute their own cheap and intrinsically worthless paper for money of the mints, every upholder of the British gold standard and the British bureaucratic system of life ten ure in office, every man who believes that corporation attorneys on the federal bench are greater thuu the people and entitled to rule tho people without ap peal even to tho ballot box, and, finally, every officeholder who oau bo intimidat ed by a president and cabinet in sym pathy with Wall street credit brokers, bond speculators and oornerers of gold. It is certainly true, and it is the cen tral fact of this campaign, that "wo havo nobody with us but the people!" But it is not truo for the first time. It was true in Andrew Jackson's day when Judge Story, a Federalist support er of Adams, described tho Jackson Democrats as the "most vulgar and gross people in tho nation." And it was truo still earlier, for in describing the conditions which ushored in the great Democratic victory of 1800, when the Federalist party was virtually wiped out, Thomas Jefferson wrote his friend and Virginia neighbor, Muzzei, then in France, a letter in which he gives a strikingly accurate outline, not only of that campaign, but of this. "The aspect of our politics," Jeffer son writes, "has wonderfully changed since you loft us. In placo of the noble love of liberty and republican govern ment which carriod us triumphantly through the war an Anglican party has sprung up, whose avowed purpose it is to draw us over to the substance, as they have already dono to the forms, of the British government. While the main body of our citizens remain true to republican institutions * against us are tho executive, tho federal judici ary, two out of three branches of the legislature, all the officers of the govern ment, all timid men who prefer the calm of despotism to the boisterous soa of liberty, all British merchants and Americans trading on British capital, all speculators and brokers, and with them the banks and dealers in the pub lic funds (United States bonds), a con trivance invented for the purpose of cor ruption and for assimilating us to the rotten as well as to tho sound parts of tho British model." So succinctly and comprehensively does this sum up existing conditions that it is hard to realize that a century has passed since it was written. The Democracy is fighting the campaign of 1800 over again. Now, as then, cries of treason are raised against it by tho ene mies of popular government. Its leaders are denounced as enemies of law and or der, as Jacobins, us dangerous anarch ists, just us Jefferson was then denounc ed by every one who believed, as the Federalists did then, as the plutocrats do now, that government should be based on property and its privileges, not on manhood and its rights. But the Democracy did not turn thon. It did not hesitate. Never so strong its when it has been deserted by all who fear the people, it pushed forward to victory under t he leadership of tho great man who first laid down "Trust the peo plel" as the fundamental principle of government. It was the greatest discovery ever mado in the politics of the world—this, that the people can be trnsted. Never in modern times was it a factor in the praotical politics of any country until the campaign of 1800, when the author of the Declaration of Independence took the field in support of the proposition that the people urc the government— that they are not to ho ruled in Amer ica, hut are to rulo it. Ho had no one with him on that prop osition hut the people. But he was not frightened. He had behind him all the centuries of the dark ages of oppression and class government. Ho had before him all the ages of the glorious progress Which is boiug worked now through confidence in the people and belief in their capacity for indefinite improve ment through the indefinite extension of liberty. Ho dared to trust the people, and with him as their leader they won their first great victory under the decla ration that r.ll men aro created free and with equal rights under the law. Lot no Democrat fear the result. In spite of tho hundreds of millions of wrongfully hold wealth being used against them, tho people of the Unitod States can assert their power to govern. And they will do it!— St. Louis Post- Dispatch. Tom C'artor'H Job. Tom Carter is not leading the Repub lican elephant this year. The best he can do is to carry water for the ani mal.— Washington Pest (Hold). PAPt£R MAKING IN THISCOUNTRY The United States Now ut the ilcad of tin I.lst in l'olnt of Production. Though the. number of paper factories in the United States has decreased 2b per cent, during the last 15 years, the product of American factories during the same period has increased 40 per cent., and the present capacity of the paper mills of the United States is 300,- 000 tons ft year. More than $100,000,000 is invested in the paper factories of the country, which number 700, and the total number of employes in them is larger than our standing army. For many years, during the time thai rag pa.per or straw paper was the standard, Great Britain stood at the head of the world's producers, and : manufactured not only sufficient for | the home demand, which is very ex j tensive, but also had a surplus left over I for export to other countries, whereas the American product of pajier was in | sufficient even for home requirements. I With, however, the discovery of the utility of wood pulp for paper making and the process whereby the cost of pa per has been reduced from 12y a to 2% cents a pound, the United States have been steadily pushing ahead and are now not only in advance of Great Brit ain, butareincreusingtheirlead rapidly. Germany follows Great Britain closely. I and may soon overtake it in paper mnk ing. The raw material, including wood ■ pulp, rags, bagging, wood fiber, and i cotton waste which enter into the com i position of paper, represent a total an | nual investment in all the countries | which have authentic figures of paper ( manufacture of $100,000,000, and the | chemicals used for dyeing or coloring | papers, particularly high grade note pn | per. involve a further expenditure of $50,000,000. The ingredients which en- I ter into the composition of paper of ■ various kinds, in addition to those nl i ready given, arc jute and straw, and the rags used arc divided, according to their serviccahleness, into linen rags, which yield 50 per cent, of paper from the amount of material used, woolen rags which yield GO per cent., and cotton rags which, by improved proc ess. yield 05 per cent. New York and Massachusetts stand at the head of the states in respect to the amount of paper manufactured. With the cheapening of the cost of pa per not. only have new uses been found for it (they have railway tracks mndc of paper in Germany, and paper pen cils are no longer a novelty in New York), but the demand for paper has increased enormously. This is par ticularly noticeable in newspapers, the size of which has, in many cases. l>eon increased to correspond to the reduc tion in price. Moreover, cheaper paper has boomed enormously the business of the publication of books and maga zines. This reduction of cost in hook making by which n volume that, a few years ago, cost one dollar, is now sold for 15 or 20 cents, has had one odd re sult, as Is shown in the general decline of private libraries, for, with the cheap ening of books, the incentive for col lecting them seems to have departed, except in the case of rare hooks, or those valued on account, of the beauty of the binding or illustrations.—X. Y Bun. MECHANICAL INSECTS. There l an English insect something like otir bee, except that it is a rich violet in color, which well deserves it* name of carpenter bee. By tilie aid of ' n chisel provided by nature this bee ex i cavates a home in any piece of timber j that suits its purpose. ! Not only do wasps make paper, but even cardboard. In South America | there is a species of wasp that nianu ! faotures a cardboard so smooth and | firm that it may be written or drawn ! upon, and it is in one way superior t<o j the article made by man, as it is water l proof. j Some large beetles are as good as cir ! cnlar saws. They seize a branch or twig with their deeply-toothed jaws and whirl around and around until the twig is sawed off. They have been known to saw a twig as large as an ordinary walking-stick in this manner. There are other insects that use sows which are much better made, finished and sharpened than the finest ones of steel. With these the little workers undertake jobs that, proj>ortinnately, no man would dream of attempting. The saw-fly, which owns the neatest In strument of this sort, cuts a j>erfoct groove in wood. NOVELTIES IN AMERICA. There is a bedstead in the Whitney mansion. New York city, which was purchased by Col. Oliver Payne in 1883, and which cost exactly SIO,OOO. A village improvement society at Woodstock, Vt., encourages t.he keeping of neatly trimmed lawna by renting lawn mowers to residents. It is a wom an's idea. l'ajier coffins are the latest novelty in mortuarj' furniture. They are pressed into shii]>e from a mass of pulp, and, when stained and varnished, look just like wood. At a Chinese funeral at Visalia, Cal., three Mongolians stood at the gate of the cemetery, and to each person who passed oit they gave a new dime, wrapped in paper. Some cute boy* quickly tumbled to the racket, and re turned through a hole in the fence scl eral times, to emerge publicly, on eac occasion with a fresh dime. PLEASURE CALENDAR. November 2.—Kail of the Foarnots Ath letic Association at Cross Creek hall. Admission. 50 cents. November 25. —Sixth annual ball of .Jed do Progressive club at Yarning' opera house. Admission, 50 cents. November 30.—-Turkey supper at St. Paul's P. M. church basement. For best clothing at lowest prices call at the Philadelphia Clothing Store, 131 Centre street, Freeland. Fall styles in dry goods at Oswald's. RAILROAD TIMETABLES THE DBLAWARB, SUSQUEHANNA AN] SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect December 15, 1895. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, HazK Brook. Stockton, Heaver Meadow ltoud, Hoar and Hazieton Junction at 5 JO, 6OU a m, 416 i n, daily except Sunday; and 7 03 a in, 2 38 p in .Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Harwood, Cranberry romliicken and Deringer at SHO a m, p in dail\ except bunday; and 7OH a m, 238 p m, Sun day. Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction. Harwood Itoad, Humboldt ltoud, Oneida and Sheppton utO 00 a m, 4 15 p in, duily except Sun day; and 7 03 a ni, 2 38 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazletou J unction'for Harwood. Cranberry, Tomhicken and Deringer at 0 35 a u, daily except Sunday; and 8 53 a ui, 4 22 p m Sunday. Trains leave Hazlcton Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood ltoiul, Humboldt Road Oneida and Slieppton at 0 29,11 10 a in, 440 p in. daily except Sunday; and 737 a in, 308 pin Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tomhiekeu, Cran- Berry, Harwood, Hazlcton Junction, Koun, Beaver Meadow Koad. Stockton, Ilazle llrook, ackiey, Jeddo and Drifton at 2 25, 6 40 p m, daily except Sunday; and 937 a in, 507 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Slieppton for Oneida, Huinboldi Koad, Harwood ltoud, Oneida Junction, Hazlc ton Junction iloan at 7 11 a in, 12 40, 625 p m, daily except Sunday; and 8 0.1 a in, 3 41 p ui, Sunday. Traius leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow Koad, Stockton, Ilazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drilton at 5 25 p m, daily, except Sunday; and 8 09 a in, 3 44 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazlcton Junction lor Beaver Meadow ltoud, Stockton, Huzle Brook, Eckley, | Jeddo and Drilton at 3 09, 5 47, 8 28 p ra, daily, except Sunday; and 10 0s u in, 5 38 p in, Sunday. | All trains connect at Hazieton Junction witn electric curs tor Hazlcton, Jeanesvillc, Auden- ' ried and other points on the Traction Com- I puny'a line. 1 rains leaving Drifton at 800 a in, Hazieton Junction at 629 a ni, and Sheppton at 7 11 a m, ! connect at Oneida Junction with Lehigh Valley 1 trains east and west. Train leaving Drifton at 530 a ra makes con nection ut Deringer with P. It. It. train for , XV ilkesbarre, Suubury, llarrisburg and points west. if'or the accommodation of passengers at way I stations between Hazlcton Junction and Der uiger, an extra train will leave the former point at. 3 50 p in, daily, except Sunduy, arriv- : lug ut Deringer ut 5 00 p m. LUTBEIt C. SMITH, Superintendenf. LEHIUII VALLEY RAILROAD. August 17, 1800. Anthracite coal used exclusively, insuring cleanliness and comfort. ARRANGEMENT OK PASSENGER TRAINS. LEAVE FKEELAND. 6 05, 8 45. 938 u ni, 1 40, 4 30 p ra, for Jeddo, Lumber Yard, Weatberly, Mauch chunk. Al- Icntowu, Bethlehem, Phila., Easton and New Y oik. 0 38. 10 41 a ni, 1 40, 2 33, 4 88, 6 15, 7 CO p m, for Drifton, Jeddo, Foundry, Lumber Yard, Stockton and Hazieton. 9.>8, 10 41 a in, 2 33, 4 86, 700 p in, for Hazie ton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah, Ash ittiid, Mt. ('annul, Shaniokiu and Pottsville. 7 28, 7 58, 10 56, 11 54 a in, 615 p in, lor Sandy Run, White Haven, Glen Summit, Wilkesbarre aud Pitts ton. SUNDAY TRAINS. 10 56 a m for Sandy Run, Glen Summit and Wilkesbarre. 11 40 u in and 3 24 p m lor Drifton, Jeddo, Lum ber Yard and Hazieton. 824 p in lor Delano, Mahanoy City. Shenan doah, w eatberly, Mauch Chunk, Allentown, Philadelphia and New York. ARRIVE AT FEEELAND. 7 26, 7 68, 9 20, 10 50, 11 54 n m, 12 58, 2 20, 5 15. tl 40 p in, from Hazieton, Stockton, Lumber 1 ard, Jeddo and Drilton. 7 28, 9 20, 10 50 a ill, 2 20, 515 p n*. from Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah, Shaniokiu and Pottsville. 9 20, 10 58 a in, 12 58, 0 07, 640 pin, from New York, Philadelphia, Bethlehem, Allen town and Mauch (.'hunk. H'.*' a ra ' ~ P ,n from Sandy Run. White Haven, Glen Summit, Wilkesbarre and Pitts ton. BUNDAY TRAINS. 10 50, 1181 a in and 324 pm, from Hazlcton, Lumber \ ard, Jeddo aud Drilton. 11 31 a m, 3 10 p in, from Delano, Mahanoy i City, Shcnuudouh, Shamokin and Pottsville. j For further information inquire of Ticket Agents. CHAS. S. LEE, Gen'i Pass. Agent, liOLLIN H. WILBUIt, Gen. Supt. Eust.'ljiv! "' i A. W. NONNKMACIIEK, Asn't G. P. A., I South Bethlehem, Pa. ! MISCELLANEOUS ADVKHTIBEMKNTS. T NVENTOUS.—Parties intending to apply 1 for patents are requested to eall at the I'IUIILNK office. l/Tllt SALK CIIILXP.-A fresh milk cow and X 1 calf. Call on I'atrick llnnhm, 21 Spring street, Upper Lehigh, for terms. = \ FLOWERS FOR FOOD. Dandelions and Nasturtiums Make Very Dainty Salads. There is nothing new in the use of flowers as edibles, they are eaten va riously in various parts of the world, and in many cases form a really impor tant article of food. In India, for in stance, the bassia tree blossoms ore held in high esteem, in spite of their sweet end sickly taste, while the flower buds of cnpilaris spigosa, a plant which grows on walls, etc., in the south of Kurope, are pickled in vinegar in Italy and form what are commonly known as capers. The ordinary cloves of com merce, familiar to all housewives, are the unexpanded buds of a small ever green, cultivated in several parts of the East and West Indies. In our own United States many a humble cook has discovered the value of the green dandelion as a vegetable. The first shoots only are. fit for food. Later they become bitter and stringy. Cut off the roots, pick them very carefully and wash well in several waters, then put them in a saucepan of boiling wa ter, add a tablespoonful of salt and boil and hour. When done, drain and chop fine, then fry them with a table spoonful of butter, salt, and pepper to taste, stir until thoroughly hieated aud serve with an egg or Irutter sauce. Another method of treating dande lions is to wash the leaves through sev eral waters, then chop them into small pieces. Heat an egg, add a half cup of cream to it, stir over a Are until it 1 hiekens, then add a piece of butter the size of a walnut, two tablespoon!uls of vinegar, salt and peipper to taste. Drop in the dandelion and stir over the fife till they are wilted and tender. Salads of dandelions and nasturtium blossoms are made and served exactly as one would serve lettuce. Choose the best and tenderest shoots, wash and dry them t horoughly, carefully cover them with a French dressing and serve im mediately.—N. Y. Journal. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When site was & Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria Read - the - Tribune, i |3 Things to Watcli in Buying Coats and Capos: I. Quality. 2. Fit. 3. The Price. 1 here is no need to bother yon with any excuses or admis sions of mistakes. We can furnish stylish Wraps for children, young ladies and women at smaller prices than ever before in the his toid of Cloak selling here. Don't ask why, but if you are skeptical, come and see. 1 hree rooms on second floor are full of Winter Wraps. We are sorry to compel you to climb one flight of stairs, but we all would walk far out the way at present for the saving of a dollar or two. FUR CAPES Those persons who secured the bargains late last season in Fur Capes never regretted the purchase. We have secured a limited num ber this fall. 1 hey are of full length and sweep; lowest prices. In our Coat enthusiasm we are not forgetting our other depart ments. Dress Goods, Blankets, Flannels, Lace Curtains, Dressing Jackets. All are teeming with newest Fall Goods. PETER DEIS ROTH, <3=l v w.LD^TO~ W IIpN? II BEST ln THE WORM). TfjffiSa, A $5.00 SHOE FOR $3.00. * BP \ . lt . is sty,ish ' durable and perfect-fitting, qualities /SjArni absolutely necessary to make a finished shoe. The bCw c , os ' of manufacturing allows a smaller profit to dealers than any shoe sold at $3.00. v . h. Douglas $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00 Shoes are the productions of skilled workmen, from the best "p^ eHal posS ' ble to pjt into shoes sold at tllese The "Belmont*' and "Pointed ®| \ Toe" (shown in cuts) will be TIT I I WMII -R- -=''=> ~ \ the leaders this season, but any •el tarn ß A " ' \ other style desired may be s2° c^ rom ouf agents. menands2,so, _ m vi/ Gr' o k, a^ d 5 \ The full line for sale by BP 'i'Peio!il. l -V eatiSot'Huilpiy'youTV-rlto W. L. UOUGLA3, Brockton, ICa3s. JOHN CELLEZZA, Centre Streetrpreeiand. GRAND OPERA HOUSE John J. Welsh, Manager. Wednesday, Nov. 4. Edwin Han ford 'Toe Shamrock."i I A Ilrsl-class com puny with appropriate scenery. Nino strong specialties. Singing ami dancing. I PRICES- "oc. 85c and 2".e. Seats nil sale ut | v. oodrlug's three dajs before date <.i how. Thursday, Nov. 5. By far the best of the season. "Spoiling Graze." A musical farce-eomcdy, headed by the kings of comedy, Geo. H. Adams & Wm. Couriright. PRIDES-."(k, a*c mil 25e. Seats on sale at 1 NN oodrlng a three ua> a before date of show. } vvwvvvvwvvwvvvvwvw J I Peirce i | School i i | 3'4<l Year. 1 ;. ; , A representative American Busl- I ness School for both sexes, founded ■ ; by THOMAS MAY PKIIUK, A. M., J " * Ph. D. Couples •ystrmatlc bml- " , IICNH training with a practical, I sound and useful English educa- ] | * , tion. It oilers three full courses:— " " Business, Shorthand and Type- ' | „ writing, English; the whole cou- " J ■ stltutlng an ideal combination. J ■ " Graduates are cheerfully assisted ' " I to positious. | * M Both Day and Night Sessions are 1 I | now running. Students received ( ■ - at any time. ( " I'KIKCK StllOOl., 017-010 Iheitnut St., I'hllailn. l" A Reeord llulldlng. * 4 QIIOKIY secured. Trait, mark, ul Coprrfttht, C registered and patent business of every description r 7 promptly and skillfully conducted at lowest rates. Inventions introduced, companies formed, ami PAtl^ < F.NTB BOLD ON COMMISOION. 2.'. years' experience P < Highest references, gond us model, sketch n r Photo. ► of invention, with explanation, and we will report d whether patentable or n<>t. tree of Ol T l! nr ■ 4 PAYABLE WHEN PATENT IB ALLOWED W]"C 4 patent la aecureit wo w ill endaot it. sale far von with- L ■* s,'il. eh " r * t '' "-PAGE HAND-EOOK anil li.tnff 4 re ir°i'°° ™" m™"t'l-omplotJ iftth'Jat.Tt Kk P 4 P" bl '^' l every inventor slu.uld KP.IT3 POKONE. t 4 H. B. WILLSON & CO . Patent Solicitor., F 4 U Unit B'ld'jt, WAOHINCaTOfd D . C L ■wm rvwvwwvvr v wvv 7vv-t G. HORACK, Baker & Confectioner. Wholesale and Retail. OENTHB STEEET, FKEELAND. Heat ( oujfh Byrup. Ttujtos Good. ÜBO J in time. Sold by driiwlHts. • Are You Afraid ® TO READ BOTH SIDES OF THE QUESTION? The New York Journal is the only Metropolitan paper indorsing Bryan and Sewall and it daily publishes articles by the leading financiers of the country on both sides of the question, "Silver versus Gold/' It is progressive, liberal and always espouses the cause of the masses. Every broad minded man should read it, whether Republican or Democrat. U Ifl 111. Daily ----- i Cent everywhere. Subscription for One Month, including Sunday - - - -40 cents Two Months and a Half - - SI.OO Send subscription to The New York Journal, Circulation Department, NEW YORK. East Stroudsburg, Pa. A Famous School In a Famous Location. Among the mountains of the noted resort. , ! <iup- A school of throe hundred ponds, with no over-crowded '•hisses, Inil where touchers can heroine vMiiuH?lu'i'helr wVrk.""" """ " C "' tht ' m i,Kil " Modern improvement. A tine new irvrann- in charire nf ej[|iert trainers. it o teach So\vinn, Dressmaking, Clnv Mialol .i I !?'extra elnuße "rawing with school than in the oveicrowded schools? Address GEO. P. EI3LE, Principal. Harness! I larness! Light Carriage Harness, 15.60, $7, $9 and $lO 50. Heavy Express Harness, $16.60, sl9, S2O and $22. Heavy Team Harness, double, $25, S2B and S3O. fiE§. WISE, • Jeddo and Freelaud, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers