] >ennsylvatii& It AII.HO AH. PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE RAIL BOAD DIVISION. In effect May 28, 1905. TRAINS LEAVE EMPORIUM EASTWARD 8 10 A. SI. Sundays only for Itenovo and Week days for sunbury, Wilkesbarre, Scrau -011, Hazleton, Pottsville, Harrisburg end interuiediatestations,arriving at I'hiladeip iia 6.23 P.M., New York 9.30 P. M., Baltimore 600 P. M., Washington 7.15 P. M. Pu'lman Parlor car from Wiliianisport to Philadelphia and passenger coaches from Kmie to Philadelphia and Wiliianisport to Balti more and Washington. 12: P. M.i Emporium Junction) daily for Sun bury, Harrisburg and principal intermediate stations, arriving at Philadelphia, 7.32 p.m.; j New York, 10:21 p.m.; Baltimore, 7:30 p.m.; Washington, 8:3">, o. m. Vestibuled Parlor cars and passenger coaches, Buffalo to Phila delphia and Washington. 8 ISO P. M.—daily for Harrisburg and intermediate stat ons, arriving at Philadel phia, 4.23 A. M., New York 7.13 A. M. Baltimore, 2:20 A.M. Washington, 3:30 A. M. Pullman sleeping carsfrom HarrisburgtoPhil adelphia and New York. Philadelphia pas sengerscan reniainiu sleeper undisturbed un til 7:30 A. M. 10 30 P. M.—Daily for Sunbury, Harris burg and intermediate stations arr,ving at Philadelphia 7.17 A. M.. New York 9.33 A. M., weekdays, (10 38 A. M. Sunday;) Baltimore 7.15 A. M.. Washington 8.30 A.M. Pullman sleep ing cars from Erie, Buffalo and Williamsport to Philadelphia and Buffalo, Williamsport to Washington. Passenger cars from Erie to Philadelphia and Williamsport to Baltimore. 12:25 A. M. (Emporium Junction .daily for Sun bury, Harrisburg and principal intermediate stations, arriving at Philadelphia, 7:32 a. m.; New York, 9:33 a. in., week days; (10:38 Sun days); Baltimore, 7:25 a. m.: Washington, 8:46 а. m. Vestibuled Buffet Sleeping Cars and Passenger coaches, Buffalo to Philadelphia and Washington. WESTWARD. fc:10 A. M.—Emporium Junction— daily for Erie, Ridgway, and week days for IJu- Bois, Clermont and Intermediatestations. 10 30 A. M.—Daily for Erie and week days for Dußois andintermediate stations. 4 23 P. M.—Daily lor Erie and intermediate stations. RIDGWAY AND CLEARFIELD R. R. CON. NECTIONS. (Week days.) SOUTHWARD. * Stations. NORTHWARD r. M A. M. A.M . I P. M. P. M . P. M. | | 9 ooi 4 02'.... Renovo.... 128 11 45 ] 9 50. 441 J.. .Driftwood... 12 50 11 05 .... 10 25i 5 10 Emporium June 12 15 10 35 45010 10 5 55! Kane 12 25 300 .... j 50610 31 6 10].. ..Wilcox 12 02 2 40 .... | 5 20 11 38 6 25J..Johnsonburg.. 11 47 2 28 .... I l__ L 1 i i ! " i 5 10 11 55 6 501...Ridgway 9 20 2 10 8 25 ' ....1..Mi1l Haven j | 60012 15 7 10!.. Croyland.... 900 149 804 60712 23 719 .. Blue Rock... 851 140 756 6 12 12 26 7 23 Carrier 8 47 1 37 7 52 62212 36 732 .Broekwayville. 837 127 742 | 62612 10 737 .. .Lanes Mills . 831 123 738 680 , 7 11 .McMinns Sm't. 830 '7 34 84012 55 750 ..Falls Creek... 82 < 110 725 «5) 125 803 ...Dußois BOSI2 55 7 10 7 42 1 15 7 55j. .Falls Creeic..7~6 53 1 15 6 30 758 129 808 .Reynoldsville.. 63912 52 615 8 30 1 56 8 35'.. . Brookville... 6 05 12 21 5 39 i 930 238 920 New Bethlehem 52011 41 450 W. M P. M. P. M.| A. M. A, M. P. M BtKFALO & ALLEGHENY ~ VALLEY DIVISION. Leave Emporium Junction (or Port Allegany, j Olean, Arcane, East Aurora and Buffalo. Train No. 107, daily, 4:05 A. M. Train No. 115, daily, 4:15 P. M. Trains leave Emporium for Keating, Port Allegany, Co iders.iort, Smethport, Eldred, Bradford, Olean and Buffalo, connecting at Buf falo for points East and West. Train No. 101, we :k days 8:25 A. M. Train No. 103, week days 1:35 P. M. Train No. 103 wiii connect at Olean with Chautauqua Division for Alleginy, Bradford, Salamanca, Warren, Oil City and Pittsburg. LOW GRADE DIVISION. EASTBOUND. J STATIONS. 100 113 101 105 107 051 ' A. M. A. M. A. M. P. M P. M A. M. Pittsburg,. .Lv f6 22 t9 00 +l3O *505 900 Red Bank, 1 9 30 It 05 4 05 7 55 10 55 Lawsonham,.. 9 42 til 18 4 18 8 07 11 08 New Bet hie'm 5 20 10 20 11 41 1 50 8 37 11 40 Brookville, .... f6 05 It !♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Some men support the interests of their country by defending the land they love. Washington was both de fender and builder, soldier and states man. Let us dwell on his work as builder. Naturally conservative, Washington was not in favor of courting trouble with old England; but as acts of Eng lish aggression followed one after an other, realized submission had ceased to be a virtue. When the first conti nental congress met, in 1774, he ac cepted election as delegate, and in company with Patrick Henry set out for Philadelphia. "That congress sat in Carpenter's hall with closed doors, but the great papers that it prepared and issued form a proud part of American history. Those were the pa pers and that the congress of which Chatham in the house of lords, in his memorable speech on the removal of. troops from Boston, January 20, 1775, J said: 'When your lordships look at ( the papers transmitted to us from j America, when you consider their de- 1 cency, firmness and wisdom, you can-: not but respect their cause, and wish ; to make it your own. For myself I must declare and avow that in all my reading and observation —and it. has been my favorite study—l have read Thucydides, and have studied and ad mired the master statesmen of the world —that for solidity of reasoning, force of sagacity, and wisdom of con clusion, under such a complication of difficult circumstances, no nation or. body of men can stand in preference to the general congress at Philadel phia.' The precise part taken by Washington within the closed doors of Carpenter's hall is nowhere record ed, but the testimony of one of its most distinguished members cannot be forgotten. When Patrick Henry re turned home from the meeting and ' was asked whom he considered the! greatest man at that congress, he re-; plied: 'lf you speak of eloquence,! Mr. Rutledge, of South Carolina, is by j far the greatest orator; but if you speak of solid information and sound judgment, Col. Washington is unques tionably the greatest man on that floor.*" Washington was also delegate to the second continental congress, the j one which unanimously elected him j commander in chief of the continental j forces, and the one where he declared , the position a "trust too great for my j capacity." To us it is pleasing to compare the modesty that character- j ized Washington throughout his life with the egotism looked upon as! forgivable, essential part of a force-! fill personality of the present (lay. j The two years lapsing between Corn-! wallis' surrender awl the treaty of peace was a period marked by more \ distinguished patriotism on the part of Washington and by his political wisdom and foresight. The country was in a most troubled state, officers and men suspicious that the army was bo be disbanded without congress making provision for meeting the just j claims of the troops. Both officers I and men began to distrust a repub-1 lican form of government. Matters went so far, an army colonel was sent to communicate with Washing-, ton and make suggestion that he as ' sumo the title of king and givo the country a firm government. The agent met with a severe rebuke; this Wash ington's answer to the suggestion: i "I am at a loss to conceive what part ! of my conduct could have given en couragement to an address which to Ue seems big with the greatest mis- chief that can befall my country. If I am not deceived in the knowledge of myself, you could not have found a person to whom your schemes are more disagreeable. . . . Let me conjure you, then, if you have any regard for your country, concern for youself or posterity, or respect for me, to banish these thoughts from your mind, and never communicate, from yourself or anyone else, a sentiment of like na ture." The discontent and apprehension continued, a meeting of officers was ar ranged and there were issued the "Newburg Addresses," intended to arouse the army to resentment. Wash ington, uninvited, attended the meet ing and made an address, in which he declared the claims of the army would not be disregarded, and begged hi 9 hearers "to express their utmost hor ror and detestation of the man who wishes, under any specious pretenses, to overturn the liberties of our coun try, and who wickedly attempts to open the floodgates of civil discord and deluge our rising empire in blood." The result of his appeal, reso lutions were unanimously adopted con curring in the policy he proposed. Shortly before the dissolution of the army Washington addressed a letter to the governors of the states, urging upon them realization of the four things essential to the existence and well-being of the United States: "First, an indissoluble union of the states under one federal head; second, a sacred regard to public Justice; third, the adoption of a proper peace establishment; and, fourth, the preva lence of that pacific and friendly dis position among the people of the Unit ed States which will induce them to forget their local prejudices and poli cies, to make those mutual conces sions which are requisite to the gen- j eral prosperity, and, in some in stances, to sacrifice their Individual advantages to the interest of the com- j munity." These he counted "the pil lars on which the glorious fabric of our independency and national char- , acter must rest." In such perfect sympathy with th« idea of conferring greater powers on : the federal government, be consented to head the delegates from Virginia to the Philadelphia convention called May 14, 1787, and was unanimously elected president of this convention. It closed September 17, on which date j Washington, as one of his biographers phrases it, had the supreme satisfac- j tion of addressing a letter to'congress announcing the adoption of the con stitution of the United States. To quote directly from the letter: "In all our deliberations on the subject, j we kept steadily in our view that ■ which appears to us the greatest inter- j est of every true American —the con- ; sclidation of our union—in which is j involved our prosperity, our safety, 1 and perhaps our nation?! existence." On the Gth of April. 1789, Washing ton was declared president of the Unit- j ed States. On the 30th of April, he \ was inaugurated. His wisdom and firmness carried the ship of state safe ly through two administrations, j though the waters oft were troubled, j At the close of the first term he de- ' sired to withdraw to private life, but was urged that duty to the country demanded he continue in public serv ice. Jefferson wrote: "The confidence of the whole country is centered in you. North and south will hang to gether if they have you to hang on." Hamilton used this persuasion: "It is dear that if you continue in office nothing materially mischievous is to j he apprehended. If you quit much is to bo dreaded. ... I trust, and I pray God, that you will determine to make a further sacrifice of your tran quillity and happiness to the public good." Washington the soldier, to whom proud Cornwallis made surrender, au peala to the popular fancy. But the people should remember the hero waa also 'first in pi-aco"—« tuition buildup For Infants jjf Xm/jK rty Years * The Kind You Have Always Bought TMC CiNTAUH COMPANY. TT MURRAY BTRCCT, NEW VORR CITY. PRICE,^ 25 Ct». m|| m ■ #|mgl||B||i fHEGWp/jh AH l«lfnlrlHF r** 5 - IN ONE DAY m Mil I I m ill'® B 91b AUTIXDiDSWr vS 18 guaranteed TO cure ANlniKlnNt ■s%£ GR!P ' BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. -HP irPAWrSSS'&'iXig'tffrl&iftvsslZ ' Hi.*J JP. H. Viewer,M.!>.,Mixuuinoturcr.Sjiriiiff/feld,ilo. BITS AND BREVITIES. The dog known as a Manchester black-and-tan Is the latest London canine fashion. Good specimens are quoted at SSOO. Living under the same roof at Ko- Jvomo, Ind., there are a 16-year-old mother, a 32-year-old grandmother and a 52-year-old great-great-grandmother. According to La Tribuna di Roma, one of the gaiters worn by Garibaldi when he was wounded in the battle of Aspromonte August 28, 1862, has been presented to the mayor of Rome. The area devoted to corn in Kansas in 1905 was 6,799,755 acres, an in crease over that of 190-i of 305,597 acres, or 4.7 per cent. The average yield to the acre for the entire state was 28 bushels. Referring to the transition stage of the orient, Bishop Hamilton said to the Church Extension Society of the Methodist Episcopal churcli, in San Francisco, the other day: "We are to see the future history of the world through the Golden Gate." Baseball has found a foothold in the City of Mexico, and is to gain further interest from the opening of grounds devoted to this sport at Chapultepec. There is the famous castle where President Diaz is at home, as well as the military academy of Mexico. On holidays and Sundays very large crowds resort thither to hear the band concerts. Finance Minister Liman tour is ready to give a concession on grounds there for 20 years, provided 120,000 is expended in improvements. 31 Boxes of Gold 300 Boxes of Greenbacks For the most words made tip from these letters Y - I - O - Grape - Nuts 331 people will earn these prizes. Around the fireside or about the well lighted family reading table during the winter evenings the children and grown ups can play with their wits and see how many words can be made. 20 people making the greatest number of words will each receive a little box containing a SIO.OO gold piece. 10 people will each win one box con taining a $5.00 gold piece. 300 people will each win a box con taining SI.OO in paper money and one person who makes the highest number of words over all contestants will receive a box containing SIOO.OO in gold. It is really a most fascinating bit of fun to take up the list evening after evening and see how many words can be added. A few rules are necessary for absolute fair play. Any word authorized by Webster's dictionary will be counted, but no name of person. Both the singular and plural can be used, as for instance "grape" and "grapes." The letters in "Y-I-O-Grape-Nuts" may be repeated in the same word. Geographical names authorized by Webster will be counted. Arrange the words in alphabetical classes, all those beginning with A to gether and those beginning with IS to come under E, etc. When you are writing down the words leave some spaces, in the A, B, and other columns to fill in later as new words come to you, for they will spring into mind every evening. It is almost certain that some contest ants will, tie with others. In such cases a prize identical in value and character with that offered in that class shall be awarded to each. Each one will be re quested to send with the list of words a plainly written letter describing the ad vantages of Grape-Nuts, but the contest ant is not required to purchase a pkg. These letters are not to contain poetry,or fancy flourishes, but simple, truthful statements of fact. For illustration: A person may have experienced.some incip ient or chronic ails traceable to unwise selection of food that failed to give the body and brain the energy, health and power desired. Seeking better condit ions a change in food is made and Grape-Nuts and cream used in place of the former diet. Suppose one quits the meat, fried potatoes, starchy, sticky messes of half cooked oats or wheat and c uts out the coffee. Try, say, for breakfast, a bit of fruit, a dish of Grape-Nuts and c ream, two soft-boiled eggs, a slice of hard toast and a cup of I'ostum l'\>©d CyHee. borne j LITTLE LAUGHS. A Denver girl sprained her ank!« at a football game. Gee, she must have a deep voice! Palm—Do men usually give accord ing to their means? Pepper—No; according to their mean ness. Orange—Has he an interest in th« business? Lemon—Only a slight curiosity, 1 believe. Plum—Why do they call an auto "she?" Prunes —It's so hard to manage, and BO expensive. Emmeline —I pity the man that mar» lies you. Eleanor—l'd do the same for the man that marries you, only I know there'll never be any such man. She —I'll learn you to find fault with my temper. When we married you took me for better or worse. He —Yes, Martha, but did I hope there would have been something like an. average. Favored American. The most favored man in the king dom of Siani is an American named! Strobe!. He is the king's counsel, ant» i plainly written. 7