If You Are in Doubt What to Give for Christmas you can find Just what you want at Hall's House Furn ishing Store Wo liavo Buffets, Side Boards and Parlor Tables, Bed Hoom Suite?, CliHIonierp, China Clonete, llockcis and Morris Chair, Berry and Salad Sets, Chop Platen, Pudding Sets, Cracker Jars, Sugar and Creams, Mayonaise Dishes, (irnvy Moats, Fancy Plates, Celery Trays, Hrush and Comb Trays, Dinner Sets from $5.00 up, Toilet Sets from $2.00 up. A Large Line of Bric-a-Brac, Vases and Lamps. Rugs, Couches, Table Covers and Foot Rests. FOR THE CHILDREN we have Doll Reds, Tea Sets, Rockers, High Chairs, (Jaine Hoards, Sleds, Hobby Horses. Ourentire line of Pictures will be sold for Cost ' to close thorn out. Don't Fail to examine C. BUOYS Otf THE COAST. tha LlaYhthonsa Department I sea Seven Different Klmln. Seven styles or kinds of buoys it to recognized and usod by the II;, lit limine department of our government. Tlioy re known as the nun, can, tone. Ice, wblBtllngAtll nud spar buoys, nud, ac cording to their size, the nun, can tind Ice buoyi ore divided into four ehwen. The nun, euu, cone and lee Liuo.vh are made of steel. The upper parts of these buoys are generally modeled In tbe frustrum of a cone, with the ex ception of the ice buoy, which 1m sim ilar In shape to a spar buoy, tapering at tbe ends. These buoys are fastened to the ledge or bottom of the channel by means of chains, shackles, swivets and ballast balls, which move freely with the current of the water at nil, singes of tbe tides. The lower ends of the mooring chains of these buoys are al so connected either to a sinker or a mushroom anchor, which Is an anchor with a saucer shaped bead on a cen tral shank. Tbe bell buoy Is a circular shell of steel, forming the main body or float of the buoy. The bells used are ruado of the best quality of bell metal, cop per 80 per cent and block tin 30 per cent, and usually weigh about 200 pounds. We believe the government stipulation la that all bells for sea buoys shall weigh 200 pounds. Perhaps tbe most ingenious of nil tbe classes of buoys used by the light house board Is the whistling buoy, which Is fitted with an apparatus by which air compressed by tbe move ment of tbe waves la made to escape through a tube, thus producing a whistling sound. This apparatus con sists of a whistle, a check valve and the necessary connecting pipes. The whistling buoy la protected by an out er guard or cage. There are three classes of spar Y.7.1 make you feel Good. Celery King ! composed of nature's tonto. laiatlvea-of the roots, herbs and seeds whtoli, aklliiully blended, pink the gnntleat and at -the wit tint the most potent of laxatives aud t greatest our (or vousUpallou and til II . a It cause. ' -f kUug la not aoaUuullo. Itlsatonlo. la It wiU juaka your blood para. 1 Wuj tw.st you (mI good. Two kinds, on herbs, the other tablets. Bold by H. Alex. Btoke. our stock before buying. K. ftftLL, buoys, ranked ncrorning to lengtn nnu size from the Urst class, forty-live to fifty feet long, down to the fourth elnss. twenty feet In length, to be placed In position In accordance with the height of the Incoming tide In or der to lie effectual. These tire usually moored to n mushroom anchor. There Is also n starboard and a port hand buoy used for marking the course of the channels. These are cone shaped buoys about thirty feet In length, at tached at the bottom end by shackles and straps. The colors of the buoys are Inter esting. Itcd buoys mark the starboard or right hand side of the channel com ing from seaward nnd the black the port or left hand side. Mlilchannel dangers nnd obstructions ore marked with buoys having black and red transverse stripes and iilldchnnnel buoys black and white stripes. Ituoys marking wrecks are painted green. The starboard nnd front buoys are numbered from the seuward end of the channel toward the harbor, the black bearing the odd and the red the even numbers. Bungor Commercial. Rnaala In the Eighteenth Century. l'eter tho Ureat said of his country nnd said truly, "ltussla Is rotten be fore she Is ripe." To reull7.o tho true meaning of these words and the full ness of their Implication one must study In detail tho reigns of Elizabeth nnd Catherine II. In Ilussln during tho eighteenth century were to be found side by side the vices allko of savagery nnd civilization. Add to the lack of social Instinct, of humanity In the wider sense and of moral respon sibility that is to be found In a Zulu kraal, the worst corruptions that are bred in courts like that of Louis XV., and one can form somo faint notion of the Itusslan capital under Eliza beth and Catherine. The country, as a whole, was orien tal In Its wunt of civil organization, but without the idealism of the east. The capital was a welter of blood nnd lust, barbarism and sophistry, atheism and superstition, drunkenness aud sav age violence, Indolence and seml-tn-sauo activity. The moral condition was reflected In the physical. Never was there such a mixture of squalor and magnificence as In the palaces of the Empress Elizabeth. Tho1 rudest and the most costly furniture were Jumbled together. Filth and splendor were always alternating, and the vilest food was euten on plates of gold. Loudon Spectator. Dolnar Wen witnont it. "Have you bud brain fag yet?" young Furbish asked the rising author. "No," replied the lutter. "Just at present I don't need the advertising." Cleveland IMnln Dealer. Retired. Patience Is ber husband In trade? Patrice No; he whs sold out by the sheriff last week. Yonkers Statesman. A BRONZE FLOWED. Prettiest Morning tilnrr That ffflvep Itloomril In a Tomato t an. While I devoured my sandwiches, tinner marks and all, with n mighty ap petite at no itt line of my llrst day tit work with the Iron umlders Mike reached over Into n neighboring yard nnd plucked II crisp climbing morning glory. Molding the delicate blossom tip for my Inspection, he said, "Young feller, kin you make me one Just like that In bronze?" t was quite sure I could tint. "Hut," said he, "you needn't think It can't be done, l-irst you get an old ran, punch a liotn through the bottom of It with a null and stick the stem of the flower through the bole, leaving the blossom Inside. Hee?" I saw. "Next you 1111 the can with water and drop Into the water bit by bit nice Hue sail I. Mind you, go slow. After a long lime tho water will leak out, leaving the blos som burled In the sand, but si III In good shape. Now you'll dry the whole thing In the core oven and bake It. That will burn the blossom to ashes. Then If you have the patience to shake It nud shake It till nil the ashes drop out through the stem you'll be ready to pour In your metal, nnd If you do as 1 tell you and make no mistake nnd try about six times you'll have In the end the prettiest morning glory that ever bloomed lu n tomato ciin." Hcrlbner's. FRIENDSHIP. It Imposes Serious Duties I'pun Thane Who Court It. "When acquaintanceship ripens Into friendship, something serious has come Into one's life," writes Mrs. Henry Craham In the Onlooker. "I don't think that any one can or ought to afford to have more than one or two really Inti mate friends. If love has gone with friendship that Is, if the gates of paradise have been opened to you,- nnd the guardian angel has sheathed his flaming sword and admitted you through the portals then you must have given everything, and you have very, little left to give. A man can have a man friend nnd n woman n woman, because there are places where men meet uieu nnd women meet wo men alone, neutral ground where the other sex cannot enter because of Its limitations, and there real friendship may live and thrive on the crumbs which fall from the rich man's table. "Tor friendship Implies something se rious. You must give of yourself, your real self, nud once given It cannot be taken back. One has no right to give up a frlcndslfl) unless the other per son agrees or unless It has become an absolute Impossibility, and even then nil the obligations of It may survive, while the delights of It die." THE "I" AND THE "J.' Why They are Dotted and How the Practice Originated. The dot over tho "1" originated In an accent which was put over tho letter when doubled or placed next a "u," n practice traced back to tho eleventh century. In tho twelfth century' the accent occurs In the combination of "1" with other letters, and In the four teenth century the accent was changed to a dot-flrst Instance In MSS. 1.127 whlch becnnie unlvcrsul when printing made It Inconvenient to retain both forms. Originally "1" and "J" were modified forms of the same letter. In the fif teenth century the "1" nt tho beginning of a word was lengthened and orna .mentally turned to the left, while In the middle of n word It was unaltered. Both forms were dotted, nnd after the Initial "1" became "J," a separate let ter and a consonant, It still retained Its dot. This is limited usually to the small "J," but abroad it may be seen also over the capital letter. London Telegraph. Kins; Alfoaeo'a Det. When the king of Spain was at Xeres be greatly admired a horse belonging to Seuor ltlvero, one of the notables of the town, who at once presented him with the aulmul. The king refused the gift, but the other day at the pigeon shooting nt the Casa de Campo, near Madrid, a mutch wus arranged be tween the king nnd Senor ltlvero. , The stakes were, on the king's side, a gold piece of 100 pesetas, and on Senor Ri vera's a souvenir of Xeres. Like a skillful courtier Senor Klvero lost nnd sent the king the horse which he had so much admired ns a souvenir of Xeres. The king could not refuse to accept, but he at once sent the senor one of the best horses In the royal stable In exchange. London Sketch. A Mare'a Meat. . A "nightmare" was supposed by our ; ancestors to be the Saxon demon Mara, i or Mare, a vampire which sat upon the sleeper's chest and was regarded at tho guardian of bid treasure, over which it brooded, as a ben over her eggs, and the place, where It sat waa termed the nidus, or nest. When any one claims be bos made a great dis covery which Is really no discovery at all we say be has discovered a "mare's nest," n place where an Imaginary treasure lies. fur of Hlmeelf. "I'll give you a position ns clerk to start with," said the merchant, "and pay you what you are worth, la that satisfactory?" "Oh, perfectly," replied the college graduate, "but er do you think the firm can afford It?" Philadelphia Press. Bard to Approach. Lady (looking for an apartment) I'd like to see the Janitor, please. Assist ant Did yes have an appointment wld bin? Brooklyn Life. Tact comes as much from goodness of heart as from fineness. JSildynilon. OLIVER CROMWELL. The tarn tent I'.rtor nf Ilia force Was Charles' Blxeeuittiii. The greater:! prmr of Cromwell s life was the exec'illim of the klu.j. Not that In this he showed himself n man of blood. There was lit lit in not n particle of the terroii i or of the pas sion for regicide which slew the help less king of I'l.ince. lie had been pro yoked no doubt by Charles' double deal ing, but he did not hale him; on 'the contrary, he was Inclined In him and bad wished to come to terms with him. Himself brimming with family affec tion, he had been touched by the sight of Charles with his children. He was Impelled to,the fatal net by what seem ed to him fell necessity n ml by the un controllable wrath of the army against the king, whose perfidious machina tions, while he was treating with the parliament for a settlement, had kin dled the second civil war, with the Scotch Invasion, and brought them nnd their cause once more Into the extrem ity of peril. It was at the prayer meet ing of the soldiers at Windsor, before they marched against Hamilton, that the king's doom was really pronounced. The secret treaty with the Scotch for the Invasion of England brought Charles to the block, nnd his offense surely was capital, though Its punish ment whs most 111 advised. The death of the captive king set the king free nnd absolved the monarchy; 11 put In expiable blood between the regicides nnd n great iitrt of the mil Ion, and flunkylsm, far from being sickened, ns Cnrlyle says It was, flourished on the martyrdom and has continued to flour ish on It ever since. The success of Ikon Knslllke wns the proof. Uoldwln Smith lu Atlantic. WAIFS IN AUSTRALIA. The State Kinds Them Good Homes and Una No Orphanage. Australia Is a continent without an orphanage, a country without nn or phan. Each wnlf Is taken to a receiv ing house where It Is cared for till a country home Is found. The locnl vol unteer societies canvass their neigh borhoods and send to tho children's committee of the destitute board the names nf any families they have found where children may bo placed. Tho children's committee selects the homo which it Judges Is best adapted to the development of the child In question. No child Is placed In a family so poor that the child might surfer. The foster parent receives a sum averaging $1.2") per week for the care of the child and for proper clothing. When of school age tho child must be sent to school. The locnl volunteer committee looks after Its care and culture, nnd Bealous neighbors often assist lit watch ing the growth nnd education of theso happy children. When the child Is fourteen years old he begins to work. His earnings are placed In the I'ostnl Savings bunk, nnd at the age of seventeen or eighteen he goes out Into the w-orld nn Independent man. The state, nt nn expense of less than $70 a year, has ralseil n mini or womnn to contribute to Its wealth and prevented the manufacture of a crimi nal nnd the expense of courts, prisons and reformatories. Carry Tour Own Plllnir. Many people when nway from hntno find it dltllcult to sleep well In n Strange bed nnd arise In the morning with a sense of having passed a decld edly'tinsatlsfactory night. An old rail way ofllchil, who ought to know, says the trouble Is all lu the pillow. It's tho pillow first, last and always. IIo lias slept In ninny hinds nnd under nil imaginable conditions and years ago came to tho conclusion that with one's own pillow at hand it mattered llttlo about the bed. On nn extended tour he always hikes his pillow with him, stowing It carefully at tho bottom of the trunk for future reference. "If I could start life over again," he says, "I would learn to sleep without a pillow (the only proper way), but the art must be no pi I red during childhood. The next best thing Is your .own pillow wherever possible. Try It and be con vinced. Philadelphia Hecord. Wonldn't V.nt Kris. A well known naturalist tells of an experience lu the Hebrides last sum mer. "We saw great numbers of eels actually leaving the sen and ascending a small dear stream which formed the outlet to a shallow loch," he writes. 'They varied In size from mere threads to specimens weighing two to three pounds each. The migration con tinued for u whole week, nnd one day we succeeded In cnpturlng half n score about fifty yards awny from high tide mark. Theso were offered to n high land shepherd, who, with a shrug and a grimace, said, 'Och, sir, I would liefer eat snakes.' " ueh a Nice n lit die. "Did you ever hear tho alphabetical conundrum, Angelina?" , "No, Augustus. What is It?" "It Is, Whon will there be only twenty-five letters In tho alphabet?" "Oh, I never could guess that!"' "It's when U and I are made one, my darling." "What a nice conundrum It Is, Au gustus!" Youthful Aspirations, nolden Itotli of your children are getting along. They'll soon have to de cide upon their careers. Hidden Oh, that's all settled long ago. Tom has made up bis mind to be a retired mil lionaire, and Henrietta thinks she Is cut out for a rich widow.' Boston Transcript. Court I a a; Peace, 'Smith never quarrels with his wife. Sho spends nearly all her time abroad." ' "Yes, they get ulong together by liv ing SJiart." Houston Post MATTER AND FORCE. heir Inaestrarltbllltr Prored Vr Newton's Famona Axiom. Mr. Spencer has suld ("First Princi ples," page 1K2) that "the verification of the truth that matter Is Indestructible" rests only upon "a tacit assumption of It." "A tacit assumption," with no ra tional basis for the assumption, would be no verification; It would be a guess. The truth' that urn tier and force are In destructible rests ttpou a better ground than nn assumption, it te the Inevita ble corollary of Newton's Third Law of Motion, which Is accepted as the fundamental axiom of physics, "To very action there Is an equal nnd op posite rcnctloii." If there could be a single case In which matter and force are annihilated, then Newton's axiom would be untrue, for In thnt ense re action would fall to follow action. The turning of something Into nothing by the destruction of matter or force would break the succession of cause and effect, of action and reaction, and consequently the theories of the Inde structibility of matter and of force have their roots In Newton's axiom, In the great law of consequences, of equivalence, of compensation, of bal ance. From "ltnlnnce: The Funda mental, Verity," by Orlando J. Smith. FREEBOOTERS. In England They Were Mass Troop er a, In Ireland Boajtrotters. Moss troopers In olden days In Eng land Infested the marshy country of Llddcadiilq, and subsisted chiefly by rapine. Such freebooters in Ireland were called bogtrotters, apparently for similar reason. Sir Walter Scott, In the "Lay of the I.imt Minstrel," Introduces the word thus: A fancied moss trooper, the boy The truncheon of a spear bestrode And round the hall right merrily In mimic foray rode. This name was also given to maraud ers upon the border. Mr. Camdeui calls them borderers and describes them ns a wild and warlike people. "They are called moss troopers," says Fuller In a long account of them in his "Worthies of England," "because they dwell In the mosses and rldu-ln troops together. They dwell In the bounds or meeting of two kingdoms, but obey the laws of neither. They come to church as seldom as the 20th of Febru ary comes Into the calendar." rear son's Weekly, THE WORD "NICKNAME." It Had Ita Origin In the Old Bnallah Word Bite." The word nickname has Its basis lu the old English "eke," an addition or prolongation, as used In "The Mer chant of Venice," "'TIs to piece thuj time to eko It and to drnw It out at length." Heekeepers still call a wood en cylinder added to a hive to Increase Its capacity nn "eke," nnd we speak of eking out an Income. A nickname, therefore, Is nn eke name, or one added, which gained Its present form through the transfer of the "n" of the Indefinite article used with It from Its proper plnce to the front of the noun. Thus "an ekenamo" became llrst a "a nekename" nnd then "a nickname," There are some similar cases In Eng lish of which the word "newt" Is nn example, having been origin illy "an ewt." Sometimes the "n" has left the word and become attached to the arti cle, as In apron, which was In olden times n "napron," while "a nntiger" has come down to us as "an auger." Saturday Itevlew. Carrier riseon Memory. I have known the pigeons Imported from Ilelgluni nnd kept prisoners for years, which, when liberated, struck out for home, only to be drowned In tho Atlantic or picked up by some ship nt sea. This proves that no dlstunce appalls them. Inning the Frnnco-rrtisslan war the French caught a homing pigeon which wns being sent to transmit informa tion out of the besieged city of Paris. Tho bird was made a prisoner of war nnd kept In confinement for ten years. When given Its liberty It nt once re turned to Its old home, showing that ten years was not sufficient to drive from Its mind the memory of home. Country Life In America, Dilution Extraordinary, A member of the French academy reported that tweijty-llve experiments on animals showed .each time that poisoned blood is active even after di lution 1,000,001,000,000 times. The Strength of the average homeopath ic dose Is from about the third to the sixth decimal. This demonstrates that those who say that there Is no medicine in a homeopathic dose be tray lguorance. ' Just What He Meant. "Chnrley, dear," suld young Sirs. Tor ktns after her husband had been play ing a soelul game, "why are you so often without money?" I "It Is due to the wa7 I was raised." "You mean reared, don't you?" "No. I mean raised." Washington Btnr. I A Good BesinnlnaT. 1 She I spend six hours a day trying to grow tall; it's the fashion, you know. He Well, you've made a beginning, I see. Your face looks lodger than usu al. Detroit Free Press. owing and Heapla. The law of the harvest Is to reap more than you sow. Sow an act, and you reap a bnblt. Bow a' habit, and yon reap a character. Sow a charac ter, and you reap a destiny. Give the reins to appetite, and yoq give wlnga to happiness, Woman's Life. A Frightened Horse. Running like mad down the street dumping the occupants, or a hundred other accidents, are every flay occur- renoos. It behooves everybody to huve a reliable Salve handy and thure's mum as Rood as Buck-loo's Arnica Salvo. Burns, Cuts, hores, Ecwma and Piles, disappear quickly under Its soothing effect. 26o, at H. Men Bloke's Un a Store. S7T - B STAR GROCERY E: . V I II U 3 B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B t B B You know that name 3 implies r3 Good Goods, rjj Low Prices and 3 Courteous Treatment, -3 In addition to our full fS line of fancy and staple j groceries, we have now a 3 fresh lot of 3 Christmas Candies 2 Layer Raisins 3 Malaga Grapes 2 Nuts, Oranges, 3 Stuffed Dates S Bananas, &c. 3 B Thinkofitl Nice mixed 3 C: candy at 8c per pound; 3 C 3V& pounds for 25c. 3 We also have added the ", B Cuban and Toledo Club 3 H Brands of Coffee ' 3 to our stock and now 3 tz. have the largest line of 3 B coffees in the town. 3 e , g We also have a full line 3 S of the 3 B Royal Garden Teas 3 t Corner 4th and Main 3 B Streets, 2 S Reynoldsville, Pa. H2 iiiiiiuiiiiiuiuiitiua iaatl Thos.E.Evatis Contractor and Builder Has bought 8'ilnmon ShutTcrV lumber of floo and lumber yard at this place and will onntlouo tint lumber biiNlnevs nt the oimie old stand. He will sell any and ull kind of Lumber Lime, Cement, Sand or Plaster. Main St., Reynoldsville. POWDER THK OLDEST, PUREST A NO MOST HtLIABLt BAKtNQ POWOC MANU fAQTUAC. MO OTHER ttUAl TO iT. which speak for them- Z3 5 selves. Remember the 3 place. 3 ft Wanted! Girls to learn Weaving and Winding, Enterprise Silk Co. . ' ENNSYLVAN1A HA1LHOAD PITFAW ft ALI.WJIIENY VALLEY DIVISION. Low Grade Division. In Effect Hoy. 27. 1904. Eaitern Standard Tlmi, EASTWARD. STAIONS. I'lltHtluty. .. lied linn l,HWmIM till . . . . New lie lili'liem Oiik lil'li.u Miiyixii i Huiijiiift villi, . ,. HriHikvllie lowii Kiiller IteyniiliUvllle.. t'UIH'OIlNl tnllMt reek Dilllola Hitlmlit Wlnlerhurn ... I'eriii llt.ld Tyler Henueictte Uriinl tirlflwixKl NcT5? P u. ' S lb 7 0: It i. IK II 1H le h 0 u 19 It tW X, Ml m 10 Wi 10 15 P, u. Triilii li.iliXiiniliiyiii.i, v Pit iHbiir0 0t, a.m., !',",'. ".J"!!1 u,m Hrookvllln 12.211, ItpynoldMvllls u.fili. ruUnl'rnck 1.14, urrlve IiuIIoIh :.20 p.m. WRHTWAUII NcflOO No.ll3.Ho.lOl7(ol05 A. M. A. a) A. M. P. M .... i SMD 1 Ml .... n : II 0M 4 in .... (I , II IK 4 IK S 6 '.'II ill .:" It 41 4 AO 5 J'l Hi "i," 4 fK r : in .ii it m G in fi 1(1 .V 12 111 6 21 li II'. 11 In 12 M 5 IK' 'i l'i ll i'll li Ml U 2.1 HI iii til 5N itl II 4 J 12 62 It III til ti. -ll V.i t t! tiflii nr.; 1 1:, t an 7 on fi or, 12.-) e 411 7 li 1 x M 7 IB 1 Ml 7 Kl 7 Wi 1 fc'i 7 IIS 7 2 (r.i 7 21 8 IM 1 t 7 47 km n a j7 Mt i 4l .... 1 a (i I 8 20 A.M. I'. II. P. M. p, M No 108 No 104 No 102 No.ll4No.IIO A. M. A. M.lA. M. P. M. P. M. .... i 5 M 11 tu .... SM) .... t8 ill til IK .... it u .... 8 2T. 11 V, .... ( 25 .... 0 Ml 12 12 .... 6 6:t .... 7 00 I i 2H ... 7 04 .... 7 or. 12 2f .... 7 10 ... 7 I" 12 :w .... 7 a to 7 Wl 12 f 5 (Kl 7 US 1 12 7 ! 1 IA 5 III 7 42 l ts 14 r7 47 311 H 0k 1 211 8 27 7 M t 4K tD 20 .... t6 4.1 t If M t8 MJ t8 18 7 l 8 M 1 Ml Oil 8 HO 7 20 td 411 12 10 15 fl 47 7 !17 Mi 2 24 iti 7 41 tu 12 ... a a 11 7 .SI 0 20 2 ax 6 46 I fl 20 8 21 t 47 t ( 7 14 8 a.". 10 00 8 2d 7 2fi .... 11 1.". ill as 1 6 an mo 011 .... A. M. p. m.r. rn. p. m. p, m. STATIONS. Driftwood Uriinl K.'iinetette lyler Peiuitlnlil Wlnierfourp .... IlillUllI I lull., W KalUCreek I'MriCOHMt IteynoldKVllIe.. Kullor IllWR ilriHikvlllH Hiimmervllle.... MHyiMirt imkltldn New HcHileiiern l.iiWKfiiihnin.... Kelt Hunk I'itlaburK Train fl.'i2(Hiiiidiiyilt.ve IluHi.l 4.00 p.m. ritllitUruvk 4.07. KiiyiioldsrlllM.!, Hrook vlll 4. Vi, Heel llHiik 8.211, 1'ltiHliiirK u.aii p. m. On Hiiiidiiyaonly train l. uvp. driftwood at 8.2U a. ni., arrive IiiiHul 10.UO a. m. Itcturn Ini! Iphvph DiiIIoIk 2. HO p. rn., arrives Urlft wikkI a. 40 p. tu., mopping at Intermediate ata tluua. Triilm marked run dallyjl dally.excnpt rlimday; t flng station, where slKnala must uown. Philadelphia & Erlo Kallroad Division In effect Nov. 27th, 1904. Trains loave Driftwood as follows: EASTWAHD t:itt n. m Train 12, weekday, for Bunbury. WIlkeHliarre, tlazleton, Pottavllln.Hcrantoo, llarrlslinru and the Intermediate ata tliiim, arrivlnu ut I'lilladi'lphia 8:2a p.m.. New York, lean p.m. 1 Hull imore, 8:00 p.m.i WuKhiiit(in,7:lfp. m Pullman Parlor car from Willlittnuport tu I'lilladelpliia and paic k.'iiii.'i itimi heK fx. in Kane to Philadelphia, ami Wllllaumport to Ualtlmore and Wash ington. U:M)p. in. Train 8. dully for Punhury, Har riKl.u. - and princliiallntermedlateatatlonii, arriving at Philadelphia 7:a2 p. rn., New York l":2:i p. rn.. Unit line. re 7:. 10 p. m., Wah ilntton f .i-i p. in. Vemlhuled parlor cara and pHKNeimer coaches, II ult mo io Philadel phia and WuKliliitrtoii. 4:un p. m. Train 8, dally, for Har Hk1.ii. and Intortnrdlate .atlons, ar rlun - . .t Philadelphia 4:2a a. m.; New York, 7.1a a. 1.1. ; Halt imore, 2.20 a. m.; WaHhinKton a.atl a M. Pullinun HIcepiiiR cars from Hnrrl. I.ura to Philadelphia un New Yorrf. Philucelphla pussemitTH can remain Id aleeper undinTurhed until 7:i0 A H. lMift p.r Train t.rtally tor Hunbary, Harris burir . (I ltr .-mediate Ktutlonn, arriving hi Phlla. .-Ijihla, 7:17 A. M.; New York, 9; H A. u.ir, week days and Id.ilH A M. on Sun day! Minimum, :l.SA.M.i Waal iiinton, : :0 A. t. Pullman gleupera irom Erie, and tVllllaif sport, to Philadelphia, and Willliii iHiMirt. to WiiKhlnKtiin. Passenger roi.rh-i from Krie to Philadelphia, aud Wllllauisport to Hull imore. WESTWARD a. m. Truin 7, dally for Buffalo via Kmponum. t:41 a. rn. Train 9. dully for Erie, Rldi! way, and week days tor IlulloU, Clermont and p:iui'lpal intermediate slut ions. :r.tiu. 11. Train 3, daily for Erie and Inter medial'' points. 3.4S p. m. Train 15, dully for Buffalo vU Km.r um. 5:4'.p . m. Train 81, weekdays for Kano and Intermediate stations. JOflNSONBUKU KAILROAD. p. in. wkkki.avk. a. m. a ;t'i ur Clermont iv 77. In 40 ... 8 211 Woodvule .... 10 43 ... 3 23 Qlilnuood .... 10 4H .... a 211 Hrnilh's Kun ... 10 02 .... 3 12 liiHianier ... 10 SO ... 3 07 r.truiiJht, .... It 04 .... 2 Mi tllen ila.ei ... 11 IS .. 2 411 loin,. i,riliill J .... 11 33 2 20 IvKidwuyur ....1150 .... Uiduway & Clearfield Railroad. and Connections. Hk.KKI.AY. p.m. p.m. a.m. a m p ut. p.m. jo 111 ar lii,l .-way W 8 30 12 01 4 uA, 7 20 7 On 7 OS 7 01 i 57 I 47 I 43 8 38 i 3.1 8 30 I J 1 4'.l i'40 I 37 t 27 t 23 i'lS ui u nn 8 S3 8 Al 8 47 8 37 8 31 8 30 a n s 20 8 08 Mill Haven 7 01 12 I 4 IS. 4 24 434 4 38 4 4 4 33, 4 67 5 01 S OA 8 20 I'M.ylitnd 7 10 12 17 7 13 12 22 7 18 12 i 7 21 ii 30 7 32 12 40 7 37 12 45 7 41 7 4 S 12 34 7 SO I 00 8 113 1 23 hlums Mills lll.ie liork ( hi rier liriK'kuuyv'i Lanes Mill Mi'Minn Pint tlurveys kun lv Kali C"k ar iv Huilols ar 1 10 1 10 12 W 8 30 I IS 8 IS 12 52 S an 12 24 4 50 1 1 44 4 OS 11 OS 1 30 9 00 8 .Vi ar r'allstrk Iv 7 35 1 15 8 10 8 UeviiolilsviHe 8 08 1 29 8 27 8 OA HriM.uvllle 8 33 1 38 8 00. 20 New U. I h I'm 8 20 2 38 8 43 K. .I Hank 10 IK) 3 20 7 Iv riiisl.urfur 12 35 3 30 10 80 p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. p.m. p i For time tables and itdiUtUiiml Inforinalloa consult ticket aisenis. W. W. ATTEKBTKY, .7. H. WOOD, tien'l Manuu'er. pas. Traffic Mgr CEO. W. ItoYD, Gen'l Passenger A PITTSBURG. CLAlfltr?? & SUM MKRVILLE RAILROAD. Passenger Tran -ielule. First Class Trains. Iially er(rri Suniluy, connecting with p. K. U. t'ralus at ouutuiervitiu. UlUNIl BAST. Nn. I. No.. Clarion, leava, 7M' a.m. 11.10 am. ftratuinvllle, k On 11.20 " Wutersun, s 12 " 11.3.! " Corsica N.-.'H ' ll.ei " Suniiiierlllc,ar.8 40 ' 12.1,0 O.IINll WICMT. No. 3. , 4.1S p.m 4.28 " 4 38 p.m. 4 .83 p.m.. 8.13 p.m. No. 8. No. 1. Huniniervllle, lv, 8..V, a.ut Corsica, It. 14 " Waterson. " O.iO ' 8trattonvt!lev 9.43 ' Clariou, arrive. . 9JU No. 4. 12,20 p.m. 8 20p.m. 12.38 " 8.38 " 12.48 " 8.48 1 1 0 " 7 00 " 1.10 " 7.11) in effect October 17. iWH. Fur further Infor mation a Idles- the Company's geueral otttcct alBruokvllle, Pa.