Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, July 19, 1897, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    RAILROAD TIMETABLES
LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD.
June 13, 1897.
AHRANGI'.MKNT OK I'ASSSNOEIt TIIAINS.
LEAVE FUEELANU.
0 Ufl. 8 48. 8 "f> a m, I 40, 8 04, il 20, "> 25, 0 10, 707
1> m, for Mriftou, Jwldu, FuunUry, lli.zlo llrook
una Lumber Yard.
0 06, 8 45, 035 a in, 1 40,333, (5 35 p ni, Black Diu
monU) tor Weutherly, Muucii Chunk. Allen
town, Boston. i'hiludelphiu uinl New York.
7 07 p in for Went burly, Munch chunk, Allen
town, Easton and intermediate stations.
tios. 'J .15 aiu, 3 34, 5 07 pm, tor linzle
ton, Delano, Mulianoy City, Shenundoali, Ash
land, Mi Cannel, Sliaiimkin and l'ottsville.
11 11 1' ,n ,or Sandy Kuu,
" uito Haven and Wilkesbarre.
SUNDAY TRAINS.
8 38, 10.50 u m for Sandy Iluu, White Haven
and Wilkesbarre.
10 50 a 111 and 138 p 111 for Jed do. Foundry,
liazle Brook, Stockton and Hnzletoii.
10 50 u 111 lor Ua/.lcton, Delano, Mnlmnoy
Ciiy, Shenandoah, Mt. (Jariuel, Shamokin and
l'ottsville.
1 38 i 111 for Weutherly. Maueh Chunk, Allen
town, Easton, Philadelphia and New York.
ARRIVE AT FREELAND.
5 50, 7 38, SI 30, lu 51, 11 54 a in, 13 58, 3 30, 3 58,
5 35, 8 01. 703 p in, from I.umber Yard, Huzle
11 00k, Foundry, Jed.loand Drifton.
7 38, si 30, 10 51, 1154 a 111, 13 58, 3 30, 3 58, 5 35
p in, lroni Huzicton.
'J 30, 10 51 a in, 13 58, 8 01, p 111, from Phila
delphia, New York, Huston, Alleutown, Muuch
Chunk and Weutherly.
7 03 p 111 from Muuch Chunk and Weutherly.
035 a 111, 3 34, 7 07 pin, from Wilkesburre,
White Haven and Sandy Run.
7 38,1130, 10 51 a 111, 3 30, 5 A5 p 111, from Delano,
Mahnnoy City, Shenandoah, Ashland, Mt. Car
niel, Shamokin and l'ottsville.
SUNDAY TRAINS.
8 38, 10 50 um and 13 55 pm, from Hazleton,
Stockton, Lumber Yard, Huzle brook, Foun
dry, Jeddo and Drifton.
10 50a 111, 13 55 pin. from Philadelphia, New
York. Easton, Alleutown, and Muuch Chunk,
10 50 a 111, lroin l'ottsville, Shumokiu, Mt.
Gunnel Ashland, Shenandoah, Mutiunoy City
and Delano.
10 50 u in, from Wilkesbarre, White Ilaven
and Sandy Hun.
For further information inquire of Ticket
Agents.
CIIAS. S. LEE, Geu'l Pass. Agent,
I'hila., Pa.
ROLLIN 11. WILHCH, Gen. Supt. East. Div.
A. W. NUNNEMACHEU, Ass'tG. P. A.,
South Bethlehem, Pa.
THE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA ANL
SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD.
Time table in effect April 18,1807.
Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, Huzle
Brook, Stockton, Beaver Meadow ltoud, Kuan
and Huzicton Junction at 5 30, 800 a 111, daily
except Sunday; and 7 Oil a in, 3 38 p in, Sunday.
Trainsleavc Drifton for I Jar wood. Cranberry,
Tomhickcn and Dcringor at 5:>U, 8 00 a 111, daily
except Suuduy; and 703 a m, 338 p 111, Sun
day.
Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction,
llarwood Uoud, Humboldt Uoud, Oneida and
Shcppton at 800 a 111, daily except Sun
day; and 7 03 a in, 3 38 p 111, Sunday.
Trains leave Hazleton J unction for Harwood,
Cranberry, Tomhickcn and Duringer at 035 a
m, daily except Sunday; and 8 53 u 111, 4 33 p m,
Sunday.
Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida
Junction, Harwood Koad, Humboldt Uoud,
Oneida ami Shcppton at 8 33, 11 10 a 111, 1 11 p m,
daily except Sunday; and 7 37 a 111, 3 11 p in,
Sunday.
Trains leave Derinjrer for Tomhickcn, Cran
berry, Harwood, Ha/.lcton Junction and ltoun
ut 3 35, 6 40 p 111, daily except Sunday; and 0 37
a m, 5 07 p 111, Sunday.
Trains leave Shcppton for Oneida, Humboldt
ltoud, Harwood Uoud, Oneida Junction, Hazle
ton Junction and ltoun at 7 11 am, 13 40, 5 33
p ra, daily except Sunday; and 8 11 a m, 3 44
p in, Sunday.
Trains leave Shcppton for Heaver Meadow
ltoud, Stockton, Huzle brook, Eckley, Jeddo
and Drifton at 5 33 p in, daily, except Sunday;
and 8 11 am,3 44 p in, Sunday.
Trainsleavc Hazleton Junction for Ilcaver
Meadow ltoiul, Stockton, lluzle brook, Eckley,
Jeddo and Drifton at 5 45, 838 pin, dully,
except Sunday; and 10 10 a m, 5 40 p m, Sunday.
All trains connect at Hazleton Junction with
electric ears fur Hazleton, Jeuncsvillc, Auden
ried and other points 011 the Traction Com
pany's line.
Trains leaving Drifton at 5 3(LO 00 a in make
connection at Dcringer with I'. It. it. trains for
Wilkesbarre, Suubury, llarrisburg und points
west.
For the accommodation ol passengers ut way
stations between Hazleton Junction und De-r
--inger, a train will leave the former point ut
350 p m, daily, except Sunday, arriving at
Duringer at 5 UO p in.
LUTIiEU C. SMITH, Superintendent.
GREAT BARGAINS IN
Dry Goods, Groceries
and Provisions.
Noti/jns, Carpet, Boots and S/toes,
Flour and Feed,
Tobacco, Cigars,
'Tin and (Jueenswiire,
Wood and WMoiowarc,
Table and Floor Oil Cloth, Etc.
A celebrated brand of XX Hour
always in stock.
Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty.
My motto Is small profits and quick sules.
I ulways have fresh goods and am
turning my stock every month.
Every article is guaranteed.
AMANDUS OSWALD,
N. W. Cor. Centre arid Front fits., Freeland.
DePIERRO - BROS.
-CAFE.-
Corner of Centre and Front Streets,
Freeland. Pa.
Finest Whiskies in Stock.
Gibson. Dougherty, Kaufer Club,
Koscnbluth's Velvet, of which we have
EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN.
Mumm's Extra Dry Champagne,
llenneHsy Brandy, Blackberry,
Gins, Wines, Clarets, Cordials, Etc.
Imported and Domestic Cigars,
OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE,
Dam and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches,
Sardines, Etc.
MEALS - AT - ALL - HOURS.
Bullcntinc und Hazleton beer on tap.
Baths, Hot or Cold, 25 Cunts.
I'he VicLrVapor Engine
manufucf urod by
ThOB. Kane A Co.. Chicago.
Steady spiM'd. ,'iisy to start, always re
liable. absolutely safe, all parts inter
changeable. adapted fur any class of
work requiring power.
J. D. MYERS, Agt,
FREELAND, PA.
Call or send for catalogues and prices.
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
Celebrated fur lis great leavening
strength and hculthf illness. Assures! ho
food against alum and all forms of adul
teration common to the cheap brands.
ROYAL UAKINU POWPEIt CO., NEW YORK.
FREELAND TRIBUNE'
Established 1838.
PUBLISHED EVEUV
MONDAY ANI) THURSDAY
IIY THE
TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE.
Malic all money orders, check*, etc., ixinahlc t<>
the Tribune Printing Com pan u. Limited.
SUBSCRIPTION 11ATES:
One Year 31.50
Six Months 75
Four Mouths 50
Two Months 35
The date which the subscription is paid to is
oil the address label of each paper, the change
of which to a subsequent date becomes a
receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in
advance of the present date. Report prompt
ly to tills ollicu whenever paper is not received.
Arrearages must be paid when subscription
is discontinued.
FREELAND, PENN'A, JULY 10, ISU7.
Criticising the Alien Tax.
From the Philadelphia Press.
Editor Press. —l. Is :i foreigner free
from the three-cent tax by producing his
lirst papers, when he has declared his
intention to become a citizen?
2. Are they to bo chargod with or for
t hirty days in a month, or only for each
day they work?
3. Does a townsiiip tax receipt release
them from the three-cent, tax when they
can not show a citizen paper? A. W. E.
Shelly, Pa., July 13, 1807.
The so-called alien tax law imposts
no tax on aliens. It taxes the employ
ers of aliens "three cents a day for
each day each of such foreign-born
unnaturalized male persons may bo
employed." That alien may have de
clared his intention and may have paid
township-or other taxes. It. makes no
difference. If a man employs an alien
he must pay the three-cent tax. After
doing that the law allows such employers
to deduct the amount of the tax from
the alien's wages.
So long as aliens are permitted to
come to the United States they have the
right to tin! equal protection of its laws.
No state can keep them out of its
borders, neither can it rightfully ban
ish them from its limits by prevent
ing or discouraging their employment,
as tliis Dili attempts to do. The United
States government alone can deal with
aliens, and this law of Pennsylvania
which attempts to put all aliens under a
boycott by making their employment
burdensome to the employer is a usurpa
tion of power and an interference with
the exclusive federal control of immigra
tion.
Some public-spirited employer should
resist this law and take it into court for
adjudication. As, however, employers
are. given the right to shift the burden
of this alien tax upon their alien em
ployes, it is for the interest of the latter
to take the act into court for review.
An alien by the name of Prazer has
already done this in Pittsburg. \Vo do
not believe the state courts will sustain
the law. We are confident that tin*
United States courts will declare it void
without a moment's hesitation.
Neglecting Tlieir Work.
From the Wilkesbarre Leader.
There is a great deal of complaint
these days about people who hold posi
tions of responsibility either public or
private that they are neglecting their
duties, thus tending to demoralize the
service in which they are employed.
County officials who are paid very "high
salaries seem to know little or nothing
about the affairs of their office and a
man can call at a county office day in
and day out only to learn that the offi
cial for whom he Is in search "has just
gone out," "is out of town," "has not
corno in yet" or some other inadequate
reason given for Ids non-appearance.
Many of the chief clerks in county
offices, who are really the officials that,
transact business, follow the example o r
their superiors and also absont them
selves without cause. Many -of these
clerks owe their position to activity in
politics and they keep up that activity
at tlies exponso of the taxpayers.
It is a well known fact that in t! e
court house one certain chief clerk L
more conspicuous by his absence than
his presence. (Jo into the office day af
ter clay. inquire for him and the answer
is ho has just stepped out, when as a
matter of fact, he has not set foot in the
office for a week. Other clerks can he
met in the corridors talking with local
or country statesmen, or perhaps you
are told when asking for them that they
are attending some celebration or Re
publican gathering instead of attending
to the duties for which they are paid.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castoria.
ON A SCHOOL COMMITTEE.
Interesting Anocdotos About tho
Present Soerotary of tho Navy.
Connection wllli Local Affairs of Hlng
lium, 3lllMN.—Chairman of School
Committee—Town moderator—
An Acquaintance Ucnc*vcil.
[Copyright, 1597.J
It Is in llirig-ham, Mass., that you
may pick up most gossip about ex
(Jov. Long, now secretory of the navy,
for Ilingham has known him ever since,
like Joliu A. Andrew, another lloston
lawyer who became governor of the
state, he married a Ilingham girL, and
settled down to live there.
Very soon after becoming a resident
of Ilingham he began to take an active
interest in Ilingiham's affairs, und it
was not long before it was agreed that
he was the best man to act. n the mod
erator ot' the annual town meeting, and
to serve as clwdrman of tho school com
mittee. When a man achieves these
places in a New England town, he may
fairly be considered one of the leading
citizens —one of the. pillars of society.
This Mr. Long understood, and the du
ties that were thus thrust upon him he
strove earnestly to perform with credit,
just as he is now striving to be a good
secretary of the ruivy.
Perhaps it wus us chairman of the
school committee that he shone with
most effulgence in those old days, since
in tluit capacity it fell upon him every
year to present the diplomas to the
graduating class of the high school.
His aunual address on graduating day
was always u thing of real literary
grace, but when it came to the actual
presentation of the diplomas he used to
avoid a certain rather necessary detail,
in order, perhaps, to hide the fact that
he did not personally know all the
members of the class.
".Each of you take one—the first one
j'Oti come to." he upod to whisper to the
ciu in a body, just after the fine, ;
w$ -■
ASSORT THEM AFTERWARDS. ~ v
Memory, closing period of his speech,
"and assort them out among yourselves
afterwards."
Ye; quite recently the secretary of
!.lte navy has shown that he remem
bers some, at least, of those who re
ceived their diplomas from liim. One J
of them, about whose blue ribboned j
certificate of graduation there was some I
confusion, lives in Washington. As ;
neither had seen the other for yen is, the i
graduate naturally hesitated to intrude j
upon the new cabinet minister, and yet
before he had been, in office a mouth the I
new secretary himself renewed the ac
quaintance.
"Dear Albert," he wrote, among other ;
things, in a letter to the graduate, "why I
haven't you been to see me?"
The secretary of the wavy is a lib
"rnl in religion. His old home is one of
the early Unitarian towns of New Eng- j
land. There is the old church, organ- |
i/.ed In IG3B, worshiping in its present
edifice since IGS6, the longest record of
continuous occupancy in the country,
a church in which old Dr. Gray, a Uni
tarian earlier tlAn Clianning, used to
preach. And there is another, tlie "New
North," which "The Governor" attends
when in Ilingham, founded by secedens
from the church, who believed that |
"I'urson Richardson" (who preached GO j
years and went to congress) was dab
bling in polities too much. So it was
natural enough that Mr. Long should
become president of the American Uni
tarian association, ami should now be.
found each Sunday in Washington
where, by the way, the venerable Sen
ator Morrill, of Vermont, keeps him
company, and Senator ('handler, of New
Hampshire; Senator Hoar, of Massachu
setts; Gen. A. W. Greely and Col. Car
roll I. Wright ure regular comnitini
enuts. Mr. Young found in the pulpit
of All Souls^ young Mr. Lenvilt, a Iling
ham boy; which proves again how small
the world is.
Ills daughter ITchn usually accom
panies Secretary Long to church. He j
has written verses in her honor, and in j
her sister Margaret's honor also. They !
are two fine, grown-up girls now. Mar
garet Is still in Massachusetts, and
Helen has thus far borne nil the pleas
ant social burdens of a. cabinet officer's
family. I'eforc her marriage, the pres- ;
ent Mrs. Long, a minister's daughter, I
the stepmother of these girls, was an j
assistant teacher in the high school at
Ilingham. a lovely, dark-eyed, slender!
women. The sou of the second mur- I
riege, Pierce, is about the liveliest ten
l year-old youngster in Mussuchusettte.
Long enjoys smoking almost as much
' as Mckinley, und it may be that this
| eomm unity of taste as to tobacco, in
spite of the fact that tlie present secre
tary preferred the flavor of a corn-cob
pipe to that of the black Havana chosen
by the president, helped to draw them
! together when they were both in con
! gross. At all events they were very
chummy, and there is no doubt that it
' was largely because of this former in
timacy between the two thut the presi
dent gave the navy portfolio to the
Massachusetts man.
The fact that "Governor" Long is
short and stout undoubtedly adds
somewhat to the antique appearance of
his now celebrated plug hat. It is not
that the hat is so very old nor so very
ill-shuped; In fact, it is fairly modern
looking. Hut it. sits well down on the
governor's massive head, and as his
figure is built somewhat "on the sum
mer cattage plan," the squatty shape
if the tile Is much exaggerated. But
Mr. Long doubtless considers (if he
thinks of the matter at nil) that some
leeway is to be allowed to a secretary
of the navy who has never been to sea;
and neither his friends nor the general
public will probably think nnv the less
of him because of such an exhibition of
the carelessness of genius.
BREAD TICKETS DIDN'T GO.
Young Woman ami a New Conductor
Trifled with Shamefully.
The tall young man with big blue
eyes felt through his vest pockets for
the fare while the conductor waited.
The good-looking woman by the
tall young man's side smiled compla
cently and if the car had not been so
crowded she would have said:
"Just like a man—never puts any
thing where he can find it."
Then the tall young man felt through
his trousers pockets.
The conductor began to get uneasy.
So did the young woman. The young
! man was culm und deliberate.
lie felt through the pockets of bis
coat, and finally ran his hand through
the lining of his overcoat and rum
maged about in the remote corners of
that garment.
The passengers quit reading the signs
I and focused their attention upon him.
The young woman lldgetod in her seat
' and remembered with horror that she
had left her own purse at home. The
1 conductor pulled the bell rope to let
I somebody oft' anil then resumed the ut
-1 titudo which said: "Any time."
I From tlie cavernous depths of lils
overcoat the young man fished up two
j last season theater checks and u wud of
1 wool waste.
' "Why, how aggravating that is!"
I whispered the young woman.
I "Can't you find it?" ventured the con
ductor. He was a new man, und almost.
■ us embarrassed as the young womn.
| "No, conductor," sid the young man.
"I seem to have left my poeketbook at
home. But here are a couple of bread
tickets that I just paid ten cents for.
You may have them."
"Why, the company doesn't nuthor-
I ize inc. to take bread tickets," he gasped,
j It wus plain to see the passengers en
i joyed the situation, all except those
who were engaged in pitying the young
1 woman.
; "What! Not take bread tickets! You
haven't read your rules and regulations,
man," exclaimed the young gentleman
in well-feigned surprise, "Broad
tickets always have gone heretofore 011
this line. Here; you bettor take
them."
He held out two bits of pasteboard
stamped in violet ink.
"Won't have thein, eh?"
The young man looked hurt. lie
slowly replaced them in his vest pocket,
drew a quarter from the swine recep
tacle uuil paid his fare.
"Ding, ding," went the conductor's
indicator. The passengers looked re
lieved und disappointed, the young
woman happy, the young man indiffer
ent. Hut. the young woman still thinks
the affair was all in dead earnest.—Kan
sas City Times.
Acrful AdvorlKlnti Solicinr.
j The earth is not big enough for the
! Chicago advertiser, und he proposes to
I annex the air by sending lip captive
balloons, from which is suspended n
1 framework sign, carrying enormous let
, ters, which may be read nt a great dis
tance., though not from the remote ru
| r al districts of UlO Lake city.
NOVEL OCCUPATION.
I Your California Woman Who
Live* by l-'uke Suicides.
There is a young- woman coming buel
to Oakland, Col., who, according to the
Sun Francisco Examiner, has made her
ivuy around the United States by fre
fluent attempts ut suicide. She has a
record of trying to destroy herself ten
t lines, but on each occasion she has been
saved in the nick of time. She is known
as Mrs. Laura Price, formerly u daring
circus rider.
Sheriff White lias just completed the
tusk of securing the history of the
young woman and he lias Ixfc-n re
quested to forward his report to New
Orleans, where Mrs. Price is now in
confinement because she attempted to
take licr life. Mrs. Price has asked aid
from the oflicials in the south, stating
TRIED TO DROWN HERSELF.
that it is her desire to return to friends i
in Oakland. She will be shipped back
If the necessary can be raised.
Mrs. Price is young and of pleasing up
pearance. Claiming to be u deserted
wife and ex-circus rider, is said to
make her way from town to town secur
ing contributions und playing ut sui
cide.
Six months ago she tried to drown
herself in Portland by jumping Into the
river In the presence of u crowd. She
was saved, and a purse wu.s raised to
gc.t her out of town. Then she turned
up at Redding, where she made a feeble
attempt to hang herself to a trestle.
Again she was rescued and a purse was
raised to send her 011 her way. In Oak
land she created a sensation by announc
ing during a storm that she was going
to walk to Los Angeles. She started
out bravely enough, but when she got
to I lay wards she pretended to try and
hang herself to a bridge. This did not
work well, so she waded into a stream,
where she was soon discovered. The
good people of Ilaywards provided
bountifully for her, nud she was brought
back to this city. The usual purse was
raised, und she was shipped on the over
land south. At Los Angeles she created
the usual scene by attempting to drown
herself. From that point she was
shipped 011 until she managed to make
her way to New Orleans, where she has
just created the usual sensation by cov
ering herself with Mississippi river
mud.
SHE WAS FRIGHTENED.
Amusing Comedy I'luyed In an
Hhli Hallway Train.
A train ut Wimbledon was Just start
ing for London, when a young woman
reached the station, and simply bud
time to jump into the first compart
men she reached and flop down on the
cushioned seat. "Only then," she writes,
"did I observe that I had, as a single
fellow traveler, a man, young, well
dressed, but of somewhat forbidding
ok |wet. For the moment, however, 1
dill not. feel in the slightest degree nerv
ous, and commenced to road a pajjer.
After the train hud passed, one station
I liupjHMß'd to glance toward one end of
the carriage. I observed the man to be
greatly agitated, and gazing intently in
my direction. Then he got on his feet.
A sudden,overwhelming fear took pos
session of inc. lie was a murderer, I
was certain. I thought of shrieking for
help, but my tongue refused to move.
"WHAT DO YOU MEAN?"
The monster—for so he seemed to me—
looked anxiously übout him, apparently
to make sure that he could not be ob
served from without. Then he came
quite close to me, at the same moment
putting his right hand in his overcoat
pocket. Was it a revolver he had, or a
knife, or a peatle, or w hat? Springing
to my feet I faced him in despair. 'What
<lo you mean?' 1 cried, half fainting as
1 s]K>ke. lie bent toward me, smiled
grimly, und said: 'Excuse me, madam,
I offer you ten thousand apologies if I
have alarmed you. Such a thing was
the furthest removed from my thoughts.
The fact is, I have to alight nt the next
rtation, and since you entered the train
you have been sitting on inv lint!* I
blushed my apologies. Fortunately the
hat was a soft one."
Lively Trndlnir In Knnno*.
Two cows, two pigs, eighteen hems, a
greyhound pup and a bull wore given
to an agent by an Abilene (Knn.) farm
er for a cabinet organ.
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD " CASTORIA," AND
" PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK.
I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same
that has borne and docs now s/vy —" on even J
bear the facsimile signature of C&zjt/x wrapper.
This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been
used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
the hind you have always bought ——— on the
and has the signature of wrap
per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex
cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
President /> - .
March 8,1897. n,p.
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you
(because he makes a few more pennies 011 it), the in
gredients of which even he does not know.
"The Kind You Have Always Bought"
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You,
% w. L. mmm o
p%r- SQ.O9 SHOE \Jjfl
G 8 The Style, Fit and Wear v
flp.' •: "*JYW VLJy could not he Improved for "!/>
/;>s;• : *** Double the Price. 13!?* '
A L. Douglas $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00 Shoes are the
\ productions of skilled workmen, from the best ma
mm. \ ftjtW terial possible to put into shoes sold at these prices.
l|i||fi \ } }.\ We make also $2.50 and $2.25 shoes for men, and
IBB|ljpfe \ ■ 'Y\ S2.SO, $2.00 and $ J .75 for boys, and the W. L.
fP^MWfoyK \ l ~ Douglas $3.50 Police shoe, very suitable for
\ letter-carriers, policemen and others having
vBBpIw I lilU£ -h walking to do.
V' A We are constantly adding now styles to our
VfaLf , ' \ already large variety, and there is no rea-
Morchnnts, seP' \ son why yon cannot be suited, so insist on
Bankers, Wjjjfc • \ having W. L. Douglas Shoes from your
Ssjtn lU " B - T"V WO ti.se only the host Calf. Russia Calf
Jri,.., : (all colorsi, French Patent Calf,
nii'ii wlllr /fe-' \ French Knaiuel, Vici Kid, etc.,
w I n i \ graded to correspond with prices
Sh'ues lSc"!M a "they " ;X ol the shoes.
by W L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
CATALOGUE FUBE.
JOHN BELLEZZA, Centre Street, Freeland.
East Slroiidsburg, Pa.
A Famous School
In a Famous Location.
Among- the* mountains of tho noted resort, j
tin- In-laware Water <in|. A school ol' Hire.-
or lour hundred pupils, with no over-crowded
elnsses, Init where teuelieis can heeoine ae
(|iialnted with their pupil* and help them inUi- j
vidually lu their work.
Modern improvement. A tine new gymuu- '
slum, in ehurg-u of expert trainers.
We teach Sewing, Dressmaking, Clay Model- >
i'Ur, rreelutnd and Meehuiueal Drawing with
out extra eli urge.
Write to us at once l'or our catalogue and ,
other information. You gain more in a small
school than in tho overcrowded schools.
Address
GEO. P. BIBLE, Principal.
VIENNA: BAKERY.
J. B. LAUBACH, Prop.
Centre Street, Freolanil.
CHOICE HKEAI) OF ALL KINDS
CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAIRY. '
FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES
RAKED TO ORDER.
Confectionery f s Ice Cream
supplied to balls, parties or picnies. Willi
all necessary adjuncts, at shortest
notice and l'airest prices.
Delivery and supply wagons let all parts nj
town ami surroundings every day.
FRANCIS BRENNAN,
RESTAURANT
151 Centre Btrcet, Froelapd.
FINEST LIQUOR, BEER, PORTER,
ALE, CIGARS AND TEM
PERANCE DRINKS.
Best Cough by rap. Tastes Rood. ÜBO I
in time. Sold by drniriclHts. Pf i
EEZmoiiauiHE^
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castorta*
| wheels,!
3 Qonlilyrisr Too! I
' ' - ""j
| STYLES:
| Ladies', Geutlemeu's & Tandem, f
\ Tho Lightest Itunnlng Wheels on Earth. J
THE ELDREDGE \
J I
3 ....AA'D.... p
THEGEHRE.!
1 \
Wc always Mado Good Sewing Machines! >
Why Shouldn't we Make Good Whoelsl f
1
g National Sewing Machine Co.,
J 339 Broadway, Factory: L
New York. Bclvldere. Ills. 9
I''* ( "a' '.^i i;t • M Put - *
ent bur.mcss conducted for MOOCRATE FEES. £
Oun OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OTFICE#
| 5 and we can secure patent in less time than those I
# remote from Washington.
# Send model, drawing or photo., with dcscrip-#
I Jtiun. We advise, if patentable or not, free of 5
' * charge. Our fco not due till patent is secured. £
i * A PAMPHLCT, "How to Obtain Patents," with#
| Jcost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J
/sent free. Address, J
jC.A.SftOW&COJ
# OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, O. C *
G. HORACK,
Baker k Confectioner.
Wholesale and Retail.
CENTRE STREET, PEEELAND.
Read - tlie - Tribune.