The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, August 25, 1898, Image 2

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    | Dis LeKking of OT WBE TAX Fiat pn Bien
ones rent if unplessaut, | taste of war,
In building nother navy v Spain will
bat in a position to begin at the bottom
end work up.
~~ The amonnt of farm capital invested
in all Europe is estimated at 881,264, -
000,000; United States, 819, 882 004,
000; Canada, 81,464.000.000; Ans
tralia, ol 182,000,000,
One reason why 1 n smaller death
rate will prevail in the war than in
previons wars is the advance in medi-
esl knowledge and in perfection of |
"| miedieal appliances, Antiseptic treat-
. mwent of wonnds was nnknown the last
time the United States was at war
Its introduction will make the hos-
pital death rate much lower.
Professor W celer of Cornell Uni-
versity in the Atlantic forecasts the
eoming struggle for the mastery of the
world. He sets aside the Latin races
as unstable and unprogressive, the
ir Teuton {Germany} as lacking some
element vital to success.
min England and Russia, the Slav
i and the Anglo-Saxon, of which last we
ave and must be a part. And to the
Anglo-Saxon he looks for the future
world dominance in the interests of
: civilization, humanity and progress,
a notable exploit w which onht not
fo be overshadowed by the glorious
deeds of Dewey and Schley was that
of Commander Todd and his little war |
fist off Manzanillo, Three Spanish
ganboats, three transports and a
ymatoon or storeship were completely
destroyed, and with the nsaal report,
casualties.” The fire of the gan-
boats and shore batteries failed to
reach Commander Todd's vessels, and
after completing the task assigned
‘Bim he steamed away and made a re-
port which for modesty and good
taste exceeds that of the Admiral |
Disensying the influence of de-
dencies upon the United States
and its policy, the Spectator says:
“The world's fntare greatly fepeails
Americans. When, in 1950, they are
4wo hundred millions, they ean crush
any people except the Slavs. To fit
them for that destiny fhe Americans
should have difficulties, dependencies
and complisated relations with the re-
muinder of mankind. At present
erythiing is too essy to them, They
live too much to themselves. They
mist learn to govern as well as to be
overned, and mast add to their
abi the English gift of eold and |
They must keep
} governments as free from
as their Supreme Court.”
making Fapid Tadustrial
On good authority it is
| that within the past few years |
kas more than doubled the num- |
ber of her cotton factories, and that
sh has scored marked achievements
n other directions.
107 cotton factories in Mexico
taxes to the Government. Of
0, three were knitting mills, four
re spinning mills, eighty eight were
ining and weaving mills, six were
ng, weaving and printing mills
and sit were printing mills. The
ive power of these factories aggre:
tod 13,826 horsepower, and their
; outfit comprised twenty:
printing machines, 13,660 looms
448,156 splindies. They em-
8 | 20,994 men, women and chil
and consumed 53,273,307
wounds of raw cotton. Half of the
alton consumed was imported from
Mexic »
United States aud half was pro.
LANA
may be termed retin
names which appear, says
Army and Navy Journal. It has
» common belief that the major.
of our regular soldiers were for
goers, and the hasty deduction was
that they were of the floating
lation, fighting simply for their
| distinctly inferior mentally,
and physically. In one list
170 wounded, 130 bore American
nes—fully seventy-six per cent —
and we think it justifisble to claim
fully ove-balf of those having!
names were born in this conn
try. Consequently, if this list is a
type of all, at least eighty per cent, ol
oar army must be American born.
This is very gratifying to know. All
from correspondents and dis.
erested people unite in praising the
ne physique, general intelligence
good conduct of our enlisted men,
their condaet in battle, the losses
y sustained at Sautiago is the best
f, and it is gratifying to our pride
that they are all Americans
There re- |
In 1896 not less | |
A YEAR FROM TO-MICHT,
A from: to-night,
matt we sit here the same?
1 wonder and wonder,
And stare at the fame
That will not reply,
Though I study its light,
And sadiy am thinking
A year from to-night,
A vear from tonight,
Al, whi can foretell”
But this I may eoant on
That all will bs well;
The rest just as happy,
The fire ust as bright,
Where ¢'or | am dreaming
A year from to-night
The world will bs laughing,
Nor hash a glad breath,
Although a tired dreamer
He dreaming of dest
A foolish young dreamer,
Whose Hips have grown wile,
May sienp ail forgatten
A vear from to-night
~Fthel M. Angier, in Boston
FLOYD GRAYS
TEMPTATION.
By Eben FE. Rexford,
Trasseript
LOYD GRAY nsed to
tell himself when he
were children, that
some day, when he
he was going
marry the rosy.
cheeked, bright
eyed girl who al
ways coanted on
him as her champion
in all the diffienities that arose to
raffle the happiness of those child
kood days
i need to picture to himsell a pleasant
‘home, and Mary's face and smile made
sunshine in it. The other lads seemed
to recognize that in some way, he bad |
an especial claim on Mary, and they
never thought of interfering between
them. Even the grown-up people,
how much they were together,
and how little they seemed to care for
other society, used to say: “It was
going to be a match,” and it is not at
- all to be wondered at that Floyd felt
confident of the futare, so far as Mary
was concerned. So confident was he,
the man he had thought so much of
being, he did not feel it necessary to
say anything to Mary about his pians,
because he was not vet ready to carry
them out. He felt sure she ander
stood all abont them. He wanted to
get some kind of a start in the world
i before be took upon himself! the re |
sponsibility of home- making.
about taking advantage of it, ag first,
on Mary
told him he would be doing a very
foolish thing in letting such as oppor.
tunity slip through his fingers. And’
Mary, when he came to talk with her |
about it, thooght very much as all the |
rest of them did. So it came about
| abont all his old friends conid see to!
, recogmize him "L
‘came over him to visit his old home.
And he went back to it, bronzed al-
| most to swarthiness by Western winds |
and sun, and with a face so hidden by |
the beard he wore that his eves were
It happened that Mary was one of
i the firet persons he met on Gis arrival
i rent hie
| Her face was pale and
and Mary Dexter
grew to be a man,
to!
in Brantford He knew her the
saw her and yet.
| changed that he sould hardly believe
Lit ras the Mary he had lovad so long
grave
tranhls
ih
Ales was RO
eves had a look of settled
cthem, The gir] was gone, and
place he found a woman whe
i not hronght her happiness,
15
# 3 §
ifi asr
| He had hoped that the old love had |
sprang to his feet
iidied ont in his heart, Hehad felt sare
Lof it, becwnes Be had scenstomed him.
elf to the thought that Mary eonld!
never he nearer to him than she was’ that was almost »
Bat when he met her, and {
of her hand in his own,
aus] looked into her grave, thoughtfal |
: wily I dud
at present
{uit the toneh
ceves that kindled with warmth again
at sight of him, he knew that he loved
‘her the same as of old
enrely bring this man back
I vo
fio
deadly draught
Her
C¥ou are uot responwmible for
% wg 2
se fife had
‘ mpemmed to form themselves on
: now,
dranght of happineas you might drink
{if it ware not for him. He stands be-
tween von and all you have hoped for,
for years. It ia in your power to
{choose between possession and loss...
for Fate will
froin the
brink of the grave to thwar! von in
nr desire for happiness, te jikes
div these thin Why mid yon
hold yourself gmilty for the man's
death? You are not offering hum
You are simply aliow-
he pledsas. Xurely
be result,
in
uniter Joma, remembar
ra
Far Bian Ta Ars ’S
¥2
Let ham drink st--let bim 4
Coward! Marderer' Th
{8
of fire before Flovd Gray's eves
%
side before be kinew what he was about,
almost, and he dashed aside the glass |
i a
Poaent
tf the other's lip
Read, angrily.
“Look at the label aud you'll know |
hig |
; from ti
i,
whirling
that ail 1 i
suswerad Floyd,
dizziiy, He kpew,
save written dows had
brain
He told himself that it was wrong passed through his mind in a few short
tor feel Jika thin
canmther
cold, abstract reasoning of this kind
He loved her, and there was no wayof |
evading the trath
“Bat [ can prevent any one else |
from knowing it,” he said. “'] don't
know that | am to blame in loving ber,
bat T wonid be to blame if | let people |
find 1t ont, now that matters are as
they are.
“at the village drug store. Hea under
stood when he saw him why Ser face
had snsh a sorrowinl look nit. Young |
Con- |
{ toyrether,
Doctor Read was dying slowly.
sumption had set ita seal spon him. |
And be was going down to his death
As he grew older, be |
of his own
atder the inflgencs of the demon of |
drink. There was not a day when he |
was sober,
lowed the poor fellow to help himself
to the lignors on his shelves, and he
ity to deaden and stupely the pain of |
his disease.
Floyd could not but pity the vietim |
wenk nesses,
‘something winning sbout him.
sould understand how Mary had been |
‘attracted to him. He wondered if it |
i ware not possible to save him yet and
he tried to do so,
indeed, that when he had grown to bs |
already ajar for his entrance
ing to the cough that racked the form |
C Dr. Reed was dead.
It might come | .
for Mary's sake
But he was soon convinced that re
clamation was out of the question a moment
The only escape from the terrible in.
the door of death, snd that door was
of the d¥ing man, Floyd realized that
the ead was not far off,
Lat any timid.
A came for him to make this
start in life in the West. He hesitated !
's account, but all bis friends |
One day he saw that Read was in|
from Mary bad told him
{maght
| clumsy,
that made it
an anasaally wronghtup condition
fe was weaker than nssal. He
coughed more His nerves seemed
sii mquiver. Time and again, as they
talked together, he got up and went |
that he went away from Brantford tos |
make his start in the world, and he
| went away, foolishly enough, withont
any definite nnderstanding with Mary :
about the fature. Heunderstood how |
he fait en it, and what his inten
tions 25d he took it for ragged |
{that she did also. And in doing this |
‘he made the sams mistake that a great
many other young men make. Noth.
8 sos be aken for granted in
oof
a
TW age
: pity for the poor fellow, who bad made
! seh shipwreek of hia life. |
| Ofcourse, they COrTaspon: ded with each |
| other, but their letters were not at
love-like. Floyd Gray,
| those men who find it exceedingly
| difficult to express themselves satis.
faotorily on paper. He might think,
! beforehand, of a good many things he |
would like to say, and that ke meant
to say, when he wrote his letter; bat
when the pen was in his hand,
the paper before him, waiting for the |
record of his thoughts, bis ideas
seemed to desert him, and what
snceeeded in writing was wholly lack:
ing in sentiment—a colorless trans
eript of a few formal phrases that
might! mean saything
‘the love he felt for Mary, in his heart,
all |
WAR ahe of !
i up,
3
i
P
3
arid i
:
behind the connter, and poured him
self ont a little glass of liquor, whieh, |
for a short time, seemed to relieve
the tension of his nervous eomdition
But the effect of the drag would
speedily wear away, asd another
draaght was soon necessary to keep |
down the tortare of the pan within,
' Floxd wondered how a man io such a
condition of physical weakness conld
(stand the nsnal effect of no mach
| ligeior The pain We felt mast be
| powarfal ou agh to counteract it, he |
| onght, aid pauls he felt a great |
3 dy
el *
By-aud bye, a terfih0s Pa sxysm of
songhing seemed to almost exhaast
When it was over, he got
with
the man
trembling is every limb,
She was the wife of seconds of time,
Bnt the heart cares little for | an age, a= | have said, and the reali: |
reéactaon that |
made him weaker than the man at his |
i side. i
“I got hold of the wrong bottle, it |
| meems, said Reed, frightened almost |
discovery, |
i -'Y on've saved my life, or what little :
there is left of it. Bat is wasn't worth :
“1 be |
Somelow T don's
I'm |
i ino
saving
He met Mary's husband frequently
There was
He |
Ia stan.
love you.
(my wife?”
But it had seamed
| zation of it cate with a
sotwraoess by the
he added bitterly
lieve I'll go bone.
| feel as if wanted another dram.
ror, I suppose.’
“Let me go with you,” Floyd said,
and the two men went down the street |
They |
to Mary's home
parted at the gate,
“1 suppose 1 ought to thank yon {
for what yira did. "
The village draggist al. | thank won, though I think it would |
have been better to hava hal it all over |
I've wished |
‘availed himself fully of the opportan- | I were dead many & time, but—I'm |
afraid to die, so I keep on living as |
But I can’t keep on |
odine
Reed said.
with as soon as possible,
| long as | can
| forever, ean I?" and he laugh
| way that made Floyd shudder. “Well,
bye, till wo meet again
better man,
now.” Reed held ont his this,
faves,
he thaske i (vond for it
» * . »
The next morning be heard that
. » » -
A year
Again,
He had written ber in lis
awkward fashion, »
straight to the heart of the matter.
I need you Will you be
And she had answered:
ay :
Then they stood up before the man
i of God, and the marriages words wera
i spoken, a thought of
his awful temp-
What if Le had
he had not vield-
there was no
tatwn came to him.
yielded to 1? Bat
Led, thank Gad, and
‘semse of guilt to cast a shadow on the |
happiness thal seemed opening out
; before hon Now York Ledger,
wontcipm—————
The Gatewny to Paciflie Teade.
Hon. Frask
Ain
the Century an article entitled
great drops of sweat on his ghastly | “Facts About the Philippines, with .
‘face, and went behind the counter | Disenssion of Pending Problems”
for another drink. Looking at kim
‘ with the pity hie felt expressnd in bis!
‘a little ont of the direct Line of ocean
(traffic in voyages by way
Floyd Gray saw him reach ap
bottle from which bo usually
face,
or Lh
drank,
horror, that he took dows one instead
he
| deally poison,
| of its contents into a Zins, with
told that
He poured ont some
3%
whose label
unstesdy hand, too keenivaiive tothe
: or notlang. i
Therefore, it was quite natnral that
| never found its way into the letters |
{be wrote her.
He Lad been
% when a letter came to him
news that Mary Dexter was soon to
be married to a young doctor who Lad
recently settled in Brantford, &
Married ~-Mary? It could not be
#
her, and that he felt sare she under
stood what his intentions were, and
bad signified his willingness to wait
for him to *‘get his start” in life be.
fore they entered into the partnership
of matrimony.
Bat when he came to think it over,
as he did, when the ability to think
soberly came back to him after the
stanning effect of the hitter news had
worn away somewhat, he saw what a
great mistake he had made. How
was she to know anything abont his
intentions without being told of them?
No matter what she might think about
them, so long as he said nothing she
could not be expected to have any
definite knowledge of bis plans, He
realized, when it was too late, the
folly of “*taking things for granted
Mary married, She had done well,
his mother wrote, in one of the letters
he got frem her shortly after the mar.
riage. By-and-bye, she wrote, that,
after all, Mary had not done so well,
for the young doctor had began to
lead a dissipated life.
had any knowledge.
Poor Mary! His heart went out to
her, he loved her still,
in the West thrae!
from
‘his mother that stunned him with the |
loved her—that he intended to marry | himself
i Should he
draught that had death init, aod thus |
piles by a progressice
i
§
§
i
i
i
!
§
§
srtare of his inward pata to police
the mistake he ja making.
Then it was that the moment of
Floyd Gray's terrible temptation came |
to him, If poor Reed drank
he would die
speedily. It
shin world be free! Free {or bin
woo and win her!
| It seemed to him that it was an age |
Bhe kpew--she must know that he! that be sat there and debated with |
as to what hie shomld do
jet the man drink
remove the obstacle in the way of hap-
from himself, forever, perhaps, the
possiblity of the happiness be loaged
for?
Who knew? Heed might get well,
after all. Straoger things had bap
pened. Now was the chance for him
to make sare of the fatare. Let the
die’ It would be better for him, bet:
ter for Mary, better {for himself
conscience a stain almost hike that of
marder} Could he afford to carry
with him through [life the conscions-
put back death from this man for a
time, and he had made no effort to do
so? Bat- death was a question of
time, simp'y. Why not
He had re
lapsed into habits formed before his
marriage, of which noone in Brantford
: not die,
her in pity, for, though he had lost {yom love apart.
meet it now”? Was it any Kindness to
him to prolong his masery? Then
something seemed to whisper to him,
Do not be deceived. The man will
Frevent lum frem
| drinking that draught, and in doing it
bat he saw, with a thell of 2
it contained a |
FE drent,
staan
the |
dranght he had prepared for himself
Peath would eome
would relieve Mary's
i life of the burden it was bearing, id
addition to
; mach of Earope which
‘ Decean,
the |
piness, or should he save him from the
consequences of the mistake he was
making, sad in doing it, put away
poor fellow drink the draught, and |
| south,
Bat—wenid it not leave upon his!
ness that it had been in his power to
fet the wan |
: piv angraph the pupil
Fate will step in and work a
{miracle to keep yon and the woman |
‘Mr. Vanderlip sary
Whale 12 1s trae that the islands ile
of the east.
n passage, therh are reasons which
operate strongly for a discontinnance
af navigatio n hy way of the Straits of
Malacca and the China Nea to the
The voyage by this conrse 18
eer.
i
The
one dreaded by sll navigators at
seasons of the vear, when
| Wtrails bevome the santer of the worst
storm distarbagess Kaown to
warid, and when navuration
conse rently restricted With
opening of the Nicaragua Canal,
the trade of our Atlante
the
ths 8
how =
a
erer.
and in
af
sliorter route thus provided;
this, the oFamerve
, Fast by the voyage through the Med:
terranean, the Suez Canal,
nad the Stra:
ronte, will tara ia the opposite direc
tion. The possession of the Philip
commercial
power, if the Nicaragua Casal project
ahonid be completed, would change
Ea-
o will be the gateway to all the
earth in the mantime trade of China,
may, in the course of these changes,
| now in prospect, become scarcely more
than a distributing pont for the trade |
‘of the vali ey of the Si-Kiang.
The Phonograph a Teacher,
he plhooograph
ch foreign iatiguages
TePives a text.
and twenty loaded S¥inden
lessen in the book 13 arranged ir
uf questions and answers
is Ow
ten
3
Tas =
Fach |
the form
The pupil,
ehune, the tubes to his cars, and starts
A vear later an irresistible longing | you dash away from your own lips the the plicnograph.
the |
FOUGHT WITH FARRAGUT.
Commodore Watson Has Muny Good |
Things to His Credit.
Among those who fm appteciniion |
the opwortnnities aflarded by |
throteh
war ¢ Complore Wataon chosen to
naval ¢pedition
hens
aml wavs
fad he
Walera, SEE
1 oy
Bate
was
far in
Hix puther was Sarah
words | 0
letters |
He |
He was at Beed's ;
“What do you mean by thet? cried |
i Uritienden {
L wtanding hish
: Ope gesignemi fo the
“Ido |
I you
‘like. If I bad known you years ago |
yon might have helped me to be »
Bat it's too late for tha:
blood :
| less hand, and the two men stood for |
i looking into sach other's
Floyd could meet the eyes of |
| Anence that was over him was through | i the other without shame or fear, and |
i fimg Dentenmunt
Cin the battles of New Orleans
later he came to Brantford |
And he came because a jetter |
that he
: Without following
iotter
nanecessary for her to L,
(take anything for granted. There
wers pone of the graces of finely
worded phrases about it, bat it went
ef ¥
Ioarmd
{the naval home in PI
eit
Lenny
A. Vaaderlip, Assistant
{ Seo retary of the Treasnry, contributed
i $0
is
ports |
with the (rrient will take the safer and |
Altima & Phlipsbarg Comectng R. B
now seeks the |
the IThdian |
ts, or bythe Cape |
| flamey.
F Bonlodmin
Puliipeburg
the course of ocean navigation as 14
f
| concerns a large percentage of the
water-borne trafic of the world
! rope looks to the Nicaragua Canal and
(the Pacifie as
| Philipsburg
| Usomcin Mis,
offering 8s Detter route !
to the tar-Fastern countries, and in |
| the event of its completion the archi
| pela;
trade of lower China and the countries | :
- Ft Houtmdale. Li...
Hong Kong, the great ware
mouse where are stored and whence |
are distributed the products of the |
| GF Real Dawn,
ar Tead Up.
L Haigny, wows
asad ta se
With each
| am
ready to begin, puts the |
evlinders of the frst lesson no the ma
Irtenidon Watson CRATE Tee
a Neither as Well
int faring Zz wn meat
How fog td
iittala
ET Was Hon
one Time
inte Ad
inet of Presi
Harrison, Bhe
Tlhwvias La
the | pited Rates army
nay al
He
in fupe,
SATE
sr fF
ar
hentueky and
tarpey General o
Wii
deme
fe 4
Hoary
winter 4 § sy
iam
Wis
£33
14 tas iaarn
Watwon's
ree $e LN tavagt
We naval academy
in hix
00 MI apane
JOHN £. WATE Y.
man, Joi ni fog
* a
[usgueha tna
months later for a cruise to Europe, |
i While
thie civil
and he returned at
be was abroad
broke onl
Luke part
in Angust, 1881 but
career did not begin
following year, when be wus onlered
to the Hartferd as navikator
was Admiral Parragut« Ragyhin
was commissioned a Hentensnt
year and in January, 1864
fo Farragut
Aras made
He was
Bay, Vickshare amd Port Hudson 0
was Watenn whe lashed Farragut te
the rigeing during the memorable doh
in Mobile Bas
Ar t
Watson
wir 1.euL
tos The 1 oloradn
Rin career detail
rom that fie lw has leen prosiated
Made [isutenant Com
wi Pe Camis under,
Captain, March
TT wi
ves TEs
close of the ivi
was
Lie
{EY 8 erag
i
as follows
mander, July
Jap. 28. INT4
gud Commodores Nav, §,
rie vears he haw
mt wane of (he Dext hats a
sate thane governor of
Wolpe
sSnmarried children ei
was the daughter of Judge
Iapres Thoraron of Sun Pras The
hry Edward Walupn, « an
en%ign in the savy sad attach to the
erniser Detroit,
lin
the last 1h givede
ihe
was for
aad Ininbi
wife and
Xie
firs
seaicle
{ey
ples son, Jo
ya
wonld le infer
MarR
ara
The Commodore, as
rea} fro ecard, Is a man of
ie
tions sud ves op fo th
ation ad with tole
stile
ey his
Tin
fav alia af Fs
nus ig
with
rave. He
of Hie
‘9
£3.
onl ould
bolds the few and ress
BW Hak that He =»
af his
We ii, Bw Sy TRe
prery demand
unt and considerate
Maintoon His Man
Wallnesn- And dul you aa
gpalut
sri
- 5
Yu 5 Ww
Ha
ant
wa
wad
WW Lr
ELL
mad can't Reed from 4
%e * old d E ¥
+} shouldn't HRe 10 LHSL my
ir “Washington Star.
5 Ly HF
AxinleRal i
ye cat A ARNE
Cail MEO ORRR
giging
sell with
LON DENXSED TIME TABLE.
In alivet Devenir 3 i
Fasraaun- Waek Dar
EW AM Nouw
7.88 aR 1138
’ S 93 ny
TH 9M 138
i 0 Was LW
AN. AR Fa
~ Week Daya
ru.
Lad
oi
Lin 8
$00
3.12
3.81
3 45
1.
Uiwomicin Mille.
Winrwasn
£8 AM
x30 1118
38 1a
$50 1: 88 a d3
200 1208 133
Sexna¥y Traren
PR
pan en vnnnny Sh
. Nid
. 3%
a8
Fo
Pm
i.08
318
Huoutadaie i 35
Hamey. i
Ramey
Jeesuia Mills,
Putiipsbary
Soxpar Toate,
AM
19.28
AAS
fo
a
FW
CoNseerove— AL Philipsburg (Union Sa
0 with ai Heed Creel Hadiromwl aioe
or and from Beiisfonte, Lock Haven, Wilke
sport Besmdiog, Polisdeipiias sud New
Lith, Lawren wviiom Cormiag, Watkin
{Ew gue va and I. vans t “Senrtiwid, Mapafley an
| alton Curwensviiie, Duliows, Puaxsataws
wer, Rulgway, Bradford, Bulla
Sarurenter,
Hoglsdale
Bececiin Mills
EE
t Uomo for Houtzdale and Ramey with |
MN
IL trains saving Tyrone st 1.30 FP.
GoM OH. GOOD, ;
Gegeras Sup bo
in eanteorn
Ang dover solutions
Eien Sanphest
WAN
Farear iy
gradanred
ey,
class amd was af |
rank of midship |
iow i " } a y
rT Them, KE. Watt
Fifth averar
j England were cocks,
Cold Datel
many of the houses sormonated be 141
War |
ee Iny
He was promoted o master |
his actual gbting
til Janvsey of the
This
He
that
Mobile
Sn) 5
INkT,
BaAYy |
and
Peansyivania Railroad "Time
Table
May 16, 1908
Main Line.
Lone Crown Fast ward.
Bea Bhyry F xpress. week days EF am
Atoms Accommodation week tans $2 am
Main Lint Express, daily ME am
Saity
Mat Fopross daily
Priladilphia Brpress, dail
ddave Freese 9
Fabimetins Aven, week drs
Paste Fae, dutty
C Was Passenger, daily
Pittsburg ¥ x {ven
ne daily —
Jotinstown Keenan werk dure
Cambria and ClesrSeld.
Must iywe ed
Maruing train for Patton and Creason fesse
$45 Matin fey For 8 3 Im
MA Westover nid. Fasticgs 3% tian
fer am G3 Patron S05 Readies
tax THe Keshw Pw Ebensbrg: Toe
nrrising BY © remem BH oa A fern
Tor Pathe and Ores leaves alten
Aplecdt gf 14% p me nat at 2 Ladoss
SRY Westover 5 9 Hastings tH anrway Bow
Crommnts) p2 Patton 100 Brmditey Funeria
149% Kaylor £15 arriving at Crean at #40
Northiward
Morving tmis ieaves {rmeean foe Mabathy
41 *3 Fiwaabney (00 Kuvior (00 Bedi y
Jiinedion fii 3 Pt fan MET Garay | for Hast
tiged 11%: Hinatings for Malay 113% tar
aay for Mahafey | 11% Westover (18 Le
dose (10% Mahaffey [S15 arriving at Giles
! nm phe} IAL A fern Immin for Pat
fv mre (Den Ciiprpbed] saves Crowes st oe
Kaylor di Freasborg 5, Bradley Tumetius
HI Patton 642 Garay (Gor Hastioge Je
H. satinnge or (lem {a gtortt) 7:1; Breas bw
tien & anh 0oray Westover Ta fa es
LE RHE Arrives 3 isl |
af Su pom ing at Glew Campie
For riitow: sump
Fatma
Frit
BEE. ANDY Lo tedet agent
P. A 8B. Db. =
Pitsburg. Pa :
£. BL Hutchinson,
teen Mgr.
O14 Time euther Buliattous.
The sarliest weather MRoes in New
IrRmpetars sim.
ple plates disks and arrows and not
to be overlooked, the sacred codfish,
Cla Bowden corks or broad armws were
Can all the
ahd charvhes
ime house where Gen
Om the Prov
fyage had hie
hamdgnariers, thers was 1 statue of an
Indian with draws bow and arrow,
reddy to shoot. Prints of the site of
New Amsterdam as (1 was in the goed
davs show the shavehse and
#34ed cock pr the platy arrow.
itm easter to sell a farm than it is to
il a plano.
Buffs, Rochester snd Fittebury ly.
nd after Jaly 1 9K. Deine will
creek Depot, Clearfield as Sdioeww
Hye
Sy rE
Beech {
Bia me Bevooldsviiles Aovomsadation, foe
Crarwensvilin PraBois, Falls mel art fe
oldeviiie. Conmeeting at Im Bode Ser Riva
way, Jobnsoobarg, Breaded snd Hoclester,
Hale rn Rofiio Kxpves,
Pradiodm and Falls Crwel
PiaBedn, for Bilgway, Juptsosbvirg,
fared and Bude,
if pom DaBole and Puynwend
pres, For DaBeds Falls One
we Rae fe,
far Ln rereranen thie,
£ rrriraeeliseg at
Pred.
£3
FIR
ape
abd I
Tomine arrive 90 5 mm. and sud 08%
Bh Ed
Fw theese, thon taboos soi? 100i inline
etl an uw anid roms
ity nity, 2
1%
A ent, a i
Clenrteid Pa
A CT WH A ©
Beech Creek Railroad.
N.Y CRHR ER Co Loven
C oadedtod Time Table
Beart dose
Voup Mail
Nous wrk Nas ow
$ WR, {2 Ha
cq
4A
fr 4 8
i 33 Pie
aX Lis
He ey + >
ws _—
as
a.
5 on ety
ane Tay XY
Few muster NW. ¥.
—
Hom oo
E ip
Ns
os
be =
May 15 Ne
so MERC eRr Sah) elles
fr
ETRE
5 ed ww
ww ELE
Pie
Mi Had
yERER 3k
Fn aad
atwessll al
1% BE RE
Patton
ahs
Time
Table.
5 1AKE EFFECT MAY 23 1:33
Westward :
vicost NAYLOR Maha the
reek Tumetisn
Prssnsgroaned
shen) {@inegted
SEL Jug {
Eastward
Hiatal i" $
£554 ihuped
it:
Bats
dsig pate resras PO
cEsnten
a id
=.
tay
rion, Malmo,
Ey inher
BE
ie Chix, a soca Messager
Maal « Pa