WOMAN'S WORLD. lege Fogland, bine tatelr collected and | Ctabniated info ion dealing with the al . peeupatians of those who have bean ab PRINCESS BEATRICE, THE YOUNGEST 4, college, the resnlt being mported fn DAUGHTER OF QUEEN VICTORIA, the London Queen. The total number — “ of students who have 16ft borween Oo- tober, 1871, and June, 1804, was 720. Of this number only the frost cont ing room will fail to attract those who are willing to risk cverything except life in order to attend i a px BB PR } Whit She. Wore. Fashionalle dressrinkers say that the young Duchess of York now sets the London fashions gnite as mnch as her mother-in-law, the Princess of Wales : 1A ey Dressing the Neck — What of the College Wormer? - Lambredqains and Draperies, Equal Rights of Parents Told of the Emi~ press Frederick - Victoria's Receptions, 667 need concern us, as of the remainder gomo have died arid somo are foreigners who have re- Learned to their native land. Of these 667 we find that 374 are engaged in "teaching, 220 are living at home (of the favorite of all thatsovereign’s many whom 108 are married), 5 have gone _ children and exercises the greatest in- | into the medical profession, 2 are mis- fluence upon her mother, whose constant | Flovaries, 1.1s a Synriey gardener, 1 a companion sho has been ever sinca the | bookbinder, 2 or 3 aro engaged in char | “a bl ik. gow tod wi death of the prince consort. Not even ity organization work, and tho remain- wore A > ack silk gown dotted with the marriage of the princess has dimin- dur are said to be ‘for tho most part | ADVE; black velvet bodice, with point- ati : _ | tugaged in’ secretarial work." { ed vest of pale iris; boonet of silver fshod tha intimacy of the relations be- | | passementerie, with petunia flowers.” tween om. | It will be noticed that more than half PW ever ollie a EE | have tilken to tenching, and of these it | As the Princess of Wales is not likely to _ oooupies the same day and night saloon | 18 cheering to observe only seven set | be sean much in fashionable society this carriages as her mother, her husband, down as ‘looking for posts.’ Less than | season, the young duchess has become Prince Henry of Battenburg, being rel. | one-sixth have married. ‘The proportion _egated to another part of the train, is small, and it would be interesting to either with the children or with the know whether it is smaller than that gentlemen in waiting. ; prevailing generally among women of . Princess Beatrice has always been | the same class and the same age. Wo | known as the most accomplished mug. | 40 not hear of any writers, tut to our | cian of the royal! family. When quite knowledge at least three are principaily young, she developed a wonderful gif$ #0 engaged, one being known as = of reading difficult music ut sight, and | Writer of short stories and sketches, che this has been carefully cultivated. She | 28 a journalist and the third asa re- is also 8 most graceful composer and markably successful translator. has set music to varions poems by Lord ——— Ternyson. These songs were heard a variably deserilitug the duchess’ dresses pa fully as those of the princess. Amer- fean women may therefore be interested in knewing that the duchess at her first public dappearance this season, at the Princess Beatrice, the youngest daugh- ter of (Queen Victoria, is undoubtedly is suid to be growing np into a rather plain child, but fat and sturdy, the Iat- ter advantages being derived from his baoxom mother. —London Letter. Dado and Frieze. | both aré used. It is a good plan to use the dado in balls, dining rooms and bedrooms, reserving the frieze for par- lors and reception rooms. : Lambrequins and Draperies. ‘In the interest of true art the old style of lambrequin is no longer in vogue. In place of it is long, soft dra- pery, fastened to a window pole or fes- tooned about it, and either falling in straight voluniinous foldings or looped | into graceful cascades. The heavily" carved cornice, with an embossed cen- tral pediment, is no more to be seen laden with accumulated dust of months of sweeping: ; The best way to arrange drapery is tho simplest. In tha old style, stiff and saloonlike, the fabrio was cut and sewed into shape on tho table Now it is draped. If draped, it needs be directly after the top is hung, so that each win- | dow is treated by itsel?, If the room be | high, the effect will be heightened by arranging it in a series of cascades or jabots. : In a handsome parlor thers are hung first and close to tho glass soft, delicate Jace curtains that reach only to the bot- tom of the sash. Next follow the French fostoon shades, generally of ponges or river. It is a country aestined to be- other light silks. These consist of four come densely populated by the Anglo- longitudinal puffings gqontrolled by a Saxon race and to dominate the south- spring roller. Then come the festooned | ern hemisphere. long lace curtaine, and lastly the silk | The Australian correspondent of the brocade velours or tapestry hangings | Boston Congregationalist writes oon- that are attached to the pole by puffs or | serning the extension of suffrage to festoons and descend to the floor in ele- | women in that country, ** When South gant and, graceful wavings. — Household | Australia falls in line with New Zealand News | in this matter, and of our Australasian ty. One put on an up town house very per with a frieze of clematis vine, which was pot defined within a set limit, but was massed rather thickly along the up- per border of the room, long, swaying tenidrils and creepers falling out of it to struy in some places almost to the wainscoting. The effect was as of a gen- tle breeze gently moving the vines, It geomed almost inerediblo that they were stationary. —— — Australia. frage in South Australia is in somo re- spects the greatest trinmph ever gained for tho cause, It establishes worann’s freedom over 916,000 square :niles of territory, o region larger than all the United States east of the Mississippi . PRINCESS REATRICR. year ago at the great concert given as a memorial of the late poet lanreate. A couple of years ago the princess narrow- ly nscaped being burned to death while staying at Hesse-Darmstadt. She was on a visit at the time to her brother-in- Jaw, Prince Louis of Battenburg, and while there the beautiful palace of Hei- ligenberg caught fire at night, the flames spreading with such rapidity that the princess barely bad timo to save ber lita, losing all her jewels and effects. "Po the princess belongs the credit of reviving in the breast of her mother. ‘he Jong dormant taste for theatrical en-. ‘tertainments. In her youth Queen Vieo- toria was frequently throughout the London season to be seen at the varions theaters with her young husband, and for the first 15 years that followed her marriage hardly missed a ringle operatic “event fa the metropolis, showing not only a keen and intolligent appreciation of both music and drama, but also a very kindly feeling toward the artista. After thio death of the prince consort, in | 1881, the acon declined to heat 07 | Zr saan ath fchee on te stage, and it was only with the utmost | appointment of a testamentary guard. difBculty that some ten years ago the | ian of their child, a privile ge which is princes: was able to induce her mother | Noy possered by ue Sithe sans, and to permit the organization of some tab- | If the appointment hy mo ly jiardiang is lenux vivants at Osborne. This had the | BOt eouenriad in Jy boty parents ne Je effect of paving tha way to amatear the- | YO 855d uf bo eleed Ti Rbl chied the atricals, of which the princess, notwith- | mother “shail have solo control OF 1a standing her strongly developed embon- | child a 1ae sae Eat Yo i a ay -jdnt, is inordinately fond, and from | and gEryiees ee dy 2 fae Fqual Rights of Parents. bas been introduced to make mOthers | gs rueall the speedy establishment of the entage. It provides that a married wom- | gourghe ** an who is the mother of a minor child, and who contributes by the fruits of her |. own labor to its support and education, shall bave equal control and authority over the child and eqoal right to its custody and services as is now by law possessed by its father. It also gives the Mre. Eulalia A. Wilsca. Mrs. Ealalis A. Wilson has been ap- pointed a trustee of the stite normal school at San Jose, Cal, by Governor Budd. She is a gradnats of the stato normal school and is principal of the Temescal district school in Alameda county, which position she has held for ten years throogh inceessive changes of trostees, some of which were professed. ‘ly hostile to a woman principal. = She disclaims being a member of any po- litical party, but is a strong advoeata of woman suffrage. This is the first time that a waman has been appeinted on any state board in California. ot, stoatenr theatricals to performances giv- | tReT: visions a bil}. ona quire that the mother of a minor child en by professionals was but another step. | 37° 0 CCL LL Now thie queen has again taken such a | \° qualified as a fit and proper person to lixing to the drama that she actually | have ntrol and custody of it. A pum- goes to the enormous expense of having ber of Philadelphia Jadies are working . entire metropolitan troops and their to secure the passage ot Hk It scenery conveyed all the way from Lon- ought to become a law. — Woman's Jour- don to Balmoral, a 34 hours’ journey, nal. SE : ip order to provide ber with an even- ing's ontertainment. In spite of her stoutniss, Princess Beatrice is far from | * Jooking as good humored as her squally fat sister, Princess Christian. Her face Suffrage In Connecticut. At Hartford Feb, 13 thers was a very animate! public meeting of the committen on woman suffrage in the hall of the houss of representatives. | Bills were considered conferring mu- | nicipal and presidential suffrage on : | women and one repealing the law of Told of the Empress Froderiek, | 1898 conferring on women the right to A pretty act of kindness on the | vote at school meetings. Addresses in of the dowager empress took place the | g4yor of the extension of the suffrage Sehnet 3 in 8 hoerhil at Potuism and | 45 women wero made by Miss Yates of anual : 8 told in an English paper by an eye: | Maine Mra Bacon and Mrs. Forbes of by Wears a froutiled expremsion, and, witness. A patient was at death's door, | An Miss Fenner of New London this is nttributed by the people who know : 3 + Bs ; ; ; and his wife had been hurriedly. sum-| gn Miss Baboock of Stonington. ber to the difficulty which she experi- | moned. With her baby in her arms she | : ia pmo : ances js konping matters sia |e: | was walking up and down the waiting | hw Youn on 0 onl npToem whi { room close to the ward in which her | an Pesions 1 husband lay. : | 3 : $ frvlaw..Now York Tribune. The empress happened to pay one of ber frequent visits to the hospital, and | | seeing the poor woman in her bitter sor- | row she approached to ask some sympa- thetic questions. : “Yes, he is dy'ng,'' the wife sobbed, “and he wants to say so much to me aboot how [ am to manage when ho is ance of the skirt could not possit be gone and how the chiliren are to ha furnished. : brought up, | baby is not well and irene ‘cries, and he 1¢s weak he can’t bear it, ‘Dundes (Seotland) € and he may dio af any moment.’ two lady correspondents { In an instant the empress had taken Marie Inandt and Miss Bessie Max the infant into Lor arms, and while for on in tour aronnd the world toy Invaari- i a whole hour the mother sat by the side gate in different countries the condition worn 4 full oape of white lace that 1s) of . her asband her majesty “of women. They expect to trav [28,000 canght YE w“ tue Should Bile ayo i pursed the child, walking up sud down miles in the course of their inquiry. rosettes of white satin 1obon, and then | Tih it and srcliing 3 . a A ' ' the room with it and soothing it with, &lininb : : nn is mot full, bat turnel in inbias line so | oie pondiimess, Parisian women are, some of them, ns to form what seera rovers of lace from : . * irnie wearing hand painted gowns, Ou in the V outline. Horii i i x nL Victoria's Receptions which a well known leader of fashion lower So¥y 5a era rosette ize thos: on A London correspondent ‘says: The in that city appeared was of dull white the should : tivd tion. Which mi severity of the weather has had an im- pix and had over the plain flaring skirt Amathes PS 13 hit wim, ilk oh ay portant effect on the arrangements for large painted baskets loaded with flow. oo Ween With a light green . ' | the queen's drawing rooms and the ers with velvet eleeves of the same color, is GE =. urd tizvs haa ill of broad white satin ribbon, folded soft- prince 5 AT, = ¢ Governor Badd of Californ‘a has inti- and ht at each side with rosettes great fallig off in the appplications for | mated that the friends of woman suf- y sang : presentation at sarily drawing rooms | . a ci : ! of yellow lace. The bib is of lace reach- ITH A ordi | Jr38° Will be wise not to sond him a bill ing almost to the waist line and gather- Waiieny are willing 10 sssamis any "| that they do not wish to become a law i very fall. Over this is a straight | PTY risk and hardship to secure an | : Cy a ey very clase and coming quite audience with her majesty, bat the gen- | deap. 2 nes, t | wine danger of pneumonia makes even onion has bee i er. to the edge of the lave, of creamy pear : by 1,000 women has been presented, rich. | the most ambitions hesitate. The rule | : | au Gt the Tit re beads. The effect of this is very ric "| compelling women to with hate asking for the passage a the bill pro- ; trast betw beads an - appar Sl ing for a woman's reformatory. 454 the oo well as ot ily the pale | Deck and shoulders at these ‘midday | Yioing x FEE y dl 1h itistic enough | functions is still insiied Om, ABA WA 8S | Mm Julia ©. B- Das, tie Yorniont ; rm ht the soul of a veritable student tendance means a nearly two hours’ | t, »d her seventieth birthday on By 8 "| wait in the carriage outside, and then Rutland. i lors. : Feb. 18 at Ro ia me another long exposure in the cold palace | ied : What of the College Women? rooms before the reyal presence is reach- There are in Philadulphia 15 working The influx of college women is still : that statistics of their careers | od, it is no wonder that complaints are women’s socicties. | m0 reoomt Joud and numerous. The queen thus far : have wot ceased to be interesting. Mrs. Sidgwick, the head of Newnbam ool A Crinoline Substitute. A new substitute for erinoline con- sists of a silk pettionat lined through- out with soft canvas, apd it has a deep ‘yoke on the front and sides, sith deep organ plaits in the back and a fluted * flcuncs at the lower edge of the yoke It is called ‘‘the Elizabethan petticoat,’ and anythicg mora suggestive of erino- line proper than the title and appear- i ro Dressing the Neck. ‘ Ribsons, laces and chiffon are all used for dressing the necksof bodices that are | ft) be worn in the evening, writes Isabel A. Mallon in The Ladies’ Home Jour- pal. The very many beautiful ones de- | veloped in satin and silk often depend on the neck dressing for the decoration, and so care is taken to choose pretty de- signs in collars, whether the bodice be high or low. A ross pink bodice of satin is cut out to form a very short V, mere- | ly exposing the throat. With this is fw iy v me A i6 sont aying n i; iQ has refused to make any concession in | There are now 27 professiorial women the matter, and it may easily happen if | deutists in Paris. ses that the royal draw- “coming beard The court chroniclers indorse this by in- opening of the bazaar at the admiralty, | “was mesmerio an important person indeed. Her baby Some of the new effects in wall papers fairly defy description in artistic beau- | recently was of heavy cream tinted pa- The establishment of fall woman suf- | population of nearly 4,000,000 about a : fourth will be under ‘aduit suffrage,’ In the Pennsylvania legislature a bill | (4 roads no great gift of prophecy to and fathers oqual in their rights of par | gue order of things in the other three- | ‘ta be taken earth went slow and EPEC, In the Kansas senate a petition signed * PURILS CF A MESMERIC EYE. They Drove a Respectable, Clean Shaved Lawyer Into Whiskers. A well kpown lawyer who bas always taken considerable pride iu the classio mold of Bis clean shaven face appearicd in the county court rooms recently with a well developed growth of “very unba- | Every friend that he met | wanted to know why he didu’s get shaved, and finally he corralled half a | dozen of them in a corner and told them | the reason He had never learned the art of shav- | ing himself and had always patronized one barber. Not joug ago the barber dropped. into the habit “of telling him | that he (the lawyer! had a mesmeric | eve. The lawyer didn’t mind much what | yo so long a8 | But hav- | his barber thooght of his he shaved him satisfactorily. ing discovered that the lawyer's eye tho that it was because he was mesmerized, go that he did not know what he was | about. Matters went on this way for a | week or so, the barber insisting that he | | was mesmerized évery tine the lawyer | It is English, if that is any recom- mendation to the young housekeeper, | pot to have both dado and frieze on the | walls. As each has grown wider, the average wall becomes a mere strip where | looked squarely at him, and the lawyer took it for granted that the mesmerism | business was a dodge to excuse the ¢o- | sasional cuts from the razor. A differant aspect was pot to the case, | however, the last time the barber shaved | ‘his lawyer costomer. Leaning over him | after he had finished, be asked if the | | lawyer thonght a man would be EXONEA | ble for cntting the throat of one who | The lawyer said he | certainly wonld not ba excneable and | got ont of the chair as quickly as poe- | He learned afterward that the | barber had developed into a’ perfect | | srank on the subject of mesmericm, and ‘nothing will perspade him that he did’ not have a very narrow escape, Ho will | mesmerized him, gible, to another barber present probably go time, but shaken by fora to w at the ar capo Tribone THE CARTH IS RUNNING SLOW But the Scientists Need Not Alarm One seriously Yet, Lord Kelvin estimates that the ning slow’ of the earth in its daily ro- tation round its axis amounts to 23 wee. | onds per century The main causa act as a brake, the action of which has been calculated by this cminent physi. cist to be equal to a weight of 4,000,000 tons applied on the equator. Other causes have also to be taken in- to neeannt—ag, for example, the inoriase in the size of the earth, due to the fall- ing an it of meteoric dust, which, if de- posited at the rate of one foot in 4,000 years, would produce the observed re. tardation by itself, ; Such a phenomenon as the annual growth and melting of snow and ice at the poles is introducing irregularities | { into the problem, the growth at the | poles, by abstracting water from the | other parts of the ocean, accelerating the earth’s motion, and the melting, by | restoring the water, retarding it Against the retarding forces there haa ita pr babies no. gal sinhing acoount a eejeration, d of 1 Kalvin lal haps hot mors rig to. ha vory sm t] {m1 than ong six-t pnd part of the retardation due to tidal frie TO, Professor Newoeomb has de astronomical Jared from that the ae ven and then went a0 tween considerations fost senile between 1850 and 1582, fast and gained eight see 162 anid 1x72 ¥ Lila Ly PONS nds changes shape, so slight 58 to bo qotts andiscov- erable in astronomical Chicago Times, GLUSEIVALIONS, = English Accents. ambition or a dream that some day the | stage of every countiy will speak the | langnagoect his country with a perfect accent and an academic vuity., “tlds that very thing, the variety of acoents, | that makes English so puzzling toa for eigner nto any of the first class comedy theaters in London. He speaks one English, walks on the stage. He speaks a second A third and a tirird and a fourth variety. thonpedy, at the Comedic Francaise, one roils worn by a Marserlliais, 1 Tt f third hy a Lretén, cach with his wdividan] secent, HfMenlt to posd ey} ener 10 De DHAYEeU (ion I was taik WW By © Ont of Place, “IC hat, “are thi there? x5 your asgod the do Romaa eitigons doing (aver rejoined the her: iy are Lelicved to be forining a majesty, piot “Pell them they mustn't’ that thee are throwing their Nme away. Plots have no place in this kind of dra- ma.’ : With which the king turned to the | andisnes ind sang with fine ‘aifact, “Her Auburn Tresses Wouldn't Stay In | ; ind Si ay ™ | ‘out & hatchet and placed it, edge up Curl = Detroit Tribune. A Realistic Dream. “Taking the other day, as a brinf re- | spite from labor, a little nap at my desk,’ said a man, * | dreamed thas 1 was smoking, and that [ bad swallow- ud a lot of smoke. I awoke coughing. Wasn't that kind of curions?’’'—New . York Sun a barber went a stop | further and once in awhile, after mak- | “ing a slip with the razor, wonld explain gore | his nerves arg so | oceurrence that he pre- | an unbecoming beard to | sitting down in any barber chair. —Chi- | ‘run- | of this retardation is | the friction cavsed by the tides, which | { rato explich- | changes in the eagth's An actor | Another | fourth havo a | It 15 just as | king in the play, CC COIBes ] com- | manded the monarch, with asperity, not | anmingled with ennni * Admenish then | THEAWFULBLIZZARD AN UNMERCIFUL NORSE GOD THAT RULES THE PLAINS, No Person Can Understand What Terrible Things They Are Until Te Has Seen Still His Uneongoered Enemies, nacular- designates the prairie snow | one who has not experienced it. Gen- erated in the great storm breeding re- swept on arctic blasts along the vast level reaches that stretch eastward from the Rocky mountains, with no forest to break its force, it becomes a demon of i the air, second only to the cyclone or tornado in destructiveness. The moisture iz ground as between millstones, hurl. ed with bulletlike energy over hundreds of miles of level plain, and finally, tening effects of lower latitudes, falls in bleak showers on the ranges of Texas and No Man's Land. : Lack of cheap boilding material and the brevity of the winter season on the prairies contribute to make the settler’s | cabin a poor refuge. When the blizzard t comes, every resonroe of fuel is hus- banded, and it is faced with a grim de- termination to see it through. But not ali are prepared even so well as the eeéttler. - Occasionally a belated emigrant, en ronte either to a chosen claim on ‘¥ frontier or toward the pleasantly rfmembered cast, where he hopes to find old friends and helpers, is caught by the blast. He may have a tiny gtove inside the canvas topped prai- against the power of the storm. Shel- tered! by the low bluff of some ravine or water conrss he may weather the drag- ra of suffering, but the chances ‘are that team and driver will be found a ghastly monunient to the storm king's strength, The farnier who has hurried 10 or 15 | ' miles to the nearest village to secure supplies for the impending visitation | | is often overtaken before reaching his i waiting family and perishes on the road, i for no matter how well pass. to the pupils ax well as to their parents, Rescue is lmpossible antil the lull comes, and awful possibilities Jurk in the bosom of the storm. ‘A Dakota schoolmistress failed to dismiss ber scholars in time for them to reach home and found herself and them pris- onera from a blizzard’s approach. A might and o day at least wore bafore her, dorving which her little charges must be protected Delihorately she apportioned lov fal pemintug in the ivtded the lazer boys to keep. the {ly Lorsing steadily, cul vw hon cama put ¥ bench dinner inte gor %: cha 34 i 13 s1Rat he ehildrin eried hunery and ! « the teacher to ford th vive oka ard Hous sove, oamae on 18 the settlers shovnl With morning abront at the dant orf nx wig! girl : ta wham tha children faititerd The loss among stock on tho plains by | i each blizzard is appalling. Thero is leas | | exposura of herds and flocks now than | | in earlier times, yok every season causes i ~ Ly it 2 xterm Nite the destruction of thousands of head of The great Frenchractor Febvro has an | qet1y and sheep on the ranges and in | Saveral years | | ago, during the height of the Texas cat- | { tle trade, a blizzard in western Kansas | early in Decomber destroyed more than | half of 800,000 cattld that were being | the noshelterd corrals herded on the open prairie. Atone rail way station, after tha storm, ont of 7,500 that had been pegzing be- fore the catastrophe. - Several hundred ponies and a score of herders also per ished. The blizzard is a permanent feature if thoprairic wint Nothin! s af tho prairie winter. voting ld cided climatic revaluation © the great frang many from Botter nt nigsissippt religo 1 11841 HATING pr made to with tact more gen who suffer equally with th ~The signal warning « &; graph of the storm's approach, ‘while the suttiors, hy CxXperienee, take with each season better precaution and provide more intelligently for the time of need, which is sure to come. But, with all man's care and defense, the biizzard remains spconguerod, 30 Nast randering munities re is NOT VSO0 tan ht bitter Norse god, from whose kingdom gions which is wholly and irredeemably detestable. In its forefront is apprehen- sion; at its height, terror; in its wake, desolation and suffering, sometimes death. — Detroit Free Press Cutting a Hailstorm In India. During a severe hailstorm in the Himalayas our native gardener brought ' ward, in the garden, to ‘"oué the storm,” ' as he said. Cathn, in his “North Amer foan Indians, '’' <escribes a ceremony of ‘ the Mandan Indians, in which hatohets and edged tools are sacrificed to the . ‘spirit of the waters'' to avert a recur- | rence of the great deluge, of which the | tribe has ths tradition.—Notes and Queries be One With All Man's Care, They Are The blizzard, as the plain man’s ver. | storm, is utterly ineomprehensible to gions of barren British America and! transformed into yeasty sleet by the sof- ria sthooner, but its beat can do little he knows the | { path when the blizzard rages his way is as that of the mariner without a oom. ! At the prairie schoolbounses, where | the settlers’ children are gathered from | a territory covering many miles in ev- | ery direction, the blizzard brings terror ptahit she | fivented | red now, and then the plocky | owixt their | $e iy a fF » ' Hers showed her womanliness — and | 35 0 hides wero shipped, at another 30,000. One ranchman found but 225 head alive | BUFFALO, A08rES {tis | cruel, relentless aud unmerciful as some | it | It is one of the west's posses. | pENNRY LN AN iA Hal LROAD 1 — {5 REFRATT NOV. 25, 4, Phiisfoitiin, uy Erie Rudiried Divistop i Time Tabie : f Pratus ienve Driftwood EARTWARD OVE A M~Train x dally except! Sunday, tor sunbury, Harrisburg and infermediale fli. Hons, arylving al Philadeiphia, di p New York, #98 p.m. Baitheore © av 6, Washingion, 7.0 pom. Publitzoen Peron ear from Willlarosport and passenger cmehes from Katie to Philadel pia. fp { | 3:39 P M.~- Trin 6 daily execpt Sonauy, lor. Harrisburg snd intertimidiate stations, arrive ing at Philadelplive at 4 valae, New York Ppa. ma Pub ionn sieepilag cars [rons dare Sabuty Ww FPhilmdeiphia ana New York Phil hia Prange TS CRT Tetra l © (nieuw eg andista und] TaN wm NSP, M~Train a dally for 00. Ha risburg and iuierinediste “lations, arriving Phi lw. a; New York, wisi. ir, week ald ire, mou Bundays; Me Hmore, ’ » mo Wushu Ci, Tow a wt ‘Pullman rd pastenge PE Erie and Willlamsport to Hinedet pois, 0” Ts in or Baltimore abd Wush® i will be transferred into Wass ugiow sleeper at Harrisbiarg., Passer, ‘wie TER from Erie to Philadel phiia aud W lam - port to Baltimore, : v3 WENTW AnD, 196 A. M.—Train 1, daily exces Nutiag sor bu Clermont and Yulee er ~ i ven ¥ at 340 mediate poiiia. ” hee wat Be mass \G1Aeg . . M.~Tain 11, ex Sunda Kane and FAA ci forts ol > FROM THE EABT AND SOUTH TRAIN 11 ismves Philadel ood Washington 7:30 a. 1a.; Baltimore x45 a. —- Wilkesbarre, [0:15 8 m.; dally except Say. arriving at Driftwood al 627 p. or. wit) byl man parlor car from Philadelphia > TRAIN 3 aves New YOry si 80 p mf. adeiphia, Li0 p.m ; Washiuglon,, 0:40 a Bal AL p.m. dstly arriving st Drift wood at #50 a. m., Pullioan shewpi are from Philadeiphin to Erie and from. Wash, ington and Baltimore to Wili Hl ane through er comehes from Philadel phi, to Erie, Baltimore to Williamsport, . TRAIN 1 leaves Renovo at 35 a mm. nil Sao Sunday, arriving at Drifiwoed ie JOHNSON BURG RAILROAD, (Dally except Sunday.” 19 leaves Ridgway at #0 u. r Jony ¥ ”. » I. sonbarg at #45 a. m, arriving at Clerssont § | TRA 10-40 wn. m. | TRAIN 90 leaves Clerinont at 10:30 a. j " m., a riving at Johneonba 2 1 ’ Ridgway at 12:00 x mt He's mann i Riavay AND CLEARFIELD R. # DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY § team # {MOUTHWARD. 1 AX oa § Na 10 0d RTH WARD STATIONS, PF M.¥ M. Ridgway) TTR island Kun Mill Haven Croyland Hborte Mills x Ju Hock In rd Run A , of PRARRAnE aren CEBELIEEINE Le TRAINS LEAVE RIDGWAY. Eastward 8 7:17 ». ma, 6, 1:48 p, mi. “7 : _ Westwaro Train 4, 11:50 a. 18 Truln I, 400 p, or Train & Bp. wm Train Train Train J. R. WOOD, den Pass Ax’ d PREVOST, dranrsd Mana gor. ci i ous Beech (‘reek |{ailroad. N YC & HH R RR On, a ! CONDENSED TIME TAHLE Remus Up Heat iown CS Bxp Mall Mut No No.8 Nao 85 No¥ PM PX : sx P8 vis i ¥y Ar ifatton, iN +3 50 134 Westover 1 Tie +38 ——“ ~ ; 8 2 he tx i Tn ad NAT, RETR eo YT Th ue New Miilport, Th sr 0 Fi, 4, 085, Kip Lok i3 IAT wre: MBHBICY #40 1% iD Lv . heron SNe BIIMI h, 4 1A It base (FW : bi # Lala L ¥i 1 ue Lhlaeta bie “ iT M Fried S11 IN Lv Cleartiedd Jou il 19... is Cleon rtieid HAP A AE ie 0 iearileid June Wom Lani neta Pigher. ol 10 «&........ Walhaton # $10 58 eM irrisdaie Mines w 0 HLY...... Munson... Ard "SV naar Arr 9 3 10 $A] Philipaburg {lve ® 10 Ar... ..... Munson, i HELE CRDCEES MN IW ing Pewee a Letsitlotown HNuow Nlioe Besa Creek Mill Huil PI: ire ren dR Haven, Vimngdaie | Wavne) Jersey sbore Junction’ . Lve. Willransport.. Air 12 5 Mh ba ~ n LEB gui n¥SEEED § - - “ i ; ‘ [gg Beerdom an xT mmErr 2 bea i i >Re we ! i cu|® 3, Willis port CLP ade pita, . NY vis Dang +N Y via Phil's. Arr Foust opt Liberty Sy Fe ex! tWiskaawm | IHL A B, Nun Pul man Buide and. Ph Pais Barned Mhirongh wes Clearfield eprom bay, (My) Varta iia We or iis part ts abit) Hematite A Flinn wort ae P HE £5 8 $4 Ait LR A3 - {On snd after Nov, 2b [Se seas age will arrive and depar? [tore a Hais us THAINS ARGH 35 a.m, Pun ssutawney wad Big dun BD. Falls Creek, . : Pan ssutawney and Bi us Bradtord aud dldgwe Clesmitieid sand EC uyrwenwy ie Clem field wood Cor weiss iis Pun isatiewney aud le Ra Rochester nnd daft a Panes whey aid lem rneiad wid TRAINS EMA RT . Fally Creek, Clem Their smooth fo wes Vide Brim fond, wahio and aw ister Panasialiwie) wid Big dw Pun asats wren gil Bie Bae . Fully Creek. Clem iin: ali UORTWeEESY Bis, Hidg way anid Hin iboaa POnXstis wae’ wos Big oo Che rtteld ind Phila, See v0 wimweny, Pun xsatawney aud Big Lian PRESSDREOTS wiv regeniiond bo giao pefure entering te comm AL oN 10 cente will be onliomted Hy eT fares arv paid cay tring : a Hoeket Ofteeds mint THOwsM ie Bie Reds . gr hot idan ake =e pep Irn ROW IX Aly Mans urvslsvilie iat ional Fargo Crs W lien Yin where Amey 0 Tat Wee gy erg. PRN ii Jin ol ite airy on Molde WC Tasso R. G. Matthews. Gen vay a Phen tor ehl xy whi igi fad ih i taal”! Per Apes, Hucaonle: N rig NY
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers