i duiius ‘Planckensee, Roldiers’ Clmnents, Aughwick Mills, ¢ vases os SNAKES. Be nes sr . uh He Cursiage Supe. i A es Miss Letla Detwetler, of Chambers- two companions had an ex« + they will not soon forget. driving down the mountain : : hits, it. Thomas their team was pur- sued for a mile by two black snakes, one of the reptiles at one time gaining the ate of the vehicle. The girls Hp their horses into a gallop, the srakes keeping up the chase until the i toot of the mountain was reached. The following pensions were granted we wk: Philip H. Patton, Sharps- , 0h, Inglert, Johntown, $6; MeKnight, Brookville, $6; McCracken, Kerrmoor, Parker. Hone 3% to $12 Margaret i ~ s Charisse Wallace W, Big Bend, $8: William V, A $5: George W. Given, ne Lebbeus Pettigrew, : John Stevens, deceassid, 4 CH. Moore, Tar - eatur : Dickson, Sink. Ane Valley, 35. Frederick Beymer, He. Ham, $8; Isaac Hi, Garwood, $6: Al. ‘bert L gael, by bate $4. James Davis, Eri mvid Pr. Weaver, Andrew ie I porium. sin Tob i Bwain, Gorge n. $17; Maty McGraw, Rochester pet ; Sarah Hitchey, Heoutsdale, 2 Brisas E. Stevens, Poyntsile, $5: CW. Myer, Boldiers’ home Erie, $8; Touts €. Faber, dead. Pitisbargh, 3. John W. Abbott, Phillipsburg, 38; Charles Thomas, Waynesboro, $s Wilk Iam H. Wilson, Mechantesburg. 35; EIT, to $12; Fitel Kuobslspies, Johns- town, IR to $10. Frank Russell, Girard, $4; Margaret Gettamie, Dunbar, $12; minor of Louis €. Faber, Pittsburgh, 2 minors of John W. Bhuster, New gland, Allegheny. $18, Hannah Husting. don, 3%: Adam Davis, Union City, $10, Jahn H. Batey, Tarentum, $8. Richard i bertha,. Moon Hun, $8; Hobert H. Young, (ireentree, $86: Andrew Lone- : arbar Wauamapart, 403 Albert Utter, os Himershure, lard a: ! i Jo Be ris Boyer, Johnstown, $8 Labano Indiana, $3 to 310; Hester : Smith, Oakland Mills, Juniata, $12 While puling a large fywhest in the i Heywione Furniture Factory at Wil. : isi ry Ore dag Jan rek. Dudley ner was can n : hry $i-inch t and thrown into the beneath the wheel, Thers was suffi Sant #teum in the engine to drive the ‘heel quite fast. Portner's leg was caught and the wheel began drag agging Bim under, when Engineer John pert, with one slash of his knifs, cut i belt in two. The knife sank into Ea ‘s lex and severed two arter- Jem. It wae feared for a time that he ~ wamid blead to death. When Portner Was rescued it was found that his leg had been crushed to the knee and he wan Sadly squeezed under the ponders Joshua Milter, aged about 77 years. a Asteran, who resided alone in a sparse. Py-settled territory four miles north of the town of North East, was murdersd one night during the past week, His Tody was discovered yesterday after noon, lying on & bed in his one-story frame house, by two boys, mas Philips and Howard Atkinson, who Were picking berries. Near by, on a bureau, Isy the weapons & hatobet. A trunk in the room by the bed was open and thoroughly ransscked, while the pocket was cut out of the | saurdered man's trousers, The Aeceaned Pe i mana from Greenville that pr. & o La A Miler. of 2 LOW, Was . by a dream early the i he rn, ne Ac A PS Mary Sa n rd some : ene pcan calling him and he was © #9 startled that he awoke. On getting wp he found the gas turned on and the an fall of the uid. It is not known + key became turned, hotel proprietors of Greensburg are talking of of bullding a brewery to be cond : eo-operative plan. Ths, they say. Ee aberative ] un- y sip Bg They granted : ers. pay el for beer. brewers at Pottaville are being “by local saloon Keepers Hee ey have raised the price of rom 36.5) to $7.20 a barrel, in or- meet the war tax. They have ly refused to make a * & result outside Ste are the the trade, hief rified Judge Harry White's desk In the court house at In- the other night, stealing valu- o including an autograph | President Lincoln and a poc- containing aid in negotiable 4 - Sister of Charity was filling eth lamp at St. John's church, ton. the chain supporting it broke It tell on her head, inflicting a from which she may not re- the body of of : Attle Zodia, arriving a Haly ai Pittsburg the other day her parents, vas crushed under a trolley car a couple of ? of Mat Agent wil o Brownaviie. was shot Dunk: at Union City has to begin business with “Councils of 0,000 for new Fa having ies a “pote for $45 ED ash Black, aged 13, son of David Ci Black. Black. “of Butler, was caught in a belt at an oil pumping station last week and received injuries from which died three hours Inter. Gorland Ta ro into w m Frost's farme and, stealing 355 He was sent to the { for them to learn how to Heve re, | Ramuel Henry, West sourse, made a lot of disturbance reduc- | to , confessed to ‘the back porch | +Detroit Frea ress. SAILORS AND SHARKS. : WMan-O0'-War's Men Say the Ses Wolves Are Cowardly, “Two facts that may scem somes what peculiar to shore folks,” said an ex-sailor of the navy, '‘are, first, that only about ope half of the man-o' war's men in our service or in any other ser- vice, in fact, know how to swim, and, second, that sharks are the most cow- ardly of all living creatures. It isodd that so large & proportion of the naval sailors don't know how to swim, but it is probably due to the fact that a great number of our man-o'war's men nowadays come from the interior of the country, where there is no water Swim in the old navy—and I pnt all of my rer- vice in the old navy, =o called the man whoeconldn't swim was, as soon the fact was discovered by his ship- mates, incontinently chucked over the side when swimming call went, and he just had to swim, Of course, the men wonldn't let a fellow who didn't know how to swim drown before their eyes, but they wonld see to it that he made s hard stab at the art of swimming be. tore they picked him ap. IH he didn’t snoceed in swimming the first time, averboard he wonld go the very next time all hands took a pinage over the side at swimming call, and thus all of the men serving on the old line o packets became swimmers before they {eft the serviee. It is forbidden t4 throw a non-swimmmer ints the wates | sow, bat I think it would be » good thing if the practices were still con- tinned, The officers of tha ships to. day insist npon the apprentice lads iearning to swim, hut they let the non- swimmers among the newly recraited iandsmen go along without lemrning There have been numerons drowning incidents in onr navy within recent years, owing to the ignoranes of wen who were otherwise excellent sailors in the easy art of swimming. “Ax to the cowardliness of sharks, that fact is well known smong men who have heey mneh to sea in month: ern waters ifested by man eaters. The flerceat man-eater that ever ballied a poor little pilot fish into acting as a food scont for him will get out of the seaway in a mighty hig harry if » swimmer, voticing the shark's ap- proach, sets up a noisy splashing. A shark ji» in deadly fear of any sort of living thing that splashes in the water. Down among the South Ses Islands the natives naver go in sea bathing alone, but always in parties of half a dozen or so,in order that they may make the greatest hnhbabs in the water and thus scare the sharks away. Ones in a while a too-venturesome swimmer among these natives foolishly de- taches himself from his swisnming party and momentarily forgets to keep up his splashing. Then there is a sudden swish, and the man-eater comes p beneath him like a flash apd gob. bles him. I know a naval officer who, down in the harbor of Acapulco, Mexico, one afternoon a few years ago stepped on a sleeping man-eater in shallow water while in bathing, The officer gave himself up for lost, hut he made a frantic effort to wade in 107the beach. He expected every minute to have both of his legs lopped off by the shark's teeth. In wadding in he, of in the water, and this is what saved him. | When, to his own surprise, he finally stepped up on the beach and looked back for his shark he saw the man- eater’s fin cleaving the blue waters of the bay hundreds of leet away, bound outward,” Machines That Make Sandwiches, An ingenions machine for making sandwiches is nsed by many of the seean line steamships. It cuts and butters the bread, snd the machine 2an be arranged so that the bread need sot be buttered if the operator does aot want it to be so. In making 1000 modwiches three hams and eleven pounds of butter are saved, it in said, sn account of the socnracy with which both are cut. A ies pe BAAS AL 0 ANOS A Mritich Page. fn all Great Britain has five flags — the Royal Standard, the Union Jack, the merchant flag, the naval ensign and the bine ensign, the flag of the Naval Reserve. The Union Jack ia hoisted by Colonial Governors, and each colony shows a different badge. [t takes long practice and constant study to identily every British flag that one would see in a voyage 10aud the world. Musienl Instruments 4 ne © woking Utensils, Budding geuins in Portland, Ore, has devised a utilitarian plan to make the new aluminum musical instra-. ments convertible into Kitchen uten- sils. By making the keys and strings detachable, he proposes to ise the mandolin for a stewpan, the guitar for a ham broiler or fish frier, and to cook flap;jacks on the banjo. Her Voice Restored by a Bay. Five years ago Mary Gillard, of In- dependence, Kan. lost her voice, as a result of an attack of grip. Since then she has not been able to speak a word. Recently, while picking straw. berries in the yard, a bug ran scross her hand. She screamed, and now she is able to talk as well as ever she could, , The Music of the Bagpipes, : The following is how a writer in the Clarion analyzes the music of bag- pipes: “Big flies on windows | 72 per cent. ; cats on midnight tiles 11} per cent. ; voices of infant puppies - — 6 per cent. ; grunting of hungry pigs in the morning = 5} per cent.; steam whistles..3 per cent. ; chant of crickets «3 per cent." Sn EO The Golden Hule of Life, “If you want a thing done well,” remarked the philosopher, ax he banged the lawn-inower into the fouce, “hire Somebedy to do it, then sit on and oversee the job.“ eA THE PARROTS OF CURA. They Are Intelligent, Companiensifiey An Infallible Test, The readiness of wheelmen to find | 'auit with the condition of most high- ways has, at times, arcuosed mueh un- | 'svorable coroment, particularly in the srlier days of good roads agitation, | vhen the subject was far less ander | tood than at present. The public ipirited erasade which they inangnr. ited was ascribed wholly to alterior notives, and it was not antil they be- gan to demonstrate its universally reneficent efpots that the position of he cyolist began to be at all appre- inted. For generations, those who nsed | he highways had been satisfied to slod slong ae Lest they might, behind deeds that vonld voice no intelligible omplaint, traveling as Little as possi ale in the bad seasons and never con- sidering the many ways in which they sould be advantaged if firm roadways m every direction emancipated them ‘rom the reign of King Mad, But the bicycle openad fresh vistas | ind started new lines of thought [he patient beast no longer trudged | dong through mad, over rocks, rats snd stumps, np-kill and down, while he driver indolently bounced along Bn the vehicle behind him, On the shee! the rider, driver and motor are me, and immediately awakens to a teen aud realizing sense of the road seneath him. Every change in grade 8 registerad by hiiraan nerves, every lepressian, rock or streteh of sand | rguses a shock to s haman backbone, | snd enilis for greater energy. With | pad conditions a severe strain is put ipon the attention, pleascire is de. Hroyed and wearisome labor takes its pi sce. The bicycle showed conslusively that roads were wrong, and it largely mdicatad the extent of their imper- fection, It thereby set in motion the | Inrees that have in ten plished mach and are working toward the sccomplishment of much more an {er the power of the inevitable logic | of events —L. A. W. Balletin. Cond Ronde’ Leagoav, Without giving the matter an earn ast thonght it might seem remarkable | that such a progressive idesns that of | sumbering connty honses by the ten. block system, which is commended without a serous objection being raised against it, should be so slow in becoming established, There are some diffienitien to be met | and overcomss, but they are not serious ones. What is everybody's business ia nobody's businesa, There in no money in it directly and person | ally for those who work to establish it. It has $0 be done but once ia 8 piace, and the same set of men would | have no upportanity to profit by an experience vither in getting the saper- visors to act or in doing the field work | of establishing it. { The Good Roads Leagnes all over the country would be doing sa partien. larly good thing if they would add the ton<block systems to the educating work | they sre doing for good rosds. The two should go hand in hand and the FOALS ACCOM. | organization would be equally avail. | able for both lines of work, The work | done in one locality would give knowl edge, practice and experinnce which would help in other places. Abont all that is needed is to estab | lish it in the very best way in a few prominent connties, and it wonld thes, as a inatter of course, go into all other | counties. Will they not add this fea- | ture to the line of good work that they | are now doing? Are Neots Lusury. The Road Commissioner of New Jersey, Mr. Badd, points cut that it. costs three cents s bushel to haul | wheat ou & level road a distance of five miles, and at lesst nine cetits to hanl | it the sume distance on a sandy road, which goes to illustrate the practical | economic importance of good roads. | This is a point which deserves the | serious attsntion of farmers. Sandy and rough roads are wearing ont their | horses and vehicles and Qereasing the cost of their farm supplies and of the marketing of their produce. Though little recognized, this 1s & fact most potent to the careful olmerver, and most pointedly and truly expressed in | Mr. Budd's report. When this fact penetrates the minds of farmers more generally they will begin to realize that money and labor erpended on road improvement will save money for them in reducing the sctasl cost of banling and ia saving vehicles and horses, : It is high time to dispense with the | idea that good roads aa laxuries, | were fancy frills, and to regard well made highways as among the necess:- ties. —Easton (Penn. Free Presa Bad Roads—Nad Business. A late dispatch from Casper, Wyom- ing, says that ‘on account of maddy roads the wool hauling business of this part of the Btate is almost at a standstill, many of the loaded ons being stalled along the roads leading to this eity. The wool market is ex. tremely dull and few sales have been made. The clip will be a large one, and of superior qualtity.™ a Shots at Bat Roads. The road improvements petitioned for ander the new law in New York | | allenged battleships, passing our coast guards he ing / that { vocabulary f militia, ¥ | gonscienes that drove me to 12 gird shat wonida't Jo what sire enald! to make the defenders of her country! are almost entirely in the saburbs of large towns, The city depends on the country; the farmer's welfare is the public wel- fare. money in his pocket makes the farmer prosperous; good roads aid him to accumulate coin, The wide tire law is still being dis: cussed in many places despite the fact that where it has been tried it has uroved successful. The reasons fur the long dehberation over the matter are numerous, but maay persons wonld hike to see the law adopted at ouch } f 1% hati Talkative and Edible, A company of p..soners from Cada fly arrived in Chicago, coming | throngh our line of anmolested, and reaching the interior of the country withont harm, albeit the sentiments of sath and all are for And those prisoners neither | speak our difficult language nor ander stand it, their native speech being the | ‘Spanish vernacular. They are the latest and perhaps the last importa- ‘tion of Cuban parrots and they reached | New York under many diffionjties, bat | they are now in tha homes of Lake! Michigan, released from their dismal. to their | WAr. wooden cages and petted henrts’ eontent, but still moping and £ melancholy far the loveliest land that ever the sun ‘hone on. That was what Columbus satd of (nba when be car. ried the first consignment of Caban parrots back to Enrope, In Cuba when that jnvely and Raw Tason reining in als glory, These latest arrivals from the beanti- fal and nnbappy Cabs will probably the last consignment many 8 long day, and the pretty birds with their red breasts and brillant green plumage and white-topped bends are as savage and misanthropis as hinysan prisoners might be nader the ban of exile, They bite savag ly ani harl Spanish anatheraas at all who appr roach thera, and whether thev are intradneing | them to the delighted ladies of Seville, mide for SURGEON GEMERAL STERNBERG | Eases : | He Will Carefully Leok After Ome Bick and Wonnded Saldiern i “The medical service of Uncle Sam's sry Ix brought prominently Into pubs is patios pow That aur soldiers are in the Reid. Thix is the braned that must | ook after the stok and wlhindad and 18 g of prime Importance that the head of (he department should be well fitted for the onerous doties that fall spon his shonlders. Rurgeon General George M. Sternbwrg («10 years old, but does not ook his spe. He served during the sivil war as a surgeon and won great distinetion. Nines then he lias been sontingousiy serviag with fle army, both in Indian campaigns and yellow ipver entdeinies. He has studied the | pest methods for preventing yellow fe vor in efferent countries where it has meen prevalent, has represented this wuntry at latorpational saniiary con- i feropoer wind member of leading medical organizations here and abroad, He Bas pubtdished many works princk sally on the cause and sure of disease {rom climatic nfloences, In sceardance with Gen, Rtarnberg’s plan for the caring of siek and wound. A daring the oo SHpation of Cuba every army aivision will be provided wiih wens for a fie io hospital for the F Givhe pani f= i Ain os ERR rebels or patriots cannot ha de termined | from their actions, tut a few words of Spanish spokan by a visitor pro- P duced a wonderfal change, as well as | ‘ a babel of discordant jargon, chatterad as if in their native forests, They | | and ther bright, wicked eyes smirked with satisfaction sad they ecrooned to themselves like the aneanny folk they are with dialwlioni effect These birds recall the fact that the Spanish sailor has an abnormal love ‘for parrots and ia nearly always ae- when he sails the Spanish main or ad- | veritures into distant ports, where he { finds himself! compelled to part with’ his harlequin friend in exchange for: i gold to pay his score, i but not so sorry as the parrot, whom he had petted and tanght and whose homesickness lasts long after the mas ter she loved hu forgotten her. A poet wrote a pathetic ballad of such & case. ln a strange conntry the | lonely parrot was adopted by kind | people, who made mneh of it, but the bird could never be induced to speak a single word... during the years of ite enforced exile it preserved an nan broken wilesce. Ax it grew old ite melancholy incrested, and left to it seif it brooded over its past life until one day a stranger passing its eags The gave it a glance of resognition. poet tells the climax | Hoe hgilad the bind in Spanish speech, The Bird in Span speach repiind, i Prow roand (8 sige Wilh JOYoas wr Pes] - Then dropped and died Same Americans visiting Calaa low years ago were much shocked while dining at a fashionable reataanrant tc i hear an order given for "two Cabany They felt relieved on learn | parrots were the a toast.” Cuban delicacy ordered. It 12 known now {hat the birds have heen an article of Cddiet for some time, the 10,000 parrots | that were formerly seat to the United - Megtes tn the season being now saemn | iced to feed hungry famibies deprived i of other sonress of food, The great popularity of the Cabar parrot in this country has been traced ‘to the fact that they come to us with | unoeenpied benins, the few words the young birds have learned being easily | obliterated to make room for a new . The Cubans themselves have as much reverence for the bird { that talks as the old Romans had ic the dawvs of Ners, when its uncanny niterancos wee regarded as oracles, Guarding Apninat Risk. *“} ter Brown left ised to marey him “That's trae, almitted the beanti- ful err x And that Tom Spunk on aldo became engaged to thie following day, wher bi. ait ta right * ful Fir! admitted the beanti- “*And that von sseepted an engage ment ring from Harry Jogoes just be fore Le lef! io answer call for troops.” “*Toat 1s correct” 1d ale sarh SCmwinoe, “My beantiinl actions with your conscience!" exeigimed the girl, “Why, 1t wus Any happy isn’t aud, sides’ “Well Gy “Don't yon suppose I want to have | enough so as to make sare that some a pairiot; re one of them will come back to marry me?” —Chicage Post. Mam, Fish Saved - Child, Hamilton Fish will long be remem bere in San Antonio, Tex, as the! hero of one of the mdst thrilling epi sodes that togk place ia the camp the rough riders. On the day before the “‘terrors” left for Tampa they gave! ‘an exhibition drill } | nessed by thousan is of persons, Lien | | tensnt-Colune! Roosevelt was in com regiment | which was wit mand, and arderesd tre wntis to charge. As» the than were slashing wy tie Mexican ebild seampered front of the galloping colani Hamilton Fish was ous of the wha ARR ta et dane Ma wine onl ROR £ hati tin wind horses ahead of the columy, asd ow galloping al up with a dextesiiy t have done erelit to wn Avis wan. --yew York Presa . full spred spac nad He 1a sorry, nndersiand that just before Wal | for the war you prom. | was starting withthe navy to the second Iik# to know hew you recon. f0n- | my it ew i Ja piaius | companied by one of those trick birds ston: also with an ambulance corps, sonsixting of enlisted men of the hos pital corps of the United States army. whose duty 1 will be fo remove the wounded from the battlefield as promptly as possible, The hospital ahiy relief will go to any port which may te occupied hy our troops, {0 perve as a 'fAnating hospital amd also an an am bulance abip to bring the sick and wonnded to the nearest port 'n the { nited rates where hospital nedommo Sation= are available A lnrge general hospital hay been 12 te! up at Key Wost, as this will be the most convenient point of landing the sick and wounded of an army io Coba A hospital train consisting of tours sleepers and a dining car, with medica Meors and attendants and nursex, will ter hedd in readiness 1o transport the sick and wounded from Tampa or any wher convenient point In Florida, he general hospitals Joeated farther sort. The first MePherann, fia, of wheres accommaia tions Bave been provided for 506 sick | t noties these hospital ac | atid upon short rommodations can be considerably ex suded. The barracks at Fort Thomas Ky. have also been converted info sg an be provided for at this paint. sareacks at Fort Myer, Va, mil in aba, f tevers break out among them It wik act be for want of vigilance an the part 3 the miedical corps. Transplanting Wild Flowerw In digging the wild Sowers, especial iy those having bulbous rootd, be care | ful to go deep enough to get all of the roots, Leave as much soll ciaging te | the roots as possible, and after wrap plug them in damp moss or grass, roll the plants up in paper to excinde the “alr. Gather a basketful of leaf mald fromm under the trees Where no grass grows, the first iach of the ground be tng the best, and wee this freely In mak tng up the bed for the reception of the wild flowers, After planting them fg their new quarters, water LUberally and shade from the sun for A week ot more. A rather shaded location sheuld A APPAR 20 Companion. Relief for Tiréa sajeswomen, Not only the saleswowmen complain | tut trained purses often suffer fron swollen feet, capecially when they first ro inte hospitals. A powder which is spel gees in the German anny for sift ng late the shoes and stockings of the ufantry scldiers might be of service t consists of three parts of salicylic dd, ten parts of starch and eighty | wven parts of pulverised woapstone : . This keeps the feet AFF, prevents cha! | ng and heals any sore SOW. The soap stone aloge, withont the other ingre | fients, has also Deen Todd useful and {wap alone will give relief when wel | ubbed over the sole of the stocking. cases oA Ou and after February gh, traing wiil leave Mazkst Street yp. arto of as foliows | | 219 a. m Reyncldeville Ascornmodation, for Curwens Du Bols, Fails Creek aad Reyuobdavilia. Connecting at Du Bole tor Ridewny, Jobhnscoobarg, Besdferd and Rochissier, 114 a mm. PBuflaio Ex viiie, Du Dots aad Falls Creek. Conneet- tng at Du Bobs, for Ridgway, Johnson burg, Bradlioed and Buffalo . 8212 p.m. Du Bods and Punxsutswney Ex- ress, For Tu Bois, Falls Creek apd “uassutawney. , for Curwens- § % Rel ake ¢ Trains arrive, 5.30 a. om. and 340 and 8:13 | Yates | For tickets, time tables and full inform tion, call on or address, C. B. Hyslip, E. C. Lapey, { Ag=ut, Gent Passenger Clearfield, Pa Mt x these i at Fort | i Exp fend [Nn Na rer! hoapital, and G0 or more wey | The | have alse | seen taken for hospital purposes. Ad | c firtonal hospitals will be established | $4 2000 ax the necessity for them arises fiw. Miernherg has laid down reg | ons for the soldiers to follow while © They will receive the best | » enlightened medical treatment and | : te! in and Reading rps always be selected. Woman's Home | | tonbias On nl -. ra, a5 eeovar : ; 510; arriving a8 Glen amy BE mapa, se, > to ri nr EF Wat pi adrem F Pitsburg Po. JR Word, Cet. P a ym A) £87, Maha LL apm J.B Butehipann, tren. Mgr. Altoona & Philipsburg Coueting & £ CONDENSED Tome TABLE. In often Duosmberd, 1897. Easroasnp~ Week Days LM. Noox am na sl an $31 Ue 1.10 a ra. Wistwano Week Days AX. AM. PN. PN R30 11.18 145 A00 23 11.81 201 58 R50 1i50 11 08 . 200 1200 133 54 Srxpar Trarwa &F Read Dowa. Pu Ramey... .. .cccooveeese S08 Houtadaie | crvenese iS Omcec ie Wiss. 581 Philipsburg ...... ...... 545 PR Byspay Tasrxs, SF Read Up. Ramey......, Houtzdain PX Ramey Honuts dale, Osewoia Mills, | Phtivsbarg Ososois Mills Routzdaie Ramey. { Dwoeols Mills... .... Philipsburg Coxxgerions— At Philipsburg men Sta fon with sil [eect Creek Railrosd rales for and from Bellefonte, Loek Beven, Win ismaport, Reading. Philadeiphia New York: Lawrencesihe Oa Natuinh Genervy snd Lyoos © nartinid, Mebaftey Patton Curwensville, DuBois, Pusasutaws ney, Ruigweay EBradiord, Buffaic aad Rochester, Af Geomala for Houtzdnle and Ramey with Pf. RB trains ieaviog Tyrooe si 7.20 P. MB th MH G00 Beech Creek Railroud. N.Y. C. &H R R Co. Leases. Condensed Time Table, Nov. 14 am aol’ | Ho oy i Soar ida pm ‘ Raa Patton 5 5 ~ - = “ 4 - * CESEBR EE gtk od Arrmoae Xow a itentle tiearfield Wandiand Bigier Wisilaceton Morrisdaie Nines Munson Philipsburg Manson Winbarne He llintown opis a BO HEBER NER seas xeeeiiY ERNUNRIERN PA a WWE up ww ory oe Ra gop Va Po EEBETUE —-—, Ad artod 80% aa CSLASRAAE Beovswenmm-au C8 UBsUTEQUREANN ¢ zangsscus? ok poe oo ya w a », w MELEE HEB UEENEEEERUR ERE, $4 Rs EL] we Yonngsdale Warne Farsay Nha Whore Junetion Shore Erie: ar Phila & Resding w 4 Saito B Poiladeiphias sr % NY via Tamaqua ar 338 nx NY via Pilla arbl0e 99 wil *Werkdars op m Sandaye y Gam BE uh New York ngers a. vin Phi) adeiphin om ix 0 LR from Wii will change ears - Columbia Ave, Phil £0 Bs tine AL Wilitan : at as nha wanowseeBBEEFEERD CLEBEE eves SoeseeEnc une nEE2y - - a $ Aus’ iw $3 I RANE RAEEHRGES AVES gig Bow Ee, ar iv iv iv BETO Loom handed ddd doh od ohh 4 - v : be the Fail Jrock ib : w gé Lemve Union Station tMakay).. Heel (Creek du unetion... Manatley - Labatburst ¢ L. ? “wy ¢ HBB ERD RP Ee... EzslESE ER EERE ris ie “ CEENNNRECRS ERE prEREsEseUEREf x PRONE PERE ME RENE WE BE AG 2 B v gisuatasRERese 7 JY B yp EEc-iiesnEstel CRBS PREBERE OE EEC eunBNNGE Beech Creek Junetion .. ... Union Station (Mabafey! f Flag station. Lonnectivns— At Unim Nation, with Heweh Creek mailrosd, Pen nayianin raiirosd, road: al Wh po sm SPDR BHOG SH. Hicks. ¢
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers