THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURd. PA. 3 SWAM'S FATAL 11 How a Great Flock Were Swept Over Niagara Fall SAD SCENE FOR ANY BIRD LOVER Ibircly Iloos n Venr Pus Without j tt Vast NuiiiIhts of Tin-no Hpk-lidld I'.lrds Taking tliu Terrible l'luiiKe Over tlio Ciitaract Loiter, Appear on the Table. All naturalists and many ports wen will recall the great destruc tion of swims winch took place at Niagara 1-ulls. A great flock o these lrge and beautiful birds was car rleu down the river and over the fa ha and an authoritative account of k the occ.iitenio recently appeared la a paper by James Savago.of UuHalo, N. Y., printed lu the bulletin of the , Buffalo Society of Natural History. While the whistling swan occurs regularly along the Nlugara Hlver, It s Is always a rare migrant and would scarcely ever to eapiureu n. 4 lor the fact that It often floats down f the river to Injury or death at the great cataract. Observers declare that scarcely a year passes without falls. About twenty made the fatal plunge lu March, XrfOU, and live in the same mouth, 11)0", but no such destruction of swans has been known as took place March 15, 191)8. wheu more than 100 were destroyed. During the greater part of the day a severe rainstorm prevailed. About U o'clock In the morning, between showers. William L,eDiona 01 Nia gara Falls, Ont., was engaged In re moving from the Ice bridge a tem porary structure that had been used during the winter season as a sou venir and refreshment stand, wheu he was startled by a loud cry. Turn ing around, bis attention was first attracted to a swan struggling ln the water at the upper edge of the Ice bridge, but on looking toward the falls he.Baw a great company of swans ln distress coming toward the bridge. The scene mat followed as a sad one for any bird lover to contemplate. "These splendid birds, helpless after their terrible plunge over the cataract were dashed against the Ice bridge by the swift current amid cakes of loose ice, which were con atantly coming down from the up per river. Some had been killed out right b the falls. Others unable to tly, because of Injury to their wings, attempted to stem the rush' lng waters, but here '-heir wonder lui swimming powers were of no avail. They were soon imprisoned in the Ice, where their pitiful cries were heartrending "The game laws of Ontario still permit the taking of geese and swan lu lUo spring until April 30, and it was not long before men and boys, armed with guns and sticks, availed -hemselveB of the privilege and be camo the chief factors ln the clos ing scene of nature's great tragedy the sacrifice of the swans." As soon as he learned of the oc rence, Mr. Savage visited Niagara halts, and from his investigation concluded that tho number of swans taken March 15 was 102. On the morning of March 18, two more were taken at the Ice bridge and a 'hlrd was Dlcked ud alive on the shore. It was secured by Mr. Sav' age and photographed. Placed in lue zoological collection ln Delaware I'ark, Buffalo, It recovered. Eleven more swans were taken later, and borne others were seen which, though apparently carried over the falls, were still able to take wing and fly away Mr. Savage quotes J. L. Davison's paper on the "Birds of Niagara County," published nearly twenty years ago In Forest and Stream, which contains reference to Injured swans ln waters near Niagara Falls, But swans are not the only water- towl that are ln danger from Nla Sara. On March 18, 1908, Mr. Sav age saw a handsome male canvas- back come down against the ice bridge. It appeared to be unable to fly. On the same day he saw a gold eneye duck struggle out of the foam lng water below the Horseshoe Falls tod reach the shore. It made no attempt to escape when picked up and semed unable to walk or fly. Later, however, it recovered and did fly off. Of the swans which went over the talis, many afterward appeared on the tablo. A number vrore preserved by the taxidermists of Niagara Falls and Toronto. .1 group of five ap pears in the Museum of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Mr. bavatre saw not less than fifty of these dead birds, and looked them over carefully, thinking that perhaps there mlebt 'be among them a trumpeter swan, but none was found. Mr. Savage believes that fully one third of the 116 swans taken would have survived '.t given proper care, but the Impulse to kill was strong er than the spirit to save, and not even a pair of these unfortunate birds was rescued from nature's doom and restored to nature's free dom Danger In Speculation. The farmer sows his seed and has no doubt' but that the harvest will repay him but he who embarks in 1 peculations that prouise sudden and great wealth, knows that he may be sowing the wind ti reap the whirlwind. Qulney. THE THREE NOTCH ROADS Origin of Hystm r 1 ravulo.n' UnMc lii Hie OnikH. Thn-e notch rjurls are iiurktoui In tlio tlmbprod pn.ru of southern tviinuii.'l mid noit..i'1'ii Ark.i...iw. Any one who has ecr travelled these suctions of the cittit.y w.V. Know Unit a three nU-li road b j. nuhllc hlntiwiy ua ('iBtinBUixlied from roaJ loading ' a sawmill, a thuu li or a schoolhouse ba-'U In the woo ls or to a farmhouse. A three notch ro.i.l cot's somewhere. If the traveller nl lows It ho will reach a town In time, If the streams are not too hinh or loo swift to bu forded. It seems that among the offenses of Ueorgo 111., King or Migiiinu, noi mentioned in tne Declaration of in dependence was thut he required all puuliu roads to be marked with . M name. In KiiRlund and Its colonies pjuilc roads na i been known as uie king's highway bo long that no uouy knows when the - -btom bk;i.i. There have ulwuys been private lanes mid rights of way, but an authoil.ed puoitu road v,i.s uivui; ; lue king s nignway. Wheu Kiijg George re (inrt!d his name to be posted at con- jnieut points on the king's high way lu the colonies the people of thut time were not particularly proud of their duty, and where tney could they ado -ed the policy of cutting three notches on trees along the road and omitting the ref erence to Kiug Cltorae. fter the Revolutionary war tno name was omitted aiiogeiuer, uui the three notches proved a vseful way of marking tho puullc Td.i. j no Virginia colonists carrier this tem lQ TBUne Kentucky and uu and lhe,r chUdren brought u to llBttourl ln early dayg ttJj roads in Missouri were built first 1 7 the Territory and tl.m by the State. There were two rcaftoona for this procedure. At first there were no counties, and later the State realized that If the matter were left coun ties there would be very little road building. So lac State built roads and marked them with three notches. Later when the counties began to buil 1 roads they were marked ln the timbered 0 untrr with two notches. Before and during the civil war this distinction was preserved ana three notch roads were always through roads leading from one town of some importance to another. Two notch roada were less Important highways, whlie roads not notched were either rail roads or plank roads. A railroad was a road leading to bo me camp whei- men were sp.-.tlr-: rails, while a plank road led to a sawmill. This was the vernacular of the Ozarks. In Ue swamp country of southeast Missouri some toll roads were built of plank 1 - ere known there as plank roada. The three notch system of marking a road so that the travel! 3r vould know a public from a private road has sur vived for a century and a half. ' Gossip An Aid to Business. It took much pumping to elicit trom the grocer the cause of the red-beaded delivery clerk's dismis sal. "The fact is," he .admitted at length, "Joe didn't talk enough, lie hadn't been trained in the Bchool of practical gossip. He didn't know how to find out things, and, what was worse, he didn't have gumption euough to tell what few things he did know. When the woman at No. 125 asked when the you.ig lady at No. 240 was going i be married. or when the baby at No. ICS was go ing to be christened, or If It was true that the v iman at No. 216 had atplled for s. dlv' ce f'om her third husband. Joe was such a chump as to say that he didn't knov. "The minute any grocer s clerk confesses that he doesn't know, he signs his own death warrant, so far as business Is concerned. It Is his business to know. That is what he Is hired for. He may have to ac knowledge once ln a while that he has no positive Information on a certain subject; but he must always moQlfy that admlHslon by adding that he will look tho matter up and report next day. Women won't buy from a firm that can't retail gossip alone with meats and groceries. If I can't meet the demand, they will trade with somebody that can. I tried to hammer that fundamental principle into Joe's red head, but somehow he couldn't learn. As a purveyof of news he was a decided failure; therefore be had to go and make room for somebody that knows how to keep track of an the neigh- oorhood news." New York u City of Tenants. Fewer New Yorkers own their own uoaies than the residents of any oth er city ln the world. The reason la a Simula one: tho land Is so valuable that none but tho very wealthy can afford Its purclu.se. Of the 391,687 families' living on Manhattan Island only 16,316 hold title to the houses they occupy and If ou will bring that little pad and pencil Into play again you will learn that 84 out of every 100 families make monthly payments to a landlord. When tnese families move, as they ure constant ly doing, it seems only necessary to take the family photographs from off the mantel so completely has their n.ethod of life been cystematized. As for the landlords, they are migh tier in wealth and tenants than any iPiidal lords of old as forsooth the tutors, whose immense multitude of iwclllngs bouse a greater numuer .1 nnniA than are co-tatned ln a It.- of the size of Haitford. Conn Seattle. Wash., of Nashville, fena MOUNTAIN MAKING. i lllmtratlon That Is Furnished by Vol cartlc Islands Along Alaskan Coast. I Tho making of mountains is Illus trated by the liocoslof Islands off the oust of Alas! a. They are volcanic Islands which teem to afford an ex- nipple of Dr. T. J. See's theory that . i till nioutituin luiiK S are first thrown up paralli'l to the const line of ii continent by the explosions which r. i-ii It w hen the ocean percolates i!. rough Its bed to the heated rocks In low. I lr. See's BiiKfccBtlon Is that succes- ilve percolations and the resultant ex- I lo.dons dig a trench in the sea bot lum during tlio course of ages, one i idge of the excHVutcd trench being thrown nr. seaward, there to wait per haps for a million years till It is es tablished as a submarine mountain ange, und the sea drains out from be tween It and the existing continent. The llogoslof volcanic Islands con firm '.his suggestion, for they and the Aleutian Islands are part of a ridge which is being f -nod more or less parallel to tho northern coast line of North America. Tho ridge suffers tunny vicissitudes and the islands are never safe from sinking. The last of them, l'erry Island, rose from the sea about the time of the Kan Francisco earthquake, 1906. Fire Island, Its younger brother, rose in lh.':i. Castle Island, the oldest, had been known Blnce 1796. The latest Island was believed to have disap peared lu 1!H)7. It la now reported that Fire Island has vanished also. A party of explorers who had Intended doing a little surveying about the isl ands could not at first find them at all. Later It reports that the biggest of the three islands hus sunk to a reef. Origin of the Club Sandwich. Alan Johnstone Is said to have orlginnttu the famous club sandwich, and the story runs that on going to the club one night between midnight and daybreak he found the cafe closed, the cooks gone, and being nearly famished, he Invaded the lard er, toasted himself some thick slices of bread, sliced them through, butter ed them while hot and laid thereon everything he found in the refrigera tor, cold chicken, ham and lettuce, with a spoonful of mayonnaise. The result was such an epicurean discovery as is not often made, but the story was too good to keep; he confided the recipe to his cronies and It straightway became one of the popular dishes of the club menu, and so the father of the club sandwich, so deservedly popular, is the present British Minister to Copenhagen. Yearning for Light. "When it comes to consuming gas in large quantities blind people can beat their seeing brethren all hollow," said an Inspector of the gas company. "I know two families where both hus band and wife are blind. Every jet is turned on full tilt ln their homes at night, and Is kept' going at that rate clear up to 12 o'clock. Light and darkness are all the same to the af flicted ones, but they Insist upon illu mination brilliant enough for a recep tion. And that partiality for light is not a whim peculiar to thoso two cou ples. Most blind people feel that way, They demand the light, and in all pri vate homes and institutions where the blind are cared for the gas bills vouch for the strange fancy." Dental. The characters in this tale are called A. and B. A. has a frightful toothache. B. is playing the part of consoler. "My dear A.." says B., "you must not succumb this way to tne pain. You muBt not thrash around and bury vour head ln yonder pillow and ln dulge In such Inelegant and thunder ous language. Be a stole, A., ne a stole!" A. sits up. "Rats!" he roars. "Stoicism leaves off wnere toothache begins." Epigram! Sickness Seasons. It seems strange to the uninitiated that there should be a "season for sickness and one for health, but such lu the case, according to a trained nurse. 'Blvcrything Is very quiet Just now, said one the other day. "So many nurses are out, the doctors have plen ty of time and the druggists are com plaining of slow business, Dut a nine later it will be different. Our busy season begins usually wheu the opera does, though the two have no con nection. Late November finds us all busy. February Is one of our best mouths." FLORIDA WINTER TOURS VIA Pennsylvania R. R. February 9 and 23 and March 9, 1909. round $48.05 TRIP FROM EAST BLOCMSBURC. Speoial Pullman Trains. Independent Travel in Florida. For detailed Itineraries and full infor mation consult nearest Ticket Agent: i-ai-7t. A Poor Weak Woman A she is termed, will endure bravely and patiently stfonieg which a strong; man would five wny under. The fact is women are more patient than they ought to be under such troubles. , livery woman oujjht to know that she may tih'nin the most experienced medical advice fret of rfinn.e end in ahmlutf confidence and privacy by writing to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, K, V, Tierce, M. President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Fierce has been chief consulting physician of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of llufTiilo, N. Y., for many years ana has nnu a wiuer practical experience .... i In the treatment of women's diseases than any other physician in this country. His medicines are world-famous for their astonishing efficacy. The most perfect remedy ever devised for wetk and deli cate women is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG. SICK WOMEN WELL. The many and varied symptoms of woman's peculiar ailments are fully set forth in Plain F.ngliNh in the People's Medical Adviser flOOS pages), a newly revised and up-to-dute Edition of which, cloth-hound, will he mailed fret on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing only. Address as above. novelties rca ist twle Sliver Trimmed Casseroles Cloths for Formal Dinners. This Is decidedly the day of the casKerolo. Theso comfortable looking ar.d handy dishes have come to the dignity of silver decoration, the sliver b lng applied ln a very open design. These may be used In exactly the SHtue manner as their humbler friends, as they stand the heat beau tifully. For entrees there are Indivi dual casseroles ln the same design. The careful housekeeper, snys Town and Country, will be Intererttd In the silver coasters or phtqm.s in applied silver which are deslstied to protect her mahogany table from the heat of vegetable dishes. An odauy ln old Sheffield pla'ed ware Is a double glass standard. This has a champagne glass at one end which when not ln use forms the bnse nnd a. cordial srlnss which ln Its turn Is used for the base at the ot' r end. In this ware too Is a dish for the coo'.j- lng of the most Important breakfast egg. This has an hour glass on top of It to Insure the result derlred. SDeakine of the table leads one naturally to the flowers which form so largo a part ln Its ornamentation and to the beautiful Unens which no true woman can pass unmoved. For the formal dinner the plain satin da mask cloth has no rival. On this the monogram is placed on each side of the centre decoration at a distance of about fourteen inches, thus leav ing a space of some twenty-eight inches for the flowers. 8outh African Millionaires. Harry Harnato. who has just died in the prime of life, Is the latest ad dition to the list of South African mil lionaires whose lives have closed pre- mntnrelv and often tragically. Cecil Rhodes, It will be remembered, did not live to see his forty-ninth birthday, although he had qualified as a million aire at least twenty years earlier, and Barney Barnato was only 46 when he came to his tragic end on the high B03 but he had lived long enough to leave nearly 1,000,000 behind him. Woolf Joel. Barnato s nepnew, was much younger when at 34 a bullet put an end to his life at Johannesourg len years or so ago, and yet he was able to leave an estate valued at z.i,ivr nnri! Herbert MatthewDavies accumu lated 734,000 before he died at the age of .43, and Mr. Belt had made and left his millions before he had long completed half a century of years. Indian Unrest. Unrest in India Is obviously becom ing more ominous. That is confessed by the government in its enactment of a "summary justice" bill for dealing with sedition. For weeks the news from that empire has been almost daily marked with reports of dacolty, or of assassination attempted or effected. Dynamite plots have been discovered, bomb-throwing has been Indirtged ln, and incitements to wholesale massa cre and Insurrection have been and are numerous in the press. There have been hints at a general uprising in April next. Whether they are fulfilled or not, there can be little question that the government is now facing the most serious problem which It has had before It since the great mutiny of half a century ago. - An English Woman Mayor. Dr. Garrett Anderson, the woman Mayor of Aldeburg, Suffolk, gave a banquet cn Saturday evening to forty councillors and other guests. The Mayor, dressed in black, with a widow's cap, and wearing diamonds, was the only woman present, The Mayor gave the totst of "The Services," and said she hoped that they would be numerous enough to meet all emergencies. Replying to the toast of "Aldeburg's vr,tiritv." tho Mayor said that dur ing her year of office she would try all she could to be a motherly Bort of hninKiiKKtinr to the town, of which Viov hurl evprv rlcht to be proud. The guests were allowed to smoke. but the Mayor did not. Sorrows of Childhood. "liy George," said the expatriate, "the unuaturaliiess of living ln an apartment never struck me so forcibly as when last night my two kids laid their letters to Santa Glaus on the 'top of the steam "radiator and went off to bed trying to figure how Santa Claus could come down the steam pipes and ud through the coils. I went out to buv a cigar before they could ask me, Poor little kids, no stockings hung by the chimney for them." O ssntBs ITOXIZA. The Kind You Have Always FEBRUARY JURORS. Tlie following persons Imve leeii drawn to servo us Jurors at Felininry term of court: , (Jkani) JriioKH. Monday, Kkh, 1 l!iof Arllnir lioliertx, Montour. 1'eter A. Mmltz. Ileiiton Twp. Amos Illinium, Herwick. James StaeUhoiie, l'ine. I.'arrixon Ileus, Fishing (7retk. A. llriissinger, Cm yngliniu. Henry J. KtlwanK Itrinrcreek. (iotliel) Ilartnian, Greenwood. M. ii. .Slitiltz, Stillwater. Kli Sclincldmiin, Hoott. John V. Bowman. Greenwood. :. V. Jamison, Center. Kdwiirii Ilemjwey, Centraliti. Ilcrt Sweeney, West Herwick. Jtev. W. It. Whitney, Bloom. C. S. Selimiek, Catuwicsa. Charles Lee, Scott. March Hosier, Hriarcreek. Ii. K. Cndman, Mlllville. Isaiali Hotter, lllooni. Josiali llerninger, Locust. J C. Christian. Mi'lville. J. 11. White, Hemlock. Clarence N. Yocuni, Hoaringcreek. traverse JURORS, First Week. Jeremiah Mensch, Itoaringcreek, (). E. Evans, Berwick. Hiram F. Bower, Centre. William Davis. Cleveland. Frank B. Fowlei. Berwick. R. L. Itunyan, Bloom. A. H. Wetzer, Conyngham. I) N. Henry, Catawissa boro. Wilson Artley, Franklin. Nathan Rice. Beaver. Ernest Keefer, Brlartreek. Charles E. Buder, Franklin. John H. Basterchcek. Mifflin. William Foley, Berwick. Jesse Ij. Runyon, Fishingcreek. J. A. Miller, Conyngham. Ezra Thomas, Greenwood. John Cadman, Bloom. Josiah Heacock, Mlllville. Chas. Schauin, Centralia. Eugene Sweeney, West Berwick. Patrick McGulre, Conyngham. H. C. Conner, Orangeville. Enos Hartman, Grtenwood. William O. Fisher, Catawissa Boro. Elroy Demott. Madison. R. E. Hess, Sugarloaf. Edward Yeager, Locust. William Holdren, Madison. O. J. Merrill, Greenwood. F. L. Greenley. Pine. Lloyd Leiby, Cleveland. George H. Hirleman, Benton. J. A. Walters, Benton Twp. Henry Summers, Bloom. Tilden Kline. Bloom. H. A Peternmn. Benton Twp. W. IX Howell, Hemlock. R. J. Greenley, Madison. Albert Slilves, Bloom. Joseph Snyder, Cleveland. Win. Roberts. Stillwater. Jacob J. Christian, Pine. Jacob Carl, Cleveland. H. E. Watts, Pine. Clark Shumtiti, Main. C. E. Hartman, Scott. Calvin McCollum. Scott. traverse jurors. Second Week. William C. Ltidwlg. Catawissa Twp Samuel Lee, Mt. Pleasant. Myron Shunian, Centre. J.'Harnmn Briirht. Greenw.ood. R. A. Br?ggs. Bloom. P. W. Zeigler, Scott. E. R. Wilson, Benton Twp. Charles Davis, Beaver. W. C Oliver, Roaring Creek. Frank M. Mayor, Briar Creek. R. A. Hicks, Bloom. J. E. White, Scott. Charles D. Andrews, Beaver. Charlie Collins, Greenwood, A. E. Parker, Madison. Benjamin L. Faust. Bloom. Harman B. Rote. Greenwood. Frank O'Brien, West Berwick. John Emory Eves, Mlllville. Harry Stuart, Catawissa Boro. Robert D. Young, Bloom. John J. Kramer. Madison. Sam. J. Seesholtz, Orange Twp. Francis Alliertson, Jackson. George Murray, Catawissa Twp. F. R. Smoyer, Milllin. John Fink, Locust. (. W. Snyder, Pine. 1). S. Mensch, Cleveland. 1). S, Keller, Centralia. Albert Brown, Center. Thomas Watklns, Cleveland. J. J. Axe, Madison. J. S. Hagenlrtieli, Centre. J. W. Snyder, Locust. Atwood Ruckle, Montour. HUMPHREYS' Humphreys' Veterinary Specifics for the curoof diseases of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Poultry, A. A. For FEVERS, Milk Fairer, Long Ferer. B. B. ForJiPn.UNS, Lameness. Rheumatism. O.C. For SORB Throat, Epliootio. Distemper. D. D. For YVOIIMS, Bote, Grubs. E. B. For OIGHS, Colds, Influena. F. F. For COLIC, Bellyache, Diarrhea, G. G. Prevents M ISC A H nil U E. U.H. For KIDNEY and Bladder dlsoreere. 1. 1. For 8KI BINE AKKS.Mauge. Eruptions. J. K. For BAD 4 0DITIO. lodlgeatlou. Price, 60 Cents per bottle. Vet. Cure Oil, for Stabla or Field Use, $1. At druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of price. - A 500 Page Hook on the treat ment and care of Domestic Animals and Stable Chart to ban? up, mailed free. HUMPHREYS' HOMEO. MEDICINE CO., OstSaW rilllem nnd AAA street. ew ion. Columbia & Montour El. Ry. TIM I'. TAIII.K IN l l- FIXT June I 1904, and until if urther lice. Cars leave Bloom for Espy, Aimed! , Li r Ridge, Berwick and intermediate points followst A. M. tS'oo, 5:40, 6:20, 7:00, 7:40,18:2 9.00,9:40, 10:20, II:oo, 11:40. P. M. ISiSo, 1 100, 1 140, 2.2o, 3:00, 3:40 4:20, 5:00, 5:40, 6-20. 7:00,7 :40 ,8:2o,V!t, (9:40) 10:20 (! 1 :oo) Leaving depart from Ttrrwicl one hop from time as given nbove, comn rtiiit 6:00 a. m, Leave IMoom for Cntawi'M A.M. 6:15, t7:oc, J8:oo, 9:00, tio-.ct, mi 12:00. P. M. 1:00, t:oo, 3:00. 4:co, 5:00, 6'Oo. (7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:20, (ll:oo; Cnrsretnrningdepartfrom CMnwisSi miurteflrum timeaigivenabove. First catllenvc MnrketSrunre for llcrwick on Suml iys at 7:00 a. ni. 1'irl i'nrf.F ('ntmt'iitfi nnrlnvl 7 frirt ii hi First cur from Berwick for llloom Sundays leaves at 8:00 n. in First car leaves Catawissa Sundays at 7 30 a. m. From Power House. Sntuiday niyht only. fl R. H. Connection. W'y. Tkkwili.igb, Sa rtintenderU Blooinsburg & Sullivan Railroad. Taking Effect Feb'y 1st, ioo9, 12:05 a m. (NOHTHWAHl). A.M. p.m. t n A.M, 6 00 rio 6 W 6 60 7 08 7 lb 7. 40 8 16 8 8 it 8 48. 0 P.M. t 5 15 17 a i 6 84 43 8 F.8 S 57 7 08 7 13 7 17 n SI 7 81 )1 !8 7 41 7 45 Blnnmsburir DLt W... 9 00 S 87 HlnnmNburu PAH 90 ' 2 8 Papor Mill 14 8 52 LlRlit tt rpft a in 2 65 OmnirevUle 8 03 Forks " I" Zaners f J 40 18 17 Stillwater 48 B Benton S 8 83 Vitnnna finnl-R? Coles Crwk 10 0S 40 Laubachs in 06 8 45 Urass Mere Park tloiO JH 47 Central 10 In 8 52 Jamison Cltv 10 is 9 n SOUTHWARD. 22: A.M. 11 Si ll 4 ii'w 12 0 11 1286 12U 18 68 1 08 18P 141 16t 211 211 A.M. A.M. P.M. t t t A.M. 700 708 f7 12 718 7 2 rr 24 78S 788 17 46 T48 880 6 10 8 13 8.85 B.J0 JamlRonCIty.... 5 50 10 48 4 85 Central 6 6a 10 61 4 88 Grass Mere Parle 16 01 ill 00 m 47 Laubachs. fllOS ni 02 ft 43 Coles Creek f 1 ll 0 4 58 EdaoDS S 14 fll W f4 56 Bontnn IS 11 IS 5 00 Stillwater. S8 1121 5 08 Zaners 16 35 ni 89 p 17 Korku C 38 11 53 0 21 Oi ngevllle 6 50 11 42 6 81 Light Street 7 00 11 50 8 88 Paper Mill 08 11 63 6 42 Bloom, f IK Bloom.DLS W. 7 80 12 10 6 00 Trains No 21 and 22 mlied, econd class. t Dally escept Sunday, t Dally I Sundaj only, t Klag Stop. W. C. 8NYDIR, SupU BO YEARS EXPERIENCE i I nHUS 1 n r. .O Design "fMt Copyrights; 4c. Anrnne fending a ketcb and desorlptlon mar aulrklr nicertaln our opinion fr whether an liiTentlon It probably petentnhle Communica tions trlotlyconBdentlal. HANDBOOK on Patent sent free. Oldest evencr for securing patente. I'm ente taken tbrouiih Munn & Co. recelv. tptctal notice, without charge. In the ( Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. I.arest cir culation of any solentlBo Journal. 9 errya, J a - a.-.. Tear: Tour montui, u suiaujui nopiuwiwj. MIINN X V.n 36IBro.d.ty, New York ilDgtoo, D. C Branch Office. 625 F BU Washington. 12-10-iy CHICHESTER'S PILLS W-r-. TUB 1MAMOND BRAND. MMktinwnft. RmI K,Im, 1Im BII.V.t SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM ClMniwt and butifief Ui hair. lVoiimttl tv luxuriant frruwth. Hover Falls to Restore Gray Hair to it Youthful Color. CuiM tfAip dinoftwc. 4V halT lauIiuZ. 4Vk?,nij$l itoat PniRptm money an J ojttn mt Ij Patent and Infringement Practice Lrclueite j. If 813 Miata gtraet, epp. VuiUJ States Patent 3slu, WASHINGTON. if"X' A Reliable Rsmsdy Foa CATARRH Elf's Cream Balm ia quickly absorbed. Gives Relief at Once. It cleanses, soothes, heals and protects 4.1A lliiiwiiuail hiuht. 1 V I n V 1 1 1 i"t ' 4 sssssssnsnHHHsWiMillMH Chl-ehee-ler1 Vlaasoad BrBj IMIle la Red and Void mtulllAV bom. sealed with Ulue Rlbboe. 7X Take we ether. Bn, ef rear v . Ilraa-glst. AiWnrf-irl.t irKM-TEH hiaiJ.iMfa iiaiNii t 1 1 1 1. m & PROCURED NDOEFNOED.,"d"'- i rj dmwliuf 111 -jjliutti. lur cxp rl 4t-u:vii !. I rv ii'!.;rL I 9Knie ajviire, how to obtaiu miL-iua, tiluiu uik.'lt ft couyrmtue.it., ,N ALL COUNTRIES. 1 J JtKslttsS i'lrr-t V-HI- l'.f,u$:m !V HH4 SH brane remitting frma Oatnrrh and drives away aCoKl in the Head quickly. Kestores the Suuaes of Ttute and Hindi. Full size CO eta. at Druggixts or by mail. Liquid Oream Balm for use in atomisers 75 eta. Ely Druthers, 60 Warren btreet, New York.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers