THE POSTAGE STAMP HOW IT 13 MADE BY UNCLE SAM'S EXPERT WORKMEN. t'he Mnntitfuot lirtnnr rroreaa From the Knicrnvinic uf the Sierl Die to tbe Vlnlxhi'd tiummrd, Preaaeil nnil Perforated Printed Sheet. The first meehiinlcnl process In the nninufticture of u pontage slump Id tliu cutting, or engraving, of the tile. This Is a piece of steel of the llnest quality, on the polished surface of which a man slowly and patiently cuts, line by line, the portrait or other emblem which Iihh been adopted for this particular stump. A steel engraving Is what is railed flu Incised plate that Is, every line which Is to show In' the linished fjrint is cut into the surface instead of being left lu relief, as in wood engrav ing. The die which the engraver cuts is a negative;" lu other words, a reversal i of tue design wmcn me sunup iu show. The reason for this soon he roines Apparent. When the die is finished and proofs show it to be satisfactory It is hard ened and fixed in the bed of n powerful press. Over It is then passed a steel roller, the circumference of which Is several times, perhaps four times, the diameter of the die. Immense pressure Is applied, so that every hue on the surface of the die Is Impressed upon the surface of the roller as ninny times ns the circumference of the roller Is larger than the nrea of the die. In this way four perfect copies of the die are reproduced on the roller, but reversed. Each of these impressions is a "posi tive." This roller is now hardened In turn In order that it may transmit the Im pressions once more, this time to the Jilnte from which the actual printing Is to be made. This plate is also of uteel. The sine Is snlnelent to print a whole sheet of stamps from 200 to 300 ot a single impression. Into the surface of this plate the im pression on the roller is forced by great pressure, once for each stamp In the subsequent sheet, and then the plate Is hardened. These impressions are negatives, so that the prints from them tho stamps themselveswill be posi tives. The reason for all this preliminary work Is most interesting. In the first place, printing could not be done from n single die because of the vast quan tities of stamps required. In the sec olid place, It could not be done from the roller, because on that the lines are liv relief Instead of being Incised, and "TiT'thc third place, it would not be feasible to have several die or a large number of them engraved, both be cause the expense would be prohibi tive and because no two would then be absolutely alike. The pre- :nt system makes It certain that ever; stamp of a certain lot is exactly lik every oth er ot the same lot a grear safeguard against counterfeiting. When three printing plate s have been made -they are nil fastened to the bed of a special printing press. When tho machinery is sta'ted the fx-st plate Is Inked, then automatically wiped until It Is like a mirror. .The wiping removes nil the Ink except what clings In the lines of the 200 duplicate engravings which dot the surface. Over the plate Is laid a sheet of dampened paper, the plate is slightly warmed in order to permit the Ink to swell, .and heavy pressure is npplled. Meanwhile the second plate Is receiv ing Its Ink, and then the third comes Into play, so that, although all three are on the same press, each Is at a given moment undergoing n different process from either of the other two. This has wrought a great saving of time over the old process of printing by hand. When the printed sheets are dry they go to the gumming machine, in which they pass between a dry roller on one side and one moistened with mucilage on the other. From these rollers they are cast out, wet side up, upon an endless web, which carries them through a steam heated box. They come out dry, ready for the perforations, which permit them to be torn apart easily. These are very cnsl Jymade by passing the sheets between oufe cylinder studded with steel pins and v another perforated with holes to match the pins. Tho two together act like the jaws of a conductor's punch. The last process is pressing the sheets by hydraulic power to counteract the tendency to curl, which is Imparted by the mucilage. The priming qf stamps, like the print ing of gold and silver certificates and bank notes, is subject to the most care ful and constant Inspection. Every sheet of paper Is counted be fore it Is delivered to the printer, and before he goes home at night he must return exactly the same number of sheets, either of perfect stamps or spoiled paper, and no "seconds" or samples are given away to visitors. Edward Wllliston Frentz In Youth's Companion. The Eleiilmnfs Eye. "To my mind two tilings strike the observer vividly when standing close to wild elephants in their native haunts," writes a traveler. "The one Is the gigantic size and his own com narntive smallness. The other is the xpresslon of the eye. This organ which Is surprisingly small In propor. tion to the size of the animal and set far back la the head, Is of a pale blue color much resembling th: t of a wall eye In o how. iOven w ten an eie niimit Is at rest his eve ha an uneom Jortiibly cold and sinister I ok." The regard one nhow wonomy Is like that we show an old imit who Is to leave us something at last Suen-ptone. TOURING IN RUSSIA. the Dlftlcultlea of One W ha Cannot Speak the Lnnvunicc. Nljid Novgorod, where the great Ilus slan fair Is held, far on toward the frontier of Asia, I found the most difll cult proposition in all Kurope from the standpoint of the traveler seeking rest and refreshment. I knew only one word In Russian, "vodka," and one can pronounce that too often. Nobody seemed to speak anything but Uusslnn. I could not get n cabman to take me to n hotel. One isvoseblc after nnother would pick me up, seem to understand and then take uie to a shop, a steam ship pier, n private resilience. I was reduced to the humiliating necessity of making pictures of hotels, beds and food of all sorts and quite without avail. At last, bethinking myself that the trade of llussla was In Herman hands, I started out afoot In search of any mercantile looking person with close cropped blond beard and spec tacles. Such a man I found, ami no ,n,.00tpd me In German to n traktlr. where I had breakfast with the aid of more crude cartooning. " oiTee Is good Volapuk, and the waiter under stood me at once, but I had to sketch a number of elliptical figures in my notebook and finally make n spirited drawing of the common or garden hen before he knew I wanted "eggs." For dinner that night I went to a res taurant overhanging tbe Volga. It Is one of my most burning memories of travel that when in my thirst I made the sign of drinking and pointed to the river the waiter lowered a bucket out of tho window into the stream and brought it to mo filled witii rich brown water. New York Mail. THE MUD DAUBER WASP. She Entnmlm I.lvlnpr Splilera nn moil For Her YonnK. When summer warmth has awakened the maternal instincts of the Insect world the mud dauber wasp may be seen gathering mortar at the margin of stream, pool or puddle. Killing her mandibles, which serve as both spado and hod, she bears tho load of mud to some rough surface, rock or wall or board or beam. She spreads and shapes her mortar until, after many visits to the mud bed, she has built a tubnlar cell about an Im h long and three eighths of an Inch wide. Then her huntress instinct nwnKons and her raids upon the spider realm be gin, for within tills cylinder the moth er mason will put a single egg. In course of time this will hatch Into a ravenous larva whose natural food is living spiders, and these the mother proceeds to capture and entomb within her rand daub nursery. On this errand she may be seen hawking over and near cobwebs of various sorts, ventur ing within the meshed and beaded snares that prove fatal to most incom ers and sometimes even to herself. If the occupant, expectant of nrey, sallies forth to seize the Intruder, I: finds Itself a captive, not a captor. The wasp shakes the silken filament from wings ami feet, turns upon the spider, seizes and stings it, bears it to her cell and thrusts it therein. II. C. McCook In Harper's Magazine. OIil Mini of the Mountain. The title "Old Man of the Mountain' was first applied to !. assail Ben Sab- bal, who founded a formidable dynas ty in Syria A. D. 1000. Ho was the prince or chief of-the sect of the Mo hammedans. Having been banished from his country, ho took up his abode In Mount Lebanon, gathered around him a band of followers, who soon be came the terror alike of Christians, Jews and Turks. They paid tho most implicit obedience to his commands and believed that If they sacrificed their lives for his sake they would be rewarded with the highest joys of paradise.. For 200 years those "Assas sins," as they called themselves, con tinned to be the terror of tho country. Whenever their chief, the "Old Man of the Mountain," considered himself Injured he dispatched some of his as sassins secretly to murder the nggres sor. This Is the origin of our use of the word assassin for a secret murderer, Ilia We Mlirlit Have. A famous writer said: "Man In gen eral, or, as It Is expressed, on the aver age, does not live above two and twen ty years, and during these two and twenty years he Is liable to two and twenty thousand evils, many of which are Incurable. Yet even In this dread ful state men will strut nud figure on the stage of life. They make love at the hazard of destruction and intrigue, carry on war and form projects Just as If they were to live In luxury and delight for a thousand ages." A Need In Schoolmaster. We should like to see a regulation that every schoolmnster before the age of thirty should for one full year at least be banished from the school world and from the academic life even If for that year he had to work as a navvy, a sailor or a commercial traveler. The man who, being educated, only knows what life is will never take too nar row a view of the school course. Lon don Post. Enloy Whnt You Have. Don't worry about your health. Keep In good condition and get as nuch fresh air ns you can. Teople irho are always puttering over them selves are like misers they don't en joy what they have. Boston Traveler. A llnrd Worker. Slimson - Willie, they tell me you have the reputation of heirs the worst boy lu school. Willie Yes father, and I can tell you I didn't get t without a iitrusgle.-Life. An Englishwoman married to a for eigner takes the nationality of her husband. LIFE IN THE BALKANS. In OlillKlnv Wo m Mil Whose llonne W:m n Kent f Hitiiilliiox. Niiss l'tlith Iiihhr.m in her volumo of travel, "The lturilon of the Halkans," tolU this little story of life In that re gion: "One night a man came to us mysteriously, lie said that In his vil lage there were three traitors. Itefore anything further could be done they must be destroyed. They could not be shot, for this would probably bring down the authorities, and It was impos sible to buy poison because the law on the sale of it was very strictly en forced, lint 'nindiuim' (myself) was n friend of the doctor. No doubt if she asked him he would write her some thing that could be put lu eoIToo. Then tho three gentlemen could be asked to supper and their political differences quietly arranged. Nor had be any doubt that I should fulfill this humble 'equost." Of the dangers of smallpox and like diseases Miss Durham says that tho Itii kan people show a childlike lg-no-iince. She writes: "At one village wl en I was leaving I was asked to give a little backsheesh to the priest's fe. Toor woman!' they said. 'Two t- her little children are ill of the smallpox, one bus died, she has had It lerself and Is not yet well, but she ooked your simper In her own house and brought it here for you" Another time a woman rushed out of a house, seized me In her arms and kissed me upon either cheek until I struggled free. Her three children were down with smallpox., and this warm greeting was nn appeal to me to give help." POMPEII A TOY CITY. It Wni t.lven Otit to Imitation unit Luxury, Diaililntlnit Home. I'ohipei'i, as can be seen on every hand, was what Ilulwv-Lytton de scribes 1 a toy city, glv'Mi over to imitation and luiury. Koi.ie set both the example and the p. ice. Tho excavations which have proceed ed for more than n century and a half may be said now to be fairly com pleted. Nothing more Is needed to en ilile the archaeologist to reconstruct the life of the ancient Itonian colony nothing else to startle the modern seek er after truth. The temples, the villas, the theaters, the baths. Hie gardens, disentombed at last, lie gaping to the skies in heaps of variegated marble and granite, whis pering their story mayhap to the moon, yet telling It plainly enough to tho passerby under the common light of day a story of indolence and frivolity mistaken by the seinibarbaric mind for pleasure, of gorgeous displays in public places, mysterious, orgies in pri vate, feasts Incalculable, vinous liba tion to the gods, gladiatorial combats, chariot racing, human beings fed to lions- all in mimicry ' Home, of Home already beginning its downward course toward the fall. Art they had to decorate the scene, within and without the peristyle, pic tures and statues, invites and colon nades in bronze and alabaster, porphy ry and Carrara, made luminous by Ty rian dyes and a local red we have not been able to repeat, though much of It Is quite restored. Louisville Courier Journal. Enitlnnd'a Stnte Rerordn. Kngland's state records are kept In a great building known ns the record ollieo In London. Here are 130 strong rooms, and in these rooms the rolls and records for over eight centuries nre kept. There is the chancery roll room, containing over 40,000 rbils of the chancery court, each roll consist ing of thirty or forty skins of parch ment stitched together and rolled up tight into a cylinder. Another set of rooms Is set aside for tho records ot the king's bench and common pleas, the latter extending from the reign of Itiehnrd 1. to the present time. Each roll is formed of a number of long parchment skins fastened together at the head and Inclosed In stout vellum covers. Each roll weighs from 100 to 200 pounds and contains from 500 to 1,000 skins of parchment Twin Earthquakes. Earthquakes which consist of two shocks separated by a brief interval of quiet or of two maxima of intensity are known as twin earthquakes. In Great Britain one'in about every twen ty earthquakes Is a twin, and the stron gest shocks experienced In that coun try belong to this variety. It is be lieved that twin earthquakes are duo to Impulses arising from two deached foci, separated in different cases from four to more than twenty miles, but lying along the same fuuit in the earth's crust. It' Different When It'a Yonr Own. "Young Dr. Keelhynie always Im pressed me as having nerves of Iron, judging by the cool way he performs the most serious operations," remark ed his friend, "but yesterday when I met him in consultation he was the most excited and rattled man I have seen in a long while." "It must have been a most unusual and extraordinary case." "No; one of the doctor's own children had a mild attack of measles." New York Times. Ivory Congratulation!. A very famous American dentist met the English husband of an American friend of mine with the genial congrat ulation: "My dear sir. I wish you Joy! You have married a first rate set of teeth." Fortnightly Kevlew. IlUMlncaalilre. Here lies Jane White, wile uf Thom as White, stonemason. This monut lueut was put up out of refpect for her memory and us a specimen of his work manship. Tombs in the same style, 50.-London Tit-Cits. Calm the Gnmblor'a rnrndlae. Modern Cairo must bo n.s.irt of gam bler's paradise, Judging from some facts which I recently hud from a friend who has been Inveatigiitiiiii the subject. In one of the principal streets near Mohsimiucd All square u gentle man who knows the town well pointed out over twenty lirst lloors over the shops with the names of bars upon them, every one of which he knew to be a gambling hell, and a police official udmltted to the Investigator that the town was full of such places. The po- lice do not seem to be at fault. They I raid the places from time to time, but j the olTemleis, nearly all foreigners and : mostly Creeks, are protected by their consuls and let olt lightly and return to , the business tlw next day. I should guess that the business is chlolly car- I rled on for foreigners as well as by ' them. There Is a sort of cosmopolitan ism about gambling, and Its votaries are drawn from all corners of the earth by the scent of the game. H it ' this seems to be one respect In which F.gypt has not Improved under British Influence. London Truth. A Queen' fold Cure. "You have a cold, eh?" said tho phy sician. "Well, suppose I give you tho same prescription that Queen Eliza- . belli used?" j He took down nn nnclent folio. I "Dr. William Bulleyn's prescription I for a cold, which Queen Elizabeth used j all her life, was this," he said. I "Takes nutmegges, the root called dornlko, which the apothecaries have; ' setwall, gatangall, niastlke, long pep- I per, the bark of pomcoltrono, of melon, 1 of sage, hazel, mnrjorum, dill, splk- I nnrd, wood of aloes, cubebe, enrdamnn ' (called groynes of paradise), lavender, j penlroyalls, the bone of a hart's heart grated, cut und stamped, and beat your spices grossly In n mortar. Put In ambergrlce and musk, of each half a dram. Distil this In a simple aqua vltao, made with strong nle, In n ser pentine. To tell the virtue of this water against cold, phlegine, dropsy, heaviness of mind, coming of melan choly, I cannot well at the present, for It is too great."-inilladelphin Bulletin. The ICxrheuuer. In past times It was the custom for the king's justiciar and his subordi nates to make tip the royal accounts twice a year, at Easter and Michael mas, on a table which was the most striking object In the chamber In which they assembled. This table was covered with dark russet cloth divided into squares, which gave it a checker ed, chessboard-like appearance, and In tho columns nnd spaces the accounts rendered by the sheriffs and great landowners who attended for that purpose, were entered and reckoned up. It was the checkered cloth, so conspicuous throughout the proceed ings, that gave rise to the name ex chequer, just as the stars painted on the celling of another historic room originated the name "star chamber." London Globe. llio Doctor In the Hurl. A medical man in France was asked to be present at a duel in his profes sional capacity. He got up early, trav eled some miles, "flamed" the swords and ministered to his client, who was slightly wounded. When both honor nnd wound were healed he looked for his fees and sent In a bill for $10. Tho patient replied through his wife, who wrote: "I am told that between men there Is a question of delicacy which forbids even the slightest appearance of trade lu snch a matter. Neither the doctors nor the seconds nre brought on the ground for money. If you persist In your claim I shall, to my great re gret, be obliged to leave to others the duty of settling this fine point with you." When Women Smoked. In a copy of the Old Former's Alma nac, printed about 1800, we find the following article on "the prevention and extinction of fires:" "Never rend In bed by candlelight especially If your bed be surrounded by curtains. Strictly forbid the use of cigars In your family at all times, but especially after night. There Is good reason to suppose a house was lately set on fire by a half consum ed cigar, which a woman suddenly threw away to prevent being detected in tho unhealthy and offensive practice of smoking." Discretion the Better Part. "I'm perfectly convinced," said tho ambitious young man, "that I can write the greatest novel of the period. "Why don't you go ahead nnd do it then?" on, I wouldu t think of such a thing. I am happy now in my belief on the subject. Where's the good of my risking disappointment?" Qnlte Offhand. Standnr Did that deaf mute orator make a set speech? Doyle No. He spoke offhand Cleveland Leader. THE OLDEST, PUREST AND MOST RELIABLE BAKING POWDER MANU FACTURES. NO OTHER EQUAL TO IT. P.OwBER The Tarantula Klllina; Wiipi. The tarantulu killer is a bustling, unquiet creature. When running on the ground its wings vibrate continuously. When It sights Us prey It tiles In cir cles around It. The tarai tuln trem bles violently; now runs und hides; now, rising runipiint, shows signs ot fight. The xrutchful huntress finds a favorable moment, darts upon Its vic tim' with curved body and thrusts In Its sting if possible Into the soft ab domen. Often the spider is at once paralyzed, but a second nnd even a third wound Is sometimes necessary. The victor seizes Its motionless prey with Its Jaws and drags It to n hole previously dug. She thrusts It In, de posits an egg upon It and covers It up. In this case the bulk of the tarantula Insures sutllcient- food for the off spring, and one alone Is provided, as seems to be tbe case with the cicada storing wasps. But the mud dauber and her Ilk, which select smaller prey, garner many, rarely sealing a cell ere it Is quite full. II. C. McCook in Har per's Magazine. How the Tlhetnn Hre-aa. Lay and cleric alike, the inhabitants of Lnssa are entirely similar to those of tho rest of Tibet There is Indeed but one difference eyen In tho dress. In one province through which we passed the women use a turquoise studded halo as a headdress. In Lassa a fillet ornamented In the same way Is bound close down over their hair, flulTed out on either side, nnd falls down over the shoulders. It Is one of the most becoming ways of doing tho hnlr that I have ever seen, and for a certain type tho entire dress of a wo man of Lassa would be n becoming costume for a fancy dress ball at home. The dress of the men and the women is very similar. There Is a sin gle undergarment nd 0110 heavy na tive cloth robe, dun or crimson In color, nud usually patched, which both Boxes pull In around the waist with n girdle, the men pouching It at the waist to form the only pocket that they use. World's Work. Eitrtliqniikea. Eartbquakoj generally do their work with great rapidity, but there are ex ceptions. Wliile Caracas and Lisbon were destroyed In a few minutes, the Cnlabrlan earthquakes beginning in 1783 lasted four years. Earthquakes travel across the enrtn at velocities varying botwmu several hundred and several thousand feet a second, tno greater the intensity of the shock tho greater lielrg the velocity. The sen waves that frequently accompany earthquakes also travel at tremendous speeds. A mibmnrlno earthquake near the const of Japan In 1H.i4 gave rise to sea waves which traversed the whole breadth of the Pacific at the rate of 3T0 miles an hour. At Simoiln. Japan, the waves from tills earthquake were thirty feet high. At San Diego. Cal.. they were oniy six Inche . high. A I" rKinleiit Kirch irr. The mcarmes of Wliber'orce In tho British house of commons for the abol ishing of the British slave trade had a hard struggle before they finally pre vailed. On Feb. 15, 1S05. Wllberforce moved "without entering Into nny ar gument" for a bill to abolish the slave trade after a limited time and for a committee to consider it.4 propriety. He had been Introducing such n bill almost every year for fifteen years, al though his twelve resolutions against the traffic were carried lu ITS!) without n division. Tint year after year the bill came to wreck, either In the house of lords or the commons, suffering defent In 1700 because several at its support ers had gone to see a new comic opera It was doomed to disaster again In 1805, but finally triumphed in 1807. The Mexican Bridegroom. The bridegroom in Mexico finds mar riage a very costly business. He is ex pected to buy the trousseau, and he Is fortunate If he can satisfy tho cxtrava gance sanctioned by custom and prompted by ardent passion. Young men from the country nre said to bo often seen in the City of Mexico pur chasing all sorts of finery for the la dles of their choice, and the spectacle they present ns they consult the meas urements, which they enrry with them for all sorts ot garments. Is very amusing. TO-DAY!" "And to think that ten months ago I looked like Una I I owe it to German byrup. ' tJThe time-worn injnnction, "Never put off 'til to-morrow what you can do to day," is now generally presented in this form : " Do it to-day I" That is the terse advice we want to give you about that hacking cough or demoralizing cold with which you have been struggling for sev-j eral days, perhaps weeks. Q'fake some reliuble remedy for it TO-DAY--and let that remedy be Dr. Roschee's German Syrup, which has been in use for over tmrty-hve years. A few doses of it will undoubtedly relieve vour cough or cold, and its continued use for a few days will cure you completely. JNo matter how deep-seated your cough, even if dread consumption has attacked your lungs, German Syrup will surely ef ect a cure as it h:.s done before in thou lands of ap parently hopelecs cases of l.ing trouble. JNew trial bottles, 25c ; regular size. 75c. At all crr.j;:psts. a DO IT j Fur sale by Boyle-Woodward Drug Co. The Olile.t Hook Max Muller'isiild that the Brahraans In particular pride themselves on tbe ago of their Vodas, which, according to some critics, date from (10(H) 11. ..; according to others, from 1200 or 1500 H. C. Even this more moderate date Is far beyond that of the Old Testa ment or any other sacred book, so that to thellrahmans must be given the cred it, If credit there lie, of possessing the oldest, the most remote and conse quently the most dllllc 9t of the sacred books of tbe world. Ueferred. "What," asked the youl'.i. "was tho happiest moment of your life':' "The happiest moment of my life," answered the sage of Pagevllle, "Is yet to come." "When do you expect It?" queried the Inquisitive youngster. "When people cease to nsl; foqj ques tions," replied the philosophy dispenser. Chicago News. II lull t Now. After all, what's the use? No mat ter bow bard we may fight, we lose In the end; 110 matter how much we may seemingly conquer, In tbe end we are vretchodly beaten; no matter how much we nre In the public eye, within two weeks after our death we nre too dead to be talked about. There Is onlv one time In the world, and that Is now. Lawrence (Kan.) World. Didn't I.lUe Cnnnlbnla. Head of Foreign Trnde Office Where would you prefer to go ns our agent? Young Traveler Well, If pos sible where the natives nrn vegetarians. New Yorker. The cloudier the day, the sunnier should be your smile. BANK . Y MAIL THU !0th Century ban Inn method bring thla trims', old banlt to eTerr poMoillcelntne world. Write for Banking bj stall booklot Founded, tB6g Assets, $14,000 000,00 4 per cent. Interest paid PITTSBURGH BANK FOR SAVINGS of Plttabucgh, Pa. .Mil,"' Tho Cure that Cures Coughs, Colds, .Grippe, Whooping Cough, Asthma' Bronohltls and Incipient Consumption Is For sale by Boylo-Woodward Drug Co, fur the well known brand uf Premium Flour. C.&.T.IiINAno, I'roprlctora a) S REYNOLDSVILLE lias put In a five horse power gas engine (or manufacturing all kinds of Ice Cream and Sherbets and are now ready to t-upply any "ri-cn at. wholesale and retail at any hour. Also we deliver promptly. Remember that we buvo both 'i-hones. mm TTOS CORE .go&l Animals. 25&50tlyJ JEFFEItSOX I MACARONI I FACTORY s HUVtVOLDVILLK, PENN'A. i i aY at J One of the largest macaroni factorlea 111 ineaiiiie. urui'ra:iiiv.u. i. ui nn ja good reference anywhere In the y tlnited Slat. Also wholesale aiteiils AM Wanted! Girls to learn Cloth Picking; and Winding. Enterprise Silk Co. KNNSYLVANIA UAII.KOAD . UUFFAIjO A AbLKXiHK.VY VALI.EY DIVISION. Lrfiw Grade Division In Effect May 28. 1H03. Eastern Stand"! tinn. KAS'i'KAHD. STATIONS. I'ittHbuig. ... Ui-il Hunk.... Luttriuiilmm . No 109 No. 113 No.101 No 15 Nc 107 A. H. A. M A. U. P. II V U. .... i 6 22 I V 1) i 1 1(0 ' ft i .... 9 -Hi 11 OTi t 06 7 V) .... 9 tl II 1H 4 In 0.' I 5 20 10 ill 11 44 4 AU 6 2(1 10 27 tSS e .i 6 itt 10 III II II 6 114 i" 4li 5 4i 10 hi 12 10 6 21 tl Oil 6 05 11 10 12 24 S it! Hi! t8 1(1 til 20 $5 fio JU ll ttl ai til SO t5 68 t9 0 Wl 11 42 12 52 0 15 9 fiO 411 11 49 ...... t6 2i 9 58 U 5:1 11 57 1 15 6 HO 10 05 7 00 $12 05 1 25 0 411 10 15 7 12 1 117 7 17 7 25 1 SO 7 30 7 30 I 55 7 if, 7 3N 2 (XI 7 43 8 04 2 20 8 111 . t8 13 t2 38 $S 18 . i 8 40 .... f 8 On J 8 45 A.M. P. M. P. M. p. M 1, M. New Hulhli-lieui Uuk iilUse.,.. Mityoui-l Htiuiiuervllle . Ui-ookvlllu.,.. illWH Kullar KynoldHvlllB eimcoHst Knits (Jruek, .. Illinois hutiulu Wlnierlnirn .. Hen field. . .. ylur Huniieeeue. .. Omul Driftwood Train 951 lftutuluviliuvti Pft.iMlinMr a n. m Iteil Hunk 10.55 Uruokvllle 12.20, HeyuolUHVtlfe 12.69, Fttlla Oreek 1.14, arrives buHnla i.20 p.m. WESTWARD ,,T.T,.11M N0I0U No KM No 102 No. 114 No.llO A. a!. A. M. A. H. P. M. P.M iJrlttwood $ 5 60 11 10 '.... 6 60 Uraut t lo til 3ii .... to 16 lieniieioltu 6 25 11 45 .... 6 45 Tyler 8 50 12 12 .... 8 53 Hi-iinllelil 7 00 12 20 ... 7 04 WIntiTljuru 7 05 12 as ... 7io sahula 7 18 12 31i ... 7 23 Uulluia 0 "i 7 30 12 55 5 00 7 35 r'allbUreek 8 12 7 55 lis 6 10 7 42 faucoUHl to HI t5 14 tJ 47 itcyiiulUsvlUu.. 0 30 8 (1- 1 29 6 27 7 68 fuller t 48 t8 20 .... t5 43 t8 1? Iowa t 54 t6 il t9 18 ItriMikvllle. ...... 7 Oil 8 35 1 50 0 00 It 30 Bumiiiervllle.... 7 20 t8 49 $2 10 0 15 8 47 May port 7 8i t9 Oil J2 24 0 32 9 00 UakKidite 7 4,1 t9 12 t 30 6 38 V New UeUilBlieni 7 SI V 20 2 38 0 45 i 9 30 l.RWHiinham.... 8 21 9 47 3 oi 7 14 .... Ked Hank. ...l. 8 3.. lu 02 8 20 7 25 .... Pittsburg ll 15 $12 35 $ 5 30 (10 00 .... A. M. P. in. P. Ul. P. M. P, M. Train 952 IKundiivl lRVp Tliiltula 4 Mi ,n Palls Oreek 4.07. lKvnoklHvllli-4.i.'linmk villa 4 .50, Ui'd Hank 0.2O, arrives I'iitsliuiK 9.30 p.m. tJn rJundiiys only Iralu leaves lulftwuod at 8.20 a. in., arrives buUuis III. 00 a. in. Ki-tui n- liiK leaves Duliols 2.00 p. m.. arrives Dhft wimjU 3.40 p, ui., ntuppli.K at Intel mediate sta tions. 1 rains marked run riullvit dullv. Biinday ; t flan station, where signals must oe ahown. I'hbudulphiu Si Erie Uuilrotttl Ulvi.-ion Id elloct May J!8th, iyo6. Train leave Driftwood at) follows: EASTWAlUl 9:04 a in-Train 12, weekdays, for fun bury. Wllbuuhurt.u ll..-.lu.... O...... U 'I .. ..,... .b, i.lilii.u, i uiwi, i lie, o,;i nniuu, Marrlshurg and the Intermediate sta tions, arriving at Philadelphia 0:23 It, m.. New Vork, 9:30 p. ui.; Haitiuiore,0:00 p.m.i Washington, 7:15 p. ni Pullman Parlor car from Willliimspoi i lo Philadelphia and pas senger coaches from Kane tu Philadelphia and Wllllauispurt to Baltimore and Wash ington. 12:50 p. in. Train 8, dally for tfunliiiry. Har rlsuurg and principal intermediate stations, arriving at Philtnieiphin 'f.ii p. m., .New York 10:23 p. ui Haltimore ; :.M)p. m Wash ington 8:3. p. in. Vetlh,ed parlor cats and passengei coaches, Huiiatu lo I'IhIiiui-,-phia and vt usliiiigioti. 1:00 p. m. Train i, daily, for llar rlsburg and intermediate stations, a, -riving at Philadelphia 4:23 A. u.; Sum York, 7.18 a. m.j Haltimore, 2.20 a. m.; Washing tnu 8.3U A. M. Pullman Sleeping cars noui Harrlsburg to Philadelphia and New tors. Philadelphia pasttengers can remain in sleeper uudisturlietl uutll 7:.fu a. m. 11:05 p.m. I'l-ani 4,uaily tor runliiry, tlai rib burg and lirermeillale stations, arriving m Philadelphia, 7:17 a. ll.; .New k urk, n.s.i A. at. on week days and 10.3 a m. on Mm day; liaUimure, i:lo a. m.; Washington, n:J0 A. M. luilmaii sleepers from trie, and Wllilamsport to Philadelphia, and Wuilamsport to Washington. Passenger coaches in. ni, Kile to f uiiadelpfaia, and Wiiliamsport to Haltimore. 12:40 a. in. 1 lain 14, dally from points south ot Harrlsuuig, arriving Haltimore 7:25 a m., Washington :16 a.m., with through Pullman cars and passenger coaches to W ashlnglou, WESTWAUO i:32 a. m. -Train 7, dally for Buffalo via hinporiuui. t:41 a. m. Train 9, dally for Erie, Kldg wa. and week days for fjuHois, Clermont and principal inlermedlale stations. :50 a, oi.Tralu 8, daily lor r.ne and inter mediate poiuta. 8:45 p. m. Tram IS, dally lor Buffalo via Emporium, also for Erie and Intermediate stations. 5:45 p. m. Train 81. daily for Emporium and lnlrmedlat8lations. JOHXSONBTJRG ttAIUtOAD. p. m. wkekdays. a. m. 3 35 nr Clermont Iv ... 10 40 3 29 Woodvale ... 10 45 3 25 (juiuwood .... 10 49 3 20' Smith's ltun ... 10 52 3 12 lustanter ... 10 69 8 07 straight .... 11 04 2 58 Glen Hazel ... 11 15 2 40 Johiisonburg .... 1133 2 20 .... ... IvKidgwayar ....1150 Uidgway & Clearfield Railroad and Connections. WEEKDAY. P m, 8 2a 8 04 8 GO 7 5ti 7 82 7 42 7 38 7 34 p.m. a n.. a m p.m. p.m. 8 50 11 55 5 40 10 1 49 9 20 arRldKway lv 9 00 8 55 8 51 8 47 8 37 8 34 8 30 8 25 8 20 8 OS uruyiand Shorts Mills Blue hock Carrier Brockway v'l Lanes Mtlla McMinn .Suit Harveys Kun lv KnIU C'k ar lv tiuHol- ar 7 10 12 15 7 I.. tZ IS 7 19 12 23 7 2 1 12 2 7 .t! 12 aa 7 37 12 40 7 41 .... 7 45 12 49 7 50 12 55 8 III 1 25 8 00 1 40 1 37 1 27 1 23 i'li t 0" b It 0 28 ! 7 30 7 25 1 10 i iO 5j 7 .! T 51 8 31 9 30 7 10 12 . 8 30 1 15 8 53 arKaiisC'k lv 7 lu 115 8 15 12 52 8 .19 UeynoUisvllle 8 08 1 5 39 12 24 05 Urookvllle 0 35 I 68 4 50 11 44 5 20 New Kethl'm 9 -0 t 38 4 05 11 05 Ked Bank 10 02 3 20 1 30 9 00 It Pltloburgar 12 VI 5 30 p.m. a.m a.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. For tlue tables and additional Information consult ticket anon'. W. W. A 1TEKUCUY, J. U. WOOD. (ieuM Manager. Pas. I raflic Met, GEO. W. UOYU, GenT Passrucer Am. IJITTSBUUG. CLjAKlON & MEKVILLE RAILROAD. SUM Passenger Train Schedule. First Class Trains. Dally except Sunday, connecting with P. K. K. Trains ul Suinmervttle. UOINO EAST. No.1. No. a, N'o. 5. Clarion, leave, 7 50 a.m. 11.10 am. 4.i6p.m Strationville, sou 11.20 " 4.20 Waterson, 8 13 " 11.3! " 4 38 p m. Corsica 8.2t " ll.4ii " 4 53 p in. fuuiuiervlllc, ar.s.JO 12.00 6.15 p in. OOtNU WKST. No. i. No. 4. No. , Pumniervllle, lv, 8 55 a.m. 12.20 p.m. 620..ui. Corsica, 9.14 " 12.31 ' 8 36 Waterson. 9.:o " V.a ' (149 " Btratlonville, 9.43 l.'V " 7.00 Ulariou, arrive, 9.65 " 1. 10 ' ".lo In effect October 17,1004. For further Inhu mation address the Company 's general oftd aturookvine fa.