Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, December 02, 1901, Image 4

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    FREELAND TRIBUNE.
Xttablilhftl 1383.
PUBLISHED EVERY
MONDAY, WEDNESDAY ANI) FRIDAY. ]
iv THE
TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE.
SUBSCRIPTION KATES.
FREELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by
carriers to subscribers iu Freelund at the rate
of 12tf cents a month, payable every two j
months, or $1.50 a year, payable in advance. !
The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct from the !
carriers or from tlie office. Complaints of
irregular or tardy delivery service will receive
prompt ntteutiou.
BY MAIL.—The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of
town subscribers for $1.50 a year, payable in
advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods.
The date when the subscription expires is on
the address label of each paper. Prompt re
newals must be made at the expiration, other
wise the subscription will be discontinued.
Entered at the Postollice at Frceland, Pa.,
as Second-Class Matter.
FREELAND, PA., DECEMBER 2. 1001. '
ROUND THE REGION.
The hoped for settlement of the Scran- '
ton railway strike ended in disappoint
ment Saturday afternoon at a conference
between the strikers'executive commit
tee and Vice President E. W. Clark, of '
Philadelphia, and General Manager
Silliman. The conference was at the j
lattor's request, and its failure was due
to the strikers refusing to return to ;
work, unless all their members be re- j
employed. I
Four now cases of smallpox developed I :
at Plymouth on Saturday. The victims i
refused to go to the hospital and were
quarantined. The investigating com
mittee visited the hospital and found no
one on guard, the watchman having
gone into the town for milk. The sinks
were full and everything was in a con
dition to spread instead of check the (
disease.
At St. Peter's cathedral, Scranton,
yesterday. Bishop Hoban, of the Scran
ton diocese, denounced boycotting in
unsparing terms and later referred to
blacklisting In the same manner. The
bishop was impartial in his criticism
denouncing unfair methods by corpoi
ations and strikers. It was the bishop's
argument that no man has a right to
prevent another from earning an honest
living.
Edward Monaghan, of GrlerCity, was ,
committed to Schuylkill jail charged
assaulting his mother aud trying to
shoot his brother and sister. The
trouble, it is said, grew out of Edward's
dislike for his brother Michael because
the latter served with the army in the
Philippines.
Complete stock of felts, all kinds of
rubber hoots and shoes and a full line of
men's and women's slippers at moderate
prices at John Rellezza's, 110 S. Centre
street, near Luzerne, Freeland.
UPPER LEHIGH.
Bertha Irene Satir, aged 2 years and ,
0 months, died at tiio homo of her
parents, George and Annie Saur, on ■
Saturday morning. Death was due to
scarlatina, with which several children
of the town are alllicted. The funeral j 1
took place yesterday afternoon, the
remains being interred at St. John's
cemetery, Butler valley.
Mrs. Robert L. Sinyard and son,
Robert, of Summit Hill, are the guests
of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Keanau.
RELIGIOUS.
Revival meetings will be held at the \
Holiness Christian church every even
ing this week. Miss Grace Welsh will
preach tonight, and all are invited to at
tend and hear her.
Rev. J. B. Kerschnor delivered an
instructive sermon at St. John's Re
formed church last evening to the mem
bers of Council No. 348. Jr. (). U. A. M.
PLEASURE.
December 14 to 28. —Fair of the
Tigers Athletic Club at Kroll's opera
house.
January 13 to 18. Fair of Loyal
Castle. No. 65. A. O. K. of M. C., at
Krell's opera house.
JV HarnesslL
/Mro! jSlngEl!jt"''jj
TfEUREKAIf
HI Harness Oil 1
BK mrikoH a poor lookbiy
Iflw' pure, heavy holie<l oil, -s- Iwl
fOjnJ pecially prepared to with- i
J mi aland tho weather. \VH I
flf[ Pold everywhere \I jl
UJ M:de bj STANDARD OIL CO. \la I
SHE KILLED A BEAR.
A Wyoming Woman linn ting Alone
IluKKed n llln Fellow.
Women slayers of bears are not In
evidence very often, and even where
a member of the gentler sex has per
formed that service It was when in
company with members of the sterner
sex, aided by the presence of ready
assistance, rendering the action to a
great extent free from personal dan
ger, but Cody boasts of a woman that
lias killed bear unaided and alone.
The distinguished feminine hunter of
bruin is Mrs. O. 1). Marx, for a num
ber of years a resident in the wilds of
Big Horn county. She had frequently
hunted bear in tho company of lier hus
band and liad killed a number, but one
day last week she visited the moun
tains in the vicinity of Beaut creek, a
tributary of the Shoshone river, not far
from tliis place.
Mi*s. Marx was mounted on a spirit
ed horse and armed witli a .'lO-30 Win
chester smokeless gun. While urging
her liorse up a shallow canyon Mrs.
Marx espied a huge black bear coming
toward her from a clump of bushes.
Quickly dismounting, she knelt on one
knee and tired. The bullet broke one
front leg, but bruin only quickened
his paee, at the same time uttering a
growl. Working the lever of the gun,
the woman hunter threw another shell
into the gun and lired again. The hear
stopped for an instant aud licked a
hole in ids left breast and then contin
ued to approach with rapid strides.
Never losing her nerve for a moment,
Mrs. Marx "pumped" another cartridge
into the barrel and, this time taking
careful aim at a vital spot under and
in front of the right shoulder, pulled
the trigger. The bullet went true, and
the huge, hairy liulk rolled over at the
very feet of the nervy woman.
Returning home, the men folks were
notified and sent out to bring in the
carcass. Mrs. Marx is now distributing
pieces of toothsome bear meat among
her friends and receiving congratula
tions.
AN to Jncketn.
Small women—aud the majority of
Frenchwomen are inclined to be small
-—will stick to the bolero or the very
short jacket. There is no doubt about
tliis, for the real Parislenne will wear
only what suits her, which accounts
probably for the fact that she is al
ways well dressed, whereas the women
of other countries who follow her ideas
slavishly are well dressed or not, as the
case may lie. But all Frenchwomen
are not short. Many, indeed, are tall.
In any case, there are sulticieut tail
ones to warrant the introduction of the
jacket with long basques. Yes, it lias
become the fashion, and there is no
denying the fact, nor indeed do
Frenchwomen wish to deny it, for tlie
simple reason that if the long basque
does uot suit them they will wear what
does. The small ladies are for the mo
ment ordering either simple boleros
one wonders when the bolero will go
out of fashion in France—or garments
cut short about the waist like ou Eton
or u bolero and having tails behind.
One of the prettiest models lias tails
that eonie below the waist and basques
as well, small basques. The tight lil
ting coat with long basque—it readies
iu some instances to the knee —Is fash
ionable, but only the tall woman wears
It.
Clienp Furniture FAIIPIINIVP.
It is one of the saddest sights In our
modern life to see a young couple,
when starting to furnish a home, go
out with good money and buy bad fur
niture. It is positively nothing short
of criminal for cheap department and
furniture stores to be allowed to sell
the furniture which is being offered to
day in our great cities. Young people
are attracted to tliis rubbish because
of cheap prices. Every stick of the
furniture offered at these stores is
cheaply put together and by glue and
thick coats of veneer is made only to
sell. It barely gets into the new house
before it falls apart, and what was
thought to be a cheap purchase turns
out to be a very expensive investment.
It is strange that folks cannot get It
through their heads that a bed, a table
and two chairs, honestly made, are
cheaper at SOO than one of those fear
ful concoctions known as "bedroom
suits" which are sold at $40.83. Ed
ward Bok in Ladies' Home Journal.
I'nlnting With Paillette*.
Spangle embroidery is truly becom
ing an art and is no longer limited to
a dew powdering, delicate trniliugs
and traceries or thick raised clusters
of overlapping paillettes. It has reach
ed such perfection as to lie carried out
in close imitation of nature in the re
production of flowers with the new
spangles, exquisitely tinted and made
In a variety of sizes, shapes and mate
rials, transparent or opaque, dull or
sparkling. A clever worker now exe
cutes with spangles in white silk gauze
marvelous floral designs for dress trim
mings scarcely to be surpassed in shad
ing by silk embroidery, which would
certainly not emit at night the same
phosphorescent glints as the wee pail
lettes in the innumerable art nouveau
lines.
ArllNtle, hut Yet Not Lntlly.
A Kate Green way type of gown is
fascinating those who appreciate the
picturesque in afternoon and negligee
toilets. The gauged yoke, the loose gir
dle and the soft big sleeves gathered
into wristlet cuffs, embroidered with
flower sprays brightened with gold and
silver, combine to produce of all wraps
the most comfortable. Velvet or heavy
satin sheeting is the fabric that
should be used, but nun's veiling may
be employed with very satisfactory re
sults, and a serge of suitably artistic
coloring is potent in recalling the tri
umphs tliis vogue had many a year
ago. A vesy different cult of the pic
turesque calls for copies of a still fur
j ther bygone day, quite mediaeval in
I Jtheir designs and rich fabrics.
I
F^ICfISTORIA
|
f ASTORIA* The Kind You Have
™ Always Bought
! AVbgelablePreparatioiil'oi-As- 1 ~
I similalingllicFoodandUcgula- a _ #
UngthcStomuchsauclDowelsof _D6cirS tilO g \
lii Signature f A u
Promotes Digeslion.Cheerful- Jf */ li/^
ness and Rest.Contains neither f g, W sjf
Opium,Morpliine nor Mineral. U1 #n'\ U
>'ot NAitc otic . i| lv\\lr
nmpe aroUJ*SAKVn.mCHKR I | Wvl^'
Puntpkm Sce*l~ \ If \jK w
/tlx.Senna * 1 .aili 14% B
/iocAe/le Sails - I _ I
xUiise Seed c 1 A V& % llj
H&ermint - ) i) |\ I II 1 fi
Hi CttrbmnteSoda + I ll lift ■■■
mm-Seed- I 11 \J ft
Aperfecl Remedy forConslipa- I\| fj' Uw 5J
tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea f I l 4/ f
Worms,Convulsions,Feverish- I I By f° _ „ fi„
ness and Loss OF SLEEP. S0 I UVu!
Facsimile Signature or Ijl
nranroiLin j rt^earS
I igers hair
Mi's Opera House
B3goan-aw.raaTi
W\ STRENGTH
AND
M\ \ LONGEVITY
il.Tifis, ; aIS THE I
ISBIt IBMCM
BLIL aMB———WMMB
All dtHPiiKPM nre more or ICON comprised in the nbove lour ailineutH, nil of
which linvo their oriuin in the Ktoinnch. To cure eneli, any or all of them,
begin right. Begin with the Stouinch. Brain with Litxiiknln, the arent tonic
Intuitive. It Mpeedily nnd painlessly nets on the bowels, cleanweH the atomnch,
HtiniuliiteN the liver, eorrectM the kiilneyN, ullnyH ucrvouMneaa, aaainta diCH
lion, while its tnnrvelloiiß tonic properties tones up the system while eurina
it, mid speedily causes n natural and permanent condition of henlth.
Laxakol* is the best Children's retnedy in the world, and the only one that builds up the
children's systems while acting as an all-around blood-purifier and tonic. It speedily clears the
coated tongue, checks colds and simple fevers, and promotes sleep. Children like it and ask
■■■■■■BESHaMMHMSieWWßW'iaeilllWWSWWßaßlWlllSLlll'illlU.ui'.xaßlßga'^iliMßi
He Wants to Write.
Tills from a correspondent over in |
Alabama: "The other day 1 tried my
hand at writin', and I was surprised
to Hud I was Horned to it. The only
wonder is I never knowed it Before
this. So, belli' Horned, though not
raised, to it, I will ask you if you know
where I can make a dollar or two a day ;
at it; and please let me know What '
kind of Writin' they'd put me on first—
whether Noveltry, Historic or Ponms,
with rhymes to the End. I mean Busi
ness and will Write Hard. Let me I
Know at Once."—Atlanta Constitution.
A. Oswald has the agency for ilie cede- '
hrat.ed Elysium's extracts and perfumery.
The finest goods made Try them
Little DOIIIK.
I "You don't appear to he very particu
lar about your appearance nowadays,"
remarked the owl. "Don't you go into
society any more?"
"Oli, no," replied the stork. "We
don't supply pet dogs, you know."—
Catholic Standard and Times.
In IIurl l.iick.
"Yes, Mrs. Uptodate Is dreadfully
worried."
"What's the matter?"
"Why two new fads have made their
appearance at the same time, and she
doesn't know which to take up."—Chi
cago Post.
| Watcliesand jewelry repaired— Kclper
s-
RUBBERS
Large variety of styles and
prices.
Some people don't like rubbers.
For these wc have good honest
stout shoes for street wear. •
The foot often looKs better and
feels better this way.
All America shoe
is solid leather made on custom
shoe lasts and as near
weather tight as a shoe can
be. Trim in appearance, too.
They are the "What's what"
in shoes for fall and winter.
Come in and sec them.
McMenamin's
Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store,
South Centre Street.
\ The Cure that Cures /
p Coughs, &j
\ Colds, J
I) Grippe, ik
\ Whooping Cough, Asthma, 1
j>\ Bronchitis and Incipient A
gjl Consumption, Is
TOTJOSI
P (JU% j
A THE GERMAN REMEDY" £
r Gutes WvoA &\sehses. J
HEADACHE"
At all drug stores. 25 Doses 25c.
*_ I
HEADACHE 1
I JP'JRIJST TXJSVGr
I Promptly Dom* IU the Tribune OlHce.
RAILROAD TIMETABLES
LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD.
.June 2, 1901.
ARRANGEMENT or PABHENOEH TRAINS.
LEAVE FKBELANI).
6 12 a m for Weathorly, Mauch Chunk,
Allentown. Bethlehem, Easton, Phila
delphia and Now York.
I 7 34 a m for Sandy Hun, White Haven,
Wilkes-Barre. Pittston and Soranton.
8 15 a m lor lia/.leton, Weatherly, Mauch
I Chunk. Allentown, Bethlehem. Easton,
Philadelphia, New York, Delano and
l'ottsville.
9 30 a in lor Ha/.leton. Delano, Mahunoy
City, Shenandoah and Mt. ('armel.
1 1 42 u in for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk. Al
lcntowu, Bethlehem, Easton, Phila
delphia, New York. Hazier on, Delano,
Maluinoy City, Shenandoah and Mt.
Carme).
I 1 5 1 a in lor White Haven, Wilkes-Barre,
Serunton ami the West.
4 44 pin for Weatherly. Mauch Chunk, Al
lentown. Bethlehem. Easton, Philadel
phia, New York, llazleton, Delano.
Mahauoy City, Slienandoah, Mt. Carmel
and Pottsvllle.
6 35 P ni for Sandy Bun, White Haven,
Wilkes-Barre, Seranton and all points
West.
7 29 p in for Hazleton.
AH HIVE AT FREELAND.
7 34 am from Pottsvllle, Delano and Haz
leton.
9 12 am from New York, Philadelphia. Eas
ton. Bethlehem, A Hen town, Mauch
Chunk. Weatherly, Hazleton. Mahanoy
City, ShenHßdouli and .Mt. Carmel
9 30 a in from Seranton, Wilkes-Barre and
White lluven.
II 51 a in from Pottsvllle, Mt. Carmel, Hheu
andoah, Mahunoy City, Delano and
Huzletou.
12 48 P ni from New York, Philadelphia,
Easton, Bethlehem, Allentowu, Mauch
Chunk and Weatherly.
! 4 44 J) m from Seranton, Wilkes-Barre and
White Haven.
0 35 P m from New York, Philadelphia,
Easton, Bethlehem Allentowu, Mauch
Chunk, Weatherly, Mt.Carmel,Shenan
doah, Mahauoy City, Delano and Hazle
ton.
7 29 ] m from Seranton, Wilkea-Barro and
White Haven.
For further information inquire of Ticket
Agents.
KOLLIN B. WlLßUß.General Superintendent,
2H Cortlandt street. New York City.
CHAS. S. LEE. General Passenger Agent,
2d Cortlandt Street, New York City.
G. J. GILDUOY, Division Superintendent,
Hazleton, Pa.
'PHE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND
A SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD.
Time table In effect March 10,1001.
Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Kekloy, Hazle
brook, Stockton, Beaver Meadow Road, Roan
and Hazleton Junction at 600 a m, daily
except Sunday: and 7 07 a ni, 2 38 p m, Sunday.
. Trains leave Drifton for Harwood, Cranberry,
Tomhieken and Derlnger at 000 a m, daily
except Sunday; and 707 a m, 238 p m, Sun
day-
I Trains loave Drifton for Oneida Junction,
Harwood Road, Humboldt Road, Oneida and
Sheppton at 600 a m, daily except Sun
day; and 7 07 am, 2 38 pm, Sunday.
Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Harwood,
Cranberry, Tomhieken and Doringer at 6 85 a
m, daily except Sunday; and 8 63 a m, 4 22 p m,
Sunday.
Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida
Junction, Harwood ltoad, Humboldt Road,
Oneida and Sheppton at 6 82.11 10 am,441 pm,
daily except Sunday; and 787 a m, 811 pm,
Sunday.
Trains leave Derlnger for Tcmhick in, Cran
berry. Hai wood, Hazleton Junction a id Roan
at 600 p m, daily except Sunday; and 337
a ra, 5 07 p in, Sunday.
Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt
Road, Harwood Road, Oneida Junction, Hazle
ton J unctiou and Roan at 711 am, 12 40, 620
p m. daily except Sunday; and 8 11 a m, 3 44
p m,Sunday.
Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow
! Road, Stockton, Ilazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo
; and Drifton at 5 20 p m, dally, except Sunday:
and 8 11 a in, 3 44 p m, Sunday.
| Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Beaver
, Meadow Road, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Ecklcy,
Jeddo ami Drifton at 64 p m, daily,
except Sunday; and 1010 8m,640 pm, Sunday.
All trains connect at Hazleton Junction with
electric cars for Hazleton, JeaDesvllle, Auden
ricd and other points on the Traction Com
pany's line.
Train leaving Drifton at 600 a m makes
connection at Derlnger with P. R. R. trains for
VTilkesbarre, Sunbury, Harris burg and points
* LUTHER C. SMITH. Superintends*