FREELAND TRIBUNE. Xitablishii 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY TBS TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FREELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers in Freelaud at the rate o! I~A cents a month, payable every two months, or $1.50 a year, payable ill advance. The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct from the carriers or from the office. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will rucelve prompt attention. BY MAIL.—The TRIBDNE 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 tbe subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postofllce at Freelaud, Pa., as Second-Class Matter. Make aU money order s, check s, etc., payable to the Tribune Prlntiny Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., NOVEMBER34,I9O3. Groat Britain is stfll th'e greatest tea drinking country. The consumption is five poundß per head of the popula tion. In Switzerland it 1b estimated at one anil a half pounds per head and in the United States about one pound pcf head. Practical measures are now In prog ress witli a view to exploiting the vari ous coalfields existing in Egypt and elsewhere on the direct eastern route. The Egyptian government has granted concessions for this purpose to Edward Nicbolls, an Englishman. Siberian merchants are loudly com plaining that Manchuria and ports in Siberia are flooded with American, German, Japanese nnd other foreign goods nnd that Russian trade is dis appearing. Energetic measures ar de manded, particularly a frontier guard sufficient to prevent smuggling. A newspaper in Norway recently contained the following advertisement: "I, the undersigned, declare that, through a regrettable mistake, I cir culated the rumor that the coffee house keeper, Jorgen Henriksen, had drunk a glass of beer. I humbly apologize to Mr. Henriksen for this unfounded im putation. Olaf F. Lieu." A child discovered wandering in the streets of Purls recently was found to liuve had her finger nails torn out. Upon being questioned he said that this was done by his parents. The parents were found and arrested. They were hnbitual drunkards, both of them, and admitted that they had "punished" the lad because he would not go out and beg for them. The octuplex system of typographic telegraphy invented by the late Pro fessor Rowland of Johns Hopkins uni versity will enable 18,000 words per hour to be sent over a single wire by twenty operators. This system is now being tested by the general telegraphic department of Germany. The Hughes system, which has the widest use, can bundle but 2,200 words per hour. PLAYS AND PLAYERS. Joseph Kilgour has replaced Aubrey Boucieault in "Hearts Aflame." Wilsou Barrett is back again in Lon don from Australia and has a new play. Rose Coghlan is soon to appear as Paula in "The Second Mrs. Tan queray." Mr. F. Anstey has been making a play out of his funny story, "Lyre and Lancet" It Is said that Sir Charles Wyndham Intends to revive "Rosemary" for his first appearance in London this season. J. S. Hiller, a well known chef d'or chestre, has composed an opera called "Daphne." S. B. Cassin has written the text. George Ober has been engaged by D. W. Truss to create the part of Si mon Bassett iu the production of "Je rome: a Poor Man." Henry W. Savage has accepted a new opera from Henry W. Blossom, Jr., and Alfred G. Robyn, which he will produce late this season. To Retire Permanently. From the Advocate. R. L. Sweeny, whosestoro in town was closed by the sheriff a few weeks ago, has been adjudicated a bankrupt. He Intends to let the goods be sold by a trustee to be appointed by the creditors and will permently retire from business. Mr. Sweeney will locate at Jeddo to accepta position with his brother, Harry, who Is chief book-keeper and paymaster for Coxe Bros. Co. The trustee to dispose of Mr. Sweeney's stock will be selected by the creditors at a meeting on December 1. Vlto Coweli, an Italian employed on the Lehigh Valley work train, was struck at Hazleton shops Saturday morn ing. He stepped from the tbe way of a coal train. His back and neck were broken and death was instan taneous. Tbe unfortunate man has a wife and three children In the old coun try- Ice cream—all flavors—at Merkt's. Read - the - Tribune. KoltottoltoltottoltKolloltonoßoHOA I The Man Who 1 0 Z 1 Made a Man s * " * 0 BR H A III.K ORES CUMMINS. O 1 " M o o £ Copyright, by 11. 0. Camming J •?o*o*ofco*o*o**o*o*ofco*o*ofc When Professor Aloyslus Holbrok resigned his eimlr as head of the de partment of synthetic chemistry in a famous American college, his friends wondered, for they well knew that his grentest pleasure In life lay In original chemical investigations. When two weeks later the papers stated that the learned chemist had been taken. to the Itathburn Asylum For the Insane, wonder changed to Inordi nate curiosity. Although nothing definite was pub lished in the papers, there were hints of strange things which hod taken place In the private laboratory on Brimmer street, and before long a sto ry was current that as a result of dab bling in the mysteries of psychology a man had been killed while undergoing one of Professor Ilolbrok's experi ments. It is to clear up this mystery and to refute the charges of murder that I, who served for ten years as his assist ant, am about to write this account, which, to the best of my knowledge and belief, contains the facts of the case. I had noticed for the year previous that l'rofcssor Holbrok was much pre occupied, but I knew that he was working over some new experiment. Mnny times when I came to his door at 5 o'clock to clean up ns usual for the next day I found a notice pinned on the door telling me thnt he was In the midst of Important work nnd would not need me again thnt day. I thought nothing about It at the time, for when he was experimenting with Dr. Blck nell, performing operations with hyp notism Instead of antesthetlcs, there were weeks nt a time when I was not allowed even a glimpse of the Inside of the laboratories. One day, however, ns I came In to report the professor called me aside and told me thnt he wanted to have a tnlk with me. "You know, Frederick," he begnn. "that I have been working nnd exper imenting for a long time on a new problem, nnd I bnve not told you or any one else the object of my toll. But now I have come to a point where I must take some one Into my confi dence. I need nn asslstnnt, nnd I know of no one I can trust more than you, who have been with me now for nearly a dozen years." I was naturally flnttered. "Frederick," he continued, rising nnd placing Ills hand on my shoulder, "this experiment Is the greatest one of my life. I am going to do what has never before been done In the history of the world except by God himself. 1 shall make a man. 1 " I did not renllze at first what he meant. I was startled not only by his wild statement, but also by the In tense tone In which he lind spoken. "You do not understand," he snld. "But let me explain. You know enough chemistry to realize thnt nil tilings— wnter, air, food, everything which we use In evcrydny life—are merely com binations of certain simple elements. As you have seen me by means of nn electric current decompose a Jar of pure wnter into its two component pnrts, two molecules of hydrogen to every molecule of oxygen, so you can bring these same elements together In the gaseous state, and If the correct proportions are observed when nn elec tric spark or a flame Is brought Into contact with the mixture you will ob tain again the liquid wnter. This Is only a simple case, but the chemical laws which govern It hold equally well for every known substance found In nature. There are only about seventy five known elements, nnd of these less than thirty compose the majority of the things found In everyday life. "During the Inst six months I have been working with these elements, making different substances. I have taken n piece of wood, decomposed It with acids, annlyzed It qunntitively nnd qualitatively, finding the propor tions In which Its elements were com bined. Then I have taken similar ele ments, brought them together In the 6ame proportion, and I have produced a piece of wood so natural you would have sworn It grew upon a tree. "I have been analyzing and then making again every common thing which you see in nature, but I was only practicing. I have bad an end In view. Finally I took a human body which I obtained from Dr. Blcknell at the medical college, nnd I analyzed the flesh, the hones, the blood—ln short, every part of It. What did I flnd? Of that body, weighing 103 pounds, 100 pounds were nothing but water, pure wuter, such ns you may draw nt the tap over yonder, and the blood which In the man's life hud gone coursing through his veins, bringing nourish ment to every part—what was that? Nothing but a serum filled with little cellular red corpuscles, which In their turn were only combinations of enr bon, oxygen, sulphur and a few other simple elements. "I have taken the sternum bone from a dead man's chest, nnnlyzed It, then brought together similar elements, placed them In a mold, nnd I have pro duced a bone which wns just aB real ns the one with which 1 started. There were only two things In nature I could not reproduce. One was Btarch, that substance whose analysis lins defied chemists of nil ages; the other wns the flesh. Though I have analyzed bits of It carefully, when I have brought to gether again those elementary parts the flesh would not form. "Chemists all over the world have been able to resolve the flesh 'pto pro teids, the uwesome proteids, as they are called. They form tbe principal aollda of tbe muscular, nervous and glandular, tissues, the serum of the blood and of lymph, but no man on earth except myself has ever been able to create a proteld. They have missed the whole secret because they have been working at ordinary tempera tures. Just as the drop of water will not form" from Its two gases at 4,500 degrees F. or at Its own lower explo sion temperature unless the spark be added, so will protoplasm not form except under certain electric and ther mal conditions. "For tho last two months 1 have been working on these lines alone, varying my temperatures from tbe ex treme cold produced by liquid air to the Intense heat of the compound blow pipe, and I have been repaid. A fort night ago I discovered how It was that 1 had erred, and since then 1 have suc ceeded In everything I have tried. I have formed the protelds. the fats and the carbohydrates which fro to make up protoplasm, and with these for my solid foundations I have made every minute and complicated orgnn of the body. 1 have done more than that—l have put those component parts to gether, and now behold what 1 have made!" He lifted a sheet, which was thrown over a heap of something on the table, and I started back with a strange mixture of awe and horror, for stretch ed out on that marble slab lay a naked body, which. If it had never been a man, living and breathing as I lived nnd breathed, then I would have sworn I dreamed. The thoughts which began to come Into my mind probably showed in my fnee, for the professor Bald: "You doubt? Y'ou think thnt I have lost my reason nnd this thing Is some man that I have killed. Well, I do not blame you. A year ago I myself would have scoffed at the very Idea of creating such a man. But you shall see, you shall be convinced, for In the next part of the experiment I must have your help. I will show you how I have made this man or I will make another before your eyes. Then you and 1, we will go further; we will do what no one but God has ever done before—we will make that Inert mass a living man." The horror of the thing began to leuve me, for 1 wns fascinated by wlint he said, and I began to feel the suiue spirit with which he wns Inspired. He took me Into bis private labora tory. and before my eyes, with only the contents of a few reagent bottles, a blowpipe and an electric battery, he made a mass of human flesh. I will not give you the formula, neither will I tell you in detail how it wns done. God forbid thnt any other man should see what I saw afterward. "Now all thnt remains Is the final experiment, nnd that with your help I propose doing tonight," said the pro feasor. "What we have to do Is ns much of a riddle to me as It is to you. It Is purely nnd simply an experiment. I am going to pass through that life less clay the same current of electric ity which If sent through n living man would produce dentil. Of course, with a man who lmd died from the giving out of some vital function I could uot hope to succeed, hut the organs of tills man which I have made nre In a per fectly healthy condition. It Is uiy hope, therefore, that the current which would destroy a living mnn will bring tills thing to life." YVe bore that naked body, not n corpse nnd yet so terribly like. Into the electric laboratory and laid It on n slab of slate. Just at the base of Its brain we scraped a little hare spot not larger than a pen, nnd, ns I live, a drop of blood oozed out. On the right wrist just over the pulse we made another nhrnsion, and to these spots we brought the positive nnd negative wires from off tbe mains of the street current out side. I held the two bare, uninsulated hits of copper close to the flesh. Professor Holbrok switched Into circuit 2,000 volts of electricity, and then before our startllug eyes that thing which was only a mass of chemical coin pounds became a man. A convulsive twitching brought the body almost Into a sitting position; then the mouth opened, and there burst forth from the lips a groan. 1 have been In the midst of bnttles, and I have seen men dying all around me, torn to ribbons by shot and shell, and 1 have not flinched; but when 1 tore the wires from that writhing, groaning shape and snw Its chest be gin to heave with spasmodic breathing I fainted. When I cnme to myself, I wns lying half across the slab of slate, and the room was tilled with a sickening stench, nn odor of burning flesh. 1 looked for the writhing form which I had last seen on the table, but those wires, with their deadly current, which I tried to tear, away as I fainted, must hnve been directed back by a higher hand, for there only remained on the slab a charred and einderlike mass. And the man who had mnde a man could not explain, for he wns crawling about on the floor counting the nails In the boards and laughing wildly. Productn From Bonea. The economy which Is practiced In the nverngo boarding house has be come proverbial, but It Is extrava gance to the standard of economy prac ticed at a "bone mill." The chief prod uct from bones Is glue, and among other materials which are obtained from them nre sonp, glycerin and fer tilizers. Nothing Is wasted. Even the most economical boarding house has a few parings and husks to throw away. There nre no parings and husks In the disposition of the bones. Ambitions. "I have no room for you at my of fice, my boy." "Don't yer want somebody dere wheD ycr goes on yer vacation?"— New Turk Journal. A PAPER DOLL'S HOUSE. Try Maklnfc Oar by Panting It In a IMK Scrapboolc. The nicest way to make a house for paper dolls Is to get a big scrapbook and paste It in. That sounds funny, doesn't It? But It really is very sim ple. Just go to some of the furniture shops and ask the salesman to give you a catalogue. They always have some old ones that are not wanted. Then buy some plnwheel paper—the kind that sells for a cent a sheet. Have several sheets, some plain and some with pntterns. Now you are ready to begin, and it's lots of fun. The first two pages, as tbe book lies open before you, are to he the hall. Look In your catalogue and find two tall backed hnll chairs and a bnllrack. Cut them out neatly. Choose the dark red plnwliecl paper for carpet and paste It across the lower part of two pages, In a strip five inches wide. I'nste in your chairs, with the hall rack between them, on the left hand page. You can cut doors out of the page on the right hand side that will lead Into a drawing room on the next two pages. Make portieres of dark red tissue paper and paste across the door. You will he able to get all sorts of things to furnish the house with from the different catalogues and even orna ments like lnmps from shops where they sell them and are likely to have the catalogues. At a piano manufac tory you can obtain a catalogue from which you can cut any style of piano that you prefer for your parlor. Choose a light colored carpet for your parlor floor. It is better to have odd pieces of furniture In this room than the stiff looking parlor suits. Find a pretty divan, several odd chairs and a dainty desk (you will have to get a catalogue of ladles' desks In order to secure It). Look in some of tbe adver tisements of the newspapers and cut out pictures of Jardinieres (you might have several of those In your parlor). If you like, you can fashion n mantel piece between the windows. Cut It out of the plnwheel paper, oak or cher ry color, and make the grate of nar row strips of black paper, which you paste at etlher end, leaving room enough to stick crumpled hits of red and gilt paper Inside of It to look like fire. Some catalogues have tall pier mir rors. If you prefer one of those to fill the space between tbe parlor windows. Windows In the bedrooms may he cut out nud curtains of white tissue paper pasted over them. These may he tied hack with narrow strips of blue plnwheel paper. Bedsteads may be cut from catalogues nud also lace spreads and pillowshains. One gets these cntnlogues from the linen shhps or any of the wholesale "notiou" houses on lower Broadway. If you can't get the bedspreads, you can make them out of white tissue. Leave a space underneath them, so that you can slip tho paper dolls "under the covers" when you put them to bed. Cut the pillows out of white tissue paper, tiny squares, underneath each of which you may place a small hit of "cotton batting," If you want to make them look "comfy." You muHt have n washstand in the bedroom, although If you want to have a very up to date apartment you might cut a door out of the page that will lend Into a smart bathroom. Get a catalogue containing bathtubs nnd all the pretty fittings thut go Into the bnthrooms nowadays. Then go to sonic wall paper shop and ask them to give you a small piece of the tiled paper that Is used ou bath room walls. It Is a pretty notion to have each bedroom a different color—that Is. have a blue room and a pink room nnd a violet room, or a dainty green room would be pretty.—New York Herald. How to Make a Xylophone. To build our little musical Instru ment we need a common but clean el gur box. Wo Insert little tacks In both length sides at even distances, as A HOMEMADE XYLOPHONE, shown ill the illustration. Span thin wire from tack to tack across the top of the cigar box and push a sharp cor nered, smooth piece of wood under the wires to the left of the top. To get the correct scale we push smull squares of wood under each wire and move them to and fro until the harmouy Is reached. All we need now nre two thin staffs of wood, with n cork on one of the ends, to be used as a hammer, aud aft er a little practice we can show, so we hope, very satisfactory results. Ethel's Per Cent. "I nin of Scotch per cent," said little Ethel In school. Her mamma had told her that she was of Scotch descent. Perliap. Yoa've Met Him. There's a little boy I know Who never seems to go Downstairs In Just the regulation way; He will roll or slide or crawl, Go backward, jump or fall, But walk? Oh, no! Not once the live long day. —E. L. Sylvester In St. Nicholas For Oc tober. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his pcr sonal supervision since its infancy. '-CCccAtwi Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, I>rps and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms nnd allays Fcvcrisliness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. 'The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. $(,00 SENT FREE! The Well- Known Specialist FRANKLIN MILES, M. L>., LL. 8., Will Send s+.oo Wor'h of His Complete Treatment Free to Our Readers. There never was a hotter opportunity for persons suffering from diseases of the heart, nerves, lives, stomach or dropsy to test, free, a well tried and Complete Treatment for these disorders. Dr. Miles is known to bo a leading specialist in these diseases, and his liberal offer is certainly worthy of serious considera tion by every afflicted reader. His system of Treatment Is thorough ly scientific and immensely superior to the ordinary methods. It includes sev eral remedies carefully selected to suit each individual caso and Is tho final re sult of twenty-five years of very exten sive research and experience in treating this class of diseases. Each treatment consists of a curative elixir, tonic tablets, laxative pills and usually a plaster. Ex tensive statistics cl< arly demonstrate that Dr. Miles' Treatment is at least three times as successful as tho usual treatment. Thousands of remarkable testimonials from prominent people will be sont free. They show Dr Miles to be one of the world's most successful physicians. Col. F.. It. Upilcman, of the nth United States Regular*, located at San Diego. I'nl., says: "Dr. Miles' Special Treatment has worked wond' rs in my son's cse when all else tailed I had employed the best medical talent and hud spent $2,000 in doing it. I believe he is a wonderful spceialist. I eonsidor it my duty to recommend him." "For years I had severe trouble with my stomach, head, neuralgia, sinking spells, and dropsy. Your treatment entirely cured me." Hon. W. A. Warren, of Jumestown, N. Y. Mr. J alius Keister. of 3150 M ehlgan Avenue, Chicago, tes'iflcs that lr. Miles cured him aft er ten able physicians hud fulled. Mrs. K. Trimmer, of Drccnspring, Pa., was cured after many physicians hud pronounced her case "hopeless." As all afflicted readers may have =<4 00 worth of treatment especially adopted to their case, free, we would adviso them to send for it at once. Address, Dr. Franklin Miles, 203 to 211 Stale street. Chicago. 111. Mnntlon Freeland Tribune in Yonr Reply. Damaged by Dyncmite. The homes of August Portland, Mrs. Sarah Crawshaw and William G. Lewis, Mahanoy City, were dynamited at 5 o'clock yesterday morning. Tho dyna mite, believed to have been at least forty pounds, was exploded in the Port land property, which is a saloon and Tyrolean boarding house, near tho front entrance to the bar. The explosion ripped up the floor, shattered the bar Uxtute*, tore through into the second floors and overturned the sleeping inmates in their beds on the third floor. They fled In their night robes, frightened, but unhurt. The interior of tho pluce is a complete wreck. In the Crawshaw aud Lewis properties, adjoining, the foundation walls were cracked and plastering blown down. Mrs. Lewis was lifted from a couch and hurled across tbe room. For a square around the houses trembled on their foundations, and window panes were broken. The loss will reach SB,OOO. Portland is of the opinion that the d\ n amiter was employed by parties against when ho has been frequently warned. One of his boarders, who was absent all night, was arrested on suspicion, but but was released. The kind that cured your Grandfather. DR. DAVlti FREE KENNEDY'S SII P ■ 1111 P ITP liver or blood troubles, rAVUKI 11 anrsfi IIFIIFnif this paper and address Dr. REMEDY RAILROAD TIMETABLES LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. November 10, 1902. ARRANGEMENT OF PASSKKOKR TRAINS. LEAVE KRKKLAND. 0 12 ni for Weathcrly, Muuch Chunk Allcntowu, Bethlehem, Kuston, Phila delphia und New York. 7 29 a in for Sandy Hun, White Haven, Wilkes-Ilarre, Pittston and Scranton. 8 15 a m for Huzleton, Weathcrly, Munch Chunk. Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Philadelphia, New York, Delano ami Pottsville. 9 58 i m for Hazlcton, Delano, Mabunoy City, Shenandoah and Mt. < urmel. 11 32 ain for Wentherly, Muueh Chunk, Al ieutown, Bethlehem, Easton, Pliila deiphia. New York, Huzleton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenumlouh and Mt. Carinel. 1141a in for White Haven, Wilkes-Ilarre, Serantou and the West. 4 44 pin for Wentherly, Mauch Chunk, Al ieutown, Dethlehein, Easton, Philadel phia, New York, Huzleton, Delano Muhuiioy City, Shenandoah, Mt. Curiae, and Pottsville. 6 33 P in for Sandy Run, White Haven, Wilkes-liurre, Serantou and all points West. 7 29 Pin for Hazlcton. ARRIVE AT FREELAND. 7 29 u in from Pottsville, Delano and Haz lcton. 9 12 u m from New York, Philadelphia, Eua ton, Dethlehein, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Wcatberiy, Huzleton, Malianoy City, Shcnundouh and Mt. Carmel 9 58 a ui from Serantou, Wilkos-Darro and White Haven. 1 1 32 a in from Pottsville, Alt. Carmel, Shen andoah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazleton. 12 35 P in lrom New York, Philadelphia, Kaston, Hcthiehcm, Allentown, Mauoh Chunk und Wentherly. 4 44 p ru from Scruntoti, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. 6 33 P ni from New York, Philadelphia, Kaston, Dethlehein Allentown, Alaueb Chunk, Weathcrly, Mt. Curuiel, Shenan doah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazlc ton. 7 29 P ni from Scrunton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. For further information Inquire of Ticket Agent*. RULLLN 11. W1 LRUR. General Superintendent, 2d Cortluudt street. New York City. CH AS. S. LEE. General Passenger Agent, :iti Cortlandt Street. New York City. G. J. GILDROY, Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pa. DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND A SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect May 10,1001. Trains leave Drifton for.ieddo, Eckley, Hazle Brook, Stockton, Heaver Meadow Road, Roan and Hazleton Junction at 000 a m, daily except Sunday; and 7 07 a m, 2 38 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Oneida .Junction, Garwood Road. Humboldt Road. Oneida and Sheppton at tl 00 a m, daily except Sun lay: and 7 07 a in, 2 .'*B p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood Road, Humboldt Road, Oneida and .Sheppton at 15 ;$2,13 10 am,4 41 p in, daily except Sunday; aud 7 37 a in, 3 11 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tomhioken, Cran berry, llai wood, Hazleton Junction und Roan at 600 p m, daily except Sunday; and :♦ 37 a m, 507 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow Road, Stockton. Ilnzlc Brook, Eckley, Joddo and Drifton at 6 20 p m. doily, except Sunday; and 8 11 a m, 3 44 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Huzleton Junction for Beaver Meadow Road, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Eckley, Joddo and Drifton at 540 p m, dally, except Sunday; and 10 10 a ra. 6 40 p m, Sunday. All trains connect at Hazleton Junction with olcctrio