The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, May 12, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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    WASHINGTON.
Prom our Regular Correspondent.
WASHINGTON, May 6, 1898.
Mr. McKinley's fighting blood
has been aroused by the great vic
tory won by our Asiatic squadron
under Commodore Dewey. Il would
have been strange, indeed, if it had
not been, for nothing more daring
in the annals of naval warfare has
been recorded than Dewey's action
in taking his ships into an enemy's
harbor, supposed to be heavily
mined, for the purpose of attacking
a fleet nearly his equal in strength,
which was supported by heavy land
batteries, and succeeding in destroy
ing the Spanish fleet, silencing the
batteries and planting the American
flag 011 the Phillipine Islands. It
was an achievement worthy of the
American navy, and one that every
American commodore is anxious to
try to duplicate. They are appar
ently going to be given opportuni
ties, too. 111 fact, the orders have
been issued that will give the rest
of our navy an opportunity to share
in avenging the Maine by doing
some fighting. Parto Rico is to be
taken. Our soldiers also are to be
allowed to do some fighting. The
air of hesitation, which was so ag
gravating, has entirely disappeared,
and everything is now apparently
bent 011 fighting. Admiral Dewey's
official report has been received,'and
he can possibly be prouder of it than
is every American who reads it.
Millions of Americans yet unborn
will thrill with pride and patriotism
when they read of the victory won
by the daring and gallant Dewey,
who will be made an admiral and
who will receive a vote of thanks
from Congress.
Congress has authorized the en
listment of 10,000 yellow fever im
munes, in the south, for service in
Cuba, in addition to the 125,000
volunteers.
It is always more or less danger
ous to interrupt Representative
Champ Clark when he is making a
speech, but Representative Lacey,
of lowa, had to get squelched before
he would believe it. Mr. Clark
was making a vigorous talk against
the six democrats who voted for the
republican war revenue bill, which
authorizes an addition of $600,000-
000 to the country's interest bearing
debt, and incidentally against the
democratic party being held respon
sible for the acts of the Cleveland
administrations, which he declared
were democratic only in name, when
he said there were only two worse
names in history than that of Grover
Cleveland—the names of Judas Is
cariot and Benedict Arnold. Just
then he was interrupted by Mr.
Lacey, who asked if Judas Icariot
was not the original silver man.
Mr. Clark turned upon him and re
torted : "The first silver speech
ever made in the American Con
gress was by William B. Allison,
whom you all worship. Now, some
of tlip rest of you ask me questions."
The challenge was not taken up. 111
the same speech Mr. Clark ridiculed
the claim of some of the republicans
that they were responsible for the
war with Spain, and addressing the
republican side he said : "We took
you by the scruff of the neck and
dragged you into it. It's our war."
Mr. Clark closed with a glowing
and patriotic reference te the brilli
ant achievement of Commodore
Dewey in Manila harbor.
The administration is'not allow
ing the war to cause it to forget the
need the republicans have for help
in the Congressional campaign.
"Hie patronage of the Government
> inting Office is to be turned over
to the republican candidates for
Congress, by an order declaring
that establishment never to have
been legally under the civil service
rules. It will be remembered that
an opinion declaring that the plac
ing of the G. P. O. under civil ser
vice rules was illegal was prepared
by an official of the Department of
Justice last year, but was never
adopted by Attorney General Mc-
Keena as his own was never made
public. Attorney General Griggs,
doubtless under pressure from the
Republican Congressional Commit
tee, has agreed to the promulgation
of that opinion as his own, and
democrats in the G. P. O. who are
wise are on the lookout for other
jobs.
Mr. McKinley deserves credit for
standing out against the enormous
pressure brought to bear upon him
by politicians of his party in favor
of incompetent applicants for gen
eral's commissions in the volunteer
army. He has sent the nomina
tions of eleven major generals and
twenty-five brigadier generals to
the Senate. Thirty-two of them
are officers in the regular army, and
the other four, ali major generals,
are ex-officers, equally divided be
tween the blue and the gray, Fitz
Dee and Joe Wheeler representing
the gray, and Senator Sewell, of
New Jersey, and General James
H. Wilson, of Delaware, represent
ing the blue.
Three Kon fall to a Terrible Death.
Falling Timbers Braak Their Platform and
They Drop 300 Feet.
The Halstead inine of the Dela
ware, Lackawanna and Western com
pany at Duryea was the scene ot an
accident Thursday evening which cost
three men their lives. The names of
the victims are : John Monohan,
Stephen Jenkins, John Titus.
The three men were engaged in re
pairing the lin-'ng of the shaft which
had been damaged by the cave-in last
week. About 5:30 some heavy tim
bers were being lowered into the shaft
when the rope attached to them slipp
ed off and the timbers struck the plat
form upon which the three workmen
were standing with great force, demol
ishing it and precipitating the men to
the bottom of the shaft, a distance of
300 feet. The bodies were horribly
mangled.
How's This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars
Reward for any case of Catarrh that
cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh
Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props.,
Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years,
and believe him perfectly honorable
in all business transactions, and fin
ancially able to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm.
WEST & TROAX, Wholesale Drug
gists, Toledo, O.
WALDING, RINNAN & MARVIN, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggists. Testimonials free.
Hall's family Pills are the best, im
As to Blockading-
The blockade of Cuba will recall
the blockade ot the Southern ports !
during the Civil war. There will be !
several essential differences, however, 1
in the two blockades. The Federal
fleets had a much larger extent of
coast line to guard than thev will in
the present instance. The Confeder
ates at the beginning of the war con
trolled the coast from the Potomac to
the Rio Grande, and there were many
important ports thereon which requir
ed particular attention at the hands of
the blockading forces. The Cuban
coast line is much less in extent, and
there are but few important ports
along it. The Confederates had a
convenient base of operations tor the
blockade runners at the Bahama is
lands, belonging to the British, the
authorities of which were very lax in
enforcing the neutrality laws. The
Confederates, nowever, for a consider
able time, had no navy to assist in
breaking the blockade, in which case
the Spaniards have the advantage. It
is doubtful, however, whether any con
siderable force of Spanish ships will
be able to reach Cuba in time to be
of service. If a powerful Spanish
fleet does come over, of which many
profess grave doubts, and a naval en
gagement should result unfavorably to
it, the blockade would soon become
very effective, and must inevitably re
sult in the surrender of the Spanish
land forces. It is true that Porto
Rico might serve as a basis for block
ade rnnners, but it will probably not
be very long ' before the ports in that
island will also be blockaded.
The chief ports of the Confederates
weie Charleston, S. C., New Orleans,
La., Mobile, Ala., Pensacola, Fla.,
Galveston, Tex., Savannah, Ga., and
Wilmington, N. C. These places
were successively taken one after
another after longer or shorter periods
of blockading. The blockade of
Charleston was the most difficult, be
cause of the importance of the city to
the Southern cause, and its propin
quity to the Bahamas, strenuous
efforts were therefore made to capture
it, all of which failed until Sherman's
army flanked the Confederates out of
it. For more than three years, des
pite every attempt to prevent them,
blockade runners were able to steal
past the strong Federal fleet and carry
to the much needed
munitions of war. To supplement
the efforts of the blockading squad
ron what was known as the "Stone
Fleet" was sunk at the entrance of
the harbor. This fleet consisted of a
laige number of old merchant vessels
loaded with stone and scuttled at the
entrance to the harbor. The effect
of this was, however, not what was
anticipated, and blockade runners
continued until the fall of the city.
On one occasion the Confederates
sent out some war vessels they had
fitted up in the harbor, and made an
attack upon the blockading squadron
which had been temporarily weaken
ed. They came out early one morn
ing in a thick haze and succeeded in
making one of the Federal vessels
surrender by reason of a shot having
passed through her condenser and
steam drum, thus rendering her help
less. The sun coming out, however,
jthe other Federal vessels quickly took
a hand and drove the Confederate
J squadron back into the harbor so
THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG. PA.
rapidly that they tailed to take posses
sion ot the captured Federal ship.
The claim was made that the b'ock
ade had been raised, but this was
soon proved to be baseless.
The last Confederate port of impor
tance to be captured was Wilmington,
N. C., which was defended by Fort
Fisher, at the mouth of Cape Fear
River, and which was taken January
15th, 1865. The men on a blockad
ing fleet have no easy time of it, as
they are compelled to be continually
on the alert to resent attacks by the
enemy's war vessels, and to detect
attempts by their merchant ones to
run the blockade. The blockading
fleet is necessarily some distance out
in the ocean, and is liable to be driven
oft" its station by storms. When this
occurs there is a great opportunity for
the enemy's vessels in port to escape,
and for such as may be able to make
the port from the outside to get in.
When a blockade is declared, it must
be with a sufficient force, otherwise
neutral vessels are at liberty to pass
in and out of the blockaded port.
After the blockade is established it
must also be well maintained, and
this it is often difficult to accomplish
by reason of storms and the attacks
of the enemy's fleet.
Tlrj Justification tor war.
No one who knows the history of
the Cuban question will doubt for a
moment the adequacy of the justifi
cation for the hostilities now initiat
ed by the United States. The mis-,
government of the Spaniards, the
barbarities of the unceasing civil
wars, the hopelessness of any per
manent pacification in an island at
the very threshold of the liberty
loving New World, constitutes an
intolerable nuisance. Sooner or
later intervention was inevitable,
for no practical repentance could be
looked in a people which had sacri
ficed one of the greatest colonial
empires known to history in its in
grained inability to abandon medi
aeval methods of government and
diplomacy. Hence the preservation
of the peace has depended only on
the chance of Spain acquiescing in
the American ultimatum, and that
all along has been known to be im
possible. Spain has lost much, but
her armor proper is still on the scale
of her quondam empire, and no one
ever imagined that she would yield
an inch of what remains without a
struggle. That she will fight now
bravely and tenaciously, no one
questions. His gallantry will excite
a further need of sympathy which
her patriotism and dignity in mis
fortune have already widely engen
dered. This sympathy, however,
is not incompatible with the convic
tion that her ultimate failure will be
a gain for humanity and progress.
In this country every voice is raised
to wish the United States success.
We heartily join our own, but not
on account of any sense of kinship,
which really need not be invoked,
but for the practical end in view—
the liberation of the sorely tried
Cubans and the establishment of
peace in a corner of God's earth,
which hitherto has known only
misgovernment and bloodshed.—
London Graphic.
A Congressional Aspirant-
F. M. Traver, of Sunbury, lias
announced himself a candidate for
the Republican nomination for Con
gress in the Seventeenth District,
composed of Northumberland, Mon
tour, Columbia and Sullivan coun
ties.
MRS. LUCY GOODWIN
Suffered four years with female trou
bles. She now writes to Mrs. Pinkham
of her complete recovery. Read her
letter:
DEAR Mas. PINKHAM:—I wish you to
publish what Lydia E. I'inkham's
Vegetable Compound, Sanative Wash
Liver Pills
*- y D doctor said I
"> also suffered
Lgc -7-s, ivj with nervous
• ' ' prostration, faint,
all-gone feelings, palpita
tion of the heart, hearing-down sensa
tion and painful menstruation. I could
not stand but a few minutes at a time.
When I commenced taking your med
icine I could not ait up half a day, but
before I had used half a bottle I was
up and helped about my work.
I have taken three bottles of Lydia
E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound and
used one package of Sanative Wash,
and am cured of all my troubles. I feel
like a new woman. I can do all kinds
of housework and feel stronger than I
ever did in my life. I now weigh 131 M
ponnds. lie fore using your medicine I
weighed only 108 pounds.
Surely it is the grandest medicine for
weak woman that ever was, and my
advico to all who are suffering from
any female trouble is to try it at onoc
nnd be well. Your medicine hns
proven a blessing to me, and I cannot
praise it enough.—Mrs. Lucr GOODWIN,
Holly, W. VA.
Much in Little
Is especially true of Hood's Pills, for no medi
cine ever contained so great curative power in
so small space. They are a whole medicine
iHood's
I chest, always ready, al- m _ _
! ways efficient, always satr
I Isfactory; prevent a cold 111 K
or fever, cure all liver ills, a **
j sick headache, Jaundice, constipation, etc. 25c.
The only Pills to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla.
OHILKOOT PASS HORP.OKS
i Poor Creatures V/ho Have Given Up Hope,
Lying Upon the Dissolving Snow.
Horace Mangold, leader of a band
ot Englishman who a few weeks ago
passed through Ottawa on their way
to the Klondike, is back again. YViien
he reached Vancouver he heard sinis
ter rumors as to the state of Cliilkoot
pass, and, not willing that his men
with their supplies should be met with
serious obstacles, he proceeded in ad
vance (accompanied by two Indians
as porters) to test the actual condi
tions. He found the pass so bad that
he is returning to England with the
intention of coming back to proceed
when the Stikine is open.
"The horrors of the trail will never
be adequately portrayed," was Mr.
Mangold's comment. "There is in
reality no trail. It is a tearful wind
ing in and out, and covered with the
remains of thousands of horses, the
debris of outfits and camps into which
you sink up to the waist. I saw poor
wretches thrust aside by the score by
the desperate procession which, what
ever happens, will never stop. And
those who actually pass the summit,
what horrors await them on the other
side !
"As I made my way along I saw
strong men crying like children.
They had lost their horses ; ihey had
started out with insufficient food ;
they were in hunger and wretched
ness ; they had been thrust aside by
the desperate creatures behind, who
showed no mercy, but were bound to
push on regardless of the sufferings
they inflicted upon those who were
too weak to keep up. That was the
callousness of it—that those who from
fatigue, from hunger, from utter ex
haustion through carrying their own
packs, stumbled, were pushed or kick
ed out of the way, and you passed on,
brushing by poor creatures who had
given up all hope and who were lying
out upon the dissolving snow, utterly
indifferent to their fate.
Two things have contributed to the
misery which I saw. First, the
weather, which was so mild as to
make the pass simply a deep creek
filled with snow broth, and second,
the imperfect outfits of hundreds of
men, who, after they reached Vancou
ver had no more notion of where they
were going or how they were to go
than they had of flying."
Mr. Mangold says that he found
among the Canadians an objection to
the introduction of the English.
"This was unaccountable to me,
but there is no doubt that it exists.
Those who have influence should im
press upon the government not to
allow liquor in the Yukon district. I
speak from experience. I have been
in the arctic regions and I know that
the talk of the need of liquor is all
tommyrot. Liquor in a mining camp
is simply a crime. A poor man who
has never handled any money worth
talking about makes a 'strike.' He at
once treats the whole camp. Then
you have, when these men are drunk,
all the elements of an inferno."
It Will Surprise You.
In order to prove the great merit of
Ely's Cream Balm, the most effective
cure for Catarrh and Cold in Head,
your druggist will supply a generous
10 cent trial size or we will mail for
10 cents. Full size socts.
ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y.
City.
Ely's Cream Balm has completely
cured me of catairh when everything
else failed. Many acquaintances have
used it with excellent results.—Alfred
W. Stevens, Caldwell, Ohio.
No wonder skeptics and agnostics
disbelieve in the power of prayer.
Queer kind of a pandemonium this
earth would be if people always got
what they prayed far. For instance, if
there ever was a nation wicked and
cruel beyond belief that nation is
Spain. She brought murder and
slavery into the western hemisphere
when she first set foot upon it; she
will go out of it leaving starvation,
treachery under and rapint behind
her as the last traces of het power
here. Yet the bishop of Macvid has
the brazenness to instruct Al the
priests within his diocese to pAy for
the success of the armies of Spaft>. It
would be a strange sort of deityfwho
would answer a prayer like tha or
any other prayer prompted by ava-ice,
selfishness or revenge.
OASTORIA.
Bean the >laW B< " lel ' 1
AGAIN we offer you COLD
STORAGE for Eggs, Butter, |
Dried Fruits, Carpets, Furs and
perishable articles. Inquire for
rates.
We Manufacture
FROM DISTILLED & FILTERED
WATER.
For domestic purposes you should
use L'URE ICE only.
CsldL Storage & Artificial 100 Co.
255 East 7th St
-3-17-7010.
RAILROAD TIMETABLE
DELAWARE, LACKAWANNA &
WESTERN" RAILROAD.
BLOOMSBURG DIVISION.
STATIONS. EAaT.
A.M. P.M. A.M. P.M.
NORTHLMBBKLAND. 625 1.50 10G0 SGO
Cameron 6 £8 ®U3
Cliulasky ...... ...... ... ;v bo?
Dauvllle 650 2 12 10 21 6 13
Catawissa 703 22b .... 628
Rupert 700 2 31 10 36 033
BlOOlQbOurg .. 71 236 10 41 639
Llweltkltfe 730 248 652
Willow tirove 734 252 0 06
BrlarcreeK - 7 33 7 CO
Berwick 74b 3oi 1102 7 oo
Beach Haven 754 807 .... 712
Hick's Ferry KOO 318 . .. 719
Shlckshirmy blO a 24 n2l 7 85
iluniock's. 320 831 ... 747
Nantlcoke 827 342 11 £6 7 51
Avonrtah?-, 382 3 47 7 5b
Plymouth 837 8 52 11 43 803
Plymouth JUDCtIOU...... 642 3 57 807
Kingston 850 4 05 11 52 8 12
Bennett..- 653 4 08 8 16
Forty fort 856 4 11 8 16
Wyoming ~ 901 417 12 00 82c
West Plttston 906 4 22 3 30
Husuuehanna Ave uio 4 25 12 07 8 S3
Plttßton 316 4 30 12 10 8 89
Duryea 319 434 ...... h44
LacKawanna 921 4 37 s4B
Taylor - 932 445 .... 657
Kellcvue 937 450 .... 96V
SGRANIOH 942 4 55 12 30 9 0.
A. M P. U. P.M. P. M
STATIONS. WEST.
A.M. A. M. P. M.P. V.
SOU ANTON. .... 6UO 10 20 155 6
Bellevue 615 .... ......
Taylor elO 1028 2c5 tt 10
Lackawanna 6 16 I*Bs 253 0 7
Duryea 828 j0 38 2to 621
PlttßtOU ®7B 42 220 6U
SusquehannaAve 632 1045 221 fl a
Went Plttßton 635 10 48 227 6 :5
Wyoming 640 10 53 232 636
Party Fort 645 ...
Benuott 648 11 *0 289 644
Kingston OC4 11 G4 240 6 '. v
Plymouth .lunation 6 59 2 5
Plymouth 7 U1 1112 254 704
Avo ml .ale 709 253 7 w
Nantlcoke 714 11 20 B* >i 712
HunlOCk'B 720 11 30 3 111 7vO
Shtckshinny 731 U4O P4 735
iltck'a Ferry 744 USO 035 747
Beach Haven 751 1155 v. 42 7 5.-.
Berwick 8 00 12 U0 819 BbC
Uriarcrcek 806 .... 855 .....
Willow (trove 8 10 12 10 359 3 il
Lime Ridge 8 14 12 15 4 04 bls
Espy 821 12 21 411 623
Blootnsburg 828 1227 417 830
Rupert 604 12 82 121 936
Catawissa R4O 12 34 42s 841
Danville 355 12 49 442 358
CflUlrtSky 449 ...
Cameron ... 905 12 58 454 9in
NORTHUMBERLAND... 920 110 SCB 925
A.M. P.M. r.m. r.M
Connections at Rupert with Philadelphia A
Reading Railroad for Tamnnend, Tamaqua
Wllllamaport, Pottsvtlie, etc At
Northumberland with P. & E. Dlv. p. & R. for
Harii-hurg, Lock Eaven, Emporium Warmer.
Corry and Erie.
W. F. HALLSTEAP, Grn. Mar.,
He ran ton, Pa.
SOUTH. B. & 8 It.. R NORTH
ARRIVE. LKAYE
am a.m.ipmip.m. STATIONS, i am pmipm-am
7.10 11.1 ft 6.30 2.15 Bloomabu'g.l 8.84 L 4" M5.tf.10
7.08 11.40 6.26 .:0 • P. & H.l N. 36 2.42 6.47
7."8 11.87 6.24) 2.05 " Main St.. 8.39 2.4* 6.50,
6.53 11.27'16.121 1 50 Paper Mill., 4- 2..Y1 7.1.1 C.37
8.50 11.23 6.09 1.45 ..Light 6t .1 8.52 *.£9 7.05 6.56
6.46 11.18 5.5 1.80 OrangevU'e.; 9.02 3.10 7.11 7.:0
0.29 11.01 5.48 1.00 .Forks ... 9.10 3.20 7.24(7.35
6.25 11.0015.44 12.63 .. .Zaner'S... I 9.14 1.24 7.28 7.46
6.1S 10.r51ft.37 1-3.45 .Stillwater. 9.20 3.30;7.33 8.00
6.08 10.1 ft 15.27' '2.3 ...Benton.. .J 9.30 3.40 7. *9 8.30
6.01' 10 49,5 29 12.10 ...EdßOn'S... I 0.34 3.44 7.47 6.40
6.02 038 5.20 12.0* .role's Cr'k. 9.37 3.17 7.51 8.46
5.53 10.32 5.18 11.53 ..LftilbftCh.. 9.47 3.57 *.Ol 9.00
5.43 •U. 23,5.03 11.45 ...Central... 9.67 4.07 8.11 9.55
5.49! 10.30! LOO 11.30 .Jan. City.. 110.00 M0,*.15|9.85
a m a m p in p m a m p 111 p in am
LBAVK ARRIVE
HUMPHREYS'
CURES
No. 1 Fever, Congestion.
No. 2 Worms.
No. 3 Infants' Diseases.
No. 4 Diarrhea.
No. 7 Coughs & Colds.
No. 9 Headache.
No. IO Dyspepsia, Indigestion.
No. 1 1 Delayed Periods.
No. 12 Leuchorrea.
No. 13 Croup.
No. 14 Skin Diseases.
No. 13 Rheumatism.
No. 19 Catarrh.
No. 27 Kidney Diseases.
No. 34 Sore Throat.
No. 77 Grip & Hay Fever.
Dr, Humphreys 1 Homeopathlo Manual of
Diseases at your Druiwista or Mailed Free.
Sold by druggists, or sent oo receipt of S&ets.,
60cts. or SI- Humphreys' Med. Co., Cor. William
and John sts.. Now York.
°rEL CATARRH
Affection
Nothing but a local BAL"^
remedy or change of XIIRFCCOLD■
cllmaie will cure It. 'V " I
Get a tvell-known ,?'°2S\!3"(ADM
pharmaceutical rem- Iw
Ely's Cream Balm wty
It Is quickly Absorb'
ed. Gives Itelief at 'lfgM
once. Opens and tVVnfjywAjfl*
cleanses the Nasal ■^-^ c ■
Al'„ys'i'ifri ammitlon COLD HEAD
ilea Band Protects thh M 'nihrane. Restores the
Senses of Taste nnd smell. No cocaine, jco
Mercury No Injurlousdrug. Full size 50c ; Tilul
Size 10c. at Druggists or b.v mull.
ELY BROTHERS, ">6 Warren street, New York
■h CfclchMtfp'i EnclUh Diamond Broad.
PENNYROYAL PILLS
■ -fGTX Original and Only Gennlnew A
E/r/'VA a*rc, ALWY relUbte. LADIES UK K\
* T1 laltf Druiolil tot Chichester a Jtnalish />fa-j®V\
Brand In Red and Gold metallio\\A7
>\ Zwßi'OU* > .ralod with Mo* ribbon. Take
W Hrfuae dangerous tubstitw V '
I / (jf 1 urns and imitations. At Drofoclafa, or amd 40.
I W IW la atampo for _p*rtlonlara, testimonials and
\ "Z* D "Hdlef for Ladle*," in Utter, by return
A JF MalL 10,000 TeatimoaUli. Haks Paper
MWtJuSSSSA
4-28-410.
j Pennsylvania Railroad.
l'lme Table in clTect Feb. 20, '9B.
A. M. A. M F. St. P. M.
Serantonfft H)lv {6 45 59 88 52 21 §4 41
1 1 lttßton " " 7od no Co fa 48 nw
A. M. A. M. F. M. F. M
Wllkesbarre....lv| {7 80 510 15 13 12 56 00
Plym'lh ltrry" I 7 88 10 30 f8 si 10 08
Nantlcoke " j 7 40! 10 27 850 017
-'.lt-cai. aqua " Bu. jU 18 a ai>i 0 87'
Wapwaliopen." 813 lu 55 358 47
Neseopeek ar BS4 11 10 4 10! 7CO
A. 11. t. v.l F. * ' p. si.
PoltSVllle IV §6 00 59 40 513 88 53 42
liazieton7 In 1135 sou! 550
Touiblckeu " 7so 11 25 a 201 610 .
Fern Glen " 73S 11 64 a 38 HIS
KOckGlcn 743 1 40 533 0 35
Neaoopeok ai 807 800 j 050
A M. A. M. P. M.j F. M.
Nescopeck lv 5 8 2'4 511 10 14 10; 57 00
Cieasy.... 8 38 Via 4 18 7 08
Espy Ferry " Is 48 Kock f 4 25. 718
B. llloouibbuig" 847 Glen 4SO 7VI
F. M.
Catawlssa ar 8 r,5 18 20 430 78
Catawlssa lv 855 la an 4 18| 780
s. Danville...." 914 la as 455 7 47
sunbury 9 80 1 Oo 6 17 8 10
A. >l. •F. M. F. si. | P. M
Sunburv...... .lv t 945 5 1 10 5 5 34. . 035
Lewlsburg ...,ar 10 in 145 608
Milton " 10 10 139 6 Oft! oto
WTlUainsport.." 1101 280 073 10 80
Ixick Haven... 11 50 8 40 7 57
Keuovo " A. 11. 440 855
Kane " 900 j .........
p si. j f. si.
Lock Haven...lv 513 101 58 45 !
Hellefonte or 1 05 4 44
Tyrime " 215 8 10 1
Phlllpsburg...." 4 28 8 301 i
Cleartleld " 5 06 9 o| ....
Pittsburg 665 1130
|A. m. p. si.; p. si.! P. si'
Sunbury iv| t 950 5 1 sn! is 35 58 so
liarrlsburg arill 30 58 80 6 55j 510 10
! F. SI. P. 51.1 F. SI,I A. M.
Philadelphia .ar 53 00 is -.3 110 20 l 430
Baltimore " BHi ! <0 t 9 45| 30
Washington " 4ln 17 IS 510 65| 740
A. SI. P. SI.
Sunbury lv 510 05 5a 25 ........
I p. si.
Lewlstown jc ar la or> 5 4 23i !
Pittsburg- "|5 665 511 3' j I ...._
IA. SI. P. 51.1 F. SI. P. 51.
Harrlsbuig Ivjtll4s i 8 60 17 82 510 so
P. SI. I A. SI. A. SI.
Pittsburg ar; I 6 55! 11l 301 1a 00 55 30
5 Weekdays. Dally, f Flag station
Pittsburg.. .lv I'HHM MMO! I*3 To 7*B CU
A. v.l A. si.j p. M.
Harrlsbuig ar I 8 801 t8 81 110 00 I 8 10
A. M.I A. SI.
Pittsburg lv ........ t 8 CO
P. M.
Lewlstown JC." ......... t7 30 t8 65
Sunbury... art 9 .8 t 5 ob
P. V. A. 11. A. M. A. M
Washington....lv no 40; ... 17 50 lin 50
Baltimore " 111 50 1 465 ts 50 I3UO
Philadelphia..." 11l 30 i 4 30 18 80 13 86
flarrisnurg lv I*B 35 *8 of tl'l 40 t* 866
Sunbury ar| I 5 08 19 40 110 t5 39
Pittsburg lv 51 ill 53 30 58 00
Cleartleld " 4 09 9 81
Phlltpsburg.. ." 4 5H 10 13
Tyrone " 7 15 I 8 10 12 £0
Hellefonte " 8 31 9 82 1 42
Lock Haven...ar 9 30 10 3 3 43
P. SI. A. SI. A SI. P. SI
Erlo lv l 3 .-5 M
Kane " 705 IS 27 fl
HenOVO '• 10 25 f 6 40| 111 81-1 1
Lock Haven...." 11 11 57 33 11 35 1 : lOC 1
A. V. I P. M.I fl
Wllllamsport.." 12 15 I s 301 'tia 15, 4ot ■
Milton " 113 9IS 1 13! 462 ■
U-Wlsburg " 905 1 16! 447 ■
Sunbury ar 1 4.5 9 45: 1 r>s 520 ■
nr T7. iriT ' I
sunbury lv t5 35 l 9 rn ta or t5 43 ■
S. Danville " 54S 10 17 8 21, 017 ■
rat awls.,n " fi OS 10 85 287 674 ■
B. llloomsburg" Via 10 43 243 682 H
Espy Ferry " lloek fin 17 217 f0 36
Creasy " Glen. 10 en 2 55 6 4
N-seopeck ....or 807 11 lu 810 659
Nescopeck lv tli 16 14 16 t7 05
Rock Glen ar't 052 11 35 440 731
Fern Glen " 1159 1143 I 40 7 37
Tomhlcken 7 10 11 54 4 55 7 46
P. M.
Hazleton ...: " 737 12 15 515 805
Pottsvllle. . 912 120 .... 942
A. X. A, SI. P. 51. P, V.
Nescopeck Is t 8 07| 111 10 t3 10 t6 59
Wapwallopen.ar 818 11 22 319 7t9
Mocanaqua " S 2"l 11 33 380 721
Nantleoke " 8 481 11 541 '<
Plym'th Ferry" (8 sol i.'-' 02 400 7
Wllkesbarre...." 9 Oftj 12 lOj 110 800
A. 51 P. 51 ' P. SI. P. M.
Plttstonfl) SH) ar; t9 41 tl2 49, t4 52 ta as V J
scranton " "| 10 IQI 1 lnl 5 go! 9on %
t Weekdays. I Dally, f Flag station.
Pullman Parlor and Sleeping Cars run on
through trains between sunbury, Wllllamsport
and Erie, between sunbury and Philadelphia
and Washington and between liarrlsburg, Plus
burg and the west.
For further Information apply to Ticket
Agents.
J. B. HUTCHINSON. J. B. WOOD.
Gen'l. Manager. Gen. Pass, Agt
Philadelphia &
Reading Railway 1
Engines Burn Hard Coal—No Smoke
In effect Nov. 14, 1897.
TRAINS LK ftVEBLOO.MSBUKG d
For New York, PhUadelphla, Reading Potts- 1
vllle, Tamaqua, weekdays 11.45 a. m. /
I'or Wllllamsport, weekdays, 7.80 a. m., 8.30 p. !:
m.
For Danville and Milton, weekdays, 7.30 a. m., J
8.30. 1
For Catawlssa weekdays 7.80,8.88.11.15 a. m., J
12.20, 8.30, 5.00 0 30, p. in. 'I
For Rupert weekdays7.Bo,b.3B 11.45 a. m., 12.2 C, "
8 30, 6.00, 0.80, p. m.
For Baltimore, Washington and the Wost via
B. A O. R. K.. through trains leave Reading Ter
minal, Philadelphia, 3.20, 7.65, 11.26 a. in., 3.-.C
7.27, p. m. SundayH 3.20. 7.55 11.26 a. m., /
8.46, 7.27, p. m. Additional trains from 24 and /
Chestnut street station, weekdays, 1.35, 5.41,
8.28 p. m. Sundays, 1.35, 8.83 p. m. *
TRAINS FOR BLOUMMIUHG I
Lcavo New York via Philadelphia 8.00 a 1
m., and via Easton 9.10 a.m. 1
Leave Philadelphia 10.10 a. m. 1
Leave Reading ia 00 m. I
Leave Poti sviTle ta.ao p.m. I
Leave Tamaqua 1.86 p.m., I
Leave Wllllamsport weekdays 10.20 a m, 4.30 p I
m. -
LeaveGatawissaweekdays, 7.00,8.90 9.10 a. m.
1.30 3 30, 0 08
Leave Rupert, weekdays, 7.08,8.18,9.18 11.56
a. m., 1.38,3.40, 6.16.
ATLANTIC CITY DIVISION.
f
Wave Philadelphia, Chestnut street whar
and south street wharf for Atlantic City.
WRKX-DATS— Express, WHO, a. m. 2 00, (3.0il
Saturdays only), 4.00, 5.U0 p. m. ACUOUI. 8.00 a.
111., 5.15, 6.30 p. in.
SUNDAVS—Express, 9.00, 10.00 n.m , Acooin.
8.00 a. in., 4.45 p. in. I
Leavo Atlantic City, dopot. : W'RKK-IIAYS
Express, 7.35,9 00, a. m., 3 80, 5.30 p. in. Acoom , '
4.25, 815 am., 4.05 p.m. St'NDAvs—Express.
4.n0, 5.30,8.00 p. m. Accom., 7.15 a. m , 4 15, p m
For cape May and ocean City o 15 a. m., I 15
p. in Sundays, South Street, 9.00, Chestnut
Street 9J5 a. m.
Parlor cars on all oxpress t rains.
I. A. SWEIGARD, EDSON ,1. WEEKS
Gcn'l Supt, Gen'l Pass. Agt.
3