FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUIII ISIIED EVKKV MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TIIOS. A. BUCKLEY. EDITOR AND PIiOPRIETOR. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE j SUBSCRIPTION" BAT ES: One Year SI •'" Six Months T." j Four Mouths 5" Two Months 25 j Subscribers are requested to observe tin* figures following the name on the labels of j their papers. By reference to these they can | ascertain to what date their subscription is paid. For instance: Orover Cleveland 23June9G means that Grover is paid up to June 28, 1896. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report promptly to this office whenever you do not receive your paper. All arrear ages must be paid when paper is discontinued FREELAND, NOVEMBER 7, 1595 ——- Energy Going to Waste. Every mm and then some fool man writes to the papers to say that we are becoming' a weak race; that the stand ard of height and measure of physical accomplishment are not what they were in the old days—whenever those ! were. The luxury of modern civiliza tion and the substitution of mechanical I for bodily energy are held accountable for this deplorable state of things. Of course it is useless to argue against J them. No man who has grown aocus- j tomed to pate de foie gras is going back to sustain himself on gluten bread while his salary keeps up, and no man is going to pay half a dollar to a workman to fix up liis last summer's straw hat in two days when he can have the job done in ten minutes for half the money on an electric machine. But everybody must have noticed that with i the decrease of occasions for manual labor there is a compensating output of energy in other directions. Man is | constitutionally compelled to use his muscles. lie has lost the prehensile caudalily that adorned his thousand j times great-grandfather, because his pursuit of agriculture and small game took him out of the trees and gave him an ampler footing 011 the ground; but with this rather unimportant exception he is stronger, bigger and better equipped than the relative with which Mr. Darwin has endowed him. The fact that he lias everything done for him by machinery, except his breathing and a part of his thinking, leaves him with a surplus of bodily vitality. Why not employ this energy that is now so lav ishly wasted? In old aristocratic so cieties it was against the unwritten law to do anything useful. A man might tire himself to death rowing, fishing, dancing, shooting, playing golf, and do ing things like that, but if he sawed wood he was done for. These aristo cratic conventions no longer obtain, ex cept among the most gilded of the elect. The time is ripe, sagely observes a writer in Harper's Weekly, to advocate the transformation or utilization ofen ergy. What we need is a wood-yard for respectable middle-aged bankers. Instead of uselessly and tiresoinely go ing through the setting-up exercises, or lifting himself from the floor by ropes, or revolving with great violence around a bar, or punching a bag, the banker could go out early and saw wood. lie would get fully as much exercise as by the domestic calisthenics, and his ex ercise would count for something. The excitement of a sport could be brought into the event, for a race between a number of portly gentlemen, to see which one could first get through his cord of wood, could hardly fail to be considered as an improving and exhil arating spectacle. As an evidence that brains and brawn may be found together in the same per son the invention of a combined trunk and bathtub by Sandow, the modern Samson, is cited. The absence of bath tubs in Europe where he lias traveled ; suggested the need of some such con trivance and the strong man hit upon the very convenient and useful article in question. The body of the trunk is lined with tin and the interior filled with trays. Clothing or personal ef fects are packed into trays, which are made to fit the inside of the trunk. These trays may readily lie removed and the trunk instantly converted into a bathtub. A PARTY of Bar.gor (Me.) bicyclists rode to Bucksport on a recent Sunday and to their return they stopped at a farmhouse to get a drink of water. The man told them that he could not ac commodate them with water, but they could have all the milk they wanted. | He said that he had to drive his cows five.miles to water them, and on ac- ! count oi the dry weather he found it al most impossible to get water enough for use in the family. There is one man anyway who doesn't water his milk. THE Goulds arc again before the pub lic through the return of the tax ap praiser in New York, who estimates the personal property to be worth 980,- 0214,580 and the real estate at 12,000,000. The appraiser is ordered to compute the commissions of the executors and trustees and to deduct the full amount from the whole estate before dividing the residuary state, which amounts to 973,224,547,; ng the children. Miners sh d.l wear the "Wear Well"'] working sh a. It is the best. EDITOR AM): IATESMAN. j The Eventful Career of Hon. Amoa J. Cumminga. Voted a Congressional Medal for Bravery ut Fredericksburg—llls Influenee in the Newspaper Field of New York City. ITon. Amos J. Cummings, who is now a candidate for congress from the Tenth New York district, was born in Conk ling, Broome county, N. Y., on May 15, 1811. His father and grandfather were clergymen of the Christian church. He was given a common school education in his native town, and at the age of twelve, when his father was editor of the Christian Palladium and the Chris tian Messenger, he entered his father's printing ollice as an apprentice in the i composing room. Then came a period of four years, during which he left home and hoed his own row as a com positor in many western and southern states. In 1857, while in Mobile, he joined the famous Walker expedition, which wound up with his capture,along with several hundred others, by the United States sloop-of-war St. Mary's. After his release he came to New York city and enjoyed his first taste of metropolitan journalism, in which he afterward became so distinguished, by working at the case in the Tribune of fice. He remained in the Tribune com posing room until the call'of the trumpet of war, when he laid aside, for a time, the "stick," and took up the sworu. In the war he w as sergeant major of . the Twenty-sixth New Jersey volun teers, participating in many battles, and was otYicially mentioned for gal lantry at Fredericksburg, and received the congressional medal of honor by order of the secretary of war. Here- ' turned from the war in time to partici pate in the defense of the Tribune office when it was mobbed by the rioters in July, ISG3. Mr. Ctunmings was one of the four compositors w ho remained in the office. Mr. Cummings lost his situ- 1 ntion with the Tribune by a strike for higher wages in which he participated, and for a time set type on the Yonkers Statesman. Returning to New York in December,he .secured work with Charles J3. Wilbour, one of the owners of the Law Transcript. Wilbour contracted to print a list of the inhabitants sub IFF : m I A / s>> HON. AMOS J. CUMMINGS. jeet to the draft, and Cummings worked upon the list until he was offered a situ ation in the editorial 100111 of the Trib une. Just after Christmas, in 1564, lie was placed in charge of the Weekly Tribune, j After serving nearly two years on the weekly lie became night editor, and aft erward city editor and political editor 1 of the daily edition of the Tribune. He has charge of the political department ; of the paper during the first Grant cam paign. 111 18G9 he became managing ' editor of the Sun, and remained there until t lie w inter of 1872. Broken down in health by overwork, he went to Flor ida. In the following summer he vis- I ited Colorado, Utah, Nebraska and Cali- I fornia, sending correspondence to tin 4 ' Sun over the signature of "Ziska" which attracted much attention. Mr. Cummings went to Florida every win ter until the spring of 187G, and his Florida letters reached a world-wide circulation. lie visited the Everglades, ; Lake Okechobcc and other parts of the state, then but little known. In the spring of 187G lie returned to New York and took charge of the New York Evening Express. He remained there until after the nomination of Mr Tilden. In 1884 Mr. Cummings was elected president of the New York Pre s club. lie accepted a reelection, and declined a thirdrenomination. Jn the fall of 188G he was elected to congress. 011 March 17 following lie became the editor of the Evening Sun. Ilere he remained until the opening of congress in December. The Evening Sun under his administration became one of tin- leading evening newspapers of New York. lie declined a renomination for con gress in l.ss.S, but in the fall of 1889 was elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of "Sunset" Cox, and he lias been twice reelected from that district. In congress Mr. Cummings has been an active supporter of all measures brought, before the house in the inter ; est of labor. Discovery of a Great River. ! The expedition of Dr. Bell, of the geographical survey, undertaken last June into t he fast nessesof British Amer ica by a route directly north from Ot tawa to Ruperts house on James bay, has resulted in the discovery of a river | which Dr. Bell describes as the "Nile j of the north," and the sixth largest river in 1110 world. Its average width is a mile, and it is five hundred inilcs long. 11 has three tributaries, one ris ing north of Three rivers, another in the Lake St. John region, and the third near Lake Misfa-sini. A primitive for est skirts the river's brink the whole distance, which is navigable from the rapids to the north. Over Seven Miles Up. i The highest, point ever attained by ; man was that reached by Cox and I filaisher, in ISG3, 37,000 feet above the sea. AUNT SUSAN RETIRES. ! Miss Anthony to Devote tt;o Ki-maincV. of Iler Days to Rest. Word comes from Rochester, N. Y., the home of Susan B. Anthony, that the ; famous woman suffrage advocate has determined to pass the remainder of her days quietly at that place. Miss Anthony's health is excellent this fall j notwithstanding rumors to the con trary since the fainting spells with which she was afflicted last summer. But it is not likely that she will ever again engage 111 protracted effort in be half of the suffrage,or any other cause. She is well along in years and under stands that she cannot do better than to give the younger w omen of the move inent a chance. In all probability f •> ■ -Mm MISS SUSAN 11. ANTHONY. therefore, she will remain quietly In Rochester for the remainder of her life To her friends she says she is quite re signed, but there is no doubt whatever that she fully expected the constitu tional convention of 1891 to give tho vote to herself and her sisters. Miss Anthony's home is a pretty brick house standing 11 little back from the street in a small grass plot, and is shaded by graceful maples. With her li\cs her sister Mary. She, like Susan 8., has never married. "Aunt Mary," as she is known to her intimates, lias the most profound respect and affection for In r sister, and lias practically effaced herself all her life in order that Susan might round out lier career. Un til a few years ago Mary Anthony was | I a teacher in one of the public shools. She is nearly as old as Susan, and for thirty years, at least, she gave most of her working hours to the training of juvenile minds and ministering to her sister's comfort, or helping her prepare addresses and papers for publication, i Yet she managed always to keep abreast ' of tlie times and to familiarize herself with the latest books. She lias also done a good deal of speech-making at home, mostly before the Ignorance club, of which both Susan and herself arc members, and those who have heard her say she is as good a speaker as is Susan. Besides she is an excellent housekeeper, but in this she cannot excel "Aunt Susan," who, all her friends declare, would have made an ideal housewife. In fact, there are many women here who declare "Aunt Susan's" bread to be the lightest, whitest and sweetest they have evei : tasted. FOND OF RATTLERS. A Little Dakota Girl and Zlor Collection of Venomous Snakes. The librarian of congress at Wasli- I ington has recently received from an 1 artist at Hot Springs, S. D., a photo graph of Martha Mclntyrc, an eight year-old child, who from her infancy has had rattlesnakes for pets. When she was four years old she found a huge rattler coiled up in the yard near her father's house, and by some mys terious power was able to come close and take hold of him, which she did apparently without the slightest fear. Every niont li or so she would find a new snake in the woods near the house, and I 1 * U .*: V 3 !Pl liif MARTHA M.'IXTYRE AND HER SNAKES. 1 now she has as many as two dozen, none 1 of which can be induced to leave lier. 1 The photograph shows her pets writli- ing 011 some slats nailed to two boards, while Martha stands behind them, her hand on one of the reptiles, which is moving from side to side. Some of these , snakes are four feet long. New C ure fur Snake Rites. Prof. Ilalford, of Melbourne, Aus ■ tralia, has been making a most remark , able series of experiments w itli chloride • of lime, willi respect to its action upon ■ human subjects as a cure or preventive of the evil effects of snake bites. lie is 1 sending quantities of immunizing se ; rum to Indiaand the Antilles. Jle finds • that by inject ii." into rabbits a dose of 1 the scrum corresponding to 1-10,000 of I their weight, they are enabled to en • Jure, without danger, a dose of venom • capable or killing untreated specimens ' in from three to four bourn. "Up with the I.ark" ;i Mistake. I That much celebrated bird, the lark, • is quite a sluggard, as it. does not-rise I until long after the chaffinches, linnets 1 and a number of hedgerow birds have been up and about. RELIGIOUS SERVICES. Announcements of religious service.- IIKI church news will he published free • I charge under this head every Thurs ' day. Pastors are invited to send us ali • items that are of general interest to tin ■ public. I ENGLISH R AI'TIST. i Services for Sunday. November 10: Prayer meeting at 10 a. m. , Preaching at 10.30 a. m. Subject, "The Evidences and Privileges of Divine Sonship." Sunday school at 2 p. m. At 0.30 p. m. the young people and children of the congregation will give a special service, consisting of the render ing of the entire book of Jonah, which has been arranged for the occasion b\ tin* pastor, also special singing. All are invited. Special services are being held each evening this week at 7.30 o'clock, and will probably be continued next week. Notice will be given. Rev. J. T. Griffith, pastor. METLLODIST KI'ISCOI'AL. M. E. services will be held in Lind say's hall every Sunday as follows: Preaching. 10 a. m. and 7 p. in. Class meeting, It a. m.;C. W. Barton, leader. Sunday school, 2 p. in.; C. W. Barton, superintendent. lOpworth League, 0 p. m.; Edward .Tones, president. Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at 7.30 p. in. The public is cordially invited to all of these services. Rev. Edmund White, pastor. HOLINESS CIIRIHTJAN. Services at the Holiness Christian Association church are as follows: Sunday: Preaching, 10 a. in.; Sunday school, .2 p. in.: experience meeting, 3 p. in.: preaching. 7.30 p. m. Week day services on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. Rev. 11. P. Jones, pastor. SIOO lie ward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one • readed disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that i-> catarrh. Hall's catarrh cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical ratcrnity. Catarrh being a constitu lional disease requires a constitutional ' reatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is take internally, acting directly upon the bloo . end mucous surfaces of the system lerehy destroying the foundation c 'lie disease, end giving the patiei - irengtli by building up the constitute nd assisting nature in doing its wor . be proprietors have so much faith i; s curative iiowera, that tbe.v oiler on undred dollars for any case that it fai - > cure. Send for list of testimonials Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. by druggists, 75c. No \Vh:tt Mlie Needed. 1 "Madam," began tlu- peddler, "I have here a history til'—" "Don't need no history nor nuthiu',* exclaimed the woman with red hair, who had opened tlu? door. "I beg yotn pardon," replied the ped dler, courteously. "1 see I have made a mistake. It wasn't a history that 1 should have offered you." lie went down Into bis pack and pulled out a couple of other books. "Can I sell you a grammar and a book ' on etiquette?" be asked, insinuatingly. By making extraordinary efforts be numbed the gate ahead of the dog.— ( liicago Evening Post. i Katio^lnntion. Rector— Duggan, attention! As you're an old Balaklava soldier, I am inclined to make allowances; but this is the third time 1 have seen you under the in fluence of drink. How is this? Sexton- -Well, you see, sir, when I go downtown one fellow says: "Duggan, i will you have a drink?" and another says the same, and I get drunk without Knowing it. Rector— But, Duggan, when 1 go downtown no one asks me to take a drink. Sexton—Yes; but you're not nearly 1 such a popular man, you see.—Punch. In Chicago, of CourHc. Ambitious Musician —I have fame at last in my grasp. "How so?" "You know 'Mendelssohn's Wedding March' helped amazingly in making his iunie?" "Well, what of it?" "1 am going to write a divorce march." —Tammany Times. A Combination WoHted. Little Fanny—Mamma, are porcu pines good to eat? Mother —No, my child. "That's a great pity." "Why so, Fanny?" "Because when you got through eat ing a porcupine, you could pick your teeth with the quills."—Texas fcjil't higs. The Liveryman'* Lows. Liveryman Terrible accident to day. Mrs. Heavyweight hired a horse of me, to take a ride, and hud hardly got started before the horse stumbled. Friend—My! my I Did the horse fall | on her? Liveryman—No, she fell on the j horse.—N. Y. Weekly. Perhaps a Little Too Hot, Too. ! Dawkins—Come on, Jack! it's half ■ past seven; my dinner is waiting for I ine at home, and I'm afraid it will be cold. Hawkins—T wouldn't bother about that, if I were you. Your wife will make it hot enough for you when you 1 get home.- Puek. Shu Laughed. , | Loorge—You are not calling oil Miss , Rosebud any more,eli? .la k No, 1 got disgusted. She has p such a coarse laugh. George I never noticed that. ! J J tick —You would if you'd been with . in hearing when 1 proposed to her. —N. | Y. Weekly. I Try the Wear Woll Shoe House. Their 1 goods cost no more and give better satis faction than any other store in Froclund. , j Blankets, quilts, feather pillows, springs and mattress at J. C. Horner's, MAM OF MANY PARTS. 'William Morris, Who Ma 3' lie Foot Lau reate of England. There is no so little understood a man in the literary world cf London a: ' William Morris, who has been spoken of lately in connection with the post j of poet laureate. It is because he is BO many-sided a man that he is known j neither by his countrymen nor by Americans. Tf lie were only a mere poet it would he easy to write of him—* to make an estimate and properly class- j ify him—but he is a larger ligure in I life than he is in literature, and ho 1 therefore belongs to the future rather 1 than to the present in the way of criti cism. He is spoken of indiscriminately as a socialist, as u designer of furniture and * fell & \/j / Air wh <7e 1 -sif, - f j WILLIAM MORRIS. wall paper, and as a poet. At Kelmscott house, Hammersmith, he designs es thetic wall papers for which he is de servedly famous, and the Ivelmseott Press, which he conducts, is noted for the beautiful books which it produces. Though he seems to be set nowaday; on winning laurels as a designer and publisher, William Morris lias a long and brilliant record as a poet. His first hook of verses: "The Defense of Guine vere and Other Poems," was publisher as far hack as 1858. This was followed by "The Life and Death of Jason," which put him in the first rank of liv tig poets. In his next work: "Tin Earthly Paradise," lie well-nigh ex hausted the treasures of Greek mythol ogy and Gothic folklore. This is a work with a plun which is somewhat indebted to that of the "Canterbury Tales." Certain gentlemen and mariners of Norway sail in quest of "the earthly paradise".—an island of bliss--find it, and remain in it for the remainder of their lives, passing Ihe time with tales from Creek and Teutonic sources. Tin poem is not meant, to inculcate vigor or active effort (though these may find their remote position in the tales); the primary conception implies a castle of indolence, an existence conditioned by languid repose. The poet does not fume and fret, but he has hopes that when there is leisure he may be thought worthy of some attention: Hut rather when aweary of your mirth From full hearts still unsatisfied 3*o sigh, And feeling kindly unto all the earth Grudge every minute as it passes by, Made tho more mindful as the sweet days die- Remember IN - ? a little then, T pray, The idle singer of an empty day. The critics of Mr. William Morris have complained of late that he has wasted too much time over the transla tion of Icelandic Sagas. But, as before .-dated, lie is far greater as a man than as a poet. At Merton Abbey in Surrey he has run for some years a factory it: which by producing artistic wall paper, furniture, etc., he has tried to restore the dignity of art to ordinary house hold decoration. He has fought that •urse of the whole Philistine world, sham' art and stupid bric-a-brac. Hi. fundamental principle was thus ex pressed in one of his lectures: "I do not want art for the few any more than education for the few or freedom fo. the few." BENARES' HOLY MAN. One of tlie Curiosities of India Visited ly All Travelers. Here is n photograph of "the Iloly Man of Benares." One of the curiosi - ties of mankind, he is visited by almost every traveler w ho goes to Benares. His , name is Sv. ami Bhaskarananda Saras- JLj ">r' , "TIIE IIOLY MAN or ULNAR KS." wati, and lie is about sixty-five years old. He lives near the Monkey temple, in a garden belonging to a rajah, wears no clothing, sleeps 011 the ground and accepts 110 gratuities, because he wants nothing. "By much study and long con templation of religion," it has been said, . ! "lie claims to he free from all passions free even from the very w ants of life." He bus a face full of sympathy and kind ness. He discusses and explains his ideas of religion whenever a visitor de- I sires to hear him, and he treats every one j of the multitudes who call upon him i with constant and most cordial kind ness. Part of his writings has been , publshcd in a bulky volume. The Only Gold Toilet Set. . I The only complete gold toilet service in the world belongs to the khedive ot ' Egypt. It was made in London and consists of 28 pieces. Each piece bears the monogram of the khedive in din- I momls, the same being surrounded by ! a fillet in imitation of that of the Grand i r Turk. Upwards of 3,000 diamonds and - over 1,200 rubies were used in decorat- j ing these golden toilet articles. The body of each piece is of 18-carat gold j • j and all are inclosed in a diamond-in- | ' crusted ebony case.. DUKE OF MAIILBOIIOUG.iI. The Young Man Who Is to Wed C'onsualo Vandarbilt. What TIo Drinks Lots, Smokes and Thinks ami tho Way Ho Looks, Acts autl Wears Ills Clothes—Not uu Imposing Personage. Perhaps you have never seen the duke of Marlborough. It is quite likely that you haven't, lie is, according to the New York World, a very exclusive gen tleninn—stops at exclusive hotels, as sociate.; with exclusive people, lie is, you know, the young man who is to marry a girl who will get something like $15,000,000 when she is married; later on in life she will have about $25,- 000,000 if she survives her parents. If you were to see his lordship the duke, you would be disappointed. Somehow or other the mind's eye con jures up a vision of a deep-chested, stout-limbed, brawny and oftentimes handsome fellow when an Englishman is mentioned. That is not so of the duke. Englishmen are not always handsome and muscular any more than Americans are. And the vast majority of Englishmen of the noble birth arc anything but athletic in build. Nature did not treat the ninth duke of Mail borough very kindly in the matter of physical proportions. lie is very short rf stature and some people say of money also, lie isn't more than 5 feet and 5 inches in height. In the matter of weight it is about an even thing between his lordship and his affianced. lie weighs about 120 pounds. His chest is hollow, and for that reason he is lacking in lung'power. l'eing somewhat short of wind, as of other things, lie speaks in almost a whisper, and sometimes he is almost inaudible in his speech. Servants are very fre quently put to the embarrassing neces sity of exclaiming: "Begging your lord -hip's pardon," thus indieatingthat they desire the question or the com mand repeated. Being short of stature, it is not at nil likely that the duke would look one whit more imposing if were to wear American made clothing. That would at least outline his figure and its sym metry or the lack of it. But his clothes Sdjf I Y"'" 'V v y THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH. are of course of foreign make. lie is no credit to his tailor. Perhaps his tailor is a credit to him. lie looks as though he had been thrown into his clothing. His coats are several sizes too large for him. So are his trousers. That is, of course, the fault of his tailor. But it mars tho appearance of the duke. The only redeeming feature of his garb is the material used. That is usually of Scotch tweed or English worsted. Those are very nice materials. In the mater of linen thedukeisquite up to date. For ordinary attire he v ears a shirt of a delicate, shade of blue or pink or lavender, lie is, or was, rather inclined to suerifice style to com fort during the warm days, lie often appeared in the lobby of the Waldorf, v here he makes his home, in a negligee shirt, with collar uttached. Ills cuffs were quite large. In the matter of neckwear there is not so much to be said in his favor. llis cravats would look very chic on a small boy in aFaun tJeroy suit, but they are too young for the duke, llis red scarf is not that rich red called bullock's-blood by the haberdashers, but it is more like n rain bow hue of pink. His blue scarf is not the Bond street blue nor the robin's egg blue, either of which would be appropriate to his blond complexion. It is a baby blue. It doesn't look well. Bootmakers say that a long narrow foot on a man is an c\ idence of gentle birth and refinement. The duke's foot is long and narapw, but lii.i shoes are not pointed to such an alarming and absurd extent as they might be without transgressing the rules of fashion. His hats are queer, llis derby is very low in the crown, and the brim is not wide enough to accord with this season's idea of what is tlie proper thing in headgear. But it suits the duke, and several of the uptown chap pies are gearing the same style of derby. They couldn't wait to have the hats imported. But nn American hatter who dictates the fashion on this side sent a designer from his shop to set his eagle eye on the lines of the duke's hat, and straightway the de signer made a block just like it. There were seven hats made from the block. The duke smokes cigarettes, some times cigars. They are always mild.. Imported, of course. He pays twenty five cents for each cigar. He only buys one at a time, which leaves one to infer that lie is not a heavy smoker, and, furthermore, that he has not the habit of sticking his hand intoliis waist coat pocket and drawing out a cigar to offer to a friend. When the duke is thirsty he drinks champagne. He is.very fond of that beverage as a thirst assuager. lie can polish off n bottle—a pint, of*ourse— in a very artistic manner. lie don't like the plebeian American drinks, lie never tasted the American brew of beer but once. Then he didn't like it. Nor does he like the American cocktails, ! Anthracite coal used exclusively, insuring j cleanliness and comfort. AKHANAEMEXT OF L'ASSENGELT TRAINS. MAY. lfi, 181)5. LEAVE FREELAND. 6 OT>, 8 25, 1)33. 10 41 a m, 135, 287, 3 40, 4 25, it 12,15 58, 8 05, 857 p in, for Drifton, Jcddo, Lum ber Yard, .Stockton and lhizlctnn. 0 Oft, 8 25. .33 am, 1 35, 8 40, 425 p ni, for Munch Chunk, Allentowu, Bethlehem, Phila., | Huston and New York. 005, 0 33, 10 41 am, 2 27, 4 25,8 58 pin, for j Mahunoy City, Shenandoah and Pottsville. j 7 28, 0 18. 10 58 a in, 11 54,4 34 p in, (via High land Branch) lor VVhite Haven, (4len Summit, ! Wilkes-Bar re, Pittston and L. and I). Junction. SUNDAY TRAINS. ! 11 40 ura and 345 p m for Drifton, Jcddo, Lum ber Yard and Huzleton. 345 pm for Dolano, Mahanoy City, Shenan i doah. New York and Philadelphia. ARRIVE AT FREELAND. ! 7 28, 0 27, 10 56, 11 54 am, 12 58, 2 13, 4 34, 5 33, 858, 847 pin, from lluzlcton, Stockton, Lum ber Yard. Jcddo and Drilton. 7 28, 0 27, 10 58 a in, 2 13, I :t4, 0 58 p m, from Delano. Mahanoy City and Shenandoah (via New Boston Branch). 12 58, 5 33, 8 r p in, from New York, Huston, Philadelphia, Hctiiichcm, A1 lentown and Muuch 0 27, 10 58 a m, 12 58, 5 33, 8 58, 847 p in, from Hasten, Piiliu., Bethlehem and Mauch Chunk. 0 33, 1041 m,227,6 58pm liom White Haven, (ilea Summit, Wilkes-Harre, Pittston wild L. ant B. Junction (via Highland Branch). SUNDAY TRAINS. 11 31 ft in and 331 p in, f rom Huzleton, Lum ber Yard, Jcddo and Drifton. 11 51 a in from Delano, Huzleton, Philadelphia and Boston. 331 p m l'rora Delano and Mahanoy region. For further information inquire of Ticket Agents. CHA3. S. LBE, Gen'l Pass. Agent-, KOLLIN H. WILBUB, Ben. Supt Easb Di'v! *' A. W. NONN EMACHEH, Ass't G. P. A., South Bethlehem, Pa. I"M1E DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA ANE SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect January 20, 1805. Trains leave Drifton for Jcddo, Eckley, Hazlc Brook, Stockton, Beaver Meadow Uoad, Houii and Huzleton Junction at 8 00,8 10 a in, 1200, 4 15 p in, daily t xcept Sunday, and 7 03 u m, 2 38 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Harwood, Cranberry, Toinhiekeii and I h ringcr at 800 a m, 12 OS) p m, daily except Sunday; and 703 a in, 2 38'p m, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction, llarwood lload, Humboldt Uoad, Oneida and sheppton at r. in a m, 1200, 4 15 p in, daily except Sunday; and 7 03 a IU, 2 38 p m, Sunday. I'm ins leave HuzJeton Junction for Harwood, Urnll berry, Toinhiekeii and Deringer at 8 35 a •i. I .►.*> |• m, daily except Sunday; mid 853 a m, ip ni, Sunday. in.in- leave Hazieton Junction for Oneida 1 unction, Harwood Uoad, Humboldt Uoad, Oneida and Sheppton at 8 47, 1) 37 a in, 12 40, 4 48 l in, daily except Sunday; and 7 37 a in, 308 p iu, Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tomhickcn, Cran berry, Harwood, Hazieton Junction, Uoau, Beaver Meadow Uoad. Stockton, I lassie Brook, hekley, Jeddo and Drifton at 2 55, 807 p in, daily except Sunday; and 1)37 a tn, 507 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt Uoad, Harwood Uaid, Oneida Junction, Hazie ton Junction a d Uoau at 8 18, 10 15 am, 115, 5 25 p in, daily except Sunday; and 8 01) a in, 3 14 p ni. Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow Uoad, Stockton. Ilazle Brook, Eckley; Jeddo and Drifton at 10 15 a in. 5 25 p in, daily, except Sunday; and 8 00 a in. .1 14 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Hazieton Junction for Beaver Meadow Uoad, Stockton, Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jcddo and Drifton at 10 38 a in, 3 28, 5 47, 640 p in. daily, except Sunday; and 10 08 a m, 5 38 p m, Sunday. All trains connect at Hazieton Junction with electric em's for Huzleton, Jeanesvilie, Auden rled and oilier points on the Traction Com pany's line. Trains leaving Drifton at 8 10 a m, Hazieton ■Junction at 1)37 a m, and Sheppton at 8 lh a in, connect at < hioidu J unction with Lehigh Valley trains east and west. Train leaving Drifton at 800 a m makes con llW,. IO " ut I)|,rllw,r w,lh '*• ,{ train for >N nkes- llarre, Sun bury, liurrishtirg and points west. DANIEL COXE, Superintendent. [ EHIUH TUACTION COMPANY. 1 J I'reelund Branch. First ear will leave Frcelaud for Drifton, Jeddo, lupati, meiit, and those ha\ ing claims or demands to present the same without delay Adam Sachs, ( lias. Orion Stroll, attorney. Geo. Cutler. POLITIC A L ANNOtNf!ICM KNTS. POOH DIHECTOH- A. S. MONROE, of Huzleton. Sul.jf.ft til till' ilmilhloii (if the ltepublicitu i iiominat ing convention. L ou roou muE( rou- TIIOS. M. POWELL, of Hazieton. Subject to the decision of the Hepubliean nominating convention. POOH DIHECTOH FRANK P. MALLOY, of Freehold. Subject to the decision of tho Democratic nominating convention. Poo It DIItECTOH— SIMON BUBE, of Hazieton. Subject to the decision of tho Democratic I nominating convention. When Baby was eick, wo gave her Castorla. When she was a Child, she cried for Costoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Costoria. When she had Children, she gave them Costoria The best is the cheapest in the end. (•o to the Wear Well Shoe House. Their shoes nil wear well. Ladies, don t forget to see the dress goods at A. Oswald's. r< < (hi? 8 You 8 S see g 8 THIS! g AlTh Trt'iv? So cl ° several thousand rop, other people. Suppose Sn, W yOUr ad was here!