FREELAND TRIBUNE. Xst&bUihil 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY THL TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRB. LONO DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FREELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by curriers to subscribers iu Freeland at the rate of 12% ceuta a mouth, payable every two months, or f1.50 a year, payable in advance. The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct from the carriers or from the oißoe. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will receive prompt attention. BY MAIL.—The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of town subscribers for $1,130 a year, payable in advance; pro rata terras 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 Postoflioe at Freeland, Pa., as Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, check*, etc., payable to the Tribune Printlny Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., DECEMBEB 5, 1902. SOOTHING SHOPPING. ▲ Peaceful Experience at the East Hurler General Emporium. The exhausted shopper sank upon the sofa, while from the open mouth of her reversed Boston bag poured a cascade of little parcels, freshly strug gled for at the Monday bargain coun ters. "Oh," she cried, "why does one have to shop in the city? Everything is so hurried, confused, complex, distracting and nerve destroying! If I were only back at East Norley! "Last summer while I was there I had to buy a yard of dark blue ribbon, and I drove over to the one store at the crossroads to get It. It took some five minutes to convince the amiable proprietor that I really wanted dark blue and could not be persuaded to ac cept light Instead, which considered more suitable and becoming to a fair eomplexioned person of my years; ho added reassuringly that anybody under forty was not too young for baby blue. "Another five minutes were given up to his lucredulous reluctance to believe tlinf two Inches wide would not do as well as three, especially as the three Inch width had been mislaid on a top i shelf and he would have to get a step ladder to get it down. Several more minutes passed In the search for the ladder, Its laborious portuge from the cellar, its erection and repair with a piece of twine, the braces being broken, iMd his final ascent to the dim and. (fusty upper region, whence the box of wide ribbons was at length produced. "I found a shade that would do, and he leisurely meusured off a yard, fin gered It, then paused to rub a per plexed ear and smile Ingratiatingly. " 'Fact Is,' he confided sweetly, 'I sold the last pair of scissors In the store Just before you came In, and I've forgotten my Jackknlfe. It's kind of awkward cutting It off, but I'll man age somehow. I guess there's an ax in the shed.' "He carried the silken roll away with him as he started with comforta ble deliberation to find the ax, which, though the hunt for it was long and persevering, evidently could not be found, for we caught a glimpse of him at last through the half open door to the back shop severing the required yard of ribbon with an old chisel. "It was all so serene, so soothing and 60 satisfactory! I believe I shouldn't be a wreck before New Year's every winter If I could only do my Christ mas shopping at the East Norley gen eral emporium."—Youth's Companion. FRUITS AND FLOWERS. In sotting out an orchard keep to gether all trees of the same variety. Good garden soil Is good for pot plants, but eun be Improved by the ad dition of leaf mold. Weak rosebushes may often be made to grow by giving them an occasional watering with liquid manure. One advantage with small fruits is that they can be made to furnish a supply long before trees come Into bear ing. In planting a border don't plant every thing In rows. A row of hollyhocks, for instance, Isn't half as attractive as irregularly placed groups that break tbe outline. With pot plants In a general way too little water is better tlinn too much. The dropping leaves Indicating drought are more easily remedied than yellow leaves, the result of being kept too wet. In preparing pots for plants the pieces of broken pots or crockery In the bottom should never be omitted, as without proper drainage the soli be comes sour, tbe plants languish and the leaves become yellowish. Willing, to He Sued. "I onee threatened to sue an old fel low In Vermont for $lO that he owed a client of mine," said a New York law yer, "but the threat did not seem to lm press him much. " 'What good will It do yon to sut me?' he asked. " 'lt will get the money,' I answered. "Here the fellow came up close to mi and said, 'Say, If that's so, sue me foi S2O, won't you, anil give me the othei slo.' "I gave up hope of collecting thnl claim."—New York Times. COXES SCORED BY WITNESSES Continued from First Faire. who truck and were not given back their old places. He didn't know how many of the men mentioned in the 11st were held by the courts for violating the laws, but he did know of sixteen of them having been dragged fifteen miles past offices of justices of the peace to Hazle ton, where they had to appear before a justice whose sympathies were with the companies. Tim Maloney, of Oneida, and Hugh Boyle, of Nuremberg, gave testimony showing that they have been refused their work by the Coxes. The company refuses to give reasons for doing so. WEDNESDAY'S TESTIMONY. The first practical miner to appear before the commission was called en Wednesday. He was W. H. Detlrey, of Nuremberg, who is employed In the mines of Coxa Bros. <fc Co., and who Is the president of the local union and a district board member of the United Mine Workers. Mr. Darrow was pro ceeding to examine the witness on con ditions at the Coxe mines when attor neys for the companies objected because the company was not officially before the commission, but has decided to place the award of the commission he fore its mea. The point was argued for some time, and the commission final ly decided to hear the witness under protest, and as the cemmlssloo, after a consultation, decided to sustain the point made by the companies, the testi mony of the witness will be stricken out. The witness said company men got on an average of $7.20 a week, and all con tract miners are required to stay in the mines from 7 o'clock until 5 o'clock, regardless of whether or not they have enough cars to fill with coal they have mined. He said a blacklist exists at tbe Coxe mines, and that he was on it for ulne months because be refused to work a breast which netted him only $3 a week. He also complained of the dock ing system in vogue there. Attorneys Darrow and McCarthy brought out tho statement that the Coxe Company had refused to ro-employ up wards of 400 men after the strike was declared of?. This number was subse quently reduced by the company con senting to take back some of the men at first barred. The company, the witness said, paid the laborer when he is working for the company 90 cents to $1.20 a day, while the company insists that the miner pay the same laborer when he is working for the miner $1.62 to $1.94 a day. Mr. Det trey mentioned several instances of In justice alleged to have been practiced i upon miners in the Coxe collieries. Dettrey was followed on the witness staud by Mike Middlick, who has been employed in the Coxe mines as a practi cal miner for four years, and who lived at Eckley. Mike said that he earned an average of about $250 last year. He also complained of tbe docking system, and said that he had been docked about eight cars In two weeks. He submitted his wags statements for ths last year or more, which showed the largest amount of money he received for any two weeks to have been a little more than $lB. One statement showed that Middlick made less than $3 for two weeks, but he could not tell whether he worked full time during that particular two weeks. In the Coxe mines Middlick said that the mine workers were paid much less than the men employed by other com panies in the vicinity. He said that In six years he saw the mine inspector of the region only twice, and in both in stances he saw htm in the gangway, and not up in the breasts where men were at work. On cross-examination the witness said that he had been refused work and that the company would not take hlra back until he left the town of Eckley, In which he resided. The next nearest town was Freeland, four mlies away, and he could not walk eight miles a day and perform a good day's work. When asked why he did not apply to other companies if they were paying more than the Coxes, he said he did apply to the Markles at Jeddo, but they had no work for him. He did not earn enough money, he said, to permit him to journey to other places to look for a better place. Mrs. Mary Boland, the wife of a Ger man miner employed by the Coxe Com pany, and who lives at Derringer, was the next and last witness of the day. She told a general story of poverty and said the money earned by her husband was not sufficient to keep her family of seven children in good health. PLEASURE. December 6 —Masquerade ball of tbe Happy Farmer Club at Dinkelacker's hall, ilutlervalley. Tickets, 25 cents. Rome Discomforts. "No," grumbled the husband in a spasm of confidence to a friend, "I have no place at all for my books. The storage room Is kept exclusively for my wife." "Oh, she puts away those things thai are a trifle too good to be destroyed, yet scarcely good enough to be of use." —Brooklyn Life. OASTOntA. Bean the yf 11" Kind Vou HaB Always Bought CARDS, THEN DEATH A DOOMED DESERTER WHO PLAYED POKER AND WON. Am a Preliminary to Hla Exeentlon Be Bad Hla Winnings Distributed Among the Members of tho Sqnad That Shot Him to Death. "It is a carious fact," said a mem ber of Company A, Third Maryland, "that military execution had a peculiar fascination for men who were dally accustomed to see hundreds slain In battle. Men who shovel a breastwork In on a trench full of slain comrades and chew hardtack or eat salt pork while at tha job with a callousness which only such frequent scenes or oc currences would make possible In the human heart became peculiarly eensl tlve and alive to the solemn parade and formalities of a military execution. "In our regiment we had a private soldier sentenced to be shot for desert ing to the enemy. His name was Thompson, and he belonged to Com pany K. This man Thompson had de serted off vedette post one night and some two months afterward came Into our lines, where members of hla own company happened to be on picket duty. Thompson did not calculate on this. His Idea In coming In was to sur render as a Confederate soldier and be sent north. It happened near to the Weldon railroad, where our division of the Ninth corps was then posted. Of course, on being recognized, he was taken to headquarters, and a court martial was Immediately convened. It leaked out somehow that Thompson was not the humble soldier he seemed, but a Confederate officer and spy. He hnd been an officer in the United States nnvy before the war. He resigned and went south, where he secured the com mission of colonel of Infantry. "Being a Marylander of family, ef forts were made to save his life, but In a quiet way, as his relatives feared to disclose his real Identity for fenr he would be hanged as a spy Instead of shot as a deserter. Friday, the day set for execution in the Army of the Potomac, came around too soon for Thompson and hla relatives. The night previous be had been Informed that all efforts had failed at Washington. I was on guard duty over him, and my brother was one of the detail of twelve men selected as the firing squad. My brother didn't like the Job, and came to the tent where I was on guard to consult with me how to get out of it. Thompson overheard our conversation, and, knowing my brother by name, ho broke In: 'Say, Tip, you must not back out I want you In the squad, as I know you are a dead shot and will save me from the sergeant' "It was the practice for the sergeant If the firing squad failed to kill the doomed man with a volley to place the muzzle of hla rifle against the temple of the prisoner and blow out hla brains. "After Tip had consented the officer of the guard permitted us to play cards with the prisoner. He bad a roll of bills, and we were soon in a stiff poker game. Two guards, including myself, my brother Tip and Thompson, com posed the quartet. We played until gray daylight, and Thompson skinned the pnrty of every dollar, ne had phenomenal luck and watched the game closely. "In the afternoon he was to die, and about noon he asked to see the lieuten ant of the firing squad, nandlng the officer SOOO. he asked him to divide It equally among the men detailed to shoot him. "Tho division was drawn np and formed three sides of a square, the fourth side being open, where the grave of Thompson was freshly dug. The band played the dead march In 'Saul,' and Thompson, at the head of the fir ing squad, marched around the three sides of the square, with the coffin In which he wns to be Inclosed cnrrlod Im mediately behind him. Reaching the open space, the coffin wns set down. Thompson seated himself on the end of It, facing the firing squad, about twelve paces distant. The death warrant was rend, and the chaplain tied bis hand kerchief over the prisoner's eyes. I watched Thompson, curious to note If he would hear the reports of the mus kets that killed him. Presently 1 heard the lieutenant's low voice: 'Ready I Aim! Fire!' "In the next Instant Thompson top pled back into his coffin a dead man. The reports of the muskets he never heard, as I saw him swiftly fall over before I heard the guns crack, and so I settled this disputed point to my own satisfaction, and to that extent the ex ecution of Thompson Interested m# and no more."—Washington Post To Thread a Hair Through a Wnlnnt. To pass a hair through a walnut without boring a hole seems an Impos sibility, but the feat has often been done. The hull of the walnut when examined with a strong glass Is seen to have Innumerable small openings, some of which lead entirely through the nut. The trick consists In using a very fine hair and an Infinite amount of patience. Pass the hair Into one of these minute crevices and urge It gen tly along. Sometimes It will appear on the other side at the first trial, but If It comes out at the hundred and first you will be very lucky. He nad Learned It. "I beard a good story the other day," begnn the grocery man, "about a cer tain politician." "That will do." Interrupted the dis appointed officeseeker. "In the first place, there are no certain politicians." —Chicago News. And One of Them Went Wrong. Adam was lucky In another way. He hnd no friends to come around telling him how he ought to bring up bis boys. —Chicago Record Herald. "WHY DID THEY TIE HIM?" Tommy la Still Mystified Over the Nathan Hale Statue. Mrs. Worth last week came over from Brooklyn with her precocious nine-year-old Bon Tommy and walked with htm across the City Hall park. Tommy manifested a lively Interest In the Nathan Hnlc statue. Ho wanted a good, long look at it, and his mother humored him. "Mnmmn, what's he tied for?" was Tommy's first question after his search ing examination. "So he can't get away," the proud mother replied. "Is he alive?" was the next question. "No, Tommy; he's made of bronze, and there's 110 life in that" "Then he couldn't got away, could he, mamma?" "No, dearest." "Then what Is he tied for?" "You see, dear, the soldiers caught him and bound him that way, and then they hnnged him." "Did they kill him, mamma?" "Yes, darling." "Then he Is dead, Isn't he?" "Yes, love." "Then how could he get nwny?" "lira-er—why, Tommy"— "Then why did they tie him, mnm ma?" Only the roar of Broadway oonld be heard above the Intensity of her si lence, and as she led the little fellow along he echoed over and over, "What did they tie him for,, mamma?"— New York Times. A Point He Poryot. It was in a small town up the state. A young lawyer who wns counsel for the prisoner In a murder trial wns cross examining an old fanner, the chief wit ness of the prosecution. The testimony of the farmer went to show the time at which he saw the accused pass a field where he was working. "Now, my man," he commenced, "you declare that you saw the prisoner pass your potato field at 12 o'clock. How did you know It was 12 o'clock?" "Kind of lnnard feelln* that It was dinner time," drawled the old farmer. "I don't carry 110 watch when out dig gin' pertaters. But when I got home an hour later It was half past 2 by the kitchen clock." The young lawyer did not wait to hear more. lie turned to the jury and began, "Gentlemen of the Jury, you have heard what this old gentleman has said in regard to the time, and"— "Say, mister," interrupted the farm er, "I forgot to tell you that the kitchen clock has been at half past 2 for the last three years."—New York Times. Philosophic* Pills. Lots of talk about this old world not being a bright one, yet If it went to blazing first thing you'd do would be to call out the tire department. There's always life In the old land, but the world gets mighty tired digging so deep for It. The charity of this world covers a multitude of sinners that don't care n straw for any other covering. Some folks spend so much time In looking backward they never see the train coming till It's too lqte to step aside.—Atlanta Constitution. Serious Matter. The young man In the dress suit was angry. "I say," he exclnlmed, "It's a deuced outrage!" "What Is?" asked the proprietor of tho restaurant. "I've been mistaken for a waltnj twice!" complained tho youth. "Thunder and guns!" cried the pro prietor excitedly. "We'll have to find away to stop that or I won't be able to keep any waiters." —Brooklyn Eagle. Simple lonn. "I'm nfraUl my husband doesn't love me any more," snld the bride of six months, with nn overgrown sigh. "When did you discover the change?" naked her mother. "When I discovered that he hnd quit leaving any change In his pockets," re plied the j'oung lady sadly. Dead Hlght. Cynic—One of the greatest nuisances on earth Is this custom of shaking hands with every one you meet. Friend—That's right, old man. Shake! -San Francisco Chronicle. Strong For tho Strong. "Your father has a strong box at home, hasn't he, Willie?" said the teacher. "Yes'ra," replied Willie; "the one he keeps the Umburger In." Yonkers Statesman. PLAYS AND PLAYERS. Fred Lennox Is playing In a "Burgo master" company. Pearl Landers has been engaged for "The Sliver Slipper" by John C. Fisher. Arthur Byron has been selected aa leading man for Mary Maunerlng's company this season. Henry W. Savage has five companies, the smallest numbering fifty-eight peo ple, now touring the country. Mr. Wilsorl Barrett's latest play, "The Christian King," has been given for the first time in Bristol, England. Grace Van Studdlford at the close of her present season as prima donna with the Bostonlans will fulfill a European engagement. Orlslcn Worden, a niece of the late Admiral Worden, Is playing the part of Nnknhlra, the slave, in "Around the World In Eighty Days." Lewis Waller, one of the best actors In England, has secured the British rights to "M. Beaucalre" and will pre sent the play In London. Edgar Selden has bought the dra matic right to Robert Louis Stevenson's tale, "The Suicide Club," and will shortly produce a stage version of It. CYNICISMS. If the average man's salary were as short as his memory, he would starve death. The trouble with most men Is that their stomachs do more thinking than their heads. Remember, the people you would like to see dend may be the pallbearers at your funeral. After a man has done wrong he more thoroughly understands the importance of keeping a secret. Women of wealth sometimes forget to speak to laboring women, but tliey are afraid to show such pride to the dressmakers. It makes no difference to what church the famlly'bclongs, the daughter usu ally selects tho most fashionable to be married In.—Atchison Globe. The Convict's Motto. Chaplain—Don't you think you ought to have some motto and try to live up to it? Convict—Yes. How would tills do: "Wo nre here today and gone tomor row ?" Ico cream—all flavors—at Merkt's. OASTOIIIA. Bara the JA KM Win Have Always Bought ■A.. OS-W-A.X.ID, doa'er in Dry Goods, Notions, Groceries and Provisions. FRESH ROLL AND Creamery Butter Always in Stock. Minnesota's Best Patent Flour A Specialty. EVERY ARTICLE GUARANTEED. N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Bte. % Freel/ind. Groceries, Provisions, Green Truck, Dry Goods and Notions are among the finest sold in Freeland. Send a sam ple order and try them. E. J. Curry, South Centre Street. T. CAMPBELL, dealer In Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes. Also PURE WINES I LIQUORS FOR FAMILY AND MKDIOINAL PURPOHKB. Centre nnd Main ntrootc. Freeland. IPIRX 3STTIIST G- Promptly Done at tbe Tribune Office. m FOR DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S Favorite Remedy It cured Patrick Kloly of North Pownal, Ift. After He Employed Five Different Physl clans and Took Nearly a Wagon Load of Medicine, With No Benefit. " It is with my sincere thanks and I gratitude," writes Piftrick Kiely of North Pownal, Vt., to Dr.! David Ken nedy of Ronuout, N. Y., "I write '-M you of the great benefit I re- " ci'l vetl from your inctlieine, lr. Itnvid Kennedy's Favorite Iteineily. My case was a severe one and a puzzler to the doctors. About eighteen month ago I begun to fed a psiisi in my right nine: It grati unlly grew worse until I via# compelled to givcup work en tirely. I would belch up quantities of wind and water. I employed five different physicians, and after taking , about a wagon load of medicine, I seemed to grow worse. By tho advice of a friend. I began to use Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy. After taking the first bot tle I felt some better, and by the time I had taken three bottles the pain was entirely gone. I have tried all of the different sarsaparillas, compounds and nervines on tho market, and I con sider Dr. David Kennedy's Fa vorite Remedy the superior of them all." ( If you suffer from kidney, liver or A bladder trouble in nny form, diabetes, Bright's disease, rheumatism, dyspep sia, eczema or nny form of blood dis ease, or, if a woman, from the sick nesses peciilinrto yoursex,and are not already convinced that Dr. David Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy is tho medi cine 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. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Rem edy is for sale by all druggists at SI.OO a bottle, or 6 bottles for $5.00 —less than one cent a dose. Dr. DAVID KENNEDY'S CHERRY BALSAM bent for COIIIH, Cougli., CnnMiun|ttion. 25c, 50c, SI.OO. RAILROAD TIMETABLES LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD." November 10, 1902, ARRANGEMENT or PASSENGER TRAINS. "V LEAVE FRKELAND. 0 12 a m for Weatherly, Muuch Chunk Ailentown, Bethlehem, Kaston, Phila delphia and New York. 7 20 a m for Sandy Kuu, White Haven, Wilkes-Burre, Pittstnn und Scranton. 8 15 a m for Huzloton, Weathorly, Muuch Chunk, Ailentown, Bethlehem, Eusion. Philadelphia, New Y'ork, Delano ana Potts vi lie. 9 58 a in for Hazleton, Delano, Mabanoy City, bhenandouh und Mt. Curmel. II 32 ani for Weutherly, Muuch Chunk, Al leutuwn, Bethlehem, Kaston, Phila delphia, New York, Hazleton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah aud Mt. Curinei. 1141" in tor White Haven, Wllkes-Barre, Scranton and the West. 4 44 p in for Weathorly, Muuch Chunk, Ai lentown, Bethlehem, Kaston, Philadel phia, New York, Hazleton, Delano Mahanoy City, Shenandoah, Mt. Catme. und Pottsville. 0 33 p m for Sandy Hun, White Haven, wilkes-Barre, Scranton aud all points West. 7 29 P m for Hazleton. ARRIVE AT FRBELAND. 7 29 a m from Pottsville, Delano and Haz letou. 9 12am from New York, Philadelphia, Ens ton, Bethlehem, Ailentown, Maucb V Chunk, Weutherly, Hazleton. Mahanoy § City, Shenandoah and Mt. Carmel \ 9 58 a m from Scranton, Wilkes-Barre and / White Haven. 1 1 32 " m from Pottsville, Mt. Carmel, Shen andoah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazleton. 12 35p m from New York, Philadelphia, Kaston, Bethlehom, Ailentown, Maucb Chunk und Weatherly. 4 44 P in from Scranton, Wilkcf-Barre and White Haven. 0 33pm from New York, Philadelphia, Kaston, Bethlehem Ailentown, Maucb Chunk, Weatherly, Mt. Curmel, Shenan doah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazle ton. 7 29 P in from Bcranton, Wilkes-Barre and white Haven. For further information inquire of Tloket Agents. UOLLIN H.WlLßUß,Generalßuperlntendent, 20 Cortlnndt Street, New York City. CHAB. 8. LEE, Ueneral Passenger Agent, 20 Cortlandt Street, New York City. G. J. GILDROY, Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pa. THE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect May 10, lflOl. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, Hazle Brook, Stockton, Beaver Meadow Road, Roan and Hazleton Junction at 000 a m, dally except Sunday; snd 7 07 am, 238 p m. Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Harwood,Cranberry, Toinhicken and Deringer at 600 am, daily /la except Sunday; and 7 07 a m, 238 p m. Sun drains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction. Harwood Road, Humboldt Road, Oneida and Sheppton at 01)0 a m, daily except Sun day; and 7 07 a m, 2 AH p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Harwood, Cranberry, Tomhlcken and Deringer at 636 a m, daily except Sunday; and 8 63 a m, 4 22 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood Road, Humboldt Road, Oneida and Sheppton at 6 32,11 10 am,441 pm, dally except Sunday; and 737 a m, 311 pm, Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tomhloken, Cran berry, Hat wood, Hazleton Junction and Roan at 6 Oil p m, daily except Sunday; and 337 a m, 5 07 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt Road, Harwood Road, Oneida Junction, Hazlo ton Junction and Rosn at 7 11 am, 12 40. 626 p in, dailv except Sunday; and 8 11 a m, 344 pro, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow Hood, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 5 26 p m, daily, except Sunday; and 8 11 a ra, 3 44 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Beavor A , Meadow Road, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Eokloy, A Jeddo and Drifton at 649 p m, daily, except Sunday; and 10 10 a m. 5 40 p m, Sunday. All traius connect at Hazleton Junction with electric csra for Hazleton Jeancsville. Auden ricd and other points on the Traction Com pany's line. Train leaving Drifton at 600 a m makes connection at Deringer with P. R. R. treins for Wiltoabarre, Sunbury, Uarris'mrg and points $1.50 a year is ail the TRIBUNE costs,
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