TIIE SCRAXTOX TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNIXG, SEPTEMBER 14, 1895? 11 What WStfa Shall Be Doee the Corn Crop? From the Tlnies-Herald. The com crop of the I'nlted States this year is estimated at the enormous quantity of S.5uo.wkVJ bushels. How can this colossal crop he saved for market and for food? Under present conditions of harvesting and storage It cannot be done. If the yield U ab normally heavy, the loss will he ureal tn iiroiHirtlon. For as corn Is the most valuable, so it ls the most susceptible to deleterious influences of all tho cereals, and the least valuable, when vitiated through these lnlluenees. ' liocause of the ease and abundance of its production In this country, little care is taken for the preservation of corn: no other cereal is so thoroughly neglected after it has been obtained from the soil. Thrown carelessly Into rail pens or cribs, either imperfect' covered or not .covered at all. it ' comes wet, sour and musty, am is rarely preserved In a condition to r ike sweet, wholesome food for mar.' or beast. Out of a total of 4.U19 cars of corn received la 1'hloago during the first half of December 189-1. only 212 graded up to tNo. 2. Kven when corn comes to the commercial elavator in fair condition, it seldom remains so; through the multiplicity and crudity of handling. It Is unavoidably exposed to moist air, changing temperature, and contact with vitiated grain, and becomes bitter In the germ, more or less musty, and Incapable of producing pure, sweet meal. In the last nine years, according tn government records, an average of 15 per cent, of the corn crop of the United States was entirely unmerchant able. This estimate is not restricted to corn used for human food: so re stricted there must lie added fully one fourth of the corn sold as No. 2. and all below this grade. .9 ordinarily kept In wet. musty elevators, the degenera tion goes on steadily from month to month, and even No. 2 corn will not grow if planted the next spring after maturing. Corn that will not germ inate Is not In good condition for food. In fact, until our cereals are kept In air-tight receivers or reservoirs, tliere can be no perfect preservation. To lTcxcrvc 1'ood Products. Absolutely air-tight steel storage. It Is claimed, is a complete solution of the probUm of keeping; corn and all other food products for any length of time without deterioration. Lyman Smith, of this city, has perfected a system of alr-tlsrht steel storage and pneumatic transfer, which he claims not only cheapens the saving of grain and other perishable commivditlea beyond all other methods In use by which the pro ducts of the earth may be kept Intact, but also decidedly cheapens the trans fer. The cereals at the same time are not only free f rom tit-cay, but absolutely safe from Injury by tire, weevil and other contingencies, and expense for in surance Is entirely obviated. The idea of air-tight storage for pre serving grain and other fool I products seems tyi have been obtained from the ancletv,- Kgyptlans. Kdivard W. Serrell. 'well-known civil engineer of New ' York, has written Mr. .Smith that some forty yenrs ago his mother planted wheat In her garden which was taken from the stomach cavity of an Egyp tian mummy, brought to New York for the Stuyvesant Institute Museum, and ,. ini piuunuiy or t.uou years old grew- and ripened, and the next year, was planted again and grew and ripened. Then a quantity of this wheat was sent to the west for seed: it was grown 1n Oregon, and was known as the mummy wheat: it headed heavier than any ever .before seen there, and though it was of dark color, made very good bread. Seeds From Egyptian Mummv. John G. Judtl. a d ton City, has informed .Mr. Smith of a similar experience with seeds taken from an Kgyptian mummy. He said It Is nearly or quite fifty years ago that a mummy was unrolled from the air-tight covering in Teeter Hall. Eng land, and within the rolls of the cloth was found a number of small round mpw "t which I obtained. lLZ?y,- '.JUt.a r'8" hoso them In in the hands of a gardener, w hose gar den was on this road to or very near Itempstead Heath, and whose name. If I ever knew It, I have forgotten. The seeds germinated and turned out to he r,,i7.?n,! poas- 1 aw them In fi I bloom, and they matured seed. 'hich was sold by the gardener next season as a iMiri;,i.. nmT mxt ancient llth.rpaI Fr?'n the -.jpuaiu, iernaps years ago. understood the process of sealing securely in alr.fl.rhr ..i ' . ' . 1 'zat'on the art u-as lost, and not l h' Present century, through dentine exploration of ancient ruins, nas It recovered; nnd not until the Inst few years was the Idea reduced to prac tice In the sealing of perishable pro. J-t In alr-tlght Jars and metal cans, by which both air anrj light were ex cluded: so that now we are able to keep such products In their natural state from year to year. In the ease of cereals no progress has been made in our great elevators, so far as preserving them In good condition is concerned; in harvdllnjr vast quantities of grain the aim has been simply to keep pace with the necessities of trans portation by rail and water. No ad vance has .been made In saving from deterioration over the (farmer's old fashioned -cribs and granaries. Hut now, with air-tight storage reduced to a practical system within the reach of all. great things in the saving of crops may be expected. JIhe Cereal's Great Value. When considered from almost every point of view, Indian corn at Its best Is found to be the most valuable grain In the world. It Is more prolific than nny other, one seed often yielding more than a thousand at a single planting. It contains oil, starch and sugar, the fat tening1 properties, In greater degree than any other cereal. With these principals are combined a sufficiency of nitrogen compounds to satisfy the ordinary needs of man and beast. All grains require a period for ma turing after being harvested. Corn re quires three months or more to rlpon after being husked from the stalk. Therefore corn and all other food cereals -should be- thrown In air-tight receptacles as soon as harvested; by exclusion of the air they will keep per fectly sweet and sound, and with a living germ, for any length of time, re taining their normal moisture. ' Corn Is In Its best condition for food at the time of ripening, If Ifr has been kept from deterioration by natural or arti ficial causes. Uut whenever, from any cause, a food grain has become hitter, sour, musty or Infested -with weevil. It Is not only unfit for food, but positive ly dangerous to health. How the Indiana Kept It. The aboriginal American was taught to bury Indian corn In the earth below the depth of the frost. The frozen earth above excluded the air, and the corn came out In the spring sweet and containing Its full normal moisture, ev ery grain ready to germinate when planted In the moist earth as the tem perature rose to the proper degree tor Wanting. In the dry climate of an-. lent Erypt the cereals were kept In tact by sealing them, up In air-tight Iain and other receptacles. . Hercu aneiim nd tPompell, uncovered In re sent times, disclosed lessons taught by ftaiUM wntMri go and forgotten by Store It In Air-tlgM Steel Reservoirs Is the Suggestion of a Chicagoan. man. out of which have grown the modern canning industry In all Its va ried forms. These methods are all ef fective, but so expensive a to be in appllahlc except to a comparatively limited extent. It is at least practicable to lay our grtut American ceiv.il pure und undo filed In the marts of the eld world; and when It becomes known there In Its prime, the demand for It must Increase with wonderful rapidity, and its con sumption grow to colossal proportions. The average corn crop In the I 'lilted States Is about eipuil In number of bushels to the average wheat produc tion of the entire globe. Corn furnls-hes food for man in a greater variety of forms than any other product, so long as it maintains its purity. Hence the importunes of perfect preservation. This can be accomplished by air-tight storage. Hitherto its accomplishment has been foihtIU by the canning pro cess, which, it Is said. Is too expensive to be piuctlcable. except on a limited scale. .... . ei... !i.-vu ,.r i-.-.acvroira are iniii'i oi homonvneous steel platis lapped and double riveted throughout. In a manner that renders absolutely nir and water tight. When sung partly or entirely in the ground, these silos furnish ideal conditions for the preservation of ensil age, Including a low and even tempera ture, seclusion from air. light and mois ture, lire, insects, vermin, and other in jurious lnlluenees, and consequent Im munity from heating, former 'tat Ion. molding, oxidation and evaporation. SILVER IS HKIt FRIEND. While GolJ Countries Are Passing Throngh o PerloJ of depression Japan Is Flourishing. W K Curtis, In Chit-ago Record. Mivau.vshita.July 24. Mthough there Is a practical Illustration of the single silver standard system In national cur rency in Japan, which affords the deep est interest to every -thoughtful man who conies here, I have said very little on the subject, and that has been only quotations from others, because I wanted to study it from all possible points of view. It should he said In advance for a proper understanding of the situation that Japan attempted to maintain a single gold standard when the government was reformed gome twenty years ago and failed. She then tried bimetallism, and theoreti cally still adheres to that policy, but Knglish speculators carried away all the gold long since, and she Is now re duced to paper currency. Issued by the government, redeemable In silver, nnd therefore sharing the deprecia tion and fluctuations which that metal j has suffered. When you hold a dollar not of the bank of Japan or the national hank, which are two very large financial in stitutions under the auspices of the government. It Is worth just as much as a Mexican silver dollar, which Is really the standard of value In all Asia! 'When Japan coined gold It was at par with iMexIcan dollars in all the empire, but the latter coins were at a discount In the English colonics of Hong-Kong nnd Rom-hay. The specu lators of the latter cities would, there fore, bring to Japan tons of Mexican dollars and exchange them In small quantities in different cities of the em pire for the native gold coin. They did this so secretly and so skillfully that before the public was aware of it Japan had been actually drained of gold nnd had nothing left upon which to base a bimetallic currency. This trick caused a suspension of gold coinage, and it has not since been resumed. There Is no gold In circulation, or In the public treasury, or in the tanks. You can buy gold coins at the curio (b al-rs. nnd of the exchange brokers. and they make very pretty curr-hottons and bangles for bracelets, but thoy have censed to he money nnd are only regarded as bric-a-brac. There is very little silver In circulation, but plenty of paper. The Japanese coinage Is based on the decimal system nnd corresponds with that of the I'nlted States. A rln was originally the Fame as a mill. Ten rln make 1 pen and 100 sen make 1 yen, which used to be as good as a gold American dollar, but Is now worth about 51 cents. Therefore, a man who comes here ftpm the I'nlted States or Kurope with money that Is at pur with gold finds his funds almost doubled Immediately. The salary of the United States minister, which Is 512,000 n year, becomes about 21,0oo yen, because a yen goes just ns far In Japan now, except In the purchase of Imported goods, as it did when It was worth a dollar. You can get the Fame amount of food and fuel, you can employ the same amount of labor, buy the same amount of clothing, and rents have not Increased at all. Hut all foreign merchandise is bought and sold on a gold bnsls; that Is, It has doubled in value. A can of American preserved meats which cost 75 sen a few years ago now cost Hi yen. An Knglish hat for which you once paid 4 yen now costs S. An Kngll::h um brella for which you paid R yen costs 10. and a piano which was worth UW yen now costs 1.000. The natural result Is a decrease In the pales of forlgn mer chandise and nn Increase In. the use of domestic articles. Speaking ns one who does not believe In Hllvor money, nor in bimetallism un less It be universally adopted nnd all the nations of the earth agree to main tain the value of silver, I must, never theless, admit that It Is the uniform testimony of all concerned that the de monetization of the white metal by the repeal of the Island law In the United States and the suspension of coinage in India was a great thing for Jnpan. It Is a practical question here, and nil persons Interested. Including ofllclals bankers, merchants, manufacturers nnd ngriciilturlsts-the worklngman does not think, so he cannot be Included arc anxious that the agitation shall continue Indefinitely, lest the present prosperity of the empire terminate. A few theorists, arguing from the stand point of what ought to be instead of what Is Insist thnt Japan shall Join Kngland, the .Lntln Union and thn United States In an International agree ment to maintain a certain parity be tween the metals, but It Is by nn means a popular Ideu. They are college pro fessors, minority members of parlia ment, Idle men who think and read a great deal nnd do nothing, and others who are entirely without practical ex perience or a knowledge of trade and Industry. Most of them have been edu cated In England and got their finan cial notions from reading the Times and the Economist. The solid, wise men, who are govern ing this empire, say: "No; let the debtors and the creditors in Kurope and America fight it out. Meantime we will saw wood. The longer Kngland holds to a single standard the better 'twill be for Japan. We have no foreign debt. We owe nothing abroad. Therefore we do not have to buy Hold to pay Inter est charges. The Ithport trade Is near ly all In the hnnds of foreigners, nnd we don't care how high foreign manu factured merchandise Is. Cotton, Iron and flour will stay down In sympathy with sliver, and It would be a good thing If nothing but raw materials were Imported Into Japan."; ' If the value of gold measured by sli ver and other commodities continues to rise U14 manufacturing indiwuiva ot Great Uritaln will be compelled to re move tq silver-using countries or lose their markets. There has already been a very large exodus of cooton manufac turers from Manchester to India, and I hear of the early transfer of two other large cotton Interests from Manchester to Shanghai. . The chief markere of Great Uritaln are silver countries and colonies which will Insist upon paying silver prices for what they buy as long as they receive silver wages for their work, or thoy will make their own goods. Twenty yenrs ago, even ten or live years ago, you could get as much for a silver dollar In iKnglaiul as In China or Japan. iNow you can get only half as much. Gold wages have not fallen In hhigland. Silver wages have not Increased In China or Japan. The results of silver labor, however, sell for gold prices when they are shipped abroad. Thus the- export trade Is Ftiuiu lated In these countries, nnd having to pay twice as much us formerly for for eign iiierchanillse the people stopj buy ing abroad and supply their wants at home. For these reasvms you will notice that India. Japan, .Mexico and other silver conn tries are not only much more pros perous at present than the gold coun tries of Kurope, but their donioatle In dustries are greatly stimulated. In fact, financial and commercial depres sion Is almost uiirvir.--.il except In the countries I ha e mentioned, where there Is nothing but sliver mon.-y. Trices In Kngland and the I'nlted States have fallen with silver, particularly those of exportable products, while In Japan 1 ""'-v remain the same. -Cotton sells for a pom one-nun wnui it urn u- jruo ago. Silk, which Is cultivated with sil ver wages, bringstwlce as much. Trans portation charges have also fallen. Since silver was demonetized Japan not only gius twice as much for her silk but pays only half as much for her cot ton nnd very nnudi less for freight In taking the one to market nnd bringing the other here. While cotton fabrics are cheaper It is just ns profitable to manufacture them In Japan, because the raw material mid freights are corre spondingly so. There Is no additional cost for food, rent and other necessaries of life. Wheat and Hour are selling at less than one-half what tiny cost In INTii. Iilce remains about tlia same. The price of labor In both hemispheres has remained almost stationary, but from the Japanese standpoint it has doubled In America and Kngland. and from the European standpoint It has lifcn reduced one-half in Japan. Take the cotton Industry as an ex ample. The Japanese mills still pay Is ami 20 sen a day for male labor and S and 10 sen for women. In the I'nlt ed States the same labor receives $1.W) for men and 7.1 cents and $1 for Women. .Hut one class is paid In sliver, the other In gold. From a Japanese standpoint the Americans pay $:! and $1 for men nnd $1.00 and $2 for women. From the American standpoint the Japanese pay and 10 cents for men and 4 and u cents for women. However one looks at It the difference Is very wide, hut the fabrics they produce sell for the saint prices the world over. Therefore, while the outlay of one ha;l doubled, that of the other has been diminished by one half. The American and European manu facturer has to pay the same rent, the same Insurance, the same price for fuel, t he same interest 'on borrowed money and the same taes that he did ten years ago. Therefore the difference be tween the cost of production now and then must come out of his dividends, and only by the most economical and skillful management can Knglish and American manufacturers survive. On the other hand, the Japanese manu facturer has suffered no increase In fixed charges or in the cost of labor and gets double prices for his products. Where he declared G per cent dividends then he declares 10 per cent dividends now. The only disadvantage he suffers is the enhanced cost of new machinery, but the gold value of machinery has fallen with the decline of silver, so that his mill and plant do not represent more two-thirds of the Investment that would have been required ten years ago. The natural and irresistible result of nil this Is to attract capital Into busi ness. Old mills are being enlarged and new ones built. The output Increases, competition lowers prices, nnd the man who If, working on a gold basis suffers more nnd more. This explains why the Increase In cotton manufacturing has j been so great In Japan. Hut It applies in an even greater degree to rice, which Is another great staple, and In which thti-e Is some competition with the southern states or America. Also to silk fabrics, paper and stationery, nnd many other manufactured productn. The first cotton mill was erected here In ISM with r),4.,n spindles. In 1 ss;l there Were sixteen mills with 4.1.700 .spindles. In 1SSI forty-six mills with G0.r..41!l spin dles. There have been seven new mills with n;o,0(to spindles already udd ed this year, and several more are Hearing completion, which will bring the number of spindles up to 711,000 before Jan. 1, IWifi. The forty mills In the city of Osaka In 1H r-.'Ud nn average dividend of 1(1 per cent. The highest was 2S per cent, nnd the lowest was X per cent. The difference was due to management. The yarn mllbi pay the best. Gnat Itritlan nnd Germany have suffered more thnn the United States from the result of sliver depreciation, because they have a larger trade abroad nnd a more limited market at home, and they have not only been Ihe victims of honest competition, but of dishonorable methods. A certain number of people In Japan, like those you find the world over, are fond of foreign goods. It is more a matter of vanity than of taste. The rise In the prices r Imported merchandise pinched them, and to meet their de mand the local manufacturers took advantnge of the slluntlon by Imitating standard nrtides Ihnt had been brought from Kurope in large quanti ties. They stole patents, forged trade marks, produced goods or an appear ance to deceive the public, and sold them at the old prices. There was much miserable stuff, but many of them were wonderful imitations. This was the severest blow that Kngland and Germany hove siifTerrd. for the quality of the bogus articles, ns well as the quantity, has Improved by ex perience, and the native manufacturer!) nave got a peimnnent hold trade that is very valuable. upon a L1TERAKY NOTES. rierre T,otl's new book Is entitled "La Galilee" Mrs. Wnrd'n story of "Kesslc Costrcll" Is to be dramatized. "Chlmm:e Fndilen," our flowery friend, Is to make his bow on the stage. M. Henri Kocht-fort bus evolved a novel under tlio numii of "L'Anrore Horoalo." A 1KSI folio Hhukespearo has been dis covered In the University library at Piulua. Tho author of "Women'B Tragedies" ft I. 1. Lowry) has written a novel about "A Jlan of Moods." Mrs. Amclln K. Harr's new novel !s eallnd "Hrrnicln." It Is a story of tho period of George II, Kmil Zola will have his romnnes on Rome completed by February next. It will be his longest work. Thn two volumes of Dante Onbr'el tins setti's family letters, edited by his broth er, will be brought out '.n this country by ltoberts Brothers. Mr. Stevenson's "Letters to n Hoy" In eluding his coi-Vesponilonce with his wif.es grandson, Austin Strong are to be pub. llshed in tho entertaining pages of "8t. Nicholas." Thnn s to be a new nnd nn'form e llt'on of Mark Twfin's hnokr. nnd tho Harnero uro to publ sh it. The flrst volume, "Ifa on the .MlisIsB'.ppI," will ho brought out beforo tho close of the year. . Mrs. (Mary Anderson) do Navarro has known a great ninny clcwer end d st'n gulahed por-jous In Europe, and I'copls aro waiting with some curiosity for her forth coming volume of reminiscences. Again has Mr. Hardy changed the title of his novel now in course of publication. It was at first "The Simpletons;" it la now "Hearts insurgent," and If Is to beconio in book form "Jude the Obscure." Th volumu will contain many passage which huvc been oniitied from the serial, Tlio "Carnation Series" Is the name given by Stone .V Kimball to the varlouu volumes of short stories which they are preparing for tho nutumn. The last an nounced is "The S n Kater end Other Sturius," by Fiona. Macleuil. The uuinor Is a tin live of tho Hebrides, and her wr.t Inus have a touch of Northern Osslunie iu)stlelsin which is a new liute In modern KukKsIi h-tiers. Of late nltno.-it everything of Stevenson's has been "serialised." lnileil this Is al most universally Hie fate of 1111 important book now-otlays. "Vall.ir.a l.iUeis," which Is to uppcjir thii aclumn, n to ti.-.itnl !' ff i n'ly. Its p-.i 'illcntinn by Stone & Kimball In book form w.ll be, iisiile from a short art'ele, with u few t-v-traetS, III one of Hie lllaiMX'lles, Hie lint opiiorlunlly tile publ c will tmt to bt-e u record of the l:fo- In Samoa. 1 A STATESMAN ABROAD. I'.rlght Onsen mions of Representative Tursncy Concerning Somo Phases of Miiropean Travcl-locsn't Take- .Mucli Stock tn the (icrman l.mpcror or the Mnglisli llui tier-Paris a Illusion unj n Snare. liepretittitutive Tarsney. or Missouri. Just ufter his return iom a three months' tour .f Kurope, chatted pltaj antly with a Washington i'oul rt-porur. llelow aie some of I'ne bright things he said: "Three mouths' running about in llurope is pl.-nty lor mo. I'm glad to gel buck. If an American wants to invigorate hls'pati-lotlsni let hlni go to Ih.rope. When an American's patriot ism is falling out and lie feels his loy alty becoming prematurely bald give liini a'Uose of Kurope. 'I liree months' in '.Curopo as a restorative will cause one's love of country to grow like the locks of Sampson. "The one thing noticeable In France Is its hatred of ilermany, and the most emphasised trait In the Ucrman make up it- Its aversion and contempt for everything and everybody French. There's going to be a war over there, not far in the future either. Whatever mny become of Russia, Italy and Aus tria In the fracas, one thing Is sure, France and (b-rmany will be against each other. "The chances now would look like Uussia and France against Oermnny, Austria and Italy, with l-tagtand Hit ting about the suburbs of the rumpus searching the pockets of all concerned therein. "TiPrmnny's kaiser Is not loved. He suffers from what is colloquially known as a swelled head. He -Is In his esti mation an author, a poet, a warrior, the like of whom has not been seen since the bloody tlays of Attila, 'The Scourge of dod.' "As a poet the kaiser who, by tho way also writes music Is apt to make things go. lie wrote a poem recently which 1 lingered over for hours. iNot for its beauty exactly. You see, my German Is a little rusty, and there's nothing swift about the aid you gain from Ollendorf. I tackled the kaiser's poem with Ollendorf. It took all one afternoon, but when I pot througt) I thought very well of It. "3ome !erman students, however, went after It. and said It was not so good as poems which Goethe. Schiller, and several other German gentlemen had written. "These critical students were being tried for high treason while I was there. The assumption is that they will like the Kaiser's verse better when he lots go of them. In view of their fates I was glad that with the aid of Ollen dorf I liked the Kaiser's muse. "The dei-man public, as I said, does not enjoy Its Kaiser. lie subordinates the civil to the military and keeps the populace more or less In a condition of mimic war. What I mean Is this: While I was there, for instance, the kaiser arose one mnrnlnz anil suddenly pro claimed (Berlin in a state of siege. Kvery shop had to shut up; all work car.ic to an end; traffic of all sorts had to clear the streets. It was like stop ping the heart of a great city for twenty-four hours. What was the cause? ..Merely that the Kaiser was In a mood to frolic with the 25,000 troops stationed nt llerlln, nnd the city must be swe.t clear and free of every scrap of business nnd litter of trade to af ford him a playground. "Going up the avenue of the Lindens one day my driver suddenly announced over his shoulder: 'Her Kaiser,' In a growling voice like a bear. It was the Kaiser's carriage coming. There were two olllcers us outriders, a sort of advance guard. The horses were coal black nnd loaded to the eyes with prance. The driver sat straight up like a ramrod. On each side of him sat an olliccr of the Kaiser's household, epait letted to the ears; and like the driver, of the ramrod family. The Kaiser and his wife held down the rear scat of the carriage, which was built like one of our victorias. It was noticeable that ns he came along not a cheer was raised: not a hand was clapped, not a hat was lifted. All was sober silence, and the street was crowded, too. It gave me a very sinister impression; It would worry me If 1 were the Kaiser. "Hut If you want to see n change In a !ertrmn or get any demonstration from him better than a shrug, mention the old Kaiser Wllhclm. Ills eyes will light up like lanterns of admiration. At tho name of 'Unzor Fritz' he will weep. l!ut name the present ruler, h" will be dumb, sullen, gloomy. It all gave me a bad Impression. "The Kuropean barber Is the worst I ever saw. In the best hotels In Lon don, where you pay six pence as much as you would here a felon with n razor as wide In the blade as a sheet of writing paper nnd as sharp as the noo 01 commerce, win set-you up rtralghl, In a sllff, high-backed chair, tuck a liark-nuinbrr towel under your chin, Inther you In a supercilious and uncomfortable fashion, nnd then give y.ut a Fcr'len of rasps which bring beard, nnd llcsh, and tears, and pro fanity firm you all at once. Then -he gives you another back-number tonvl and grullly Intimates you may wnsh your fnce nnd comb your hair to Euit yonrpelf. He's thvo-.u-h v.-Hh you. "That's nil you get out of nn Hnrrllsii bnrbcr. In I'arl.i they are a lit tie bet ter: they treat yon as .brutally and f.o as little for you. and do It ns vilely ns the London barbers. Tint tbey ns lent seem sorry for yon In Paris; whereas Hie Iti-ltlsh barber extilin In 11 morose, bloody way over the tortures ho hss Inflicted and thn ruin he litis wrought. ""Paris Is a delusim am! a snare.' Even Its vices, which Paris prldra Itself on and which Indeed make up (lie Paris Ian fltnclc In trade, are shoddy and de plorably shnbbv. "You hoar a world-wldj exclamation over the giddy dlzzlnr-ises of, say, the Moulin Unngo In iParls. American pa pers will Illustrate tho dolnps at the Moulin Itoiigo. , You are given to under stand thnt llaorhus wan a fttdnte citi zen In the most profligate -dny.i of H-'imo comonrod a fie gods oiid god dersrs to bo met under full heads of steam n't the IMottlln Kongo. , "Don't you belbve It. "I got Mrs. Tarsney to go to church, and taking n preacher of the gospel to chaperon nnd protect us. a party of us all .Americans went out to 'do' the Moulin Itouge. "It was a dreary affair; ns itnmo as a flock of Bliei-p. TM riot and license ex ists only In the volatile minds of (hone who wrlle for American papers. There wns nettling about 'It which wasn't shabby, tawdry, weak, futile, and utterly-tiresome. ' : -. "Anil the Mutlln Rnugs In a fair Fpllnter of all (Paris. It'e a humbug; It assumes to be vicious, whereas It's only vulfeur In weak, polntlcai way,"( . ( Soom the Horse Will Be Omit of a Job, " '' Successful Foretell an From t:ie To:-tor; Transcript. Locor.'i.'ivt s for the road srd motor w.igo;:s of various kind.j are not new ia l.osion, and tlio one pro;-. il :-l by eleo lilelty ih-.it is r.-i-.v iilunetl-.ig i.;ueli a. tuition on account of til- run-city of I .a con:Uriii-iio;i ia ;-ofc r j ioik li ot a jiovi I ty alter i-II. c.eipt us r, !;unls the P'tve ti-.ut pro; els it. ..iao ' uts ago til. re v;.s ii. q-.if.-iitiy :-ei 11 0:1 :l,c s;i.its u' Co:iiiiIil-;e a Lo-.,;y ii-:-Ij;ii.-i1 : cir; v two piiMjas, w.tii ilia-it t'-r it-! n !.r power, that i;..uie f;'-o.! tl;n-.-11..U w.ie not r-oii-l ! j" t line.- s. T li" Mi i.-o;-.oit:io i-'ia- OVer l-iil l i I I; sm-i.i li- e.-t H::li;vi-.-l 1 with wh.U' fie s." nn.l c c line !.:io v: :it. outcry cou.pany 01 ci- pi:ri:.-c..l were calli l "(iiaoi- y 1 1 thty nil.l probably hiu use had there net 1 " :i ;. lai;:il tv.,il; : t tu 1.1 becausi tin y filxhtciud h(i;:-?. l..it t'.:e.-c, of 1 ours-.-, were il. 'lm d tor use on I. on rails, lire not iii hlu ihe rem i.U '-coo of fils article, which d.-iils ooiy v..tn v. h!"l. :i run on the ordinary roiols propMlcd I.y motors to ttke the place of h-Jiv- s. t'l'irlages without hiif-s luivj lo:iT been popular In France. Siueo is.c tiny have been coming rapidly Int-f.iv-(-r through the Invention of a pitro ieuin motor. '1'ao recent race trim Hurls to llm-i'i-anx, In which machlms ndapted by Jli.M. P.'.iihar nnd l.evas Eor, of Paris, to carriages of two or four seats competed, has attracted the at ti'iitlon of not only France, but or America, These cairlages, made 11ft traditional patterns, are driven by I means of a motor which Is situated In differently either at the back or In the front. The driver i.its with a lev rrady to his hand, by means of which the machinery can be set In motion in a few minutes. Some experimenters have proved that two minutes will suf fice for o start, and others agree upon live minutest ns the time required Anyhow, it Is a small affair, even If the horses have a sort of udvanta nero. nut horses, at least, cannot go backward, except at great personal In convenience, and ufter a vast amount of manipulation by the coachman. The petroleum carriage runs cither way without protest. And In the matter of ppi't'd no mere horse can approach It The average speed on good roads rec ommended by the manufacturers Is something more than eleven miles nn hour, and even greater claims are mad for it. The petroleum in these engines Is used as a fuel for the production i.f sttam. They are us eamly worke I ns trlcycl", probably ensler. A novice. n many wilnrss, is able, rpon the flrft trial, to drive his carriage over tw bun died miles In two i'nys of ten hour-.' apiece. Tourists have wandered over half a dozen dcpai'tuiL-iLS in them, and the taste is spreading every day. j nese vt-nicles, perfect ns they ap pear to be, will have to give place to the later devices of electricians. So fur those that have been constructed have proved too heavy and expensive to nmi general sale. The bat torlea alone cost about fMX They have undoubted advantages. The are clean, noiseless and require no engineer or skilled operator, resembling In this respect the trolley nnd the cable car. Uut the excessive load of the batteries and the lack of facilities for recharging them will prn- ninit tlielr use outside or large cities ful some time to come. Supplies of petro leum and gasoline are to be obtained In any town. The petroleum vehicles arc light, more convenient in running and also require no engineer. For these reasons they must take the pro cedence for ordinary use until the in genuity or tne Yankee has overcome the obstacles that electricity presents. j a He, lor instance, ine electric wagon of the Moston inventor. It Is heroic In its proportions, resembling an Knglish brake In general design, and Is built to outlast the "wonderful one-hoss shay." It weighs li.loil pounds and Is unuoubteiiiy the heaviest motor wagon on the continent, rlvnling in weight tne steam omnibuses of Paris. The general design of the vehicle Is well adapted to the purpose. The batteries contained In the body 8 nil under the I run t seat nre extremely powerful, con slstlng of forty-four chloride cells, with a total capacity of two hundred nm pere hours, nnd nn average discharge rate or twenty-live amphcrcs. The motor yields four horse-power and three uirierent speeds nre obtained, the mini mum nelng four and the maximum I'luiit-i-ii nines an nour. 'ine owner lias put tnis carriage through tile paces In hill climbing and over heavy roads wiin most c-atistactory results. An electrical wagon In use In Phila delphia has run several hundred miles without nn accident. As compared with pntrolctim vehicles It Is rather ponderous, weighing 4.2r0 pounds. Th-j batteries weigh l.iiiM) pounds and con Flft of s-lxty chloride nccumulati-rs, having a maximum capacity of thirteen horse power. From f.0 lo 100 miles can be accomplished on one charge, accord ing to the grade nnd Speed, and the maximum speed attainable Is fifteen miles nn hour. The motor, weighing .100 pound.-!. Is n nominal three-liovse power, electric launch type, capable of developing for a short time nine foil horse power. Steering Is accomplished by mruns of a wheel In front of the driver. The first electric wagon ever seen nenr New York hns Just appeared In Mi-ook- lyn. It came from the West, nnd In the Invention of two residents of Knnsas City. It weighs about .1,000 pounds, and as nt present constructed hns but one sent. Klghleen hundred pounds of storage batteries of the chloride accu mulator type furnish the power, which Is conimiinicoteil to the wheels by a rawhide friction pulley running oil n steel flnnge nlt.-vhed to the Inside of the rear wheels. When desired, an aulo ir.atlc lever detaches the power from the driving wheel without stopping the motion of the motor. On ordinary good -ronris a speed of fifteen or clgiile-Mi milts nn l our can be obtained, und for .''scendlng hill.-' n reserve of twelve l;or"e power can be drawn upon. A run of fitly rrllos ran be mada with one charge of the latteries. Lock Haven, Tn., Is nlco a claimant for honors In this direction. This wagon Is Intended for hotel service. The seats run lngthwls.-. anil nndrr them are r-.Iorcd the balrcrlrs, eight cilia In nil, four on each side. Though so few In number, thee colls nre rnld by the In ventor to have ruflicleiit .capacity to tun tho wagon fifteen days of nineteen hours each, recharging thcmrplvci from t gencrntor often sixteen cuidle power ll.thts. The motor develops three horse power, reared to cqunl six. The ve hicle weights 1.C00 pounds, nnd l.i ssid to carry S.OCO pounds. Tho rubber llren. with which It Is fitted. Incral-:c the comforts of riding. , When the wagon Plops or Is ruttnlng down hill the generator returns the used tip' cm-rent to the batteries, thus eeotiomlRlng power. It Is claimed hnt on a good road a spei-d of tyenty-five mile sn hour cen be reached, and the project In on foot to npply tlio Invention lo fire and police pnttrol v.irons, hotel amnlbitscs nnd pleasure agons. .A light 'and gracefl biv.-ry pro pelled by a gasoline mynor hns for three months part been traversing the streets of Springfield nndadjaccnt c.itintry. This vehicle welgls only 60i pounds, much less than aiyy so far constructed abroad. The mo 'or,, which has a- ca ptu'tty of four horee-power 'Is on tho ex ifloflon principle, 'Jmt the ga.i ts net manufactured In b carburetter beforo entering- tho explosion chamber, as in trut la nearly all oMicr patroleura mo Experiments ' Which Clearly Age of Horseless Vehicles. tors. Tliiis a saving In weight und n f:al:i In simplicity ur-.- rrcured. which in-.' Inr.ovtart considerations in a mo tor vcl-.icl '. The minor : ilglis out 1:0 pi-uiios. and bast t i iraytd 110 weakness a f:ei- a re .-iril oi 1 ".0-i piles over varying 1 ..'.i(li.;..i. .f ; .-, ! ui.d t ratio. Sis-cda vr;,i:i;v f.oiii il.ro to ten miles en 1: -nr ia? '-i- niii.uri l w-nli-mt cliiinslng iiie : ; ed :' the r.oiio-, and If a higher M I; d. ir.d. i-itf.-'Uvi- tif a button suit In :ii- I'u ,-it-;!.i:i oT tlio mt:ior. Tlio i-:o.-I.- 1 .in bo sloppi-i! v.itlibi a spa". of 1 fci t. 1 iie ccst of running la oj:cfour:'i t f a lent a mil". .o r: llr.-illy new minors have re-(-.'i il-'vi-lopi 1 In this country. cciHIy I., I i:. y u II Ir CI! e the ether motor und the not ch 1 h. other motor Is the fi ii't of tie- iY.r:Iiii;d f powir 1'. water, ethos .-rdi's of n ;-.v.iiv: inventor Me. For tii-! t,t noi.nlon eri -,.Ioj s i-tb, r In.Micd of being converted Into -x- l-iiiiii i;i:; jas at nlp."ly-slr: degrees, w lo-ri water ;-cqiii!v:! UIU il";;rc -s to convert It into yfeam. A great K.iving of h -at l.i thus i lii-cn .1, and the gas of ot::;-r i-i n i:::!-1. r.-m.-o powerful than r.teom. The invi-l.tor constructed a bicycle filttd with bin motor and it l:i claimed that a P;-red of six'5' miles an hoiir is pon.'-iliK-. "lie entire bicycle, with pnrtimetic tires three Inches in '.in meter, weighs only :;ixty pounds. The hut-u'r engine, which Is now being manufactured t y a Western linn for the propulsion of bicycles, vehicles nnd lauiieV;-;, is a machine nf wonder ful simplicity and llghli-ess. a four horse power engine w.-!---hli;g less than filly pounds, balar.ct- wheel Included. The engine runs at .".OO revolutions a minute. The fuel employe! Is ordi nary kerosene oil or casoiine which Is Ktored in a tank or reservoir and Is sup plied to the cnirlno through n small pipe by gravitation. The amount con sumed is one-tenth gallon per hour for each horse power. The kerosene or gasoline Is fed Into th cylinder nnd ex ploded by an electric spark from the battery, causing a homing nnd expan sion of the air within the cylinder. There arc cither one, two or four cylin ders uecoiUng to the amount of power to be developed. The speed ; regu lated by Increasing or diminishing the flow of oil, and the cnglii" Is stopped by throwing off the switch from the battery. These engines are ai.p'.l-d tn bicycles, tandems, trlcycl. -a nnd to com fortable little victorias, which nre built low. have four-inch pneumatic tires, seat two persons and carry a four-horso-power engine. FOOT BALL KILLS. Changes SuggcstcJ by Yale and Prince ton to Ho KcpiiUii.icJ by lluivard nnd Pciinsylvania-Kiffjrcnt Sets Vv ill.Mukc Confusion. There Is going to be a nlc? little Im broglio In the .matter of foot ball rulea this fall, snys the Chicago Kecord. The American lii'ercollriat,- Foot Ball as sociation se-:iis to have met Its deuth when I'e.liiryivanla 2 pel AVesleyan with drew, anil it seemed a mockery for Vale and Princeton lo continue the ex istence of the b'.dy. It now ni. peats, however, that there is considerable rhyme and a good deal of r. npon In the action of these exclusive colleges. The n.'.i-.oclatlm yearly publishes the rule book, and heretofore every college, school on 1 athletic club In the country has playe-.l the f.'iimo under the rule book of the association. It has been wondered whether Yale and Princeton would this year endeavor to prescribe rules for all foot ball In America. Such now appear.? to be their Intention. "Aleck" Moffat. AYnlter Camp and other solor.s from the New Haven, and New Jersey Institutions have had their heads pretty close together recently, and have d-clde.l up in at least three prominent changes In the rules. Harvard, Pennsylvania and Ciriiell have tacitly agreed to a couple of changes In the rules, but tlicFc only to apply to games between these colleges. Is lloenJ to .Mnktf Confusion. Here is n conflict nt the very start. Cornell and Princeton have a m-itch arian.'-ed. I'mli-r w'net.i tiles will that match be played? When Pennsylvania plays T.al.iyittc .Harvard tnceta A ni ne 1 st, 1 rlnivton Lc-high and Yale has a gome with the Crefccr.ti. What rules will govern? It Is hound to cad in con fusion and endh ss -Mcl'.i-rirgs. ;;ine colleges will accept the 11 ,v Y;l)e Prliuctoii rule boo!;, and others will adhere to the carefully prepared rnle.i of 'PI rules that were nude after the most careful ' ilr liberation 1-y Yale, Princeton, Harvard, -Pennsylvania r.nd Paul Ihishlcll, who represented the ex perienced umpires and referees in the country. The three changes proposed by -Princeton nre these: First, that on n fair rjtch the mini n-.nMii.T the same sl-.nll have the privilege t,f clioo'-'m.' b- t-.vecn a "free kick" and a down." Tl-is is an Immaterial c! :uige Ironi last year's! rules and the puvotit lTa:-v;r.l-I"i-syivanla-Ooniell ng'vcpiont. P.-'c md. ; Hint, ns last year, there s':'l! K Hire.? olliclals referee, umpire atd lhir-.-m.ni 1 any one of whom shall have tlv ; ower ! illsiiur.lii'yliig a plr.ycr for fouls. I This, too. Is nn Immaterial chance. Third, nnd this is where thn nth comes In Princeton nnd Y,?b propose that every rnrher ri nil remain l:i hh place In Hie line until after the ball hat been put In plnv. This Is radical, even unknown to old timer, and opposed io every principle of American colb-o-.? Kttghy. It doon nv.-ay entirely with the ninny pretty and strst.-glc ple"r of (lying Interference rovnd Ihe end plays and gcncnl ns-lrl.mce for tho Kiel;, rudiments of the great nnd Intelligent nn-,e plnyed by Fcnnsvlvania. tlarvarl and Cornell nnd copied 1 y rttch str ing '',1ms ar tlioec of Frown. Amherst, Pnitmonth, AYHl'ar-'i. T.pM"h. Lnfav- rlte, Vlrr-ln'.i. Michigan. 3:nt; Prrs- ,!tt', Chicago and others without irelt. The mvalion new I v.'!" thc-c team-i 'cnp-rpt to the dictation of Vale nnd Prince ton, wHllnr.1" sec their own teem" weakened and the rnmo In gen eral deprived of much of It.t merits? MUNYCN'3 Ehttimatlsm Curo r.svcr sil-t to rclievn in thrca lioars and ccro il three lnys. MUNYUN'tj Pv.iuc-isi.i Cure Is eunr. !-itecil to correct constipation nnd curs 1. 1 lorr.ia ot iiiuicaioti ana etotnacn .rotttjle. MU:-iY0N"3 Cfttnrrh Curo oolhc3 and 'it-nls tho alllictnl parts o:ul rcsforc! them olienlili. No failure; n euro guaranteed. MUXVOX'H Kidney Curo speedily cures 11. ins itl tho Nell, loins or eroina nnd nil I'urms of kiucy tllfeaso. MUUYtiX'rt Korvo Cnro euros ncryous- ncss and butlilj up tlio system. MUNYON'rf Yiiali2cr imparts now lifo. rotorcj Iwt powers to v.'oai and debiiita IBIi lllt ll. 4 ritu Cl.VM. Ko matter whnt ilia dfocaso is or nor many doctors lnvo luilcd to euro you, unit your drugr''! U'A -ccnt viul of on ol Munymi Cures, end if you r not beno fiUtU ygur tucucy wiU bq wAwUcd. RAILROAD TIME TABLES Central Railroad of New Jersey. t ih!KU and otiMqueiutnua Divioioio Anthracite etial uoed exciujlvy, losuiw tug cletuiUueM kiid couiXurL i'i.nw TAltLifj I.N fcKi-'tOf JUNE 2, 1S9J. Trains leave Scranton for Ptttston. WUkes-Uaxrv, etc., at U.3U a.m.. l.-j. o.u, S.iKi, V.iu p. m. buuiu?d. u.ui a. tn.. 1.00. !!.15. 7.10 p. m. For At lan Uc City, 8.J0 a.m. '''- For New York, Newark and Elizabeth. --'' e.oess . 1.2.t p-xpruas with Inn. let parlor car), 3.05 (express) p.ra. Bun. tluy, .li, p. 111. Train leaving 1.23 p. nu arrives at Philadelphia. Heading Term iinl. 6.'.'t p. ni. mid New York (i.45 p. m. For Maiieh Chunk. Allentown, Bethle hem. i..;htoa and rhlluUelpliki, 8.20 am.. :i.iy, r,..i x.-epi fiiiladtl,liiii p. 1," Snntlny, 2.1o p.m. For lintc llranch, Ocean Orove, eta. at S.i'd .1. 'n., i.j:: p. For It-ailing, Lebanon and'llarrlsburc. v,a A'li-iiiowii. H.M 11. 111.. 1.23, GOO p. 10. Eunday, 2.1J p.m. i- o- i-.i'i--, ,'!,., v;n n. m.. i.r. p. m. nrtiirnmg. leave New York, foot of I.ih. er'y rtrncl. North river, at 9.10 (express) n.rn.. 1.10. 1.3-1. 4.M (express with I51itti.t j.si lor car) p.m. Sunday, 4. SO a.m. Leave l'hila.klpliia, Iteittlinc Terminal. f.W a.m., 2.W end 4.30 p.m. Sunday ti.j A.m. Through tickets to all points at lowest rutes nmy be hid on application In nd vance to the ticket agent at the etation. II. I. BALDWIN. Ger Pass. AirenL J. II. OLIIAUSEN'. Cen. SupL Hel., Lack, and Western. Effect ilonday, June 24, 1S95. Trains Ihiivu jjei-Huton as follows: Ex press for New York and all points Eurit, 1.4". Mo, 5.15, S.OO ui.d S.Oi a.m.; 12.00 and i.'A I..111. Kxprcsi for Haston, Trenton, Phlledel. Piii". and the soiiih. 6.13. 8.00 and .6G a.m.. ti.Tu end 3 CI p.m. Wnshlngion und way stations, S.E p.m. ioijybiuma uerommodailon, 6.10 p.m. l-.xprers for rilrghtimton. Oswego, El Jilr.i. 'Vrn'iie. liK'h. Dnnsvllle. Mount .Morris nnd r.uffalo, 12.10, 2.3T. a.m.. and 1.21 p.m., making time connection! at Buf. f.-.lo lo all points l.i the West , Northwest u.-id Poiithwcst. J-t.-nh accommodation, 9 a.m. lioi-.h-inton und way nations, 12.37 p.m. Mt-holson accommodation, at 4 p. m. and CIO p. m.. Plnliamton and Elmlra Express, 10i p. in. Kxpres for Cortland, Syracuse, Osweg i tica and Klchfleld Springs, 2.3a a.m. and 1 .1 p.m. Ithaca, 2.33 nnd Bath 0 a.m. and 1.21 p.m. l-'or North umborlund, Pltiston, WirkeM Larre. p'ymoulh, bioomsburg nnd Dan Mile, mailing cIokk connections at North tirot''l!inl lor WMllumsport, Hurrlshurg, Di.Hlinorc, Washington and tho South. XorthoioDerland 11ml Intermedial Hta lions, i;.W. K.D5 u.m. and 1.30 and 6.07 p.ra. N'nr tiui; and Int i-rmcdlaie jta'lona, F.' iin-1 li.21 u.m. Plymouth an4 liiter lnnllato Rations, 3.40 and 8.S2 p.m. Pullman parlor and sleeping coaches oa all cxpren tr.tina For de;ai!ed Information, pocket tlma tntilns, ftc, nrply to M. L. Smith, cit tkkt-t nTe, ,xi Lackawanna uvenue, or t'ojict ticket eini;e. riKLAWAUK AND RAIL- "1 Monday. all iruini ill ui rive at new Lack awanna avenuu station tollows: L' rains will leave Scran ton station for Carboii'lale and In- lermedlatn points nt 2 2'l, LA, i.d, S.2'. and JO.lo u.m., l.Mi, 2.20, S.33, 5.13, 6.15, T.23, 9.10 and 11.2) p.m. l-'or I'nrvlew, Wnvmnrt nnd Honedale f t 7.0-t, 8.2". untl 10.10 a.m. ,12. 00, 2.2) und 5.1S p.m. l or Albany, Saratoga, the Adirondack and Mont-vul at i.-i.'i a.m. and 2.2J p.m. -'oi' W'ilkeK-Harre and lntcrr.iedlp.tq points nt 7.!"., !i.;s i-.nd ll.ir, a.m.. 12.05, I.2.1, 2. .-., 4.(m, r,.n, -...-.. n.ir, and ll.Si p.m. Trains will arrive tit H ranton station from I 'nrbo'iiiale and Intermediate poinU nt 7.10. f,.ii, 11.3 i and l.4-i a.m.. 12.W, 1.17,2,31, 3.. 4..T4, r..r.r.. :.- .. s.11 and 11. 33 p.m. Prom HcoieK lale, Va mart an-l F'ar-vie-.v nt !i..;i u.m., 12.00, 1.17, 3.4J. D.53 und i.4.'i p.m. l-'rom 'onirer. Sarnto.Ta. Albany, etc., at 4..".4 and 11. v.: p.m. Prom Vtlke-rtuw end internierPato pointi at ?.i,".. iM. 10.03 nnd ll.r.'i H.m., l.iii, 2.M. 3.S). f..l", 6.US. ;.2. 9.-.C and 11.10 p.m. Eric and Wyoming Valley. Trains lor.vo Scranton for New Yorll and laterme-Jlato points on the Krlo rail road at 7.00 a. 111. und 3 21 p. m. Also lor Ho:iesi!ali-, llawtt-y nnd local points at 'M, 9.40 a. m. and 3.21 p. m. All thn above aro through trains to an! from Hoiupuaie. Train for Uake Ariel 5.10 p. m. Trains lravo for WIlkca-Barra at t.3t a, r.i. and .t.43 p. 111. May 12, 1S?3. Train leaves Bcrunton lor Philadelphia and New York via. D. v 11. U. R. at 7.4j ft. 111.. 12.0.. 1 20. and ll.Sit p. m..,vla P., U A W. R. It., 6.00, t.os, 11.20 a. m and 11 p. m. Loavo Pern n ton for PltUton and Wilkes Pane, via P.. L. fc W. It. 11.. 6.00, 8.08, 11.2 a. in.. 3.:o. (i.07, S.r.3 p. ni. L'lue t'ir.inton tor White Haven, Ha cleton. Pottsville nnd all points on tha pcuver Meadow and Pottsville branches, via E. & V. V. n. 1:.. S.40 a.m., via II. & H. K. H. at 7.45 a. m.. 12.03. 1.20. 2.3S, 4.00 p. m., via 1)., I & W. It. . 6.00, 8.08, 11.20 a, m., I.JO. 3.50 p. 111. Leave Seranton for Bethlehem, Enston, Reading, liarrisburg and all in termed I at a points via 1). & H. It. R., 7.45 a.m., 12.03. I. io. 2.rs. 4 .00, it.- p. m., via D., U & W. II. H.. 6m R.m, 11.20 o. :n., 1.30 p.' m. Leave Sernuton'for Tunk-hannock, To wnndn. Klmira, Ithnea, Geneva nnd all liiteriiicillnto po'iits via l". It. n. R., 8.4J II. 10., 12.C5 and 11.33 p.m., via U., L, & W. IS. IS., 8.0S, !.3S a.m., 1.30 p.m. Ia'uvc S inton for Uochostor, Buffalo. r;iai.iir.i l-'nil::. Uetroit. Chicago and all points west via 1). A H. It. R.,' 8.46 a.m., 12.U". ti.15. 11.38 p.m.. via 1 U & W. R. it. met l'liis.ien J miction, 8.1IS, 9.33 a.m., ,S 11.ee p.m., via i-j. i vv. v. K. .i p.m. l o- Klmtra and the west vln Balamanca, via P. tt II. It. U., S.'3 a.m., 12.05, 6.05 p.m., ! via V., L. ft W. U. It., 8.03. 8.56 a.m., 1.3UL ; nnd I-.07 p.ri. l'lillnin-.i parlor and sleeping or L. V. I chair tarn or. ail trains between L. B. I .iiinetlon or Wilkc-liiirro nnd New Yi-rk, I pbllndelphla, liufialo, and Bupenaloa I Bridge. ; HOLT TN Tt. WtLRt'R. Oen. Supt. , CHAR. 8. Llirl.'.'n. Pass. Agt, Phlla., Pa, A. W. NONNKMACllFIU. Asst. Goa. i Pass. Ant.. Uouth liotblchem. 1'a. RfR.-iTii l'IVIIOV. n 1-lIVrl. 3In tflih, ISM. Noriti niiiil. 805'a03"jOi knulh Knnnd, iOi 19 i 2(10 u 34 ho 4 Stations I 2 W-l t(Trnlns Pally. Er. iJ y; ! 1 cept, Hr.nlny.l l' r M, 10 r.i 7S.-.I . 1-40, 7 10 . Io:iij 70.1 . r i p l "R sr. 1 in. . r 1 o:H . Arrive Leave N. Y. Franklin fit, . Wear, 4-.'ud street . A'eeliuKkcn Arrive Leave if ; 411 819 Ml Uuai-tx:K Juiicliooi ttim ininciH!k stjirllgut rresinu pork Vomn Peyntella Iielinont riemiant Mt. UnlondKlo 1'orset t!t,jr t'ui bind.ne White Hrldgo Ma.vtlcld Ji-i'iiiva . Arclilb.ild .Wlnton "' recfcviiia Olv-f-h.-iDO Iik-ksan TUroop Proviilenco Park Place Puiaulun mt tn 8 31 8 41 M M 8l 8l 8 It 6iit;is.n 8 1H o ill. y rv , 4f,- 40 . 4 5ilS S5 . 4 47!i! li . 4 VIS (it . OS: 64 8 4 (15. 14 X'tll.M'l .... 4 SIM .nU h 4 (Ml It I)l Dl (6 sal 1 in r 74 HSlI 88t . ...IftlSU; DP M Its 11 7 7 f1i7;f8 8fl fT ftlifll!4'4lt4l 8 Mill S) Out 7 84118 4.1 849 74HM8M lr,i 7 43 18 M SM 7 48.18 911 114 7 6 1 04 4 04 7S4 107 4UT 7 Ml 1 10 4 10 8 co 1 14 414 811311 181417 8 031 1 Ki 4 0 II MM I 1 8AI ft .ft't'l 1 ! M 41 T.I 8 Mill 111 8 50 lt 07. 8 44 o a" 11 01 H 41 til l: 8 30! 11 Of; H 3l' It III' 881 18 V7 8H.'. r i (1171 8 :;8 10 ,V. h ' a ha y tavo ArrlTfl a u p air v AU trains tun dally except Sundny. t sljrnllles that ualna stop aaslitnal for pas 801'Sers. . ecoro rates via Ontario a Western before purchasing tickets and save money. Day and Nlort Kinross to the. Wests 4i 'SS'2f I HL'LiSON JJ V rommcnt-lng W.- I. sSV". day. July W.