FREELAND TRIBUNE. ElUbllihol 1888. D. S. BUCKLEY, MANAOING EDITOII. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY TBI • TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. D. S. Bucliloy, President. P. B. McTighe, Secretary. Thos. A. Buckley, Treasurer. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. FREEI.AN D.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers iu Freelund ut the rate of 12X cents a month, payable every two months, or $1.50 a year, payable In advance. The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct from the carriers or from the office. Compluints of Irregular or tardy delivery service will receive prompt attention. BY MAIL.— The TRIBUNE is seut 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 bo made at the expiration, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postoflice at Freeland, Pa., as Second-t lass Matter. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., MAY 25, 1903 FOR THE HOUSEWIFE Malilns n Stone Fireplace. Any one who hits had a fireplace built knows from sad experience how difficult it is to have rough rock done well— in fact, to have it done at all. The very idea of using an uncut stone for anything inside A house seems the height of absurdity to the mind of a country workman. When I showed the mason my sketch of the fireplace he remarked that it would require a great deal of labor to cut the stones into the shapes I had drawn. A sort of pitying wonder came into his face as I told him I wanted the rough stones, just as they were found. The contractor, think lug to facilitate matters, had hauled up a huge pile of stones gathered from all arouud the house without the slightest regard to tlieir suitableness. Some were covered with old cement, and all were badly bruised; the room was filled with a useless assortment of material which could only bo used for filling in back of the facing since not one had any lichen. We had to scour the woods ourselves for each stone as R was wanted, selecting those of prop er shap and size and carrying them in by hand so as to preserve the growth of lichen. It was two days' hard work, but well worth while as we saw this "center of the home" taking almost the shape we had hoped for. When the stone can lie procured without much cartage A stone fireplace of this sort is not expensive, comparatively speaking. Ours is 9 feet wide at the base and 9 feet G inches high, lined with fire brick and having a cheap brick hearth. The whole thing, built on a solid stone foundation, cost the labor of a mason and a mortar mixer for two and a half days and the cement and brick S2O to $25. This is, of course, exclusive of my own time spent in hunting for the stones.-- ( ountry Life In America. Worship of Ancentorn. "I saw in a certain paper the other day," said Father McGrady of Louis ville, Ivy., to a meeting of strikers in Lowell, Mass., "an account of a Chicago woman hiring a Pullman car to take her pet cat to Florida for the winter. In the same paper appeared an account of the operation of North Carolina cot ton mii'.s witli children at 13, women ut 39 and men at 59 cents a day. A little later I saw an account of a New York society woman having a suit made by a fashionable tailor for a monkey, which was to make a debut in Newport society. And you people, and others in like situation, are expending your strength producing wealth to be spent in living entertainments to cats and dogs and monkeys. This is carry ing ancestor worship too far." The OltleMt Unions. The following are claimed to be the oldest unions in America: 1803, New York Society of Journeymen Ship wrights; 1806, an organization of the house carpenters of the same city; 1800, the Tailors' union; 1819, the hat ters' organization; 1822, the Columbia Charitable Society of Shipwrights and Calkers of Roston and Charlestown. Mention is also made of the New York Typographical society, which was a go ing concern in 1817 and which is sup posed to have hud its start in the pre vious century. The TenmnferM. No other organization of wage work ers ever made the strides, gathered within its membership the large num ber of men and succeeded in getting so satisfactory wage agreements and hours of labor as have the teumstcrs* unions of Chicago. The oldest of the teamsters' unions— that of the coal wagon drivers— is less than three years old. Now the national union has a membership in Chicago alone of over 35.000 and is still growing. One of the youngest of the affiliated unions of the teamsters — that of the Milk Wagon Drivers' union, organized Sept. 13, 1902 now has over 2.<HM> members and stands third in the list of those Laving the largest member ship. °t!uiie' 8 Early Risers The famous little pills. SUPPORTING A BATTERY Thrilling Story of an Artillery Duel UIID KM Sequel. "I shall never forget the first time I was under fire," said Colonel Thomas Crenshaw to a party of veterans who were fighting their battles o'er again. "We were supporting a battery and had lain down on a stretch of ground as level as a ballroom tloor. The Con feds were beyond rifle shot, but they opened on us with artillery, and they did everlastingly plow up the ground with shot and shell. Every old soldier knows that artillery tire at long range is not half so much to be dreaded as the rattle of musketry, which sounds on the battlefield like Chinese fire crackers in a thunderstorm, but it is a good deal more 'skeery' to a novice. There we lay for half an hour, never moving a finger, watching the puffs of flame from a dozen cannon and the shells coming tearing through the air with their fiendish shriek, apparently headed directly for our faces. I tell you a position of that kind tries the very soul of your raw recruit. Give him a chance to shoot back, and he is all right, but fighting is one thing and waiting to get killed without striking a blow is quite another. "Rut there was more ahead for us. After the artillery duel had raged for some time a regiment of Confederate cavalry debouched from the wood with all the deliberation and precision of a dress parade. They were Mississippi ans, tall, athletic fellows, who sat their horses like centaurs. They halted and dressed ranks while the batteries behind them hurled a perfect rain of shells over their heads. We could see their colonel riding down the line and pointing with his sword to our battery, which was pluuging shells in among them with frightful rapidity, but little effect They advanced a step or two, every horseman seeming to choose his ground. Here they come, slowly, stead ily, like a great gray wave, conscious of irresistible power. The bugle rings out sharp and shrill, they break into a quick trot, HOG sabers leap Into the air and the stars and bars stream out on the smoky background like a porten tous meteor. On they come; 800 yards, 700, 000! Gads, has our battery gone silent? Five hundred, 400! Charge! Every spur sinks deep, the 'rebel yell' rises from every throat, and the col umn leaps forward like a thunderbolt, into the face of which crashes the canister from our four 0 pounders. Great ragged holes are torn through the four deep column, but they close instantly, and it comes on unchecked. "Now it is our turn! We are in front of the battery, in the pathway of the avalanche. We pour a volley into it at eighty yards! A hundred brave men reel out of their saddles, a hundred horses go plunging to their knees! The line wavers! Another volley and an other! The lino breaks and suddenly retreats, while we swing our caps and cheer and hug each other for joy. And that was war!"— St. Louis Globe-Demo crat. FROM PRIVATE TO GENERAL Brilliant Records of Two Surviving Comrades of Maine ISenrlmentH. Several papers in speaking of the seventy-sixth birthday of General Frank G. Nickerson of Cambridge, Mass., have said that he was the only man now living in New England to enter the army as a private in the civil war and come out as a brigadier gen eral. Augusta ly£ no intention of al lowing such a misstatement to circu late uncorrected, for one of our most distinguished citizens, ex-Governor Sei dell Connor, can be credited with that same splendid record. He enlisted in April, 1861, as a pri vate in the ranks, saw the hardest kind of active service, as his two crutches eloquently testify, and after winning rapid promotion by his gal lantry in battle was commissioned a brigadier general by President Lincoln in June, 1804, and it was as a brigadier general that he was later mustered out. Whether there are others now living in New England who rose from private to brigadier general we do not know, but certainly the name of General Con nor is with that of General Nickerson on this roll of honor, which for the whole country must be very short. General Nickerson, by the way, is also a Maine man, a native of Swan vllle, in Waldo county, and he enlisted as a private in the Fourth Maine. He was later colonel of the Fourteenth Maine and became a brigadier general in November, 1802. Ills father was in the war of 1812 and his grandfather an officer in the. Revolution. In recent years he has been a resident of Massa chusetts.—Kennebec Journal. Soldier MnonH nt Fort Monroe. Prominent among the two year regi ments from the Empire State was the Tenth, or National zouaves, raised in New York city. A working lodge of Master Masons was organized within this regiment. The meetings or com munications were held in a casemate at Fort Monroe and were attended by many brethren from neighboring camps. The lodge entered, passed and raised thirty-four members. Not infre quently gray clad soldiers of the south ern army, prisoners within the lines, found their way there and sat in lodge with their more fortunate brethren.— Washington Post. Twin riuhtintt Itetri incntN. ThoEighty-third Pennsylvanlaand the Forty-fourth New York were regarded as twin regiments. Roth served in Rutterfleld's brigade, Morell's division of the Fifth corps. General McClellnn once publicly pronounced the Eighty third "one of the very best regiments in the army." It encountered more fighting and lost more men in battle than any other Pennsylvania regiment, but none of its losses was due to blunders or disastrous routs. WOMAN AND FASHION lints For Small Girl*. Big picture huts for small girls are all the vogue for spring and summer wear. They come in soft white chip with billowy frills of mousseline de soie facing and outlining the wide brim and with the crown entirely hid den with flowers such as roses a%d forgetmenots. And they also are seen \\ PRILLS AND FLOWERS. with higli crowns of the very new wicker straw and the brim a mass of soft chiffon frills with tuffota ribbon for strings and a big, full bow at the back. Little girls of fashion will also wear white mull hats with Tarn O'Shanter crowns and the brim made of frills of flue swiss embroidery. Many ribbons will trim the summer hats for children, the soft ribbons in omber ef fects being most used arranged iu bows and tied in loose knots and loops. Illne SEME IN Fanhionable. Blue serge, that most faithful of ma terials, is to be fashionable again this season and is not only to be found in the big department shops made up in the inexpensive costumes, but at the more exclusive private establishments where high prices are asked. There is blue serge and blue serge, and conse quently there is a wide runge of choice in the different weaves of the material as well as in the different styles. The rough welt or cord is very smart, but looks almost too heavy for summer wear. However, it is being made up into yachting costumes and into the short walking gowns that are so fash ionable for the moment. The closer weaves with cheviot or camel's hair finish are made into the more elaborate costumes, witli strap pings of clotli bands of taffeta or moire ribbon or with quite elaborate braiding. Short and most fanciful jack ets or blouses and Norfolk jackets are the favorite styles for this sort of gown, the long tailor coat on the more severe order being thought quite inap propriate, and yet there are some few blue serge gowns of this sort of serge made with the three-quarter coat, half fitting, and the short skirt and not one particle of trimming. Dainty Itibbon Work. The latest ribbon work, that con structed from omber ribbon (very nar row, very fine work and very nmch in relief) Is an entrancing subject for con sideration. The delicious fat double flowers that can be formed of this baby ribbon are simply "ducky and twee!" Again, you get the pink tipped double daisy and the little Noisette roses, to say nothing of the "snowball," the double May, pink und white, the double cherry blossom, the marigold, the "redliot poker" and many others; also the flowers formed of ribbon work, but not applique, just "dangles," are so nice. Everything In Keeping. Attractive as miladi's suit may be, she must set? to it that her hat, her gloves, her parasol and her footwear are all in keeping. On her feet she will wear either black openwork lace hose with patent leather shoos or else white silk hose with white kid or can vas ties. The ordinary black shoe will soil the edge of the skirt and for tills reason is never worn. On her hands white silk gloves or lace mitts are the proper thing. Par IN Up to Date. Tan pongee gown; embroidered but tons; embroidered squures in skirt- Brooklyn Eagle. HUSTLING FOR CERTIFICATES Continued from First Page, number must become idle ioafer9. The Tribune would suggest to the local school boards that a canvas of the borough and surrounding towns be made and the information secured as to whether a sufficient number of these boys will attend school If provision be made for them, and that schools for work ing boys, who are thrown out of em ployment, be opened. ROUND THE REGION.', Squire Donohue, of Wilkesbarre, who won a national reputation by thrashing wife-beaters who are called before him, was placed in the city lockup this morn ing, charged with assaulting his wife. When the officers called to arrest him he was found in bed and refused to arise and dress. The police then hustl ed him off to jail in a nude state. Thomas McDonald, of Plymouth, was attacked by a fit of hiccoughing. This was followed by sudden pain In his right side. A physician found that two of the man's ribs had been fractured by the violent wrenching of the body caused by hiccoughing. A colored theatrical company of thirty live persons which plays at Pottsville tomorrow night, arrived there yesterday, but the members had to leave last night for neighboring towns, being unable to get either hotel or boarding house ac commodations in Pottsville. Scranton's new city administration made a radical departure yesterday by closing peanut stands, caudy stores, butcher shops, bakeries, ice cream stands, dry goods, grocery and furnish ing stores in which business has been done on Sundays. Plymouth township board of commis sioners broke a deadlock of two years Saturday night, when E. W. Morgan was elected secretary, John 11. Williams, attorney, and William Bowe, supervisor. The X-Itays. Recent experiments, by practical tests and examination with the aid of the X- Kays, establish It as a fact that Catarrh of the Stomach is not a disease of itself, but that it results from repeated attacks of Indigestion. "How Can I Cure My Indigestion?" Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is curing thousands. It will cure you of indigestion and dyspepsia, and prevent or cure Catarrh of the Stomach. Kodo! digests what you eat—makes the stom ach sweet. Sold by Grover's City drug store. Mountain Park Decoration Day. The New Jersey Central will run an excursion to Mountain Park on Decora tion Day by special train. Round trip: Adults, 75c, children, 50c; from Scranton. Mountain Park has been put In ex cellent condition, and there will bo good music for dancing—while the restaurant will be conducted by a well-known cat erer. Bowling, concerts, and a general good time. Special trains from Scran ton at 8.30 a. in. From a Cat Scratch on the arm, to the worst sort of a hum, sore or boil, DeWiu's Witch Hazel Salve is a quick cure. In buying Witch Hazel Salve, be particular to get DeWltt's— this is the salve that heals without leav ing a scar. A speciiic for blind, bleed ing. itching, and protruding piles. Sold by Grover's City drug store. A French doctor lias invented a harm less bullet, which ought to be very useful to French duelists. It is made of a chalky compound, and when it strikes a person it merely marks the spot without doing the least mischief. With a mask over the face men can practice revolver shooting at each oth er just as they now practice fencing. The Clydesdale horse should walk at a swinging pace of not less than four miles an hour, and if lie wants to trot he should move straight and close, with the points of the hocks turned in ward rather than outward. lie should not be wide between the thighs, nor iliould Ills fore legs lie planted on the outside of ids shoulders, causing him to walk like a bulldog. A strange spindly plant with nodding little flowers was sent from the City of Mexico to the Madrid botanical garden in 1784 and, being new to the bot anists, was named dahlia, after Dahl, a Swedish botanist. Florists soon no ticed the great possibility of variation hi the flower in color and size, but it was rare in Europe until Humboldt brought from Mexico a quantity of the seed. In view of the important effect of the heat imparted by the sun's rays on all life, Professor Langlcy of the ad visory board of the Carnegie institu tion advocates the establishment of two laboratories close to the equator, at the greatest possible difference of altitude and yet within sight of each other, so that, under like atmospheric and other conditions, simultaneous ob servations could be taken and the vari ation produced by difference of altitude accurately recorded. .Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Condy 0. Boyle, dealer in LIQUOR, WINE, BEER, PORTER, ETC The llnoßt brands of Domestic and Imported Whiskey on sale. Fresh Freehold Beer, Purler a* d Ale on tap. WH Centre street. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. (V'f/ on ever y Seven Million boxes sold in post 12 months. This Signature, /• I>OX. 25c. POST OFFICE CLERK'S STORY. How He Wan Enabled to Take Out a Life Insurance Policy. Mr. Fred B. EvHeth, Jr., general de livery clerk In the Lewiston, Me., post office, say 9: "For over twelve years I was unable to obtain a life insurance policy, but I have successfully passed two medical examinations for policies, since Father John's Medicine cured rae of a catarrhal trouble of twelve years' standing, and restored me to health and strength, after I was thought to be In consumption as the result of an attack of grip a year ago which left mo in a badly weakened condition. I have In creased thirty pounds in weight, and It gives me great pleasure to add my testimonial to the many in favor of your grand medicine." Remember, not a patent medicine, no alcohol or other weakening stimulants. Guaranteed to cure consumption and all throat and lung troubles, or the money is refunded. Fifty years in use. Father John's Medicine Cures Colds and All Throat and Lung Troubles. Prevents Pneumonia. For sale by M. E. Grover. Druggist. PLEASURE. May 29 —Annual ball of Balaklava Social Club at Kreil's hall. Admission, 50 cents. May 29 —Annual ball of Fearnots Athletic Association at Cross Creek hall, Drifton. Admission, 35 cents. May 30. —Picnic and Held day exer cises under the auspices of Tigers Athletic Club at the Public park. Juno 13—Dance under th auspices of St. Anthony's Italian and Tirolese Cath olic chapel, at Kreil's hall. Admission, 25 cents. The Wa*teM of the Body. Every seven days the blood, muscles and bones of a man of average size lose two pounds of wnrnout tissue. This waste cannot be replenished and the health and strength kept up with out perfect digestion. When the stom ach and digestive organs fail to perform their functions, the strength lets down, health gives way, arid disease sets up. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure enables the stom ach and digestive organs to digest und assimilate all of the whole some food that may be eaten into the kind of blood that rebuilds the tissues and protects the health and strength of the mind and body. Kodol cures Indiges tion, Dvspepsia and al-l stomach trou bles. It is an ideal spring tonic. Sold by Grover's City drug store. Fair at Laurytown Alinahouae. A fair will be held at the Laurytown almshouse on the afternoon of four Thurdays in June, namely the 4th, 11th. 18th and 25th, for the benefit of two of the inmates of the institution, Andrew O Donnell and Patrick McCole. It is hoped that a sufiicentsum may be raised, by the proceeds of the sale of fancy articles, to purchase artificial limbs for those men, who have been so unfortunate as to lose each of them a leg A Little Early Kltier now and then, at bedtime will cure constipation biliousness and liver troubles. DoWltt's Little Early Risers are the famous little pills that cure by arousing the secretions, moving the bowels geptly, yet effectually, and giv ing such tone and strength to the glands of the stomach and liver that the cans of the trouble is removed entirely, ami If their uso is continued for a few davs. there will bo no return of the complaint Sld by Grover's Clrv drug *tore. Granil .Decoratlon Day Excursion To Niagara Falls via Lehigh Vallex Railroad. $9.00 for the round trip tickets sold good on any train. May 29. good for return until May 31, inclusive Inquire of ticket agents for further particulars Beautiful hammocks at Birkbeck's. Do You Enjoy What You Eat? You can eat whatever and whenever you like if you take Kodol. By the use of this remedy disordered digestion and diseased stomachs are so completely restored to health, and the full performance of their functions naturally, that such foods as would tie one into a doub!e-bow-knot are eaten without even a "rumbling" and with a posi tive pleasure and enjoyment. And what is more these foods are assimilated and transformed into the kind of nutriment that is appropriated by the blood and tissues. Kodol is the only digestant or combination of digestants that will digest all classes of food, in addition to this fact, it contains, in assimilative form, the greatest known tonic and reconstructive properties. Kodol cures indigestion, dyspepsia and all disorders arising therefrom. Kodol Digests What You Eat s Makes the Stomach Sweet. Bottles only. Refiular size. $ 1.00. holding 2 I A times the trial size, which sells for 50 cents. Prepared by E. O. DeWITT & CO., Chicago, 111. Grover's City Drue Stop. MORPHINE Opium, Laudanum, Cocaine and all Drug Habits permanently cured, without pain or detention from business, leaving no craving for drugs or other stimulants. We restore the nervous and physical systems to their natural condition because we remove the causes of disease. A home remedy prepared by an eminent physician. WE GUARANTEE A CURE FREE TRIAL TREATMENT Confidential correspondence, especially with physicians, solicited. Write today. Manhattan Therapeutic Association Oopt. A 1136 Broadway, New York City RAILROAD TIMETABLES LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD!" May 17, 1903. ARRANGEMENT OF PABBENGER TRAINS. LEAVE FREELAND. 0 12am for Jeddo, Lumber Yard, Weathor ly, Mauch Chunk, Allenfcowu, Bethle hem, Easton. Philadelphia, New York, Bullalo und the West. 8 15 a m for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton Phila delphia, New York, Hazleton, Delano, Mahano) City, Shenandoah, Mt. Carmel, Buffalo and tne West. 9 12 am for Sandy Run. > 1 1 45 a m for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al lentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Phila delphia, New York, Hazleton, Delano, Muhanny City, Shenandoah, Mt. Car mel, Bulf-ilo and the West. 5 45 p in for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al lentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Philadel phia, New York, Hazleton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah,Mt.Carmel, Bulfalo and the West. ARRIVE AT FREELAND. 7 20 am from Hu/leton and Lumber Yard. 9 12am from New York, Philadelphia, Eas ton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Weatherly, Hazleton. Mahanoy City, Shenandoah and Mt. Carmel 1 00 P m from New Fork, Philadelphia, Easton. Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauob Chunk Weatherly. Hazleton, Delano, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah and Mt. Carmel. 0 33 P m from New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Weatherly, Mt. Carmel, Shenan doah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazle ton. * For further information c insult Tiokel Agents. THE DELAWARE, SOSCIBEHANNA AND SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect May 19, 1901. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, Hazlr Brook, Stockton, Beaver 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 Dritton for Harwood, Cranberry, Tomhicken and Deringer at 600 a m, daily except Sunday; and 707 a m, 238 p m, Sun brains leave Drifton for Oneida Junction. Harwood Road, Humboldt Road, Oueida and Sheppton at 000 am, daily except Sun day; and 7 07 a m, 2 38 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Harwood, Cranberry, Tomhicken and Deringer at 636 a m, daily exoept Sunday; and 63 a m, 4 22 p in. Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood Road, Humboldt Road, Oneida and sheppton at 6 32, 11 10 a m, 4 41 p m, daily exoept Sunday; and 737 a m, 311 pm Sunday. , Trains leave Deringer for Tomhicken, Cran berry, liaiwood, Hazleton Junction and Roan at 500 p in, daily except Sunday; and 33' a m, r 07 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt Road, Harwood Road, Oneida Junction, Hazle ton Junction and Roan at 7 11 am. 12 40, 628 p m, daily except Sunday; and 8 11 a m, 344 P m, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Mcadov Road, Stockton. Razle Brook. Eckley, Jedd< and Drifton at 6 20 p m, daily, except Sunday. -*■ and 8 11 a m, 3 14 p m. Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Reaver Meadow Road, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 548 p m, daily, except Sunday ; and 10 10 a m, 6 40 p m, Sunday. Train leaving Drifton at 600 a m tiiukes connection at Deringor with P. K. R. trains for ">* iifc os bar re. Sunbury, Uarrisburg and point* west. All trains connect pt Hazleton Junction with electric cars for Hazleton. Jeauesville, Audcn ried and other points on the Traction Com pany's 'bin. LUTHER r. SMITH. Superintendent. WILK ESRARRE AND HAZLETON RAILROAD. May is. 1003 Cars leave and arrive at corner of Broad und Wyoming Streets. Ha'leton. as follows: ForWiikesbarroand intermediate points,6oo, 8 Of), 10 00 u in, 12 05, 2 00, 4 00. 6 oi, 800 p m. daily, including Sunday. Arrive at Ashley Junction at 7 00. 8 05, 11 00 a in, 1 00, 3 00, 60 , 7 00 and 10 00 p m. At Ashley Junction pHssengers will be transferred to the cars of the Wilkesbarre and Wyoming Valley Traction Company for Wilkesharie, their cars passing that point every fifteen minutes. The run from Ashley Junction to Wilkes barre via the Wilkesbarre and Wyoming Val ley Traction Company, to Court House Squuru, J Consumes about twenty minutes. M Returning from Wilkesbarre, leave Ashley J unction for Hazleton and intermedinte points 7 JO. 8 50, 1150 a in. 150. 3 60, 5 60, 750 and 10 60 pm. daily, including Sunday. Arrive at Hazleton at 8 26, 10 55 a m, 12 56, 2 55, 4 55, 6 55, 8 65 and 1' 55 p in. For t he information of travelers, to connect with the cars of this company at Ashley Junc tion, pHSScgers should leave Wilkesbarre (Court House Square) at 7 00, 0 30, 11 30 a m, 1 30, 3 30, 5 30, 7 3i and 10 0 p m. By applying to this office special arrange ments tor parties muy be made to hold tho last car fr-au Ashley Junction. 1,000 mileage tickets for sale at this office, and trip and cxcuison tickets can be pur chased from conductors on cars. Excursion rule, tickets good until used, Hiizieton to Ashley Junction, $1.40. One WHJ\ tickets good until used, 85p. aLVAN MARK LK, General M linger. (J. W. TH MPSON, Superintendent. A. F. H ARC Elf, General Passenger Agent. I EH Kill TRACTION COMPANY. Is Freeland Schedule. First ear leaves Hazleton for Freeland at 5 In a m, then on the even and half hour thereafter. First ear Sundays at 600a m. First ear leaves Freeland for Hazleton at "•45 a m, then on the 15 and 45 minutes after ihe hour thereafter. First car Sundays at 645 Last car leaves Hazleton for Freeland at 11 oo pm. Last car Siuurdavs at 11 30 p in. Lust ear leaves Freeland for Hazleton at C II 15 p in. Last car Saturdays tif 11 45 p in. Cars leaving Hazleton at 6on am connect w th I). S. & S. Railroad trains at Hazleton Junction for Harwood, Tante rry. Turn hie ken and Derringer daily except Sunday, and 830 a in and 4 00 p m Sunduy. Cars leave Hazleton for Humboldt road Oneida and Sheppton at 6 00 and 10 30 a m and 4 00 p in dally, and 7 00 and 3 00 p m Sundays. Cars leave HuzleUm for Beaver Meadow road. Stockton, Hazto Brook, Eckley. Jeddo und Drifton at 5 30 p in daily and 9 30 a in und 5 30 p m Sunday A. MARKLE, General Manager. CENTRAL RAILROAD OF NEW , JERSEY. November 16. 19<>2 Stations in New York: Foot of Liberty Street, North River, and South Ferry. TWAINS LEAVK tIPPKII I.Kit IGII. For New York, at 8 15 a m. For Philadelphia, a T 8 15 u m. For White Haven, lit 8 15 a ui and 0 05 p m. For Wilkes-Burre, Pittston und Scratitou. at 8 15 u m. For Mauch Chunk, Cutasuiiqua and Allen- v town, at 8 15 a in. Through tickets to all points at. lowest rates may tie had on application in advance to the ticket agent at. the station. C. M. BURT, Gen. Pass. Agent. v W. G. Resler, General Manager. dne Minute Cough Cure for Coughs, Colds and Croup,
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