THE COLUMBIAN, B LOOMS BUfcA . Ti C . i $ 6W V. orlJ a: .-".'vV. Il.Ti.rT Of tli.'i OIK" llll'i' :: ''m '. i '1 VI! Illn III" III Hi! I'rn Ihi'lv n i.i mi l of ; .!-iv trilui!.;: ii.ii. WlH'tl I i i ' I 1.1- V';-t K'l-slpr,!"! of n I'- .! . Miii mimtre i. "Sll's rrfimcil fully. "V cr 11 1 . ! limt ill . f:il.illi;ir i !n t'.i- r, it v. 1 1 hi li . : !:i I' ll't'T h :.) I ( li ti I fiiil.l tnle- :v lit is . ics iinriiinli-il ti'll i:h WOllH'll t:) t. TillTC- trinr- it if HC' a hundred fore" tmii:r.iT d me "Oh, h-m; yimr :i I tics! ! J-Oii In help in,, t.i rut nut or country--tn New Zi iilnml." "Why New I'lilntiil ?'t "I viuit to Ri-t tut fur ,v..ny this romitry ns 1 run." "1 urn Mfrjilil run t ninrifiKc Wl.'lt til.! that. rut- ito cni Know Ciiinlmr?" "Yfi. Ifx a (low lilscult." "It mny lie. hut U'h also ,i trlct mi th" cm.vf of Africa. A of tiHTctwints I know have a tr;i station thiTi'. Thf manager rfu- liccn out three yi-ars, is ro il ! firi.i .l.liK ho nine home in loss than h'.x months' time. I think I run tet yon the Jnli. If be tween tlK'ii ( iid now yon acqnlr? a kn'W l- (if t,,. a j ! ii;;;; ..." "What laiiKitiW.'" "Calatiar. The native of tic Calnlmr lintrt Fp.i.U a dialect un like any other, an.l the manager of tho vtatloii tin st ho fully conversant With It." In tlio end, after an tnte.v'ew with the heail of the firm In mien tlon. I nm-i'tetl tlie post, the ap pointment heinj; jirov hlntial on my belli;; nhle to ronvcrsii In Calahar with a native missionary who wan coming to KhkiiiikI In four months time to attend a KiitlnTltiR of Afri can clergymen In London. The (iiiestlon nron' who was to tea c h m Calahnr. Ap- imivnt'.v no one In T.on- lon knew It. Finally I FOUght Ollt I r o f e Fsor Peters. The 5 r e at au thority on prim It tvo lane uaes proved to he :t shabby lit tle old man addicted to iiLiiff-taknu. "Thu Cal-.-. bar dia led,," h e said, "aye. "H'i provod to shabby little, old tye. If ever a bo a man." new edition of my book Is railed for I'll tra rh.'tp'er on It. It's write an ex a very lt.ter- Cttin;; lanjruae." "V.'iM oil teaeh It to n;e?" I ask- cd. ;n:d explained the situation. "I'm ton l)..:sy j 1 1 ; t now. 1 can't find time." "Yon r.iiist teach me," i cried In l: rni. "You're our of thi: very few men In London who know the lai'truape." SIi!l lei i!eiin'iii il. (Ju a sudden, however, ai't. r an extra I'iK pinch ot Brmf, he cliii:;;;' d hU m'.nd and promised mo an houi throe times a week, and to set me lessons, which, It I worked conscientiously, would niakn me proficient In Calabar in three months. (Jreatly delighted at the upshot of the interview, hastened home to tnd that my extremely musical land . land, Mrs. Tompkins, was at her piano again. Tho Incident clirys tallzed h nebulous desire to got away from Kensington and the vicinity of Miss Austin. Again 1 went to Bee Benzon. "I'm tired," I said, "of furnished apartments, and landladies who play the piano ul. the afternoon and evening; and, of course, It will be Impossible for mo to study under the circumstances. Can you got mo Id Kcmcwhere a: a paying guest In a ju!ct house?" Within a week, thanks to the In Tulnerablo Ilen.on, 1 was installed In I'pper Hempstead, and devoting myself seriously to tho utudy of Calabar, My hostess, a Mrs. Vaughan and her two daughters, Hope and Kveiyn, completed the household. Evelyn was a school girl, Hope a few u..rs oliler. a si.niewhat clever aritlst, who Illustrated Children's Christmas hooks. Her days were spent drawing Impossible pretty chil dren princesses, fairies. giants, c-ereB, and animals with conversa tional powers. We rapidly became friends. I wrote :.ouie appallingly bad verses to accompany some of her drawings wh'ch Bhe couldn't sell, and a mis guided publisher then bought them. To bnlanco thu obligation she hear.l r.ie Bay my lesons, in Calabar. My progress In that tongue was furj rising niysulf and earning me the commendation of tlio professor. Every morning after breakfast I used to Mart translating the Stand ard reader into Calabar, und then Mitting ii o English tho exercise in Ca'Hbar r.rt mo by tho professor. At ilrst 1 used to do this In my sitting room. Presently 1 got in the hahlt of i-taying in tho dining room after breakfast. Miss Vaughn "c.1 tnat room for u studio, and wo found we worked all the better In tnnsnany. AiU-i luncheon we used Mm 1. I'M ' :. .. I ....', I, V (l''t ( Illlin i n:il 1 fin: it 1 1 t lie l I y I' I Of i:l'l IhMT.t Ivor. 'ii i 'm V C:i .l-'i'r h: "Wiiiit'a (I nt my that? i ! ' i clc iif . I'll" hurl: fl'!' '.''( miry from Cal.-.lmr arrive nef I v.iek. Oh, he does, does he? Well. Mr. Trent, stick to your exer-ri'-.w tl'il then, and nfter you've met Irm, ( nine and tell me ho vnu've. i fared." "I will," I promised, "nnd I'll set- tie up th.-n," for hitherto I had not . pnid the professor a farthing; he ; ha.i pt.t It off. saying that he pre I tcrre.l payment nt tho end of file , coun e. The week pasrd raiidly. I worK r l herd, and. when not studying Cal ' ahar, read hooks about West Afrlcn I nnd dlscusied my future there with I Mope. Wo promised to oxchans-e j b't'iTs by every mall. I was nlso to ! fill up my leisure time by writing a j loni; fairy tale In verse suitable for j a Christmas Illustrated fairy bonk. Ail too sooon .he Calahar native , arrived, and an appointment was ; fixed at the office of the. company. J Menzon, at my special request, nc I roiiipat.l. d me. and punctually at th Hour ; umed we were ushered Into the manager's private room an 1 found him engaged with a big, black man dressed In European style. "Now, Mr. Trent," said the mana ger, "Just converse with our good friend here In h!H native tongue. I Immediately hurst Into Calahar speech, welcoming tho nigger to the land of King Edward, und trusting he had had a pleasant voyage. Hut the man only stared, nnd at last, wuen I ceased, he said. "Mo no understand," and then began chat tering In some gibberish utterly un intelligible to mo I retorted In Calabar, begging him to answer In his own tongue, but all to no purpose. Then I knew that Calabar was gibberish utterly different to the language I had been laboriously learning for three mouths. "Paters has been having a Joke with you," suggested Henzon, when this fact was at last clear, "or eiso he's taught you aztec or some other outlandish lingo by mistake." "Mistake," I roared. "I'll go and j kill him! Here I have wasted throe llionthu of mv life" nn.l I rnuVin.t out of tho otllce In a state bordering on frenzy. I d not bellevo I would really have slain the eminent pro- essor had caught him rhat after loon; but he van out, and lis servant :avo mo a etter a d - ft'll'Kl fWJtJ! I ressc-d t o V m vie' lif h My dear .!r. Trent," t ran, "I am caving Eng- WM. y :i 1 k iit';-u i n d to "May I tell your mother 1100 to Bt,ld' we're engaged?" hybrid Jap anese, said to be spoken by the tribes in the Interior. You have by this time, no doubt, dlscoverej that the language I taught you was not Calahar, nor any West African dia lect. Many years ago, when I was young and obscure, the dream cf In venting a universal language came to me. With infinite care I com piled It, only to find that uo one woould learn it. No publisher would publish a cheap handbook of It. except at my own expense, and I was too poor then to pay a printer's bill. "So Tnittco' as I styled it, died still-born. I put it away, and be came in time a professor of lan guages. I. who had invented the finest language In the world a lan guage no one know but myself. Thin you came to me and the temrtKtlo" to teach at least c no pupil 1'nirlco assailed me and I s::c(T.mbe.l to It. Any rea seriah'e claim lor damages you liko to forwn.d to my lawyer will be met. Eaiti'.fuily yours. Arthur Paters." m That day, after dinner, Hope and 1 sat on a bench in it uecluded corner of the Heath. Wo talked in Ca'a bar I mean "I'nlilro." I append a translation of my speech. "After all, I expect I shouldn't have liked West Africa. I'm not sorry I'm not going." "What did you say?" "That's awfully sweet of you. ilape, it v.as the thought of being away from you that made the Idea of leaving Eirdaud so unwclcoii.e." "Din't tay 'Mr. Trent,' say 'Yv'al K t.' " "No, I know I shouldn't. I couldn't help It." "No. 1 never kissed Miss Austin In my life." "No. 1 never really loved be fore. How couldl, when I never net you?" "I swear it." "May I tull youi mother we're en gaged?" Cnlfico Is the finest language la ;lie world. . . Bit a M A Coun rv Rich Potentially But Po.tr in Pec'. A PLHN I I I DDI' Or GIFTS It fr'ev: ruin i( U !i:e That ProiTr- f ito Xatlojis Would Call Hmi, Y ''it South American .rlu!ilior Are Ceiitenieil l iter Poverty In V.'li'rli the Native- Live. Paraguay Is one of the sisterhood of Latlri-A merican republics which enjoys a plentltiide of gifts but re mains poor In the midst of vast po- '"T'lal wealth. Its Government what highly civilized people, rejoie ing in llie Deiietlts of what wo call Progress, ranging from porcelain I. a h'ubh to luxurious express trains, rd ns "bad." yet tho Paraguay i. :ic are contented. Anglo-Saxon on lor. kern In Paraguay lament that I tiii re are few factories, wlro fences, Hies with asphalted streets, pollce i men wearing helmets and the reBt of I the apparatus of civilization. Of J coarse wo are bound to Join in the ciiorns or disapproval. A corres pondent of the Iliienos Ayres Stand ml. writing from Asuncion, the capital of Paraguay, In September, the early "r.prlng" of tho regions south of the equator, says: "How glorious the flowers and yo'.ing leaves; All Paraguay Is now ono blossom, at a distance one sees n hluelRh haze In between tho all green of tho forest. Farther, all light yellow, and again a lightish plr.k. The fragranco ono perceives miles off carried by the wind until lost, and for a moment one forgets the hardships und struggles of life upon earth and feels one's self more spirit ual among these glorious accomplish ments of the Oreat Spirit, and one wishes to bo better If only for one moment, and to peep Into the soul llfo of after-life, with that Intense doflre to learn more, and know more about this magnificent nature, and how dull to have to return to overy-day life; no time for thought. no time for anything but business and to once more see all the miseries of life and not be able to help the suiTorlng millions of whom Para guay also has Its share; one trip In the ramp will show anyone In what utter poverty these people live, and in what wretchednens their children Bro born, bred and finally die, if they ever do reach the age of matur ity, for the greater part die before they are one year old. Happily for them, they have but little sentiment, an 1 alt Is easily forgotten; they are not a strong people, physically speak Ing. If so they would In truth be sublime, as Ixmgfellow puts It: '(), fear not In a world like this And thou shalt know ere long. Know how sublime a thing it Is To suffer and be strong.' "Nor do I give them credit for b"liin a strong-minded people, with come few exceptions." ci the correspondent depicts a country that has charms wholly lack Inn; in tho lands of cold northern ml-ts und rains. The Paraguayans lov their delightful country and probably find, though without con, uc!oi:s thought about it. that com pensation which, after all, evens up things in a much bemuddled world. Tho correspondent adds: "This mlBery is of course greatly fl no to themselves and the great thing for Paraguay is to get labor Imported. Good, cheap workmen, are essential for the progress of Paraguay and especially agricultur ist are wanted. This problem the Government has been trying to aolve and I believe they are well on tlieir way to obtain satisfactory results, although It is impossible to tee any change as yet, the time having been too bhort. The new Immigra tion law with a splendidly fitted out 'Oiicina do Inmigraeion," all will In the long run tend to Induce immi grants from all countries to come to Paraguay. " The "misery" may be evident from one point of view, but when we turn our gaze to the horrible slums of great ritios In distant lands, we are lncllnej to regard the lot of the Par aguayan as something vastly better than that of the dwellers of the "East Shies," of London and New York, lioubtless many things In Paraguay way be .u4 rovei., but usually v, here conization, with Its immense complexities and demands, enters much that is satisfying to the soul of man departs forever. Tho strenuous whlto race seeks to make over all peoplo according to Its approved model, but nowhere has It achieved contentment, and so it can not beiitow it as a gift upon the back, ward .nations. Tho Standard's cor respondent wants to see "good, cheap workmen" In Paraguay, but in the Argentine itself tho workmen league themselves In guilds and unions and clamor for their "rights," while in more advanced hands the labor prob lem puzzles tho wits of statesmen and employers. If tho "superior" nations have not been able to con ciliate iho worklngmen, there la tmall hope of Paraguay's realizing (he Ideal of the Standard' correa pondent. Necessity. Necessity is the mother of hard work with the most of ui. Hot Sisters Now and ngum you nee two women puss, iu iliivn the uticct who look like sisters. Ye lie nstonivhid to lcirn tlnil tiu-y ntc i i.ni.pr a :'d diu r' !cr, mui mi rvVi.c Utut ,! wuii'i ii nt f.irrv or f'.irty-!ive oe,:'it to l,e i.t her linct Bie.f fsircnt. Why isn't it so 'r I lie I'cncrnl health ( woninii in so in timately associated with the lncul health df the essentially feminine organ tliut tlitrc can he no red checks and round form whrro there is female weakness. Women who have suffered front this trouble have found prompt relief nnd cure in the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It gives vigor nnd vitality to tho organs of womanhood. It clears the complexion, brightens the eyes and reddens the checks. No alcohol, or habit-forming drugs is contained in "Favorite Prescription." Any sick woman may consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. F.very letter is held as sacredly confidential, and answered in a plain envelope. Address t World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R.V. Pierce, Pres., Buffalo, N.Y. OEiUid HC P. l!r. .Vililroy Says Ilrink ami Urujjs lies! ley lliiiniin Pervert Who Can lie Spared. Chicago.- "Vice Is a benefit to society. It aids nature by sweeping out her overcrowded workshop, rl 1 ding her lal niv.toiy of :::ls its, defects an I other worthless creatures." ii.t tici hired Lr. McKlroy, of Wash ington. u'ldn-Ks'tig the Hyde Park Women's !:Uil al Cki'i. "Men i u l woir.i n addicted to I'rink, ilrups and other corruptive i radices Lie henelit i ti -C humanity by their si If t'.v'i.ri:et!on," asserted i jr. McKlroy. "These human per verts, by the moral suicide, leave the world to those capable of self re straint and similar virtues. "Nature consigns annutlly to her Junk pile thomands of drunkards, !'.:. (lends, Vports,' loafers, gam lleis and others of the criminal and (luiiM-crlni'iurl r lasres. "Vice performs the office of Judge and executioner, rutting off the ca reers of lis victims at an early age. generally In the twenMis or early in tlm thiities. "People who have done much In t'.'O way of reforming drunkards have l.ec'i surprised and astonished to find how little real manhood remained after whiskey had been removed from the equation. "If the world were to suddenly quit manufacturing, importing and selling Intoxicants I believe that the defoetvo and delinquent classes would Invent some other means of self destruction." ii:r.:; shack hocsws mkal. ii:ier Surprises Click ami Ioe Calm ly Munching; from Manger. Wallace, Idaho. George Heller, a Wallace mining man, returned from a trip to the New Chicago property, ne, r Murray, In which he Is heavily Interested. He was at tho mine fpr several days, driving a horso from Wallace and keeping the animal in a barn at tho workings. Ono morning when he went t' l.arnei-s tho animal ho heard Ftrango rands In the barn, and approa.li- inj'; cautiously, was surprlseu to see a largo doe and a yearling buck landing on either sldo of the hon-e eating from tho same manger. It was well for Mr. Heller that Ii3 approached tho door cautiously, lor as soon as he was sighted by the doe she niado a furious charge In his reetlon, nnd he escaped injury only by Jumping behind the door and using It as a shield. The doe and buck then ran out and made for tho timber, and Mr. Heller, having no gun, could merely watch their f.lnht in surprise. DIGS VP MASTODON HONKS 'arnier Finds Teeth of Great Irelils torle Animal. Mason, Mich. Teeth and bones, upposed to bo those of a mastodon. have been unearthed on the bank of' Willow crefk e the farm of Charles Kckhart, three miles south west of this city. Frank Warfteld. who woik.i tho farm, recently found ne pel feet tooth, the crown of an other und half of another split diag onally across the crown. The per fect tooth is about five inches long third Inches thick and five Inches from tho crown to tho end of the roots, which are broken off. Tho crown Iw black and highly polished. Sorn.i of tho bones are apparently from the limbs, and two fragments f the lower Jaw bone, which show wiioiv two back teeth had been tm- "ii!c;l, are together about twenty lii:hya long. I't i. Mil;,; .U.amK.ucd l-Ycnis. Poston. The abandoned farniB of New Kug'un.1 have been taken ad vantage of to a considerable extent for forestry work. About 2,500 acres have been planted with trees, nnd In the course of n few years these will prove profitable Investments. In ad dition to this, several of the water companies have adopted llie tree planting policy as a means of foster ing the water supply. The redemp tion of these farma Is a very Impor tant thing to this section, for the In creasing number of abandoned fnrma has been a matter of serious alarm for n long time, nnd this step seems to offer a solution to tho problem of utilizing tho land which has been standing idle. In Massachusetts this area of wut-te has been computed at 10 per cent, (if the total area, while in Khodc lsif.ud alone there are no less than aS of these abandoned ti t Agu,, jh I no nhu iuu nava siwavs 1 he Kind YouHaveAiwavs Butt i i i e ; . That keen oln ervi : ir" e.-..r. John .'.i'l.ir. te!:K in . r y: I' ll k." ii pretty s'' rv (..' . -4.; ' v.::rcli. In i'-.o :. i'ir of I I.e e';;iln.i ,i .. w ;...:- ; i t il''it the he.-,.i r,f e ; ii , 1 f y ti" San Jort'ii:!:;. i". ! . l'o:i p.- .- : ro.'i'.l i frr.i-u la !;e vi : .' ;'" e" v;s ten feet dec;', v. .:, s.u '' ff" the f refit truck l;f ft wo-.vie'ic '' Wh?t could the primal I" Mi .' Ii g of, to come ouf so rinly v, 1 il.- ' the ground was siiov-buri-'! ? V Ki' aily direction of hi-- tvn lt sp '. I.e had a f'.eiinlto nlni. ii'id r-i! e- ly it was toward i ir.n;iiitul'i Miir ii : thousand feet high that I v a. t climb. So I foliove.l to s- '." 1 could find out what he was up to. F'rom the base of the mounti.ln the track followed straight up, an i I knew by the melting snow thPt I v ti.' not far behind him. I lost the truck on a crumbling rldgo, partly proJ-rt-lng through the enow, but soon dis covered It again. Toward the summit of tho moun tain In an open spot on tho south side, nearly enclosed by disintegrat ing plnnnrles among which tho sun hef.t reverberated, making an iso lated patch of warm climate, I found a fine gtirden full of rock cress, phlox, sllene, drabs,, and a few grasses; and in this garden, I over took the wanderer, enjoying a fine fresh meal, perhaps tho first of the season. How did he know the way to this one garden spot, so high and so far off, and what told him that It was In bloom while yet the snow was ten feet deep over his den? He must have had more botanical, topographl- 01 and ellmatologlcal knowledge than moat mountaineers possess. A Purlsinn Character Dead. Paris, France. The revolutionary Llbertad died recently In a local hos pital from a kick which he had re ceived during a stormy nu'eting. Llbertad was one of the most curious figures in contemporary Paris. He wore no hat, but long tangled hair and a long beard. Over his scarlet shirt he wore a black blouse, and he was never seen without a crutch and an enormous cane. His language was terrific, and he rarely attended any public meeting without calling for blood. Tho man was a complete mystery. His most Intimate disciples knew nothing of his history. On his death bod he begged hs friends not to arrange a funeral for him, as he had left his body by will to the Paris School of Medicine. Maharajah's Wife a Beauty. Paris, Franco. When the Mahara jah of Kapurthalla fell In love with tho dancing girl in the streets of Madrid, Anita Dclgado was not only exceedingly graceful but very pretty. Ho brought her to Paris to be trained for tho position she was to occupy, and she developed Into a handsome, stylish girl. He took her to his home in India and made her his wife with Oriental ceremony amid great splen dor. Recently he returned to Paris, his favorite city, and brought hla bride, now become a woman of sur passing loveliness. Copies of her lat est photograph are eagerly sought. Til inn bless Monkeys. The radical difference between the hand of man und of the monkey lies In the thumb. In the human hand the thumb has the "opposing pow er," which means that the thumb ran bo made to touch the tip of each or any of the other fingers on the same and; the monkey's thumb Is non-opposable. Miles of Human Hair. The average w'oman carries 60 miles ofhalr on her head. HUMPHREYS' Humphreys' Veterinary Spec-Hies forthe cureof diseasesof Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Doga, Poultry. A. A. For Fl'VEIlS, Milk Fever, Lung Fever. B. B. For HIM1.1IX8, LamrneM. BheumatUro. C. C. For t () UK Throat. Epizootic, Dlilemaer. D. D. For V. Oil MS. Dull. drub. E. E. For ( 01 ;i!S, t'olda, lufluenza. F. F. For COLIC, Onllyaclie, Diarrhea. Q. Q. Prevents Ml AC All Rl Ui E. H. 11-Fur K:!M:'iiJ III. uMer disorder. I. I. For:U ItlKKAKKK Mance, Eruptions. J.H. For U YD OMIITM V Indigestion. Price, CO Centa per bottle. Vet. Cure Oil, for Stable op Field Ubo, $1. At druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of price. AfiOOPago Hook on th treat ment nnl care of Domestic Animal and Stable Chart to hang up, mailed free. HtmrnREYS HOUEO. MEDICINE CO., Corner William an4 Ana Btreeu. New York. ouiumuia & Momiur 1. Ky. II li; Alll.l. INI I I I IT Jiiiii.' I 1'j'i.i, : ml 1. 1. in -ii it.tr lice. Curslcnvc l'loomfur l.yy , Al med i a , I.iat Kidc, Berwick and i nUiii.c.hat t fuiritaa follows: ( A. M. tioo, 5:40, 6:io, 7x0, 7 .-40,. 8: 9.00,9:40, 10:20, 11:00, 11:40. 1". M. I2:io, I :oo, 1 140, 2. 20, 3 :t0, 3'.4' 4:20, s .00, 5 140, 6,2o.7:oo,7:40,8:2o,9;' (9:40) 10:20 ( 1 1 :on) l.cuviiif; depart from licrwicl nut ht a from time K,vel J '""'i commencief. t 6:oi n. m'i I.cnve liloom for Catawisna A. JU. ; (:I5, 7:oC, 8:00, 9:00, tlO:00, 'l .4 l2:oe. I'. M . 1 :00, f2:oo, 3:00, 4:00, 5:0c, Iix4, t7:oo, 8:00, 9:00, 10:20, '(iimo) Cnrs returningdepari f rom Ctawi M lIlilH,elrlTl timcasgivena bor , ! irst cai Jh .ivcs Marki tSiiiaie for I crstitk on Sund iys ol 7:00 a. m. First tnit'nr Cntawissa Sundays 7:oorf. in. First cir from ltcrwicK for Illuom Sundayt Icivcs at S:no a. m . First car leaves Catawissa Sundays at 7 30 n. m. T F'rom Power House. Snturdny nihi only. fl. K. ti Connection. Wm. TitRwn.Lioia, Superintendent. Blodinsliurg & Sullivan Railroad. Taking R fleet F"eb'y 1st, igoS, 12:05 a. (r NOKTHWAItD. A.M. r.M. i f HlnnmRhiir? I) I. A W... 9 00 2 7 HlnoniHhurif ft II 9 02 2 IV Paper Mill 9 14 I 62 LtKlit. Htrcel V IK 2 &r. OrttDKevllle B in 8 1!) ForkH 3 n 1:1 Zannra fi 40 f) 17 Stillwater H 111 Benton 9 AC 8-1 Kd.sona nno.)'! 87 CoIph Creek in 03 j. 40 Laubaclia in on s (irana Mere I'arlc flMO .n 47 Central 10 15 8 M iftinlNon Cttv Hi h fl .1 l M r"w w M 7, OS 7 li 7 el It t in e t 4 1 P.M. t n I.t 17 fl S! (I 84 II 4U (t t.7 7 03 7 IS j 17 7 lil '7 s; '7 "I 7 41 7 SOUTH WA II D. 22 '. II M 11 4k 11 is 12 Of m i 12M 124 is sa 1 1 Sf 1 41 I 9 3 M ill A.M. t 5 SO 6 M f(l 01 not r ik y 14 6 IN 6 2N tS5 s m SO 7 UO 03 A.M. t 10 48 10 61 111 00 ll Oli II 0 111 09 11 13 11 21 fll 29 11 S II 42 11 Ml 11 53 P.M. t 4 fin 4 8M it 47 I 4H 4 6 H M 500 6 0 17 6 HI 5 81 t 8 6 42 A.M. t 7 00 7 0S n is 7 IX 7 2U r7 84 7 8" 7 R f7 45 7 49 8 00 8 10 8 )! 8.5 8.S0 JamlBonClty.... Central ... Oraaa Mere Park I.aubHi'hs Coles Creek Kasons Benton Ml HI water Zaners r ork (11 nifPvlUe LI(Tht Hlreet Paper Mill Bloom. P s K. . . . Bloom. DLtW, 20 1210 6 00 Tralna No 21 and 22 mliefl, aecond cla.irt. t Iiallv exc -nt Munilav. 1 lliillv I Nniut. only, t King stop. W. C. UN' VUKR, Snpt. KkHl4L 60 YEARS' Tradc Marks Dcsiqims Copyrights Ac AnTonepenrtlng r nktrh nnd description may O'llckif nrort-niti our opinion free whether &u iiuM'iit liti is prohnhlf pHtetunMn. t'nnirnuntrn. liMimtrictlr "iIKU-iiUhI. HANDBOOK on I'itent tiont I roe, tHdtit nynnry for nonuriiiK ptitntn. I'litiMita taken tlirouirh Mntin A i.'o. ruculT tpetuii not tee t without chnrgo, in the Scientific American. A hundoomoly Itliiftfrntpd woktr. l.nrvnt rtr ciiluiloii of miT dciuiitlUo Joiirnnl. Turin. $3 a jr: four ttmnttn, L bultl bjrall new dealer. MUNN&Co.38'0'" New York braucb OiBcx, 626 F Bt Waihlmilon, IX C. 12-10- ly CHICHESTER'S PILLS . . TIIK DIAMONII BBAMn. - oauirsi ask yoip iv hlkM.wi lw I'lll In Krd sod iim sesled with 111. DIAMOND IIKANU PILIjl f.. Z yssri known ss Best. Ssfsst. Alwsvs Kellsbk SOLD BY WIUOGISTS EVERYWHERE PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cloniri and Wutiftu the Kaie. Promote luxuriant growth. N 'ver Fails to Baitore Orn Hair to it You thrill Color. Curvi K-alp diieaM't ft ho if Utlus. M POCUREONOBtFENOi:0."-,.l',:n ' r lira" . .: : .u. l..i- .-M.i-rf . .iiu.1.111. i-i.iIti ' i"i j .. t . i;, . ..1 1 1 . . i . u .nr. tn.'. uwva W ik vlilt. in., ,M AlL COUNlF.IS:.S. ii B """" tilrr.i v. itk H'iu'.;iv." t il Patent and Infrlnct Tisnt Practice Uctavr's. li Wntj i,r iioiuo t.i un ul . IS Nlntu gtroat. tpp. Ul iV-4 8UtM WiAtt C'.i. 1 AR; I!..!.'- -7 FOR Ely's Cream Balm t . li JJ.L It quickly absorbed. Gives litlict ot Ones. It cluiiiisps, BlHltllCH, AW ',yB' IichU and prot octet tlit) diai'tiHPii uicm. bruna roKultin from Catarrh aud drirw away at'oKl m thu II end quickly. KeHtre'. the Scukus of Tuxte Rud Smell, Full site 0 ctM. at DitiKginU or by mull. Liiuiil dream liulm fur uh in atoinizcrs 75 ot. Ely Urotherm, 56 Warren Street, New York, li fiitstina. VX If WASHINGTON ffiCT'!T3Trttjrjrr;xT',2di 1 i i 4 ' t II n :t. ' l I.'; if It. v il, ; ;i,i . : I.'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers