THE COLUKSlAfV BLOOMSBURQ. PA.' f ? WASHINGTON. Prom oar Regular Correspondent. Washington, May 15, 1899. An extra session of Congress will be called early in the fall, if public opinion does not object sufficiently to frighten Mr. McKinley out of issuing the call. That is the onjy. reason it has not been oflkially announced. It has been decided upon, but Mr. McKinley wished to appear to follow a public demand, so the .announce ment was deferred until his friends, who are now talking extra session in every direction, could try to work up the public demand, Ex-Senator Quay is using the Speakership contest to make votes for his admission to the Senate on the appointment ot the Gov. of Pennsyl vania. Thai is why the Pennsylvania delegation is unpledged, and why there is talk of putting up a dummy Penn sylvania candidate for Speaker, who the delegation can pretend to support until Quay orders them to vote for one of the other candidates. Senator Stewart was asked whether he favored an extra session of Con gress in September. "No, certainly not," he replied "nothing would be gained by it that would be useful. It would simply mean three or four months of talk before they got down to business, instead of three or four weeks, which invariably follows the assembling of the hrst session ot a new Congress." 1 Great efforts are being made to have the Navy Department join in trying to persuade Admiral Dewey to rottie home by way of San Francisco, Acial order issued by the War Depart ment saying that the extension Older issued did not include that excluding the Chinese. The gall of the beef contractors is second only to that of Secretary Al ger. It might have been supposed that they would have been more than satisfied to be exonerated from all blame for the bad beef, which the re port of the Court of Inquiry admits was furnished the soldiers the report declaring that the beef was all good when it left the hands of the con tractors' agents but they are not j they are actually demanding the pun ishment of Gen. Miles, because he dared, in the interest of the men in the army, to say that the beef was un fit to eat. They are citing the action of the committee of the German Reichstag, which favored a bill dis criminating against American meats as proof of the injury done their business by the charges ot Gen. Miles. Alger would gladly have Miles punished, but Mr. McKinley will hardly consent. He fears that Con gress will tackle the beef question anyway, but hopes that a Congres sional investigation may be escaped by allowing the matter to stand just where tt was left by the report of the Court of Inquiry. If the talk of sev eral indignant Senators and Repre sentatives counts for anything, the matter will be heard from in Congress. SEVEN LADIES STOLE. KEEP YOUR WITS AT A FIRE. Tlr All nrloHffed to One Fnmtly Arnilfd In I'nrta for Kleii totiinnla. A detective on duty lit flic Louvre hn J his attention called by one of 1 l.o slatants to tlie cxtriiordinnr.v attitude of seven Indies vim wundcicd about from one counter to another without buying anything. After watching those Indies for Home time the detective called up a collengue, and the two together took nil Reven into cimtody, naya the Dublin Rnturdny Herald. On being searched they were found to have secreted stuffs and small ob jects of value under their dresses, and were Immediately marched off to the police commissary. That functionary found to his amurement that the troupe consisted of a grandmother, three of her daughters and three granddaugh ters, In comfortable circumstances. The old lady's husband and the hus bands of her three daughters were Im mediately sent for (the youngest Indies of this Interesting family are still un married), and declared themselves to tally ignorant of the acts of their wives, who, they said, made frequent trips to Farls from their home In the suburbs and often brought home many pretty things; but they assured the commis sary that they (the husbands) Iind no notion that these had been eome by otherwise than by the usual method of purchase. The commissalre, taking the social position of the "kleptomaniacs" Into consideration, has allowed them their liberty upon heavy ball. Advice of a Mn.n Who Unx Itn.l Plrnlr of Uirrletice In Lutein. About Catarrh. It is caused by a cold or succession of colds, combin ed with impure blood. Its symptoms are pain in the head, discharge from the nose, ringing noises in the ears. It is cured by Hoods Sarsapanlla which purifies and enriches the blood, soothes and rebuilds the tissues and Hood's Pills cure all liver ills. Mail ed for 25c. by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. instead of New York. A railway com- and relieves all the disagreeable sen ninu has nfffrnA tn furnish him with- I saiions, out cost the finest special train mat ever crossed the continent, to bring him from San Francisco to Washing ton. The Republican politicians are not disposed to help along this idea at all. They are afraid of Dewey as it is, and they don't know what might happen if he was made the hero of a series of popular ovations in every town between San Francisco and Washington. They would much pre fer his coming to New York, trusting the rest to his modesty, I hnve l.ecn art actor for 2J years," said Tlinddctis Shine. "I have crossed the continent nine times. Nnturully, I have slept in a good many hotels hero nd there. I have been caught In three otel fire.s. Thu first time I come near being cremated. It happened because was bounced out of bed at the first alorm, felt sntlnfied thnt I was ns good s dead, bounded out of t he room and ushed down the hallway, t didn't know where I was going. Like Kip ling's stampeded soldier, I didn't stop to see. The consequence whs that I ran into the part of the building which was burning, turned to go back, found my escape cut off by smoke, fell insen sible in a little while and was dragged out by a flremnn who stumbled over me. "There Is but one thing to do when you are sleeping in a strange place and the lire call is Hounded, (iet out of bed wlftly but quietly, put on your shoes, rouscrs and eont and pick up your val uables, if you have any. You can do all this In five minutes or less by working steadily and coolly. l!y the time you get it (lone you will know In what dlrec- you want to go, and how to get there. Hotels don t burn down hi ten minutes these days, and with tho present ef ficiency of the fire departments in the large cities not one in Jim 01 tnem tnat catch on fire burns down nt all. When a thing of this kind comes tip 'make haste slowly is a motto that every man and woman ought to remember. It is the crazed ones who die." A SOLDIER WHEN DYING. Bo; Kidnapped- About a week ago a neatly . dressed couple alighted from a railroad train at Tamaqua and registered at one of the hotels as Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jenkyn. They were subsequently seen in close conversation with the adopted eight-year-old son of Charles Christ. A day or two afterwards the boy was missing, and no trace of him has since been tounu. At the same time the couple disappeared, leaving behind an unpaid board bill. When questioned, about the .couple speak ing to him, the boy said they were his uncle and aunt from Philadelphia, this Henderson and Hopkins, the two lead- is doubted. Mr. Christ traced them ing Western candidates, have made a to Lakeside, where Proprietor Yost deal whereby their strength 'will be said a couple and a boy answering combined to nominate the strongest the description boarded a coal train of the two, and the one who fails to for Bloomsburg, but all further trace - .1 ' e 1 1 I 11 1. 1 f UAM ...nt. A fUlnn ,1 r.t pet ine aueaitersniD snau ue mane 1 ui mem ivai. nsuuiiu rkoirmm nf tho wnva nnrl Means Committee and floor leader ..ot the SEVEN BURIED ALIVE- Republicans, a position to which Payne Uborert Caugh Under Avalanche Culm Representative Payne, of N. Y., seems likely to fare badly in the Speak ership fight. Senator Piatt has prom ised to force him to withdraw as a candidate for Speaker, in favor of Sherman, and it is understood that How a, I n I ted Matt Hrtfnlnr Sainted III Officer Ills Vmut Act Ilefore Death. "Ever since the war," said an ofllcer, "my memory has been developing de tails that were crowded for the time to the rear by my interest in the greater drama. Many of them, although small in themselves, illustrate the personal courage and devotion of the troops, "There is one episode that in particu lar typifies the American soldier. I like to think so, at any rate. He was a pri vate of regulars. v hen I first saw him he was already a dead man, if ever I saw one. He was on his feet, sham bling along with that galvanic kind of energy that comes to men of great vi tality when they are wounded beyond repair. "Just as he fell even, as it seemed, In the very act of falling he looked up and saw me. A very faint sign of rec ognitlon came into his eyes, and then lie straightened with a jerk and saluted me as stolidly as though he was on pa rade. "There was nothing in the act of con scious dramatic effort. This well-drilled well-disciplined, well-balanced private Boldier of the United States army was merely saluting me, his superior ofll cer, and the thing that stood for his flag. "I never knew his name, or his rec ord, or his regiment, and I didn't want to know. I knew that he was a soldier and it has been the means of constant inspiration to know that we have that kind to work with." was advanced after the death of Mr. Dmgley and which he would like to keep, if he can't get the bpeakership Should Sherman win the chances are that he would have to promise the chairmanship of the committee on Ways and Means to some other state. So it looks as though Payne was bound to lose no matter who wins. at Centralia Four Killed Outright. Four men were killed outright and three others were so badly injured that their recovery is doubtful, by the cave in of a culm bank at Centralia Friday afternoon. The dead are James Gaughan, aged 35 years; leaves wife and three children. John Kuko, aged 28, single. It i r 1 1- 1 . .1 fl. T V T aa Unniin.Ant I lUaCUil OCailllClK, aECU (i WllCiUlU A.e;,;r. mniArl in Wash, tnree cnuuren. ington this week for the purpose 0f John Comyock, aged 40 years ; wife erecting an equestrian statue ot Ixen Lee upon a site overlooking Arlington, the old Lee homestead. The site has been donated to the association, and prominent Southern women will under take the task of securing the money to pay for the statue. It seems that one of the ways in which our new possessions are to be Americanized is to allow them to be nverflowed bv Chinese coollies. The order issued several weeks ago, ex tendine the laws and regulations gov erning immigration to , the United States to all territory under military control, was taken to mean that Chi nese coolies would be excluded from Porto Rico, Cuba and the Philippines. But that didn't suit those who are in terested in filling those islands with Chinese and they had pull enough with the powers that be to get an ot- Bow'sThU? 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. T- Cheney for the past 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and finan cially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. West & Traux, Wholesale druggists, Toledo, O. Waldino, Kinnan & Marvin, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly up,on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials free. Sold by druggsts, price 75c a bottle Hall's Family Pills are the best1, im and four children The injured are : George Ferdokor, aged 30, single, leg broken and internal injuiiesj John Conins, aged 35, mar ried, leg broken and knee-cap dis located, also injured internally, and John Sedisky, aged 28, single, injured internally and back crushed. Several other workmen narrowly es caped. The men were engaged in loading cars with culm taken from a bank forty feet high, and which the Lehigh Valley Coal Company are running through their Centralia colliery in order to secure the valuable coal that was dumped there from the mines several years ago. A large quantity from the bottom had been removed which undermined the top and made it extremely dangerous. One of the men looked up and, seeing that the top threatened to fall in, cl-mbed up the side of the bank. With the use of a shovel he succeeded in starting it, but the workmen below kept at work. When the fall occurred they were hurled against the sides of the three cars standing on the track. The force was so great that tne cars were over turned and the men were buried. The work to rescue them at once began. Hundreds of men with shovels ran from the village to the scene. The injured men were the first to be reach ed. The crushed and twisted bodies of the more unfortunate men were found about five feet from the track. Evidently they had met with instant death. The banks were surrounded by a mass who feared tor friends or relatives. The crying of the distressed was pitiful in the extreme, and could be heard half a mile away. A church in London still possesses an income originally given to it for the purpose of buying faggots for burning heretics. i A NATURAL QUESTION. That Arltci wltU This In, Do These Stubborn Welsh Walk Span lull f A very long time ago the 15ritish gov eminent ordered thut Knglish should be tuught in Welbh schools. As a result in 1S95, a colony of persecuted Welsh miners fled from the llntiHh tyrnnn and. settled in the deserts of l'atagonia, These men were heroes, and with most magnificent courage they dared to th in a desert where not a plant would grow, where tho water was brackish and the heat intolerable. Ihcy wce surrounded by wild tribes of hostile savages, and made them warm friends they were ruled by a foreign govern mcnt, and became loyol citizens Through long years of want and fam ine they never despaired. They hnv turned the desert into a beautiful fer tile country, have become rich, number 3,000 people, have extended tbeir string of settlements right across South Amer ica, own a paying railway, and ship large crops of wheat, wool, ostrich feathers and qunnaeo skins. They left Wales to escape the tyr anny of the English lanjjunge, and now, rather than talk Welsh, they converse largely of their freedom in excellent Spanish. THEY SET GUARDS. SIAMESE FOOTBALL. Tho Dall la Struck Ucnerallr with the Knee and Kept In the Air. The Siamese youth have only ona game worth considering, and that one is indigenous or native to Burma the question of parentage being a much- mooted one, snys Harper s Weekly. At all events, the game requires a certain amount of activity, and is very inter esting to the onlooker. It is a kind of football in fact, I have heard it called Burmese football played with a ball about four inches in diu meter, mode of braided rotan, entirely hollow, very strong and resilient. The number of contest-ants is not arbitrarily fixed, but play Is sharpest when there are enough to form a circle about ten feet in diam eter. The larger the circle after it has passed the desirable diameter the slow cr the play. The game Is to keep the ball tossing into the nlr without breaking the circle, As a man fails at his opportunity he drops out, and when there remain but four or six, the work is sharp and very pretty.' The ball is struck generally with the knee, but also with the foot, from in front, behind and at tho side, Some become remarkably clever. I have seen a player permit the ball to drop directly behind his back, and yet, with out turning, return it clear over his head, and Btraight into the middle of the circle, by a well-placed backward kick of his heel. A Story of Sterility, SUFFERING AND RELIEP. a; . Tells t'.e storv. When your ne.tu , iiehr. Slid Vu feel tllluis, constl- 'pnle-l, mid out 1 if t me, w ith your I to'ii icn xo'ir iiihi liO a;piim-, juoi. i 1 buv u nackii '.c ot 1 2 Unnrl'iz PfS $ Anil tntm n dose, from 1 to 4 pills. 5 'they will do their work, cure your 'headache ond diiiousih-ks, rouse mu t liver and make von feel linnpy aualn. 1 2,r cents. Hold by all medicine ueuiers. 4 Pennsylvania Eailroad. TimeTabieitn effect Nov. , '9 W - . rantonfStCllv Ulston " " llkesbsrre. . lv lym'th Kerry " annooKe - ocanaqna .." WBDwallnpei.. " Nesconeck r Pottsvllle. lv HazletoD ..... Tornhlcken Kern bii n Kouk bleo Nescopeck ar HUMPHREYS' WITCH HAZEL OIL Piles or Hemorrhoids Fissures & Fistulas. Burns & Scalds. Wounds & Bruises. Cuts & Sbres. Boils & Tumors. Eczema & Eruptions. Salt Rheum & Tetters. Chapped Hands. Fever Blisters. Sore Lips & Nostrils. Corns & Bunions. Stings & Bites of Insects Three Sizes, 7$c, 50c. and $l.oo. Sold br drucgUU, or tent post-paid on receipt of prloa HlXmKIVS' ICD.CO., Ill a Ml WIIIUalt.,lUiifarfc Neoopeck lv UIBRHjr " spy Ferry..... " uioouiHuurif" CatawlPua ar at.awlfisa.......lv Danville... sunliury.. c u R E S Lt'wlHbur ....ar Miuon Wllllamanort. ." Lock Haven. ." Henovo ......... " Kane... " Look Haven.. i-lletoule ynme Hilllpsrnirff.., .enrneia .... Pittsburg Sun bury. HumsDurg. Philadelphia.. ar Baltimore.... . Wasmngton 8UDbury ....lv Lewlstown Jo ar ltteburg- " NERVITA PILLS Restore Vitality. Lost Vli or and Manhood. Cure Impotency , Nl ght Emissions and wasting diseases, an enects ui sen- abuse, or excess ana indis cretion. A nerve tonic and blood builder. Brings the pink glow to pale cheeks and restores the fire of youth. tBv mall 50c per hox, O boxes or 2.50: with a written guaran tee to cure or reflind the money. Send for circular. Address, NERVITA MEDICAL CO. Clinton A Jackson Sts., CHICAGO. ILL Sold by Moyer Bros., druggists, bloomaburg, renna. -i.v f?3 i PATENTS n&vAiira and Trade Marks Obtained, and al Patent business conducted lor MoDiSKATB v HUM OUR OFFICH 18 OPPOSITE THE TJ. 8. PAT- ENT OFKICK. We have no sub-agencies, al hnuinpR direct, hence can transact patent bust ness In less time and at Less Cost tliau those re motetrom wasnington. Send model, drawing or photo, with descrlp tton. We advise It patentable or not, free 01 cburge. Our lee not due till patent Is secured A book, "How to Obtain Patents," with refer enoes to actual clients in your eiaie.iouniy, tnan flpntfren. Address V. A. SNOW CO,, Washington, D. C (opposite u. ratent uuice.) RAILROAD TIME TABLE TELAVARE, LACKAWANNA & i- WESTERN RAILROAD BLOOMSBURG DIVISION. In Effect August 1st, 1898. STATIONS. EAST. Ttlonj- AiiIimkIk I'UHt Sentinel IVntvli Wlille They Work and l'lnj. It Is well known that ninny nnimals appoint one or more of their number to net an si-ntinelH to frunrd nnlnst sur prisc while the rest nre asleep or feed liifr or nt piny. Amoiifr the- nnimnls iisiiiK"tlie word in Its widest sense that arc thus prudent may be named the following: AVnsps, nnts, ehamois and other antelopes, pruirle do;;ft, wild horses, rooks, swans, Austrian coeka toos, zebras, quails, certain monkeys, flamingoes, New Zealand silver eyes, (slugs und other birds, marmots, mou flon and other sheep, seals, African wild cattle, huanneoes, elephants, etc. Terhnps the best known of these are the prairie dogs, who burrow their homes In the earth In little villages, with regular streets an( ""Verythiug. All around these vtlhtves, bolt upright, sit wise little dogs to keep a lookout while the others sun themselves nt the doors of their burrowB or ilay. Let a strange animal or a man appear and one of the little sentries at once barks, nnd In another Instant there is a twink ling of heels, nnd not a pralrio dog la fo be seen until tho danger is past. Linil TO Mil. FINXHAM MO. 69,186 "Dkab Mas. Piskham -Two years ago 1 began having such dull, heavy dragging pains in my bock, menses were profuse and painful, and was troubled was leucorrhoca. l iook patent medicines and consulted a phy sician, but received no benefit and could not become pregnant. Seeing one of your books, I wrote to you tell incr vou mv troubles and asking for advice. You answered my letter promptly and I followed the directions faithfully, and derived so much benefit that I cannot praise L.yuia fc. rinic ham's Vegetable Compound enough. I now find myself pregnant and have begun its use again. I cannot praise it enough. "Mbs. CobaUilson, Yatks, Masistke, Micii. Tour Medicine Worked Wonder." " I had been sick ever since my mar riage, seven years ugo; have given birth to four children, nnd had two miscarriages. I had falling of womb, leucori-huca, pains in back and legs; dyspepsia and a nervous trembling of the stomach. Now I have none of these troubles and can enjoy my life. Your medicine has worked wonders for Ine,MBS. S. DAK.NUABT, NEW CASTLE, l'A. 2 42 2 48 2 li 10 .11 10 33 lorn 10 41 10 48 OASTOniA. Bean tho 9 lhfl KM Vou Have Always Buugtt Signature of Itrfitta with yon whothnr 70a print Inn thVanrfln twrvtt-killintf tuliaoru titbit. NO'l 0HAln ML 10111 utiim l lie (Immi fur tottam-n, tlt -yiif tslf out !irvouiiitrun, eaiMiliiuicuvgU 1 B ITT tine, puriittts the blood, rST m 1 k UTATw, tors lout mnhtKid.-atf"fl W I mJPW 1iipi mkei you tiruDtr "'B I U 1 4aJ8,(1- 400,000 In braltl), nerToajWi wk it IfJJMtftaeMriireif buy ndpocUct-rfTl VIHspJNO'TO MAT from book. 1 "J fm lour own drutrtn. wlio Ell CLH Touch foru. Take it wttU rfvHj BtAP wU.,pttfiuly,prrmfntly One miftrnnt'(j to rum, or w refund mnny. 1 vuMgo, iiatUMJ, let. 1104 1180 l'f MM l'i"6 isfii 12 17 Northumberland........ .. a 1.60 louo Cameron....... ...... 6 88 ...... rimlHfky 6 48 Duuvllle....,.... tso 2 12 Catawlasa 7 08 2 a KuDt'rt i uu i ai BloomH0urt... 7 15 Kapy 7 28 LUne Kldt'e....... " 7 80 Willow urove 7 84 BrlarureeK .......... 7 88 Berwick 7 64 Ueacb Uaven...... 7 68 Hlck'B Kerry. 8 01 Hlih'ksUlnuy... ....... ......... 8 14 Uuulock'H.. 8f(7 Nanitcoke 6 86 Avondnle................ 3 40 Plymoulb..... 8 45 Plymouth Junction 8 fin IVIUgB'jUU........,............ Houuett..- ... 9 0ii Forty Fort "08 Wyoming 08 West 1'lttBton 912 Hustiuebunua Ave 9 u mtHion 9l nuryea.... 9 23 Lackawanna 9i Taylor m 88 Kellevue 88 HCHAMTOM 9 42 a.m e.u STATIONS. A.M. SCRANTON. ...................... 600 Bnllevue. 8 06 Taylor !2 Lackawtnna 618 Duryea 6 22 Pltuton 6 18 Husqueliunna Ave 6 82 WeM. IMUalon 6 8ii Wyoming 6 41 Forty Fort 6 4ti BeariKlt 6 to Kingston Plymouth JuuoUon 7 00 Plymouth TO AvomlAle - ' 09 Nantlenke 714 Hunlock's 7 20 siik'kshlnny 7 81 lllck'B Kerry in Beach Haven 7 68 Bi-rwlck Bi'u BrtRrereek 8 06 Willow drove 8 i Lime Kldge 8 14 6 60 03 607 6 13 8 28 6 88 6 46 62 6 6 7 a 70 7 1 7 S T S 7 4 7 & B 0 8 08 8 1 8 18 8 21 8 k 8 28 ti 82 8 80 8 40 8 44 ...... 8 48 .... 8 5' .... no: 12 35 9 ' p.m. r. m WEST. a.m. r. M.r 155 6 40 8 01 8 07 8 18 I 24 8 84 8 42 8 40 8 61 8 65 4 02 4 06 4 10 4 16 4 21 4 24 4 iH 4 84 4 87 4 45 4 60 4 65 T SHINGLES y O LAS 1 For Rurhurban and country houses. Requires no painting or after care. Superior to the liest tin, nnd cost less. NAT. SHEKT METAL ROOKINO CO 339 & 341 Grand St., Jersey City. (4111511 PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM nraniM and beautiHu Hit bait. Froim.ua ft laiumni rruwin. Mw Falla to Hertort Oray Uiii to It Youuinu you Ouiw Klp diiwi a bur Ml 0-U-4CO. 10 05 1016 10 28 10 20 1041 10 85 10 89 10 44 10 68 10 5tt ll'bi) n"i" 11 19 11 80 11 48 1148 11 64 2C3 2 10 2 13 2 17 2 20 2 24 829 .'. I 6 "6 1 08 A. M. i 7 3D f 7 88 7 ' 8 0 8 )!: 8 J A. H. I 6 00! 7 HH 7 2 7 84 7 43! 8 071 A M. I 8 24 8 88 f 8 43 8 4? 8 65 8 55 9 14 86 A. M. I 9 46 10 16 10 10 11 00 11 69 A. M P M 12 in 1 l6 2 15 4 23 6 07 R 56 Hariisbuig.. Plttpbnnr.... .lv A. V I 9 611 I I 80 r. if. I 8 00 8 11 4 IV A. M I 80 110 0 A. M 10 16 10 2l 10 27 10 45 111 66 11 10 A. M. t 11 Of. I 1 ! 1! 1 A. M 111 10 via Ko-k lt'D P. M. 12 20 11 20 12 8S 1 (HI P. M. t 1 1 1 45 1 89 2 811 8 40 4 40 9 05 P. M 3 45 4 44 6 Mil 8 261 9 0M 11 80 P. M. 1 66 8 20 P. M. I 2 1H f 40 P. M I I 12 f 8 21 r 8 80 f 8 60 ' 8 68 4 10 P. M 12 86 ,2 (X), 2 20i . 2 28 9 86 1 8 00 P. M I 4 10 4 1H f 4 2 . 4 80 4 86 4 W 4 66 5 r, P. M. 8 451 6 1H 6 14 7 10 8 IT 9 tO A. M. 10 05 P. M. IS 06 t 6 55 A. M. Ill : T. M. I 6 651 P. M. t 2 5j 4 23 11 8" P. M. II) 60 111 801 P. M I 6 26 6 6. P. M, 111 X I 9 4 no 6. P. M I 7 8) A. M. I 2 (HI1 P M , p. 1 I 6 00 f 08 6 17 6 87 6 47 7 00 P. M. I 6 utl 8 1' 6 I 8 6 t P. 1 . 7 0: 7 O, 7 11 7 28 7 80 7 80 7 47 8 10 P. M . I 9 25 10 40 r. m? 8 81 10 10 A. V. I 4 CO 8 36 7 4 Weekdays; Dally, f riBB station Pittsburg..-Harrlabursr. ..lv Pittsburg lv Lewlstown Jo Sunbury ar A. M I 8 CO P. M. I 8 10 M. t 8 00 P. M. t 8 06 t 5 00 Washtnsrton....iv Baltimore " Philadelphia..." Harmnurff.. Sunbury ....... Pittsburg Iv Clearneld .... hlllpBbure.. Tyrone " ueiieionie " Lock Haven. ..ar A. Ui 8 90 9 81 10 12 12 30 1 41 2 4t ..lv Erie KaDe ... Kenovo Lock llaven. Wllllameport. Milton LewlBburg...... Sunbury ar 8unbury....M.. 8. Danville-.. Catawlsua B. Bloomnburg" Bgpy rerry.... Creasy Nescopeck ...,ar ...lv . ar Nescopeck. Hock Glen... Fern Glen Tornhlcken..... Itazleton M " Pottsvllle " Nescopeck lv Wapwallopen.ar Aiocanaqua " Nantlcoke " Plym'th Ferry" wukesoarre...." Plttston(S H) ar 1 P. M. P. M. A. M. 17(6 I 8 Mi I 2 60 A. M. A. M. I 2 00 1 3 4 1 9 1 A. M. - t 7 80 m t 9 18 P. U. A. M. A. M. A. II III .0 t 7 60 110 60 111 6fi I 4 65 t S 60 112 00 tl v I 4 80 I 8 80 112 26 A. M. A. M. A. M. P. M. I 8 86 I 8 05 '.til 40 t 4 00 1 I ft 06 I 9 40 ' 1 10 t 6 40 7.T 12 46 I 2 60 SS :::::: :::::: 11? 'Si? IS 111 ...... I V 0l 9 80 ........ I 10 80 P. M. A. M. A. M. r, M. I IH 7 55 I 6 25 11 10 t 6 40 10 811 11 68 t 7 88 11 86 1800 A. M. P. M 12 55 I 8 80 tl2 40 4 06 1 60 9 19 1 27 ' 4 62 9 06 1 15 47 2 21 S 45 1 65 5 20 A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M ' 56 10 I 9 65 t 2 00 t 6 43 6 83 10 17 2 21 6 07 6 54 10 85 2 87 24 Via 10 43 2 43 6 82 Hock flO 47 1 2 47 f 6 Sf Oler 10 66 2 65 6 41 8 07 11 10 3 10 51 A. M. A. M. P. M. P til 10 14 16 t 7 Ct t7S 11 85 4 40 7 3: 7 47 11 48 4 46 7 W 7 68 11 54 4 65 7 4t P. M. 8 22 12 18 5 16 8 OS 11 80 2 Ot) 6 25 A. M. A, M. P. M. P, If t 8 07 111 10 t 8 10 t 6 69 8 IN 11 22 8 19 7 09 I a xci il ax a 001 1 si 8 48 11 54 8 50 1 42 P. M. f ' 12 02 4 0(1 7 62 9 OS 19 10 4 10 - 8 00 A. M P. M P. M.l t 9 8ft 119 4W t 4 62 10 OH! 1 IS" 5 20 P. M t 8 86 9 05 t Weekdays. I Dally, t Flag station. Pullman Parlor and Sleeping Cars run o through trains between Sunbury, willlamBpor and Erie, between Sunbury and PbllxdelpbU and Washington ana between uarriBourg, mis; burg and the west. tor iwciner iniormauun appiy tu ikwi Agents. J. B. HUTCHINSON. J. R. WOOD. Gen'L Manager. Gen. Pass, Agt. 5 50 5 6 6 06 m. Bloomsburg Hupert Ciitiiwlpsa Danville Cuulasky C imercn NOHTUUMBKRLAND... 821 8 24 8H4 8 40 8 65 12 01 12 C 12 15 13 22 19 27 It 82 12 47 2 80 142 2 47 152 2 57 8 02 8 10 8 24 8 35 8 42 3 49 8 55 8 59 4 04 4 11 4 IT 1 23 4 8S.T8 18 4 44 8 81 6 6 6" 6 6 8 68 710 7 25 7 82 78.8 '749 7 63 8 Oil 8 07 113 4 49 9 ( 6 12 67 4 64 8 4 91'0 1 10 6 (8 9 0 Connections Bt Rupert with 1'hllBdelplila I Reading Hallrond for Tamflnend, Tamaqua Wllllauisport, sunMiry, PotiKvlllft, etc At Northumberland with P. & K. Dlv. p. & K. for Harrl-burg, Lock Haven, tmporlum Wisirer. Corrr and Erie. W. F. HALL8TEAD, Gen. Man., Scrauton, Pa. SOUTU.-ARKIVI. II. & B R. II, am 7.10I 7.oh: 7.118 6.68 6.6(1 6.401 6.291 6.25 6-11 60S 6.04 .('.' 6.68 6.41 8.40 a 111. 12.06 1 12. 00 1 11.67! 11.47 11.48 11.33 11.2' 11. HI 11.13 11.05 11. IX) 10 68 10.6 10.43 pirn 6.30 6.2H 6.24 6.12 .0U 6.69 6.48 5.44 5.37 5.87 5 22 5.90 5.18 5.03 p.m. 2.15 2.0 9.06 1 60 1.46 1.30l 1.00 19.63 12.45 12.8 12.10 140.1 11.63 11.45 10.40l5.0olll.80 1 am a m p m p m LIAVI Bloomsbu'g. " P. A p. " Main st.. Paper 11 111. ..Light ft.. Orangevh'e. .Forks... ...Zaner's... .Stillwater. ...Benton.... ...EdHon's.... .Coie'B Cr'k. ..Laubach.. ...central.,. .Jam. City.. NOKTH LIAVI am pmipmmm 1 1 411 8.4' 8.49i 9.42 8.5'.' 8.45 9.01 2.54 9.0V2.Mt 9, 9.28' 9.271 9.88 9.48 9.47 9.6"! 9.6k 10,10 10.14 8.10 '8.20 8.241 8.30 8.40 8.44 8 47 8.67 4.07 6 46 6.10 6.47 6.60 7.11 16.87 7.05rt.60 7.1417.10 7.24 I.kb 7.8,i; 7.4K 7.47 7.51 8.01 8.11 4.10M.16 7.35 .45 8.00 8.80 8.40 8.46 9.00 9.6 9.8S auipuipmam AHIWV Philadelphia 8c Reading Railway Engines Burn Hard Coal No Sn. x In effect July 1, 18;8. THAINS LI4VI Bl.OOVSBTJHQ For New York, Philadelphia, Heading- rcttr vllle, Tamaqua, weekdays U.80a. m. For VMUlamspori, weenuu a, t.oua. ui., o. v For Danville and Milton, weekdays, 7.80 a. m. 8 40. ' For Catawlsss weekdays 7.80, 8.88. 11.80 a. m., 12.20, 8.40. 5.00 6 80, p. m. For Kupert weekdays7.80,S.38 11,30a. m., 12.20, 8.40, 5.00, 6.30, p. m. For Baltimore, v aahlngton and the West tfa B. & O. K. K., through trains leave Heading Ter. mlnal, Philadelphia, 3.20, 7.65, 11.28 a. m., 8.46, 7.27, p. m. Siindovs 8.20. 7.65 11.26 a. m., 8.46, 7 27, p. m. Additional trains from 4 and Chestnut ntreet Btatlnn, wetkdajB, 1.85, 6.4t 8 23 p. m. Sundays, 1.36, 8.2S p. m. THAINS FOR BLOOMhBURO Leave New Tork via Philadelphia 8.00 s m., and via East on 9.10 a. ro. Leave PhlladelphlB 10.21 a. m. Leave Heading '2.15 p. m. Leave Poti svifle l.8n p. m. Leave Tamaqua 1.49 n, in., Leave Williams). on weekdaj e 10.00 a n,, 4.80 p m. laveCatawissa weekdays, 7.00,6.(0 9.10a. m 1.80 8.40, 6 08 Leave Hupert, weekdays, 7.0S, 8.28, 9.18 11.4 a. m., 1.88, a. fo, 6.2. ATLANTIC CITY DIVISION. In enVct Oct. 4, 1898. Leave Philadelphia, i hesinut Street what and South Street wharf tor Atlantic City. Wbbk.uayb Express, 9.ooa. in., (Saturdays only 1.30) 2.00, 8.00,4.00, 5.oo, 7.10 p.m. Aecoiumo dutlou, 8.00 a. m., 5.80, 8 80 p. m. Sundays Ex press, 9.00 10.00 a. in. Accommodation, 8.00 a m., 4.45 p. m. Leave Atlantic City, depot, : Wkbi-bavb Express, 7.85, 8 15, 9 00, 10.46 a. m., 8.30, 6.80 p. m. Acoom., 4.25, 8.17 a. ni., 4.08 p. m. Sundays Express, 4.00, 5.30, 8.00 p. lu. Accom., 7.15am., 4.15 p.m. For Cape May, Sea Isle City and Ocean City. Weekdays 9.00 a m. Sundays Chestuut street 9.15 a. ui., South street, 9.00 a. in. Additional Weekdays for Cape May, 4.15 p. in., for 8oi Isle City, 6.00 p In., for Ocean Clty,4.15, 6.00 p.u Parlor oars on all express trains. I. A. SWKUMhl), KDSON J. WEEKS, -, Ueu'l Supt. uen'l Pass. Agt. GET YOUR JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE
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