FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY THL TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STHEET ABOVE CENTRE. LONQ DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FREELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers in Frcelaud at the rate of 12tf cents a mouth, payable every two months, or $1.50 a year, payable in advance. The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct lrom the carriers or from the oillce. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will receive prompt attention. 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 ou the uddress label of each paper. Prompt re newals must be made at the expiration, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postofilce at Freeland, Pa., as Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, checks , etc., pai/aMe to the Tribune Printinu Companu, Limited. FREELAND, SEPTEMBER 10, 1902. FACTS IN FEW LINES Dandelions purify the blood und tone up the system. Magazine rifles will be Issued shortly to the Moorish army. French submarines will In future be manned by volunteers only. The wife of the governor of New Borneo has a baby rhinoceros for a pet. There are but nine subscribers to the postofilce telephone in Swansea, Wales. The Russian consul at Salonika bus suddenly resigned his appointment to enter a monastery. Beetles in the East and West Indies are so brilliant In coloring that they ure beautiful as gems. The volume of the world's commerce is two and a half or three times as great as it was thirty yeurs ago. Antwerp town council has opened a labor exchange to assist workmen and servants of both sexes to obtain em ployment. Efforts are being made to establish a university at Jerusalem for the Jew ish students expelled from Europeun universities. After thrashing a corporal who had ill treated them eight German cavalry men have deserted to France and en listed in the foreign legion. Its neck broken by a passing train, a fine dog otter weighing twenty-one pounds was picked up recently at Gal gate, near Leicester, England. Within the last fifty years 104.589 persons have emigrated from County Mayo, Ireland—nearly as many as in habit the county at the present time. W. J. Ryan, a blind man in Milwau kee, has iuvented a writing frame with wire lines to enable blind per sons to write with evenness and sym metry. Of ninety-throe emperors who gov erned the whole or a large part of the Roman empire sixty-two were mur dered or died under suspicious circum stances. Orders for some 10.000 tons of ar mor plate for tin? new war vessels King Edward VII., Commonwealth and Do minion have been shared by three Shef field firms. Finding a nine leaved shamrock, a farm laborer at Gronlngen, Holland, sent it to Queen Wilhelmina, who ac cepted the gift and rewarded the donor with X'J Is. Bd. President Roosevelt has appointed a man to look after the remnant of buf faloes now remaining in this country und to prevent that animal from be coming extinct. Pineapples grow so plentifully in Natal at certain seasons that it is not worth while curting them to market, und they are often given to the pigs in constAjuence. Inspectors of the Bristol (England) factory district have figured out that more than 5,000 miles of machine made cigarettes are turned out weekly from the districts aforesaid. Probably the smallest village in the United Kingdom is Bagley Wood,about three and a half miles from Abingdon. It was formerly the abode of a hermit and has only four inhabitants now. Jonathan Hutchinson's allegation years ago that the prolonged use of arsenic gave rise to callosities on the palms and soles which in certain cases turned to cancer are said to have been confirmed. Betting on (he results of the recent municipal elections at Rome was per mitted by the government. The wager lug was conducted on the parimutuel system, and the profits were devoted to charitable purposes. The authorities in Cape Colony have made an enactment forbidding the practice of medicine to all foreign phy sicians in whose home countries a sim ilar privilege is not accorded to resi dent practitioners in Cape Colony. CA.STORIA. Bears the jp The Kind You Have Always Bought OASTOH.IA, Beara the The Kind You Have Always Bought OASTOHIA. Boars the The Kind You Have Always Bought "rr(Z^l sS- MRS. CONSTANCE RUNCIE. She OrlKlnntfd Women's <lul* and IN un Author anl Composer. Mrs. Constance Faunt Le Itoy Run cie of St. Joseph, Ind., though In her sixty-sixth year, possesses the intel lectual ability of a young woman and enjoys the distinction of being not only an author and musical composer, but also the organizer of the tirst woman's club in America. When Mrs. Runcle returned to Indi ana after pursuing studies abroad, she was twenty-two years old, and a club for women was something unheard of. ltut with her peculiar inventive genius she gathered the women about her and organized a thoroughly equipped, club, which she called the Minerva club. And this initial club, founded in 1851), had for its purpose, as the usual wo man's club has today, the intellectual and social advancement and improve ment of womankind. Besides the Minerva club, Mrs. Itun cie established the Bronte club in 18(10 in the city of Madison, and today this club is in a flourishing condition, with the rare distinction of being the oldest woman's club in existence in America, the Minerva club having died a natural death. Mrs. Ituneie twenty-eight years later started a new club in St. Joseph, Ind., her present home. This club is per haps the most unique club In America, for besides bearing the name of its founder it has an unusual history, and its work is carried on along peculiar lines by peculiar modes. Two years * MRS. CONSTANCE FAUNT LE ROY RUNCIE. before its birth the women of St. Jo seph had been coaxing Mrs. ltuncie to organize and lead for them, but she declined owing to deafness and her work in music and literature. At last, her income becoming curtailed, the wo men again sought her and offered her a sulary for conducting the club. They knew nothing of clubs and willingly placed the entire matter in her hands, realizing her ability. They installed her as perpetual president, with com plete power and authority, and so the ltuncie club became a despotic mon archy, with a ruler whose term of of fice extends to her death. Mrs. Runcle early displayed u mark ed talent for music and was sent to Stuttgart, Germany, to study, where she became a pupil of Bolierez. Later she developed literary ability, and among her publications ore "Poems Dramatic and Lyric," published in 1888, and a story, "The Burning Ques tion," which appenred in 181)1. It is in her musical compositions, however, that Mrs. ltuncie prefers to be remembered. She is naturally a composer and numbers among her col lection of productions "There Is a Land of Pure Delight," a hymn; "Around the Lord In Glory," a chorus; "We Have Sinned Unto Death,' a can tata; "Te Deum In E Flat," and an opera, "The Prince of Austria." The sacred song "I Hold My Heart So Still" was published in San Francisco forty years ago and was the first mu sical composition that Mrs. ltuncie ever presented to the public. Sun Francisco Chronicle. FPOWIIH and Wrinkles. The woman who smiles rather than frowns will have a skin smoother and freer from wrinkles than the woman who knots her brow and pulls down the corners of her mouth. It is no use to devote oneself to emollients for smoothing and softening the skin when the heart is fall of bitter feel ings that contract the muscles, in duce frowns and wrinkles and give the face a rigid, harsh contour that can never be softened by artificial aids. Be cheerful and sunny if you would be beautiful. The wrinkles of old age are not in themselves unbearable, because they are not unnatural. Every emotion leaves traces on our faces, impercep tible day by day, but very plain when years have made them habitual. If our emotions are narrow, mean and hard, the wrinkles, when they come witli time, will indeed be disfiguring; generosity of thought, kindliness, cheerfulness and good humor make wrinkles that so beautify and glorify on old face that uo one can look on it without pleasure. It is no use strug ; gling against wrinkles when we are verging on fourscore; we can only #hoose whether we will have them beautiful or ugly. Fun For the Children. " As a child begins to walk It Is well, If the mother has patience, to teach Mrs. Dane, of Northfieid, Vt., Cured of Kidney Disease and Rheumatism. There is no better known woman ill Northfield, Vt , than Mrs Jane S. Dane, whose picture is sliov 11 above. Mrs. Dane was so much benefited by the use of I)r. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy that she has written the following letter to Dr. David Kennedy for publication. for five years E \vr.g afflicfcd witla Liidury disease and rheumatism, {IJC flutter E had in its must acute form in my hip. I snflered so B eo!i)i! not turn over in bed at times. 1 resorted to many different kinds of treatment, only to find myself worse than ever. I was advised to use Br. itavld lit nnedyV Favorite Remedy, and after E had taken i'our bottles of it I considered myself completeSy cured. Sincere! v yours, MRS. JAXE S. DANE. Such testimony as to the merit of a medicine, coming from a woman of Mrs. Dane's standing and character, ought to be of immense value to the sick and suffering. Dr. David Kennedy's favorite Remedy lias cured many cases of kidney disease and rheumatism that were given up bv their attending physicians. A very simple test to determine whether your Kidneys or bladder are diseased is to put some of your urine in a glass tumble r and let it stand 24 hours; if it has a sediment or a cloud)-, ropy or stringy appearance, if it is pale or discolored, you do not need a physician to tell you that you are in a dangerous condition. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy speedily cures such serious symptoms as a pain ill the back, inability to hold urine, a burning scalding pain in passing it. Frequent desire lo urinate especially at niglit, the staining of linen by your urine and all unpleasant and dangerous effects produced on the system by the use of whiskey, wine or beer. If you suffer from kidney or bladder trouble in any form, diabetes, Brigbt's disease, rheumatism, dyspepsia, eczema or any form of blood disease, or, if a woman, from the sicknesses peculiar to your sex, and are not already convinced that Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy is the medicine you need, you may have a trial bottle, absolutely free, with a valuable medical pamphlet, by sending your name, with post office address to the Dr. David Kennedy Corporation, Ron dout, N. Y., mentioning this paper. c Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy is for sale by all druggists at #I.OO a bottle or 6 bottles for #5.00 —ICSH tlian one cent a dote. Dr. David Kennedy's Magic Eye 89IVQ for all Dfeeaset or Inflammations of the Bye. 2 c c watr plays* Under presupposed good health conditions, water dubbling at least once a day ought to be part of the programme from fifteen months on. A child easily learns not to tip over the water dish, and the dripping around must, of course, be allowed and the place of the water feast plan ned accordingly. There are floating toys of various kinds to be had at small cost, but hardly better than pa per boats, nutshells, small boxes and the like, easily found at home. And things to wash! There is joy! Cloth things and tin things and bubbles to blow; then, besides, water makes very good paste for tissue paper. I have seen a little girl not much more than two years old busy for an hour paper ing a big bottle with toilet paper, ap plying the water paste with the nail brush. Scrubbing also is part of the water feast. Let the small dabbler scrub something hard for as long time as she likes and wash the windows ev er so badly. How Art Improves the Fljcnrc. The lirst consideration for the wom an who must call in art to assist her to make her figure attractive is the fit of the undergarments and corsets. No dress can set well nor can a fig ure be graceful when badly fitted un dergarments and corsets are worn. These will indeed destroy the charm of the most perfect figure. Women in general wear too many undergarments. Undoubtedly the best wear Is woven combination suits, which cling to the figure and cause no undue fullness. The limbs are thus perfectly free and thoroughly protect ed. The corsets should be worn di rectly over this suit, and in extremely cold weather silk, satin or sateen bloomers may be worn; otherwise a single petticoat, preferably a lined one, with a fitted yoke, will be found ample. Women Need More Sleep. Lack of sufficient sleep gives a wo man more wrinkles than worry or in creasing years. The busy woman of today does not spend enough time in her bed. Powders and toilet prepara- j tions are worthless when measured up j with the health producing qualities of sleep. "To sleep is to strain and purify our emotions, to deposit the mud of life, to calm the fever of the soul, to return into the bosom of ma- | ternal nature, thence to reissue healed j and strong," wrote Amiel. The average woman spends only i seven or eight hours in bed, when she j should spend nine, ten or even twelve ; if shorter hours are not enough. If every woman would only sleep more, there would be fewer cross wives in the morning and more pretty girls on the avenues in the afternoon. DINIIWUNIIIIIK; IIIMINII. The housewife can wash her dishes without injury to her hands or the of fense of greasy water by cleaning them first with a brush. It is a simple and effective process. Scrape the dishes j with a knife; then bold each one sepa rately under the hot water faucet and wipe it off as the water runs over it with a brush similar to a sink brush. IMle the dishes up wet, arrange hot soap water in the dlshpau and then wash them in the pan with a mop. Anyone who has ever tried fills wifl never wash dishes any other way, for the faucet and the brush do all the dirty work, while the mop "does the rest." Saving the Cosily Linen. Sort your linen, reserving the finest for stato occasions, for with good care these will lust as long as you live, and you need never be caught without a table's crowning glory, a soft, fine cloth. If you think this needless ad vice, go to any of our gest linen stores, and you will find that good linen, like diamonds, is never cheap, but you will find at moderate cost linen that will be nice enough for ordinary use, and you can replenish this without a financial struggle. MayonnulNe Drenslnwr. Chill the yolk of a raw egg on ice; then put the yolk on a very cold plate and add a little salt and a gill of olive oil drop by drop, stirring constantly in the same direction. When it forms a cream, add a teaspoonful of French mustard and a tablespoonful of cider vinegar. Stir all the time to keep from curdling. Lemon juice or tarragon vin egar may be used instead of cider vin egar. Window Slinde*. Window shades are rarely manage able after renovation at home, and to have them done at a laundry is ex pensive, so it behooves the housewife to make her shades last as long as pos i sible before trying to clean them. They will take a new lease of life if turned upside down, end for end, and hemmed as before. The Bathroom. The bathroom chair should be low, softly cushioned and finished in white enamel. The cabinet for the various toilet articles, liquids and salves that are liked should be white and may conveniently have a door of mirror glass to serve the double purpose of cubinet and looking glass. Body linen should bo hung over the back of a chair at night. This allows j the air to circulate through the gar ments. It is very unhygienic to put them one on top of the other. Bo sure to answer all notes and invi tations the day they are received. II At. one rl HALF THE COST / Lion Goffee I has better strength and f v flavor than many so-call- JJfc ed "fancy" brands. I iLI Bulk coffee at the same I f Price is not to be com- I M pared with Lion in quality. I / In I lb. air tight, J sealed packages. CURLS WHfcHE ALL ELSE MILS. 3 Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use J* In time. Sold by druggists. ■ 1 Fall Stocks i i i p are now p I Ready for Your Inspection. B § § p Complete Lines 55 P Fall Hats and Caps, K if Underwear and Hosiery, Furnishings and Neckwear. ff B 8 i i B Shoes for Men, Women, Boys p | .and Girls at Very | § Lowest Prices. § 1 § p icMenamin's Gents' Furnishing, B :: Hat and Shoe Store. H ft 5c v is cs 5s South Centre Street. 5* 0 f? 8 8 00\0*0'000>0%£'*0\0*000*0'000.0X00,0*0\000'A000'H0\0%0 o\o\o\o\o^o\Poo\o\o^o\o\M\oXo\o\o\0 < *UM\o\o\o\o\ lire's Tonic. A ride in the open, For Health, For Pleasure, For Business. You should ride a Bicycle, RAMBLER. $35 to SOS. The 1902 Models Bristle Willi New Ideas. CaHiiEiaie. A complete stock al ways on hand. For Sale By fair D. Daiis, Freeland. RAILROAD TIMETABLES LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. I May 18, 1902. ARRANGEMENT OF PASSING KIT TRAINS. LEAVE FKEKLAND. 0 12 ii m for Weatherly, Muuch Chunk A Hon town, Hethlehem, Easton, Phila delphia una New York. 7 29 u ni for Sumly Pun, White Haven, Wilkes-Burre, Pittston and Stnmton. 8 15 a in for Hazleton, Weatherly, Munch Chunk, Allentown, Uothlehem, Easton, Philadelphia, New York, lieiuno and Pott s Vl lie. 9 58 u ru lor Huzleton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Hicnandoah ami Mt. Purine). 1 1 45 a in for Weatherly. Muuch Chunk, Al lentown, Hethlehem, Easton, Phila delphia. New York, lla/leton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Bhenandoah and Mt. 1141 am for White Haven, Wilkes-Hurro, Scrauton and the West. 4 44 i ru for Weatherly, Maueh Chunk, Al lentown, Hethlehem. Easton, Philadel phia, New York, Huzleton, Delano Mahanoy City, Shenandoah, Mt. Cur me and Pottsville. 0 35 i> m for Sandy Pun, White Haven, Wilkes-Hurro, Scrantou and all i>oints 7 29 P m for Hazleton. APKIVE AT KREELAND. 7 29 am from Pottsville, Delano and Haz leton. 9 12 am from New York, Philadelphia, Eas ton, Hot hie hem, Allentown. Maueh Chunk. Weatherly, lla/leton. Mahuuoy City, Shenandoah and Mt. Cuimol 9 58 a m from Serunton, Wilkes-Bar re and White Iluven. 1141a in from Pottsville, Mt. Carmei, Shen andoah. Mahanoy City, Deluno ami H a/let on. 12 35P m from New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Hcthlchom, Allentown, Muuch Chunk and Weutherly. 4 44 j) ra from Serunton, Wilkes-liurre and White Haven. 0 35 p m from New Y'ork, Philadelphia, Easton, Hcthlehom Allentown, Maueh Chunk, Weatherly, Mt. Carmul, Shenan doah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazlc ton. 7 29 pm from Serunton, Wilkes-Harro and >v hi to Haven. For further information inquire of Ticket A fronts. KOLLIN ILWlLßUtt,General Superintendent, „ „ s Cnrtltindt Slruot, New York City. CH AS. 8. LEE. General Passenirer Ajrerit. „ . Cortlandt Street. Ni vv York City, ( J . J. GILDPOY, Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pa. DFILAWARK, HCBQUKHANNA AND SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect May 11), 1901. Trains leave Driftou for Jeddo, Eckley, Huzle Lrook. Stockton, Heaver Meadow ltoad, ltoan and IlHzieton Junction at HOO a m, daily except Sunday; and 707a m, 288 pm, Sunday. Trains leave Drilton lor Oneida Junction, Garwood Koad, Humboldt Hoad, Oneida and Sheppton at > 00 a m, daily except Bun da": and 7 07 a in, 2 38 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood Koad, Humboldt Uoad Oneida and Sheppton at 0 82, 11 10 a m, 4 41 p m' daily except Sunday; and 7 37 a m, 3 11 pin' Sunday. ' Trains leave Derlnfter for Tomhicken, Cran berry. Haiwood, Hazleton Junction and Koan at 6D) n te, daily except Sunday; and 337 am. 07 pm, Sunday. ■rrjtn, leave outpptoti for Hearer Meadow Ko ?dj Stockton Hazlo Brook, Eckloy, J.-d.io und } t riftzin at .120 jt in, dully, except Sunday: and h ii a m, 3 44 p in. Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Heaver Meadow Hoad, Stockton. Hazlo Brook, Kckley. Jeddo and Drifton at 5 411 p m. daily; oxceot Sunday; and 10 10 H m, 5 40 p m. Sunday; All trains connect at. Hazleton Junction with electric cars tor Hazleton, Jeaneßville, Audon riod and othor pointa on the Traction Com pauy's line Promptly Done at the Tribuue Offloe,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers