FREELAND TRIBUNE. Zstablishtl ISBS. PUBLISHED EVEItY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY TEE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FREELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by curriers to subscribers iu Frceluud at the rate of 12% cents a month, payable every two mouths, or $1.50 a year, payable in advance. The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct from the carriers or from the office. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service wiil receive prompt attention. BY MAIL.—The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of town subscribers for $1.50 a year, payable iu 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 expiratiou, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postoffice at Freeland, Pa., as Seoond-Cluss Mutter. FREELAND, PA., JANUARY 13, lUO3. ROUND THE REGION. The first woman indicted for murder in thirty years in this county is Mrs. Barbara Uoscanna, of Plymouth, whose case the grand jury returned on Satur day. She is charged with the murder of 'her infant daughter, whose body was found in a pond near the house. The woman admitting throwing the body in the pond, but said the child died a natural death and she was to poor to pay for its burial. The convention of the United Mine Workers opened in Wilkesbarro this morning and will continue for three days. About 400 delegates are expected, representing the 43,000 mine workers of District No. 1, which comprises all the upper coal field from Carbondale to Wilkesbarro Mrs. Iliram J. Willour, of Shamokin, who was taken to the pest house Thurs day with her three children, all of whom were supposed to be suffering from smallpox, have been discharged from the institution, physicians having pronounced their ailment chicken-pox. Most of the non-union men who caus ed the strike of the 800 union mine workers at the Bottonwoood colliery joined the union, and the others, it is expected, will join. In that event work will be resumed unless the company keeps the mine closed. Alexander Ilahin, 5 years old, of Wilkesbarro, died of hydrophobia. Ho was bitten three weeks ago by a mad dog. Three others were bitten on the same day by the dog, hut all have ap- , parently recovered. The last witnesses were heard on Sat urday in the case which is to decide if the body of the murderer and suicide, Ralph J. White, can rest in the Sweet Valley cemetery. There were 136 wit nesses iu all. John Sheeran was shot in the left shoulder while painting a target at a shooting gallery at Miners' Mills. He had his back to the shooters and stepped in front of a target as one was fired. Attorney James Bunnell, of YVilkes barre, convicted and sentenced to three , months for keeping a disorderly house, has been released on bail, ponding an argument for a new trial. Miss Francis Markham and Benjamin Dorrance, of Dorranceton, were notifi ed on Saturday of their election as fel lows of the Royal Horticultural Society of England. A cat with eight legs, two bodies and two tails was born on the farm of Chris topher Bachman at Rock Glen last week and is still alive. The two-month-old daughter of Martin Kline got the nippel of a milk bottle in her throat at Wilkosbarre and was choked to death. Twenty cases against Schuylkill county grocers for selling oleomargarine were brought before the grand jury last week. Grand Jury Secrets There has been much complaint of late about the secret proceedings of grand juries being made public, and in his charge to the last grand jury Judgo Lynch cautioned the jurors about the matter. At first it was supposed that some members of the jury had made public the proceedings, put it now turns out an eavesdropper was at work. To ventilate the grand jury room it is nec essary to open a large transom. A man secreted himself in a closet nearby and overheard things. An arrest will prob ably follow. Artillery and Balloons. Some experiments with artillery fire directed against a captive balloon have been recently carried out in Germany at tlie school of instruction at Alteu Grobov. The balloon was allowed to ascend to a height of 300 meters (984 feet), and fire was opened upon It at a range of 4,800 meters (very nearly 5,000 yards). Sixty rounds were to have been fired, but at tlie seventeenth the balloon was struck, tbe envelope was torn, and the gas ignited, the ear falling to tbe ground.- London United Service Gazette. Subscribe for the TRIBUNE. CHOICE MISCELLANY A rtfttaii Parly. The Philadelphia Record relates: "A plgtuil party Mas given In his studio the other lilglit b.v an artist from the west. The arriving guests were very curious to know what on earth this sort of u party is. and they found it to be one whereat the tails of pigs are the main dish of the supper. As ac cessories there were served, of course, sauerkraut, sausages, cheese and pret zels, but the delicious pigtails lorded it easily over their neighbors. They were fried, and each guest found he could eat a dozen without difficulty. 'ln St. Louis,' the artist said, 'pigtails are as common an article of food as pigs' feet or beefsteak. Every butcher has them on sale, and they cost about 20 cents a dozen. Here in the east they seem to be uuknown. 1 had a great deal of trouble to get these that you are eating tonight aud bad to order them two weeks in advance.' Several men got the recipe for their cooking and said they would leave' standing or ders for pigtails with their butchers." COIIQNII. EKKM uinl Ment. The mother eodlish Is prolific, the roe of a large one containing as many as 9,000,000 eggs. Nature seems to have provided for a much larger supply of cod than we are obtaining, but the eggs, floating on the surface of the wa ter to hatch, are destroyed by millions. Codfish eat anything that comes along, from tacks to sharks' teeth. In the stomach of a large specimen vwo ducks were found. The fish weigh as much as 150 pounds, and the biggest are four and a half feet in length. One man lias caught 000 in a day of eleven hours on the Newfoundland banks with a hand line. Eighty men take on an average of 1,000 a day on the Doggev bank. Newfoundland is the headquar ters for dried cod. Consul Carter, at St. John's, says the quantity held there before the present season opened was 35,840,000 pounds. The stock on band a year before was 42,500,0000 pounds.— New York Press. I'll per That Stop* Bullets. A series of interesting and In their way almost unique firing trials has been undertaken by the Swedish gov ernment. The purpose of these experi ments was to examine the effect of shooting against pasteboard. The tri als were conducted on the wharfs of the Swedish navy in Carlserona, and the target used was a prepared one of millboard, against which fire from re volvers, ritles, carbines and machine guns was directed. The pasteboard, which was three inches thick, resisted completely the bullets fired from the small arras, %it was perforated by the projectiles from the machine guns. The experiments may be said to have given very inter esting results. Bullets from the car bines used are able to penetrate wood en planks five inches In thickness, but they could not penetrate the paste board, which was only three Inches thick. fioKun Art Works In Paris. In a recent Issue reference was made to the trade in Paris In bogus pictures and works of art generally. An exten sive fraud has now come to light in connection with tapestry for so called antique furniture. The carving for "original" seventeenth and eighteenth century articles Is responsible for this. The demand has far exceeded the sup ply, and ingenious inventors of an un scrupulous class have set about meet" lug It. The antique, with all Its fade and worn effects, has beeu so success fully produced that even experts have been deceived. At last the matter lias become so flagrant that the police have taken it In hand, and some arrests have been made. In the meantime, bow ever, a rich harvest lias been reaped, for many an "amateur" of the antique has his rooms furnished with these bogus productions.—Paris Messenger. Male Orarcri Dam a Hlver. The biggest beaver dam ever seen in Maine Is now attracting hundreds of people to Caribou, on the Aroostodk riv er. Two miles from the village the bea vers have built a dam of logs and mud 250 feet long, turning the river back upon the lowlands for a distance of three miles and thus creating a great lake. Trees a foot In diameter have been cut down by the beavers, the braucbes trimmed off and the trunks In some mysterious manner brought to the dam and submerged. The dam is better than many on the river that have been built by man, and the Cari bou people are rather proud of It. Over a thousand beavers have worked hard on this Job for several months, and they will be allowed to remain in pos session all winter.—Lewtston (Me.) Journal. A Wonderful Old Clock. An Interesting exhibit at the Smith sonian institution is an old German clock that was ticking about fifteen years before the birth of the great American republic. It keeps good time and Is 140 years old. It is made of bard wood, and the work was all done by band. Every piece of the mechan ism Is highly polished, and it is put together with liaml wrought rivets of brass. The parts sliow very little wear, and the timepiece is so care fully constructed that it does not vary a second in time during twenty-four hours.—Philadelphia Telegraph. The President'* Bnth. Even the linotype can sometimes be amusing. In a report of a speech at the Mayflower descendants' banquet in one of the best of the papers we read recently that "Theodore Roose velt took his simple bath to defend and carry out our constitution." For "bath" read "oath." O'.dy one letter wrong Yet there Is no doubt whatever about the simple bath being good for the constitution.—New York Mail and Ex press. 10ASTORIA > - £ For Infants and Children. fJtSTORIi The Kind You Have * *jl Always Bought AVl'Sclflbk PrcporiilionforAs- _ simUaling the Food aiidßegitla- |E / ting the Stoinaclis'and Dowels of JjGtirS tllG # t tDBfiEBDMBI | a . x /Yw 1 Signature / A u Promotes Digestion.Cheerfut- } & -J Bftp ness and Rest.Contains neither r ff If Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. | 01 M 4\ i \Jf NOTFJAIICOTIC. I FIWIP' fiocyte of Old DrSAMUELPITCHKR § SeuC' i P ■jf % dlx.Sentta ♦ 1 jo IVn _ lUh*U*SatU- i p 1 stnue Seed- *■ 1 jfill S< lil /tannine - ) 11 1 f& 1 E I 3 nVCarbmatrSoda + L M ll 118 811 fivrrpSetd - 1 11 B T * || A perfect Remedy for Cons tipa- * I \j UW & Hon, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea 8 I lif Worms .Convulsions, Feveris- 1 I 9g Fn „ ness and Loss OF SLEF.P. § I 0 I UV U 2 Facsimile Signature of | Thirty Years EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. \ STBENGTH Jfe\ AND | §1 \ WVITY i jpsj IS THE JMI _ lroro^ [All diHrattett are more or Icnm contitrittrd in the above lour uilmcntH, nil of I which linve their origin In the Ntoinach. To cure each, nay or nil of then:, I begin right. Il'in with (lie Stomach. Rpgln with Imxakoln, the tfrent tonic | luxatlve. It speedily ami pniiileNntv acta on the bowels, clrnnsen the atomncli, E Htiiinilates the liver, corrects the hidneys, allayH uervounaenn. aasists dlm*- | tiou, while its marvellous tonic properties tones tip the system while curing I it, and speedily cnuses a imturnl nud permaneiit condition of health. B Laxakola is the best Children's remedy in the world, and the only one that builds up the B children's systems while acting as an all-around Llood purifier and tonic. It speedily clears the B coated tongue, checks colds and simple fevers, and promotes sleep. Childrtn like it and ask I for it. Mothers are its greatest friends; they use it and recommend it. All druggists, 25 and I 50 cents, or free sample of The LAXAKOLA Company, 132 Nassau Street, New York. TBiißßmriWM iini' SSBBBB—■JI FOR THE CHILDREN Tivo CtrntiluK Oriole*. Do you want to know just the eun ningost thing that ever two little birds did? Let me tell you -because it's true. The birds were beautiful orioles, and you know the curious, pretty nests the orioles make, swinging like a soft, gray, silken bag from the high branch of some elm tree. Just three springs ago the orioles had come to this grand old elm tree that shaded the porch of a quiet farmhouse. They had picked out the very branch they wanted, and now they must hunt for material to build their pretty home. So they Hew about, chirping and call ing and busily gathering stray threads and moss when—oh, joy! What was that beautiful, long, white, silky stuff on the porch just under their elm tree home? They flew down very cautious ly. They flitted this way and that. Dare they take some of it for their airy home? One more peep—yes, grandpa was sound asleep. There was no doubt about it. Hut how should orioles know that the long white whiskers belonged to him? They ventured nearer; they pulled one hair; they grew bolder and pulled another. Two long, beautiful, silky threads for their nest! They flew off to the tree and then back for more. Grandpa still slept. The little rogues were having sucli a good time when Aunt Lucy happened to spy them. She laughed aloud, and of course that frightened the birds,and grandpa woke. Hut wait; Just hear the rest. Aunt Lucy was so pleased at what the cute little orioles had done that she deter mined they should have all the pretty threads of hair they wanted. So that very afternoon she took some of Ma ry's golden locks, a few more of grand pa's and some of her own glossy black hair and spread them on a bright cloth on the porch. Then she warned the family to keep very quiet and see what happened, in les's than an hour the orioles had taken every hair and car- I rled it to their tree. Before many days the pretty nest was done and the birds were enjoying their new home. In the fall, after the orioles had left their elm tree home, Aunt Lucy had | some one climb the tree and get the nest, and there, so curiously woven In to the lining, were the soft, white, gold j en and black liahs. ! Aunt Lucy keeps the nest in her par | lor and counts it as one of her greatest treasures.—Hortha B. White In Prima ry Education. Candy and nuts at, Keipur's. I | hirS"' IX 1 jjWREKA 1 Standard Oil J[ \ \ \ Condj 0. Boyla, dealer in LIQUOR, WINE, BFER, PORTER, ETC The llnost brands of Domestic and Imported Whiskey on aide. Fresh Rochester and Blien nndoHh lloer and YeunirlimFs Porter on tar W Ootre •treat i Mid-Winter Bargains in I lats, Caps, Rubber Goods, Wit iter F uri lishi 11 gs. Fine Lines of Men's and Women's Shoes, Men's and Boys' Hats, ■ Caps and Furnishings, Boys' Knee Pants, Neckwear, Collars, Cuffs, Etc. McMenamin's Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, South Centre Street. —_— A f*S ""* ASKTh[^^HEUSf ■■,'..-u' 1 - ■ —- W;KVG(R£SH & SONS,;. VThe Gare thai Sires i p Gossghs, V Golds, j M Gripga, (k \ Whooping Cough, Asthma, 1 4j Bronchitis and Incipient A Consumption, Is | \ H THE GERMAN REMEDY" 4 Y C,ut'tVvoA ar.A ] The.... O WiSkes-Barre i\ecord Is the Best Papor iti Northeastern Pennsylvania It contains Complete l.ocal, Tele graphic and (ieneral News. Prints oaiy the News that's fit to Print 50 Cents a Month. ADDRESS. $6 a Year by Mail The Record, Carriers--- WlLK , s . Btn „, p , Wm. Wehrman, "W atclxnaalser. Repairing a Specialty. Thirty-four Year's Experience. Next to Neußurger's Store. RAILROAD TIMETABLES LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. June 2, 1901. AKKANOXMBNT or I'AHSENGCR TRAINS. LEAVE FKEELAND. 0 12 a in for Weatherly, Mnuch Cliunk, Allcntown, Bethlehem, Huston, Phila delphia H ml New Vork. : 7 34 a in for Sandy Run. White Haven, Wilkes-OHrre. Pittston and Seranton. 1 8 15 a in for Hazleton, Weatherly. Munch ('hunk. Allent. wn, Bethlehem. Fasten, Philadelphia, New Vork, Delano aud Pottsville. 9 30 a in for Hazleton. Delano, Mahanoy City, ehoiiundoiih Hud Mt. ('urinel. 1 1 42 a ui for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk. Al lentown, Bethlehem. Huston, Phila delphia, New Vork. Hazleton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah and Mt. Carrael. 115 a m tor White Haven, Wilkes-Hurrc, Seranton aud tin? West. 4 44 I'm for Wcatberly. Mauch Chunk, Al lcntown. Bethlehem. Huston, Philadel phia, New Vork, Hazleton, Delano, Miihtiiioy City, Shcnundouh. Mt. Cuniiul and Pottßville. 0 35 P in for* Sandy llun, White Haven, Wilkea-Harre, Seranton and all points West. 7 29 pin for Hazleton. AitKIVB AT FREISLAND. 7 34 a in front Pottsville, Delano and Haz leton. 9 12 a ni from New Vork. Philadelphia, Hus ton. Hethlehein, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Weatkerly, Hazleton, Mahauoy City, ShenaaUouii and Mt. Carmol 9 30 a IQ from Seranton, Wilkes-Dane and White Haven. 1151 am from Pottsville, Mt. Cannel, Shen undoHh, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazleton. 12 48P in from New York, Philadelphia, Huston, Hethlehein. Allcntown, Munch Chunk aud Weatherly. •I 44 P ni from Scrunton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. 0 35 P m from New York, Philudnlphiu, Raston, Bethlehem Allentown, Mauch (.'hunk, Weatherly, Mt.Carroel,Shemin douh, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazle ton. 7 29 l ni from Seranton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. For further information inquire of Ticket A {rents. ioLLIN E.W' LBUR,General Superintendent .r, , rtlandtStreet, Now York City. .'HAS. H. LB Li. General Pauenircr Ajreut, Cortlaudt Street. New York Citv G. J. GILDUOY, Division Superintendent, Hazleton. Pa. I A HE 1)EI, AWAKE. SUSQUEHANNA AND SCHUYLKII.I, KAILEOAI), Time table In effect March in, 11)01 Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckiey, Hazle ! iV "teckton, Denver M™li H. ad, Konn * Hazleton Junction at 6U n m daily except Sunday; and 7 07 a m, 2 38 p ra, Sunday Trains leat e Drifton for Harwood.Crantierry oinhleKen and Derionor at ClO am, difv except Sunday; nd 707 a m. 838 p m, Ru,,- ■L\Taml": 07 a m,™ 3* pmi Rupdjv"™" 1 S ""- Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Hnrwood ranborry, lomliiekcu and Deringer attJß& a n, daily except Sunday; and 8 53 am 422 n m J unday. ' Trains leave Hszicton Junction for Oneida function, Harwood Kurd, Humboldt Hoad Oneida and Sheppton at 6 32.1) 10 ami 41!' Oi.iLyf' ePt S " nd V i ' lnd 737 tn/sililS: Trains leave Derinirer for Tomhickon. Crsn it Tubn' 1 :"l l ,2lclnn Junction and itoun nf. 5 (vTn m'. Ru nffaj\* UCPt Bund T= 5"7 Trains leave Shcpi ton for Oneida, Humboldt O'^UPKJ , R.-N (,, 1 :? D ,V JU .RSL'S o m ,, SundHy ClCept Sm " ln > ; and liami 344 "AUISISI Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Beaver wn .t. IU S T TS; *%s< Lieotrtc ears for Hazleton, Jeaaesrille nfny'Tune. 01 P ° lnt * ou the Tr *otion Com I Train loivinjr Drifton at 800 a m makes at lJeringer with P. K. U. Salnffo? Sunbury, Harrliburg and point* t,m fiBB 0. SMITH Oup.rlutond.nk