The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, September 22, 1905, Image 2

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    $
a had come to my door alone,
Tv. my | y
y lord; .
Ha I heard no footfall save your own,
voice but yours,
ow wide had my door been thrown,
how gladly the way been shown,
ve, my lord!
t I peered from my casement cautiously,
ve, my lord;
You stood at my door with henchmen three
I knew too well;
Doubt and Distrust stared up at me
And gaunt-faced, white-lipped Jealousy,
Love, my lord,
“TrHE CLOSED DOOR.
Oh, the house of my heart is over small,
Love, my lord;
An’ if I let you in I must let in all,
Oh, every one!
And riot would reign in my quiet hall,
And 1 fear me soon would my dwelling fall,
Love, my lord.
You went who might never entrance win,
Tove, my lord;
Strange that 1 thought it little sin
To bar my door;
But a king comes ever with shout and din,
And not alone had you entered in,
Tove, my ord.
- L'hen sia
Garrison, in Puck.
!
{
ev -
| FreETING TO THE DEATH
A BULGARIAN LEONIDAS AGAINST THE TURKS,
Thir{y-eight Men Repel the Attack of Thousands--A Gal-
lant Defens2 of a Mounta in Pass--Th2 Robin Hood
of Macedonia and His Exploi's.
| BY ALBERT SONNICHSEN .
~ am
EE i TET
OR the past fow weeks I
have been studying bits of
reports that bave come in
from Macedonia from va-
©) rious chiefs of chetas, se-
cret agents and other in-
dividual members of the organization,
all regarding a certain incident whick
occurred some weeks ago down in
Southern Macedonia, in the caza, or
district of Tevgeli. It was much tele-
graphed about gt the time and men-
~ tioned in the European papers, but
ome of the main facts and all the
details have as yet remained secret.
Putting together the dry official re-
ports to the commiltee with the nar-
ratives of several participants or wit-
nesses who arrived here several days
ago, and excluding obvious individua!
exaggerations, there still remains the
story of an event which stands out as
. remarkable, even in this country of
sensational events. It is just such a
one as you may find here and there
in the pages of Herodotus—a second
~ Leonidas in another Thermopylae, It
is the story of how :hirty-eight comi-
tajis, well armed and well entrenched,
for a whole day stood off the repeated
attacks of 2000 regular Turkish
soldiers, a horde of several thousand
bashi-bazouks, several hundred Alban-
dans and a band of thirty Greeks.
‘These numbers are quoted in the Turk-
«sh reports.
Few people familiar with events
here for the past few years have not
heard of Apostol Voyvoda, known to
the Turks and gendarmerie officers as
_ Captain Apostol. There is a standing
| price of 5000 liras, or Turkish pounds,
on his head. He is a small, dark,
keen-eyed man of about thirty-five
_ years, who can neither rrad nor write,
and always signs his dispatches, writ-
ten by his secretary, with a rubber
stamp hanging as a watch charm.
Were he a man of education, he would
be one of the general lecders, for he
is intellectually keen. But he is the
Robin Hood of Macedonia, It is about
kim that the story centres.
A week before Lent Apostol came
_ here to Kustendil, to recross the froi-
tier some days later with several horse
loads of munitions, Ile was going to
take them to his cwn district, cache
them in the mountains to use them as
a reserve for the summer's fighting.
Witk Lim were Save Michaeloff, his
gub-chief, and thirty-eight men, On
the day before the begirning of Lent,
Apostol and his band were in the
Giavato Mountains. He wanted to
get over into the Cherni-Dervent Moun-
tains; between the two ranges runs
_ the River Vardar. During the day he
had sent a courier across the river
to the vilinge of Spalivo, asking the
villagers to send horses for the amnmu-
pition. As was afterwards known,
the courier was stopped in the inter-
‘mediate village of Stoyak, where a
company of scldiers were quartered.
* And this is the reason he was stopped.
A Greek shepherd boy, wandering
about "the mountains with his flock,
eame accidentally upon Apostol's band
in hiding for thie day. They took him
prisoner. Now, every Greck is an
enemy to every Bulgar, and for some
qnoments the boy's life was in danger.
Perhaps it was his youth which ap-
pealed to the chief; at any rate, he
released him. The boy at once went
to the village of Stoyak and reported
Apostol’s presence in the nearby moun-
tains, and ater pointed out the courier
passing through the village for Spalivo.
The latter was arrested. When night
came and the horses from Spalivo did
rot appear, Apostol de ided that per-
haps the villagers had lost the war,
go he and his men shouldered the am-
munition bags among them, descended
to the river, crossed it, and by moon-
light had reached their destination,
Spalivo. This village was several
‘miles higher up the same bauk of the
"river on which stood Stoyak, where
the soldiars, wefe quartered, On one
side are aigh mountain bluffs, on the
other the River Vardar.
But as the villagers had not received
‘Apostol’s message, they, not expecting
him, had made no preparations, First,
they had allowed their dogs free, who
noisily announced the entrance of the
pandsmen into the village. Their bark-
ings were heard by some Albanian
shepherds a short distance outside.
However, the ammunition was
gtored imran old, half-broken-down de-
sgerted house, and two of the bandsmen
~ avere detailed to sleep upon it. Apostol,
Michaeloff and their companions then
© divided themselves among a half dozen
houses nearby. In half an hour all
were asleep, save a few of the vil-
jagers, who remained awake to guard
_egainst surprise. Meanywkbile the sol-
a
diers in .»woyak had quietly marched
up to Spalivo and surrounded it. Then
a search party entered the village and
began searching the houses, The Al-
banian shepherds, who had heard the
barking of the dogs, joined them, The
soldiers were now doubly assured that
they had Apostol and his band sur-
rounded at last.
Meanwhile, the pounding at the doors
as the Turks demanded entrance to
the houses, alarmed the village. Ior-
tunately, tie search began from the
side opposite to that where the bands-
men were quartered. Now, it 1s a
standing law of the committee that the
bands must never fight in the villages,
unless absolutely cornered, so Apostol
and his wen, still half clothed, gath-
ered themselves together, and deter-
mined to break through the ring. It
is probable that the traitor, who, as a
Greek, hated the Turks only a little
less than the Bulgars, had minimized
the number of the band, and that the
Turks thought they bad only a band
o( ordinary size to deal with, of from
fifteen to twenty men, At any rate,
Apostol and his men had no difficulty
in walking through the circle. They
retreated quickly up the pass through
which the river runs until they could
go no further, Bebind them the bluffs
descended abruptly into the Vardar:
on one side rose cliffs, on the other,
below 'them, ran the river, a wide,
swift stream just then, for the snows
were melting, Before them the rock;
ground descended toward the village.
From a military point of view, it was
an ideal position for defense—and
death, for no escape vas possible.
Day was dawning then, as the
bandsmen hastily threw up three lines
cf trenches with loose rocks and
boulders that had once timbled down
from the heights above them. As
soon as the Turks were able to
locate their positions by the growing
light, they spread out in fan formation
below, and began to fire. The bands-
nen numbered just thirty-eight, for in
the hurry there Lad not been time to
gather in the two men who were in
the hut with the ammunition. As
was found later, they rontinued sleep-
ing undisturbed, for the Turks had
not considered the hut worthy of
search, and there the ammunition and
its two guards remained in safety dur-
ing the whole day. The first line of
trenches in the pass was defended by
Save Michaeloff and eleven nien.
Fifty yards beyond and higher up
fifteen men were stationed, and still
higher up were Apostol aad twelve
men,
Meanwhile the firing had begun to
attract to thie spot the vultures of the
Turkish army, the Dbashi-bazeuks.
These are a disorganized, irresponsibl:
rabble, who seldom fight but are al-
ways on hand to shave the plunder.
On occasions, they will sometimes sup-
port the troops in a charge, for thay
are well armed. These began to zather
in great numbers now, and took up
positions with the regulars. When the
fight was two hozrs old a Greer band
of thirty men, ccmmanded by an cficer
in the uniform of the Greek army, ap-
peared and joined the Turks.
Evidently the Turkish officer in com-
mand had recognized the strength of
Apostol's position, for hitherto he had
ordered no attack, Meanwhile it had
been telegraphed to Salonica, two
heurs away, by train, that Apostol
was cornered and more troops were
needed. But, anxious to gain the big
reward on Apostol's head, the Turk-
ish officer determined to get him
before his superiors arrived. En-
forced by the bashi-bazouks, the Al-
banians and the Greeks, he ordered
a general charge. The ‘bandsmen al-
lowed the charging throng to come
half-way up. Thea four hand gren-
ades were thrown and as many volleys
fired. They also rolled down huge
boulders into the panic-stricken Turks.
The destruction by the bombs was ter-
rific, for even the Turkish regulars,
fierce fighters as they are, poured down
in scrambling retreat.
Having lost heavily, the Turks made
no further efforts then to storm Apos-
tol's position. But in three hours the
reinforcements from Salonica began to
arrive. By noon twenty-five carloads
had come, two thousand soldiers in all,
Meanwhile the bashi-bazouks had
streamed steadily in from the sui-
rounding villages to the number of
five thousand, some reports say. That
is probably an exaggeration, and then,
too, as far as actual fighting was cou-
cerned, most of these fellows prob-
ably took up the passive attitude of
expectant spectators.
Upon the arrival of the generai offices
in command from Salonica, he im-
patiently ordered a general attack at
once. The soldiers made a wild up-
ward scramble, but again the bombs
were blasting up the loose lava among
them, That attack failed, as had the
first, Two more equally desperate ats
tacks had a similar result soon after.
Then the Turks withdrew and began
to open up a heavy fire on the rocks
above, depending on rock splinters to
destroy the insurgents behind their
positions. These tactics, although
costly—for Apostol and his men were
slowly pot shooting individual oflicers
wherever visible—were more success-
ful. By seven that evening, at fifteen
o'clock by Turkish time, the insur.
gents had been much reduced, Another
attack was ordered, before dark should
give the few survivors a possible
chance to escape. In the first trench
ouly Michaeloff and three wen were
alive, and they all wounded. In the
other two lines of trenches were eight
men unwounded.
As this last general attack began
the ammunit. nm of the bandsmen gave
out in a few last volleys. Then
Michaeloff and his three men in the
first trehch rose, deliberatel; smashed
their rifles over the rocks, destroyed
their watches in a similar manner
and drank the poison, which is part
of every bandsman’s equipment, to
save him from torture, if wounded.
The eight men above killed their
wounded comrades with their Knives,
and then made a break for the river.
The Turks were successful. They had
gained the position. The news was then
telearaphed that Apostol had been
killed. From one of the bodies were
taken personal I2tters addressed to him,
a rifle with his name engraved upon it
was found, and various villagers iden-
tified the corpse. Later it was found
that this was the body of Apostol's
secretary, So well was the Sultan
pleased with the rews that he imme-
diately telegraphed his personal thanks
to the troops, and sent £350 to be
divided among them, The gendarmes,
the creatures established by the re-
forms, who had taken part in the
fizht, were all promoted,
Next day Georgis Pasha, the Italian
gendarmerie officer, commissioned
there by the Powers, arrived and be-
gan an investigation, It seems he
was the first to question Apostol’s
death, At any rate, he sent for Apos-
tol's wife, who lives in a village near-
by, and the dead having already been
buried, he ordered them disinterred,
that she might identify her husband
among them. She failed to do so.
But several days after all doubts
were settled when the kaimakam, or
governor of the caza, received a letter
bearing Apostol’'s rubber stamped seal,
announcing himself in good health,
save for a sprained ankle. Of the
whole band of forty men, six escaped,
two being the guards who watched
over the ammunition and took no part
in the fight. They remained with it
until another band came a week later
and carried it safely off. Of the eight
who broke for the river, three were
drowned. while attempting to swim
across, and one, realizing that he could
not even attempt it, drank poison.
One reached the opposite bank and
escaped, and is now here in Kustendil.
Apostol and his three comrades
crouched among some rushes in shal-
low water, and escaped later in the
night when the search was over. He
is now recovering from his sprained
ankle in a secret hospital in the
mountains,
What the Turkish losses were in the
fight is hard to estimate truly. Turk-
ish reports only mention two Greeks
and sixteen Albanians killed. Vil-
lagers of Spalivo say 1200 in all fell,
but that is perhaps an exaggeration.
Still, the casualities must have been
heavy, otherwise such a large force
could not have been checked for a
whole day by thirty-eight men.—New
York Post.
Rachel’s Sister Still Lives,
kb Comparatively few persons are
aware that the once great actress of
the Comedie Francaise, Rachel, who
died so far back as 1838, has a sister
still living in Paris. This sister, Mlle.
Lea Felix, was hurt in a carriage acci-
dent recently, but is now getting
better. Mlle. Felix retired from the
stage fifteen years ago, her last ap-
pearance being as Joan of Arc, in
garbier's drama, at the Porte Saint
Martin. She always retcined her fam.
ily name of Felix. Mlle. Rachel, the
great tragedienne, had four sisters
and one brother. All her sisters were
actresses, like herself, and had con-
siderable sucess in the profesion. Lea
Felix is, in all probability, the only
one of the sisters now living. —Lon-
don Telegraph.
Noble Revenge.
It was a hot day, and the dray horse
and the thoroughbred carriage horse
nappened to be drinking at the same
‘rough.
“Youre a perfect fright,” said the
thoroughbred, indulging in a horse
laugh, “with that hideous old straw
hat on your head.”
The dray horse looked at him, but
said nothing.
Then, with a brush of his ample
tail, he brusned a fiy from the quiver-
ing hide of the carriage horse, which
the latter, with his poor little stump
of a tail, was unable to reach, and
dipped his mose in the trough again.
—Chicago Tribune.
A Curious Club.
One of the most curious clubs on rec-
ord has recently been formed by so-
ciety ladies in Berlin. The principal
condition of membership is that the
applicant must be deaf. The club has
over a hundred members, who meet
regularly one a week in handsomely
furnished rooms in the Wilhelm
Strasse, where they converse by means
of ear-trumpets anl the sign ianguage
and drink tea.
HOUSEHOLD
AFFAIRS
FRANCONIA POTATOES.
Pare potatoes of uniform size and ny
them in the pan with the meat which is
to be balkd, Baste with the drippings
and serve round the meat. They wili
be well browned and flavored.
CHICKEN CUSTARD.
Fill the required number of custard
cups lightly with bread crumbs and
finely chopped cooked chicken. Beat
one egg and add half a cupful of milk
and a few grains of salt and pepper, if
desired, and pour the nfxture into the
cups. Set them in a pan of hot water
to remain in the oven until set.
DRESSING FOR CABBAGE SALAD.
Heat three tablespoons of vinegar
and pour on to the well beaten yaks
of three eggs; beat all the time until
creamy and add two level tablespoons
of butter. Mix two level tablespoons
of salt, two level teaspoons of mustard.
and a level teaspoon of pepper and add
to the cooked mixture. Shave cabbage
fine and mix with the dressing.
BRAIDED BREAD.
Roll out dough that has been mixed
for rolls and has risen and been
kneaded well. Take the palm of the
hand and make the long strips uniform
all their length. Pinch three strands
or strips together at one end and braid
loosely, then pinch the other ends tight.
ly. Lay on a buttered pan and leave
room between the braids to rise. Tet
vise, bake and then glaze with the
white of one egg beaten with a table-
spoon of cold water.
VEGETABLE ESCALLOF.
Put two cups of canned corn and
two cups of canned tomatoes together.
Season with salt and pepper and a
rounding teaspoon of sugar. Pour into
a buttered baking dish and dot with
pieces of butter, using three level table-
spoons. Stir the butter in, then
sprinkle a cup of fine stale bread
erumbs over the top and dot with but-
ter, using a rounding tablespoon this
time. Bake half an hour and serve
hot for luncheon.
POTATO SALAD WITH CELERY.
Six or eight cold-boiled potatoes, one-
third the same bulk of celery, one egg,
one teaspoonful of salt, one teaspocn-
ful powdered sugar, one-half teaspoon-
ful of white pepper, one scant tea-
spoonful dry mustard, two tablespoon-
fuls salad oil, four of vinegar; stir sait,
sugar, pepper and mustard into the
beaten yolk of the egg; add the oil a
little at a time, then the vinegar, lastly
the beaten white; cut the potatoes and
celery into small bits, mix and pour the
jressing over them. Garnish with
parsley or celery tops.
APPLE CUSTARD.
Pare and core four good-sized tender
apples.and steam them until they can
readily be put through a sieve. While
hot, add a tablespoonful of butter, the
volks of four eggs, one saltspoonful of
salt and a cup of milk. Stir well, then
turn into little cups or moulds and
pake in a pan of hot water for twenty
minutes, or until the knife blade comes
up clear. Beat the whites of the ezas
to a stiff froth, sweetening slightly, and
heap over the tops of the cups. Dust
with powdered sugar and brown slow-
ly in the oven. Serve cold.
see.
FSS AUTRE
[HINTS FOR, THE
|HOUSEKEERER.
Benzine and common clay will clean
marble.
Castor oil
leather.
Wash white marble with clear water
and a soft brush.
Lemon juice and glycerine wili clean
and soften the hands.
Drippings from a candle can be taken
out of cloth by ether.
If you are buying carpets for dura-
bility choose small figures.
If a Hamburg steak is served with a
hot tomato sauce it will be most appe-
tizing.
Clean out closets and bureaus with
turpentine water and use gentcrous pro-
portions of the turpentine.
By covering the bottom of a bureau
or chiffonier with a sheet of tin or
zine protection from mice is secured.
A feature brush is preferable to a
cloth for dusting gilt picture framcs,
as the cloth wears and deadens the gilt.
An old tin tea kettle with the bottom
cut out makes an excellent cover to
place over iron heating on gas or gaso-
is excellent to soften
.line stoves.
Until the plumber can come, a leak
can be temporarily stopped with a
mixture of yellow soap, whiting and
a very little water.
A small, stiff brush, such as artists
use when painting in oils, is excellent
for brushing tlie dust from the crevices
in velvet trimming and from between
ribbon folds.
Lemon juice will whiten frosting,
cranberry or strawberry juice will
color it pink, and the grated rind of
an orange strained through a cloth
will color it yellow.
Clean springs and woodwork of beds
carefully, going over joints and ends
of slats and every crevice with corro-
sive sublimate, by way of guarding
1 against possible dust creatures.
FEMININE FANCIES,
Empress Haruko of Japan is fifty-six
years old,
nal
Ex Queen Isabella used to be phe
nomenally stout,
Mrs, Russell Sage has joined the Na«
tional Association of Audubon Socie-
ties,
Miss Honoria Acosta, of the Philip-
pines. graduated from the Drexel In-
stitute,
1t is sald that the wife of M, Witte,
the Russian peace plenipotentiary, is a
Jewess,
Marie Corelli, the author, is a small,
plump woman, with curly hair and a
double chin.
Mrs, W, 8.
nead of a firm handling
lumber monthly.
Queen Wilhelmina of Holland sent
for a famous London photographer to
take her picture,
The German Empress usually spends
her summers at Kadinen, on the north
cast coast of Prussia,
A Belgian woman, Mme. Rolland, of
Seneffe, attained her one hundred and
fourth birthday recently.
Miss Nettie Payne, of Butler, Pa, is
gergeant on the police force, and is on
duty from 7 p. m, until 5 a, m,
Sarah Bernhardt is said to cherish an
almost superstitious affection for a
aecklace of goid nuggets presented to
her by California miners,
Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Dill, of Lincoln,
Kan.. have been married twenty years
and are the parents of twenty children,
all of whom are living.
Miss Madge Pickler, daughter of ex-
Congressman Pickler, has left her
aome in South Dakota to work a mine
she owns in Cripple Creek, Col.
Mlle. de Rosen, daughter of the Tlus-
cian Ambassador, when she makes her
debut in society will receive from the
Czarina the badge and title of a titular
inaid of honov to Her Majesty.
Pratt, of Atlanta, Ga, is
100 cars of
THE NATIONAL GAME.
Mathewson certainly is the mainstay
ol the Giants,
Wagner in fifty-three games hit safe-
Iy forty-eight times,
Fultz still leads the base running in
the American League.
Pitteburg has allowed Carisch to go
home for the rest of 1005,
Lajoie’s men maintain their suprem-
acy at long distance hitting,
There is a great scarcity of catchers
in the big leagues this year.
Thomas, of the Phillies, is doing the
best batting of his career this season,
The Chicago American Club has se-
cured Pitcher Fiene from the Toledo
Club.
Seven home runs were made in the
Boston-Cincinnati double-header of Au-
gust 16.
Dick Padden, commissioned by the
St. Louis Browns to dig up a live one,
returned with a Starr.
The Brooklyn Club has purchased
Infielder Hummell and Pitcher Hart-
ley, of the Holyoke Club.
The Detroit Club has bought pitcher
Tyrus Cobb from the Augusta Club,
of the South Atlantic League.
Young “Cy” Young led the National
League in shut-oufs for a good while,
but Mathewson has supplanted him.
Clymer and Howard ave the only
fledglings in the National League that
are batting better than .300 per cent.
The Cincinnati Club has secured out-
fielder Thomas Fogarty, of the Pough-
keepsie (Hudson River League) Club.
The New York American €lub has
purchased pitcher Robert Keefe from
Tacoma, and outfielder rank Dele-
hanty from Birmingham,
Pitcher IFalkenberg and outfielder
James Murray have left the Harris.
burg outlaw club, the former joining
Washington and the last named to
Buffalo.
Rich Sago Pudding—Here is a rec:
ipe for the favorite pudding of a
housekeeper of the last generation,
who served it to ‘ner family after the
gimple Sunday dinner customary in
her day: Soak six heaping teaspoon-
fuls of sago in a quart of sweet milk
for five hours. Then add a quart of
boiling milk. Cook till soft. Beat
the yolks of six eggs in a pudding
dish with a teacup of sugar and a lit-
tle nutmeg. Then when the sago is
soft stir it into the eggs and sugar.
Bake twenty minutes. After the pud-
ding has been set away to cool beat
up the whites of the six eggs until
they are a stiff froth and fold into
them three tablespoonfuls of sugar.
Spread this meringue over the top of
the pudding and brown it in the oven.
A little jelly is sometimes spread over
the pudding before adding the mer
ingne.
The Shah of Persla wants to see
America, but dare not face the ocean
which males his stomach sad. Here's
a great chance for scme of the air
ship hoasters.
On account of a prolonged drouth
in Colombia crops are ruined, cattle
are dying and the country is on the
verge of a famine.
Pennsylvania Railroad.
In effect May 29, 1904.
Main Line.
Leave Cresson—Eastward
Sea Shore Express, week days...
Harrisburg Express, (ex Sun.).
Main Line Express, daily.......
Philadelphia Accom., (ex Sun.)....
Day Express...... .
Mail Express, daily..
Fastern Express.
Bundays......... . .
Leave Cresson—Westward.
Sheridan Accom.
Pacific Express,
Way Passenger, dail
Fitishurg Bxpros
Chicago Special.
Pittsburg Accom
Sheridan Accom
Main Line, daily...
Cambria &
In effect May 29, 1904.
Leave Patton—Southward.
Train No. 703 at 6:50 a. m, arriving at Cresson
at 7:50 a. m.
Train No’ 700 at 3:38 p. m. arriving at Cresson
at 4:25 p* m.
Leave Patton—Northward.
Train No. 704 at 10:47 a. m. arriving at Ma.
bafley at 11943 a. m. and at Glen Campbell at
12:15 a. m,
Train No 708 at 6:07 p. m.
Broovblos
SERRE
Conor eRe
BEEEEBBEEE EBBEBEEBB
"oReTT eR
NEWYORK
ENTRAL
& HUDSON RIVER R. R.
(Pennsylvania Division.)
Beech Creek District.
Condensed Time Table.
a Wh Read do
xp Mail June 10, 1004 Exp Ma
037 Noss No 30 No
m pm am
5% Yio ar Patton Iv 10 10 Ld
900 129 Westover 636 500
2380 Arcadia 718
80 100 ar Mahatley Iv 700 830
1228 lv Kerrmoor ar 387
1219 Gazzam 407
767 1212ar Kerrmoor Iv720 418
762 1207 New Millport 784 42
745 1201 Olanta 740 420
737 1164 Mitchells 746 481
701 1122 Clearfield 825 505
6385 10 57 Woodland 845 528
624 1045 Wallaceton 850 589
615 1085 Morrisdale Mines 907 547
6051025 1v Munson ar 915 6566
6582 056561v Philipsburg {ar9ds 625
625 1045 ar “ Llv850 582
600 1020 ar Munson Ivo18 600
655 10 16 Winburne 923 608
582 955 Peale 943 628
518 933 Gillintown 1001 645
6504 926 Snow Shoe 1008 650
406 833 Beech Creek 1067 Ci
853 821 Mill Hall 1109 7
845 818 Lock Haven 1116 808
826 760 Oak Grove 1183 828
316 740 Jersey Shore 1145 838
240 17101v Williamsport arl220 910
pm am pm pm
pm am Phila & Reading RR m m
225 660ar Williamsport lv 12% 1380
36+11380 lv Philadelphia ar 730 650
m pm s PM am
4 00 lv NY via Tamaqua ar 040
30 g7801lv NY via Phila ar 1040 1902
m pm . pm am
*Daily. tWeek days. 7 p m Sunday. $1100
vm Suaday
Connections—At Williamsport with Phila
flelphia and Reading Railway: at Jersey Shore
with the Fall Brook District; at Mill Hall
with Central Railroad of Pennsylvania; at
Philipsburg with Pennsylvania railroad and
Y and PF C RR; at Clearfield with the Buf
alo, Rochester and Pittsburg railway; at Mae
haffey and Patton with Cambria and Clearfield
division of the Pennsyvania railroad; at Mae
haffey with the Pennsylvania and Northe
western railway.
(eo. H. Daniels, W. H. Northrup,
Gen. Pass, Agt., Gen. Agen
New York, Williamsport,
J. P. Bradfield, yen’ Supt., New York,
Pittsburg, Johnstown, Ebens-
burg & Eastern
R.R.
Condensed Time Table in effect June §, 1088,
Leaving Ramey.
am pm pm Pp
845 108 10
855 110 8
900 115 8
912 127 40
931 148 42
945 200 440
ving Philipsburg.
P
ERR H SENTSSN
am am am m pm p
Philipsburg... 550 740 1100 230 453 :
Osceola... . 603 754 1114 244 508
outzdale..... 621 813 1133 808 506 8
mey... . 683 826 1145 315 587 8
Waltzvale ...... 638 830 1150 820 542
Fernwood....... 648 840 1200 830 563
SUNDAY TRAINS.
To Philipsburg.
am pm pm pm
'ernwood... . 825 12 600
altzvale. 8385 1214 6
mey..... 840 1218 1250 6
Houtzdale.. 8 52 1230 102 6
Osceola... 911 12 iq
Philipsburg, . 92 18 7
To Ramey.
am pm pm pm
Philipsbur, 040 200 8X
adh 2 954 214 $5
Houtzdale.. 1013 1230 233 iq
Ramey.... 10 25 124 2 245 8
Waltzvale.. 10 30 250
Fernwood.. . 1040 800
Connections—At Philipsburg(Union Station)
with Beech Creek rallroad trains for and frond
Bellefonte, Locs Haven, Williamsport, Reade
ing, Philadelpuja and New York, Lawrenees
ville, Corning, Watkins, Geneva and Lyons}
Clearfield, Mahaffey and Patton; Curwensville,
Dubois, Punxsutawney, Ridgway, Bradford,
Buffalo and Rochest
Connections at Osceola Mills with Houtz»
dale and Ramey with P R R train leaving
Tyrone at 7:20 p. m. "
For full information apply to
J. O. REED, Superintendent,
ay
a
Philadelphia &
Reading Railway.
Engines Burn Hard Coal—No Smokes
IN EFFECT MAY 15, 1904.
Trains Leave Williamsport From Depot, Food
of Pine Street.
For New York via Philadelphia 7:30, 10a, my
12:29, 4:00, 11:30 p. m. Sunday 10:00 a. m.,
11:30 p. m.
For New York via Easton 10 a. m., 12:39
noon, Sundays 10 a. m.
For Philadelphia, Reading, Tamaqua, Mae
hanoy City, Ashland and all points in Schuy!
kill coal region 7:30, 10 a. m., 12:20, 4 and 11:
p. m. Sundays 10a. m., 11:30 p. m.
Trains for Williamsport:
5 a.m. and 1 p. m.
ia Philadelphia 12:15, 4:28
8:00, a. m., 2:00 and 7:00 p. m. Sundays 12158
m., 4:25 a m, 12:00and 9 p. m.
Leave Philadelphia, Reading Terminal, 4:
a. m-, 8:36 and 10:20 a. m., and 4:35 p. m., an
11:30 P m. Sundays 4, 4:00 a. m., 4:06 p. me
and 11:30 p. m.
Through coaches and parlor cars to and from
Philadelphia and New York.
Tickets can be procured in Wilhamsport a
the City ticket office and at the depot, foot
Pine Street.
Baggage checked from hotels and residences
direct to destination,
EDSON J. WEEKS,
General Passenger Agent.
A. T. DICE,
General Superintendent.
Reading Terminal, Philadelphia.
Parlor Cars on all express trains.
Huntingdon & Broad Top Mt.
Railroad.
In effect Sept. 7, 1903.
Southward.
Train No. 1 (Express) leaves Huntingdon
jovery day except ns for Mt. Dallas a$
:35 a. m., arriving at Mt, Dallas at 10:20 a. m,
Train No. 8,(Mail) leaves Huntingdon (ever?
day except Spndas) for Mt. Dallas at 5:65 p.me
arriving at Mt. Dallas at 7:30 p. m.
Tratn No. 7, (Sundays only) leaves Tnniicg
don for Mt. Dallas at 8:35 a.m., arriving at
Dallas at 10:05 a. m.
Aar-All trains make connections at Mt. Dak
las for Bedford, Pa., and Cumberland, Md.
Northward.
Train No. 4 (Mail) leaves Mt. Dallas (eve!
day except Sunday) for Huntingdon at 9:
a. m., arriving at Huntingdon at 11:10 a. m.
Train No. 2 (Fast Line) leaves Mt. Dallas
{every day except Sunday) for Huntingdon at
:40 p. m.,, arriving at Huntingdon at 5:16 p. m
Train No. 8, {Sumanys only) leaves Mt. Dale
las for Huntingdon at 4:00 p. m., arriving at
5:30 p. m.
All trains make close connections with
R. both east and west at Huntingdon.
CARL M. GAGE,
General Manager
NO CLEAN BRASS.
To clean very dirty brass, scrub
with a mailbrush, dipped in powdered
bath-brick dust and paraffin. Even
the most tarnished brass can be
cleaned in this way. Polish with the
dry dust and a soft duster.
er hmms————
Russia is experimenting
with
American car couplers on the .
Petersburg and Moscow Railroad.
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