FHEELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVERT MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. One Year $1 50 Six Months 75 Four Months 50 Two Mouths 25 Subscribers lire requested to observe the date following- the name on the labels of their jmrters. By referring to this they can tell at a glance how they stand on the books in this olhce. For instance: Grover Cleveland 28JunelU means that Grover Is paid up to Juno 28,1WM. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report promptly to this office when your paper is not received. Ail arrearages must bo paid I when paper is discontinued, or collection will be made in the manner provided by law. FHEELAND, PA., JANUARY' 25, 1894. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. Congressmar.-at-Large, James I). Hancock Venango ' Poor Director, CorncliuaG lldea Lansford Poor Auditor J. E. Altmiller Hazlcton Carnegie now admits that he can make steel rails and undersell all the foreign competitors in this market, tariff or no tariff. Free traders knew that long 'ago. In times of war deserters are shot. In the civil combats which are fought in the halls of congress it remains for the constituents of deserters to shoot them out of public life at the next succeeding election. Let us iudulge the hope that iho work will be done most effectually. The Baltimore >Sim very truly says: "The Democratic party, will either pass the Wilson bill or it will go into the congressional campaign so heavily handicapped that it cannot escape defeat." This fact should be reflect ed on by those Democratic congress men who aided to delay this neces sary legislation. That which the worker producer by his own exertions, whether physi cal or mentally, justly belongs to the worker, and not one iota of it should he taken by another person or even by the government. To do so is to commit robbery, and to call it taxes or revenue does not lessen the theft. That which the community as a whole produces, such as land values, clear ly aud justly belongs to the com munity, and the government should take it all. l'ut that doctrine into practice and give every one his own. Every man arrested for vagrancy now-a days is not a tramp, says the N\ ilkes-Barre Xeimlealer. Some twen ty men arrested recently at Beading, charged with being vagrants, proved to he workingmen and were discharg ed. In some.cities the police are too officious and make arrests when they are uncalled for. The professional tramp, of course, cannot he watched too closely, hut there is no need of taking into custody every stranger who comes into a town, and holding him up to public view as a desparado. Nine-tenths of the "tramps" are noth ing more than the involuntary victims of Mclvinleyism. They are willing to work, hut so-called protection lias i throttled their freedom aud taken | away their opportunities to labor. The British postoffice department runs the telegraph system of that country, but private capital has been trying to get hold, partially at least, of the telephone lines. The post master general having been inveigled I into making some concessions of J rights to the National Telephone Company, a great outcry has been I raised by the people against his course and the dispatches state that J he has promised to recede from his 1 position. The municipality of (Has gow, which is deep in socialistic ex-\ periments, has headed the protest, and organized the cities of Great Britain into an anti-monopoly league, to resist all attempts of private capi talists to get hold of the telephone system. This is pretty good testi mony to what the British people think of public management of com munication, after trying it for twenty years in the case of the telegraph. If the people owned and operated the railroads, as they do the postoffi ees, would all the lawyers and city, county, state and national officials and editors be given passes? Do they get postage stamps free? Would the the people pay the lawyers $14,000,- 000 a year? Would it be necessary to collect ten million a year from the people to spend in advertising'? Would the people need the services of ten thousand freight and passen ger agents to pull and haul the peo pie to get them to use the roffds that pay them? Does the postoffice de partment hire men to travel over the country and solicit men to send their letters over this or that route? All these non-producers and many more can be dispensed with or put into some vocation where they will do some good. These are the elements that hoodwink the people in the in terest of the railroads because they j are paid Iqj it. I BUSINESS BRIEFS. See McDonald's cheap shoes. Use Pillshury's Best XXXX Flour. Goto McDonald's for good furniture. Parties supplied with ice cream, cakes, etc., by Daubach at reasonable rates. Fackler has the finest and largest as cortment of fine candies and ornamented cakes for all occasions. "Orange Blossom," the common-sense | female remedy, draws out pain and soreness. Sold by W. \V. Grover. I Every family should have a box of I Wright's Indian Vegetable Bills, the use of which will cure most of our ailments. •In case of hard cold nothing will re lieve the breathing so quickly as to rub Arnica and Oil LinnnfiDt on the chest. Sold by l>r. Schilcher. Wall paper will be hung at 20c. per I double roll from now until March 1, Also all paper reduced from 2 to 10c. per roll at A. A. Bachman's. All those who have used Baxter's Man drake Bitters speak very strongly in their praise. Twenty-five cents per bot tle. Sold by Dr. Schilcher. The name of X. H. Downs still lives, although he has been dead many yearß. Ilia Elixir for the cure of coughs and colds has already outlived him a quarter of a century, and is Btill growing in fa vor with the public. Sold by Dr. Schil cher. Beware of Ointments. Beware of ointments for catarrh that contain mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and complete ly derange the whole system when en tering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used ex cept on prescription from a reputable physician, as the damage they will do is ten-fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucuous surfaces of the sys tem. In buying llaU'B Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. E3?"Sold by all druggists, price 75c. per bottle. Not to Tllaim l . Tcnant—See here! That house you rented me is infested with rats. Ev ery night wo arc waked up by the racket. Atfent —That's very strange. The last tenant never said a word about rats. "Well, tlien, of course you are not to blame." "No. The people who lived there before never complained of anything except ghosts."—N. Y. Weekly. A l'erfoet ltrute. "Henry, dear, have you had a hard day? You look tired. There are your slippers right by the fire." "Maria, please don't let this go any further. I can't afford so much devo . tion this year. Collections are slow and you simply can't have that—" "Brute!" "That's better. 1 think I can live up to that title without going bankrupt." —N. Y. Recorder. Nome Pride I.eft. Chicago Police Justice—Your face seems familiar. Don't I know you? Greasy Old Bum—l don't think you do, your honor; I'm a little pertiek'ler about the comp'ny I keep.—Chicago Tribune. Ho Wat* Willing:. Miss Kcedick (after his proposal) I'll be a sister to you. I Mr. Dolloy —That's right. Every true wife ought to be assister to her hus band.—Truth. Not a Flatterer. She—All of which only convinces mo that you married me for my money. He—Well, it may not seem probable, but I honestly loved you.—Life. SIIE WOULD MAR 1C AN EFFORT. -awiJM j "Now, Neddie, learn your lessons and mamma will love you." "Will you love me as much as you do the pug?" "I'll try to, dear."—Demorest's Mag azine. A mending the Motion. He was a small man, the conductor of an electric car, and she was a large, powerful-looking woman. "I want you to put me off at Dundas street," said she. He viewed her majestic figure for a moment and replied: "Madam, I will stop the car and let ' you get off."—Toronto Empire. | A Firm Foundation. The lady had implied a doubt as to > the statement of the dairyman. "Madam," lie said, indignantly, "my i Reputation rests upon my butter." "Well," she replied, testily, "you . needn't get ugly about it. The founda tion is strong enough to keep It up for ' [ ever."—Detroit Free Dress. When Bahy m sick, wo gore her Caitoria.' When site wax a Child, ho cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she bad Children, she gave them Castoria BILLY AND THE BOY. The Story of a IIore Who Could lake Care of Himself. Billy was a veteran among horses, lie had lived twenty-nine years and six months when I knew him, and all I that time he ha.l been learning how to take care of himself without troubling ! others to look after him. His reputa i tion had never been pood, though the older he grew the worse he grew, ac corditiff to his master's statement. For | my part I always thought the horse was justified in his treatment of those who ill-treated him. Perhaps if ho had been better tem pered he might have been turned out to grass in his old age and had little or nothing to do. As it was no one was fond of him, and since he was able to draw moderately heavy loads he was harnessed regularly and made to work. He had been known to bite, to kick, to run away, though no one believed that he had really been frightened. "It is just ugliness, wanting to show what he could do to be hateful," said his master, one day, when the hired man came home with the new# that I Billy had shied at a bicycle, had I run into a wagon and broken it and I the one to which he was harnessed into "slivers," as the man expressed it. This "fright," if it really was one, cost his master fifty dollars, and Billy forthwith had blinders put on him. He never shied again, hut the blinders did not improve his temper. One day when ho was just about finishing a meal which he was taking out of a pail set in front of him on the ground, a small boy came past with a long wisp of straw in his hand. He MAKCIIKD DOWN THE STREET WITH HIM. did not know him, but he knew small boys when he saw them, and hail no love for any of them. The boy stopped and Billy kept on eating. The boy went nearer and nearer the curb, and at last reached over and tickled Billy's nose with the straw. Billy made believe at first that he did not feel it, and the boy became bolder and bolder and tickled harder. Billy finished eating, and then had time to attend to him. Suddenly he tossed his head, caught the boy by the back of his jacket, lifted him off his feet and marched down the street with him. The boy screamed, but no one was near enough to seize hiin. They did not go far, and before any one interfered Billy stopped and shook that boy exactly as a man might have shaken him for punishment, then dropped him, turned and walked back home. No small boy dared to meddle with Billy after that, and, although the lad was not hurt, he hail one of the worst scares of his life.—Louisville Courier- Journal. SAVED BY A BUFFA" O. How PugnttrlouH Hull I'ut a Savage ri*er to Flight. The forest land of southern India possesses a breed of buffaloes vastly superior to the hare-skinned, ungainly creatures common to the plains of In dia. They are shaggy-haired, massive and short-jointed, with short, thick, symmetrically-curved horns. They are trained as beasts of burden and pos sess immense strength. A bull of this breed is a match for a tiger. A herd of buffaloes was grazing on the outskirts of the forest at Soopah, with the herder on guard a short dis tance away. A tiger came out of the forest and tried by roaring to stampede the herd. The herdsman manifested great bravery. He shouted, beat his heavy quarter-staff on the ground, and tried to scare the brute off, not thinking of his own danger, but of that of his herd. ; Suddenly the tiger rushed forward, sprang upon the man, knocked him i down and stood over him growling. The bull of tho herd, a pugnacious | creature, now charged savagely upon | the tiger, and rolled him over and over. The bull was so quick in his motions | that the tiger, taken unawares, was at j a disadvantage. He neither bit nor \ : scratched the bull, but gathered him- | self up and galloped off into the forest. ! Ihe bull shook himself, bellowed, pur- ' sued his enemy a few yards and then went quietly to feeding as if vanquish ing a tiger were an everyday occur rence. The herdsman was not injured by the tiger, but received a wound in the leg from the bull's sharp horn, inflicted ! when the buffalo knocked over the I tiger. An Good a* a Dog. In South America, a boy who wants to own a pet animal gets a monkey in stead of a dog. Sometimes he can buy a monkey already trained, and if he can do so he is a very happy boy, be cause wild monkeys are ugly little fel lows and it takes a long time to teach them how to live with civilized people. A South American boy has to pet a inonkey because there are not enough dogs in South America. Hut with the South American boy a nice tame mon key with soft fur hair and snapping black eyes is very highly prized, and , he becomes attached to it, just as an j American boy becomes attached to his | collie or his Newfoundland; so ho docs not feel the need of a good dog. ALMOST FORGOTTEN. Tlie Alyßterious Ilelic of a Prehistoric I'eoplo. On the shores of Brittany there is e mysterious relic of forgotten ages i which escapes the attention of most travelers. Far out in the Moriban sea —across which legend tells us Arthur sailed with his knights in pursuit of the dragon—rises a little island. It can be reached in a boat from the coast only in a calm sea. A lire ton shepherd has a solitary hut upon it and feeds a few sheep. Crossing the grassy slope off which they browse, the traveler finds himself at the foot of the hill, in the face of which has been excavated a great tun nel or cave, floored, walled and roofed by huge flat rocks. Some archaeologists say that this cav ern was the work of the worshipers of the serpent god of Hoa—a race that has passed into oblivion. The learned traveler knows only that the mysterious cavern antedates all history; that the rocks of which it is built came from the mainland, a dis tance of more than one hundred miles inland. No rocks like them make any part of the geological formation of the island. Even with our modern engineering knowledge and machinery it would re quire vast labor and skill to bring these enormous blocks of stone and place them so securely as to defy the wear and friction of ages. How were they brought here by men who had, perhaps, few mechanical ap pliances—nothing but the strength of their bodies and their faith in a strange god? The race who built the temple are dust, liven their names ages ago per ished from the earth. Their religion is vanished. These stones are the/mon uments of their indomitable resolution. That defies the flight of years. EVER THE SAME. Egypt Not Much Different Than It Was Centuries Ago. The characters in "The Thousand and One Nights" may be almost im agined to step out of their setting of words and to take forin and glow with the generous warmth of life before one's very eyes. The natives still drink the same coffee and out of the same cups; they smoke the same pipes; they wear generally the same dress; they play the snine primitive instru ments that whisper the same strange and plaintive tones; the funeral pro cessions wend their way along the streets as of old; the popular festi vals or moolids aro still observed with the same untiring capacity for enjoy ment; the public reciters still prac tice their profession before admiring crowds; the water carriers still carry their burdens so welcome to thirsty lips; except in the houses of the rich and thoroughly Europeanizeil food is still eaten with the lingers and in the same manner, and the hands are washed with the suine basins and ewers; the mosque of El-A/.hur still, says the Gentleman's Magazine, at tracts Its crowds of students. Even the old wooden locks and keys are still in use, and the water jars are still leapt cool in the lattice work of the overhanging raushrabiych win dow frames. Instances of this sort might be multiplied a hundred fold. It is indeed a wonderful change and contrast that is presented to the eye when you leave the E pean and enter the native quarter. And the mind and feelings turn in unison and become attuned to the changed scene. The sense of taking part in a new and different life steals over you, and you temporarily throw off your nihility with the west and the nineteenth cen tury. The clock of time is for the mo ment put back for you. Orphans in Auittralla. According to the Medical Times 01 Philadelphia Australia is a country without an orphan asylum. Every where local committees keep record of families with which a destitute child may be placed, ami the children's com mittee of the destitute board selects a home suitable for each child thatcoincs under its care. On an average one dol lar and twejity-five cents a week is al lowed for board and clothing, but in no case are foster parents selected who are so poor that the adopted child will suffer hardship. It must be sent to school regularly until the age of four teen years, when it is put to work. The local committee watches over each adopted child and sees that the condi tions are all fulfilled. The earnings of a boy of that class from fourteen to eighteen are put in the postal savings bank, and at the latter age he can be gin his career with a little ready money. As a • result the state has raised a citizen at a cost of seventy dollars a year and saved no end of outlay for courts, prisons and reforma tories. I.arg Foreign Cltien. Of cities with more than one bun 1 dred thousand population England has thirty, Germany twenty-four, France and Russia each twelve, Italy ten, Austria-Hungary six, Spain five, Bel ginm, the Scandinavian states, Uou mania and the Balkan islands each four, the Netherlands three, Portugal two; the total in Europe being one hundred and sixteen great cities. Asia has one hundred and five, China having fifty-three and British India thirty. In | Africa there are seven, in America i forty, of which the United States has twenty-six; South America nine. Aus tralia has only two large cities. ltlsky IluHlnrmi. A Maine farmer who recently visited j Boston tells how he goj the better of the deadly trolley-car: "I stood," he says, "right on the track wluu one of them dummcd skypole cars came u-bnz zing along, and I thought I'd just see if they'd run over me. They hollered and yelled for me to get oIT the tra-k, but I didn't budge an inch, for I had as much right there as they had, and they just hauled the thing up stock-stiil afore they got ter me. All a mau's got ; ter do is to stand up for his rights, and | them Boston fellers dassn't run over him." UNPLEASANT ENCOUNTER. A Butterfly Hunter Iluns Across r.n Im mense Python. I never had any kind of hankering after entomological pursuits, but force of circumstances—i. e., the want of something better to do—drove me to become a collector of butterflies, when I was at Sierra Leone some years back. So enthusiastic did I become that I actually made an expedition of three days to the top of some wooded moun tains, where previously, on a deer hunt, I had happened to come across several specimens not to be found in the plains, putting up at a house which had been built by a former resi dent and was kept in repair bj' the government and used as a sanitarium. One day, I had been led a long chase into the woods by a "flutter-bug" of unusual size and brilliancy, which looked as though cut out of mother-of pearl, and shining under the sun's rays which occasionally penetrated the dense foliage, with all colors of the rainbow. lie had escaped me a dozen times or more, hut at length I had him secure enough and in perfect condition. I had just pinned him in my speci men-box, and was examining his beau ties with the pride of possession swell ing in my bosom, when an undefinable feeling of dread seized upon me—a kind of prescience of coining danger, which I could not account for,lut which I certainly experienced—causing me to shiver slightly as I raised my eyes from the butterfly and to turn my gaze upward to the branches of the tree above me. What was my horror to see the head of a gigantic snake within a few feet of my own, his black eyes following my every movement anil his huge coils slowly loosening from the branch round which he was twined, prepara tory to inclosing mo in their deadly folds and crushing the life out of me. Several people had been lost in these woods and never heard of again, and, like a flash, the solution of the mystery occurred to me, and here was I myself within anuceof meeting with a similar fate. With a yell of terror, I sprang back a 3'ard or two, dropping my net and box under the tree; but, having done so, I seemed to have become paralyzed, and remained gazing spellbound at the monster, which had now ceased its movements and contented \tsclf with watching mine. For a moment or two the spell lasted, but my mind rapidly reasserted itself, and warned me to put a safer distance between myself and the serpent; and the idea no sooner entered my head than I started on a wild run home ward. I didn't go very far, however, before I felt ashamed of my precipitate flight, remembering, of course, that I had nothing to apprehend so long as I was out of the python's reach; anil as calmer reflection succeeded, I detcr- THE SNAKK WAS STILL THERE, mined to go home and get my gun aim pay him back for the scare he had giv en me. Besides, I had no intention of losing the property I had dropped on catching sight of him. I reached home breathless and ex cited, tilled both I*l3' coat-pockets witji buckshot cartridges, shouldered my gun and started back as though my life depended on my haste. Sure enough, the snake was still there, his head resting on the branch, aild his eyes just as restless and alert as ever. I approached as near as I dared, and let fly, with both barrels at once, straight for his cranium. I had no sooner done so than the whole tree seemed to quiver with the convulsive struggles of the monster, as lie writhed in his agon 3', and wound and unwound himself from the branch of the tree, that stretched like a giant's arm over head. The leaves and twigs fell In showers, while moths and other in sects were disturbed by the myriads. Presently, however, all was still, and the forepart of the snake's body hung lifeless from the with the head almost blown entirely off. 1 then recovered my box and net, with the butterfly that had caused me so much trouble, and was gazing at the snake, now hanging limply on the tree, and wondering if I could possibly secure him. when I perceived a motion higher up in the tree, and, to my hor ror, saw another, equally large, slowly descending. But I had had enough of snakes for one day, and declined the contest, and hastily gathering up my paraphernalia I started homeward at a brisk pace. I do not, of course, know what size this particular reptile was which I en countered, but the natives assert that they grow to a length of thirty-three feet or over, and I should say that this one was fully as long. I have called it the story of a "py thon, that being the local term, but I believe the snake in question be longed to the species called royal rock snakes.—A. Taylor, in Golden ilavs. Child Carried oir by an Eia!©. The body of a three-year-old child of Henry Smith (colored) of Selina. Ala., was found on a rocky cliff by a party of searchers. The child had been left alone, and an older child, on returning, saw an eagle with what appeared to be a child in its talons. The body was recognized by bits of clothing, the flesh being eaten from the bones. Look for bargains at J. 0. Center's. Will close out lots of goods. Come and see them go at half price. Come and see our Furniture. Just unloaded 5 cars. Also 1 car of Carpets, Rugs, [ etc., etc. Yours, jJOHN C. BERNER. ■VW— 7LEHIGH VALLEY j&jfifc/ RAILROAD. I I —-* Anthracite coal used exclu* I j sivefjf', insuring cleanliness und ARRANGEMENT OF PABSBNGKR TRAINS. JAN. 1, 1894. LEAVE FREELAND. 6 Of), 8 40, 983. 10 41 a nt, 1 20, 2 27, 8 45, 4 55, 1158, 7 12, 8 47 p tu, for Drifton, Jeddo. Luin ► her Yard, Stockton and Hazleton. 0 05, 8 40 a in, 1 20, J 45 p in, for Mauch chunk. ) llciitowu, Hot hlchciu, I'hilu., Huston uud New fork. 0 40 a ni, 4 55 p in for Bethlehem, Huston and I'hila. 7 20, 10 50 a in, 12 00,4:44 p m, (via Highluud i ranch) for White Haven, (4 lon Summit, Wilkes arre, I'ittston and L. and 14. Junction. SUNDAY TRAINS. 11 40 a in and 8 45 p m for Drifton, Jcddo, Lum er Vard and Ha/leton. J 45 p m for Delano. Maiiauov City, Shcnun doah. New York and Philadelphia. ARRIVE AT FREELAND. 5 50, 7 18, 7 20, 9 10, 10 50 a m, 12 00, 2 10, 4 :W, 058 and 807 pin, from Ila/Jeton, Stockton, Lumber Yard, Jcddo and Drifton. 7 20, 9 19, 10 50 a in, 2 10, 4 :44, 658 p in from Delano, Mulmtioy City and Shenandoah (via New liostnu Mraueli). 10, 0 58 and 8 07 p m from New York, Huston. Philadelphia, Bethlehem, Allentownand Mauch ; Chunk. 9 19 and 10 56 a m, 2 10, 0 58 and 807 p m from Knston, I'hila., Bethlehem and Mauch <'hunk. 9 00, 10 41 u in,2 27,0 58 pin Irom White Haven, Ulon Summit, Wilkes-Barn*, i'ittstoii and L. and B. Junction (via Highland Branch). SUNDAY TRAINS. 11 01 a m and 081 p m, from Hazleton, Luin ber Yard, Jeddo and Drifton. 11 01 a in from Delano, Hazleton, Philadelphia and Huston. 0 01 p m from Delano and Mahanoy region. I For further informution inquire of Ticket Agents. CHAS. S. LEE, Gen'l Pass. Agent, I'hila., Pa. It. H. WILBTJH, Gen. Supt Hast. Pi v., A. W. NUNNEMACHEH, Ass'tG. P. A.. South Bethlehem, Pa. R \ HE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND X SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect September 3, 1890. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, Ha/.le Brook, Stockton. Beaver Meadow ltoad, Itoau and Hazleton Junction at 0(10,0 lUum, 1210, 1 uo p m, daily except Suuduy, and 7 UO a in, 2 08 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Harwood,Cranberry. | Tomhicken and Deringer at 000 a in, 12 10 p in, I dally except Sunday; and 7 00 a m, 2 88 p in, Sunday. | Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction, I Harwood Hoad, Humboldt Hoad, Oneida and Sheppton at oHia m, 1210, 409p m, daily except Sunday; and 7 08 a m, 2 08 p in, Sunday. | Trains leave Hazleton Junction lor Harwood, C'ranberry, Tomhicken and Deringer at 007 a i ni, 1 49 p m, daily except Sunday; and 8 47 u m, 4 18 p m, Sunday. • Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood ltoad, Humboldt Houd. ! (ineida ami Sheppton at 0 47, 9 10 a in, 12 40, 4 09 I p in, dally except Sunday; and 7 40 a m, 008 p I in, Sunday. I Treins leave Deringer for Toinliieken, Cran berry, Harwood, Hazleton Junction, Koun, Beaver Meadow Houd. Stockton, Hu/lc Brook, ! Kckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 2 40, 007 p in, daily except Sunday; and 907 a m, 507 p m, i Sunday. ... Trains leave Sheppton for Oneidm-Humboldt • ltoad, Harwood Houd, Oneida Junction, Hazle ton Junction ad Hoan at 7 52, 10 10 am, 115, 5 25 p ra, daily except Sunday; and 8 14 a in. A 4.) D m. Sunday. „ Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow ■ Hoad, Stockton, Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 10 10 a in. 5 25 p in, daily, except Sunday; and Ilia ra, ;i 4.". Sunday. Truing leave Hazleton Junction tor Braver Meadow Hiiiul, Stockton, Hu/.10 Biook. Belt ley, Jeddo and Drlftnn at loan a in, 811,6, # p ni, daily, except Bunday;and 10 US a m, 0 .w |. m, 8 A&1I connect at Iliixleton Junction wltli UO'B SSjStW.M sL 8 pX n, -at% lc u , s:: 1 15 pin connect at Oneida i unction with L. V. K Trad?icavS t i:r^n B ,U 0 00 ra. mat,,, con nocuVm at IJcrliittcr with P. It. It. train for Wilkoß-Ilurre, Sunbury, Harrisliunr, etc. i K. It. COX®. DANIEL COXB, I president. Superintendent. SUBSCRIPTION! , Subscription to the TRI BUNE, $1.50 per year, entitles you to the best reading twice a week. liiisiiT Advertising in the TRI BUNE is valuable be cause of its extensive circulation. ADYERTISIHII! J! Pill)! Job work of all kinds at the TRIBUNE office in the neatest style and at fairest prices. Flint I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers