A ——— a La we SCHOOL SHOES. - You can Fit Your In School Shoes, The Kind that Chil dren Out Stand the Knocks, At Trifling Expense. If you but ¢ mbrace the golden opportunities now ready to be harvested. All styles, sizes and prices. We bought them right and will sell | them right. George F. Streit, FARMING N NOTES of Interest to the Farmers Who3Read the Patton “Courier.” ‘Boilgd turnips are excellent for the hens. = There are said to be 52,000 beekeepers | in England and Wales. To keep moths out of the hives make ‘the entrance as small as possible. The average farm horse suffers more from poor care than he does from bard work. ‘The farmers who have held on to their breeding cattle are about to reap their reward. Cut out and burn the dead canes from among the raspberries and black- | berries. Save the ears from the largest and earliest maturing corn plants for next year’s seed. A good crop of strawberies next year depends largely on stirring the soil now and keeping the jweeds down. The balky horse can often be cured of this trick by any simple device which may distract his attention for the moment, thereby causing him to! forget his whim. Once in the morning is often enough to water house plants, and let the water be about the temperature of the room. Setting pots in dishes of water is not a good phn, as the roots become saturated and have a’ tendency to rot. All . water should be applied at the surface. Isinglass, Mr. ‘McCalmont’s ‘great | ‘great race horse, who is about to be pus to the stad, will command 300 guineas, the highest price ever asked in Eng- land. The £57,384 he won during his career of four years were made in only twelve races. ] Children, especially mants, are soon | run down with cholera infantum or “summer complaint.” ' Don’t wait to determine, but give DeWitt’s Colic - and Cholera Cure promptly, you can rely on it. Use no other. C. W. Hodgkin. : ; Marriage Liceases. ‘The following marriage licenses were | issued by the Clerk of the Orphans’! Court for the week ending Thursday September 19, 1885: C. A George and Maggie Kelly, Michael F. Garman, Johnstown, Sadie Johns, Ninevah, Westmoreland county. . Charles Bock and Bertha Hohn, Johnstown. Frank J. Sloan and Maggie Broghan, ‘Johnstswn. i Frank Litzinger and Margaret Dun- | lap, Patton. _ Hurry Wheeler and Annie B. Cann, | Edwin H. Philips, Jeffries, Clearfield | county, and Susan B. Herdman, Johns- town. : Timothy J. Sullivan and Nellie E. Marlow, Johnstown. John Brophy, Mary Madden, Dean Station. Calvin D. Mock, East Conemaugh, | and Lettie Wallace, Johnstown. John Smith and Clara McGough, F. J. Veigle, Lilly, and Annie Sloan, | Washington township. Thomas J. James, Johnstown, and | Annie B. Sellers, Cramer Indiana Josiah township, and Myrtle Gels, rellville. ¥ w. Marsh, Lower Yoder Mor- | want a reporter? Connellsville, and | © SELF DEFE NSE. The law Relating Thereto Laid Down by the Supreme Court. A United States district judge in Arkansas instructed a jury that every- where except within his own house the law recuires a man to ran away and do his best to escape from an assailant be- fore killing him. The judge further said that when assaulted on his own premises, but outside of hig house, a man must show his sense of danger by efforts to escape before his plea that he killed his assailant to save himself from great bodily harm can be accepted. This instruction was handed down from ancient times when weapons of assanlt consisted of knives, bindgeons, swords, etc., which an active man had some chance of escaping. But it is not applicable to these days of revolvers and winchesters, whose bullets no man can dodge or outrun, and the United States supreme court has sent it to the black letter lnmber garrot. The man sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment by the Arkansas judge obtained from the suprerae court an or- der for a pew trial under a new instruc- tion. This new instruction declares that wherever ‘a nian may be, if he has a right to be there and if! he has not him- self provoked the assaclt, the law justi- fies him in standing his ground and killing his assailant provided the prov- able circumstances are such as to satis- fy a jury that he had reasonable grounds for believing and acted on the belief that the killing was necessary to protect. himself from great bodily harm. Putting any further limitation on the right to kill in self defense would abol- ish it altogether. Arkansas is only one of the many states in which a man may have to decide very hastily whether he sm —————— shall be tried for killing a fellow citi- zen or let the fellow citizen be tried for killing him. In these cases, with his attention excitedly fixed on his assail- ant, he has no time to get legal advice or to study the necessities of the situa- tion through the eyes of bystanders. “Court and jury will do that afterward, and he is under restraint enough when he knows that in. saving himself from the peril of the moment he incurs the further peril'of having to satisfy a jo~— that his act as justified by the circum- stances. ~—New York Werld. sas angoimeiamt FASHION IN OLD JERUSALEM. The Jewesses of Ancient Times Were Gor- ++ geousty Arrayed 1 Ags far tack as seven centuries before the Christian era there were very gayly dressed women in Jerusalem. The . Prophet Ezekiel tells of them. They had garments of silk adorned with broidered | work. Their bodies were swathed in fine . linen. They had shoes of badger skin. They wore ornaments of gold and sil- ver, rings in the ears, bracelets on the | wrists, a coain around the neck, a jewel over the brow and a crown upon the "head. The prophet speaks of the earrings : ' which were worn by the women of Je- ' rusalem, but these ornarnents were worn | by Jewesses ages before the time of Ezekiel, even in the days of Moses and - earlier yet. There were earrings among the other gifts in the oblation give to | Moses, as described in the book of Num- bers. The first Biblical reference t« them is in the part of Genesis which tells how Rebekah obtained as a gift a ‘‘golden earring of half a shekel weight’’ from Abraham's servant, who ‘put it . upon her face.’’ At a later period th patriarch Jacob procured all the ear- rings which belonged to his household and hid them under an oak tree. Sub- sequently to that time earrings are fre- ‘quently spoken of in the Bible. Even Job, the patient man of Uz, must have owned a lot of them in the latter part of his life, for whea all his brethren and all his sisters and all his acquaintances came to comfort him ander his afflic- tions ‘“every one of them gay © him an earring of gold.’ In the very early periods of Jewisk history women seem to have been as fond of dress aud decorations as the are in modern times. When the daugh- ters of Jerusalem were appareled and bejeweled in the way described by ! Ezekiel, their garments and ornamen’. must have been nearly as expensive a- those of the grand dames who now shine in society. The wearing of ‘divers col- ors,’’ however, does not seem to have been a mark of honor. —New York San. In the Wrong Place, Lawley (expert shorthand reporter }— . I say, James, the boy from the newspa- per office has called for the report of that lecture. Is it finished? James (a novice)—All but a short sentence in the middle of it, and I can’t | for the life of me make Sut from my notes what it is. Lawley—Oh, just put in “great ap- plause’’ and let it go. ! : James acts on the suggestion, and the lecture is sent for publication with’ . the doctored part reading: ‘‘Friends, I will detain you but a few moments longer. Great applause.’ '— Exchange. Just the Man Wanted. : Applicant—I understand that you Editor—Yes, I am in want of a man | to do the verbatim work. Are you a | shorthand writer? Applicant—No, sir. Butl am a rapid writer. I used to be an actor and have | | had experience in writing stage letters. Editor—Ab, you are just the man we want !—-Bosten Traveller. ———— ——— p— Beer In Atlanta. Smith—It is understood that the | | breweries have engaged a carload of | frogn. Brown—For what purpose? | Smith—Becaunse they're 80 full of | hops. — Atlanta Constitution. | Did His Work Well. - Bootblack—Dis yere business mighty hard on me eyes. Customer—On your eyes? Bootblack—Yes, + Yer see I puta sech a dazslin . ‘ine on de shoes it hurts ‘em. —Chioago Record. is drawn QUEER ANSW ANSWERS. wo | TOBACCO avd clear They ‘Came From x Children of the City of 1 The finest line in Patton at Wisdom. ~ Since wit has been defined by Noah | Webster as ‘* the felicitous association of | objects not asually conne cted 80 as to produce a pleasant surprise,”’ may not : 1 the pupils of some of Boston's public | schools, who gave the following answers | to their examination questions, lay claim | to it? ‘The record as here given is bona fide, having been read during the grad- mation exercises of one of the leading grammar schools of this city: First.—Who were the pilgrims? Second. —Name a domestic useful for clothing and describe its hab- its? The ox. He don’t have any habits | because he lives in a stable. Third. —If you were traveling across the desert, where would yon choose to rast? 1 would rest on a stool Fourth. —Mention five races of men. Men, women, children and babies. ot dirty, filthy set who lived under the cground. : animal | Fifth. — Describe the white race and chew that it is superior to the other | races. A white man will. nod at you when Le meets you on the street. Sixth. —Of what is the surface cf the earth ooinposed? Dirt and people. Seventh. — Name a fruit that has its seeds on the ontside. A seed cake.’ Eighth. —Name five forms of water. Hot water, cold water, fancet water, well water and ice water. N inth. -~Name and locate the tive senses. The eyes are in the northern part of the face and the month in the southeim. : Tenth. ——Who were the mound build- ers? FHistory cannot answer these ques- tions. Science only can. Eleventh. —Define flinch and use it in a sentence. Flinch, to shrink. Flan nel flinches when it is washed. Twelfth. —By what is the earth sur- rounded, and by what is it lighted? It is surrounded by water and lighted by gas and electricity. : " Thirteenth. —Name six animals of the arctic zone Three polar bears and three seals, Fourteenth. — What is yeast? Yeast is estimates furnished swhe nn desired. G. J. FITZPA TRICKS | Restaurant on Magee avenie, P. R. R. depot. MEALS AT ALL HOURS, near M AHAFFEY HOUSE Mah: iffey, Clearfield Co., Pa. Accommodations Arst-class. Best of L Aso and Wines at the bar, Stabling alte ‘hye GEORGE FERGURON, otf Prop'r: Go To DANIELSON & ENGBLAD'S sth Ave., near R. R. Station. Shoes made to order and repairing of all kinds done promptly. Prices moderate. 18tf. AUGUST K. HUEER, STONE MASON, Melton Avenue, PATTON, PA 1 am prepared to do all kinds of work | in my Cline at reasonable prices. Contrpets 1Ken and Satisfuet ion guaranteed, Give ae ao all. RI'P-A'N'S The modern stand’ ard Family Medi l cine: Cures the I— : | common every-day ills of humanity. ONE GIVES RELIEF. a vegetable flying about in the air and hitching itself on to anything. Fifteenth. Why do you open the dampers in a stove when lighting a fire? To let the oxygen in and the nitrogen out. Sixteenth. —What did the constitu- tion do for the country? It gave the president a head. Seventeenth. — What are the last teeth | that come to man? False teeth. —Bos- ton Budget. The Cross. A Jetter from W. F. Carman says: In your paper I find mention of a rich find - at Dashur, where relicy embellished with the cross were found. Some doubt : has existed as to relics bearing the cross being genuine antiques. I have in my jon a-elic from Nineveh clutched | from destruction by my own hand while excavating a chamber in the southwest angle of northwest palace of Nimrod, one of the most ancient or Nineveh. This relic cannot be less than 3,000 years old. It has upon the upper surface the Maltese cross and is surrounded by buds of some flower. It is a lamp of hard ‘baked clay similar in material to the cylinders whereon is recorded the history of the time. Its antiquity, how- ever, has been doubted because it bears across. can prove that the most ancient relics found both at Nineveh and Baby- Jon have the cross as the most ancient emblem of the sun. It is seen on the necklace of the king and on the rock sculperes of Bavian and elsewhere in the rains of Nineveh and vicinity.— Philadelphia Record. : She Didn't Keow, My friend Mrs. B. is one of those good uatured women who are always wanting to make other people comfort- "able. She happened to be in the railway . station the other day; a man she knew came in. He said he was going to Pitts- | burg. . Now, it happened that Mrs. B whose husband is a director, knew the conductor of the Pittsburg train. He passed through the waiting room just then, and Mrs. B. called to him. “‘Conduactor,’’ said she, ‘this is my especial friend, Mr. Smith. He is going . on your train, and I want you to show him every attention possible. ”’ The condnctor, of course, said he would, but when he went away Mr. Smith turned to Mrs. B., with a sickly smile. “I did intend to go to Pittsburg to- day, and I was in an awful hurry, but, on the whole, I think I'll wait for the next train. ’’ And he handed that kind bearted woman a slip of paper. It was a pass, but it was made out to oue Jones. —Ex- change. Anmountig a Baby. "The following quaint advertisement is from a South Africa paper “It was on Thursday, at 9 30 a. m., ‘the 4th of ‘April, that in the passive re- tirement of C. M. de Tarnowsky family, at Bonne Terre Poenix, a lovely babe named Eliacin Milton Lubomir has his first breath of life on this earthly world. All generous, Christian friends, kindly to pray our heavenly i Father to protect this puny, living spring through time and for eternity.’ : Pleasure n His Work. “That sour old fellow, Grumpus, has | a job that just suits him.’’ “What's that?'’ CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS COPYRIGHTS. CAN 1 OBTAIN Ea EB ra Baro nearly A Ry Ye re contgential. A Handboo tents and’ how to obe um y For a to secure contymns. A NEw York, 361 Broa DWAY.. 000 P. copie’ Wei A WL Douglas Shocs TAND 0 5 Fo -— AND GROOT pL T r32CSC. wee Eh $ $5.00 —— — Clam! 152.50 © 00 SLT Be © A ERE FOr BOT3 nt For Men, 9 id : and Youths War W. L. Dougie shots arid save from $1.00 to $3.00 n r. All Sty bes aud 3 idtha. The sdvanece in healer r hia i eres the joe uf ather makes, but the qual and prt ces of ww. L. Douglas shoes remain the aame. Take no substitute ; See thet name ind rice t 3 stamped on sole. Wa Le. Doaglas, Piccicron, Mass. Suid by MIRKIN & KUSNER. Dr. S. W. Worrell PATTON, PA. General Surgery 7 im AN THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Room No. 3 GOOD BUIL DING. FISHER & CO, Wholesale. Frae Old Whiskies ported Liquors. and Im- California Wines and Brandes ‘147 Clinton & 609 Main Sts., ‘‘Fle’s station master where 50 trains’ | go out every day, and he sees somebody miss every ove of them.’ ord. —Chicago Rec- The Comervative Erephnot. “Nowadays,”” said Mr. Bugleby, i | “prety wuch everybody carries a dress | suit case, but 1 notice that the elephant. | sticks to his trunk. No dress suit case for him, eh?’-—New York Sun. The old Scythians painted blind for- tune”s powerful hands with wings to show er gifts come swift and sudden- ly. —Cbapman. sly Johnstown. Pa. Telephone 175. | Bottlers and Proprietors of OLD CABINET, OLD FAVORITE AND ' COXEY’S COMMON: WEAL Pure Rye Whiskies. THARDER'S ‘Harder's Cun Work “The E00 Combating, tickets hefore ars iach a iit Shai SA | Beech \ Creek Railroad New York Central & Hudson River R. R. CONDEXSED TIMETABLE. Read x hh * Ep. wali - GUN WORKS. a) We sell almost any $100 1895 Bicycle » m LR m at 850, 860, 870, 830 and #85, depends on the make. We give you the big end. of the margin usually taken by agents. In Effect May 12, 1895. oi LH 8 2 PATTON ..... WERtONEr. aie Mahaffey. lesen Koerrmoor. {s AZZAM “Kerrmoor HE a Ba W Miliport.: 3 2 11 a ORR cists RHI Y TMitehetts » = L vi teartield Junction Ar. CLEARF TELD i pon . - 95 900g BNE p= 8 ® 12 on al | 8 ot = SEE URUES ABE | HE 3 ! Ard Heargeld June tioti Lv. v «. Woodland ; is RA 8 FE & HE 8% . 2 = i a ainsi rises DIEIOP... $30 32 Ww allneeton.,. Bi 1510 32 Morrisdate Mines... icycle Repairing“... © 95 Lv. PHILIPRBU Ri... - 7 S10 Ar. PHILIPSBURG. Lv 7 310 17 Ar Rp Sa¥ES dd -~ ¥ -4 Munson, LAT : | 8% BE Difficult repairing done promptly. Frame brazing done by the new pro- cess, no burnt tubing. Wood and steel rims, tires, covers, inner tubes, patches, pumps valves, cement, lacing, tape spokes, nipples, saddles, posts, nipples handle bars, grips, coasters, | foot brakes, beels, elc. “Standard” C yclometers $1.50, by Mail, usual price $2. Ship bicycles for repairs by express HW. prepaid. MEP MS FE *Daily. Weekdays. #.00 p.m. Sunday. ! HO I0 A. mm. Sunday. Through Pullman Soe ping Car between Pu. . Boi, Clearfield, all intermediate points, and Philadelphia in both diretions dally, except Sunday, on trains Nos. 35 and 38, CONNECTIONS At Willan ms Philadephia and Readiog Rail At Jersey Shore Junction with Fall Brook Railway for: gointa | in New York State and the West, At: Till Hall with Central Ratlroad of Pennsyl- vania. At Philipsburg with Pennsivanis © . Railroad. At Clearfield with Bufo, Rochester 30 Land Pittsburg Rallway., At Mahia fTey and Patton with Cambria and Clearfield division of Pennsylvania milroad, At Mabatfey with @ — Rertnurtennia and Nor Western railroad. A. G, PALMER, HERRIMAN, Beri, a 1 Passenger ee Bn. 2, R. R. Time Tables. In effect May 20th, 1895. Main Line, Leave Cresson Eastward, i Sea Shore Express, week days. ........ 86 3 ‘Altoona Accomodation, . weele days... 9 Main Line Express. daily. we 10D Altoona Asecriiodation, anily. Mail Express, daily. Philadelphia Express, “daily. DAILY POST, Main Line, SG ally an : Johnstown . Aceom., week days......... 8 14 a large ei Rage paper, and acific Express, daily... ne sae : THE CO 5 ? one year each | Way Passenger, dally... for #3.00. The price of The: Mail Train, dui.y ) | Fast Line, daily. ins Post alone is $3.00. Send. us Johnstown Acton, “week duyn. uatian y our order at once and get sev- CAMBRIA and C LEARFIELD, en papers a week for the price you formerly paid for one. = The SUNDAY POST, Soaring + rain for Sato and Lb resson leaves Maubatley at 25a m3 La’ Jose, Gos; Baayen. twenty puges every Sunday, containing as much reading C8 Gurway, (for Hastls 4:32; Hast Garw ay, (for Tonson) 8, Pa sn i ey Junction, 72%; Kaylor, pry arnvi Aeron trun | for Putton and Cresson leaves Mahatle 2 pms la as any of the monthly maga- : zine, and THE COURIER one year each for only $2.25. {“resson at R10 a.m. Jose, 2:13; Westover, 343}; a ings) 2:97; Hastings, 247; Garway, lor Crosson 3:1 Patton, Le Bradley June and THE COURIER tor 2:59, arriving at © resson at £15. . 3 3 Fe - 1 - year each for only : Northward. ; LSLoing train leaves Cresson for Muhaflky ‘Just think of it, Post twice a week, Wi: Kayior, 31; Brdiey Junction 10:08; wn, HER Garway, for Hastings) 10042; ook Pat for Mahatfey) 13; Garway, (for Mahaffey) and your: county paper for the pri ce of one. Write us sample ¥en copies 1: 25; Westover, Hi: La Jose, HT, arriving at’ B. R. & P. Time Table. Mahaffey at 11:50, Afternoon train for Patton | oh Mahattey leaves © resson wt 335; Kaylor, 41; Bradley Junction, ; 5:00 Patton, #12 Gar Wi Ridgway, Rochester Nis the apper OH | Munson... Lv SWInbarme. ...... ou PEALE . Sie Gillintown._.... invashans SNOW SHOE... i 9 5 fi : a8 9 25 S30 UW ¥aZY TOCK HAVEN. i. Youngdale (Way ne. on BIOWNE....... cree Jersey ¥ Store Junction... nN NV MEPTP : Ar, i i P & R R Ri. WIM=PT Ir PHIL ADELPHI AAT. Ne 'w Yorkvia Tam Ar ‘New Yorkvia. PhilnAr 7519 S Teese gree e Bs as em Rm TOD TUVUERE 6S REHEENS 8 a 2x = ® $1.60; i » HEE ff - “KE E CLEARFIELD, PA. rt with Tuo Papers For nly $ THE COURIER is plesed to announce its siaining arange- ments with The Pittsburg Post the great home newspaper of - Pennsylvania, and to passe who want the best daily ed semi-weekiy paper published in the city, we recommend The Post. BEBBER BBEEES wr, for Hastings) 5d; Hastings, gor Mabaf ght Garway, (for Mahatfey) TH: West. oh “vn Ja dose, TZ, arriving at Mabaftey } P m. SU sQU EHANA EXTENSION : Eastward. : Moming tmin leaves Cherrytree at 6:85: Rarnesboro, #53: Rpangler 878%. Carmolitown Road, 7:43, and cones od ith tain tor Cresson at Bradie v Junction ats - Afternoan tmin a Cherryvtree at 200; Barnesborg, 225 Spangler, Ra Carrolltown Road, 255 und connects with teain for Cresson ut Brad fey Junction at 3:40. Westward. Morning train leaves Bradicy Junction for Cherrytree at i it, Carrolltown Read, 10:35; Speen, lea: Barnesbors, 11:02, arriving at C 1errviree at 11: SR Afternoon tmin leaves Bradley Junetion for Cherrvires at #00, Cartolitown Rosd #17; Spangler, 6:35 Barnesboro, Hem, arriving at Cherryt Pee at 55 &#On the Flensburg Branch tink leave i Ebensburg for Cresson at 730 a m, and 23 pom. Leaves Cresson for Ebensbur and intermediate pointson the arrival of a trnins from East and West, both morning and evening, © For mites, maps ete, address Thos, KE, att Ave, Pitifbarg, -P Ss. 3. PREY ONT, Genel Manager. fey) ONO 1 .w42 “ T he for The Short Line between Du Bois, Bradford, Sulnmanen, Baililo, agara. F and points in Region, | 3 Od and after Nov, 3h, Ist, will arrive and depart 0x Iv, except =anday, mo Buttle and Roehestyr Brockway vidle, Ridgway, Jewett, Pris id, Nannie, R pcting at for Wi passenger trains ann Falls “Creek as fuillows: mail—-Far Johnpnsonburg, Mt Buttle, und Johnsonbuare with leox, Kane, Warren, | a. {By to ticket agent, or . Di, HO Eifth 1. R. WOOD, General Pas. - Agt. P&NW Railroad. Read 50 Read down No ld Nev Nols pm am #5 11a a 25 a xX 20 i015 5 or 10a $44 4H 43 by £30 0 9H 358 8a Liovdsville 32 #00 Iv Bellwoodiar 110 Connections With Buffalo Rochestes and Pittsburg Rk. R. 2With lieeeh Creek miiroad. FWith Cambria and Clearfield milroad, 1With CCresason and Clearfield milrosnd, With Penns syivania milroad. Cush Creek Beane h —Tiains leaves Motices for en Campbell at 10:30 am and 550 pm. Ariive al MrGees from Glen { ampbell at 740 “am and 3220p m. Pennsyivania milroad tins arrive and . leave Be wads as Silows: a, a and 11547 a 1h, 1248, LN Nn and #320 Westward, 7; 8a 1, i ry 3:38, TOT and 0:3 1 ~ aw . FORD, Supt. Bellwood, 52 GET THE | REST When ye : ‘ hi a do not a Aocet od 3 = allrini any A and beled to think you ‘aa Zait. finest finished and Most Popuiar for a mere seng. Seo to i: thet © you buy from relinbie mente facturers that have gain:d a reputation by honest and square dealing, you will then get a X Sewing Machine that is noted the world over for its dura- bility. Yvu want the ons that is easiest to manage and is dochester; eon vin ans yd Erie, voeconmadation—For DuBois, SKy- i, aid Panssatawney, J Secommedation from Bradford, snbure, Ridgway, Brock wayville, and intermediate stations, for. DuBois and Pha xsutawiey. - 200 p.m. ~Hmd ford Accommodation—For Beevhtres i rou Kawi y vi tie, Ellmont, Carnon, wonbuarg, Mt. Jewett, and STATIONS : am ar Punxsutawn’yl lv 8 17° Metieas 3 Mahaffoy2 La Josed Berwinduale Irvonn Coalportd a gil r wi XN a wuey, Trains Areive-T00 a. 1. ace ommodation from AWE. Nad a. mu, Mail from Wal- ston amd Punxsutawney; 1:10 p.m, accom- modation from Pun xsitawney: 5:10 p. m.,. Mail from Buttiilo and Roehester. Far Dn Bois, Skyes, Big Run, anid Walston. haa anlY BLsRERYESEE @ Jet, AND OLEARFIELD Dultois Salen Fulks Creek Pra Bais FALLS CREEK A - fe * Ft : Wily, except Sunday. Trai fn Ne 71 connects at Du Boi for Bi Pun ssutawuey, Ridgway, Johhsonburg ford, Buffalo, and Rochester Train No. 72 connects at Charstield for Ty- rong, Altoona, Huntingdon and Flarrtsbarg. Frain No. 75 connects at DuBols for Bradford and Pittsburg and has Pullman Sleeping Car’ from Philadelphia to DuBels, : Train No. 71 connects at Clearfield with Beech Creek RR. RR. for Philipsburg, Loek Haven, Jersey Share, Williamsport, Philadel- phia and New York, and has 1liman Sleep Run rad- Ang Car from DuBois to Philadelphia, Thousand miie tickets at two cents per mile, ‘good for passage between all stations, R.G. MATTHEWS, Eowarb C, LAPEY, Gen, Supt, Gen. Pas, Ag. Rochester, N.Y. Rochester, N. Y. &g Passengers are requested to purchase entering the cars. An excess | charge of Ten Cents will be collected by Con- | ductors when fares are paid on trains, from all stations where a Ticket Office is mainmined, WRITE _FOR CIRC FOR CIRCULARS. ETRE tana y Omaven, hE Lora » jem : POR BALE BY
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers