Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, February 01, 1894, Image 2

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    FREEL AND TRIBUNE.
PUBUgITED EVERY
M SNDAY AND THURSDAY.
TI-IOS. A. BUCKLEY,
EDITOR AXP PROPRIETOR.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE.
SUBSCRIPTION KATES.
One Year SI 50
Six Mouths 75
Four Mentha 60
Two Months 25
Subscribers are requested to observe the dato
following the name on the labels of their
papers. By referring to this they can tell at u
glance how they stand on the books In this
office. For instance:
Grover Cleveland 28June9i
means that Grover is paid up to June 2S, lWi.
Keep the figures in advance of the present date.
Report promptly to this office when your paper
is not received. All arrearages must. bo paid
when paper is discontinued, or collection will
be mude in the manner provided by lun-.
FREELAND, PA., FEBRUARY 1,1894.1
J> EM OCR A TIC T IC K ET.
Congrcssiuan-at-Large,
James I>. Hancock Venango
Poor Director,
Cornelius Gildea Lansford
Poor Auditor
J. E. Altmiller Hazleton
The rapid increase of crime in this
country is largely due to the delay
and uncertainty of criminal justice.
In 1889 in the United .States 3,5G8
murders were committed. In 18!) l,
they reached 4,290, and 5,908 in 1891,
while for 1892 the total is 0,790, an
increase of nearly 90 per cent, in four
years. But although wo had more
than 20,000 murders in four years
there were only 331 legul executions.
Judge Lynch, however, took a hand
in the matter and disposed of 558
criminals. This lynching record puts
our lawmakers and judges upon
notice that the people demand speedy
justice, and when they have reason to
believe that they will be disappointed
they will sometimes dispose of the
business in their own way.
William M. ftiugerly undertook an
immense contract when he started in
to harmonize the Democrats of this
state. He will, even if he succeeds,
have but little thanks for his trouble,
and ho might as well drop the ques
tion. There are a number of poli
ticians in Philadelphia and a few
scattered through the stale who are
masquerading as Democrats, but who
really do not know enough of the
principles of the party to be classed
as members. They would again sell
the chances of any candidate, as they
have often done before, to secure some
paltry city office fur one of the clique,
and to effect a union with such heelers
and label them as Democrats would
disgrace the party. The Demo
cracy of Pennsylvnia can better afford
to be in the minority than to lower its
standard by making an alliance with
Matt Quay's henchmen.
The beauty of the uew tariff bill is
not so much in any promises of pros
perity like wore held out by the Mc-
Kinley bill, but in the fact that it will
create a deficiency in the government
revenues and compel the legislators
to look al jut for other means of sup
port. The proposed reductions in I
tariff duties alone are not enough to give
the country any direct benefit. We |
will still have a tariff of great magni- j
tude, and consequently will eufhr'
through indirect taxes nearly as much
as before, but the bill has been so neat
ly arranged thatlarge revenues will be
lopped off and Uncle Sam will have to
look for more honest ways of getting
money. The deficiency is already ap
parent, and the income tax is pro
posed as a relief, and while it is noi
by any means the best mode of rais
ing revenue it is preferable to a tarill
tax and will do as a substitute until
the time comes to advance the claims
of the single tax.
The passage of the Wilson b'"',
which is certain to become a law
gives the Philadelphia Press a severe
pain, to judge from its shrieks and
howls on behalf of trusts and monopo
lies. The Press is one of the blatant
organs, which, a few mouths ago, were
tickling the friends of protection by
telling them the Democrats would not
have the courage to reduce the tariff,
but its cbildish glee was quickly
turned to agony when the Democrats,
under the leadership of Grover, at
tacked monopoly of every form. The
J t i'Bti has been very largely support
ed for years upon profits wrung from '
the American people with the aid of
McKinleyism, and its moans and wails 1
are nothing more, perhaps, than its
death rattle. The iron business will
not be so profitable when the Demo
erats get done with the tariff, and
more than one of these mouth pieces
of protection may have to derive sup
port from another source.
A short time ago the councils of
1 liiladelphia reduced the price of gas
(the plant being owned by the city) J
to sl.( 0 per 1,000 feet, and the gas
men there are naturally elated over i
the prospective decrease in light bills.
One part of the city is still supplied
by a private corporation, the price of
gas furnished by it is $1.25 f or the
same amount,, and the newspapers are
pointing out the advantage derived
by municipal ownership of ?1 10 j,| iuits
The Record goes so far as to urge
the councils to secure control of the
electric light and to retain possesion i
lof the sireet subways, and several '
other papers are advancing similar
suggestions. Now, if some one was
to drop the hint to theso enterprising
editors that they are advocating the
fundamental principles of state social- j
ism, or even to tell them they are en- J
dorsiug some of George's theories, j
what a rush would be made to dis
avow all connection with this mis- j
undeistood, yet despised and mis
represented form of government.
Like the rose, which smells as sweet
by any other name, so do George's j
theories give out beneticient results, I
whether or not the party putting J
them into practical operation knows j
what they represent.
BUSINESS BRIEFS.
See McDonald's sc. muslin.
t'se Pillsbury's Best XXXX Flour.
Go to McDonald's for cheap blankets, i
Parties supplied with ice cream, cakes,
etc., by Lauoach at reasonable rates.
Costiyeness can be permanently cured
by the use of Baxter's Mandrake Bitters.
Sold by Dr. Schilclier.
Fackler has the finest and largest as
cortment of fine candies and ornamented
cakes for all occasions.
•'Orange Blossom" is a painless cure
for all diseases peculiar to women. Sold
fresh by W. W. Grover.
Purify the blood by occasional use of
Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills, the use
of which will cure most of our uilments.
Wall paper . ill be hung at 20c. per
double roll from now until March 1.
Also all paper reduced from 2 to 10c. per
roll at A. A. Bachman's.
Every mother should have Arnica &
Oil Liniment always in the house in
case of accident from burns, scalds or
bruises. Sold by Dr. Schilcher.
How often we hear middle-aged peo
ple say regarding that reliable old cough
remedy, N". 11. Downs' Elixir: "Why,
my mother gave it to me when I was a
child, and I use it in my family; it al
ways cures." It is always guaranteed
to cure or money refunded. Sold by
Dr. Schilcher.
How's This !
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re
ward for any case of Catarrh that can
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
1". J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo,
Ohio.
We the undersigned have known F.J.
Cheney for the last fifteen years, and
believe him perfectly honorable in all
business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligation made by
| their firm.
W EST (V: TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, 0.
WALDINO, KINNAN ISC MARVIN, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, acting directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Price,
75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
Testimonials free.
He Saved Up.
"You've got a new suit of clothes,"
remarked young Mr. Madison Square
to Charlie Lovely.
"Yes, there is a brief intermission
between the ice cream period and the
sleighing epoch, when the young man's
pocketbook takes a rest. I took ad
vantage of it to buy myself some fresh
clothes." —Texas Sittings.
Unjustly Accused.
lie—l assure you I would never dare
to rob those sweet lips of a kiss.
She —You hypocrite 1 Didn't you at
tempt it last night?
He—Never! Far from intending to
rob you of a kiss, I was trying to give
you one.—Truth.
In the Restaurant.
"The last time I ordered spring
chicken hero they brought me a thor
oughly matured hen. How do you sup
pose 1 can get a real spring chicken?"
"Order a fresh egg."—Demorest's
| Magazine.
Where the Shoo Hurt.
' Gussie—Yes, Miss Uoldmoro is a
stunning girl; but I don't Chink much
of her father.
I C'bolly (who has called)— Yes, he's no
gentleman; and he's a brute to boot.—
j Puck.
11
Austy— So you have had your first '
meal at your new boarding place. Was
it a course dinner?
Little Girl—Awfully!—Good News.
FO RE W A UN E D-FO RE A It MED.
Male Voice from Above (sweetly)—'
lias that young man gone yet, Tilly?
1 illy (hesitatingly)— Wh yr—no-
Popper!
Male i \ nice from Above (more sweet
ly)—W ill you please bring ine up that
pair of boots you see by the door?
' The Young Man (tremulously)— Ah— I
er—Miss Tilly! While you are up J
guess I'd better be going. -Puck.
See McDonald's 25c. aprons.
Whon Baby was sick, wo gave hor Castorla.
When she was a Child, sho cried for Castorla.
W'hen sho became Miss, she clung to Castorla.
When she had Children, she gave them Castorla
SMUUULINU nouns TO MEXICO.
Baled lu New York for Transportation
Across the Texas Border.
Passing through Hudson street re
cently with a friend, says a New York
Ilerald writer, I chanced to pass the
establishment of a firm of "folders and
repackers" of dry goods. Before the ]
door were a hundred or more little |
hales of goods, bearing odd markings, '
but showing that they were destined
for a firm in Texas, doing business in a
town near the Mexican line.
"Do you know," asked my compan
ion, "why those goods are put up in
such small packages?"
Upon replying in the negative he
continued: "They are to be smuggled
across the Mexican line. The goods
are purchased in their original pack
ages and delivered here. The wooden
boxes are discarded and the goods
subjeoted to hydraulic pressure and
baled. Each bale contains about thirty
pieces or half the number of an ordin
ary dry goods case.
"The goods are then shipped to
Texas, and all marks removed. When
all is arranged some night the little
bales are slung across the backs of
j mnles, two bales to each animal, and
| with an armed escort the train pro
' cecds over the border to some dis
tributing point in Mexico, where the
goods are sold to Mexican traders at a
I good profit.
"Smuggling in this manner is quite
extensively carried on between this
j country and Mexico, the United States
I getting in return for its dry goods,
which are the most easily handled,
cheap Mexican coffee and cigars. Of
course there is a suspicion that the il
licit traffic is known to the custom
| officers of both countries and connived
I at, but that would be a hard matter to
prove."
TALK THE "JARGON."
M)xp<l Tongue* That <crman-Ranno-Po
lish Immigrants Speak.
"He talks the jargou" is a remark
often made by a despairing interpreter
when he attempts to translate the lan
guage of an east side witness, says the
Philadelphia Press. "The jargon" is a
recognized term for a dialect so com
mon that it is distinguished by the
definite article from all the other
numerous jargons known in the city,
ft is spoken by Hebrews from Poland
and Russia. It consists mainly of an
imperfect German, with occasional
Hebrew or Polish words. Those who
have studied its history say that those
who speak it are descended from He
brows who formerly lived in Germany,
and spoke the German tongue.
When they migrated to Poland they
preserved among themselves, as far as
possible, the German language. It be
came somewhat corrupted, but in the
main was the language spoken by
those who originally left Germany.
The language of Germany itself be
came changed in time, and now there
is considerable difference between the
words spoken by the Polish descend
ants of the German Hebrew and those
spoken by educated Germans.
Tlio difference is said to bo slight
when a few corruptions of the original
tongue are known. Educated Ger
mans, however, cannot understand at
first the peculiar Polish-Hebrew style.
It is now very common in many parts
of the great east side, and shopkeep
ers there have to learn, not only Ger- I
man, but also "the jargoh" of the im
migrants from Poland and Russia.
j FIRST OF HOOFED ANIMALS.
Supported to Have Lived on Wefltern I'ral
ricg AOO.OOO Yearn Ago.
In the rooms of Prof. E. I). Cope, at
[ Philadelphia, the person fortunate
enough to gain admission, says the St.
Louis Republic, may see the creature
which all naturalists are unanimous in
pronouncing the ilrst representative
of the hoofed-anhnal species. The an
imal is not alive, neither is it entire so
far as ilesh and blood are concerned,
but to the paleontologist, who cares
only for the fossiled bones, the speci
men is perfect. It is not larger thau
a yearling calf, und not nearly so tall,
and was found in the Wind river coun
j try in Wyoming. Prof. Cope named it
| Thenacodus primoovus when it was
i first discovered, giving it as his opin
| ion that it was akin to u specimen
which was found several years ago in
i France (the palcotherium), and which
gave Cuvier and the other naturalists
so much trouble to classify. At the
time of the discovery of the French
specimen the savants of Europe decided
that it was the ancestor of "hoofed
critters," but the Wind river fossil,
which is easily distinguished as being
a t3'pe of the same, is believed to be
much more ancient. Cope's curiosity
was found in rocks belonging to the
eocene period and the time when it
grazed on the western prairies has been
placed as far back as five hundred
thousand years. Every bone is perfect
and in place, and the specimen could
not be purchased for ten thousand dol
lars.
A Profitable Dream.
Tunis must bo a capital place for
those who live and thrive on the credul
ity of theis fellowmen. It is said that
a lady there recently announced that
she had a dream, which she considered
as a Divine rovclation, that whoever
drank the water of her cistern would
not be liable to take the cholera, and
she offered to furnish the water at a
penny a drink. The people thronged
to taste the water, and in two days
more than twenty thousand persons
had paid their pennies, and imagined
that they had obtained-4mmunity from
the dread disease.
Clerical Presence of Mind.
An English paper tells a good story
3f clerical presence of mind. A curate
who had entered the pulpit provided
with one <>f the late Bey. Charles brad
ley's most recent homilies, was for a
moment horror-struck at the sight of
Rev. Charles Rradley himself in a pew
beneath him. Immediately, however,
he recovered enough self-possession to
l>e able to say: "The beautiful sermon
I'm about to preach Is by Rev. Charles
Rradley, who I'm glad to see in good
health among us assembled bore-"
THE EXECUTION.
ANNA BONUS KINGBFORD.
I was led out to be shot
No buuda-je was put over ray eyn.
I stood facing the file of soldiers ik
the middle of the quadrangle, and
noticed that the officer with the drawn
al re placed himself at the extremity
of the line, composed of six meu. In
that supreme moment I also noticed
that their uniform was bright with
steel accoutrements. Their helmetß
were of steel, and their carbines, as
they raised them ami pointed them at
me. glittered with the same burnished
metal. There was an instant's hush as
the men took aim. Then I saw the
oificer raise his tared sabre as the sig
nal to fire. It flashed in the air. With
a suddenness impossible to convey, the
whole quadrangle blazed with an aw
ful light. It crossed my brain with
instantaneous conviction that this
amazing glare was the physical effect
j >f being shot, and that the bullets
had pierced my brain or heart and
aused this frightful sense of a'l
pervading flame.
"It is over," I said; "that was the
ballets."
j lint presently there forced itself on
j my dazed sonses a sound, a confusion
! nf sounds, darkness succeeding the
white flash, steadying itself into
gloomy daylight; a strange and inde
scribable tumult; a heap of stricken,
tumbled men lying stone-still before
j tne.
Then it all burst on me with dis
tinct conviction.
The storm which had been gather
ing all the morning had culminated in
its blackest and most electric point im
mediately overhead. The tile of sol
diers appointed to shoot me stood ex
actly under it Sparkling with bright
steel they stood shoulder to shoulder,
a complete lightning conductor, and at
the and of the chain they formed the
officer, at the critical moment raised
his shining, naked blade to the sky.
Instantaneously heaven opene I.
The lightning foil, attracted by the
burnished steel.
From blade to carbine, from helmet
to breast plate it ran, smiting every
man dead as he stood.
They fell like a row of nine-pins.
The electric flame licked the life out
of seven men in u second, arid not one
of them moved again.
Kugllnli Cohl Miner*' Strike statistic*.
Some interesting statistics of the great
strike of English coal miners, which
ended a few days ago, show that during
the 1C weeks of the strike the normal out
put of 63,000,000 tons dropped to 39,000, •
000. Ordinarily 11,000,000 tons are ex
ported and 49,000,000 lons are consumed
In England in the period mentioned, hut
during the strike only 8,750,000 tons were
exported and 2 J,250,900 tons consumed.
The estimated loss to the mine owners,
Ironmasters, railways, etc., was £13,251,-
615. Consumers paid In Increased prices
£1,767,000. Miners, iron workers and
other artisans lost £18,208.000. The
total general losi is placed at £33,231,216.
The workers rendered idle numbered
1,003,250, which meant 3,511,425 person*
in a destitute condition.
nu*liiHN at a Mining Camp.
The principal business of the new gold
mining camp at Ilarstel, Col., is chopp n$
t-tnkes. Few assessment holes have b.-en
started. Two town sites have been laid
i If, fiulfour and Gilllspie, and throe miles
further away a man has claimed land for
auothcr town site, as well as an Immense
placer tract. No end of speculators are
coming into the district. No statem nfc
of the wealth of the camp can be made
further than the reported assays. Furn
iture from Denver has a rived to be used
in the first hotel.
Per® Hyacinth• New Church.
Fero Ilayacintlie, lecturing in Paris in
Aupjiort of the movement to establish a
Christian apostolic church, says that the
new church will not be hostile to unv
;burch at preseut in existence. lie
declared that, according to church st.i
'dstics, thirty milllou out of the thirty
sight million French Catholics do not re
ceive the sacrament at Easter an I are,
consequently, excommunicated. Pero Hya
cinthe attributes the public luiiifTereutw to
the narrow views expounded by ministers
Discipline.
Discipline, like the bridle in the hand
of a good rider, Bhould exercise Us in
fluence without appearing to do so—
should be ever active, both as a sup
port and as a restraint, yet seem to lie
easily in hand It must always be
ready to check or pull up, as occasion
may require; and only when the horse
is a runaway should the action of the
•curb bo perceptible.
IIw Ha Dlil It.
Wool —"Ilicks promises to give hia
wife ten cents for every ten cents he
spends for cigara"
Van l'elt—"IIow does it work?"
Wool—"First rate; whenever wo
meet he buys me a drink and 1 buy
him a cigar."
Youth.
Ruskln remarks that youth is a period
of building up, in habits, hopes, and
faith- Not an hour but Is trembling
with destinies—not * moment once
passed of which the appointed worn
can ever be done agaia, or the ne
glected blow struck on the cold iron.
llubit.
I trust everything, under God, to
habit, upon which, in all ages the
lawgiver, as well as the schoolmaster,
has mainly placed his reliance; habit,
which makes every thing easy, and casts
all difficulties upon the deviation from
\ wonted course.
A woman's heart and the ocean
deep's much about the same thing;
you can't reckon on 'em. and Go J
A'mighty as made era alone knows t ie
depths of 'em. ... It's the rjugri
weather brings the best of it up—.'
U. Ewing.
It is In the relaxation of security, il
Is in the expansion of prosperity, it is
In the hour of dilation of the heart and
of its softening into festivity and p.en
sure that the real character of men is
discerned. Burke.
NORWEGIAN SUPERSTITIONS.
j Men of Strong Nerves and the ilelng* *f
the Spirit World,
j The simple faith of the Norwegian
| peasants is that the seeing or not see
ing of beings of the other world is a
me re question cf .strong or weak
nerves. Only reversing, says All the
I Year Hound, the generally accepted
j belief, it is the Northman of strong '
j nerves who has power to see the un-
I seen. And he who sees it fears it not.
"If you have the gift," says my in- >
formant, "you may see dozens and
6cores of forms pass your door, but
| you know not what it is to feel alarm."
"There's a ghost on every ship,"
I says the same authority. "My own
i uncle, who saw the unseen plain from
| his childhood, was married to a woman
i who could not believe in spirits. lie
! had a fishing smack of his own, and
saw strange things of nights. One
night he asked her to go out with him, ;
and she went. *lf I see anything I
will call for you,' he said, and she
agreed to it. In the dark middle of j
the night he could see three meu come i
walking on the water toward the little :
vessel. He went and called liis wife,
saying:
" 'Look out now; do you see noth
ing?'
" 'No,' said the wife. 'I see nothing
but the water and the darkness.'
" 'Well,' said he, 'there are three
men there, plain to be seep, und now
I'll go and get up the nets, for a storm
is surely coming.'
"Two o'clock was the wonted hour
for getting up the nets, but wait he
would not, in spite of all his wife could
say to him.
"When two o'clock came the nets of
all the other fishermen were lost and
their boats nearly wrecked In a sudden
great storm that rose, but my uncle
was well out of it, and anchored in
safety, because he could read the
signs they were all blind to."
CHEAP RENTS.
Railroad* Have Affected lira riches
of Old Mobile'* 11 tidiness.
A portion of the glory of Mobile,
Ala., departed when, after years of la
bor, the railroads from the north were
able to surmount the difficulties pre
sented by marshland and bayou and
continue their lines to New Orleans.
This affected certain branches of the
business of the city materially, prac
tically ruining the heavy trade in rc
shipping merchandise at Mobile to
New Orleans, leaving giant warehouses
tenantless and docks to rot and become
grass grown.
The extent of the depreciation in
value of some of the shipping property
can be inferred from the following ob
servations of a recently returned com
mercial traveler.
In walking through one of the old
streets recently he saw on the ground
floor of a huge five-story warehouse the
striped pole and the sign of a barber
shop and boot blacking establishment.
Walking in to have his shoes polished
he inquired of the proprietor how much
of the building he rented.
"All of it," replied the man.
"What, all of this immense build
ing?" asked the drummer in surprise.
"Why, how can you afford it? What
do you pay for it?"
"Fifteen dollars a month," was the
answer. "I use only what I want of
it, but my lease covers the whole prop
er.,v"
Inquiry from merchants of the city
' confirmed the man's statement. The
class of property had become absolute
ly useless by the altered conditions,
enabling the barber to secure for fif
teen dollars a month a building which
formerly rented for thirty-five hundred
or four thousand dollars a year.
ONLY A FEW OF TH EM LEFT.
Xlphlmd Wliiilm Which lifelong to I.ong
-I'iiitt <>®oloi;lc:tl Agon.
Prior to 1883 the naturalists of Amer
ica knew nothing of xiphioid whales
except from comparisons and the fossil
records of the geological ages. During
the year mentioned, however, one of
these queer cretaceaus was stranded
upon the sands at Barnegat City, N. J.
J. 11. Ridge way and bis assistants
managed to save the specimen, and im- 1
mediately telegraphed for the officials
of the National museum of Washing- j
ton. They went, of course, and took
all the apparatus necessary for preserv
ing such u unique curiosity. Among
these Smithsonian worthies were sci
entists of international reputation, yet
the creature before them could not be
assigned to its proper class until after I
the brain was critically and scientific- ,
ally examined—this on account of its
great rarity. Before removing the j
flesh preparatory to "making a skele- j
ton" of the great creature's bones it I
plaster cast of the exterior was made. !
After this operation had been finished
in all its minute details the meat was (
cut away and the bones carefully artic- '
ulated. A scientific report of the inci- ;
dent, quoted by the St. Louis Republic,
closes us follows: "The* xiphioid
whales have a most interesting his
tory. * * * They really belong to
the geological ages, and perhaps only
a few stragglers are now leftin remote
quarters of the globe. It would seem
that they arc but the surviving relics
of u great raee, which declined long
ages before man appeared upon the I
earth."
National Peruliarltleii.
It takes soven days after death, ac
cording to Siamese belief, for the soul i
to reach Heaven, and prayers are kept
up during that period to help it on its
way.
In Dutch Ouiana the women carry
upon their persons all the family sav
ings in the shape of heavy bracelets, ]
anklets, necklaces and even crowns of '
gold and silver.
The Spaniard, however courteous he ]
may be, never invites a guest to din- I
tier. In Italy, too, the privacy of the ,
family is seldom invaded at the dinner i
hour. The members eat in silence. 1
The king of Assam has two hundred .
wives, who are divided into nine j
grades. When one of then! dies her
body Is lowered from the rotf of the I
palace to bo buried; the law in Assam
prohibits the carrying of a corpse i
through the doors.
: Look
for
bargains
at
J. C.
Reiner's.
Will
close out
lots
of
goods.
/
Come
and
see tliem go
at
half price.
Come and see
our Furniture.
Just unloaded 5
cars. Also 1 car
of Carpets, Rugs,
etc., etc.
Yours,
! JOHN C. BERNER.
rv LEIUGIi VALLEY
IyVjS 1!A1 i KOAI).
AntlnnclU- coo! innd uxolu.
/ ttr""" "" u
AURANGCMrvT OK I'ANSI M.I.R Trains.
JAN. 1, ISJJ4.
LEAVE IKE 11. A Nil.
0 05, 8 lb, i) 88. 10 41 a in, 1 20, 2 27. 3 45, 4 65,
6 68, 7 12. 847 p in. for l-n't-n. J ddo. Lum
ber Yard, .Stockton i.nd 11 > ton.
6 06,8 40a in, 1 ,k45 p in lorMumh Chunk,
A lieu tow li, Bethlehem, i'hlla., Lumou and New
York.
040a m, 4 55 p m for Bethlehem, Huston and
Philu.
7 26, 1066 a rn, 1:.'4 \'A i. in, (via Highland
Branch) for White It iivcii, <. n mimniit, Wilkea-
Barro, Pittetou ai:l L. and B. Junction.
cl NIJAV TRAIN'S.
11 40 ft ni and a 45 p in for Drift on, J< ddo, Lum
ber Yard uud lla/.icton.
345 o in lor Delano. Mahwioy City, Shenan
doah. New York and Pliihu • Iphia.
ARRIVE AT EKEELAND.
5 60. 7 18, 7 26, 0 19, 10 56 n 111. 12 33, 2 13, 4 31,
658 and 887 pin, from i!n. 'toil, Stockton,
Lumber Yard, Jeddaand Drifton.
7 26, 9 19, lu 56 a in. 2 10, : • . i 5R p in from
Delano, Mahanoy < Ity m.d Shenandoah (via
New Boston Ilrunch).
2 13, 6 68 und 8 or j- rn from > w York, Fas toil,
Philadelphia, Bethfclrciu, Allcutown und Muuch
: Chunk.
919 and 10 56 11 in, 2 13, 6 end 837 p m from
I Easton, I'hlla , Mi uoh ( hunk.
9 3!1, 10 41 a rn. 2 ::7, 1, . M > uumm Vv bite Haven,
OlenSummit, \\ likes-!din e, I'itmion and L. and
j B. Junction (.via llighii.i.d lira: chr.
SUNDAY TRAINS.
1 11 81 a m and 381 p nr. from Iluzleton, Lum
ber Yard, Jeddo nod Di li ion.
11 31 u m from Delano, lfiu.cton, I'hiladclphia
! and Easton.
I 831 p m from Delano and Mahanoy region.
For lurther information inquire of Ticket
Amenta.
CHAS. S. LEE, Gen'l Pa?s. Agent,
1 _ _ l'liilu., Pa.
It. H. WILBUB, Gen. Br.pt. East. Piv.,
A. W. NONNEMACIIIiIt, Ass't O. I'. A..
South Bethlehem, Pa-
TIIE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND
SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD.
Tlmo table In effect September 8, 1898.
Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eeklov, Hazle
Brook, Stockton, Beaver Meadow Road, Roan
and Hazleton Junction at 6 00,6 10 am, 1210,
4 09 p m, dally except Sunday, and 7 U3 a m, 2 38
p in, Sunday.
Trains leave Drifton for Hnrwood, Cranberry,
1 omhickeu and Deringer at 6 00 u in, 12 10 p m,
dally except Sunday; and 708 am, 288pm,
Sunday.
Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junetton,
Harwood ltoad, Humboldt Road, Oneida and
Sheppton at 610 a ni, 1210, 409 p in, dully except
Sunday; and 7 03 a in, 2 38 p in, Sunday.
Trains leave Ha/.leton Junction for Harwood,
Cranberry, Toinhlcketi and Deringer at 0 37 a
nr, 1 49 p in, daily except Sunday; and 8 47 a m,
4 18 p in, Sunday.
Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida
Junction, Hnrwood Road, Humboldt ltoad,
Oncldu and Sheppton at 6 47, 9 10 a in, 12 40, 4 39
p in, daily except Suudny; and 7 40 u m, 308 p
in. Sunday.
Tr; ins leave Peringer for Tomhlckun, Cran
berry, Harwood, Hazleton Junction, Roan,
Beaver Meadow ltoad. Stockton, Hazle Brook,
hekley, Jeddo and Drifton at 2 40, 607 p ni,
daily except Sunday; and 937 a in, 507 p nu
Sunday.
Trains leave Sheppton for Oneldu, Humboldt
ltoad, Harwood ltoad, Oneidu Junction, Hazle
ton Junction a-d Roan at 7 52, 10 16 a m, 115.
ft 25 p in, dally except Sunduy; and 8 14 u m. 3 4o
p rn, Sunday.
Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow
Road, Stockton. Ilazlo Brook, Eckley, Jeddo
and Drifton at 10 16 a in, 5 25 p in, daily, except
Sunday; and 8 14 a in, 8 45 p ni, Sunday.
Trains leave Hazleton Junction lor Beaver ,
Meadow Road, Stockton, Hazle Brook, Eckley,
Jeddo ami Drifton at 10 38 a m, 3 11, 5 47, 638 p
m, daily, except Sunday; and 10 08 a in, 6 38 p m,
Sunday.
All trains connect at Hazleton Junction with !
electric cars tor Hazleton, Jeancsville, Audeu- |
ried and other points on Lehigh Traction Co's.
R. R.
Trains leaving Drifton at 6 10 am, Hazlotou
Junction at 9 10 a ni, and Sheppton at 7 62 a m,
1 15 p m, connect at Oneida Junction with L. V.
R. It trains east and west.
Train leaving Drifton at 6 00 a m. makes con
nection at Doringer with P. R. R. train for
Wllkes-Barre, Sunbury. Harrlsburg, etc.
E. B. COXE, DANIEL COXE,
President- Superintendent* j
■niPTii
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