FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY TBI TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. FREELANL).—The TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers in Freeliind ut the rate of cents a mouth, puyable every two months, or $1.50 u year, payable in advance. The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct from the carriers or from the olhoe. 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 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 Postoflloe at Freeland, Pu., as Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., DECEMBER 17,1902. 4DNTonT*^OBE3> SHORT STORIES. American sailors receive about one* third more wages than those 011 British ships. The latest Hoe printing press uses up 120 miles of white paper every hour It runs. At the close of the season there were 300,000 tons of ice left in the Maiue warehouses. Brick kilns are now tired with petro leum, 100 pounds of oil being sufficient to burn a ton of brick. In Porto Rico a cow giving five to eight quarts of milk a day for five months can be bought for SSO. It is alleged that there is only one doctor available for a population of 13,- 000 in the West Indian island of Nevis. A national school of music is to be or ganized in Chicago by eight prominent citizens, and William L. Tomlins is to be the director of the institution. A novel device tried by the navy de partment during the year was the "tracer," which renders a shell visible during the night to the gunner, but In visible to the persons at the target, this being accomplished by the insertion of a burning composition in the base of the shell. PLAYS AND PLAYERS. Blanche Walsh seems to be making a first class hit in her "Daughter of Hamilcar." Elsie Do Wolf recently secured the American rights for the latest London comedy, "Mrs. Willoughby's Kiss." Thomas Jefferson is playing "Rip Van Winkle" on the Pacific coast, and, according to report, with great suc- Richard Golden is reported to be meeting with great success in "Foxy Quiller" under the management of Len Stern. William A. Brady is trying to secure a concession to build a theater in which to run "'Way Down East" during the St. Louis exposition. Helen Grant ley has decided to shelve "Her Lord and Master" and continue the season with Clyde Fitch's "The Girl ynd the Judge." Henry Miller has bought Richard Harding Davis' dramatization of one of his own novels and will present it about the first of the year. Sherrle Matthews, the former partner of Harry Bulger, has suffered another paralytic stroke and is in a sanitarium at Indianapolis, Ind., his home. HORSES AND HORSEMEN. Prince Alert, 2:00, pacing, made an attempt to beat Star Pointer's time, 1:5014. at Memphis Nov. 10, and the best lie could do was 2:01%. J. M. Johnson, Lawrenceburg, Ivy., has purchased tin? bay yearling colt Lord Allerton, by Allerton, 2:01)'A, dam Rose Bay, by Lord Russell, from C. W. Williams. Gulesburg, 111. A movement is 011 foot to revive trot ting at Louisville. The plan is to or ganize a driving club and secure con trol of the Douglas track in time to give a meeting next fall. J. 11. Bunnell, Grand Rapids, Mich., lias purchased a two-year-old colt by Ashland Wilkes and a bay suckling colt by Ashland Wilkes from J. D. Creighton, Lexington, Ivy. A. 11. Merrill, Danvers, Mass., has purchased the bay pacing gelding Er skino Reed, six years old, by Chatten ton, 2:18, from W. W. Evans. ton. Ivy. 110 has shown trials in 2:12*4. Ed Benyon has the honor of driving to their records below 2:10 the greatest number of those going in 2:10 or better during 1002. He drove Fereno, 2:07%; Ozanam, 2:08, and Walnut Hull, 2:0014. to their records in 1002. castor 1A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought r Dr. David Kennedy! Faronte Remedy CURES AIL KIDNEY. STOMACH AND LIVER TROUBLES. The SPORTING WORLD A Great Football Captain. Captain George B. Chndwick of the Vale eleven Is one of the best all round lootball players seen on the gridiron during the past season. The Yale team finished the year's playing with a splen did record, due largely to Captain Chad wick's individual efforts. Chndwick is a brother of Charles Chndwick, the former prominent Yale CAPTAIN C. B. CHADWICK OP YALE, player, and comes from Brooklyn, where he learned the game on a pre paratory school team. Captain Chndwick played sensation ally in the games with Princeton and Harvard, in the former making the only two touchdowns secured by the wearers of the blue, lie will be award ed a halfback's position on the All America's team of 11)02. In defeating both Princeton and Har vard Yale became the eastern cham pion of the year. Michigan holds the western title. The Australian Heavyweight. Jim Doherty, the Australian cham pion, who is coming here looking for tight, won't have to wear out his clothes waiting for a chance to see what he can do with our heavy artil lery. Billy Madden—the busy Billy—will hand him a gold mounted invitation to a meeting with either Gus Ituhlin or Denver Ed Martin. Madden said recently that he couldn't think of anything more to his fancy than a go between the invader and Ituhlin. "Ituhlin wants to tight," said Mad den, "and, like the Dutchman who left his gun home and wanted it, he wants it bad." It ought not to take long for Sam Fitzpatrlck, Doherty's manager, and Madden to clinch such an arrange ment. But it is likely that Doherty would rather take on some of the light er fellows like Carter, O'Brien, Marvin Hart or McCoy before Kuklin. About llie Horte's Age. To distinguish merely between the young horses and the old It is only nec essary to remember a few facts. The first is that the milk teeth are present until he is between four and five years old; that the "mark," or dark central depression 011 the surface of the inci sors, becomes gradually worn out and in a horse over eight years old has nearly always disappeared from the teeth of the lower jaw; that the shape of the tooth is much wider from side to side than it is from front to back. As the horse becomes older the surface becomes progressively narrower from side to side, and instead of remaining oblong it becomes triangular and then in very old animals flattened from side to side. Want MoGovern and Jordan to Flglit. The National Sporting club of Lon don has offered a $2,500 purse for a tight between McGovern and Ben Jor dan. The conditions offered by the club are twenty rounds at 122 pounds, weigh in at 2 o'clock on the day of tlfe fight. Dr. Ordway, the American represent ative of the London club, has seen Mc- Govern and his manager, Sam Harris, and put the proposition to them. Jor dan is ready to meet the ex-champion under the conditions named, but In sists that there should be a side bet of from SI,OOO to $2,000. Splnn'M New Purchane. John Splan of Chicago has purchased from A. 8. Ashbrook for a long price Mary Wagner, by Strathmore—Mary 8., by Alcantara. Mary Wagner is the dam of Baronmore that got Peter Stir ling, holder of the world's record for three-year-old geldings. The Monk'* Owner. Fred Gerken, for years one of the most prominent of the New York speed way brigade and who gave The Monk a new lease of life, is now devoting his leisure time exclusively to the saddle horse. Rufldian Trotting. American bred trotters have been very successful on Russian tracks this year. The Russian champion four year-old trotter this year is by Alvto, an Americau stallion. THE NONUNION MAN. It Is Small Wonder That He Is Loved by His Master. Stephen Bell, writing to the New York Times, says: I read in your editorial on "The De mand of the Nonunion Mine Workers" today the following: In the assertion of their right to live and to work the nonunion miners sound a note which should find an echo In every American bosom: "We believe It to be an Inalienable and undoubted right to work when we can ob tain It and to receive as compensation for It the best price we can obtain." Why do these much vaunted non union miners thus qualify their right to work? In plain English their assertion of the right to work "when we can ob tain it" means that they have the right to work when they have found a master to hire them, und at no other time. They are simply asserting their permission to work by the grace of the Divine Right Baer and his associates. Of the right to work without the per mission of some master they seem to i have no conception; with them the I right to work passes into abeyance | when the master says so. It is small ! wonder that the masters love them. I I have for years criticised the unions ! for their temerity in standing for and i asserting anything short of the full | rights of man, but despite their timidity and ultra conservatism In this respect | they are still miles ahead of men who ! can see no rights beyond what a mas- I ter graciously concedes them as a privi ; lege. For these I can find no parallel ; except in the case of the "good nig gers" who always took sides with their masters and frowned down all attempts ! at their own liberation and in the "loy al subjects" of the king who did what lay In their power to defeat the Anieri j can patriots in the war of independ ence. If the earth does In truth belong to Divine Right Baer and his coadjutors, , then of course the nonunion miners are i entirely right in their policy. But you yourself have ridiculed and condemned | his claim. Are you willing to concede that the rights of humanity in the ! earth are not extinct and that those I who have been granted the privilege of owning the land have duties which they should perform—no less a duty than that of paying to their fellows the full value of the privilege through the siugle tax, by which method of collect ing public revenue industry and coin- I merce may be left absolutely free? You condemn union inen for prevent ing other men from working, but it is difficult to learn whether you are con demning the men or the deed. If the latter, then you should also condemu i those who by closing down the mines have prevented anybody from working. The "Labor Vole." Eugene E. Sclimitz, the labor mayor of Sun Francisco, who was in the city a few days ago, declared that the un ion men of Chicago could do as their brothers did in Sun Francisco and elect a man from their own ranks as mayor. 1 His statement will be doubted proba bly by those who wutched the result of the recent election. George J. Thomp son, who was defeated for the senate j by the narrow margin of thirty-three votes, doubts the strength of the labor vote and gives interesting figures to prove bis contention. Thompson is well known among the unionists of the city and is probably as popular a man as could be selected. Ills honesty has never been questioned by any one who knows him. The district where he was a candidate includes the Lake Shore drive, the most aristocratic portion of j the citj'. It Includes a ward which is i the home of the mechanic and a strong ' union district. The result of the elec tion showed that Thompson carried the "silk stocking" portion of his district by a large majority, while the strength of his opponent was shown in the por tion inhabited by union men. The in ference is that Thompson's unionism was a handicap to him rather than a help, and still the labor men are every day talking about having 200,000 votes in Cook county.—McManus in Chicago Inter Ocean. Mitchell an an Author. i President John Mitchell of the United Mine Workers of America has decided to write a book in which he purposes to deal with the recent coal strike and Its outcome as applied to the problem of I the relations of labor and capital. Mr. I Mitchell lias been importuned by lec ture bureaus and publishers to enlist himself in their services; but, because j of his desire to devote his time and attention to his organization, he re fused numerous enticing offers. When, however, he saw he was to soon have some leisure, he agreed to accept the j offer of a Chicago publishing house and ' give them a book. Most of the matter is in shape and requires only editing ' and arranging to make it ready for publication. The book will probably be out within two months. Mr. Mitchell | purposes to give in it the inside history of the coal strike as far as he can without betraying any confidences.— Philadelphia Ledger. A Crime Aftalnat Humanity. I Child labor is superfluous and wick- I ed, a shame to our civilization and an ; Inexplicable crime against humanity, j In every country where industries | have developed, where the industrial j and commercial system has become complex, children, frequently hardly ! more than infants, have been taken from their homes and sold for a pitia ble wage into slavery In the factories and the mines. It would seem to most of us that a simple statement of the fact and a simple demand should be sufficient to obtain the consent of all fair and humane persons to the out- I lawing of this system and to the grant ing to children the rights of childhood ! that should be inalienable. But state- I ment and demand have been made again and again and still the children ' .work.—Robert Uunter. "LIKE THIRTY CENTS." A Lawyer's Story of the Origrin of This Slang; l'hrnse. The origin of slang has always been a puzzle to philologists, but once in awhile a current phrase can be traced to Its source. The colloquialism, "To feel like 30 cents," Is apparently non sensical, but it is certainly the most forceful expression of the day for de noting small, mean and contemptible In one's own sight. Its origin Is thus explained by a Philadelphia lawyer who sometimes practices in New York: "There is a vagrant law in New York under which a person having no visible means of support may be placed In durance. It has also been decided In that state that a person having so small as 30 cents in his possession has 'visible means of support.' Now, there Is no law in New York except the va grant law under which pool sellers and gamblers of that sort may be held. Shortly after the decision just men tioned was formulated two gamblers were captured in a raid and taken to the Tenderloin station house. They sent for a lawyer, who came and had a talk with them. 'lt will never do to make any show of money here,' he said. 'Give me your rolls.' They hand ed their wads over to him, and he gave each of them a quarter and a nickel, with instructions to produce the coins when he asked tlieni to do so in court. "When their cases were called, the lawyer got them off on the plea that they were not vagrants, each having the legal amount of funds in his pos session. Just as the decision was ren dered in favor of his clients a messen ger entered the courtroom and required the lawyer's presence at the supreme court. lie left without seeing his cli ents, and they wended their way to the nearest saloon. " 'How do you feel?' said one. "'I feel like 30 cents,' said the other, 'and probably will until I get my roll back or what's left of it.' "And that is how that phrase was started on its travels."—Philadelphia Telegraph. Artificial Air. The progress of invention In subma rine navigation has stimulated efforts to produce oxygen by cheaper and eas ier methods. If oxygen, the vital ele ment in air, can be supplied as wanted, the length of time that men can remain under water may be indefinitely pro longed. A process of making oxygen, invented by George F. Jaubert, a French scientist, promises to answer the requirement. His object was to find a solid substance which would produce oxygen as calcium carbide produces acetylene gas. He selected for the purpose a peroxide.of sodium or of potassium which can ue cheaply manufactured by electro chemical means. It is called "oxylithe" and is made in little cubes and pellets, some only half an inch in diameter. When decomposed with water, it gives off oxygen. Two or three ounces of this substance supply enough oxygen to en able a diver to remain under water for an "hour. By suitable apparatus the carbonic oxide produced by respiration is withdrawn into the oxygen genera tor, and fresh oxygen takes its place. The Grand Llama. An Indian traveler in Tibet who saw the grand lama in 1882 thus described him: "The grand lama is a child of eight, with a bright and fair complex ion and rosy cheeks. llis eyes are large and penetrating, the shape of his face remarkably Aryan, though some what marred by the obliquity of his eyes. The thinness of his person was probably due to the fatigue of the court ceremonies and to the religious duties and ascetic observance of his estate. A yellow miter covered his head, and its pendent lappets hid his ears. A yellow mantle draped his per son, and he sat cross legged, with join ed palms. The throne on which lie sat was supported by carved lions and cov ered with silk scarfs. The state officers moved about with becoming dignity." A Cliiiiosc Decoration. The Chinese government has con ferred the order of the Double Dragon upon Dr. Samuel L. Gracey, American consul at Fuchau. The order carries with it a decoration which is a silver star in the center of which is a large sapphire and at the top a smaller pink coral. In the blue enamel surrounding the sapphire are two dragons, with in scriptions in Mantchoo, indicating that the decoration and order were con ferred by direction of the imperial gov ernment. The decoration is worn sus pended from the neck by a yellow rib bon. Congress will have to give the consul leave before he can accept it. Fewer Divorces In Enelund. Divorce cases are not so numerous in England as they were twelve months ago. The number in the cause list is 159, a decrease of 53 from last year. They include 123 petitions for divorce, 12 for judicial separation and 4 for restitution of conjugal rights. Of the 123 petitions for divorce 05 are presented by husbands and only 48 by wives. The proportion of undefend ed cases increases. Only 22 of the pe titions in the present list are to be con tested. —London Express. L'nenmoiila IN at Hand. Do not neglect any cold is the advice suggested by Dr. Reynolds, the com missioner of health of Chicago, who comments on the increase and ravages of pneumonia. It is evident that in sev eral parts of the United States pneumo nia is the most widespread and fatal of all acute diseases, outstripping pulmo nary tuberculosis as the chief item in the tables of mortality. The advice is therefore timely and needed, "Do not neglect a cold, however slight, at this season of the year."—American Medi cine. "Incnrable" Heart Disease Soon Cured. FRANKLIN MILES, M. D., LL. 8., Will Send $4.00 Worth of His Specially Prescribed Treatment Free to Afflicted Readers. To demonstrate the unusual curative powers of his New Special Treatment for diseases of the heart, nerves, stom ach or dropsy. Dr. Miles will send, free, to any afflicted person, 54.00 worth of his new treatment. It is the result of twenty-five years of careful study, extensive research, and remarkable experience lu treating thou sands of heart, stomach and nervous diseases, which so often complicate each case. So certain are the results of his New Treatment that he does not hesi tate to give ail patients a trial free. Few physicians have such confidence in their skill. Few physicians so thor oughly deserve the confidence of their pitients, as no false inoucements are ever held out. The Doctor's private practice Is so extensive as to require the aid of forty associates. His offices are always open to visitors. Col. N. G. Parker, Ex-Treasurer of South Carolina, says: "I believe Dr. Miles to bean attentive and skillful physician, in a field which requires the beet qualities of head and heart." The late Prof. J. 8. Jewell. M. D.. editor of the Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases, of Chicago, wrote "By all means publish your surprising results." Hundreds of "Incurable Cases" cured. Mrs. Frank Smith, of Chicago, was cured of heart dropsy, alter live leading physicians had given h-r up. H.n. C. M. Buck, banker, Faribault, Minn., writes, "I iiad broken completely down. My head, heart, stomach and nerves had troubled me greatly for years. Feared I would never recover, but Dr. Miles' Special Treatment cured me after six eminent physi cians of Chicago and elsewhere had complete ly failed." Mrs. P. Countryman, of Pontiao, 111., says: "Several years ago when I sent to Dr. Miles for treatment, three physicians said I could not live two weeks. I could nor walk six feet; now I do all tny work." 1,000 refer ences to, and testimonials from Bishops, Clergymen, Bankers, Farmers, and their wiv< s will be sent free. These include many who have been cured after from live to thirty physicians had pronounced them incurable. Address, Dr. Franklin Miles, 203 to 211 State street, Chicago. 111. Mention Free In nil Tribune in Your Reply. NOVEL USE FOR X RAYS. Thievery In Jnpnnene Mints to Be Fsposed by the Machines. The Japanese government has put the X rays to a practical use, accord ing to the Electrical World and Engi neer. A firm in Philadelphia has re cently sold to that government one of its machines for a novel purpose. The representative of Japan who placed the order suid that in the gov ernmental mints a groat many gold dollars are coined, and there has been considerable loss through dishonest em ployees swallowing the small coins and thus taking them out of the mints. There has been no way of preventing this until a clever official suggested the use of the X rays, and the machine was ordered at once. It Is not proposed to put every em ployee to the test when leaving the mints, but lie will be searched by elec tricity from time to time, unexpectedly, and any one of the employees may be called up at any time to undergo the test. It is believed that the fear of de tection will prevent the stealing, at least in the form now used. RAMBLES IN RUSSIA. Warsaw, Russia, is going to have a statue of Chopin. The first dog hospital in Moscow has just been founded by an association of the women of that place. Kites are to be substituted for the balloons now used on board Russian war vessels for observation purposes. Russia has more cattle than any,oth er European country, yet its exports of meat and live stocks amount to only $380.000 a year. A line of cold storage steamers from IJbnu to England is now to be established. When M. Loubet, the French presi dent, was in St. Petersburg, he left 25,- 000 rubles for tin? poor of that city. It has since been decided not to distribute this money, but to build with it a house in which poor families can live without paying rent. Russia announces that the river Bug, which has been dredged, is open to navigation for vessels drawing twenty five feet of wafer between DachakofT, on flic Black sea, and Odessa. Nico laieff may soon rival Odessa as a grain port. THE BABY. Don't pick it up every time it cries or you will Instill into it a restless dispo sition. Don't give It any toys till It passes its first year. I.et it bite Its list anil play with Its toes. Don't try leaching It to walk before it Is a year old. If you do, you tuny make its legs crooked. Don't give it elaborate mechanical dolls. The rag dull of old times suits it better and furnishes a lesson in econ omy. Don't worry about its crying if you have made certain that nothing hurts it. That's just its way of developing Its lungs. Don't hurry it into talking. You may overwork its brain, and besides It will make up for any lost time between the ages of four and five. One of the hard things to under stand is how such nice grandmothers as everybody has ever could have been mother-In-laws. Dr. David Kennedys mvorite Memedy CURES ALL KIDNEY. STOMACH • ""--AMD LIVER TROUBLES. —Dr. David Kennedy* favorite Remedy CURES ALL KIDNEY* STOMACH ■ ANP LIVER TROUBLES* RAILROAD TIMETABLES Lehigh valley railroad. November 10, 1902. ARRANGEMENT OF PASSENGER TRAINS. LEAVE FKEELAND. 0 12 a ra for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk A1 lentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Phila delphia and New York. 7 29 a in for Sandy Itun, White Haven, Wilkes- Barre, Pittston and Seranton. 8 15 a in for Hazleton, Weatherly, Mauch Chunk. Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Philadelphia, New York, Delano and Pottsville. „ * 9 58 a in for Hazleton, Delano, Mahanoy 7 City, Shenandoah and Ait. Carmel. 1 1 32 a iu for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al lentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Phila delphia, New York, Hazleton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah aud Mt. Carmel. „. r _ 1141 a in for White Haven, Wilkes-Barre, Serauton and the West. 444 p 111 for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al lentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Philadel phia, New York, Hazleton, Delano Mahanoy City, Sheuandouh, Mt. Carme. aud Pottsville. 6 33 p m for Sandy Hun, White Haven, Wilkes-Barre, Serauton and all points West. 7 29 p m for Hazleton. ARRIVE AT FREELAND. 7 29 am from Pottsville, Delano and Haz -9 12 am from New Y'ork, Philadelphia, Eas ton, Bothlebem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Weatherly, Hazleton, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah aud Alt. Carmel 9 58 a in from Serauton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. , _ 11 32 am from Pottsville, Mt. Carmel, Shen andoah, Mahanoy City, Delano aud Hazleton. .... 12 35P ui from New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Alaucb > Chunk and Weatherly. I 4 44 p m from Serauton, Wilkes-Barre and } White Haven. 6 33 p m from New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Weatherly, Mt. Carmel, Shenan doah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazle ton. 7 29 P m from Serauton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. For further information inquire of Ticket Agonta. ICULLIN H.WILBUR, General Superintendent, 20 Cortlandt Street, New Y'ork City. CHAS. S. LEE. General Passenger Agent, 20 Cortlandt Street, New York City. G. J. GILDROY, Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pu. '"PIIE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND A SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table In effect May 19,1901. Trains leave Drifton forJeddo, Kcklcy, Hazle lirook, Stockton, Beaver Aieadow Road, Roan and Hazleton Junction at BUD a m, daily except Sunday; and 7 07 a ni, 2 38 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Drifton for Harwood, Cranberry, Toinhieken and Deringer at 000 a m, daily except Sunday; and 707 a m, 238 p m, Sun day. Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junotion, Harwood lload, Humboldt Road, Oneida and . Sheppton at 000 am, daily except Bun- 1 day; and 707 a ra, 2118 pm, Sunday. A Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Harwood, Cranberry, Tomhicken and Deringer at 036 a ra, 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 0 :J2,1110 a m, 4 41 p m, dally except Sunday; and 7 37 a m, 3 11 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tomhicken, Cran- , berry, HHI wood, Hazleton Junction and Roan at 5' ) u m, daily except Sunday; and 337 a in, 5 0? t> m. Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt Road, Harwood Road, Oneida J unction, Hazle ton Junction and Roan at 7 11 am, 12 40, 620 p in, dai'v except Sunday; and 8 11 a m, 3 44 t> m, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow Road, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 6 20 p m. daily, except Suuday; and H 11 a m, 3 44 p m. Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Beaver Meadow Road, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 649 p m, daily, except Sunday; and 10 10 a in, 6 40 p ni, Sunday. All traius connect at Hazleton Junotion with electric cars for Hazleton. Jeanesville, Auden lied and other points on the 1 ruction Com pany's line. Train leaving Drifton at 600 a m makes connection at Deringer with P. R. R. trains for wiiUfKbarre. Sunbury, Flarrisburg and points west. A LUTHER O. SMITH, Superintendent. > Standard American AMI, and ENCYCLOPEDIA A Statistical Volume of Facts and Figures Containing Over "V 600 Pages. ? jfjjfi Tmmms iiflfyilOOf) FACTS SPECIAL FEATURES. Review of the Cool St. ike; tie Trusts In the United Sta cs; l ull Election Returns and KV T Platforms ol Pollti.ai , 1 1 Z-:\W*' of Ol- L !! ccrs t,,e National \Q>' .•>,' Conimi trees; I eder.'l, State ami Labor I .e>'is lation; Our Insu ar rjj Possesion.: Isthn la Canal Law; Civil eminent for the Philip plnca; Quaht, cation. r . ot, r K A: ' Mt iPr States; Automoh'L @o*l Stat atic, I raternal, "'l.tary anil I'alrotc Sncielle ■: Information 8.1 l o ,al2'i Ci.unlrlrs, rhc.r ktil rs and fiov -0 mas m ' vr m. Nts: Tlir Sri-m t L__fs, Dlsturhancas ol I' 02 ("l.int Price, Bacon- I "ruction of the City of Naw Vo r " ' * Condensed Information for the Office, the Store and the Home. Price ~| Postpaid to any address, 35c 25C, I THE WORLD, Newsstand! D . .. • " i Pflitzer Budding. New York. STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, i EAST STROUDSBURG, PA. 9 Ri'yiilnr Stat,,. Normal Courses, and 9 Spoulul Ifopiirtinenta of Music, Eloou- H tion. Art, Drawing, Stenography and M typewriting; strong College Prepara- M tory Department. H Free Tuition. M -*l Boarding expenses $3.60 per week. ™ 1 upils admitted at any tune. Winter Q lerm opens Dee. 29th. Write for B catalogue. [w E. L. KEMP, A. M„ Prin. | 5 rWgjnßß3afrHHtaßil tUUKWHUmI Watch the date ou your paper,
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