Everybody Knows That nervousness and headache go to gether. The worry and cares of business or home, overwork, loss of sleep, improper food—all tend to irritate the temper, derange the digestion, weaken the nerves and undermine the health. This tearing down of the life forces must be stopped. The ebbing tide of health must be. checked, and new energy, new life, new I ambition infused into the whole system. To do this quickly and thoroughly use Dn. Miles' Nervine® ; It afts directly on the nervous system, quiets the irritation, rests the tired brain and restores the wasted tissues as nothing else can. You should not delay. Get it at once. Sold by all druggists on a guarantee. Dr. Miles Medical Co.. Elkhart. lad. ©Goodfcfe© LITTIiU HABIKS I) lE,either from bowel troubles or from diseases which they contract because they are in a weak and feeble condition from bowel troubles. Mothers who are seeking the ideal and proper medicine to give their little ones for remedy" lu iaia , collo aud simple fcvere will find LAXAKOLA the great family It is the best and most effective laxative for children. BEST because It Is safe and marie entirely of harmless Ingredients. BEST because it is non-irritating and never "f. S'H?* !""" " r in-ttation. BEST because it is sure aud never fails. BEST because Children like it ami ark for it." .h.il'in.E thing to give little babies violent remedies that rack and rend their little bodies. DON'T 1)0 IT—give them LAXAKDI.A. A few drops can be given with safety to very young babies, and will often relieve w.VaV d , I ', ll ';' 1 "A 1 '< tl'ut cause it, aud it also will cheek simple fevers, break up colds aud clear the coated tongue. Great relief is experienced when administered to young children suffering from n MITMII'J^S'n'H'V'u'r I ;'# white or green evacuations from the fact that I.AXAKOLA 52 ™ J '" '''',7 " ,e bo . wcls a,Ki carries nut the cause of fermentation, aids . r< li. \ i-> 1 restlessness, assists nature mid inducc-a slcop. LAX AKO L A I /i r"' e' V l' ° USP during "II conditions of health of the for wo MEN. es t,,,,,,.. „wsiove. : 1 , ■ , , ViVal m suco , "ka ""'l' l ' <• THE LAXAKOLA CO., 133 Naa.au Street, N. V„ or ROUND THE REGION. After being in progress for three i months Scran ton silk strike came to an end today. The company gives the weavers an increase of about 20 cents a day and allows them to appoint one of their number to measure the silk. The other employes got increases ranging from 8 to 12 per cent and a half holiday on Saturdays during the summer with full pay. "I have been troubled with indiges tion for ten years, have tried many things and spent much money to no pur pose until I tried Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. I have taken two bottles and gotten more relief from theui than all other medicines taken. J feel more like a boy than I have felt in twenty years."— Anderson Riggs. of Sunny Lane, Texas. Thousands have testified as did Mr. Riggs. Grover's City drug store. At a special meeting of llazleton Carpenters' and Joiners' Union the refusal of the employing contractors to sign the scale was the chief subject under discussion. Before adjourning a poll was taken and the members decided to strike on May 1 if the builders do not agree to the terms of the union. You cannot enjoy perfect health, rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes if your liver is sluggish and your bowels clogged. DeWitt's Little Early Risers cleanse the whole system. They never gripe, (trover's City drug store. PLEASURE. April 27.—Lecture by Rev. O. G. Lang ford, B. A., on "The Outlook for the. Twentieth Century," at English Baptist church. Tickets, 25c. April 50—Ball of Local Union No. 1519, IT. M. VV. of A., at Yannes' opera house. Tickets, 50 cents. May 4.—r Bene fit hop at Yannes' opera house. Tickets, 25 cents. Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially d isjests the food and aids Nature in strengthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive or gans. It lathe latestdiscovereddigest ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach It in efficiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Sick Headache, (iastralgia.Crampsand all other results of imperfect, digestion. Price too. arid }l. Largo size contaloa !V4 time. Small slio. Book all about dyspepsia tualledfree Prepared by E. C. DEWITT 0. CO. Chicago. Grover's Citj Drug Store. " Let me add my testimony to the wonderful curative qualities of Dr. Miles' Nervine. After dodtoring with several eminent physicians and trying advertised remedies for what was pronounced one of the most stubborn cases of nervous prostration, I found a permanent cure in Nervine. I believe it to be the greatest remedy of the age for those afflicted as I was." JOHN M. GRESHAM, 17 E, Pratt St., Indianapolis, Ind. BREVITIES. J You will waste time if you try to euro I indigestion or dyspepsia by starving j yourself. That only makes it worse when you do eat heartily. You always need plenty of good food propoyly digested. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is the result of years of scientific research for something that would digest not only some elements of food but every kind. And it is the one remedy that will do it. Grover's City drug store. CASTOTIIA. Boars the Jon Have Always Bought The 2.000 mine workers employed by the Lehigh Valley Coal Company at the Prospect, Mid vale, Oak wood and Henry collieries, who have boon on strike for a week, returned to work this morning. Fred Dilcher, national organizer of the United Mine Workers, ordered the strike off and told the men that they violated the union's rules and had done it much injury. Those famous little pills. DeWitt's Little Early Risers, will remove all im purities from your system, cleanse your bowels, make them regular. Grover's City drug store. OASTOniA. Bears the /f Kind You Have Always Bought Officers of the Scranton Municipal League yesterday afternoon burned the gambling implements confiscated in re cont raids. The outfits were worth over $2,000. The bonfire was watched by a great throng. Spring coughs are specially danger ous and unless cured at once, serious results often follow. One Minuto Cough Cure acts like magic. It is not a com mon mixture but is a high grade remedy. Grover's City drug store. castohia. Boari th© /j The Kind You Have Always Bought By a clause in the will of Dr. Charles Dona, of Pittston, who recently died in Florida, the sum of $2,000 is set asido to be usod to further the prohibition move ment. Skin troubles, cuts, burns, scalds and chafing quickly heal by the use of De- Witt's Witch Uazol Salve. It is imitat ed. Be sure you get DeWitt's. Gro ver's City drug store. Ice cold soda at Helper's. Time to Plow. Remember that plowing done now will not have to be done after awhile, when work Is pushing. INSURANCE FOR DRUGGISTS. Protected From Rlnckmsll and Mis takes In Miiini; Drans. i One of the latest tilings in the fidelity 1 and casualty liue Is to insure druggists against what is called the wrong pre | script ion man. For .sls or $25 a year several companies down town guaran tee druggists against damages arising from mistakes in compounding drugs. One of the most successful of these companies has 950 chemists of New | York, Jersey City, Newark and New Ilaven 011 its list of subscribers. , The idea of insuring druggists I against loss from their own mistakes originated in the belief of a number of leading pharmacists that they were the victims of a gang of rogues who made a practice of pretending that wrong medicines had been given to some member of their families, some -1 times with serious results. The gang | was partly broken up by the fidelity j company which first assumed the re sponsibility of protecting druggists at $5 a year each. An officer of this com pany says that there are fully 1,000 mistakes 11 year in the compounding of drugs. "While there are so many genuine mistakes," he continued, "there are many alleged errors in mixing medl j eines, and some of the complaints are invented for the sole purpose of ex ; torting money from the retail drug gists. Our company guarantees to pro tect druggists against themselves, but our main desire is to prevent fraud on the part of those who want to black mail one of our clients for something he lias not done. , "It is a serious matter to make a ! mistake in mixing drugs, but it is fre | qucntl.v even more serious to the drug | gist to have it noised about tlint such | a mistake was made. I have known chemists to be forced out of business by the publicity given to the fact that they made a blunder. Dishonest per sons have recognized the fear that I druggists have of an exposure of tills kind and have taken advantage of the I knowledge. | "Since we undertook to protect them a number of druggists have confessed to paying big sums to persons who said | mistakes were made. I have the names : of half a dozen so called doctors who I have aided an east side gang that was engaged in the business of bleeding chemists. i "Still, there is nothing really remark ■ able in this protection of druggists. | For instance, we have a special insur | anco for saloon keepers, guaranteeing them against financial loss through be ing locked up for violation of the ex cise law."—New York Sun. Do 111 K Ills Rent. Mr. M. B. Thrasher, a friend of Tus | kegee institute and Its pupils, says that lie once made inquiries about a ! certain graduate, a shopkeeper in Aln i bama, who seemed to be doing a thriv ing business. "What kind of a man is this Wood, the colored merchant down the street?" he asked in the store of a white man, judging that there if anywhere lie might hear an unfavorable opinion. The merchant supposed Mr. Thrasher to be a traveling salesman and answer ed: "You can sell him any amount of goods. He'll pay for them every time." Then Mr. Thrasher went on to the store, where lie found everything hi the most prosperous condition. In the course of his talk with the merchant they stepped to the open back door, and there Wood began calling: "Suke, suke, suke! Ho, there, suke!" Then there came a grunting under neath the floor, which was raised n lit tle from the ground, and presently there came crawling out an enormous hog. "That's my hog," said the merchant. "I raise one every year, though there's no reason why I should, for I'm not: married, and I don't keep house. I raise them as object lessons. It does not take much of anything to feed them, except the waste from the store, and see how fat they grow! "Then I get the negro farmers who come here to trade to look at ray hog and see what can be done by keeping the animals shut up and fed instead of letting them run wild. Then I tell them they might as well have hogs like mine as their thin rnzorhacks. All they need do is to shut up the pig in a pen of rails and set the children to gathering acorns for liim. "I can't start a school here," ho con cluded. "I tried that and failed, but I can at least tench the farmers how to raise liogs." Watch the date on your paper. THE FACTORY GIRL. now She Toils nsd Ekes Out nn Ex istence 011 552.n0 a Week. I was left an orphan two years ago. I engaged In an cast side factory for £2.50 a week because I was unskilled, out I am still working at the same wages. I get up at 5 o'clock in the morning. There is no heat in the house where I board. There are other girls in the house, and each one of us has some part of the work to do. When I go to the kitchen, I scrub the floor. Then I run back to my room, put on my other dress, comb my hair, run back and get breakfast and then walk to the factory. The boarding house is near the factory, ami I save 10 cents a day in car fare. lam at the factory by 7 o'clock. I am tired when I begin, but I do not think of it any more than I can help. At the noon hour I go to dinner. Factory girls do not wave luncheon. When 1 go to dinner I also help wait upon others and do a few chores, after which I hurry back to the factory. It is hurry, hurry, hurry. At 0 o'clock the day's work at the factory is over and, weary enough, 1 go back to the boarding house. After supper the dishes are to wash and put away, and some work is done to make ready for breakfast. One morning in the week I get up before 5 o'clock anil do 1113' laundry before breakfast, for a factory girl who works for $2.50 a week must i wash and iron her own clothes. There is just one thing in tlds which helps to lighten the burden—a factory girl does not have many clothes, so the washing is light. I do my ironing in (lie evening after supper. 1 do my patching whenever I can. When Sun day comes I am almost too tired to go to church. I wonder why some kind hearted church people do not send us a preacher to the boarding house once a month and some music. 1 have never been to a theater but once in four years. I have but one dress in which to appear when I go out 011 Sunday for a walk. 1 have had it four years. A factory girl's dress J costs about 4 cents a yard, her stock j ings 10 cents, her shoes 50 cents or I less. I have no gloves but a pair of [ mittens. Whatever we wear, is out of i style. That is why we wear bargains. J Everything a factory girl wears comes | from a bargain counter. It took me | nearly six months to save up $3, with i which I have got a jacket. My hat ; cost 15 cents, and 1 have another which 1 wear on Sunday. It cost me sl. ( I have about 00 cents a week on which to dress myself after 1 have j paid for actual necessities, j The room where I sleep, sew and j sometimes read lias several beds in it. j Two of us sleep in one lied. In an -1 other there are three. I Do I ever think of having n home for myself? Sometimes the thought comes to me, but 1 put it away. What chance Is there for a factory girl ever to get a home?— Annie Smith in New ! York World. Another Knockout. ! Union labor in New Ilaven got a set hack by an opinion given to the board of education by the corporation eoun j sel, A. Heaton Robertson. Recently ! the court of common council, composed of the aldermen and eouncilmen of the j city, passed a resolution ordering that all contracts hereafter Issued by the i board of education should contain clauses that only union workmen In good standing be hired on such con- I tracts. ! The board of education asked the j corporation counsel if such contracts ] would he legal, and he reported they would not on the ground that such a | clause would be unconstitutional, be i lause it would prevent competition in | bidding and would tend to create and i recognize a privileged class. Such | contracts would be void beyond ques ] tion, lie says. The corporation counsel j concludes: j "Rut even if there was 110 such pro [ vision In the city charter the power to j discriminate in favor of union labor, | either by the court of common council : or the board of education, Is beyond 1 the authority or scope of either board. ! whether acting together or separately, J because It interferes with tiie discre tionary power which is vested in the j different departments of the city gov ernment In making contracts, as ii j effectually tics their hands and pre vents their availing themselves of op i portunities to make advantageous agreements in behalf of the city, and | any taxpayer, under these circum stances, would have a right to enjoin the city from consummating such a j contract. j "This very question, whether a city i lias 11 right In making contracts to dis ! criminate in favor of union men, has | been decided by a number of courts, ; and in every case the court has decid ed against such a right." Bit; Strike For Plttsbnrgr. A recent Pittsburg dispatch says: A | series of strikes affecting between 100,- 000 and 150,000 men is likely to be in augurated April 1 unless the building and other trades, including structural iron and steel manufacturers, comply with the demands of the labor organi zations. Tile trades directly concerned will be carpenters, joiners, bricklayers, stonemasons, painters, plasterers, plumbers and others allied. The big amalgamated associations of iron, steel | and tin workers arc involved. One Tiling: nt n Time. ! The industrial council of Kansas City | believes in pushing one boycott at a time and lias a committee that is at work continually. All of the unions place a tine of from $5 to $25 on mem bers who patronize a boycotted firm, j This system is a great improvement, 1 It is said, over the old plan of having I several fights going on at once. jjg HP 15 pi L lii l® Hp L [§ L p] p pj ™ iji L Hp L THE WORLDS BEST. ngj Call and OFTEN IMITATED; p Iffl | 12 1 (fll m m | !H McMenamin's i m | I Hat, Shoe and Gents' Furnishing Store. | nil 86 South Centre Street. g Ifl PL __ 1 ISfrßiaiiaiirP B mMTimfiTiMrFaJirF&Jri iTthpianarafpria ipfe pBBBSS CWIII KOA jS; (Fg/U{ ASKTHE MAN BEHIND THE U —. W.K.GRESH fit SONS. ' MAKERS. \ The Cure that O^esi p Coughs, & \ Colds, 1 p Cripge, Whooping Cough, Asthma, J 4j Bronchitis and Incipient A jj' Consumption, is foXlO'sj A THE GERMAN HEMEDY" £ P C.ures Wvroat, J j\S<M *W 25^50ds/> Wi'lkes-Barre Record Is the Best Paper iti Northeustern Penusylvania.... It contains Complete I.ocal, Tele graphic and (ieueral News. Prints only the News that's fit to Print.... 50 Cents a Month, Add,!!s ' $6 a Year by Mail 'I he Record, or Carriers WILKES-BASSC. P. Condy 0. Boyle, dealer in LIQUOR, WINE, BEER, PORTER, ETC. Tin- finest brands of Domestic and Imported Whiskey on sale. Fresh Koch ester and Shen andoah Boor and Youngling's Porter on tap. oa Centra street. 3 Beat Syrup. A TMtos Good.' Use M fxl in tinio. Sold by driuuiTia*. RAILROAD TIMETABLES THE Dilawiki, Subqukhanna and Schuylkill Railroad. Time table in effect March 10. 1901. Trains Irate Drifton for.Jeddo, Eukley, Hhzlp Brook. Stockton, Heaver Meadow Head, Roan and lisaleton Junction at GOO a m, daily except Sundry: and 7 07 a m, 33* p m, Sunday. Trains leate Drifton for Harwood, Cranberry, I oiahicken and Derinjrer at •CO ana. daily except Sunday; and 7 07 a in, 3*G p m, Sun i day. 'i rains 'care Drifton tor Oneida Junction, I flurwood Koad, Humboldt Koad, Oneida and • Weppton at GOO a m. daily except Sun day; and 7 07 a m, t IS p n, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Jua. tiou for Harwood, Cranberry,Tomhicken and Deringer atG.% a daily except Sunday; and A M a m, 4 22 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazletoa Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood Head, Humboldt Koad. Oneida and Shcpptou at e J2, 11 10 a ai, 4 41 p m, daily except Sunday; and 737 an, 3 11 pm, Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tomkicken. Cran berry, Hat wood, Hazletou Junction and Roan at fc U0 p m, daily except Sunday; ana ? .'l7 : a tn, a 07 p ms, Sunday. ! Trams leave iihrppton for Oneida, Humboldt ; Koad, Harwood Koad, Oueida Junction, liuzie i ton Junction and Koan at 7 11 nan, 12 40, 5 p ra, daily except Sunday; and I 11 a m, 3 44 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppten for Braver Meadow Koad, .Stockton. lla/.le Brack, Hekley, Jeddo and Drifton at 3 J.G p rw, daily, except Suuday; and A 11 a ra, 3 44 p ta, Sunday. Trains leave Hazletou Junctsem fer Beaver Meadow Koad, Stockton. llazla Brook, Eckley, Jcado and Drifton at HI p m, daily, except Sunday; and 10 10 a no. A 40 p m. Sunday. All trains connect at Hazleton .1 unction with electric cars for Haxlcton, J canes? i lie, Auden ricd and other point* on tke Traction Com pany's line. Train leaving Drifton at 600 a m makca connection at Deringer with P. K. It. trains for Wilkesbarre, Sunbury, Ilarrisburg and points west. LUTHER O. AMITH. HttwrlnWimlwit. LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. March 17, 1901. Akkanoemrnt or Pamrk6kk Trains. HEAVE FKKELAND. (5 12 a rn for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Alleutown, Bethlehem, Kanton, Phila delphia, New York and Delano and Pottsviile. 7 40 a ni for Sandy Run, White Haven, Wilkes-Barre, l'ittston and Scrautcn. 8 18 a ra for lla/.leton, Weatherly, Mauch Chunk. Allentown, Bethlehem. Kaston, Philadelphia, New York, Delano and Pottsviile. 9 30 n ra for Hazleton, Mabaney City, Shea audoah, vit. Carmel, Shamokin. 1 20 p m for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al lentown. Bethlehem, Easton, Philadel phia and New York. 3 34 l> m for Sandy Hun, White Haven, West™ ' {UrrC ' cicrunlon * nd *ll points 7 29 p ra for Hazleton, Dolano and Potts viile. ARRIVE AT FREELAND. 7 40 a m from Weatherly, Pottsviile and Hazleton. 9 17 n m from Philadelphia, Easton, Bethle hem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Wenth- Hazleton, Mahanoy C'ity, Sheuan _ _ _ doah, Mt. Carmel and Shamokin. 9 oU a in from Scranton, Wilkes-Harre and Whito Haven. 1 12 l> ra from New York, Philadelphia, Huston, Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk aud Weatherly. 3 34 P ra from New York, Philadelphia, Eaaton. Bethlehem, Allentown, Potts viile, Slminokin, Mt. Carmel, Shenan- doah, Mahanoy City and Hazleton. 7 29 P m from Scranton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. For further information inqnire of Ticket Agents. KOLLIN 11. W1 LTtUR, General Superintendent, -. 26 Cortlandt Street, New York City. CH AS. S. LEE. General Passenger Agent, r, . . e P. Cortlandt Street. New York City. G. J. GILDKOY , Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers