iii POWDER Absolutely Pure Celebrated for its great leavening strength and heulthfuliu\ssiiresthc food against alum ami all forms of adul teration common to the cheap brands. HOY A L JIAKINO I'OWDEIKO., NEW YORK. FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established ISSB. PUBLISHKD EVBKY MONDAY AND THURSDAY TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIS STREET ABOVE CENTRE. Make all money orders, chcchs, etc., paijubh tv the Tribune Printing Company , Limited. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.5( 1 Six Months 76 Four Motitlis 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 u subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. For instance: orover Cleveland 28June97 ■leans that Grover is paid up to June 28,1807. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report promptly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription Is discontinued. FREELAND, PA.. APRIL 1, 1897. Well Watereu. Artesian wells,, instead of being ex pensive luxuries, are cheaper than pumps in the Great American desert— nn elliptical oasis, of which one focus is at Wilburn, Ivan., and another at Meade, its long axis being formed by Crooked creek, a winding stream. This little loz enge-fihaped district is probably the best-watered portion of the earth's land surface. So easily is water attainable that a farmer may have artesian wells all over his property and at any spot on his premises he pleases—none needing to be more than 15 or 20 feet deep, and none costing more than SSO. Of such wells there are over 250 in the district, yet so unintelligently is the water sup ply managed that in nearly every case the greater part of the flow simply runs away into Crooked creek. A few of them yield 45 gallons a minute; others from 12 to 20; the majority grad ing down to eight or ten gallons. The total amount yielded would submerge 12,000 acres a foot deep every year. Mrs. Backus, of Osage county, Kan., who is seeking to drive the corset out of that state, is moving upon the legis lature in furtherance of her plan to de prive the female form of its chief sup port. Apart from the physiological evils of wearing a corset Mrs. Backus advocates her measure from the stand point of a.rt, and it is .said she has writ ten letters to the members of the legis lature in which she declares that no generously endowed woman should ojv pose the reform, as it offers especial ad vantages in the matter of self-pride. There is much opposition to the pro posed measure, however, and if it evei 'becomes a law it will be by a tight squeeze. If a bill passes prohibiting the wearing of corsets in Kansas it b said that a number of the most promi nent women in the state will apply for a stay at once. The editor of the Otwaka (Idaho) Beacon makes tlie following plaint to liis readers: "We are out of wood, out of meat, out of flour, out of money, aud almost out of patience. We have a number of subscribers on our books •who have promised to pay up their sub scriptions with food or fuel, but we have waited these three, five, nay, seven years, almost, and there is no relief in night. Our family is suffering and the editor's hand has almost lost its cun ning for the want of a good, square meal. If something is not done, and that quickly, the Beacon will go out in everlasting night and we will have to go to work. Pay up in 'any old thing.' " '1 ho western section of the American Laryngologieal, lthinologicai, and j Otological society has just closed nn interesting session at Kansas City. The etiology of nasal polypi, chronic otitis media, and palatopharingeolaryngen! subjects generally were discussed. The experience of one doctor that n nickel's worth of methyl ben xotnethox • jycthyltetralydrop.yridineearboxy I ate used as a gargle was efficacious for son 4 throat was nonconcurred in. The mem bcrs were probably fearful of the conse quences of using such a remedy. An obituary of a little child in a Mis- j souri newspaper recently was couched ; in very tender and pathetic tones, and ' had much to say about the lamb of the : flock and the Good Shepherd. Incor porated in the article was the beautiful and familiar poem by Mrs. Browning. | but the intelligent er. lpositor and the j proof readet :-oiled wry thing- by giv- i Ing the poem the caption: "lleGiveth t His Beloved Sheep." I WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington. March 29, 1897. Although all the Republicans in the ! house promptly lined up to vote down Representative Dockery's very fair anti trust amendment to the McKinley tariff bill No. 2 that is being railroaded through the house, providing that when- j ever it should be shown to the satisfaction j of tin* president that there existed a i trust or combination to control the price I of any article on the dutiable list, the duty on such article should be suspend- ! ed, only one of theiu has had the nerve ! to stand up and openly defend the | trusts. Representative Walker, of Mas sachusetts, is the man who was not only willing to vote for the trusts but to talk for them. lie told the house that the great trusts reduced the cost of produc tion. which was true, but when he added ' that they also reduced the prices to the consumer he entered the realm of fiction. Lie said that trusts were the natural outcome of higher civilization, and pre- | dieted that all the railroads would even tually be contro l dby one. An att impt is being made by the Democrats to get the time for debate on the tariff bill ex tended, but it is hopeless. The edict I has gone forth that it shall he passed by j the house on Wednesday and as the i votes are controlled by Czar Reed, it will I he. Every member of the new executive | committee of the National Association of Democratic Clubs, appointed by Presi dent C. F. Black and directed to meet i in Washington April 12, for organization , aud a discussion, of the programme to be carried out by the clubs, was a supporter of the Chicago platform and of Bryan and Sewcll. They were chosen for that reason and those members of the old ; executive committee who refused to sup-1 port the party ticket and platform last i year were dropped for the same reason. ; The association is a strict party organi- | zation and will not recognize bolters ! in any way. The following is the entire executive committee: Benton McMillin. Tennessee; G. H. Lambert, New Jersey; I). C. Smith, North Caro lina; C. C. Richards, Utah; J. R. Mc- Lean, Ohio; E. Ik Howell, Georgia; 11. I). Money, Mississippi; J. C. Dahlrnanm. Nebraska; S. M. White, California; E. Murphy, Jr.. New York; L. L. Jackson, Maryland: J. L. Mitchell. Wisconsin: C. I. Faulkner. West Virginia: W.J. Stone, Missouri: G. F. Williams. Massachusetts; J. S. Hogg, Texas, and J. C. Si blew Pennsylvania. In no business conducted by private j individuals is tho government of the : United States so directly concerned as i in the soliciting of patents. When an gnorant client gets the worst of his I leal lug with an unscrupulous and tricky patent solicitor he is apt to regard the i United States paten: office as having I had a share in the business. Knowing this, intelligent men in congress are 1 always on the alert to head off when possible the tricky schemes resorted to j by some men who call themselves soli- j citors of patents. One of those schemes 1 is struck at by the bill introduced by Senator Ilausborough, making it unlaw- ; fill for any solicitor of patents to offer j an inventor a premium or prize as an I inducement to him to pay his fee to enter his invention in a so-called com- \ petition. Representative ••Champ" Clark, of Missouri, brought down the house by his retort to the assertion of Represen tative Bremweli that Jefferson stopped the coinage of silver and supported pro tection. Mr. Clark said: "That is an historic lie. It is on a par with the statement that Madison was a Fed eralist. The trouble is the histories are written by New England people. There will never be any truth in history until the Yankees quite writing history and ; the Southern people begin." Representative Dolliver trod on some I sore toes when lie said in reply to a Re- I publican charge that the Democrats were ; trying to delay the tariff bill: •'On the contrary, we are very anxious to roach some of the schedules of this bill before the final vote is taken. We understand that there is an incipient revolt over there among some of the Republican members from the prairie states who want lumber left on the free list." It is stated that at the request of ex- Secretary Carlisle, Claud M. Johnson is to keep his place as chief of the bureau of engraving and printing, for a time, as a reward for the work he did among the Gold Democrats in helping to carry Kentucky for McKinley. The following is the toast to which Mr. Bryan will speak at the celebration of Jefferson's birthday: "Thomas Jef ferson —We celebrate the anniversary of his birth, not in the spirit of idolatry, but from regard and reverence for his political principles." The Republican politicians are after' Secretary Bliss because he promoted a brother of the late General Hancock, who is a Democrat, from a $1,400 to a $2,000 position in the pension office. Representative Griggs, of Georgia, lias offered a joint resolution for the ainend ! mcnt of the constitution, so as to give j | congress the power to Impose and collect j an income tax. S. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. NEWS OF THE WEEK. Thursday, March 25. 1 In the United States senate the ag ricultural appropriation bill was placed • on the calendar. A bill for the repeal and annulment of the civil service law was offered by Mr. Allen (Pop., Nel>.). A time for taking the vote on pending amendments to the arbitration treaty was fixed In the house general de j bate on the tariff bill continued, the , principal speakers being Messrs. Gros j venor, Evans, Johnson and Walker for i the bill and Mr. McMillin in opposi tion British merchant vessels on the j way to Crete were stopped by the blockading squadron King George of Greece announced his determination to withstand the coercive measures of the powers Both Turkey and Greece continued preparations for war on the frontier A shipment of 45 pieces of I heavy ordnance, the largest ever made in this country, passed down the Hud son river bound for Randy Hook prov ing grounds. They cost the government *sl, GOO, 000 to manufacture at Watervliet | Howard Potter, the well known New York clubman, brother of Bishop Potter, died suddenly in London Ad vices from Washington state that Gen eral Stewart L. Woodford may be sent to Cuba as a special commissioner and ' afterward to Madrid as United States ; minister An alleged plot against the I French general commanding in Mada gascar is now given as the cause of the | recent exile of Queen Kanavalona to : Reunion island uonilun Truth an i nounces that the Duke of Leeds will I succeed the Earl of Aberdeen as gov | ernor general of Canada in 1898 The Greater New York charter was passed to a third reading by the New York state senate, all the amendments of fered being rejected Three ships grounded in a fog—the Saginaw and the Emily E. Johnson on the New Jer sey coast and the Wandrian near Jones' inlet, Long Island. No lives were lost. and the damage was slight A letter j mailed to General Gomez in Cuba was returned to the writer with a Spanish 1 stamp on its back, saying, "Party's ad ; dress unknown." Friday, March 20. ! In the United States senate the Tor rey bankruptcy bill was taken up and a substitute for it offered by Mr. Nelson >f Minnesota. In executive session the arbitration treaty was further discuss ad. Mr. Chilton speaking In favor of his amendment In the house general de bute on the tariff hill closed, the princi pal speeches for the measure being made by Messrs. Payne and Dalzell, the latter insisting that the protective tariff did not foster trusts, as had been urged by the opposition The Cretan insur gents captured the fort at Malaxa and blew it up. They occupy all the heights about Khania. The crown prince of Greece took the field on the Macedonian frontier. Great Britain was said to have withdrawn from the proposed 1 blockade of Greece It was stated that | the Armenians killed at Tokat num | bered fully 700. The sultan has ordered : the arrest of the Turkish officers and j their trial by a commission The Greater New York charter was passed by the New York state senate. The as sembly passed the Lexow antitrust bills j Attorney General McKenna has or- I dered an appeal of the government's case against the Joint Traffic associa tion to the supreme court, which will be directed to advance the case and decide !it at this term. More western roads ! withdrew from their traffic pooling as- I sociatlons Senator Woleott stated in j an interview that the adoption of the gold standard by Japan will hasten an | international agreement Claus Do i seher, one of the original organizers of I the Havemeyer Sugar trust, has an nounced his intention of building a | large refinery in Long Island City to i compete with it, and the Sugar trust has retaliated by discharging his three sons and his brother, who were in its employ Wallace 11. Halsey of Yon kera, N. Y.. is accused by his wife of trying to poison her with carbolic acid placed in some tonic she took for a cold The pretty daughter of a rich farm er at Derby. Conn., engaged to a young commercial traveler with an income of $1,200 a year, eloped with her father's i farmhand, whose income is sl2 a month. Saturday, Marrli -J7. In the United States senate Mr. Gal linger (Rep., N. II.) again attacked the way in which the civil service law is | being applied. A resolution was adopted I to have the Transmlssourl decision, to gether with Justice White's dissenting ! opinion, printed as a senate document. I In the house the tariff bill was discuss- I ed under the five minute rule, and a I long and bitter political controversy en sued Dr. Jameson told the British i parliamentary committee of inquiry In i to the Transvaal raid that he knows he did not do the right thing because he I didn't succeed, but that if he had suc j cecded he would have been forgiven I Counsel representing western railroads were in conference in Chicago over the j supreme court's Transmissouri decision. The opinion reached was that all rail | way rute making associations are out ' la wed by the decision of the' court . The Surety Building and Loan assoeia- I tion of Philadelphia, whose stockhold ers are well known residents of that city, has made an assignment for the I benefit of creditors. Charles M. I). Rich j ardson, the solicitor of the association, | is the assignee. The liabilities are $65.- 1 000; assets, $55,000 President McKin ; ley nominated Ferdinand Eidman for collector of internal revenue of the Third . New York district Three men were blown to atoms and ten other persons injured by an explosion of nitroglycerin ! at the Repauno Chemical works, near Philadelphia. The dead are James HamJlton, Charles Wright and J. T. Stiles, ail employees of the works Senator Piatt was slightly wounded over the left eye in Washington by a hurrying page swinging the door of the senate chamber against him Tt was announced in Washington that William J. Bryan will address the National As i sociation of Democratic Clubs of that city April 13. The executive committee of the association Jias been reorganized on a silver basis——Edmund Charles Yon. the French painter, died in Paris Grand Marshal Dodge appointed these chief marshals for the Grant mon ument inaugural parade; Major Oenr era! Merrltt, U. S. A., first division milL tary and naval forces; Major General Howard, second division, veteran and i patriotic societies of the civil war; Colo ! nel 0. F. Homer, third division, civic orga ligations. Monday, March en. Sixteen survivors of the steamship Vllie de St. Nazaire, which was wrecked off the Virginia capes several weeks ago, were taken into Greenock by the tranlp steamer Yanariva. which picked them up at sea in an open boat The min- I isters of the powers have decided to or- I der the withdrawal of the Greek and ' Turkish troops from the Thessalian frontier, under penalty of a blockade The sultan of J.laroceo has forbidden his subjects to make pilgrimages to Mecca on account of the plague Colo nel A. C. Tyler's house at New London, Conn., The Elms, was destroyed, with its contents, the total loss being about $300,000 A lire occurred at Ports -1 mouth, Va.. making 00 families homeless and causing SIOO,OOO damages. A Cath olic church was among the buildings burned A destructive cyclone visited Austin and other towns in Texas, caus ing great damage to property. Many houses were demolished, and one or two persons are reported killed The coal lleld of Jackson county, 0., was sold to a London syndicate for $4.000,000 An I important debate on the financial rela tions of Great Britain and Ireland be gan in the house of commons Wil liam P. Adams, widely known as Oliver Optic, author of books for boys and girls, died in Boston, aged 75 years Mrs. Margaret J. Preston, the well known writer of southern poetry, died in Baltimore Dogs attacked persons in Jersey City. Hah way and Elizabeth, N. J., and two men, two boys and a wo man were bitten. In Scranton, Pa., a 1 boy died of hydrophobia It was as serted in Washington that many mem bers of congress favor the proposal to pass a bill legalizing railroad freight and passenger pools Mgr. Merry Del Val, lately appointed papal ablegate to Canada, arrived in New York on the fimbria en route for Montreal George Merkt. a victim of the cigarette habit, expired in Bellevue hospital, New York, begging for one more smoke to save his life —-The tug Alfred P. Walcott sank off Seabright. N. J., breaking her sea cock valve, like the battleship Texas. Her crew was taken to New York j Philip Saxton, a Brooklyn wheelman, was run, down by a surrey driven by ; unknown men. His skull was fractur ed, and ho is expected to die at the Nor wegian hospital. Tuesday, March .'JO. In the house of representatives a call was necessary to secure a quorum. The Democrats tried to obstruct the Ding ley bill and applauded New England | members who declared the new duties excessive. Speaker Heed called to re store order In committee of the whole. The senate judiciary committee made stringent amendments to the bill pro hibiting the exhibition of prizefight pic tures. The arbitration treaty was dis cussed in executive session The Cu ban insurgents under General Ruiz Hi \ era have been defeated, and General Rivera, who succeeded Maceo in com mand, has been captured by the Span iards The British admiral command ing the squadron in Crete has sent word to his government that Colonel Yassos, the Greek commander in the island, has practically declared war . against the powers. The admiral says that more troops will be needed to set -1 tie affairs in Crete The president nominated Charlemagne Tower for minister to Austria-Hungary; William S. Shallenbergcr for second assistant postmaster general; Thomas Ryan of Kansas for assistant secretary of the interior and Henry Clay Evans of Tennessee for commissioner of pensions , Dr. liicardo Luis, convicted of en gaging in a Cuban filibustering expe dition, was sentenced to 18 months' Im prisonment and to pay a fine of SSOO at Baltimore The gunboat Helenashow ed a speed of 15.8 knots in her trial run on Long Island sound and earned a premium of $56,000 —Eight lives were lost off Pensacola, Fla., by the founder ! ing of an oyster sloop Latimer E. Jones, who was extradited from Lon don for forgery. Mas committed to the . Tombs in New York by Judge McMu hon in the court of general sessions A Mexican cable dispatch from Monte video, Uruguay, states that the United States cruiser Yantic is aground at a dangerous point at the mouth of the Uruguay river Archie Campbell, the younger son of a retired British army officer, committed suicide in a fit of de spondency in New York The Mas ter Steam Fitters' association locked out 1,500 members of the Enterprise As sociation of Steam Fitters and the Progress Association of Steam Fitters' Helpers in New York, and a great strike is expected. Wednesday, March .*ll. In the United States senate Mr. For aker introduced a bill permitting pool ing by railroads. The arbitration treaty was again considered in executive ses sion. In the house consideration of the tariff hill was continued, a number of committee amendments being adopted. Two western representatives spoke against the section of the bill placing hides on the free list. The Republican members of the ways and means com mittee agreed on an amendment to the tariff bill providing tliat the new rates of duty shall go into effect on April 15 President McKlnley nominated Frank W. Palmer of Illinois for public printer It was rumored in Madrid that General Sanguilly would succeed General Rivera as insurgent commander in Pinox del Rio The prosecution of the French deputies accused of being implicated in the Panama scandals was begun A fight is reported to have taken place between the Greek.;-, and the Turks on the Turkish side of the Mace donian frontier Torpedo boat No. 7, the Dupont. was launched at Bristol, R. I. Miss Converse, daughter of Com mander Converse, christened the vessel The Nebraska legislature passed and the governor will sign an act forbidding corporations to contribute to campaign funds A cyclone swept over Chan dler, O. T.. and vicinity, and 30 persons were reported killed It was an nounced in Washington that Consul ! General Lee. ut Havana, will be granted a 60 days' leave of absence from April 15 Ex-Lieutenant Governor Charles T. Saxton and John F. Parkhurst were nominated as Judges of the New York state court of claims. Mr. Saxton's nomination was confirmed Immediately -——Two women and an Infant were suf focated by a fire in 61 West One Hun dred and Fifth street. New York, and another woman and a boy are miss ing A dynamite explosion at Scotch Plains, N. J., killed William Beidel ; stetter and mortally wounded Robert i Peltz. What remained of the barn of John Cook, where the dynamite was stored, was destroyed by fire Anto nio Christensen. an alleged defaulter arrested in New York and given into j the custody of a Michigan sheriff on 1 Monday, was found roaming leisurely | about ihe Grand Central station, where, he said, he had "seen the sheriff off" ! Fire in the east wing of the Insane asylum on Ward's Island. New York, did damage to the amount of $50,000. A panic among the patients wa3 avert ed, and no lives were lost. BRIEF ITEMS. Mrs. Ilcnry Deis roth is alleged t< have committed suicide by jumping int< the Diamond Water Company's reservoir, it Hazletou. ill health is assigned a> the cause of the rash act. The bruised and unconscious body ol John Franey, 31 years, was found lying on the railroad tracks, east of Uirard ville. It is supposed he was struck by a passenger train. His recovery is doubt ful. The Mcrriam colliery at Ashland, once the best in the coal fields, is now so nearly worked out that it does not pa\ to operate it, and they have decided to shut down. About 400 employes will be thrown idic. Speaker Hover lias appointed Rej resentatives Kidd, of Philadelphia; Tip ton, of Adams; Muchlbronner, of Al legheny; Patterson, of Blair, and Mona hati, of Luzerne, on the Pennsylvania commission of the Tennessee exposition. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. By an explosion of gas John Evans and James Powell, of Summit Hill, were badly burned. The men wort* at work i repairing some old breasts, and the gas j which bad accumulated there ignited ! from their lamp-, causing the explosion, j The committee of the Schuylkill Coal \ Exchange has fixed the rate of wages to j be paid miners in the Schuylkill region j for the last Half of March and the first j half of April at 93.03, or 4 per cent i above the 82.50 basis. This is lln same ! as last month. A newspaper to be known as the ('at ho- ' lie Council will be published in Wilkes- j burro in the interest of Catholic work j and societies. The paper will make its I first appearance on Saturday and \vill [ be Issued weekly, It will lie devoted to ! the Catholic news of the county. BLOOD POISONING. GIVEN VP TO DIE! Remarkable Recovery of Mrs. Thomas Stockton, of LAFAYETTE, PA. Mrs. Thomas Stockton, of Lafayette. McKean Co., Pa., relates the following remarkable recovery: -When first taken ill. Dr. Ward, of Mt. Alton, said that I : had dropsy of the bowels; 1 kept grow ing worse and lie advised me to go to the Bradford Hospital, where he operated upon me. I had been out of the hospi- 1 tal but a short while, when blood poison ing set in. A physician from Mt. Juwett attended nie for three weeks and then said lie could do no mure for me and gave me tip to die. My husband then j took ino to Dr. Freeman, at Smethport who wanted to operate upon me, but as ! I had already gone througli one awful experience of that kind, I refused to again. After arriving back home, I made up my mind to try DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S as I had heard of it doing others so much j good, so my husband wont to Thompson ' Si Wood's Drug Store, in Bradford, and j purchased a bottle and it certainly was a God-send to me. From the verv first : it seemed to help me, the pain I had en- j dured constantly began to leave me, my j appetite improved, and before long 1 : was around the house doing considerable j work. In short. hud it not been for Dr. j David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy I believe I should have been in my grave today. I hope every one suffering from disease, especially women, will try this valuable medicine. 1 know of many here who are using Favorite Remedy since it, helped me so much, and in every case it has proved its great value." GREAT BARGAINS IN Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. Notion*, Carpet, Boot* and Shoe% % Flour and Feed, Tobacco, Cigars, Tin and Queen ware, Wood and Willuwware, Table and Floor Oil Cloth, Etc. A celebrated brand of XX ilour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. My motto is small profits and quick sales. | I always have fresh goods and am turning my stock every month. Every article is guaranteed. AMANDUS OSWALD, AT. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sts., Freeland. J ENT business conducted for MODERATE FEES. £ ?OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE* ; and we can secure patent in less tiuic than those 1 1 # remote from Washington. $ 1 t , Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-# ! Stion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of? 1 # charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. $ ! J A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents," with* Jcost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries jf > sent free. Address, 5 j |C.A.SNOW&CO. OPP. PATENT OFFICE, Dr. N. MALEyT" BEN TIJOT, Second Floor, Birkbeck Brick. OVER niRKIIF.CK'S STOKE. jt I eat Cough Syrup, Tastes Good. Uso ifl £ In time. Hold by druggists. I§ i^raaGEciaaiEayi, SEE I THAT THE Preparation for As- f SIGNATURE slmitatingllicFooclanrißcgula- II liiig the Stomachs and Dowels of SJ OF Promotes Digestion, Cheerfu- / /<5i JiiCatifonakSoda* I S| a&ftfc,. 1 BOTTLE OF liinis/ynui f '/aivr J f A perfect Remedy forConstipa- f I dSSk n ■ ■■ tion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, aI Hi KS DTIIn H H Worms,Convulsions,Feverish- 111 li % I j| M MJP 111 ness and Loss OF SLEEtR. I HB!■IU I UFHJ I UHlfl R I(. Oastorla i 8 pnt cp ia one>size bottles only ( It EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. fl S/Srf*° oa I w . 9 ovor 7 RAILROAD TIMETABLES DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA ANL i- SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect December 15. 1805. Trains leave Drlfton for Jeddo, Ecklcy, Huzle Ib-ook, Stockton. Beaver Meadow ltoud, ltoau and Hazleton Junction at. 5 JO, 600 a in, 4 15 p ni. dally except Sunday; and 7 03 a in, 2 ;J8 p m, : Sunday. Trains leave Drlfton for Harwood, Cranberry, Toinliioken and DeriiiKer at 5 30 a m. p in, dully except Sunday; and 7U3 u m, 238 p in, Sun day. Trains leave Drlfton for Oneida Junction, Harwood Bond, Humboldt (loud, oueidu and Sheppton at a 00 a in. 4 15 p ni,daily except Sun day, and 7 03 a IU, 2 3s p ni, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Juncti l, Harwood ltoad, Oneida Junetion, Hazle ton J million u:id itoan at 7 11 am, 1240, 525 . p m, daily except Sunday; and 800 u m, 3 44 1 p m, Sunday. 1 Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow ltoad, Stockton, llazle Brook, Ecklcy, Jeddo ' and Drilton at 5 25 p m, daily, except Sunday; ; and 8 OP a ill, 3 44 p in, Sunday, i Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Heaver Meauow ltoad, Stockton, Huzle Brook, bekley, Jeddo and Drilton at 3 Oil, 5 47, ti 20 p in, daily, except Sunday; and 10Ok u in, 53H p ui, Sumluy. All trains connect ut Hazleton Junction with ; electric cars lor Hazleton, Jcaucsviiie, Auduu ned and other points on the Traction L'om j pauy's line. ; Trains leaving Drilton ut 000a m, Hazleton Junction at o :.".i u in, and Sheppton at 7 11 a m, connect at Oneida Junction Willi Lehigh Valley trains east and west. Train louvitig Drlfton at 5 30 a iu makes con nection at Dcriuger with P. It. It. train for i Wilkcsburrc, Sunbury, llurrisbuig and points I For the accommodation of passengers at way stations between Hazleton Junction and Der inger, an extra train will leave the former point ui 3 5(1 p ui, daily, except Sunday, arriv ing at Dunuger at 5 00 p ui. LL'THKR (J. SMITH, Superintendent. LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. November 10, 1800. ARRANGEMENT OK PASSKNOBK. TRAINS. LEAVE FHKELAND. I 0 05, 845 !>3O am, 140, 325. 430 p tu, for Muuch ('hunk. Allentown, Bethlehem, Fusion. Phila delphia and New York, jo 05. 845 i!; 0a m, 1 40, 2 31, 8 25, I 30, 6 15, 057 P tu, for Drilton. Jeddo, Foundry, li.zie brook and Lumber Yard. 0 15 p in tor Huzle Creek Junction, 0 57 p m for Munch Chuuk, Alloutown, Beth lehem ami Boston. y.iO a iu, 234, 4 1.0. 057 p m. for D-lano, Ma hanoy i iiy, Slieuundouh, Ashland, Mt. Larmel, Sbuniokin and Pottsville. 030 a in, 2;>4, 4 30, 057 p m, for Stockton ' and Hazleton. ? 10 51, 11 54 am,s 20 p in, for Sandy Run, "lute Haven, Wilkceburre, Pittaton, Scranton and Hie west. SUNDAY TRAINS. 10 50 a ra and 138 pm for Jeddo, Foundry, Huzle brook and Lumber Yard. 8 38. 10 50 am for Sandy Hun, White Haven ! und Wilktsburre. 1 38 p ni tor Hazleton, Mauch Chunk. Allen- i j town,i Bethlehem, Huston, i liiladelpliia and, New York. 10 50 a in for Hazleton, Delano, Mahanoy ' ■>', Slii-uaiidoah, Alt-. (annul, Shuinokiu uiul Pottsville. AUKIVE AT FREELAND. 550 7 28, 9 20, 10 61, 11 54 a in, 12 58, 2 20, 5 20, 0 08, 708 p m, from Lumber Yard, Foundry, Jeddo and Drifton. 7 28, 0 20, 10 61, 11 54 a in, 12 58, 2 20, 520p m, i from Stockton and Hazleton. , 7 28, !i 20, 10 51 am, 2 20, 520pm, fi oin Delano, 1 Mahanoy City, Shenandoah, Ashland, .Mt. r u r- i nicl, Shatuokiu and Pottsville. j 9 20, 10 51 a m, 12 58, 0 00, p m , frotu Phila delphia, New York, Bethlehem, Allentown, , and Mauch (Uiunk. 7 08 p m from Weathorly only. I 9 a ill, 2 <44, 3 28, 11 I*)I pm, t roill Serunton Wilkesbarre and White Haven. &Uttnion ' | SUNDAY TRAINS. 8 28, 10 50 a in and 12 5> pm, from Hazleton, I ; Stockton, Lumber Yard, llazle Brook, Foun dry, Jeddo and Drifton. | 10 50a in. 12 55 pin, from Philadelphia, New | York, bethlohtni, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, i and Woatherly. j 1050 am, from Pottsville, Sliainokin, Mt. ; ( urmel Ashland, Slieiiundoah, Mahanoy City ' ! and Delano. i 10 50 a m, from Wilkesbarre, White Haven aud Sandy Run. For furthor information inquire of Ticket Agents. CHAS. S. LEE, Gon'l Pass. Agent, 1 KOLLIN 11. WILBUR, C.en, Supt. East! Dlv. '' | A. W . NONNEM AC 11E It, Ass tG. P. A., South Bethlehem, Pa. . COTTAGE HOTEL. Washington and Main Streets. 11 ENIIY II AA S, - Proprietor. | The best accommodation for permanent and ; ] transient guests. Goodtabie. Fair rates, liar j tinely stocked. Stable attuched. I STATE LORIAL SCLIOO East Stroudsburg, Pa. | A Famous School j In a Famouw Location. I Among the mountains of the noted resort, the Delaware Wilier Gap. A school of three or four hundred pupils, with no over-crowded clashes, but where teachers can become ac quainted with their pupils and help them indi i vidunlly in their work. Modern improvement. A tine new gymna sium, iu charge of expert trainers. 1 We teach Sowing, Dressmaking, Clay Model ing, r reehand and Mechanical Drawing with | out extra charge. ' Write to us at once for our eatalogue ami other information. You gain more in a small school than in the overcrowded schools. GEO. P. BIBLE, Principal. DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, Kosoubluth's Velvet, of which we have EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumin's Extra Dry Champagne, Heuucssy brandy, blackberry, Gins, Wines. Clarets, Cordials, Etc. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. 11am and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. Ballentinc and Hazleton beer on tap. Ruths, Hot or Cold, 25 Cents. VIENNA ; BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. CHOICE DUE AI) OF AIL KINDS, CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES RAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery $ Ice Cream j supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with I all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply wagons to aU parts of town and surroundings every day. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 1 151 Centre street, Freeland, FINEST LIQUOR, BEER, PORTER, ALE, CIGARS AND TEM ,j PERANCE DRINKS. BICYCLES! BUGGIES'. High-Grade, sold direct to users at wholesale. W" will save you from $lO to SSO. Everything in I Bicyo! > and Vehicle line. Catlog free. Beauti ful substancial bicycles at half price, guaranteed 1 year. No advance money required. We send by ex pre. • and allow a full examination, if not right return n tour expense. Now isn't, that fair? Write us. Hrexvater Vehicle Co., Holly, Mich. IBTC YCLI S T S ! Encyclopedia, how to care for and repair Tiros, , ('hams, Bearings, etc. 150 valuable pointers for riders. Price 25c; sample by mail 10c. It sells on sight. Agt. wanted. J. A. Slocum, Holly, Mich 14 day. Agts. wanted. 10 fastselleTV V3v Big money for Agte. Catalog FREE E. E. Brewster, Holly, Mich. Read - the - Tribune.