Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, June 19, 1903, Image 4

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    FREELAND TRIBUNE.
Eitablishtl 1888.
1). S. BUCKLEY, MANAGING EDITOR.
PUBLISHED EVERY
MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY.
BY THE
TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited.
D. S. Buckley, President.
P. B. McTiglie, Secretary.
Thos. A. Buckley, Treasurer.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
FREELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by
carriers to subscribers in Freeland at the rate
of 12* cents a month, payable every two
months, or $1.59 a year, payable in advance.
The TRIBUNE may bo ordered direct l'rom the
carriers or from the office. Complaints of
irregular or tardy delivery service will receive
prompt attention.
BY MAIL.—The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of
towu subscribers for $1.50 a year, payable in
advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods.
The date when the subscription expires is on
the uddress label of each paper. Prompt re
newals must be made at the expiration, other
wise tho subscription will be discontinued.
Entered at the Postofflce at Freeland, Pa.,
as Second-Class Matter.
Af (ike all money orders, checks, etc., payable to
the Tribune Printing Company, Limited.
FREELAND, PA., JUNE 19, 1903.
<{<OISII QN(| BEP
Commencement Program.
Below will bo found the program for
commencement week at East Strouds
burg normal school, where several
young people of this section are study
ing:
Saturday, June 20 —9 a. m.—Annual
picnic given seniors by Normal trusses,
probably up the Delaware.
Sunday, June 21 —8 p. in.—Baccalau
reate sermon to graduating class by
Prof. E. It. Kemp, A. M., principal.
Monday, June 22—8 p. in.—Music re
cital by pupils of the music department.
Tuesday, Juno 23—2 p. m.—Class day
exercises by senior class in Normal
chapel. Music by Oppenheiin's orches
tra, of YVllkesbarro.
Tuesday, June 23—7 p. in.—Concert
by Normal Choral Society, assisted by
Miss Rebecca MacKenzle, soprano, of
New York, and Oppenheiin's orchestra.
Tuesday. June 23 —9.30 p. ra.—Alumni
reunion In Normal gymnasium.
Tuesday, June 23—11 p. in.—Alumni
banquet in Normal dining room. Op
penheim orchestra.
Wednesday, Juno 24—9 a. m.—Com
mencement exercises In Normal chapel.
Address by Hon. Horace Iloydt, of Le
hlgbton. Dedication of new recitation
hall, music by Miss MacKenzle and
Oppenheim orchestra.
Threat Carried Out.
Preston colliery at Girardville, is now
only a memory. The machinery was
removed some week ago and the razing
of the building Is now in progress. The
abandonment of this colliery is an effect
of the 1902 strike. The mine was Hood
ed and a young man fell into it and was
drowned. For a while during the strike
the pumps wero kept going to recover
the body, tho Reading Company spend
ing 8100,000 on the work, and the mine
was just about dry when the engineers
and pumpmen quit. It rapidly filled
again and the company's threat to
abandon it has been carried out.
Do Yon Knjoy What You Rat?
If you don't your food does not do
you any good. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Is
tho remedy that every one should take
when there is any thing wrong with tho
stomach. There is no way to maintain
the health and strength of mind and
body oxeept the nourishment. There is
no way to nourish except through the
stomach. The stomach must be kept
healthy, pure and sweet or the strength
will let down and disease will set up.
No appetite, losses of strength, nervous
ness, headache, constipation, bad
breath, sour risings, rifting, indigestion,
dyspepsia and all stomach troubles are
quickly cured by tho use of Kodol Dy
spepsia Cure. Sold by Orover's City
City drug store.
Deptn in l'limriiiK.
At the Michigan station tests wore
inude by planting seeds of wlient, oats,
flax, corn, barley, clover, peas and
buckwheat at different depths ranging
from half an inch to a foot. The high
est percentage of germination for
wheat, flax, corn and clover was at a
depth of an inch; for oats, two inches;
for peas, four Inches; for barley, half
an inch, and for wheat, two inches.
Clover entirely failed when the depth
was greater than two inches. Some
plants of oats, corn and peas appeared
above ground when the depth of plant
ing was eight inches or more.
Alfulfit In TV inn.
The success of alfalfa in Texas is
easily measured by attention given to
it in the general press. It is growing
to be quite popular with the politico-
Hemiagricultural newspapers of Texas.
These have "caught on." Trust the
wily city editor with a nose for politics
to Indorse what the people have in
dorsed. Some newspapers prefer to
ride the alfalfa colt when broken rath
er than to leud a hand in the breaking.
So also of other issues. Yes, alfalfa,
farmers' Institutes, hogs and dairying
are now popular issues among the peo
ple.—Farm and Ranch.
Setting Strawberry riant*.
The soouer you set your struwberry
plants tho better and the sooner you
cultivate them, after they are set the
better, for more reasons than one.
Weeds and the small fruits are iucom
patlbles.
j THE WINDOW |
f PICTURE
•' By ELIZA ARCHARD CONNER. |
4 Copyright, 1903, lot Eliza Archarxl Conner £
THE managing editor gave me this
photograph and said to me:
"Miss Daggetty, write some
thing around that picture. Fake
up something. I don't much care
what."
My name is not Daggetty, though the
managing editor calls me that. It is
Emily Dalgetty, which is a pretty
name, but I never hear it here. The
oilice boy calls me "Dag" behind my
back. I heard him one day. So does
the religious editor, a young snip who
is killing himself with cigarettes.
I can't think of anything to write
around that horrid old picture yet, so
I just lot my typewriting machine rest
and take a pencil and scribble by hand
any nonsense that conies into my head.
That is a good way to tap the tlow and
get started, I find, and that's why I let
myself write this foolishness. I wish I
could get hold of a beginning about
that photograph. It's merely a snap
shot of a gone to pieces old man with a
long beard and a bald head. lie leans,
with folded anus, upon the window sill
of a log cabin which has the window
taken out, if there ever was any in.
Oh, you old image! Why can't I get
started on you? But no! All I can
think of this morning is Ned Ball. I've
not thought of much else for ten years,
I believe, and I'm twenty-five now. I
can't remember when we were not
sweethearts. Ned and I. I can hardly
remember when we were not engaged.
"I'll have time this afternoon to fin
ish off that old ogre for the Sunday
paper. I can't finish him at all, I can't
begin hiui, unless something comes in
to my head about him. I shall just
write one of Ned and me till I tap the
supply. I wonder where it is, anyhow,
that it won't come when you call for
It?
Ned, dear, I think I will write this
just as though I were going to send it
to you for a letter, though 1 know your
eyes will never see it. I wouldn't dare
let you know how I long for the sight
of your face, even pale and withered
with pain as it is. for the touch of your
hand, even though you could not rise
from your couch to meet me. Forty
prying, vulgar eyes would be upon us,
too, there i that ward of the charity
hospital where you have lain six years,
despair eating your heart hollow. To
this day I cannot make it seem real,
dearest, you with your shining yellow
hair and pink cheeks and broad shoul
ders, the strongest, strulghtest, quick
est, handsomest fellow in the univer
sity, the captain of the football team.
We thought we should meet in a year
when you went away. I was going to
Prim college, so it would not seem so
long. But father died In a week after
you went, and I had to work for my
living. I did not mind the work,
though, Ned. I was glad of away to
put in the time and keep from grieving
for father and from wishing for you so
constantly. I know it would only last
till I married you, and then I should
have plenty to do to put In the time. I
never told you, Ned, but Tim Greeno
wunted me to marry him. You re
member him—a sawed off, chuffy little
fellow, with bad teeth. I laughed in
his face. I couldn't help it. Tim
Greene to aspire to Ned Ball's sweet
heart!
And then—and then—Ned, only a few
months more, and you were struck
"OLD MAN, WIIY CAN'T YOD STAIiT MB
YOURSELF?"
down in a football game. In half a
minute the athlete of the university
became a cripple for life, the lower
part of his body paralyzed. If you had
money—oh, if 1 had money! I know
you would take it from me, dear, for
it would be like taking it from your
self. Then you could be wheeled in a
rolling chair into the air, the sunshine,
fcould have a home and me to take care
of you. But no, no again!
This demonish picture! Old man,
why can't you start me yourself? Now
I look at you I see you've only one eye,
and that glares at me as though It was
a real live orb und not merely tho
photograph's dead fish eye. Aha!
Here's something at the back of you.
What is it?
"This is a snap shot of old John Wat
kin, the hermit of Smole's mountain.
He lived thirty years in a wretched
cabin in the edge of the woods and in
all that time was never known to speak
to a woman. It was supposed an un
liappy love affair soured him in ids
youth, but nobody knows. Some said,
too, that he had money, but none was
found in the cabin or anywhere around
it, though gold hunters dug Into the
earth all about the hut. He used often
to bo seen leaning upon the window
sill, just as lie is in the photograph.
He actually died at last in that posi
tion, nnd his body was found thus one
morning, with the dew wet upon his
beard."
So he's dead, is he? Rest his soull
That's the managing editor's writing.
I wonder why he couldn't have told
me to look at the back of the photo
graph nnd get my clew from what was
written there. Now, my old Dick Dead
"JAWKIN, LET NONE OF TFIEM LOW BRED
REPORTERS IN 1"
eye, my task will be easier. Come to
think of it, I know just where your
ex-cabin is, and I've seen you yourself
leaning upon your arms across the
window sill, like the photograph pre
cisely. So you're gone! If that were
not so, I should say you ought to have
been gone long ago, because you were
so dirty and horrid looking with that
scarecrow face, old and pale and grim.
But since you really are dead I feel
sorry for you. Yet why? You did no
body any good while you were alive.
Why should you have been let stay so
long?
God forgive me! What good does
Nod Ball do anybody? Ned, it would
kill me if you were to die, even though
I know you would be out of pain, even
though I can never hope to see you
again. It's brute selfishness in me to
want to hold you here, I know; but,
dear. I think it would really kill me
to have you die. I dream of you still;
last night again. Do you know what
they are, sweetheart? Dream kisses
from lips of living loved ones whose
faces we may behold never more on
tliis earth. Oil, uiy love, my own true
love!
One thing more, partieularly as you
will never see this, and then I turn to
nij' typewriter, for I know what I'm
going to say about my old window
man now. Tim Greene got his revenge
on me for not marrying him—at least
his wife did. He married Milkman
Boss' daughter. You never knew Ka
tie Boss, but it doesn't matte*. After
Tim's father died it was found he was
much richer than was supposed. Tim
was left at least half a millionaire.
Ills native cunning did much for him,
niul luck did more to make him very
rich, and now his wife is on the ragged
edge of high life. She has to be very
careftil and exclusive.
Two weeks ago her sister ran away
and married the Greenes' milkman —a
case of heredity, I suppose. It made a
great stir. The managing editor sent
me to ascertain the state of Mrs.
Greene's feelings and do them up for
print. She bade her lackey spurn me
from the door—she, the girl who used
to carry milk to our house—although I
sent up my card with my name en
graved in plain letters. She must have
known it, but she stood at the head of
the grand staircase and shouted down,
so I would be sure to hear:
"Jnwkin, let none of them low bred
reporters in!"
I really don't think I cared much.
Who am I, indeed? I am only a poor
newspaper hack. I must be at beck
and call for any work that comes up.
I get very little money, but I probably
get as much as I'm worth. If I were
happy or had any hope. I might write
better. I could write words that would
touch the hearts of men and women,
for 1 know human life as only doctors
and newspaper people can know it.
But what's the good? My heart is just
broken, that's all.
Now, my old Dick Deadeye, bore's at
you. One more scribble to get a good
ready, then my type keys will begin to
click.
Eli, what's this? The pencil in my
fingers wrote it its own self;
"The window sill."
I never wrote this out of my head. I
swear I did not Thnt's where old
Watkin was found dead, leaning over
the window sill. It's queer. 1 suppose
that's the unconscious cerebration they
talk of. though I never knew it acted
like that It reminds me of something
more I will write to Ned in tills letter
he is never to see. I cun't do up Dick
Deadeye till I record It. It 18 a thing I
never told anybody. Five years ago
live this very month—l went to a fash
ionable lady's house to report a lecture
ou occultism. The speaker was a dark,
graceful oriental. Azra they called
him, and the women fell In love with
liiin and raved over him after their
kind. I have a contempt for women
who make fools of themselves over a
man, particularly a dark man. Azra
said we could have anything we want
ed, no matter what—anything thinka
ble, that is—lf we simply kept our
minds and wills fixed on It In steady
demand. He told us he would stake
his life and hope of the future on the
truth of this statement. Because of
the truth of It he said, we should be
very careful not to set our hearts on
anything that was wrong lest it come
back to us and bring disaster instead
of good.
Will and demand, will and demand,
persistently, Intelligently and earnestly
—that Is all. Take a certain hour of
the day when you are least disturbed.
Make a mental picture of the object
you desire, hold it In your mind stead
ily for as many minutes as you can
spare. What is more, do not think of
it as coming to you; think of It as al
ready yours. That is like what the
Bible says, "Whatsoever ye desire
when ye pray believe it is yours, and
ye shall receive it." Don't plan and
contrive how your wish is to come.
Leave that to the universal power,
said Azra. Just see it in your mind
always as yours and never give up.
Ned, I wanted money, for money
would give me everything else. It
would bring you to me or me to you.
It would cure you if there was any
way to restore power to that crippled
spine. Ned, I willed that 1 had $20,-
000, willed it with all my might. Azra
said if we wanted money to make a
mental picture of the exact amount,
like the piles of gold and paper in a
bank window, and hold fast to it. We
should imagine to see it in a green
light. That is the light belonging to
money.
Ned, I made a picture of a pile of
gold, shining engles and double eagles,
and I've held to that as mine for five
years. Azra said paper money would
do as well as gold. So it would, Ned,
for all the result my occult practice
ever brought.
I have kept at that practice, not let
ting go the thought a day. What good?
What good is anything? What good Is
life itself? How will it end?. Will it
ever end?
I throw away tills page. Now I must
imagine a biography for old Dick
Deadeye.
What's this? That strange writing
again! Ah, it is not mine. I see my
hand write, but my brnln has nothing
to do with it. Oh, am I crazy?
Under the window sill. Look under the
window sill, Emily Dalgetty. It Is loose.
Lift it up. The IOK underneath it is hol
lowed out Into a hole. A canvas bag Is
there with $20,000 In gold In It. The gold
is yours. Your mother was the woman I
loved, and your father, Archie Dalgotty,
won her away from me while I was a
soldier during the civil war. I cursed
them both and went away, but it is wrong
to curse anybody. I have found that out
Mfc 111
TUB MAN'S EYES TURNED ALWAYS TO HER
FACE.
now, and I am sorry. Curses follow those
who utter thorn. I cannot rest till I even
it up somehow.
Emily Dalgotty, this money is yours,
and it is honest money. Go you out early
tomorrow morning and bring away all
you can carry. Return again and again
secretly till you get it all. Never tell any
body you huve It or how you got It.
JOHN WATKIN.
Upon the slope of one of the foothills
of the glorious western mountains,
where the air is high niul dry and
charged with atoms of the potable gold
of the sunshine, Dr. Slicer lias bis sur
gical sanitarium. In its vicinity sonie
times/three miles away, you may often
see a young man in a rolling cbair
wheeled hither and thither by a tall,
handsome young woman, and the
young woman is his wife. Wherever
the vista is the fairest, the hillside the
sunniest, the waterfall song the sweet
est, there the invalid chair goes often
est and is left longest The young wo
man will let no one wheel it but her
self. and from sky or waterfall or
mountain the man's eyes turn always
to her face with a look of love and de
votion that is good to see.
The young man has a noble, fair
head and a face, though pale, full of
the beauty of the soul. He is a divin
ity student they say, and from ills in
valid chair preaches sermons of an elo
quence not born of ordinary experi
ence. There is hope that he may one
day walk again.
1(11FF1CM.
Startling Discovery Made by An
Australian.
Volcanoes can easily be extinguished,
says the New York Herald. A New
Zealand man claims (and there are
many who agree with him), to have
discovered a liquid by means of which
volcanoes may be extinguished quickly
whether active or threatening.
Many diseases of the human body
act in the same manner as volcanoes.
Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Kidney Dis
orders, Female Diseases and many
others all begin with a slight rumble
of pain and distress, and if not treated
in time will burst forth in all their
fury, causing all who are so afflicted
the most intense suffering and making
life a complete burden.
That a liquid has been discovered
that will extinguish these volcanic
eruptions of disease, whether active or
threatening, is not only certain but a
material fact.
DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVOR
ITE REMEDY is this liquid discovery.
THE WONDERFUL CURATIVE
powers of this famous remedy have cut
a new path through the field of medi
cine, sweeping with it a startling
record of tremendous success.
Druggists sell it in Mew BO Cent Slim
and the regular SI.OO size bottles.
Sample bottle, enough for trial,free by mail.
Dr. David Kennedy Corporation, Rondout.N. Y.
Dr. David Kennody'H Mairlr Eye Salve for all
AlaeuNCH or luflummallonß of the Eye. 85c.
PLEASURE.
Juno 20.—8a-e ball, Hazloton All-Col
-1 -gians vs. Freelund Tigers at the Tig
ers park. Admission, 15 cents.
June 22 and 23. —Annua! entertain
ment of the pupils of St. Ann's Parochial
School at the Grand opera house. Ad
mission, 15, 25 and 35 cents.
Juuu 25.—Comm< nmoment exorcises
of Freelai d High school at the Grand
opera house. Tickets. 10 and 15 cents.
July 1. —Picnic of Good Wills Social
Club at the Public park.
July 4.—Parade and picnic under the
auspices of the Citizens' Hose Company
at the Public park.
Oar Diamond Field*.
From seven diamonds, weighing
from two to twenty-one carats, that
have hoc*n picked up in Wisconsin and
adjoining states Professor William H.
Ilobbs traces the diamond fields of
North America to the volcanic region
of the Canadian wilderness south of
Hudson hay. The only known matrix
of tbv diamond is the black shale, or
"blue ground," around the necks of
burned out volcanoes. The loose stones
fount seem to have been transported
by glaciers, and on following up the
probable courses of these ancient ice
rivers the lines converge in the barren
territory stated.
Kodol Given Strength
bv enabling the digestive organs to di
gest, assimilate and transform ALL of
the wholesome food that may be eaten
into the klod of blood that nourishes
the neryes, feeds the tissues, hardens
the muscles and recuperates the organs
of the entire body. Kodol Dyspepsia
Cure cures Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Ca
tarrh of the Stomach and all stomach
disorders. Sold by drover's City drug
store.
Beautiful hammocks at Birkheck'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 double-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
Makes the Stomach Sweet.
Bottles only. Regular size. $ 1.00. holding 2J4 time®
the trial size, which sells for 50 cents.
Prepared by E. O. DeWITT & CO., Chicago, 111.
(-trover's City Drug Store,
ga—■maa—m
| STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, |
EAST STROUDSBURG, PA. JJ
-9 Regular State Normal Courses, and L
9 Special Departments of Music, Klocu- S3
9 Mon, Art, Drawing, Stenography and &
■ Typewriting; strong- College I'repara- 83
Q tory Department.
I Hoarding expenses $3 50 per week. ||
Pupils admitted at. anytime. Fall Term
opens Sept. 7th. Write for new cuta- U
E. L. KEMP, A. M , Prin. E
MgWHI*i4MSBSS!BBgBSESgBi WBJA'-HUSH ®
(We CairSefn'oiir TarE
-9 T'>- ar* Oclory. Bi.sin.sS or fisi
" " "'•■"' have"'.. I'U
liS- , I ;.r:.
'!> S , .itHM.il wlill'|.
' 'i - !•!>., L I'.iK Aml u
,!a \ ! <l. .f ii-liC" li"d prk-e anil
• ~*•. • . .. V V 1 '• ' XV
W-i 51.000.000 to Loan
'UieSw*;- on Good Mortpages.
lOfli'CS ill Bp pi imipa I citit lii.tli. Si
lences. A. A. ROTTNER i\ CO., 816
♦ Roal Fstpte Bkltr.. Phila-. Pa. Established ISQ3-
Wm. Wehrman.
W^tch:MA.K:EK
Centre street, Froelaud.
REPA|RING OP EVERY DESCRIPTION.
Host Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Us© ■
In time. Sold by druggists.
RAILROAD TIMETABLES/
LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD.^
May 17, 1903.
ARRANGEMENT or PASSENGER TRAINS.
LEAVE FHKELAND.
6 12am for Jeddo, Lumber Yard, Wcuther
ly, Munch Chum , Allentowu, Bethlo
hem, Easton, Philadelphia. New York,
Buffalo and tbe West.
8 15 a m for Woatherly, Mauch Chunk,
Allentown, Bethlehem. Eraton Phila
delphia, New York, Ha/leton, Delano,
Manano) City, Shenandoah, Mt. Carmel,
Butfalo and the West.
9 12 a m for Bandy Run. \
1 1 45 a m for Weatherly, Muuch Chunk, Al- 1
lentown, Bethlehem, Huston, Phila- "
deli>hia. New York, Hazleton, Delano,
Mahanoy City, Shenandoah, Mt. Car
mel, Buffalo and the West.
5 45 p ni for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al
lcntown, Bethlehem, Easton, Philadel
£hia, New York, Hazleton, Delano,
ahanoy City, Shenandoah,Mt. Carme 1,
Bulfulo and tbe West.
AKKIVE AT FREELAND,
7 20 am from Ha7leton and Lumber Yard.
9 12am from New York, Philadelphia, Eas
ton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch
Chunk. Weatherly, Hazleton, Mahanoy
Gity, Shenandoah and Mt. Carmel
I 00 P in from New York, Philadelphia,
Easton. Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch
Chunk Weatherly, Hazleton, Delano,
Mahanoy City, Shenandoah and Mt.
Carmel.
6 33 p iu from New York, Philadelphia.
Easton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Maucb
Chunk, Weatherly, Mt. Carmel, Shenan
doah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazle
ton. *
For further information c insult Tioket
Agents.
THE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND
SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. JF
Time table In effect May 10, 1001. \
Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, Hazle
Brook, Stoektou, Beaver Meadow Koad, Roan
and Hazleton Junction at 600 a m, dally
except Sunday; and 7 07 a m, 2 38 p ni, Sunday.
Trains loave Drifton for Harwood, Cranberry,
Toinhicken and Deringer at 800 a in, daily
except Sunday; and 707 a ra, 238 p m, Sun
day.
Trains leave Drifton for Oneida Junotlon,
Harwood Road, Humboldt Read, Oneida and
Sheppton at 800 a ra, 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 835 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 a m, 4 41 p m,
daily except Sunday; and 737 a m, 311 pm.
Sunday.
Trains leave Deringer for Tomhicken, Cran
berry, Haiwood, Ha/leton Junction and Roan
at 600 p m, daily except Sunday; and 337
a m, 5 07 p ra, Sunday.
Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt
Road, Harwood Road, OneidA Junction, Hazle
ton Junction and Roan at 711 am, 12 40, 528
p m, daily except Sunday; and 8 11 a m, 3 14
p ni, Sunday.
Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow
Road, Stockton, Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo J
and Drifton at 5 20 p in. daily, except Sunday; \
and 8 11 a m, 3 44 p ru. Sunday. f
Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Beaver
Meadow Road, Stockton, Hazle P.rook, Eckley,
Jeddo and Drifton ut 548 p m, daily,
except Sunday; and 10 10 a in, 5 pm, Sunday.
Train leaving Drifton at 800 a m makes
connection at Deringer with P. K. R. trains for
Wilkecbarre. Sunbury, Harrisburg and point*
west.
All trains connect at Hazleton Junction with
electric cars for Huzleton, .leanesville, Auden
ricd and other points on the Traction Com
pany's line.
LUTHER (\ SMITH, Superintendent.
WILKESHARRE AND HAZLETON
RAILROAD. June (i. MK)3
Cars leave and arrive at corner of Broad
and Wyoming Streets. Hu-'let on. as follows:
For Wilkcsbarre and intermediate points,
weekdavs, lIUo ain and every hour thereafter
until and including 705 and 005 pm. Sun
days. 8 05 a in and every hour thereafter until
and includingo 05 p in.
Cars leave at same time also for Conyngliam
Pass, ruins, Bcisels, St. Johns, Nescopcck
Buss, Albert and Nuiuuigola.
Cars leave Wilkesburre (Public Square) for
lla/.leiou at 7, 8 30a in, and every hour there
after until 10 30 p in.
Iv applying to this office special arrange- .
incuts may lie made for parties to hold the 1
last car.
Baggage will only be forwurdoi on week- V
days on trains leaving Huzleton at 805, 805,
10 05 a in. 12 05. 2 05. 4 05and 8 05 p in.
Baggage received oil Sunday will not be for
warded until the first train Monday morning.
1,000 mileage tickets lor sale ut'this ollice,
and trip and excursion rickets can be pur
chased from conductors on curs.
Excursion rate, tickets good until used,
lla/.leton to Ashley Junction, fri.4o. Due way,
tickets good until used, 85c.
ALVAN MA HK LH, General Manager.
(). W. THnMPBON, Superintendent.
A. F. II ARCEit, General Passenger Agent.
LE11 It 1 11 TRACTION COM DAN Y.
Freeland Schedule.
First ear leaves Hazleton for Freeland at
515 a m, then oil the oven and half hour
thereafter. First ear Sundays ut 000 a ni.
First car leaves Freeland for Huzleton at
545 a m, then on the 15 and 45 minutes after
the hour thereafter. First ear Sunduys at 845
Last, car leaves Hazleton for Freeland at
11 <m pm. Lust car Saturdays at 11 30 p ni.
Last car leaves Freeland for Hazleton ut
II 15 p ra. Last cur Saturdays at 11 45 p in.
Cars leaving Ha/.l' ton at 800 a in connect
wth I). S. & s. Railroad trains at Hazleton
Junction for Harwood, ('ranta rry. Tom hicken
and Derringer daily except Sunday, and 830
a m and 4 (X) p in Sunday.
Cars leave Huzleton for Humboldt rood 'VJ
< Miopia and Sheppton at 800 and 10 30 a m and 1
4 00 p m daily, and 7 00 and 3 00 p m Sundays. *
Cars leave Hazleton for Beaver Meadow
road. Stockton, Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo
and Drifton at 5 30 p m dully, and 0 30 a m and
5 30 p in Sunday
A. NIAKKLE, General Manugor.
CENTRAL RAILROAD OF NEW
JERSEY November 16. 10(12.
Stations In New York: Foot, of Liberty
Street. North River, and South Kerry.
THAINB LEAVE UPPER LEHIGH.
For New York, at 8 15 a m.
For Philadelphia, at 8 jf a m.
For White I-iaven, at 8 15 a m and 8 06 p m.
For Wilkes-Barre, I'ittston and Ueranton, at
For Mauch Chunk, Catasauquu and Allen
town. at 8 15 a m.
Through tickets to all points at lowest rates
may be had on application in advance to the
ticket agent at the station.
C. M. BURT, Gen. Pass. Agent.
W. G. Healer, General Manager.
Anyone sen ling a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain oar opinion free whether an
Invention is probably patentable. Communion.
Hons strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
sent. free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Muim & Co. receive
tpecUil notice, without charge, lathe
Scientific American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest ctr-v
eolation of any sclent Itlc Journal. Terms, $3 n
year: mont lis, fl. Bold by all newsdealers.
MUNN & Co. 3Blßroad,ra '-New York
Branch Office, 025 F 8t„ Washington, D. C.
An Advertisement
In tills position .Is not very con- jw
splcuous, still It attracts the rend- ]
er's attention and proves that ads
in nil parts of this paper are read.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.