Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, February 20, 1901, Image 4

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    P* A SOLDIER'S BRIDE."*"'
A Young Woman Who Went From
lianHiiN to Manila to .Marry.
A Leavenworth (Kan.) correspondent
Bays: Miss Daisy Bennett, daughter of
Colonel and Mrs. C. E. Bennett of Fort
Leavenworth, was married Jan. 5 to
Lieutenant George M. Grimes of the
Twentieth infantry at Manila, Philip
pine Islands.
Miss Bennett lias always lived at
Fort Leavenworth, and It was here
that she met and fell in love with
Lieutenant Grimes. Their courtship
began before the war with Spain, but
since that time the lieutenant has been
much away from the post, and the
lovers finally decided to he married,
though they were 10.000 miles apart.
. Lieutenant Grimes could not leave
his post, so his sweetheart made the
MRS. DAISY B. GRIMFS.
long Journey from here to the Philip
pines to marry him. She loft Leaven
wort li last November and arrived In
Manila Dec. 15, taking passage on the
transport Sheridan. Miss Bennett Is
one of Leavenworth's fairest daughters
and bus long been a well known and
much sought society girl. Iler beauty
Is of the blond style, and she has blue
eyes and light golden hair. Her father
Is a retired officer of the regular army,
having served through the civil war.
Lieutenant Grimes is a son of Major
George L. Grimes of the Second artil
lery, who commanded the famous
Grimes battery in Cuba during the war
with Spain. Lieutenant Grimes was
sergeant of Troop B, Second cavalry,
from Juno, 1806, to July, 1898. lie was
then appointed a second lieutenant in
the Twentieth and promoted to first
lieutenant last March.
Brerhcr'ii Praise of the Queen.
Forty-one years ago Henry Ward
Beecher said at Cooper institute, New
York:
"Every reason urged against a larger
liberty for women is illustriously con
futed by the dignity, purity and wom
anly propriety with which Victoria
stands before her empire and before
the world. For ages woman lias been
advanced to honor, influence, office anil
the highest public trusts if she will ac
cept them ill aristocratic forms. She
may he au abbess, a countess, a queen.
It is only woman without a title that
must have no privileges. With a crown
on her brow she may enter parliaments
and govern empires; with only her own
simple personal virtues she may not
lift up her hand to cast a vote. Now,
as a Christian democrat, I assert for
her every right and every privilege
that aristocracy accords her. That
which is good enough for a queen is
not too good for my wife; that which is
noble in a duchess is honorable in my
daughter."
llnly'M First Woman Lawyer.
Much has been said recently about
France's first woman lawyer. Home
has the distinction of possessing the
first woman lawyer in Italy in the per
son of Signorina Teresa J*abriola. She
has just passed her examinations with
honor and is now a full fledged lawyer,
hut has not inscribed herself among
the advocates, as, she does not desire to
champion the new woman, but to de
vote herself to the philosophy of law.
After taking her degree she addressed
a committee of the University of Home
for several hours. She now lectures at
the university, together with her father
and brother. Signorina Labriola is a
well known writer on scientific sub
jects.
Smaller \ it-tiling ( Urdu.
The new visiting cards, so much re
duced In size, are much more dainty,
appropriate and ladylike than the use
less breadth and length of cardboard
so long lu vogue. Some of the French
styles are as small as the name and
address will permit, says the New
Y'ork Post. Roman lettering has In
creased in popularity and with ultra
fashionable women has for the moment
superseded script and certainly has the
advantage of being more legible and
of allowing the use of a much smaller
card.
Woman's Pretts Association.
The annual meeting of the Woman's
National Press association was hold In
Washington Jan. 18, 1901, and the fol
lowing officers were elected for the
coming year: Mrs. Belva A. Lock
wood, president; Miss F. G. French,
first vice president; Mrs. E. S. Crom
well, second vice president; Mrs. 11. B.
Sperry, corresponding secretary; Mrs.
P. P. Pealer, recording secretary; Mrs.
I'. M. Stocking, treasurer; Mrs. M.
Stillman, auditor; Mrs. E. S. Brinton,
delegate at large.
Never an Angelic Being.
Woman was never an angelic being,
devoid of human faults, passions and
weaknesses, and she is not today. She
will not be tomorrow. But she Is a
creature today who understands her
self ami her fellow beings as never be
fore, uud therefore she Is capable of
greater tnefulni'ro.—Ella Wheeler Wll
-69*
I The Well DresMeil Woman.
The grievous faults with the femi
nine wardrobe are found in the bottom
' of skirts, the footwear, the hand cov
j cringe, the veils and neckwear.
| Skirt bindings wear out rapidly when
i a woman does much walking, no mat
ter how short the skirt. Just the fric
! tion caused by a skirt striking against
j the body tells upon the facing and
| bindings. A careful watch shodld be
| kept over those places, and repairs
| should be made before the damage Is
I noticeable to any but the keen inspec-
I tion of one's own eyes.
! Shoep ought to be carefully fitted and
; brushed each day to remove every par
, ticle of dust. When needed, a polish
j should be put upon them, either at
home or at any of the regular boot
blacking establishments. Fresh laces
i should he put lu when the old ones be
gin to look dingy and frayed, and but
| tons should be changed as soon as the
! polish wears away.
' Good looking hands are an immense
i satisfaction. Pretty veils are not ex-
I pensive, so no woman has an excuse
! for wearing one after the mesh has
j broken. Poverty and neglect stand
i out all over the woman who stretches
a damaged veil over her features or al
lows her linger tips to protrude through
! her gloves. As for neckwear—well, ab
solute cleanliness is particularly ex
pected of the well groomed woman.
; She must be Immaculate in that re
spect if she changes every hour in the
day.
; She Ilnd n "CircnH."
A lady over at Sedolla had an inter
| esting evening recently, what her big
brother irreverently calls a "circus."
She had expected a caller, Dr. Crow,
| who came in good time, and they were
; pleasantly chatting when the maid an-
I nounced "Mr. llogg." It was not an
I unusual occurrence, however, for the
doctor and "Billy Hogg" to find them
-1 selves calling on the same lady at the
j same time, but they were somewhat
surprised when the bell rang and after
a few moments Mr. Bear was announc
ed. The young lady had not noticed
the coincidence of the names, but the
maid evidently had, for, notwithstand
■ ing the fact that she had been trained
not to betray any feeling in the pres
! ence of guests, it was with a decided
giggle that she a few moments later es
corted Mr. Lyon into the parlor. The
lady managed them all, however, to ev
erybody's satisfaction, it is needless to
•say.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
She IN a DlaekNiulth.
One of the newest trades for women
is blaeksmltbiug, and Miss Esther
j Searle of Sawker City, Kan., is the
; pioneer. She adopted it in the way in
j which unusual occupations generally
are taken up—by chance. Her father
is a blacksmith and has been assisted
at the forge by his sou, and last sum
mer, when the young man was away
on his vacation, Miss Searle thought
that the work was too much for her
| father alone, so she went into the forge
and soon learned to wield the heavy
j hammer with ease and skill. When
her brother returned Miss Searle found
herself so interested in her novel work
that she continued to go to the smithy
: every day for an hour or so. She found
that her biceps were so developed that
she could swing the heaviest hammer
easily and that her chest measurement
had Increased several inches in the
j short period.
Itoutitles For Hi* Families.
Two bills relating to matrimony have
been proposed in the Wisconsin legis
lature. One aims to encourage the de
; velopment of population by a slate
premium to mothers of large families.
Mothers of a family of G children
are to receive $lO annually; mothers of
7, sl2; of 8, sls; of 0, S2O; of 10, $25; of
11, SSO. and of 12 or more, $35.
The other bill provides an annual tax
of $lO on unmarried men over 30 years.
Both bills were drafted by members
of the woman's club of Oshkosh..
France'* Women Workers.
A recent volume treating of the work
I of women in France gives this table of
; women workers in that country; Pliy
| siclans, 450; authors, 519; artists and
sculptresses, 3,500; singers and actrcss
, es, 3,000; nurses, 13,000; milliners, 30,-
000; government employees, 50,000;
I members of religious orders, 95,000;
l teachers, 100,000; in business houses,
245,000; landowners, 500,000; factory
girls, 575,000; domestic servants, 650,-
000; seamstresses, 950,000; farm labor
ers, 2,700,000.
The Mall Bag.
On the door of a college girl's room
i hangs a unique letter bag. It is made
from a soft felt military hat, given to
j her by a soldier friend. The crown is
i embroidered In various weapons
: swords and pistols, guns and a battlo
ax—with the college ting of the donor
j crossing the national colors. The hat
J is lined with a bright orange silk and
is hung by the twisted cord that in its
original use circled the crown.—New
York Evening Post.
Hair on the Face.
An old maid wants to know what will
prevent hair growing on the face. It is
difficult to answer. A growth of hair
on the face can only be permanently
removed by electrolysis, which is a
long and tedious performance, at the
I hands of a skilled dermatologist. Any
growth of down may be entirely taken
I off with a specially prepared solution
of calcium sulpho hydrate, but it will
not be a permanent remedy.—New Or
leans Times-Democrat.
The Queen Consort.
Queen Alexandra, the "queen con
i sort," as she will most likely be called,
1 is a stately, gracious woman. All good
| works for charity's sake have received
| her countenance and aid, and she is
I greatly beloved. Ever since she came
j from Denmark, a princess, young and
beautiful, her hold on the British peo
ple has beeu strong.
FOR HIS CHILDREN'S SAKE.
Elotitioiioe Tlmt Wa WaNtod on the
LoKiNluture of Georgia.
The infamous factory system is pene
trating the south, anil the monster of
greed is calling for tender children for
its food, says The Tobacco Worker.
Some men, able to see some of the hor
rors which will come in the wake of
the industrial development of the
south, are nobly but impotently striv
ing to soften the brutality of the com
ing era by legislation against child la
bor. While the antichilil labor bill,
which was defeated, was up for discus
sion in the Georgia legislature lion.
Seaborn Wright spoke eloquently for
its passage. His peroration follows:
The spirit animating the opposition
to this bill is the spirit of commercial
ism. It knows no pity. It chills every
generous thought and deadens every
holy feeling. It measures all things
manhood, womanhood and childhood—
by the dollar. The hearts and brains
aye, the puny weight of children—are
valuable only as they can be coined in
to money. You lay our little children
at the feet of eastern capital and say
all this will we give in exchange for
your dollars.
I lift the standard of revolt today and
in the name of the south denounce the
unholy traffic.
Mr. Speaker, I stood in the door of a
humble cottage shadowed by the facto
ry's massive walls. The mistress of
tliis home was the wife of a gallant
Confederate soldier. They had seen
better days. Death had kindly come to
him, and ho slept. The remorseless
hand of necessity had driven the wid
ow and her children out from the old
homestead to the humble cottage. As
I stood the gates of the factory swung
open, and amid a hundred children
hers came. They were young children.
The kindly walls of the nursery should
have been around them. There was no
spring in their steps, no light In their
eyes, their cheeks were white, and I
thought, standing in tlie presence of
the children of this Confederate soldier,
I wotdd give every spindle and loom In
the south to bring back the light to
their eyes ami see the roses bloom
again upon their little cheeks.
I would like to see every boll of cot
ton whose white bosom opens to the
warm kiss of southern suns spun and
woven in the south, but there are
prices I would not pay for it.
We are standing today, Mr. Speaker,
at the gate of the grandest manufac
turing empire the world lias ever seen.
The men of the north and east, with
spindle and loom and treasure, are
coming to our cotton tields. The laws
of nature, stronger than all the laws of
man, compel them to come. But mark
this truth, they are coining as our mas
ters. Our children and our children's
children are to be their servants. I
would put no restraining hand upon
their coining. I would fling wide the
gates and bid them enter; but. so help
me God, I would never give them our
children until their little bodies had
grown beyond the nursery walls and
the light of knowledge had dawned
in their souls.
Last night I sat with my wife by the
fireside of our comfortable home. I
watched my 8-year-old boy lay his
head upon his mother's lap and close
liis tired eyes in sleep, and I thought
except for the goodness of God he
might be numbered among the thou
sand little toilers in the mills of the
south through the long hours of the
uignt. And then, with Justice in my
mind and pity in my heart, I said, "I
will do for the children of my people
what I would have them do for mine."
Trn<l'M ( itioiiH In Crrnt Itrltnln.
The British board of trade has issued
a report on the trades unions of the
United Kingdom, of which an abstract
has reached the state department, says
a Washington correspondent. The
number of unions for which compara
tive statistics of membership are given,
for the period 1S!)2 to 1899, Is 1,085.
Some of these unions were not in ex
istence the whole of tills period, and
the number on the list at the end of
1899 was 1,292, compared with 1,218
at the end of 1892. The membership
of ail the unions at the end of 1899
was 1.802,518 as compared with 1,503,-
232 at the end of 1892, an increase of
20 per cent in the eight years. In 1899
the total number of trades unions de
creased from 1.310 to 1,292. This de
cline of 18 is due to amalgamation of
a number of the smaller unions witli
larger organizations, the number of un
ions (30) formed in the year being the
same as the number dissolved.
The total membership, however, of
the trades unions rose iu the year from
1.049,231 to 1,802,518, an increase of
153,287, or 9 per cent, the greatest
proportionate gain in any of the eight
years covered by the report.
Figures with regard to income, ex
penditure, etc., of 100 only of the prin
cipal unions, with a membership of
1,117,405, show that their funds at the
end of the year amounted to $15,970,-
040. The total income was $9,000,155.
In tlie Twentieth Century,
The labor programme for the twen
tieth century is an follows: To organize
the yet unorganized workers, to build
up national and international unions,
to make our unions more effective, to
protect the interests of tin? toilers, to
promote their welfare by all possible
methods, to safeguard every step we
have already gained. It may be true
that others by their sympathetic action
may aid the workers' movement, but
we resent the promises and claims of
any and all that the betterment of la
bor or the abolition of any form of in
justice to the wage earners depends
upon any other power than the feder
ated labor unions of the country. As
sociated capital must be met by organ
ized labor. Workers as individuals are
today as much at the mercy of the em
ploying class us a rudderless ship in a
tempestuous sea is at the mercy of the
waves.— Samuel Gompers In New York
World.
TO CURE THE GRIP.
Advice of a Fa in out* I'liynician.
First and foremost, REST.
Take care of yourself. Your already
weakened nerves want rest, and must
have It. If the attack is severe, go to
bed and remain there. More fatalities
result from neglect of this precaution
than from any other cause.
Eat sparingly. Your digestive organs j
are in no condition to take care of large !
quantities of food.
Drink plenty of pure, cold water. It ;
allays the fever, stimulates the kidneys |
to action and opens up the pores of the |
skin. Keep the bowels open with Dr. !
Miles' Nerve and Liver Fills.
Take three doses of Dr. Miles' Nervine !
per day, and if you cannot sleep take an I
extra dose at bedtime. To further con- j
trol the fever, and to overcome the pe- !
culiar aches and pains of the grip, u e
Dr. Miles* Pain Fills. They act quickly ,
and effectually, and no bad effects result
from their use. These remedies have >
been thoroughly tested more than a
million times, and their efficiency is
thoroughly established. They never j
fail to give relief.
Dr. Miles' Remedies can be found at ;
any drug store, and they are sold on a
positive guarantee that first bottle or !
package benefits or raonrf refunded.
Recent experiments siiow that all
classes of foods may be completely di- j
gested by a preparation called Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure, which absolutely digests ]
what you eat. As it is the only corubi- !
nation of ail the natural dlgestants ever
devised the demand for It has become I
enormous. It has never failed to cure !
the very worst cases of indigestion and ;
It always gives instant relief. Graver's j
City drug store.
One Fare to Washington, I)- C.
And return via the Lehigh Valley '
Railroad. On account of the inaugura
tion ceremonies at Washington, the Le- i
high Valley Railroad will sell tickets to !
that point and return March 1. 2 and j
at the low rate of one fare for the round !
trip. These tickets will be good to re
turn to March 8. inclusive, and will be j
honored on any train except the Black j
Diamond express. Stop-over allowed at |
Philadelphia and Baltimore, by deposit
of ticket, provided ticket is used within \
original limit.
For further particulars consult Lehigh
Valley ticket agents.
Reports show a greatly increased
death rate from throat and lung troubles,
due to the prevalence of croup, pneu
monia and grippe. We advise the use
of One Minute Cough Cure in all of these
difficulties. It is the only harmless
remedy that gives immediate results.
Children like it. Grover's City drug
store.
Fair Clones Friday Evening.
The fair at Eckley for the benefit of
the Catholic church at that place will
close on Friday evening, when all con
tests and drawings will come to an end.
A special Invitation is extended to Free
land people by Rev. Thos. Brohony to j
attend the fair on Friday evening.
For the weakness and prostration fol
lowing grippe there Is nothing so prompt I
and effective as One Minute Cough Cure.
This preparation Is highly endorsed a*
an unfailing remedy for all throat and
lung troubles and its early use prevents
consumption. It was made to cure
quickly. Grover's City drug store.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature of
Philadelphia Feline Duplicity.
It was during the natural history
hour.
"Give me," asked the teacher, "an
example of the alleged deceitful char
acter of the cat."
"In restaurants it is sometimes said
to pass itself off for a rabbit," answer
ed the head boy.—Philadelphia Times.
Divining Kudu.
The only trustworthy divining rod
that has ever been made is fortunately
cheap, it has a steel head and a wood
en handle and is shaped something like
an anchor. Any man who wants one
should go to a hardware store and ask
for a pickax.—Youth's Companion.
A fool forms an alliance with the
straws driven by the wind; a wise man
forms an alliance with the wind.—Chi
cago News.
The first savings bank in the United
States was established in 1810.
Thore is always danger in using coun
terfeits of DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve.
The original is a safe and certain cure
for piles. It is a soothing and healine
salvo for sores and all skin diseases.
Grover's City drug store.
Tobacco of all kinds at Helper's.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
1t artificially d igests the food and aid 3
Nature iu strengthening aud recon
structing the exhausted digestive or
gatis. It Isthe latestdiscovereddigest- j
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach It in efficiency. It in
stantly relieve3and permanently cures i
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
Sick Headache, Gastralgia.Crampsand
all other results of imperfect, digestion.
FrlceSOc. and It. Lar?o size contains times
small size. Boole all about dyspepsia mulledfrce
Prepared by E. C. DeWITT & CO' Cfc'cago.
Orover'fl City Drug Store.
Wm. Wehrman,
Watches. from to $25.
Clocks, from $1 to SB.
Centre street, below South,
| Kot at Half-Price
p Nor Below Cost
Q
55 are our goods sold. We
couldn't remain in busi-
V ness long if we followed
5; anything else but busi
; ; ness methods. We sell
J*
i! Shoes for Men, Women and Children,
| Hats and Caps for Men and Boys,
£ Furnishingsfor Men and Boys,
5;
*5 at prices which are as
J* cheap, and quite frequent
! ly cheaper, than others
K ask for the same quality.
** Give us a trial purchase
and let us convince you
that here is a store where
A your money can be spent
55 to your advantage.
H
I McMENAMIN'S
c*
*0
X Gents' Furnishing,
O'A
55 Hat and Shoe Store,
OM,
II
A 86 South Centre Street.
&
0*
!S € - £ * U ****> "X* o\o\o\o\o* 0\ o\o'%o\o\o\o* n\o\o •
o^,o^.oM.o\o^oVo%.UiAo^,o\o\io'%,o\o\oXo^oKo^o\o'Ko\o\oM.o\K
KH*l St roiid*l>u rg, Pa.
The Winter term of this popular institution
for the t raining of teachers opens J .n. , luO;.
This praet icul training school for teachers
is located in the most healthful it ml charming
part of the state, within the great summer
resort region of the''state, on the muiu line <>l
the D. L 5c W. Hail road.
Unexcelled facilities; Music, Elocutionary.
College Preparatory, Sewing and Modeling
Uepa rtments.
Superior faculty; pupils coached free; pure
mountain water; rooms furnished through
out; (itIDD BOARDING A RECOGNIZKD
EE AT IIH E.
We are the only normal school that paid the
state aid in lull to ull its pupils this spring
Write for a catalogue and full information
while this advertisement is before you. Wc
have something of interest foi you.
Address,
GEO. P. BIBLE, A. M.. Principal.
VThe Cure that Sures J
$ Coughs, L
\ Colds, j
I) Grippe, k
V, Whooping Cough. Asthma, 1
4} Bronchitis and Incipient A
CJI Consumption, Is tjj
folio's
f
THE GERMAN REMEDY* K
jA £>o\& \\
Wilkes-Barre l^ecord
Is the Best Paper In Northeastern
Pennsylvania....
It contains Complete Local, Tele
graphic and Genera! News.
Prints only the News that's tit to
Print...
50 Cents a Month, ADDRESS,
$6 a Year by Mail The Record,
or Carriers - - - WILKES-BARRE, PA,
Condy 0. Boyle,
dealer In
LIQUOR, WINE, BEER, PORTER, ETC.
The finest brands of Domestic and Imported
Whiskey on sale. Fresh Hoehester and Shen
andoah Beer and Youngling's Porter on tap.
NH Centre street..
Hi B * Bt GuuU* Use W
KAiLKOAD TIMET AbLES
1 EHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD.
November 25. lilUO.
A (tnAN(> bU hNT or l'AcirthMJ fc.lt TRAINS.
LEAVE FKK ELAND.
6 12 u m lor Weuthcrly, Munch Chunk,
Aiieutowu, HciLlclicui, Lueton, 1 hila
dcipliiu and New V oik.
7 40 a in loi Sandy bun, White Haven,
W likes-liarro, Pulsion uiid Seruntou.
18 a m lor Jriuzicloii, Alabuuoy City,
shenaudouh, Ashland, Weatlierly,
Aiauch t iiunk. Allciiti wii, Bethicijcuj,
Kasion, l'luludcipluu autl Aew \ oik.
AO u in lor Huzletou, Mabanoy Ciij, Mien
aiidouii, ..it. Carniel, Shuiuokin and
Potts ville.
2 .4pm lor Sandy ttun, White Haven,
W i Ikes-Bur re, acrautou and ail points
a 20 P in tor W eatlierly, Muuch Chunk, Al
lentown, iieliiletieiu, Fusion, Philadel
phia uuu New V ork.
42 p ui tor Huzletou, Alahanoy City, Shen
andoah, Ait. Carniel, Shauiokui and
PoiLsvillc, vv eatherly, Maueli Chunk,
Aiieutowu, iJothleheui, Fusion, Phila-
UclpUiu and New V ork.
34 P m tor sandy Hun, White Haven,
W ilkes-burre, seruuton and ull points
20 p ni tor lluzlcton, Mahanoy City, Slien
uiidoa.ii, Alt. Carmei and Sliuinokiu.
AIUIIVE AT FKEELAN'D.
7 40 a in troui Weatlierly, Pottsville, Ash
land, Shenandoah, Mahanoy City and
Hazleton.
• l 1; ain from Philadelphia, Easton, Bethle
hem, A Hen low n, Aiaueli chunk, W fath
erly, JJuzlctoii, Alahanoy City, Shenan
doah, Ait. Carniel and slutiuokin.
30 a in troin Seruuton, Wiikes-liurre and
White Haven.
.2 14 p in from Pottsville, Shumokiu, Mt.
Carniel, Sheuaiidouu, Mahanoy City
uiid tiazleioii.
i 12 P ni liom New York, Philadelphia,
Huston, HelhJehern, Aiieutowu, Aluuch
Chunk and Weatlierly.
k 42 p ni from serauton, Wiikes-Ilarre and
White Haven,
d 34 j> in troui New York, Philadelphia,
Easton, Bethlehem, Aiieutowu, Potts
ville, sliumokin, Mt. Caruiei, Shenun
doah, Mahanoy City and Hazleton.
7 29 P ni troui Seruuton, Wilkes-Hurra and
White Haven.
For turilier information inquire of Ticket
\Keuui
.ui.liiN' 11. W'l LUCK,General Superintendent,
Cortlandt street. New York City.
CH AS. S. Lh F. General l'usscnuer Anient,
Cortlandt Street. New York City.
G. J. GILUKuY, Division Superintendent,
Hazleton, Pa.
I'HK Dklawakk, Suhqukhanna and
Schuylkill Kailhoad.
Time tuble In effect April 18, 1897.
Trains leave UrilUin lor Jeudo, Kokley, Hz!e
brook, htoektyn. Heaver Meadow Koad, Moan
did Hazlelon Juuetiou at I) 30, 6UU a m, daily
Xeeid Sunday; and T 03 a in, z 38 p m, Sunday.
Iraiua leave Ilrllton tor Harwood,Cranberry,
omlueken and Derlnker at 6 30, 6 Ou a m. daily
except Sunday; and IU3 a m, 238 p m. Sun
brains leave Drlfton for Oneida Junction,
durwood Moad, Humboldt Koad, Oneida and
beppton at bOO a m. daily creep! sun
lay, and > (lb a ni, 'i Jb p ui, Sunday.
I rains leave Huzletou Junction for Harwood,
ranberry, louihickcu and Deriuger at (5.16 a
n, ually oxeept Sunday; and b 6b a in, 4 JSi p in
•unday. H '
Trnins leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida
Junction, Harwood ltoad, Humboldt Hoad.
Oneida and Slieppton at b2, 11 10 a m, 4 41 p m
aailj except Sunday; and <37 a m, 311 i in'
Sunday. v '
Trains leave DcrinKcr for Tomhick m, Cran
ky. Ha wood, Huzlcton Juuetiou and '<oan
at L :.n, 6 40 p in, daily except Sunday: ana <37
a ra, 6 0, p m, suuduy.
Trains leave Sheppton lor Oneida, Humboldt
Uoud, Harwood Houd, Oneida Junction, Huzle
ton Junction ar-d Komi at 7 11 am, 12 40, 532
p m, daily except Sunday; and b 11 a m. 3 44
p pi, Sunday.
Trains leave Sheppton for Heaver Meadow
Koad, Stockton, Iluzlc Brook, Eeklev, Jeddo
4 Pfl on ar P ,n ' dailj-, except Suuday;
and b 11 u ui, 3 44 p m, Sunday.
1 rains leave Hazleton Junction for Heaver
Meadow Hoad, Stockton, HazJe Brook, Eoklcy.
Jeddo and Drlfton at 6 46, Has p m, daily,
except Sunday; and 10 10 h hi. 5 40 p tn. Sunday.
All irains connect at Hazleton Junction with
electric oars lor Huzloton, Jeunesville, .Auden
ricd am) other points on the I'ractlou Com
nany'i line.
Trains leaving Drifton at 6 30, 00a ni make
ooimcutlon H t Deringvr with P. It. It. trains foi
w-ikiHbarre, Hunhury, HarrisbutK and points
west.
For the accommodation of passengers at vruv
sta(lons between Hazleton Junction uiid Dcr
iiiw-cr, a train will leave the former point at
3oU p m, dallv, except Sunday, arrivlnif ut
Derlnirer at 6 00 p in.
LU'TUKH C. SMITH, Superintendent*