The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, March 15, 1894, Image 3
NEAT AND DIS BUSTLES ARE IN FAVOR, BUT THEY ARE YET OF MODEST SIZE. ' Two StyWsh ow Gatmeiiion Outdoor Wear—A Niece and Dressy Mome Geotrn. Daring Designs In Lavepine— More Je w- elry—Hair Decorations. : [SpeciatC orrespondenae. | stylish and really handsome outdoor gar- ments for<pringthat I sve yet scenare, first, a black velvet coat richly trimmod with jet galloon end with a coreclet ma lo | - of the same, and. a fluted collar also gar- nished witk that trimmmg. axd a long garment tha..was half redingote ani half polonsise “The latter wae mades? VEITOEG ANIXBOUSE GOERS, ‘taba brown drap dete, cut en princesses Jin the back and beantifuliv draped across the front to the right side, where it vas lified and held umder a square gi backic and left to fall in heavy folds © the bottom, There were a stitched and .-donbled bertha eapeand bishop sleeves, with far cuffs. There also wasa choker weollar.of the same fur. Theilong rodingote shape in coats far wearly spring are to be very stylish, and #he nearer they can be made to look like # princess dress-shape the better. The most of them are of broadcloth, but there will be some of ight cheviot and tewed, and not a few will ‘be of black cleth. Tiov fit enogly and fall in tragfpe: 5 iin the back and generally streizlit Gown in front, fastening invis- ibly. Some few have far in stoles all the way dewn, and stili others have a line of large hand painted porcelain bus tons reaching to the waist. These but- tons ame pmissed in very sptistic designs and are expensive, : Fer a pice and dressy home gown I must mention oné that I ssw yesterday under tie finishing touches at a fashion- able houses up town. The material was of petania. satim surah, shirred around the waist to draw it in to fit the fgure. | There wern stodes of handsome black | lace imsertion down the front and a ja- bot frill bordered with the « and still other bands extended rif way wp | each side seam. The sleeves were made insoch a way as to roach up over th - shoulder seam to ths collar, and ther drooped down loesely amd gracefnlly | TL +0 over the elbows nearly to the wrist. [tf i { : i i - almost every nwo APER en canons. Why They Cantot Always Ba Suentette Guarded Aguimit. [pecia! Correspondence§ Cmicaoo, Maseh 8.—It is probable that amewspaper reader in the United States gt one time or another baa berated his favarite journal and nittered "abjnrzations coxcerning its editors and . reporters becans® of some error of fact, | some misspelling of a proper mame or some Incorrect New York, March £—The two must | Aull yet if thows fault findersshdre to | readers of modern statistical statement. stop and think, the wonder would be not that there ave blunders in newspa- pers, but that there are so few. -Althongh in a general way modern newspapers know ' something of the methods emploved in laying the news ¢f the world before the people at daily or weekly intervals, yet few not actnally ergaged in the work re- alive thromgh how many hands each item” hae to pass from the time it is perhaps a romor on the street and a compact paragraph or a ‘double lesled, scare headed, screaming scoop.” columns in length and an integral part of the { printed sheet. Let the reader of this letter mentally follew the fortunes of a | single, plain, everyday news item on its way to the reader.and he will under | katand what I mean. wate and Lawyer Heecumso have ha | an altercation on the street. It hap pened the day befora and has sc far been kept ont of prist. It. may be permanent ly kept ont, but it net be run to earth andl a reporter who is known to have a this sort of story is stariad ont, tswill mot do, im the opinion of this ex ct wiencal “‘gatherop,” to wo direct to tie jredge and the Jawyer until the sa- lisnt points of the story have been got together. So the reporter visits first Juuge Heviwate's friends, to whom he Eays be nnderstands that the judge got decidediy the worst of ita» the contest, verbal cor physical. They have been sworn te secrecy on the subject, but this skillfal exhibition of his slight informa- knack of tracing and unraveling just tion by the reporter is toe much for them, and they proceed to indignantly | deny theinsinuation, and to tell the true | story of the row, acearding to their Eights. After the reporter hasseen four or five | of the judge's friends, each of whom has talked moreor less, and each of whan! has been thagked for setting the reporter | stradgiat, he socks the friends of Lawyer, Huecumso, Similar tactics and similar | experiences follow, and + ..5 a mass of | conflicting “material” in his possessio the nesvspaper man then goesto the pri 1- cipale Each of these protests agminst i publicity. Perhaps Jota refuse to talk: perhaps both tals freely. At last the! { was cut princess shape. in the back and’! made a very handsome dress indeed. Tae poionaise : and the peplum grow ia favor every day, and s discreet little bustles —not big ones, but searcely more than small ¢ushions in. tended to givo the proper “set” to the -pol®haise drapery in the back. The new fancies in little matters like slippers, jewels, head ornaments and the wearing of the hair are legion. gin with, mere jewelry will be wor on the street ‘than has been seen in sov- eral years. The lacepins are remarka- ble for their daring designe. Ome was a large green {Gwalo worm in enamel. It looked simply horrible, but seemed to the wearer, who is one of those dics whose time is fully occupied in thinking up sciue new thing to wear and then wearing it. The new slippers for lounging in ham- mocks and ezsy chairs must of necessity - . be very neat, and so they are. One fancy has the white kid slipper embroidered with flying birds as seen from a dis- tance. There is an upright bow of kid set on the instep, and a tiny fringe of black feathers all around i, Another is . of gray sued: * the instep, the whole embroidered with black eilk. A low style has queer little dark blue figures worked on a ground and a rosette on the instep. An- 7 THE LATEST. other has a flat cherry velvet bow on a plain oyster white suede slipper ard a small black embroidered fizure on. thn toes. For dancing the slippers sre of satin in colors to match the gown, and | - many have red heels. For the decoration of a pretty head of hair for a full or partially full dress oc. 1 casion there are steel springs cover: | with velvet or ribbon, to which 5 do the neat and | To be- | kid, with a strap across. { i i | bled, and the story 13 | 8ggregate all the v | reader and a copyholder, then correct: | and hurried to the “form, eray | réporier returns to the REWSPEDEF < office | and tells the story in brief, as he ander stands it, to the city editor, : “Haif a colamn,” says that fanetion- ary laconieaily, poising his blue pencil for a moment in the air. “Tell both | sides in full” = Then beging the reporter's real work. | At least 12 men have told him 12 differ. ent tales of the trouble which must ail be fused into a halt ? column of SBC say from 530 to R00 words—and “both i sides must be told in fall” story is com pleted by the reporte more neariy a column than half length. “Hurry op, you!” sings-out the city editor, "Must have that story now!” Then to a *‘reader,” “Here, cut this stuff Jt is that | - down about half--quick!” And the bine pencil of the reader r goes remorselesaly and rapidly through sen- i tences and paragraphs that were care | fully preparad with a view of giviag “bot! th ides in full.” a © hedd” is written, tie whole rolled tight and shot through & pneumatic sube to the composing room, There the copy is cut into *‘takes,” or pieces of a few lines each, the later the smaller, and given out to perhaps a half dozen separate printers. Fach sets his take 23 rapidly as possible. using in do- ing so many little pieces of metal. Ina! very short time the ‘takes are assem- “proved.” In the way from 600 to 1,060 bits of metal or iy pes have been arrang- ed in sequence by the men in setting this story, and every type out of its proper place means an error of some sort. Th. matter must now be read by a pre a "where it is take its place with other “stories.” eac containing hundreds or thousands « | pieces of type. It is late now, anid fhe paper mast be | made up. - The ‘‘makeup” editor, who | perhaps has neither seen nor heard of | this *‘story” two minutés before he or- ders i: placed, finds it too long, even and cuts out a few more lines “in type.” He busies himself for some time doing | this with a great variet y of articles and “stories” long and short on all sorts of topics. When the last form is locked up and on its way to the press, there is quite a collection of disjointed lines and | here and there. Judge Heviwate and Lawyer Huccumso a five line paragraph that contains the neat of the entire matter. Probably not, for though he works quickly he has are: sewed flowers or gauze bows picked out with jet, steel and gold beads. Some- | ‘times these are worn to theater or opera in place of bonnets. The hair is dressed | With thic' mass of curls o on top. and a | . Wk 7 ‘middle ft 3 : ; to mention. bint these «0c las lead, VE HARPER ~ | learned to discern almost instantaneous- Ty, and the chances are that—thongh, counting the men from whom the facts | were obtained, the printers and proof- | readers, the reporters and editors, each | “story” in the paper has passed through | { from a dozen to 50 hands—there are no se. | ‘more would they be broadened by the re- 1 rions blunders. But, as I said at the beginaing, it's a | wonder there are not more errors in ev- | ery issue of every newspaper printed, i i f i i and if you had to help make a newspaper | i ronndings of Portland. He delights ex- | pecially to speak of the known as Deering’s Oaks now a public for awhile you'd agree with me. : . V. DEVEREUX. § fs dnriom————————— In England the blind tore 08 per cent of the population, in Scotland .07 per cent “nl i Teeland (11 per cent, or in Engi. ues one person in every 1.356 Beotiand one. in L439 = blond and in Ireland one 1 88) uf Ko | tofore been con | that suits him | beautiful streets of the city seated in a | comfortable phaetan [and gad =n, When the i taut, : fo pursue in landing | was inserted in its bel ly. ‘of catching fish was nnanimou-ly de | of pr hike. paragraphs that have been lopped off Perhaps he left ont of the story about : SUMEA TT TOM REED A-FISHING. HIS IMPROVED METHOD OF PURSUING THE ART. The Heeret Not Yet Divalged — Why the EE —— fellow immortalized this grove in Ex-Crar Believes In Weman Suffrage. His Doyish Pastime In the City of Port- land. {Som-cin! Correspondence. | PorTiaxD. Me, March 8.--Fow ad- dlresses on the floor of congress bave done more = the just add toc the fane of speakers than the speeches made before. the tariff bill was put to a vote ig th hones. The address of Mr. Wil- sin and that of Mr. Crisp as well were excellent examples of parliamentary de bating. On the other side, that of Speaker Reed was a moda, and it was eagerly read here he made his 3 where ex- | first political speech, and where he is | knewn intimately bv.so many and by sirbt to almost every man. woman aud chill in the city. From many quarters we of Portland learn that this speech has given Mr. Reed added reputation: thatet has btronght to him new lanrels; - that be is now seen Lo possess even great- Among the assignwents given out by | tthe city editor one bas been for the in- | b vestigation of a ramer that Judge Hevi- | THOMAS BRACKETT REED. {ar strength as an orator than has here ceded to be his. And of course the renewed -intersst displayed "over the eonntry at lurga in thisremark- poem beginning: Ofren think at che besutiful town That is buted by the ses. . And carrying this refrain: A boy's will is the winds will, And the thoughts of youth are long, long thouchits Dane of the town to this is ding from tie nr and straight ‘roads grove 13 k 11 Whether Long- fe low, 28 a boy, bestrode a dled and en- Joyedd a whizzing, broothless the hill I do not plenty. Gf men who Thomas {Brackett Read toasting down fis step thief witgfer pleasure. A oF coasting. INT sR kriow, remember that to comnt declivity iis nse J. C. Szarro. a —— ————————————— DEMORALIZING FICTION. - 4 Soetety Being Eotablished For the Sup pression of Trashy story Papers. . [Special Correspondence. } 2 New York, March S.——A number of wealthy and well known citizens, who for the present do not wish their names to be known, are now organizing in this city for a rather remarkable purpose, At the first glance this purpose may strike some as aunecessary or abeuid, bunt that is not the belief of men who: ! have given the matter careful thought. | The so callwd “family story papers” and flash “boys” papers” circulate 1,200.000 copies every week and are read by at | least 6.000.000 of yonng and middle aged ; people, i without excep : fortunes, { very iarge. T | serial form i defect, able man has set Ris neighbors and | friends to teliing stories of his earlier | days. Mr. Beed’'s Amusements. Mr. Reed's amusements are simple. He is too busy a man to devote much | time to ‘pleasnn . Perhaps the recreation 20st is driving aboot the | a-fishing, though on one oecasion or about onee¢leventh of the whole ponnlation of the country. The pavishere of these papers, almost ani their annual incomes are The stories they publish in are enurely devoid of lit- erary ment. But thisis not their greatest The stories are intensely sensa- tional. They give faise ideas of life; they degr: we the character of the ual reader and unfit him for reading any- thing that is not impure and high" fla- vored, The probabilities do not enter into con- sideration with these writers. They ex- -haust. the possibilities in their so called plots, and while avoiding obscenity, which wonld make them amenable to the law, they are full of a more danger- cas and corrupting su; most profitable contributors to this de basing class of periodicals are women. Men are good at stories of adventure and | travéPor in describing impossible detect- He rarely goes | he | achieved a marvelous performance as an | ang:er. each niember of which, ' "He bad been persuaded with some difficulty to go ont wit | fishermen, ‘the ex-speaker, believed himself to be a h a party of | EAVe ives, bat the love stories are the great dove by women. The effect of these papers on the char- acter of the young cannot be overesti- mated. They have made dnd are mak- ing criminals of thonsands of bovs each year and sending a greater number of young ziris to ruin. The effect of thesa papers, winch no intellectual person ever touches, is great for svil. . Az nt law cannot interfere press the | with this class of poblication, and it is Uskillfal manipulator of lines and hooks | and jointed rods and flies and all the | paraphernalia of modern fishing. Mr. Reed did not expect experts of the party which even could hardly dissipate, ment when the spirits of the entire par- ty were at their lowest ebb a commotion was ochserved in the water, was offered to him in abundant quaniity 58 to the best course his prize. He Lands a Fine Fish, Mr. Reed preferred, however, to man- age the matter in his own way, and fm | due tune be landed a large, handsome | | fish. “soon as his captive was lifted from fhe | water, that thore waa something strange ‘He noticed, as did all the re<t, as about the fashion of 1ts hooking. When | investigation was made, there was a ge n- eral chorns of grcans, for the hook, in- stead of being in the mouth of the fish, This method ciared Ly all present to be unspor: sman- It was agreed, however, that if Mr. Reed would explain to his comrades how | "This he declined iL was a secret forgiven. grounil tr by letters patent, when - ali, | free'use of it by paying a proper royalty, Mr. Reed has gone a-fishing but few times since this essay as an asgler. ‘ says his father was a confirmed fisher- | man, and so were his graadfather and ' great-grandfather, and their ancestors after the reader's heroic compression, | also, and so on indefinitely, but the fish- | ing instinct has died out in the family. super- | e did it, so that all could follow” is exanple, he would be fréely and fully | tory banners—red y do on the | Bair raising and k method this Was vi i which he proposed in due time to pro. | : : tect organza to be lucky | Bnt when lack came to no | {ous a gloom settled over the professed | in the | quaint humor of the one fime “czar” Just at the mo- | i Tea, Ut and it was ! ' noticed that Mr. Reed's line . was drawn | All eyes were fastened npon him | Land his tackle, and advice of excellent ! quality donbtfal if any law can be passed that will bring abont this suppre-sion. The INE LION fpr todown ‘maké them cleaner by a rousing sentiment against them, Parents Eumble circumstances are to be in- to watch over what their children wil people are not competent such matters. But that it is erying evil 1 - rr f¥ SE pea) them or public yoked }, but s Judges in a great and with a eld that in which all the temper onerate, J. B. f+1GE 1 undonbred ri mune orreater than Hee SO NOVEL ANARCHIST 230MBS. Johaun Most, Justus Seheovab ond Their Ls sociates discuss 2 New Met lud. [Bowie inl Can New Y Mureh have had to know J Sehwab, Rosh Ke more priogquls ists of N AG whom is of (rerman wi grant soon fill Cleve ron viraty Paine Flan a 3 FESS ES Ea. i i New York his | friends and enemies alike, might make | original | Teuton kh He ! - Mr. Reed is quite in sympathy wit | the movement pation of women. Although he might for the so called emanci- | i grand { as a concluding and clinching arenment. not approve of my making the fact pu i: > ' lic, he fully believes in woman suffraz but for quite different reasons from those | advanced by Misa Anthony, Mrs, Liver- | more, Mrs. Blake and their followers. They hold that if women were to possess the ballot the general grade of intelli- gence would be materially raised among the voters. Mr. Reed holds that the session of the baliot by women would | Xx . RA oak i him to join the Sulvation. Army and con: tend to raise their in telligence and broaden. their mental scope. Views on Woman Suffrage. “It could rot be otherwise,” he sail ¢ me one day in discussing the ideation, “Women have been broadened by the re- sponsibilities of business. How munch | light parade, with a bund | discnssing Freiherr and aie odicais Keppelman proposed and inl. in caior add bea: : defying legends—imst al the last meeting and anp- is full of AVY sort of yard i“ Wh as bein r * nic iy ale, fli: profile, He hoch, wi and hus ah BINOr, sail Ld means of propagands were rather a fail- ure and were pretty sure, as the case of Vaillant shtuwed, to de Stroy the thre i wr if no one else. -He therefore advised : tine &1 aid { imitation bomb, to be made of papi mache and loaded with anarciustic ong re ature prinfed in red ak, mstead of the cnst lvnamité. It wonld be. a on the police,” urged Koch Omary 3 a Joke Aid When it was found that 1t would cost several thonsand dollars to make enongh - of these bosnbs to cause a stir, Most ad- vised putting the money into Die Frei heit as a much wiser and more effective way of spending it. This was the signal for a row. .The advocates of oiher and more prenounced papers declared that Most was too conssrvative and advised | solidate his publication with The War , Cry. conserva | surprising, sponsibilities and discussions of - govern | ment!” © Mr. Reed is very fond of pointing out to visiting friends the beauties of the sur- glorions grove park, but wildwood when he was a hoy. The poet Longfellow, when a lad, used to play under the shade of thess noble old trees, and sume now standine nn donbted > ~et grateful shade In + per o 2 : ‘fj ¥ AN. the that Most ve to suit his old associates is and 1t De in order to learn what ‘advanced anarchy” means, I saw the anare hist chief today and ask ed for an e 1 ination, but he was cnnsy- ally reticent. It was really delicious, The news ir will now however. to hear this from his own lips: meaning the dissenters; A great cause like this nd conservatism. We “Those men,’ “are too radical. needs prudence a shall win in the end. but it must be along intellectual lines. Educate the people— : f -in the rignt way—and the rest will be easy. ‘The sun of the capitalist 1s going - down, and the star of a free people 1s ris I nr, sat.” writing, interview to close. never t ‘And heturned to his indicating that he wished the “w,. A. BR n the invigarat- ride down but there are "sbower! og have made ehormons - gi, hit. . prars gaestiveness, The feature—the drawing card—and thess are rose. Evin wes Leamplicatéd paris snd roquires po bombs as a- ‘ont ‘Hopping dani has become too on {cr the 1» ting VERDUROUS LAWNS AND FOLIAGE Gn Buglishmas Tells About the Careful Gardewing In Hie Native Land. Lewis Riwe; 8 practical gardener, . came to this sotutry 10 years ago from England. wiege Be was a farmer, and be viins and cuts according to Bnalish rales. Sneakin: f this country, b «said: Yun know vest good | zland the Boases of ii rir es pracie od} iva of on it! ; . wee ir Apert e ir mat ux sore | well thers nels yon - should so ta Fivgves it i1sh is lawns ‘wiier FH veantiful, and « staiis np straight, + are of eratly 4 they look soit and cane of the new grass is delight «yy bave wind ws gen- erally that wn to the lone, and on the oa vo ootide the houses are chiming rose + all mn bloom. The CON giao I new mown KI every blade of ior bat ail ti the sume | evel. The Tos oi. % 18 Na aot So at oa fawn as 1c 1wiery it You were 1 30a ninst have a good id for the grass to Lot make grass grow insand. Tuer es the gresi comes op you most po over it step by step and dig cot-all the coarse grass ang weeds and to mend each place after digging up the roots. Then you will be- gin to find patches where no grass ap- Yon want to have grass seed and sow these places with it. €1 Fs bh, decay: 350) five on Y OO -~ handy lw and at night alter it goes down. | mow the grass every week. a lawn yon must watch every teh of it oem] poironed to death. tor ign snbetancoon a lawn that ig Tike- Iy to potsun the grass. yon want to dig it up, pot fresh soil and Th turf 1 the bole you bave made, keep an eye on it afterward and wails i decomposed sweep- | irigs {rom the stable muke the best fer: { it weil. The rich. tilizer. In pruning trees von wait to cat off Iriln & 7:17 a. m, yoar trees blown. ated minis shy a full bry Americans let their ¥v and they don’t prevent decay It 18 easy to stund this prin. ever vy long shoot copact anid bus tke alti trees get sirawn menansa to the branches, trim trees if ven aod cipie. And the only 1 i jiwns ways cut th 10 some of ‘that | have witd rk. — New York sy Pedi i ot of Bard wa vie Checker, cok has been de- ctories and work- Man's? ister of the time mventor claims tus of the sind v slectridity, foekwork and no fix- fitted to and sited for the iv ded with ps into the Ca ‘eg. One close us nay i dees RE. As Hany “tn be aay ars ¥ trate H i haoanentiy *nambers have t basrd ready ta take wien nox ieaving aamber of vluis can Le pro- | - marked are ro- fre for beginping . the “early”! slct ieetyical atlachment, pened. Before nen ces the iriy”’ as A rule two ons, arly “asd “lute” hel oe i is in i Ware Lg 2 the = oe rrovive the cheeks men, — Exchange, : Very Anciesit Jokes When Theun mency ent of the Andrians for Lirevce defense 1and and told them that the Atheniank would axon stoe and necessity, wns ropiied that the Athenfans | two such servicealile 5 f with had Were Wi godin, but they wars dweit and mio biin Cyrus’ 01 the wretched his averturs of Sardis vi too much corn “Say +i} « two. gods who “al- 1%, who had declined ind th en after the taking sted Lo « eity to be hnmeorous. suid rhe insniting victor, tinnking they will come and when he was dis to them to the and, appointed: of pipe and drew them to fand, and seeing them abont sad to the fishes, ng to since come out and dance when 1 played. — Westminstir Review Hie, Bosom Friends Fair Castoaner— As | wish to present a fricnd of wine with a bottle of your tincture on bor birthday, I should like to know if itis really to depended bof summer fre chiles? | you the be i: * 1% Drugs ist tefl Yery good. Then CLICTETO b niversai. : a Potties. Exemplary Patience. “The train stops. Peasant Woman (who for a jupg time Las been showing signs of great answty, to stoat man absorbed 1 bis pupery—1 get wut now Excase we, you are sit- ony Lutter!— Bantes Allerlie. gentle eR) iter my lawns twice adav-—inthe | morning betore the sun gets fairly ap! i POWAY AND (1 EARFIELD RR. After you have | | wot THWARD. You bave po idea how easy | itis to let a patch bere and there get | i: When yon find any | 2 # fertilizer un. | der it and {it a new and healthy bit of | 6 al- | ason i iave been | them ring the : les wus trying to get | the | came with two 1m their country—poverty | haut the fishes to | to terms, has | “that | a piper, seeing fishes in the sea, were to | his hope tock a net and | iaciosed a great mnaititude of the fishes | ‘Cease | om would not | >} bonest | Pir | with the Fal’ Brook rai | York state und the wes i Cleartott Division of have to | ¥ bod paren, | NOV. 8, Phiisteipton snd’ Erte Hatirnd Divas Time Table. re EASTWARD. Sl} Swept Sundsy Jor Dadeiphyn &0 m.; Beititaare, » = Won Patina Rai 323 from and Toy conches from Kane to Philadelphia £1 Renday, ov eeilate (dations, are LF a. HH. New York ! BI alas i WIL Pili “pie core fromm Hr Ci tndeiph Phi phe ard New: York Tidal hia ansm- nae rr i Stren Ci To _ nie 5 iD sieepe MM -Tr ip rarg and ih Bil Lael pits, wre k days ate Hasan, &l a rn 3 ™ Hiren Cal Pras gio, x Erie and Wits 1H Ry ta Pa | Tigers In shew yn: mrt fll be ron ent Jat Wa hsp af Hurristairg ivan Erte $0 nid tart! - og tise g- vay to Balti gti wiltims. ow PTW A ’1, SZ A M~Truin |. aa xé Munday, E for Ridgway, !nbols, Clermont and inter ‘nedinte stations Lomves Hidgway st 300 p, m1 for Erie *50 A M Train 4 dslly tr Bre and inter “Rept nadie points 5.23 Tair il, duit wept Sunday, Kane and intermnetiste stations or THROUGH. TRAINN POR DRIFTWOOD = © PROM THE EANT AND SOUTH TRAIN 1] memves Philaded ia =% a Washington 7:40 « TL; Ari. i a Iu: ‘ Wilkembarre, i154 in ; daily except Sam dy. arriving at Driftwood al od? Pullman parier ear from Phi Williamsport. Rain 3 lmves New : ia, IL: p on: re mare, 11:8 pom; Towed wt #30 a m - from Philadelphia to En and Baitirnore thn come inn Frome "nd adel phe to pron timore 10 W iia Hamsport to Da Puts, RPI Wi HAL | raves Hendvo oi 602) i¥ exeept Sanday. arriving: at 4 I ovr arriving at ork, = FE aE > s wi nit 8 44 | se lwpvl Gre 4 $ “integry Amara cirk, BSN a mm, Nondays; Bad. a , Pus Haiti and Wash HREM pm Pag Washington, lcs wm; dally wrrf Vig ut Drift Pullman teed ars Erie ana from “ndte ts Willa mepurt and ma. dash Eni wrwat oA JOHNSONBURG A ILIAD {Dally excopt Sunday: HAIN 19 lenves Ldgwus 1 sosbarg atl £5 &. wm, urriving at Sas m . RAIN 20 Haves Fron: at i riving at Johnsn bare at lf y at ia m HTa.m Jorn WrrRonl of Sa. om, ar He and “> DAILLY EXC EPT su NDY, CU NINTHWARD LP nx PB LL Re 1 i) Miii Ri Croyiand. -Bhorts Mills Hroekwuyviile : MeMinn Summit Harveys Buu Fails reek Tog Boia - TRAINR LEAV £ BFEUSELLEROE Eastward Westwned: Trin J, iL am. Train |, 30pm Lrain “ 5p mo Train 6 6p, m Train £ 7B pm =. M PREVOST, General Manner. JR WioD, ten Pa ART, HFFALO, ROCHESTER i PITTSBURG 48, ret) On and after Fob, Neh, (REY, nase isger traing will arrive ant depsirt froun Dabloh an hows: : TRAINS ARRIVE : 3; : BRéynohisviile sad: pu: i® Creel, x Pun ssatawne ara He Hoo, it Headford and Rinrwen: pe bs Clenrtivil and Curia Ti8% (Hie, Pahzsutlawies aud iz Huo Roehestor rsd 248 Hanier, Clearfield and Curwess ii - Punxsutn ene ali Big Raw TRAINS DEP nT. PW Foriteartield uid a Fe ile * Mt Punxstls wy ¥ wi gig Rim, °C Riwhester and He sidiord. wo Hie Haan ana Pun satan: wv. is Ridgway nisl Headford. EB“ or Capwensvi pire mane x if Yelia 35 Hig Ra ad # In Xsdaunny. : yn 5“ Falls Crevk gui Rey Heim; Lp re same - tikota : i 5 - § & Pussstigers are nivsriestisd gore enlering the enrs Li oXowss od # . . x 5 LTEe ¢ Downs will he ooiiseliad eordine Frere Be Bares are pall on trains, iron ded seth wk wre a tHeRet olflee 1s mann adres, Phoasend mile ties: 1 ail stations ut © oo 1s For tickets, time Ril Rissd Bay LM fk Ciel gy Fibdies, Z atziea anor add risa : M Landergen EC lapes 22343 sliir=sg 4; Agel, 12 teen} ; dbns, anes Me : enliwadeor, 8 7 31 “iN ¥. harmett tip t = Ol, Bulls 1 ;ailroad. HK. e. Beech (‘reck N L € XH KN ONDEN=ED TI vp : Wail Nu 3 M i AY ity i, - Ey SAR Tagle flemaet 1} : Exp Na 42 rx i Nay 3s a 3 iF SAF JIE ER al = bp ¥ v ahigey iss, Wik i 5 sie Mo i Sport 210 BLv Munson # 10 BLv | ; Plath pasting BNE 1 § oO e - - — Gif oe wr ghLim gy 8b Munson. | Wilkharne © Forge Ran. * > Perle 588 2 BX Aero Ararton sebsiilintown ; Npow Si iw ~. Youngdaic R AME Aisove sud NS June: orgs: stpranw Newberry Mayr Seed Lve.. WHltamsieor: ; F $13 ineb «ln Wp 0 0S RENTS ReLGh EERE ANNEEN EE iti w BRESESEREEEZNNLEAE © - PUNTER EE REED E BOP ered RIS TRE "eu Ta. Ads sles = Ar Wilber cin 3 Lve_ Phila pn Lve.N Y vi © 7 30 Live, N Y via § u (Foot of Libs ty re ae etme ttn eb *Daily. Weekdays wid po SRE C18 Ri EN Sutrdags HOI0 AM. Sami NR : NOTE - Reading & Brad bail th aves Willis. Sport ut 3 35 P.M, and grrives RE PPE ibaa? shim at i010 pe. N, Through pasmnyers will find the Cannon Bail prefer tists Warehwk fin) train, i wnusetione—At Wi phia and Reading i; to td WIE dais Iurmy Slaue Hs 1 New sith bwiyg oad from Philipst are oo! With sbogon ua wl lertown At "mn fir Sadie 5 vid Rigs pags 41 jo this Tey : AR AF +58) Phas fag Jy “Hh £724 a iar tel with the Burtaio way © At Giazain eo and Berwin: ve atid Clearetey: | ang wild Wentewny rail, a “pinE ORar fwiwe phish on train 3 PALMS superintenay,: