rio ’ ; ‘ i Hk a 8 g Sl 5 A, » § +] g £2 . ¥ = x 1 F i : " 1 ¥ + . » Ni Me eid - i We a w— MR co oid Be ih © @ true story. Margaret Dane in Youth's “FOR LITTLE FOLKS. STANLEY'S SKATES. Turtles Are Not U aonily Seen on lee, but This Is Said to Be a Tras Story. Btanley was learning to skate, bat he found it wasn't as easy as it looked. Brother Paul conld go across the pond in about two seconds, but poor little Btanley got tired before he got half way over. : ~~ Fhis ankles turned, and he tambled and tumbled, and bumped his head, and lest his hat, and almost lost his | temper besides “I most wish my birthday present | had forgot to be skates, ‘cause I'm hort | so nll over,” he said as he got up slow- ly from another falL “I guess 1'll take my skates off and slide,’’ he thought to himself. So the straps were unbuckled, and the skates | were fasteed together. Then how he | did ran and slide over and over again! Tt was ever so much nicer than akat- ing. and he didn’t fall once He went froin one end of the pond to the other, . and thén the dinner bell rang. . “I've been skating, '’ said Stanley be took his seat at table “J expect you'll beat me now, ”’ langh- ed Brother Paul as he looked at Stan- ley's happy face. ‘Have you been skat- ing all the morning?”’ “ '"Cept when I went sliding," an- swered Stanley. ‘Oh, dear,” he ex- claimed, *‘I forgot my skates! They're on the pond. I left them when 1 went | sliding. Can 1 go and get them this | very minute, mamma?’ Mamma sald yes, and away he ran a8 fast as ever be could When he reached the pond, his dates’ ‘had disappeared from the piace where he had laid them, but a little distance frorg the shore Stanley saw something | black Ta !Mearhe the wind blew them he! said, and then he went, one, two, three, | slide—straight to the very spot! And ‘what do you suppose ha saw? A great big turtle had grabbed one of the leath- er drags in his mouth and was slowly | dragging Stanley's skates over the ice ~ "Why, you wicked turtle!'’ exclaim. | ed Stanley excitedly. ‘I'm going to get i: my papa” Aud sure enough he did in | Papa cut the strap with his peninife, | and Mr. Turtle lost his skates. "A wonder what he was going to do! ‘with them?’ asked Stanley thought- | fully. “Perhaps ho was going to learn how to skate, '’ said papa, smiling. “Perhaps he was, *’ answered Stanley. But Mr. Turtle walked quiotly out of sight and never offered ong word of planation, and Stanley and papa and 1 are still wondering about it, for this is Companion, yoo This Newsboy Was Grateful. A condition of moral degeneracy is pommonly attributed to newsboys, but there are exceptions : A physician who recently moved up sown. into the eighties tock an evening paper from a small newsboy and dived into bis pocket forthe change. “That's all ri) ht, Doo, "remarked the little chap. Don't you remember Jirnmie you cured | last winter with the fever?’ Then the physician recognized in the | tall and sturdy boy a little chap whom | be hid pulled through a fever without any payment. ‘Flat that's all right, Jimmie, " he said, ‘‘and you must certainly let me pay you for your paper. “No, * gaid the boy, ‘1 won't. Where | are you living up here, doo? | want to and see you.’ {Ho hasn't yot turned up to seo the dooter, but every morning and evening | he slips a paper andor the door, and to “have a proper understanding in the be- | ginning with the first paper he scribbled ‘a little notice, '‘Please, doc, accept these papers allns, from Jimmie. "'— New York Herald ag am glad 1 dot1’t live at the pole,” "sald a» little girl who had to get up =e it was quite dark one of these Told mornizgs. ¥'It must be dreadful to have to go about in the dark for six months.”’ That is the idea most chil dren have of the frigid zones. But it is | ‘pot vorrect. In the first place, there are not ypore than three months of actual | "darkness, for the long twilight helps | to shorten the night at both ends of! the season. Then, too, during the time | when the sun never comes above the | horizon or close enough to it to make | twilight or dawn, there is’ bright moon- light part of each month and such bril- liant displays of the anrora borealis that it is far from “pitch dark,”’ as owe might suppose. —New York Ti imes. —————— An Awful Warning. P——— ——————— THE DISCOVERY OF ARGON, meer Coincidences Conneded with the Papert: ments Made by Scientists. Frofessor Hamday explained in an in- | tarvisw last wogk how be discovered argon, the new © fur me nt inthe atmos phere which is now exciting the won- der of the sdentific world He fait 1: “The impulses came dire Hy from Lord Rayleigh, Hp was much impre we by the fact that atmospherio nitrogen was | heavier thay chemical nitrogen. This might be dee to an admixtare of lighter | gas with chemical nitrogen or to the ! presence of a gas of a greater weight in atmospheric nitrogen. Lord Rayleigh was inclined to the former explanation, and some four years ago he consulted me abort the manufacture of chemieal ni- i trogen. | '“f regarded the second explanation an the true one, and after be had been ex- | perimentiog for some time I asked his | | permission to make experiments on my own account. He never hesitated to ac- cord his consent, and I set to work. It was drenry waiting for results that came probabilities, and probabilities grew into triumphant certainty. At! Lord Rayleigh three ounces of the new $08. *‘He replied at omoe. He also had conducted independently, had led to simultaneons sncoess, as has been the | ease with so many discoveries and inven- | tions. There was still another ovinci- | ence a little Ister. As soon as we got the gas we wanted to find out its nature | Waa ita chemical chanical mixture? Was it monstomie or diatomic, simple ar compound? Profess- or Olszewski of Cracow was experi- menting with 1¢ tn communication with | te. Dy the a; plication of heat he made i the discovery that there was no loss of heat through intermolecular motion. { We made out that argon was monatemn- ie. I wrote the news to Cracow. My | letter had hardly gone when I received |.» communication vo my confrere. He | had also suspected the monatomio nature | of the new gas, but for another reason. | Argon weighs 80 times as much as hy- drogen and 16 times as much ns oxy- gen. He bad expected the heavier gas | ‘ to iiquefy at a higher temperature. To i his surprise, it liquefied at a lower tem- | perature. sion, and that was argon was monastom- ie. But it was curious that letters an- nouncing the same information should oross.''— New. York Sun's London Cor- respondent. AN APPEAL ON WALL PAPER. Getting Out the Edition n of a Newspapev Under Tryiag Conditions. A recent issue of the Callaway (Neb.) Tribune was printed on wall amd ations: TELEEoY 2 Solio papa ‘but we can't lesme om eid, flour ora piece of side meat, and having run all Sur WHO JNU WANCHTE WY So wise up the w given ua, which is about Ey and only the office towel is left, whicki bas not bests wash- ed for seven years. 80 we ask onr broth- won't take no money. | {er printers $0 consider our situation, | with a family to support, with nothing | , coming in, and we know their ever gen- | erous disposition will see some way to | ‘contribute a little paper or a couple bours’ work to keep my paper going for | the good it will do the outside world in ' telling them how this afflicted, dro nght stricken district 18 getting along; also to enable us to get shoes and proper wraps for our wife and four children. All com- fn the press, whether for us ar to be divided with other printers in this dis- triet.”’ . Ex-Speaker Reed's New Cane, Everybody who knows Mr. Reed at all knows his abhorrence of loud or flashy dress. He dislikes jewelry. His soarfpin, when he wears one, is of the most modest kind. No rings sparkle on ‘his fingers, aud nothing could be more ‘nuobtrusive thaw his watch chain. Well, the other day, when Mr. Reed was in Providence, he was presented | with a cane. It was an enormous affair, with a head as big as a football and | with a great amount of gold ocarv- | ing and elaborate filigree work. Mr. Reed gasped as he cintched the cane, but he carried it bravely until he settled | himself down in a railway car. Then he took a newspaper and quietly wrap- ped up the cane. He swathed thé mass- ive head in his handkerchief, and he | pent the entire outfit into retirement: ‘ apder the seat. When he reached his | : hotel in this city, be handed the bun- dle to his wife. He breathed a sigh of ‘relief as he saw it consigned to a clos: et, and when it comes forth again it will be because there is a moving day , in the Reed, household. — Washingto 1 Star. Freeing of Pipes Prevented, An English firm ig introducing an antomatic air valve intended to prevent the bursting of pipes by frost. The valve is soldered into the water pipe at the , highest position of ‘the building and { normally is kept closed by the pressare | of the water inside the pipes. In time ' of frost the main cock is closed, and | | then by opening the lowest tap in the | | building the water in the house pipes | can be run off, air coming thro. gh the | alr valve to take its place. T. as the | pipes, being filled with. air, cannot i freeze. On turning on the water from { the main again the air valve closes nu- tomatically. — Philadelphia Record. | : : Mrs. Yates Defosted. | Mra Yates, who as mayor of One- "hunga, New Zealand, did. so much to discourage other communities from making women mayors, has not been re-elected. Her fellow citizens have re- pudiated her and placed a mere man in the mayoral chair. But Mrs. Yates is | ‘doing to have her revenge on a world that watched her csarlike rule without | : sympathy. She is going to make a tour and lecture. -New York World. pever cama, bub there were times of high excitement as = sospicions be- | length, in July last, I was able to send | some of the gas Our investigations, | There was only ane conclu. | rounications will be cheerfully answered, i snd any donation will bo acknowledged | | —x MURDERER'S HOODOO BiB. He Attributed His CHme to it and Pined Away and Died When He Lost Tt, A case ont of the erdinary, by reason of the saperstitions clement in it, has been closed recently by ths death of the principal character in the penitentiary at Prankfort, where Lo had begun to serve a life gir to nee for murder. A year or more Aro. a negro named Andrew FP Bell Ei musther negro with so Hitle provoeation ti ha wag econvietsd and sent to the penitentiary for life. On the Ftrial Ie I 8 defenses was that he was not | mocountable, as he was ander the infla ence of a “hoodoo bag ''- This hag he for good. After it came into his posses. sion, he said, his disposition changed, and his mind was filled with murderous thoughts at all times, finally culminat- ing in the murder of a negro aginst whom he had no previous ill will. As statod, he was convicted, but an appeal was granted om tie strength of his claims for the part the hoodoo bag had taken in the crime. All this time Bell had clung tena- oiously to the bag, in no case per- | mitting himeelf to be parted from it, | | and it was with bim in the penitentiary. i His attorneys went thers for it. Bell begged them not to taka it from him, . because he would die if they did. They. told him it was pecessary that the bag should be sent with the papers in the | case to the elerk of the court of appeals i if he hoped tu win his case on sppeal. Finally he consented to give it up, and the hoodoo bag was turned over to the clerk. Ball at that time was in excel- lent health and had always héen a bur- the bag was gine ied | ly man. Ihe began rh pine away, ang ay within ten days. . The hoodoo bag is still in the of the clerk, but nobody wants to lr. i # avpopt with tom not be persuaded to go little red bag and is said to oontain such grewsome and shivery and weird and uncanny things as hair from a graveyard rabbit, hair from a cut that died in a fit, wool from a dead riegro's bead mingled with strange herbs gath- ered in the woods at midnigdt and > Winchester (Ry. ) Special THE ARMENIAN QUESTION. | ft Is Cancing Grave Anxiety Thronghout i Turkey Stories Told by Traders. All sonrees of information ho stantinople and other places in tho sul tan's domain agree tliat the sitaation throughbat the Turkish empire war rants the gravest anxiety. The principal cause witLout doubt is the Arsasalan question. I ines in many places in the interior of Asia Minor is almost ¢n- terior. In spite of every effort to pre- | vent news from reaching the gapital it trickles in. oners marched into Byria and clegwhere in irons. Dozens of Arp vias merchants’ agp in prison. The prisons ore foll Turks nie allowed to threaten Armceni- sighiicant and dangerous of all P4 1h wild stuff Turkish pavers are allowed to print with the o bject of exciting th ignorant Mubammcdan masses into ba tred of Christiana, Jt. 1eqaires only a spark to set fire to the tinder of fanati- cism throughout Turkey, and it is evi. dent that the government alvendy re pes its tolernnce in this rispect - Const: anting vio Lotter, : Pestilence Will Follow War, A pew aspect of the war in the cast is i suggested by Colonel Maurice. He calls 1 attention to the Chines 24 h i there are massed 500,000 men ar . ‘Peking. This force has alre adv Teen there Ye some time, and it fs likely to remain for several months longer. It is ‘an elementary maxim of military tac tics that a large force of men she ould ‘nog be gathered until a short time be- | ‘ glans, Napoleon and his march fo Mos. fore they are to be employed; (therwise | an epidemic resulting from ent reed : lack of sanitary arrangements is almost | Inevitable. Therefore, says (Colonel Maurice, as soon as warm weather be gins in the spring there will be a most | frightful outbreak of pestilence in some | form or other, probab iy in many {; Tins | but beginning with malignant typhos | in its most virnlent shape. He saggests | that while there is yet time all foreign. ers in Peking be withdrawn vader ade | quate protection. — United Service Jlag- azine. ; ra er Tobac co In South Carolin, Ten years ago net a po ound of tobacco was grown in South Caroling f ket. There were stray atehi 5 | there, and forehanded nile | the upper counties of the stat produced encogh of a not super ity to supply a strictly home but tabaceo growing as a “ing industry wa Last year 1,000, (0 of tho | best variciics finest guality wire the county of Darl ingto nm alon acreage devoted tothe cultivat plant was not 5 per cent of the acreage devoted to the cultivation of cotton, vit the value of the tobacco product was i6 per cent of the value of all the cotton { paised in the county. The moncy value of the tobacco crop of the conaty was $120,000. —Charleston News and Cou- rier. A New Move, I have heard from several sources and believe it to be trae that 16 students refused to take the oath of allegiance, | expecting naturally to be sent to Siberia forthwith. The czar, bearing of this, said: ‘If they refuse to be my loral subjects, lct them leave Russia within 24 bours and live elsewhere until they have acquired another nationality Then they may return. if they please ; and finish their education.’ The stu. dents were so astonished that they iw- mediately took the oath.— London Standard. ee had bought from a ““dodtor’! asa charm crushed to powder on a tombstone — tirely suspended. Merchants in the cap- | ital are afraid to send goods into the in- ui dboth soldiers aud coolied TT WATER LEVEL IN THe “LAKES. Spreuintion ns to o the Rewntt of Opening the Chicago Drainage Canal. The protable effect of the opening of the Chicago drainags canny wpe n the swater le vel of the great Jukes has been the sn ihe of disc nssicon ever singe that tremen: ond Jacjent took shape. A ory of alarm we coral when it was annoguced that the diver sion of water from Lake Michigan in anything like tha i fill the canal then across J1linois to the Miscissippt valley wonld serionsiy interfere with the navi gation of the S Clair and Datroit riv- ers and render it imposible for heavy Araft vessals to enter most of the har- ; bors on the lower Jakes. The Chicag! engineers have done their bast ever since to dizpel that belief. They have main tained that the taking from the Inkes of all the water that will ever bo roquired for the canal will not lower the lake Jew] mors than three inches, and the Chicago newspapers have all indorsed the opinions expressed Ly the Chicago engineers, as a matter of course, Professor GG. Frederick Wright of Oberlin collegs, who has perhaps made a mare careful study of the geology and geography of the lake region than any other man in tha United States, does not agree with the Chicago engineers, however. Professor Wright shows that ‘the quantity of water required to be tarned into the drainage canal when is | is first opened will be equal to about § per cent of the quantity that now flows over Niagara. When the population of Chicago reaches 2,000,000, the Inw on- der which the canal was constructed provides passing throogh it shall be doabled. That means that at least 10 per cont as w rasers over Niagara cs tha § i= firsy 5 a hae Rene the luvel of Lakes Michigan, Huron ava Erie and the conn pling rivers af Jenst nine inc he ., and that when the canal is | operat its full capacity the fall in tho water devel will be 18 inches. This, Prof scp. Wright says, way have bunt littls effect in the rainy Sensis, but dar- ing the late savimer and autamn he fa! Certain th ;at it will serionsly interfere with pavigation. He declares that the vessel owners and all who ars inturested in the commerce of the lakes should realize the danger and do ail they can to avert it. As a praventive mesdure he | suggrsts that a dam Me constructed across the lower end of Lake Superior at the “*Soo,’’ which will raise thy level of that lake two feet and store «nough watar during the rainy seasom $0 supply the lower lakes during the late sumiter and fall. Professor Wright says that the level | of the lakes is such that if the eotitinent | were to dip 50 fest to the west all the: water which Bow goes over Niagara! would flow over Illinois and into the | Traders hear of long strings of pris- i Mississippi, and if the dip were 100 foot | to. the ncith the water of the lakes’ would go through ‘Lake Nipissing inot | the Ottawa river, and the Niagara would become dry. wos with impunity everywhere M: nt Certainly his suggestions are worthy | the attention of lake men and vewel owners, and an investigation shoald be , started to determine what the actual effect of the ¢ pening of the Chicago ca nal will be Chie go ought not to be deprived of th is peans of disposing « its sewage, but if there is any way - preventing such a serious iMertferinoe with the navigation of the lower lakes ‘ag is threatened action 5 nid 1 bei taken D avert it ~('1 land Le selor The Japanese Soldiers Diary. : appears that notebooks ard gaite common in the Japapcse army among They ke vg regular diaries and take copious notes of everything they sea. “'Ii is sorpris ing,’’ writes a war correspondent to the ‘ China Mall, “what a lot they know. about the great west. Several of them talk intelligently of Spartans amd Per. onw, and even compare the abolition of fendalism in England and Japan, They fully understand all that i implied in the contrast between old fashioned hand to hand warfare and modern long range manenvers, and they speak scornfally of the Chinese tactics at Ping: Yang in try- ing cavalry charges against massed Lod- fos of riflemen withoot fit camng their “machine guns, as the French at z ater: loo did their fieldpicoes to throw the ranks into disorder, Jap anese must bo sarprising to Parope- an heean we do nos know them ress is greater aud more real mers maine VU -~Lopdlon Tamuons Bridge to Be, points the way buil ding, which EN >: apis truth are rapidly learning to accept now ideas of the strength of materials Weadmir- ed the Homan arch becanse it showed mass apd strength in a stroog material We are beginning to grasp the idea of lightness and strength combined in the steel cantalever. The most famons bridge is still ou paper. If the Hudson is spanned by & six track railroad bridge, we may have a splendid cautalever of 400 feet longer span than the Forth bridge and quite as high above the water. It is posiible that the bridge may be another suspen sion. Whatever form it ultimately as- sumes it will be the famous bridge of the world. —Chagtanguas. | » oe : For Frost Bites, One application of kerdeahe, it is said, gives instant relief in cases of frost bite and chilled hands and feet without the tenderness and soreness fol lowing the use of snow or cold water ov the disagrecable pain of thawing ous. that the qnapiity of water | All this from the A FLORIST’ 3 FAKE. The Story of the “Blanket of Fliwers” on Mrs. Astor's Grave an Invention.’ M any women have visited Trinity ry, One Hoandrod and Fifty fifth street ¢ and Amstirdsm a ne, in the past fow days to sca the marvelons “Plankat of Bowers” which was said to Yeover tho casket’ Waldorf Astor, snd which was to be “renwwod every morning for a year’ by Mr. Astor's order. Mrs. Astor was bur- fed on Jan. §, pot in a vault, bot ina grave, in the porthwestérn corner of the Astor plot. On the day of the faperal the mound of earth was covered with pine boughs The evergreens have not been removed, and except at ome corner, which has been nnooversd by inquisitive visitors, the grass is coverad with snow. The laborers in the cemetery have swept a path through the burial plot, and about the grave a path has been trodden by men and women. The cemetery employoss have grown very tired of having their word donbted by women who inquire the way to the Astor vault and the blanket of flowers on the coffin. No flowers at all have been placed on the grave, and they can ses for themselves that none can be put on the casket. So the women insist that thé coffin is not in the grave, but in the vanlt of John Jacob Astor, and they ask to have the vault opened, so that they ean soe this wonderful covering. Al though the man explains to them how impossible and nseeless it would be to comply with their requests, they de- part onsatisfied and douliting his word. The ok gatekeeper, who has been employed about the cemetery 22 years, has to bear the brunt of their inquiries and dissppointments. He said that the | other evening, just as bo was closing the | gates, two women begged for admit tance, saying that they had come all the ay from E. wt New York to see the nH wr='d not go home ansatis- « states, and ALT Pale . All this annoyance and sap. meant is doe to Joseph Fleischman, al florist, of Broadway. Om tbe morning ' of phe funeral be told the reporters thas had the contract to supply fresh flow. | every day for a year for the grave FoF thiz he was to receive $1060 a day, | Bo! anid, and in all be would reccive | $40,000 from Mr. Astor. Own the day | after the (nneral Mr. Fleischman sent | to the newspaper offices a typewritten | stary of the alleged contract given to | him Sy Mr. Astor. He was, he said, to | furnish 4,000 fresh liliss of the valley and 4,000 violets each day. Hea repeat: , ed the statement yesterday to a reporter of The Sun, and then, being confronted | with the facts, admitted that be had in- } Yeuted the whole story. Superintendent Otto Meurer of the cemetery and his brother Albert, whois | sexton of Trinity church chapel and had | charge of the funeral, say that no such order for lowers was given by Mr. As tor to amybody. = Naw York fan. THE ANTITOXINE DISCUSSION. Professor Drasehe’s Crithetnm Unfavorable to the New Diphtheria Remedy. The physicians of two or threes Earo- pean capitais are beginning te flud seri ons drawbacks to tho nse of the new remedy for diphtheria The subject was carefully discussed at the Medical soci: ety in Vienna this week Drasche's criticism was unfavoralle to the new method, owing to the effects vw hich he Had cheered In 80 onses. He | id that di tions of Pelring’s anti allected the Kidneys seri vation was corroborat The 7 said that in the presciice of this fact it © :1 no To no be believed that the injection had ro ia jurious cfeety It conld not be a matter i of indifference that a patient who was | recovering from a dangerous illness | shosil be sabjected, through this rein edy, to a further serious malady. r P op the present time, for observa tions have been much too short to per- | ’ mit a final decision as to the valne the treatisent, it is clear that its appl- | on cation should be limited. With regard} 5% wrariavne LER HV. to the statistics which were supposed to | prove a {t8 snccess Professor Drasche said | that in diphthe ris, bare figures were na evidence. — Loudaoy i Letter. A Debatantes eas That the deburantes © ante alone for success in the social swim, but have a fancy for conversa tional distinction, is evidenced by the following remarks, overheard at oom of - tha introduc tary 't as: “Miss Rose Y FO 3 know Mr. Lagu! i, for he isi hipghon bor er,” sapd oo vee riting at the me arg lawy: . = KO y about with a tag c Ne & hs ¢ to 5 say thé ot nversation Eruith wil. ~ Washin gean | Pout. A Question Making Mech Noise. A discussion is raging in Po in aver question propounded by a schoolteache to her class, "If a tree outed in a for est should fall and no ene should see it; wonld it make a noise?’ The question has created much discussion among the pupils to who it was presented, and it has spread into older and wider circles The debate turns upon the theory that | sound exists only in the ear, and tha there can be no sound where there is no ear to receive and respond to the atmos . pheric waves —Oil City Blizzard. - Rach Had » Dog. . ‘The elevator in the Victoria hotel lifted the following load the other day: ‘Mrs. Kendal, Mrs. Kendal's dog and ‘Mr. Kendal, Miss Sibyl Sanderson, Miss Sityl Sanderson's dog and ber fiauce, . Antonio Terry, Mra Langtry and Mrs ff Mrs William | co AA | | | Beech (Creek }lailroad | Rap Mai Feb k, bes, x Med Al Professor f ihe season ot 1804-3 do not rely upan their sppear- | Sr ga. | al: particular © NNN LS ANTS HAILBROAD a—— SEFBAT NOV. 5 wd Phtindeipitie ant rie aily Time Table. Praise eaves Divifiwira FASTWARD, $04 A Mo Trams, Ia ¥ SX iy ~autry, Harristinry (od (ntespiead tnd, af iviag al 1 Ae ira New York, Hein . Be. Paitin ort Ww gets ington, 724 pom. Pailnss fren WH Hwnnsgp ort and passer from Kawe to Philadelphia. | . B39 F M_- Train & deily exovgr » mig : Harrisburg aod intern riod ip te wrsiny . ing at Phimdeiphis ut 4 on TS New York TON am. Pus msn seep ng 2.0 (rod Mee nsoan 3 wi diet phi and New Yore Pati I3 Yomactnge t2 un Fetamip te iaepe’ nos "es PP. a Phy ac. - . = J erinedunte stata. a iy 8. mm; New ¥ ] 2 week Was wm, on a =. WR, Washin . «la aa TN. pt Be scl a. vison Harrisbury, Passer ; Erie to iy ! a Philadeipiia and Win. a | . WESTW As kD 8 4 nT M..~Train hu Ld P.M.~-Taln FrE Bom os. WRG Rail ROAD, ; Las pt Sunday Rar 19 Ten = SORDGIE 34 FA 8. ML, BIYIVISg 41. lermat | ea m | TRAIN 20 leaves Sie m., se : Rruway AND CLEARFIELD R. B BAILY EXCEPY SUNDAY ER —————— A 4 ir HOT HWA RD. I Lv. wm, STATIONS. iw , idgway Ran Mill Haven Miils Vineyard § Run EET : a Crean ; DuRols AINS LEAVE RIDGWA BE = EEE EEE EEE cen nea EEEE BEIEERERRER > posearine. § GUE RR Eii SNNBEERT FRR 3 i EreaTssuns i “REI TEINE" » x od h ~~ Train 7 un. om, 46 py ma. Train 4 7215p. m M. PRE VOKT, | General Manager. Prop wet 8 NY C&S R R RR Co. Losgew. CONDENSED TIME TABLE. Read Up - Rend Lown ¥ x vv . ; ! } Boar Patton Ix ; . Westuver a | ae Malay Berm HF mud {¥ i Gy - 1 ey & ra i. lg " Ker PN Now Milipor. {Manta ante tn XK nrtinid 4 4 Bdad : a Wood] np = WO aah Pag le Fao Fe. Wal horton . 7 #5... Morrimtnie Mt DEX... 7&0 iY ... «Munson. [4 JE] ro : i pi aa ME pi A ER ENOSNENUN EE Ce - < oe Manson... Fomine rma LGiltintown rae _ Seow Shoe iain ~.. Beeoh: reel LM Hal? 24 ¥ on nigga bv i 310 7 4 Jersey Shore Tanetion ] HOST Glee Willameport.. Ary | $n AR i AN i un » 3 Ar Wn tamaport Lv + § : #11 3 Lye. Phisdephin. Ae loa N X Via Tansy. Arr Lye NY vin Ph ‘a. Arr 3 {Foot of Liberty SL » +EBcovenmen ("Gass uinR S A ay 2 kp © wy Ll] # CGN NEBLEARSESS & Er ——————— ip SAT SR A : SLmilY. tWeskdnts “ow pw Sendaye JI I0 A WM. Sanlays Through Pail man Butdel. Shepoayg { ay Pa wees Ciesirfield and Phish Phi dXily ex wept Sundily, in Ermine ad 3 Connectinns—AL Wiliam port wiin, | pais and [Reading Rudi ren i AL Je (ne tuogs HELE Le #0 i. 1% SE Cease 45 i r i 2 is Na i ad Ae y \ At M abndley wa ane! North western itv y Fi AG PALMER, , wy pein Senta g t “BUFFALO, RocHESTi i On and after Nov. 0th, Ded, jes | will arrive and dey it rome a dy : TRAINS ARRIVE 5am Punssulawiey and Bog a Falls Crecs, + Pan xsatawney and Big B 4 Bradford and Ridgwiy Clearfield and Car aensy ue m. Clearfield and (urwsosv - Shwper -“- “ Lal " wv tsute wney and 3c Rua Rochester a od Butio, Punssute & te) ard Baw Clenrtivid and orwensvd TRAINS DEPART, , Falls Creek. Clenrfeid aad Curweasyile,] Bradford, BuTalo and Hoel stor, Pun ssutawney sid Big Run Pun xsatawne)y aud Sig Kaa. L Falls Creel. “Chew rfiete and ol Ridgway and Bradford Punxsuisv ey and Bi Riss Clearfield s nd ila. Siew utter, Panxsutawney and Big : FS a1 reqeusted 0 Pun td the mrs. AD excess change of. ectiected by « edule fares wil an tralu, retinal! stieg re nea E aan EECCERHEEER BIEELEHEYE » ru Boras i. I pafSp Jv iwst WD all atmthomnin a sila vs Wir Neen, Una hie mail on 0) sdk rene, ? M Launder oo Agewt, ivr. on EC Lapey, uo" Pur Ages Bovwwsie Sy R. G. Matthews, (ien : wie: N.Y Py sh vas Fp