Ti ew # Had wo EER RE Sin NEW YORK'S STATUES. The City Evectnd the Worth Monument It is a peculiarity about the public ' statnes in New York city that they have had to be provided by popular subscrip- tion with little or no aid from the city. An exception to the rule is the monu- ment in Madison square erected in 1857 homor of Major General Worth. The eity paid for that. Most of the other piatnes have been erected by private en- Individuals paid for the bronze statue os of Franklin on Printing Homse square, that of Alexander Hamilton in Central park, the statue of Daniel Webster in the samefplaoe and the Irving statue in Bryant be The Scotch residents of - New York contributed to the erection of statue in Central park in 1871 of the Robert Burns statue in 1580. he German citizens of Ncw York pro- the bronze bust of dumboldt on one hundredth anniversary cf his rth, in 1869, and ten years before that they had provided for the expense of the iller status in Central park. The _ French citizens of New York raised the money for the Lafayette statue erected in Union square in 1876, Irish citizens for the bust of Thomas Moore, erected in Qentral : gesidents of New York for the equestrian statne of Bolivar in 1884, and the Ital- fan residents of New York for two statnes—that of Mazzini, érected in Cen- tral park in 1878, and the Garibaldi statue, erected in Washington square a few years later. Sh The statue of Holley, the civil engi- meer, was nirveiled in 1890 by the civil and the telegraphers gave the statue of Professor Morse in Central park, which was erected in 1871. The Jerman singing societies contributed the statue of Beethoven erected in Cen- tral park in 1884, and the postmen fur _mished that of B 8. Cox, evected in .istor piace. The Lincoln statue in Union sgasre was erected by popular sabscrip- tion in 1565. ‘ @eorge Washington on the same square js many years older. The latest statue of Washington was erected on the sub- treasury steps facing Broad street in . 1889. There are three statues of illus. trions Americans on Madison square proper, exclusive of the Worth monn ment. They perpetuate the memories of Admiral Farragut, William H. Seward smd Roscoe Conkling. —New York Bun. FORCE OF Bvangeline’s (nlm Response to the Plead. ing Vnice of Her Mother. Bo CRAPTRB Bvangline O’Glary came home from the tall wearied and distrait. Prior to the ball she had been working all day im the telephone office. Despite the © fatigue and weariness which crushed ber, however, she felt it would be im- HABIT. possible to sleep with the memory of - Archibald Rooney's manly voioe ring- ing ip ber ears. She had been beautiful that night, she knew, but Archibald Bad been cold and distant, save for one . word of formnl greeting in his resonant, baritone tones. Restlessly she thought #% over while tossing sadly upon her eouch and izing through the damask curtains out upon the pallid, gibbons moon. ‘#‘He loves another!’ she murmured in an ecstasy of pain. ‘‘Even though I have ever discriminated in his favor when any ono calls up central for his sumber. "’ She CHAPTER IL Worn out with fatigue and sorrow. and heedless cf the fact that she must . beat the down town telephone exchange at 8 in the morning, Evangeline did not fall asleep until the onyx and ovoid ermuln clock on the mantel told the hour of 3. Then she slept. CHAPTER I1L “Evangeiine! Evangeline!” 1: was ber mother’s voice ‘calling her in the morning. : “Evangeline! Get up! You told me to call you up at 7, and it's 7:30!" Evangeline turned uneasily in ber slumber. The spoken number had dimly renched the innermost recesses of her brain. : : Her ripe lips moved. **Busy now,’ ashe murmured mechan- jeally. ‘Call 'em up again!’ —Chicags The Largest Window. The largest opalescent glass window in the world is in the new St. Paul's church at Milwankee. It is what is known as a nave window, the lower pomposed of three immense id the upper half of a splendid _vose tracery in a semicircle of bril- Hanoy. This monster window in its ex- treme measurement is 30 feet and 1 inch in width andl exactly 24 feet in height. It is beautifully executed, the subject being the crucifixion—in fact, it is an exact oopy of “Christ Leaving the Pretoriom.” There are ovr 300 life size figures repre- sented on this wonderful window. —St Louis Republic wo — Reward of Enterprise. ““That was a good article yoo had in the paper this morning, Mr. Wrounder, giving the details of the method by which an expert burglsr opens a com- bination lock without having to blow the safe to picees,’’ said the editor. ‘1 have instructed the cashier to give you $10 extra for it. Sorry to part with you, Mr. Wrounder, but we shall not need gervices any longer.’ “*Wh-what!'"’ gasped the reporter. **You give me $10 extra for that article and then discharge me?’ ; “you, sir. T dischargé you for know- ing how to write it. ’—Chicago Tribune. Irish bog oak is probably the est known example of workable wood dug from ti. ground. It is perfectly black and has good grain for carving. : © ki bt eh. et S—— Phe Rome: catacombs are 580 miles dn extent, wid it is estimated that from #,000,0 0 tn 15,000,000 dead are there foterred park in 1880; the Venezuela The equestrian statne of “burg Dispatch Dore’s masterpiove, LAST USE OF ARMOR fs Was Io 1799 and Was a Picturesque and | Drisbolion!l Sceoe. dn Janaary 1799 at the town of Aquilia, in the Abruzzo, then heid by a garrison of 400 French troops, the | peasants broke into the town, apd though they were driven out hy the French, they continued to give serious trouble They even drove the French into the fort and made reacy to hom bard then with heavy guns The Front were in an awkward position Boulert, the officer of artillery. ran sacking bis brains for the means of send ‘ing out men to spike the guns on the ziacis, onder the fire of the insurgents from the neighboring houses, suddenly remembered that he had seen in his . magazine some suits of plate armor, and he proposed to try whether, protected by them, men could not sally out and ‘work in security wader the musketry fire He got together 12 complete suits and dressed out 12 gunners and grena diers thus, selecting big men, be it re marked At a certain hour the garrison lined the covered way, and from thence and from the fort opened a steady fire »f musketry and of artillery on the lines of the insurgents Then sat marched the 12 knights of the eighteenth century, much in Da- vid's state of mind when he complained be had vot proved his armor. The men carried handspikes, hammers and spikes. Moving naturally slowly and awk- wardly in their heavy steel mail, still they succeedod in completing their work ander a hail of builets from the insar- gents. The scene is described, as wo can well believe, to have been most re- markable and to have had something picturesque and also diabolical about it. As the mailed figures moved in $i: lence among the guns, their bandspikes Jooking like maces, their silence and the slowness of their actions seemed annatural under the steady hail of bul. jots: The insurgents were believed to "have thonght hell itself had seat forth these extriacedinary antagonists, ghosts of a past age, while the French on the ramparts, true to their nature, the first moment of anxiety over, burst into roars of Isughter. — FPhipp's ‘Marshals of Na’ poleon '’ : A STICK OF LICORICE Where the Plant Grows and How It bv ‘Prepared For Consumption. . Black licorice is made from the juice of the licorice plant, mixed with star: to prevent it from melting in bot weath er The licorice plant grows for the most part on the banks of the Tigr' and FEunpbmates rivers, which Sow through iminense treeless prairies of an cultivated land - The climate of thes great great plains is variable Half the year it is mild and pleasant, but for three. months it is very cold, and for three months in sainmer hot winds swee) across the country, raising the tempera tare to 104 degrees for weeks at a time The lHeorice plamt is a shrol, three feet high and grows witbout cuitive tor, in situations wheres iis roots om. ronch the water The usual time of ool looting is the winter. but roots are dug all the year round At first the root is full of wate: wd must be ‘allowed tu Ary. a procwss which takes nearly 8 year. from six inches to a foot Jong. The good and sound pisces are: kept, and the rot . ten ones sre psed for firewood The lic orice is then taken iu native river boats of Bassora, whence it is shipped in pressed bales to London As the valley of the Euphrates cop tained one of the earliest civilizations in the world, it is probable that licorice is about ths oldest confection extant and that the taste. which pleases nearly all children today, was familiar w the little brown boys and girls of Babylou and Nineveh 5,000 years ago —Pitts | ns ant pers The Poverty of the Bonapartes. Some time before the death of his fa ther fieneral Marbeuf had married, and the pecuniary sapplies to his boy friend seem after that event to have stopped ‘Mme de Bosaparte was left with fom infant children, the youngest, Jerome bat £ months old Their grestuncie Lucier, the archdeaoon, was kind, and Joseph. abmndoning all his ambitions. returned to be, if possible, the support of the family Napoleon's poverty was therefore no onges relative or imagina fy. but real apd bard Drawing more closely nan ever within himself, he be came a stil! more ardent reader and stu “dent, devotiag himself with an indus try akin to passion to the works of Rone sean. the poison of whose political doo- trines instilled itself with flery and grateful stings into the thin, cold blood of the unhappy cadet. — Professot Sloane 1p Century _. Convinced. “You aver,’ said thé black browed bandit, - ‘‘that you are the celebrated cantatrice, Mme Squallkina Prove it, and you are free Never shall it be said that a Cuttaweezanda would offer in- dignity to an opera sopranc [tis against all the tenets of the profession.’ ‘How shall | prove my identity?’ ‘asked the captive By singing. of course ’ “What! Sing in cave? No bouquets® No steam heat” And not a sent 10 the box office’ Never!’ ‘Gentlemen said the bandig, fit is avident that the lady is what she clair to be Escort her to the nearest village and. set her frees '—ludianapolis Jour aa this Trodden on by Hundreds. "A few years ago a box containing over 900 guineas was found under the step leading into a bedroom in a Dublin house It must have lain there nearly a cen- tury aud was only discovered on part of the floor beiug taken up during re- irs i : Nombers of people must have fre- quently passed over the step without the ro: test idea that such object lay concealed under it. —London It in then cut into small pieces, "that stood on the floor. a valuable i THE SETTER DOG. | tts Seanting Power Is So Fine as tp Bo o : . Source of Wonder. The soenting power of a well bred well trained setter is a thing wholly. beyord human conceptics., zu ihe mar- velous exhibitions they give of this’ power can scarcely be credited. Indeed it would pot be wise to seriously dis-: cuss the quality of a dog's nose were it! pot presible to verify the stories that might be told of this wonderful power. | Who would believe that a dog going at a goud gallop, with a dead bird in its’ mouth, conld scent a live bird on the! ground several yards to one side of his course? And yet there are few sports men who have not seen a dog points live bird with a dead bird in his mouth. ' It wonld seem as if the scent of the bird 80 pear his nose would prevent the dog "from scenting another bird of the same variety lying close in the grass several yards from him. A man with a bunch of ross in his face would pot pretend THE AMERICAN WORKINGMANM. How He Appears Through the Spectacion of 3. Pani Bourget. : Behind the capitalist, be be ever wo intelli rent, so active, #0 enterprising, there is the working mun, says Paul ‘Bourget, in his book on travel in Amer jes in the Boston Herald Given that America is pur excellence a democracy. it is that personage which oomstitnted jts fundasental basis. If the civiliza tion »f that country is to change again as it so often gives the impression, it 3% through the workingman that it will change, a8 France of 1783, whoee mn terial life rested on the peasant, chang od through the peasant. From tivo to time formidable strikes, which every where else wild be called civil wars seem to foretell ove of those class dn els, the issue of which 8 pever deg’ ’ 3]. The more miserable, ever sizes tor world has been the world, have aiways | beaten the more barpy, when it has come to a matter of battle However, at other times and outsid | of these questicis of strikes you believe him. : 2 _ Yet there is Do doubd: brut the set- ter being able to sme!l ani point live birds on the ground wil: be bolds a dead Hird in his mouth. He ther than this. He points a dead on the ground with a dead moutk, and he kmows the & féels the scent that it isa This {act he expresses in his manner pointing, and if it is a wounded bird knows that, too, and indicates Most dogs are taught to point 8 live bird and not to point a The dog vill go st full 9 right to his dead bird and never pause & ment. If there isa live bird 4 will point that stanchly, promptness and certainty of his deci- TR! ¥ k il i] gris sions show that the instant be catches 8 scent he knows whether the bird is alive bird differently from what he does live bird and usually springs in and catches it. What there is about a wound- Appenranors Deceptive. The other day there entered a Broad- way oar down town a withered, skinny, queer looking little woman of about 50 years, a perfect type of the shabby spin- ster as she is commonly imagined. A member of » firm which publishes a pa- per given over to the hottest and most sentimental chasp fotion, who happen- ed to be in the oar, greeted her with & consideration snd conversed with ber until she lefts the car up town. “Who is that vemerable antique’ asked the friend who was with him whoa she had departed. “*She is one of our contributors, '’ re- " plied the publisher ““T'ne editor of the ragbag depart ment!”"’ “Not exactly. The fact is, oid man. she is Miss ——, the author of ——. And he strung off a list of a dozen or more of those high pressure, passion . palpitating, heat bursting serial fictions dear 0 & certain class of feminine read- ers. ‘You'd never believe it, of course, but it's so, and we know it to the tude | of $7,500 a year, which is what we pay ber under our contract for her stories ™' —New York Recorder. : Superheated Steams. Probably it has come to be accepted as an axiom by most practical steam engiteers that in modern conditions of working superheating is useless or im- possible. Some reasons for sach a belief, arising out of difficulties experienced, po doabt there are. But if engineers generally had fully appreciated the magnitude of the loss dae to condensa- tion in the cylinder it is difficult to think that superheating would have been abandoned with so little of a strog- gle to overcome the difliculties, and that, for so lomg, while every other means of securing economy has beén tried, saperheating has been neglected. "It in sometimes said that the guantity of beat in superheated steam in excess of that in satarated steam is very small That is so, of course. But the earlier ex- perience showed that this small quan. tity produced a disproportionately large. beneficial effect. — Professar W. C. Un- win in Cassier’'s Magazine ; : Fores of Habit. There are no tables in the houses of the Eskimo, and the women are there- fore in the habit of placing everything on the floor. A Danish lady employed several Eskimo women to do some wash- ing. Entering the washhouse, she saw thers all bending ovér the washtubs To make them more comfortable she bad some stools fotched and placed the tobs upon them. By and by she looked in to see how they were getting on, and to her astonish- mest discovered the women standing on the stools and stooping still more la- boriously over the tuba, which still re- mained on the floor —San Franciso Argonauct. ‘The Ashes of Peleg. Ia the year 553 A. D., while work- men were engaged in trenching the salt mines in Prossia, they unearthed a tri- sugelar building in which was a col- umn of white marble At the side of the column was a tomb of freestone and over it a ‘slab of agate inscribed with these words, which were in Latin: «Here rest the ashes of Peleg, grand architect of the tower of Babel. The Al- mighty had pity on him because he be- came humble.’ : te Bungalows may be built of itod walls on a brick foundation, covered external- ly either with tiles, weatberhcarding creosoted cr stained and varnished, with . rough ca:t or half timbered work. In- aide the walls should be plastered. A Sheffield bootmaker displays this potice in his window: ‘Don’t you wish — apm iw ome ears : i : ¢f the leather bands, thee aor , ten BO 1 talk to pane of these laborers, you @ thera so evidently bappy in thelr wiv execoding it #0 well, with such a dependence of free citizens on ioc rough foitores bey £0 vividly bo tse calm ©f energy amu the riviag falling of the preten ro wi wim, Tos 3 List .Y0 ring af? steim, the whirling of the fiywhe T°» expenditure of personal force ciligentiv apiied, env’ Yon know for ae ranch omeal wid! SOT Cs thal Wales wi Faoh, You know Ww activity 1» | 26.8 4 Per Gy gd] re. seieties | ressiacead TT avy Gre 80 DODCTOUS, phere, go tendy tO susiain the z.an and to sustain hs family : the duyx wooed Wide of = era tGneek, Tm Pas EVE REO Hed in Chas sew a Lee Th aa af Fhaks to ope. of Ses BIE oav Oi % WERE 431; Pe sel to at 18 to the Lindy the ze acativas of #8 atihreh LT © et Co 1a eens ian tha Twartin ef t her for “rial hyper, We stend to i # ito euve ber sail * A¥i 8% na, fon ned creat af her parting rom AY Tip Te WETe ae AUGUST K. HUBER, Beech Creek Railroad MASON, PATTON, PA I mmm prepared tod Winds Of work in oy. Hine at Prasonabie prices. Conteris ake gind rst py es furatshed « hen desde goRragtend Give gu go W.E. Probert, i A RT PTI Barber and Hair Dresser, IN ALL 17S BRANCHES. $0 NEXT In R70 POSTOFFICE P.P Young & Bro., Wholesale sod Fednil Peader in FRESH MEAT OF ALL KINDS. Bologna, Lard, Etc PIPTH AVENUE. Patton, Pa. FirstNation'| Bank OF PATTON. Patton, Cambria Co, Pa CAPITAL PAID UP. $56,000.06. Aeeoitnin of © orpiarmie ais and Banks miowived ble etme cyssdstem? wo anking Rremonadiip foots fur wile fr all lHpes, Foreign Drafts pevalde in sw. Forssk, jadivida. yeaa 1h orem lew wis for mrad onder oRtive thee jeamiiing toe prin iped Cedtiee of the (Rd World Aly evvrrespeade tie wild fam persia Al DTION ony peean pt and Tuterest paid oo sre leviwinile A. E. ParTrox, Wa H SANFORD, President. a : Cashier. ioe mllitary station in wr husband and she Eagligh women, however, ze, #0 bopeiessly aft over Le grent majority of Eeg- love, this game worketh 4 men's brains. A non- i ig bride to he, whose groom to De ream, falls and laturs only apis the ks threaicns to add to the marriage cervice, °1 tiie this pan for betivr or worse, bot not for golf '—New York San. : Loma, LOR # PIR ~ * Beautifel Garnete. fom contains many Year haw great aid green 0 a8 BWarowiie amd those siaft Cran ores wich come from Brobrowska (anaman stone (essdinite from. Covion ts a deep golden garaes, ¢ pearly swiss bobbie,” anda 1 a beantiful Fond with a tonch of vii! rabies’ Are nothing sad 1% is bat Teo certain ic often buys fie The carbunele, once so a yarnet Cut en °% 10 The Kipes Wa garnet valine © os i he enn Fe 3 a TOWRA cllowen at the baek Sorae garnets ont a delicate silver cross Ty The stone 18 oveasions of mr ones size large enun to fainon Boa d cups = Philade! ria Times : in the Yara Business, Two years ago Clara and Ethel were the alas .®uf the normal school rT re avd ’ parts: willi mutual bepes for fu re happiness. Recently they met aud few into cach other's arms “Oy, Clara, | am so happy! FoX ¥ Fred is . 30 good to me. “And 1, Ethel, am happy and have a lovely hubiy, and he bas a splendid necro. He's junior member of the firm of Hustle, Catchnm & Co What is your hubby’: busines?’ : “Ch, Frou is in the yarn business? “He 15 a inanafa turer, then?’ “Orr, ru: he's. a eonntry editor!’ — Ridgewood + NJ. 3 Nows . A Comparison. oe Thomas Sheridan, the father of Lady Dufferin, once displeased his father, wha, remonstrating with him, exclaim ed, “Why, Tom, my father would never “have permitted me to do such athing! Sir," said his son in a tone of the Trains Arrive a 3 7 B. R. & P. Time Table. The Shart line wiween DuBods, Ridgway, Bradford, Saelapuisws, Bain Rochester Ni agara Fails, amd points. in the upper OH Heglivn : ; Oy and after Sh IAG, pees TPRINS 3 i Sop Falls Une #130 sunday. as fdlionwe Na ny fran Boon hvac r Banal fons barg, briana, WB i We tT cr bbw Li Ls Jonhsonbnmg Hidgwse, 2 via Wav vithe, intermeslinle $ Vieng Phen Pho x ada w ne: 3 p.m Brew 5 wind Boa lat rv, Bvw Ridgway Fook Braddon wid pom Mad Par xsate wins ow Pus xsaia woes ston aod Pus sain ins miadaiion from Pun Mail from Bufuio C.&M.D vn ines in tion Mon . Mai from Wal adn Raw lyosdas tc be maariéd, and x8 od CMC i Lv AM det . AND CLEARFIELD Pra Basie Ea biciia FALLS CREEK ridgport Curwensy ib Falls ( Trew K greatest indignation, ‘do you presume to compare your father to my father?’ —8an Francisco Argonaut Argument. Newsboy— Paper, sir? = Solemn Looking (itisen—My dear bay, I would like to oblige you, but i can t read. Newsboy— Yes, Dem if the head ain't. —Chicago Tribune ‘sir. Want a shine’ Solitary confinement is calculated, doctors state, to produce melancholia, suicidal mania and loss of reason. Nine months of absolutely solitary confine ment are almost certain to result in the mental ruin of the convict. gl: feet's wuth spendin a nickel on * Flag timaliy Train Ne, 71 Punxsutawney, Ridgway, J ford, Buffalo, and Rochester : Train No 2 connects af Clmrteid Sr Ty- rone, A ovina, Han tingdon aod Hartsburg. Train No. 3 connects at DuBois for Bradford and Pittsburg and bas Puliman Siesping Usr from Phibastelphia to Dubos Trin No 74 conneets at Clearfield with Bevel B. KR ipsburyg, Lock sw for Pig Ran dinsonburg, Bmd- fr Ph Haven, Jersey shore, Williamsport, Philautoel ia and New York, and bas Puilman Sleep i ond fro. Da Rois to Philadelphia, ousand mile Uekels at two cents per mile, jowod for passage between all stations. 3. MATTHEWS, Epwaap . Lary, Gen, Sapt., Gen. Pas, Agt } Rochester, N.Y. Boviwster, N.Y. | Ba Passoogers are reqiestod Ww parchase | tiekets befure entering the ears. An exeess | charge of Ten Cents will be evliectad by Con- reek ductors when Sores are paid on trains, om all | | stations where » Ticket Office is maintained. aa C%iy Pattoh, 23 Readley Jaf New York Contrat & Mudson River R. R. Leshee. {NOINDENSED Ti ME-TARLY. Fins : i a x w% Kerrmor | Le New Millpost Avante. 5 Mitchells ad {IR Ls Dearfieid Junction Ar. PRE mRw | Ghd! 3 vs J CLEARFIFLD 4] ae == | i BOE i Ari sarfiedd Junction ix Wad mudd ter. Walisewton, Mortisdeie Mines | shaded vt $ SURE EY fine a. -t Munson Ar 8 93% Lv PHILIPSBU RG TSH 40 Ar. PHILIPSBU Re. Masses Winbhearne PRALE CHtlingown : KNOW SBOE. REFUH Ureelt A sins iS t Ar & 16 Aa 3 ! } is 4 we i RERERES 3 TAM Ar 85 8B fv a ris ci BAR ESE weveveare derey iE EEE BB ane -tnt wo FY SRORE WMRPT ¥ 1 - dn eG Nr is = 5 PAaRRR , WOMSP TT | Is © PHILADEI PNA Ar x, New York Ar Foust of Litwrty Srved SW edna #0 pm Sede 08a. ms Smiley : Throng Pallnven Sleeping Car befwnen Du. Busia, Charfield. sil intermediate paints, and Nex BERRY AEERSY re ”~ we. A BL. i: 8 as 2 Lo HEHE A SURTEANBIATAR a - Ed I dgpen agunvERud - Pugliese om < » va J >. Philadelphia tn doth dinactions 4aily, exept = ‘Mail Express, daily serpin, on Traine Nos 5 snd COSKNELTIONN At Wiite H Philadelphia and. Reading Railroad. Af Jepury Mooey with Fall Book Railway Sow ats in New York tate apsf the West A2 1 Hall wiih Cenirat Ratleemd of Penney van At Philissharg with Penasivanis with Railromd. At Clomrfedd with Botlaio Roelwater : and amd Pitistearg Raliway As Parton with Cambs and (lonrfield J of Pony ivanis mtiresst. At MahatBey with Penney iranian and North Weltdrs mailront. Af PALMER FE HERRIMAN, superintendent, tend 3 Pa P. R. R. Time Tables. In effect May 27th, 1894 Main Line, Leave Crosmon- Fasten mols Shore Express, week days... A ltonna Accomodation, week days... Tay Expres. daily Spit a Ay : CA TEootus Adcomiodation, daily. Phittndeiphin Fxprows, Amity Main Lane, Leave Crosson—W Johnstown Acro. week dnys Pacitie Express, daily . Way Passenger, daily Mani! Train, daily Fast fine, dalix sisi ai Jobhmstown Levan, woek days E CAMBRIA snd CLEARFIELE: : sth ward, Mourning train for Patton and Ores Saves Mahaffey sl 258 a la Jos, 800 Westover dix Camrway, for Hass Die Hast adh Garway, for { von; 70%. Patton, gf ey Junetion, Tk Kavier, TSF, Crop wi Rig a m. JA" a far Patton. and Cresson Tes hater st 199 9 =: L Jome, 206: Westover, 23% Be Thea tgs 252 Hastings, 247, ta o FEOF Crosson § on, Til Kaye dor ASR, arriving at Cresson at £16 Cass Readies Janetion, Soll ; . Caner, TR a) evening. frorsi Bras, Spangler, 10x Rarneshore, 1100 arrivieg adhd ows Thess, B. Wait Pisbung ROR. lemre Bellwoods ax follows Fastwast, Cand 11447 a om, I 2% &2 snd BD pW. Northwanrd, Siorning train eaves Crosson for wu; Kayior, Ti Redes Jonetion ’ wn, IE Cares y, (Tor Hastings: Sk for Mabaffey' 1100 Gmrway, (for ’ 11990 Westover, 11:82 1a Jom, a, got Mabaffer at 1220, Afternoon Sain far awd Mahafov bmves Cresson st Sle 3 Gar way, (for Hastings: &5; fey 847. Garvyay Jom, TR arriving at CHHAN A EXTENSION ed Fastward, 3 Morning Sesin haves Cherrvtoe af Sui Foo ropesadsony & 0 0 spy ier RN are Rowe, 7-88, and connects with mio for Cross at Bosdiey Junction a1 73K Afternoon tain haves Cherrytree of SR Rarnestwien, S22 Sypsagier, 26 Carolitown Rowil, 255 and commis with train SF Creson at Bradley Junetion at © ’ y Westward, Morning twin leaves Reiley Juretion for (herrviree st 1008 Oarrolitows Reed, sik nt Cherryives a1 (08 3 Afternoon train temves Bradtley Junetion Cherrytree at ©5 (aroiitown Head, 2 Manger. 27. Barnesbors, £35, sariving at Cherryiree st a Sim the Fhensturg Branch Usios ave Fhensburg for Cresson af 70 a om, 0D am and T30 poor. Leaves (resen for and mtermedinte points on the srvival of trains from Fast and West, both moming and For mites, maps ote 8 ' v to thoket h A.W. PB} Aves, Pittfharg Pa ey JR. Woh, weno & M. PREVOST, teesteral Manager, , P & N W Railroad. Rad " Rimd down § SGEUNRESEES No 15 Nes Ne se STATINS ar Punxsatawn'yvi iy Loalportd Lioydevilie tx me Tv Bellwaoodh ar Connections With Buffalo IWith Beswh Creel TW ith Cambria and Clearfield milrond Cresson and Clearfield malirond. sybvanin mailrosd. ‘ Cash Creek Branch —Tmine mves MeGeos for tien Cam flat HED. a m and LW pm Arrive at Motes Som Glen Oampiwll at ee a mt and TE pa i Pennsyivania milroad trains arrive eps ABn Penns wll E8eeoveas ~ nm. Ruoehester k i and ns Westward, 18 8 m. 136 B2R THT and £59 p wm. . 4. FORD, sap, Helbwond, W. AfLour shoes are M AHAFFEY HOUSE Mahaffey, Clearfield Co., Pa Accommodations Arwt-olase. Bast of. and Wines af the bdr. abiing a GroRrGE otf weiss . at) Te Wa : With Peas in a ¥ . $4