‘Daisy perbups dying." in pi § we mms 2 A ce en TTC OUR CASTLE IN SPAIN. Ths street's bleak and Jong, and the rain’s The! dye Hwa , grown weary and old; They Im in the wind and rain. AR, fio! I'm st home in our castle in Spain. In the glow of the firelight you stand by me I flickers and plays an your shadowy hatr. Outeilie, in the city, I seek you in vain, But still you are found in our castle in Spain. : 1 hear not the roar of the traffic; I hear ‘Your acoent s» low, and so strange, and so clear— The voice that could bid ome forever to remain With you in our castle—our castle in Spain. Phut castle's so fair, so enchanted the ground, The springtime abides in it all the year round. There lives never wither, as bopes never wane : : Tha lime trees ave Bloor bs Spain. Yet the winds that blow o'er the whole earth | TEDW, "Amd the stream ‘neath its ramparts has flowed fhe world through, Anil read in your eye a love deeper than pair— Love stringer tham death in our castle in » Bpan! Wherever you wander, ah, you I love best, When you from our refuge realities wrest, I wonder if you are as glad to regain Our fortre=, cur haven, our eastle in Spain — May Kendall in New York Ledger BENEATH THE ROUGE ‘A womnan sat at tier dressing table, in front of the mirror, and dabbed cheeks that were livid with patches to pink ‘eolor. - Her maid folded and put away sone drapery that had been flung down an the bed and watched ber mistress furtively. Down stairs there were prep : arstions for a big party, and the daylight shone on the silver and orchids om the dinner table much ae it shone on the face of the master of the house, with the odd pucker of discontent between his brows, ready and waiting. in the pruotty drawing room. It shone on those obstinate blotches of color, which had | to be renewod so often; in order to hide the wife's ashen skin. : Mrs. Marston had run away from her first husband and been the subject for a fainods divorce case. The companion of | ber flight, Lewis Marston, bad married ber directly the divorce was made, and a certain less particular section of soci- ety consented to overlook her lack of marals #o lorig as she had a good chef. and gave amusing parties, There was one child of her first mar- riage left in its father’s care, and this little girl of ten summers was lying dangerously ill. The glass reflected eyes that were stained and wild. She pen oiled a black line under the lower hid, and she thought as she did so: “They cught at least to let me seo ber. To be turned away from the house Was cruel, bot Charles was always bard, Be will never forgive, and then that ‘other woman will be bending over her bed, will listen to her poor little weak voice, will nurse her and will make mach of ber, will take my place.” She blackened one eyebrow, and a tear fell splash on to one of the silver brushes. : “Ouiy just to bave secu her for one minute—crept in like & stranger and looked at her face. Three years rgo!l Only three ycars sinco she saw nie, and yet they will have taught bic to forget. My darling little girl, my own little girl! O God, belp me!’ fibe began on the other eyebrow, bot her band shook. “What a fright 1 shall look tonight! Marie, bring me all wy diamonds. 1 can't do without them, my eyes look so dull. Bother this rouge; it wou't stick on, There, I'll make it somehow.’ 8he thought as the maid fastened » glitter:ng tiara in her hair that if the child died that night she could have no means of bearing, and she suddenly started up and sat down at a writing ta- ble. Ehe wrote to an old friend, a mau who hud stuck to ber first husband and eut her dead when she - passed bim in the street, and the letter ran thas: Dear Bin Josin—~Cour pity's sake, know hiw Daisy ix. I am half mad w Ahsan. fety. Fiemse let the pain I sm eullering ex ens the Hberty 1 take fn troubling you DororHY MARSTON She sent the maid with the letter at oboe, with a command to find Eir John Deane and get an answer if pussible. Then, with a walk like a qoecn, in a dress from Yorth, with her beddaanond- ed head and the roses on ber checks, she descended to the drawing rovin to re ceive her guests. ; “My dear, you're late,’ said her hus band. : - Bbe bad long ceased to expect any companionship or eympothy from hin, 80 she spswored careles: ij: “Am I? Jt doesn't matter, as no one has arrived.” Soe “But it does matter''— he began, whe the door opened to admit a guest. There was 8 young guardsman with a fair face who thought Mrs. Mui:ion a “good gort’’ and flirted with her ose perately in ap . elementary fa -hion. There was a society doctor, plapsible manner, gray hairs aud ken enjoyment of the symputuy und inter - est of pretty women. Hewat next stout ‘ Jady with a eonteated smile aud pluad blue eyes. She was Mrs. Marston's Lust friend and a little deaf. Most of tre ‘women were fast, and most of the wes were horsy, and they all agreed at dine per that they had never seen their hoot "#88 looking so well. : : “We shall meet at Hurlingham to- morrow,’ whispered the gunridom. o. He was a nice boy, ail 10 do? ded Dorothy Marston when hr own six re- * wiled her. ; She thought, “To Hurliugbuwm wud “TH come. I candrive you a, Ha Yke. You had better lui. : “Charmed, of course,’ The mun on her right a « Bad won money on. ti fancied she heard her mo the bull, and she wondércc surved with any news as +: “I made u little. Lewis anlucky. Be insisted on Lila wa Deu: tly outs der.” Then she Innghed, sinn pagne and glanced at our castle in | es frie with a | mare way down th { woman at the other eid cangizt the look and hated her for it. The recipient was the girl's husband. ‘‘And pow tell me some delightfully paughty scandal,’ Mrs. Marston said to the horsy man. ‘The latest and best you know.’ : “Mrs Graham?’ “Oh, she’s an old story.” “Give you my honor—new edition’ — “‘Really! Go on."’ “Warned off the bockstalle Well, I'm not a bowskstall.”! As be paused she thought: “Marie * ean't have found Sir John. I wonder if they have a good nurse. They might i have let me see ber ju-t for oné moment. Children rarely take to a steproother, but Daisy used to love every one." “8g Mrs. Graham has even overstep- ped the bounds of modernity,’ she said aloud. “Taken the barrier in one stride.” “Bravo, I am always grateful to a ‘woman who gives me something notori- - ous to talk about.” And she thought: ‘1 wonder if she suffers much. I wonder if sbe is oon scious. They said, ‘No Yeiwer.' Could that mean she was worse? How all these people would chatter and whisper if they knew the situation tonight! Not one of them would by sarry—yes, Hilda would, poor, frightened, little woman, . becanse her baby died, aithotgh I do flirt with her husband. And my baby— 0 God, how bappy I was over Daisy! - and now—it's my own fault for leaving i her, but how could I know she was go- jug to be ili7" : Nl ~The room, with its brilliant lights, | ita sound of voices and its Moghter faded . from sight. In imagioation she was car ried far away to the little bedroom pext the nursery in the old house. She bent over Daisy, who slept and dreamed of mamma— ihe real mamma, nos her pew one—and she said to the cold, stern faces around hur: ‘Have pity; let me kiss her ounce. T won't distarb ber. | 1 won't wake ber.’’ Perhaps they might | comsent and let her creep away, having geen her baby and kissed her, as in the old bappy days question and replied at random: “Yes, [| am going to act as a Greek goddess It's a queer kind of play, but | ope can da snything nowadays, and Lady Lane acted in it, so that makes the whole thing so eminently rvespuctable. She died of dullness, poor old dowd. Her husbani’s a nice boy--he got me into the show. She stretched out Ler hand and pulled an orchid to picces, and the room faded from sight again. She stood near the little bed. Daisy | was awake and knew her. Thay weren't angry; they wore kind, they let ber hold her close, let ber stay to nurse her, Jet ber sovihe her only ass motber, | even the most degraded, can, Charles forgave for the baby's sake and let her | stay just till she got well Sha pulled herself together and rose to leave the room. In all ber dreams she , pever saw a s3d picture, save that it was ead to seo tho child suffer. Of eourse she was cortain to get well As the fontman blinded her the coffee when up stairs she nsked carelessly: “Has Marie retrirned?”’ “An hour azo, mum,” be said She started. With no letter for me?" “No, moum, She said not.” “All right. Mrs Barker has changed Cher mind and will take some milk Hand it to br, please.” So she oon ‘t heur thus wight. The potion minds Ber jer fair, placid friend shouted some gossip in ber | ears as fs the manner of deaf people The prentiemen jnned them, and asinger sat down at the piano. Tha song over, amifl loud a) plause a footmian opened the door to ait o gentlemsan. He had , asked to ses Mr. Marston alonc, but the man bad binnderesd, misunderstood hin and anpounoed Li as one of the even gs guests : “ir dobn Duane T= i ; y, RORY frie qd rea t ¥ fret bios, reckless, anid she knew why be was there as well as if he had - spoken He murmured some excuse and drew ber hostond out of the room. Thu whole place swam belore her €hn wis struck pamb. Only sub ty could have furced him to visit to iin Daisy dead! Bbe had read it fy the troobie io bis face. Daisy dead, dead! Flow cuen little baby cold and diad, aod Lo wot there to bold ber in ber: ., to Kiss ber just once note, to wi Pt hr. {po Her fricusd waa speaking She strug. gleil ba to conscicosness, to bear her say in ber ond, blatant voice: ‘Fancy Sir John ming to visiv you again, Dolls! What a triumph for you to- iy roomfoel of people heard, : 1 at Mr. Marston, Bho smiled fairete: tha eo'or in her checks Md po: vary, por were ber eyes dim but hur Lips, for von had tnricd bine Li LS: she a» might haat bad “How fanny yo triding tonal t ~e i yu i YOu: ¥. £3 nmph Tie Telephane In Korea. In bi: work, “‘liores,’” Mr. Hepiy v ! a tosis at 3 53 Tes orf i Borie months bo re hes nw foreigner pad vi ing url Ts fro 72 w The } $ os bof 3 1 tmmerirotoox, al great ug by ta ne f the areen doy rger with the cap Mary hones a day were swat by his jeajesty nod his stening at trend of thatele 4 A wRWHR was kept all ase tha queen dowater should aol bir ue cual sleep. Bat age, or ax und, OF & murmor, heard The ! ug was disgust- o telephure was vouden ned as v his majesty of Cho sen. shont ening talile. A tiroid little . i She beard the guardsman 8k her a . ¢ircumstances would permit, - might suppose, because he was a partic wife of his old ea THE FRENCH WILL REMAIN. Boecont Statistics Upset the Calculations of German and English Prophets. It would be a misfortone for the world {f the French people were to disappear from it. We have beard for a good while of tho amall birth rate in France, under which the births per year were Jess finmercus than the deaths, and we ‘have seen computations by statisticians that if this disproportion between the births ans deaths were kept up fors certain period of years thers would not be a Frenchman on the face of the earth at the end ‘of that pericd. We wonld have. been sad over this prospect if we had believed it could ever be realized, for the world would be flatter than it is if the French were bot in it. A crowd of Germans or Englishmen or even Irishroen could never make vp for the Jost French. x We are happy to be abla to rélieve any apprehension which may have been creatsd by the statisticians. France ber self, ever ready for any emergency, bas some to the relief of the worid. The French government has just issued the population returns of 1893 (we ought to have thoss of 1804 by this time), and. they are joyful. There was an excess of births over deaths in the year 1533, pot a heavy excess, but still encouraging The number of French in France at the end of the year was greater by 7,146 than at the beginning The record looks all the better when we compare it with that of the previous three years, during which the births fell 80,000 behind the deaths. It is a record which gives evi- dence that the tide has turned, and, if _Jast year was as good a year as the pre- vious one, the growth of population must be such as to knock out all the computations of the pessimistic statisti cians, most of whora, by the way, are either Germans or Eaglishmen. It is first rate pews for France. The ‘army must be kept ap. It is good news for the world. We conld pot afford to Jose the Freoch. How dull cid Eorope would be without French politics and playwriters and presidents and artists and novelists and women, without = French esprit or penses or olan or fa- tigue or other things that belong almost exclusively to France! France and the Frepch aro greet. The Gearmansg, English, Italians, West Al. ricans and others had better 1 tindalge in any hope of the disappearance of the French. — New York San. "AN ABSURD OLD LAW. It Stood In the Way of the Recovery of the Body of One of the Fibe Victims. "Dickens, who so often studied with delighted interest the applications of English law to particular cases, would have found a sabject worthy of his grimmest humor in the fact, cabled the other day from London, that wien the master of a fishing smack, cruising near where the Elbe went down, saw floating in the water a dead body, which was doubtless that of a victim of the great disaster, he made no effort to rescue it fron the waves and carry it ashore for identification and burial. - Instead he sailed past and away from the doleful bit of flotsam as quickly a8 308, 4s one plarly hard hearted and cold blooded mariner, but because ‘recently, alter landing a body, he had been forced to pay the faneral expensex.’’ Curious ns that experience had been and delight folly ilinstrative as it was of “crown- er's quest’’ wisdom, the captain had no inclination to repeat it. One lesson bad beet enough to teach bim the great principle that common sense calinot bay allowed to interfere with consi: sucylm the enforcement of a parliamentary act, and what in comparison With that isthe continued agopized nncertainty of some German wife or mother’ —New York Tires. ; ; A 810,000 Bachelor Dance, : Of course everybody is talkihg abons the Hitchooek-Balkley dance, Iz is said to huve cost those young bachelors about $10,000, and, as there were only about 200 people present, each person bad to absarb about $30 worth of pleasure and refrexmnent It was anounced that every ove could order what he or she chose for supper. It was pot surprising then to see terra- pin und canvasback docks washed dosen with rare old clarets and champagnes costing #8 a bottle Horse of the dudes either deliberately ar stupidly misunderstood blinche idea of supper, and, when the waiters came to them for orders, asked for new dress suits or diamond scarf- pins. : : : I should think thas one dance like. this on soch an elaborate scale would last society for a long time Like overything else remarkable, Aladdin's warvelous lamp gets wre some when swung aroiand too promiscu- ously. —Choliy Knickerbocker in New York Recorder Worked at Gieeley's Elbow. Johoa Barstow, ntidonbtedly ¢ compositor in the coun- srghite.sixth birthday Cont. , recetitly. His eye s Ye #18 1. his Hired by age, and bu; ws, Uncle Joshua waa Cardeley’'s most lulimate friends He mt type at Mr Greeley's eh throneh the Harrisou aud Ty- ; 1 reentis with pri the two raced to eat’? >is ote uf Fh ie tog Wo tue Cheaper Thun Water. A Greek jJonrnal states that so great is the quantity of wine pow in stock oi the island of Cyprus that last yuil's crop Te aiug a glut on the market, wud if we are to believe further accounts wine there has become cheaper than wa “ser. In the village of Tschakistra a nicl- chunt who was baving a house built is said to bave provided tbe mawons with | wine instead of water to mix with the | mortar. — Public Opinion. { the carte Ln Wanted! : People to know that C. M. Letts is | the leading Contract Painter and Paper Hanger north of Jobnstown. Best of references furnished. -60t2 } DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cures scalds, burny, indolent sores and never : fails to cure piles. C. W. Hodgkins. STATEMENT OF DITOR PATTON BOROUGH FROM i i i November 20, 1893, to March o 1 CO 11th, 1598. Recsipls. From A. J. Jeckson, Burgess, Fines and flieenss Magee Avy, mwer acount F.R. Barker, io. Tr. Ligoor Lis Iaiiasle | . Testi Bomigh Bonds WwW. J. Donnelly, Bungess, fines amd Hewnses ; R. Somervilie, Attorney, Bom, board walks acct. ; Carroll Twp, Balance due Boro poet. road fond, RRR Fas. Mellon, J, PP, fines is “ Colt on Tax Dup: is ; Xm Bal. due Trensd eer Tetad.. : . RANT al Exprnditares. fides pa Ad meet street work * 245 H ” - gmber sine work 88 rrading iron bridge, Magee Ave - #41 3 wwer pipe Boro Tis wT pe, Avy work on Mages Avy wewer Police services Boroongh Clerk ORL for street mm ps Printing and Pub Ondinances. | aunt Ballding snd fuarn- wehing enuncil cham ber and kwkap it pay ment on Boro ust R. 1. Goff, Engineer and map of Boro : ad ORB Swope Baro . Aorney ries ui “me year rent | fr walter plugs iw “' Pire PE 150 © Fees pald Treasdoer “ehnl Board n Foww pai ied WJ, fea nelle Retvnl Fund CO Paanation set Mage Foe on” Tntorssst ofr Honeds fora, irders set Tr 13d 4 t3, Mise, Teiie . 3 H Mod Orme Berard of Hloeadl Prurdons, Phgest and “a » va i . Hecording Pavsogb dom Aw] sheryl, 2 Pe ent BC Tore ers GRITS. : SAY mi LB pinks 1 SAVE ww ion Tota! ; : Liabilities, Busine Pad 3 rossuly fmt re @ Mtl Ponds omstanding Total Re scirees, gncollectat on Tax Dup. IN 5 hig sal wider peda wierd 2nd linn f the Pir ¢ examined Poa THe sELiiae rivet and ‘wo Papers For nly$1.%° THE COURIER is pleased to apnounce its clubbing arange- ments with : The Pittsburg Post the great home newspaper of Pennsylvania, and to persons who want the best daly or semi-weekiy paper published in the city, we recomraend The Post. : The DAILY POST, a large eight-page paper, and THE COURIER one year each for $3.00. The. price of The Post alone is $3.00. Send us your order at once and get sev- en papers a week for the price you formerly paid for one. The SUNDAY POST, twenty pages every Sumday, containing as much reading as any of the monthly maga- zine, and THE COURIER one year each for only $2.25. The Semi- Weekly Post, and THE COURIER vear caclr for only. : Just think of 1t, The Post twice a week, 1d yout county paper | Hie . ST1.50. : : the price of one. us for sample a ow R 1. GEORGE, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, GALLITZIN. PA, Solicitor for German National B. & 1. association. WM DAVIS, — Attorney and Counselor at Law, EBENSBURG, PA. All legal business promptly attended to. Office in Armory Hall i wt pO AS A - AUGUST K. HUBER, STONE MASON, Mellon Avenne, PATTON, PA. 1 am prepared to do dll kinds of work in my fine at rusonable prices. Contracts aiken wid extirnates Nu ralshend when desinad, Satisfection gaaraniocd. Give mes cali, : WwW. E. Probert, mm ARTIRTIC Exp. ¥ Met? Moss Barber and Hair Dresser, IN ALL 17S BRANCHES. £2 XEXT DOOR TO POSTOFFICE. P. P. Young & Bro., and Retail Inter (a Ww ~ FRESH MEAT OF ALL KINDS. Whos bs Bologna, Lard, Ftc. FIFTH AVENUE, Patton, Pa. OF PATTON. Patton, Cambria Co., Pa. CAPITAL PAID UP, $50,000.00. Accounts of Corportions, Firms Individa- alk and Banks reeeivid apon the most vor. Ble terns consistent with safe and cotmervative banking : Steamship tiekets for ale Sr all tw leading ines, Foreign Drafts payabis in the principal cities of the Old ward All corppspondence will have personal Aftesition, Interest paid on thine oir prompt ard faorpmenile A. EB. Parroxn, President Wat, HH. SANFORD, Cashier. ry tw ; gS a) . x z & * ed 2» i 4 1 ea ial 4 ” oe ¥ > 4 Tm oe Seating ARSC So + : > bo Le he". tin wa it 5 i Sd MONEY _ § Wager" . ; wl, pr ANG OR GUR PEALE yom spachlaes chonper ilin wot elnew Bore, The Xi W¥ curisest, bul Wwe make casa vas he (MIMAXK, IDHAL ether Filet Sew Pal Nteksi BewioT Ba eines for3liOun a Card oir our a, end yet fre Lg dniRid ¥ Feoaweee Jealivor wil ive tt. We ahallenges tha wea stance ww BETTER 450.90 3 Lav aie Sor 350.00, 000 } oie Tor $i Bowl y (ross Gee OF OUP ALCL 5, © youve wr RTT f Loco RuHIal dali. A. “ X B.R. & The Short | Bead ivavt, Saiamas : agra Falls, am witli in iw Regan Un had aller Nov, 3 IM, peewee Drains will arrive $154 jo fsa t oy ¢ ih Sration, daily, Feet Suaodny Noinh ds Eiko DUANE wand BOchostor adie ar Brockwavyille, Ridew Tohnwonbirg VW Jewett, Bradford, Salanmaca Rovhoslier oon : P&E train 3 fer Wileax Corry, sand Ei m3 A Bk Aeeh ew, Buy Ran, it am A Jonson burg, P, Time Table. ay pe ¥ = fet lows Fanti, i . RI A Ware, Warnes wry rtaods ton For § vd Puaaxsalawney, i frond Bradford rem «wad Vii wermned li {ela Pho xsutawney rvs LRN Ridgway, Johasoniairg Bradfornt 310 pope. Madl For Po Punssulaw nes, aiid by Tralos Ar TARY MR XARTAW EEL, NO ston sd Ta mandation from Pan Ceutawney: nig p C. & M. Division. ¥iunt Yop. tL, Bett FALLS CREEK AND CLEARFIELD Ar Train hartield wil Dron ii . a iv ‘ P Haven Jorary Shore, Witham phia and New York, aad bas Pullman Sleep ing Car from Dubleis (o Phd Yelp “Thousand mile HeRets al two conte pot Fond Dor parasesanls Betws fi sagt 1 1 ! RG. Marrurws, EowarpU Lave Lahde, Saji, i Pus Hochestor N.Y Raxh | Sor Passengers are reguesied Ww tickets before ctiteriog the ons, AR exee { charge of Ten Cents will be collected hy Con- Nix 74 connects ot FiestNation'IBank ==. o. | ductors when fires ae pad ob trains, from adl | | aun where n Tioket Offer is maintained Lt Beech Creek Railroad Hom York Central § Hodson River BR. R. Losses. CONDENSED TIME- TABLE. Rend ap ’ Ppmpm : 1% Ar PATTON Lv LL © Westover W012 Mabaffer #215 1 WK orrinwer | TGAZEAM. Kerrmons in New Midipwort Crlnretse 3 ¥8 | i wl 5 “a ¥ =» = Pr | Mitebedls ? sok i 1 GEAR Aad Gr Rn nEgdnn Lit At | B® 1 EB Bl NRERS CLEARFIELD. ¥ an | ew nl BR 13 BR St WIN ar Clearfield Junetion Ly B40 GE Ld. Wosd bgad wooo : wi. eh og2 Wallnewidon 7 0 Dorvisdaie aes 7 0 Ia, #55 ix wm Ar 4 Mourns % AT Pit! FINE" 12 At PRELIPSEL Ha ix ay + oe wy i. Winhnm rrabk L¥ NOW mate Hepa it Lvex [4K HAVEN Yokdhaeiae se | WAN Tie - Fea funetion MST AT. IZ SH 0S . i yy ura P ! t . poor PW AY W i La, M2550 5 327.2 ai LA ii zwei TR ¢ = ant Noi Na ” BB 0 0 LM Ero AM AM Fores hg “ #h ™ Fost of fabegty Std 3 i te. ania) THIN. mm series Through Pullin siveplog Car between Da- Mode Tovar lt, all interamwsdiate podnds, and Phitbidednhin ia oth dinetions daily peda y, on ruins Nix vial eA CONNPOCTHONS Willlamisgort with Philwdedphiie as Pooadding Ratined, AT Jomesy shores: Junition Jd) Brook Rajiway for ants in New York State and the Wimt. Af i Fadl with Contra! Batlroad of Pennsy is vans At Phitinsbres Perinsivanis Katirond, AL Cieardeld with Butiaio, Rochester wl Piteshary Ballwal Ni Mash fey wml Patton with Samhbrin gnd Clearfield division AF Pennsylvania miooed. At Malisfley with Pennkvivania ant North Western mitrond. A, 6G, PALMER. F. KE. HERRIMAN, superintendent, Gen] Passenger Agent, : Philndelphin, Pa P.R. R. Time Tables. i594, Revs with . Mais Later 1 od 4) Vastwani. sep, Shoe Fapross A frosonis Aoeonpodiation Tran EXpanows TH Alfons Aeon Sail Express, daily Phitadeiphilg BE xpos Loshinsiow sn Ai Paeitle Bx pve Way Posse nner, aii, Ma Pricey, os : Fast Line, dail RBs LOWE Aodain., wie Kdais CAaMini A and LEARFIELEY : & and. Maorotng free for ENthon and LU resson ene Masbiatiey ad wr doy ba dome, dw: Westover, Hastings: oid Hastiogs ©8k TA Patton, TIN Brad Cavior, TO4, arfving at Afternoon treln for Patton « Mehmifey at 20 pom; La cas, ard Westie or, 281 Garway, (or Hast. Ths! 287 Hastings, 247; tsmrway, for Cresson R10: Patton, ha Hradiey Junetion, SE Ray ar RE, vison al $315. frarwny, for ress Jaci, 7 resend gt el aon goad peat len. y i yr i ervivingr ut Northward Morning tno leaves Crosson for Mahaffey at Ray sor, oni red ley Juntion GA Pals won, Ke2s Omri for Histings: 10043 Hastings, for Mo bua tT wr famrway, for Mabmiley: Piadh: Westaavoer, 14.0% LL } i gr, BTTIVING at Maha vaoat | Aran rit Mushy Lawes re § Ran cil Buadiey Jilin, ay Au Kavior, so Pation, » 10 (sar + Hastings, dor Muha for Mahaffey: T01 West. dus «1, arriving at Msabhatlesy wis vs fier Wests £23 UA Cg WEY ANA EXTENRION Faditaurd. EE es at as spe iagler ada Carrodlilown coin With tain fod Crenesin oo Cherryisree at 258 . Ror, oak Cartoillown few te With train for Crys Mik ives Westwind xy Junction for Carnditown eesd, 108% irnatwboro, LSE, grriving at Ried Ley vex Breede y Jusetion fa tarredlzowny Roasd, #17 rues, 827, armviog at wishing Hmneh tins mye veonadly al TID a aa, BESE a Je ese or EL i pe innts on the arsival of al mek West, both orising and agvaly or Hi0 Eifthy. spade. ty tie A. WW. Is JK. Win Geneial Mp. i Massages ; P & N W Railroad. Rawat wy flosad down’ hy, ax it “ N+ » No in i : om nm i We ar Panysatawn’yl iv 5 1 : Mic sees 5 58 wn Mahatfev! 2405 aM Pay Joan 15 nS Beswindale oH A Lrvionn 4 a8 B- Oued peoartd 1 i 4 henvilsn ily HW i iv RBullwoesd ar 11 1 nee With Buffiio Rochester and ; Fo 2With Bewel Creek madirosd. mitt and Clearfteld milroad. 1With arthoud milroad, AWith Penns sued, 3 Brash = Trains aves Medios phell at Hr® am and Be pom sees from hen Camplsedl ot 7 miioad arrive and ay follows: Eastward, 750 IN BM and 9 M, BIR TAT and R08 pom Dy, Rupr, Beiiworady Pa. 13 THE BEST. FIT FOR A KING. 3S. CORDOVAN, ; FRENCH & ENAMELLED CA trains W sot Wind 3 x $33.30 Fine CALF &iGAARDR are? * 3.89 POLICE, 3 sues. \ | 22% WORKiNGMEy: EXTRA Fink “$2 $1.7 BoYS SCIOLSHOER BRO . C ver One Miltion People wear the ? orl) W.L.Douglas $3 & $4 Shocs All uur shoes are equally satisfactory The Tua the Dest value for the proney. They equal custom thoes in style and fit. io wearing qualities are I » mel hymen poform secstamped on sole. Fiov 1 ty Sy evved over other metiag i yous wealer Caanst supply you we can, Sold by Seale MIRKIN & KUSNER M AHAFFEY HOUSE Mahaffey, Clearfield Co., Pa. A wommodations Arsteclass, Best of Liquors purchase aid Wines at the tar. Stabling stiached. GBORGE FERGUSON, : Prop'r. otf anne a oa DOE + in Effect fob £1898 as . : ¥
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers