FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1388. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STKEKT A HOVE CENTHE. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four Months 50 Two Months 25 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. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to tills otlice whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. FREELAND, PA., JANUARY 10, I*oß Saved by a Snore. A few weeks ago, says the Chicago Times-Herald, the local press an nounced with a flourish of trumpets that inventive genius had won another triumph and a South side citizen had patented a device to prevent snoring. At that time, we believe, this discovery was hailed as a great boon to the pub lic. Now we have come to look upon it hs an unwarranted and unjustifiable in terference with one of the manifesta tions of nature. A special dispatch from Milwaukee announces that Robert Wag ner, of that city, has been saved from going to the penitentiary because he is the owner and user of a peculiar ear piercing, nerve-shattering snore. Rob ert. it appears, owned a warehouse which burned the other night under circumstances which indicated incen diarism. lie was arrested and a clear case of circumstantial evidence was made out against him. At the last mo ment two nieces proved a complete alibi for him by swearing that during the night in question- they were kept awake by their uncle's nasal foghorn, which never missed a toot all night. Go to with your clothespins and claptraps built for silencing the snore! Nature knows best. One of the best prescriptions that can issue from a physician is a change, a specialist friend of mine tells me. says a writer in an exchange, j The effects of mingling with new people who have new methods of thought is very salutary, he says. Always to see the same people do Ilie same thing, feel the same w ay, produces a. 1 stagnant condition of the mind and heart that is very distressing to behold. There are thousands of invalids who might be greatly benefited by getting away from home, if only for a short time, to mingle with strangers and be touched with the magnetism of the great world as it. courses in its accus tomed rounds. And there are mental and moral invalids who need the same change to get their heart and mind enlarged and let in a little more of the great light of life. • A bicycle has reached Central Africa and has greatly exercised the minds of the natives. It was at. first put down variously as a grinding mill and a cir cular saw. The owner, a Tanganyika missionary, gives the people a treat when he dismounts a bearing and al lows them to examine the "bullets," as they call the balls—an eloquent com mentary on their education; and when they see him mounted and spinning along their exclamation is: "Ko banda Jkasikolo!" which is alleged to be equivalent to "Good gracious!" Could they behold one of our American scoroherino bloomer girls in transit their language would prove insufficient to express their astonishment. The completion or the aerial tram way over Chilkat pass is promised be fore February. Steel towers and cables support the boxlike carriages, which will have a capacity of 300 pounds each. The road is expected to transport 120 tons a day from Skaguay to the head waters of the Yukon. With this accom plished the worst hardships and risks of the journey will be removed. Big checks are fashionable this fall. The other day there was deposited in New York one for $13,045,250, to pay the first installment of the debt due by the Union Pacific Railroad company to the United States. A few days ago a check for $17,000,000 was drawn to the ©rder of the city of New York in pay ment of municipal bonds. AScruthTopeka (Kan.) farmer is said | to be enjoying new potatoes on his j home table, the third crop from the same part of his land this year. The song says: "Potatoes they grow small in Kansas." If they were given a chance they might grow large. A young w oman in Baltimore has had one of her front teeth filled with a half carat diamond. This must be the girl to whom the singer referred when he remarked that "Her Blight Smile Daunts Me St ill." A fcLlow down in Barren county, Ky., walked 32 miles the other day to get a license to wed. Rome men find trouble nearer home tban that. CASTOIIIA. WEISS' 3L An Incentive to Industry. "1 am really delighted at the interest iy boy Tommy is taking in his writ ng." said Mrs. Hickleby. "He spends wo hours a day at it." "Really? llow strange! now did >ou get him to doit?" "Oh, as for that, I told him to write me out a list of everything he wanted for his birthday, and he's still at it."— Tit-Bits. A Gooil Guess. "Reuben," said Mrs. Pendleton, who had been reading the society news in a Louisville paper, "what do you sup pose is a revolutionary tea, which seems to be all the go in the city?" "I suppose it's a tea whar the women do a great deal of fightin'," replied Mr. | Pendleton. —Louisville Courier-Journal, j The Pronpect. "Do you think," said the man who had bought a large tract of arid land, "that I shall be able to water this waste." "I dunno," replied the native. "It strikes me, though, that there's u heap better chance of your wasting the j water."—Washington Stnr. Wants vs. Needs. ' Little Dot—Oh, mamma, the organ 1 grinder's monkey is at the window, j hn' he has a little round box in his hand. | Mamma—Well, my pet, what do you j think he wants? Little Dot (after a glance at the or- | gan-grinder)—l dess he wants to bor- j row some soap.—-N. Y. Weekly. A Sinecure. Weary Willie —De milk inspectors liev hired ol' Slosby Slocum ter test milk. Sunset Sims—ls it hard work? Weary Willie—Not very. Slobsy sim ply drinks a little out uv each can, an' if dere's enny wateiMn it is puts him right inter convulsions. —Judge. And She Jumped at the Chance. Miss Youngly—So you've only known him a month? Don't you think you're taking a great many chances in marry ing him? Miss Oldwaite (candidly)— Dear me. no! It's the only chance I've had in ten years. —Judge. Then He Kissed Her. "While I cm as much opposed to the anarchist as anyone else," she said, "it is still evident 1o me that there is some thing very attractive about the word." "What is it?" he asked. "The pronunciation of the last syl lable," she replied.—Chicago Post. A Serious Objection. Spirit Medium (to skeptic)— Now that you have conversed with the spirit of I your departed brother, are you not con vinced? Have you any more objections to offer? Skeptic—-None except the fact that my brothers ore all living.—Judge. Experienced. City Friend (enviously)— Well, I sup pose you know all about gardening, now that you and your wife have been living out in the suburbs for* a year? Mr. Remotely (of Lonelyville, fer vently)— Yes; we don't garden any more!—N. Y. World. Bound to liOse. "There is just one trouble with large families," said the student of social phe- | nomena, "and that is that a man is kept so busy supporting one he doesn't have any time to spend at home."—Chicago Journal. The Cornucopia*. These horns of plenty always come In sizes, you must own. Some get a small tin horn, nnd some Possess a large trombone. —Washington Star. i GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Professor Grammar School And your son, I hear is attending college? Mrs. Stnuckle—Yes, he's gone to one of them pyrotechnic institutes, and we | hope he'll soon extinguish himself.— ' I N. Y. Herald. Can Yon See the Pointf When a goat dines on scrap-iron, It amuses man; But it doesn't tickle his palate like An oyster can. —Chicago News. No Time for Bcpeutance. "Yes," said Hardshell, wearily, "I I married in hastei—" I "And repented at leisure, eh?" in terrupted Softhead. "No. I've had no leisure."—Town Topics. Not Responsible. "Why did Columbus forgive the mu- ; t'.neers?" asked the 'teacher. " 'Cause they was half seas over when they kicked," said Johnnie. —Harlem Life. May Have Meant That* "He told me to get off the earth. What do you suppose he meant?" | "He seemed to think that you ! needed a bath, evidently."—Louisville ! Courier-Journal. Two r* I tub t s. ; Trivvet—l saw a flight of wild ducks I yesterday. | Dicer—That's nothing. I saw a flight j | of stairs.—Louisville Courier-Journal. | The Hero. Father—Who is the best boy in the school? 1 Freddie—Chip ITardboy. lie kin al- I most lick der teacher.—N. Y. Journal. AS THE POETS SEE IT. You Can Scatter Sunshine. There's a heap of satisfaction In the knowing, if you know, That this world Is just an Eden, If you try to make it so; For no one can monopolize The King of light und day. And you can scatter sunshine, If You Feel That Way. There's a joy behind each sorrow, There's a lesson in defeat. There's e lecture in experience Philosophers can't beat; And nothing like "I've been there" Can teach you day by day To scatter wads of sunshine. If Yd a Feel That Way. When you stand before your mirror And you see reflected there The Image of your Maker, * With a face of blank despair. Just reason for a moment. Let nature have full sway, For you can scatter sunshine. If You Feel That Way. —Capt. Jack Crawford, the "Poet Scout," in L. A. W. Bulletin. A Maid with No Appetite. I Rebecca Dainty wns a maid whose sum i mers no one knew. Though she for fifteen years had said that she was thirty-two; ! And though she never felt real smart, folks called her rather bright, j And, while she had a good, kind heart, she had no appetite. She always came to breakfast late, and ne'er forgot her sigh; First she would pass her little plate and try a piece of pie, Next she would cast her eyes around the table, left and right, To see if something could be found to tempt her appetite. If on the table buns were found, to eat some she would try, And then of lamb chops spoil a pound, nor pass the codfish by. A pi ee or two of hot cornbread was always her delight, Although, poor thing, she always said she had no appetite. dhe next would try a chicken's leg and then a piece of wing; Next she would eat a soft-boiled egg and then most anything. She always wanted something light when first she started in, But how she coaxed her appetite would make an ostrich grin. —Thomas F. Porter, in N. Y. Sun. The Day That Summer Died. The day that summer died we saw a change Creep slowly o'er the sunshine of her face— A fleeting beauty, dim and wholly strange, Unlike the brightness of her earlier grace. We felt a ohiill in every breeze that blew, And saw across the meadows green and wide A veil of frost that silvered all the dew— The day that summer died. j The day that summer died a red leaf fell From out the maple's green and stately crest, And all the slender fern leaves In the dell In robes of white and palest gold were dressed. A late rose shed its petals one by one, The poplar stirred its trembling leaves and sighed; A glowing dahlia blossomed In the sun— The day that summer died. The day that summer died the forest stream Crept forth to catch the blueness of the skies; ' The hills grew dim and hazy as a dream, Or, like a vision viewed by tearful eyes, A growing shadow, chill and vaguely drear. Swept o'er the lundscape like u rising tide; And winter's footsteps sounded all too near— The day that summer died. —Emma G. Weston, in Youth's Companion. A Tired Fellow. ; Talkin' 'bout November days—l reckon they're all right; , But I has ter fetch the wood in fer the big oak fires at night; I reckon snow a-fallin' makes a purty sort er show, ■ But it ain't so powerful pleasant when you has ter shovel snow! Talkin' 'bout November days—with frost in furrows gray, They ain't so powerful pleasant when you spend 'em haulln' hay; } I like the sharp, clear mornin's—the hunt er's lively horn, But I'm feelln' mighty solemn when I'm set to shuckin' corn! I've come ter the conclusion this world— fer man an' boy— is about a peek o' trouble ter every pint o' joy; I like blue skies an' meadows—a bird that knows a song. But 1 can't jine in the chorus when they work me all day long! —F. L. Stanton, in Atlanta Constitution. The Silent Ruler. We only know he walks with noiseless tread, j Unresting ever—voiceless as the dead. ! We only know he brings us loss or gain, The rose of pleasure, or the rue of pain- All changes manifold of life or death. From a leaf's promise to a dying breath. We know only, when this old earth and sky Pass into nothingness, he cannot die— The silent ruler with his scythe and glass. Our Father Time, who sees the nations pass, Yet gives no token overland or sea l)f his new reign—the veiled eternity. I '-William H. Ilayne, in Youth's Com panion. The Wronged Mnn. The wind was raw; it snowed all day; j Yet there he stood out in the weather And watched the football rivals play And 1 clapped his stiffened hands together, lie whooped and danced as one possessed, And when the spectacle was ended Declared that it had been the best Affair he ever bad attended. That night he sp.t ard jawed his wife. And blamed the girl that she had hired; lie swore they sought to wreck his life— The maid, he shouted, must be fired!— He almost wept, he felt so bad— In sooth, he acted like a fool. And all because the furnace had, For lack of care, been left to cool. —Chicago News. Inconsistency. What courage men will sometimes show In things of mighty weight! J And how they flinch when some slight blow Falls from the hand of Fate! In stocks he lost. He seemed not vexed To find his assets few. | He lost his collar button next And made the a!r turn blue. —Washington Star. YOUR LAST CHANCE TO BUY AT YOUR OWN PRICE. Overcoats, Men's Suits, Children's Suits, Children's Reefers, Children's Overcoats, Pants, Hats, Caps and Gents' Furnishings Going at Less Than the Cost of Manufacturing Them. Our Time Is Growing Short and We Are Almost Ready to Leave. Me Must Dispose of the Remaining Stock, No Matter How Great Our Loss. IF 111 WOULD SHI 1(11, LOIR II II FOLLOWINC PUCES: Men's Suits. Men's Suits, fine black worsted, going for less than the actual value of the cloth, go at $2.50 Men's fine plaid all wool Suits, finely made, French facings, go at $3.48 Men's fine dark brown plaid Suits, all wool, go at $3.23 Men's fine Scotch tweed Suits, up to date style, go at $3.75 Men's fine clay English worsted Suits go at $6.48 Men's Overcoats. Men's fine dress Overcoats, up to date, go at $3.75 Men's jet black dress Overcoats, double stitched, inch velvet collar; they are worth $12.00, will go for $4.23 £3. Boys' fine beaver Overcoats, from 14 to 19 years, go at $3.48 Men's fine castor beaver Overcoats, all wool; they are custom made, finely trimmed, silk piping; worth every penny of S2O, but to move them quickly we put them down to $8.48 Men's fine Montanac Overcoats, all wool, finest trimmed coats to be seen; they are worth $12.50, will go at $4.48 Men's short heavy Overcoats, excellent goods, go at $2.48 Made-fo-Measure Men's fine up-to-date, made to measure suits, fine imported cloth guaranteed a per fect fit, they are $18; we will make them up now for $10.48 Men's fine fhibet cloth suits made to your measure, fit guaranteed, they are worth S2O; we will make them just as you like them for $11.48 Men's fine pants made to your measure in fine English worsted, worth $6.50; we will make them now for $2.98 Our line of piece goods is large, but we have no room to mention more. Call and leave your measure with us and save $lO on a suit or overcoat. FVrt IVTAI BA Miolflfl Mt C#rae 10 tlle °" lj c#il| S ollt - f - Bl| siess Sale in Freeland, Where Clothing Is 1/U IN Ul DO IVllblOU Almost Given Away. We Sate You Big Money on Everything Yon Bay. Bring This Bill With You and Point Out the Article You Want. To Every Purchaser of $lO Worth or More, CAR FARE WILL BE PAID. Gents' Furnishings. Men's fine, white linen handkerchiefs,- worth 10c, go at ic. Men's heavy winter Hose, worth 15c, go for 3c per pair. Men's large rim slouch hats go at 36c. Scotch plaid Mufflers, extra large, go at 19c. Men's fine Suspenders, worth 25c, go at 7c. Men's woolen Underwear, worth 50c, goes at 17c. Men's four-ply linen collars, any style, worth 15c, go at Bc. Fine English Mackintosh, worth $5, goes at $2.48. Heavy woolen Mackintosh, positively worth'slo, goes at 54.98. Men's good, stout working shirts, worth 35c, go at 15c. Stylish, up to date Neckwear, in four in-hands, tecks, shield bows, positively 50c neckwear, will go at 18c. Men's fine seal plush Caps, trimmed with Astrakhan ear laps, they are worth $2, go at 49c. Men's fine Fedora Hats, in black, blue or brown, a regular $1.50 hat, will be sold at 39c. Men's fine seal Plush Caps, worth $2, flat top, go at 49c. Men's fine puff Ties, pure silk, in any style, worth 50c, go at 18c. Men's fine SPlug Hats, Kohler style, known throughout the coal regions, worth $2.50, will goat 89c. Men's fine Jersey Overshirts, worth $1.50, will go at 48c. Dr. Jackson's Underwear, very heavy camel's hair; they are worth $2.50, but we will sell you a suit for 96c. Heavy cream satin brocade Mufflers, worth $1.50, go at 75c. Gents' fine silk Handkerchiefs, some cream, some white, worth 60c, go at 39c. Men's up to date fancy bosom Shirts; they are worth 51.25, but at this sale the price will be 69c. Boys' Reefer Suits. Boy's fine Reefer Suits in melton cloth, three rows of fine braid, strictly all wool; they are worth $3 25, but will go at sl.lß Boy's fine Reefer Suits in navy blue, four rows of fine braid, cut in full length, all wool, finely made; worth $4.75, go at $1,68 Boy's fine gray Reefer Suits, all wool, Langford cassimere, full deep collar, three rows of fine braid; worth $3, will go at sl.lO Boy's Scotch plaid Reefer Suits, in the finest quality, from three to five rows of fine braid, the latest winter styles; they are worth from 4 to SB. Twenty different styles to select from, will be sold at Boy's Reefer Suits in any style or any price. We have no room to mention more. Attend this removal sale early and save dollars. liixivji I IViUUW I Men's Pants. Men s Pants, our own make, finely made, good workmanship; they are worth $2, while they last will go for 69 G Men's Pants in fine striped cassimere, perfect fitting, finely made; they are worth every penny of $2.48, will go for Men s Dress Pants in black, blue, brown and fine worsted striped, all wool; they are worth $4, will go for $1.23 Mens Worsted Pants in dark colors' they are worth $2.25, will go for Men's finest grade of Worsted Pants, strictly all wool, equal to any $6 pants, will 8° for $'2.48 Men's extra heavy stout Wool Pants, will wear like a board, all sizes; they are worth $4.25, will go for sl.JfB Hundreds of bargains in Men's and Boys' Pants. We have no room to mention more. These are just a few of the many bargains. Corduroy pants for men and boys nearly given away. Come to this great sale. You will never have such another chance in your lifetime, as we are going out of business. Storm Coats. Storm Coats in all wool chinchilla, extra long, extra large collar, all the com forts for cold weather; they are worth SB, but are now going at $2 48 Storm Coats in genuine Irish frieze, fu H length and full collar; they are regular $i coats. lo make them move quickly we have put them down to $ gg Men's extra heavy Storm Overcoats, worth sl2, go at gg Genuine Belfast Frieze, worth $22, go at , $lO \ oung Men's Storm Coats, while they last, go at ft 2 9 8 All kinds of Storm Coats for Men and Boys at prices never before heard of. For the Boys, Boys' fine Reefer Overcoats, sizes from 8 to 15 years, full velvet collar, all wool beaver cloth. They are $4 coats, but will 8° at $1.38 Boys' heavy chinchilla Reefers, full sailor collar, made in the best style; these will go at $1.1,5 The latest style three-piece Vestee Suits for little boys; have made another reduction on them; they will go for 13 Boys'heavy winter Caps, in navy blue beaver cloth, with ear laps attached; they are 50c, will go at 10c. Hundreds of bargains in Boys' Reefers, which will be sold at less than one-half the cost of cloth. Come early. Boys' fine Suspenders* worth 20c, will go at sc. Boys' knee Pants will go at 11c. Boys' good stout Suits go at 98c.