The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, November 02, 1906, Image 3

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French Girl's Lingerie.
Like her mother, the little French
girl has an inborn love of pretty lin-
gerie, but the luxury of her underwear
is limited strictly to the quality of the
material and the beauty of the hand
stitching. No lace trims the dainty
garments unless it be very narrow
Valenciennes, edging a little frill on
which three tiny tucks have been run
by hand. Any embroidery that may
Ind a place on the lingerie is worked
irectly on the nainsook or broadcloth,
in button-hole stitched little scallops,—
Washington Times.
\ —
Peek-a-Boo Shoes.
Peek-a-boo shoes are pretty things
among the most fanciful footwear. The
Jeek-a Noo part is made by cutting the
eather in simple designs on the toe and
the low uppers on either side of the
opening. The shoes are of kid with
high heels, and are to be found in
every color and shade imaginable. One
of the prettiest is in bronze, but with
light gowns those of different colors,
pastel shades to deep tones in green,
‘blue, lavender pink, and oyster and
white are pretty. The shoes are laced
with ribbons to match, and worn with
f k stockings of the same shade, which
visible through the cut openings.
They are pretty and dainty worn with
frocks of the same color,
As to the Use of Perfume.
Much has been said of the vulgarity
f scent. Well, of course, there are
vulgar perfumes, just as there are low
pusic and art. The real reason of the
tirade against the vulgarity ef per-
fumes no doubt lies in the fact that the
scent bottle is made too evident. A
woman of {aste, in whatever class of
fe, will not pour in the eau de cologne
y the pint. It is something far more
elicate that she requires. It is not a
apid evaporation of strong scent that
she delights in, but a very faint, cling-
fog fresh violets in her linen cupboard
br hanging her dress in a wardrobe,
where a scent bottle is left to evapor-
ate slowly. It takes a long time for
the subtlest part of the scent to get
Into every fibre of the texture, but
when she wears that dress there is no
vulgarity about it. She brings a kind
of fragrant presence with her into the
room, and it accompafies her wherever
Bhe goes, reminding men of summer
evenings in pleasant gardens where
the lilies blow.—Modern Society.
Mistress Whom a Servant Respects.
‘A woman should insist upon being
Sfistress of her own kitchen, but unless
she posseses self-control, patience and
{act she is really just as unfit to man-
Age her servants as a child. It is a
yery true saying that a man or woman
who has not learned to control self is
not fit to control others. If a woman
cannot go into her kitchen without
losing her patience or losing her tem-
i she would do better to stay out of
{t. Fault must be found, but with
ezvanis, as with children, it should be
in a quiet, dignified way, and a proper
lime should be chosen for it. A woman
Who does not know any better than
fo take a time when a servant is par-
ticularly busy or has some special
piece of work she is trying to get
through, such as washing, ironing or
getting dinner, will never be likely to
have good service. If she scolds or
pags she at once lowers herself to the
level of her servant and loses the re-
Bpect which every mistress of a house
should strive to ‘deserve from those
about her.—Woman’s Life.
a
.
Women and Laughter.
. ‘A Parisian physician has started a
school of laughter. This is surely an,
innovation. We are accustomed to
ear that we may ‘“lawgh and grow
fat,” but whether the threat conveyed
8 such that the average woman is
fraid of increasing her avoirdupois or
hether she is too lazy to do more
by smile occasionally is not known,
but it is a fact that women do not
often laugh. They smile, and alas!
00 often giggle, but a hearty laugh is
ecoming a rare thing. Some people
elaim that the childhood training, forc-
[ng girls to be less boisterous and re-
gtrain their hilarity, has resulted in
the absence of laughter among women,
and surely an unmusgical roar is any-
thing but pleasing, but let us try to
gultivate the “musical tinkle,” the ‘“sil-
pery laugh” so much vaunted by the
ovelist, and in return we are prom-
sed that not only shall we be more
attractive, but entirely free from dys-
epsia—the latter is a prosaic but
mforting reason, although if a wom-
n suffers from that complaint it is
fiifficult to understand just how she
will feel well enough to laugh, and
fe cure her own illness.—Indianapolis
ews. .
—..
: Exercise.
The variety of beneficial motions that
may be had in muscular exercise is
almost unlimited, It is interesting to
notice that children, when free to play
as they choose, instinctively make so
any different motions, that they seem
use all their muscles. When peo-
le’s ideas of propriety shall have be-
rome what they should be. grown: peo-
le can exercise like children, without
a considered. daft or silly. Many
f the performances of children seem
o older persons purposeless and use-
less. There is such a state of ignorance
nd prejudice that many people of
ponsiderable education lack very much
pf having a proper conception of the
One may learn and practice with bene
fit a system of exercises, as many do,
without having the acquaintance with
the principles involved that makes pos-
sible the greatest benefit and interest
and enjoyment, There is an important
advantage in knowing the reasons for
the various movements, and what mus-
cles make each movement, and how
muscles use bones as levers.
Fashion to Be Motherly.
Some cynics say it is merely one of
the poses of the fashionable mother
when she lets herself be seen in publie
with her children around her. But
some stout defenders of Mrs. Fifth
Avenue say she really feels the spirit
of that Roman mother who said of her
offspring, “These are my jewels.” Mrs.
8S. Barton French rarely goes for a
drive in the afternoon without at least
one of her children in her victoria,
and Mrs. Oliver Gould Jennings and
Mrs. Francis D. Beard seldom are seen
without one or more of their hopes
with them when walking or driving.
Usually the children are dressed in
such a fashion that the mother’s beauty
is set off, Henry T. Sloane preserves
this tradition of family affection, and
always takes one of his younger daugh-
ters with him when he goes for his
afternoon drive. A development of this
idea is the current fad of mothers hav.
ing their photographs taken with their
children grouped around them. Yet it
was only a few years ago when such
“family pictures” were thought to be-
long exclusively to Coney Island. Posi.
tively that man Roosevelt is getting a
following.—Newark Advertiser.
s—
Care in Dressing.
The well-dressed woman is always a
woman of keen intelligence and brain
power. No senseless doll knows how
to dress. She may don gaudy raiment,
spend a fortune on a gown so utterly
inappropriate to the occasion that one
can only feel an intense pity for her;
but no one would ever dream of lay-
ing the burden of her sin against good
form and good taste at the door of
the whole of her sex, says the Wash-
ing Times.
The woman who dresses well, in
conformity with her age, her work,
and her position in society, choosing
neither extreme of the prevailing
modes, but striking a happy medium,
is the woman who has brains and
uses them to make good selection
from the fashions of the day. It is
the well-groomed, suitably gowned
woman who attains success, whether
in business or social life.
The age of the blue stocking has
passed, and nowadays the woman who
dresses unbecomingly through choice
and not for the sake of economy is re-
garded as either mengally weak or as
seeking some eccentric form of self-
advertisement, which is but another
phase of unpardonable vanity. In the
commercial world the dowdy, insignifi-
cant woman, even ifyshe has mental
ability, is at a discount when, com-
pared with the well-dressed woman,
confident and smiling, with bright ca-
pacity written all over her comely per-
son.
The latter has learned an essential
fact—that confidence is born of good
clothes; and therefore, with genuina
brain power, reasons the necessity of
making the most of all her good
points. By doing this she engenders
the feeling that her dress adds to her
appearance, she knows that it is fin.
ished in every detail, and thus as.
sured, her business assumes first im-
portance and success is gained by tha
forgetfulness of self.
The woman orator, the actress, the
singer, the musician, all understand
“the philosophy of clothes” as a powen
ful adjunct to their personality. And
this personality is to them of as para.
mount importance as their own individ:
ual gifts.
White linen coat suits tailored and
heavily embroidered are shown.
Linen holds its own, especialiy in the
long coat suits, which are practical and
becoming.
Most of the separate coats are in
plain tailored styles, with colored vel:
vet collars.
All sorts of efforts have been made
to introduce the wearing of artificial
flowers as corsage ornaments, but so
far the American woman will have
none of it.
Skirts grow wider and wider. Even
the moderate ones are now at least
five yards around the hem, while eight
are not too many to be considered for
skirts of thin material.
There are methods of laundering and
cleaning which are secrets to the world
in general, but which make it possible
and even practical to make wash fab-
rics into such dainty creations.
The possibilities of the silk coat on
basqued bodice, with a sheer skirt have
not been exhausted, and the dressmak-
ers are vying with one another in
ringing charming variations upon this
idea.
The semi-tailored gown is the latest
outgrowth. The skirts of these gowns
are as correct in line and finish as the
tailor’s art can make them, while the
Jackets or coats are exquisitely made,
lation of exerclse to lite and health.
and are more or less elaborate.
Home Health
Club
By David H, Reeder, Ph.D, , M.D.
“All that a man hath will he give for
his life,” is a true saying that is older
than the Bible. In speaking of “All”
fa person naturally understands that
worldly possessions or money is meant,
and in that sense it is true, There
are other things, however, which some
people will not give up, even though
they can know with considerable ac-
curacy that continuous indulgence wil
ultimately mean death. In many, yes,
the majority of cases, it is ignorance
which causes people to do or neglect
to do those things which will give a
reasonable insurance of continuous
good health for many years.
The mission of the Home Health
Club, as declared by me many years
ago, is to teach the natural laws of
health, overcome superstition with
simple, practical, helpful knowledge.
Teaching how the many little ills of
the family or of the individual may
be overcome or cured by the natural
remedies supplied by an all-wise Crea-
tor and nearly always at hand.
One of the most powerful and effec-
tive therapeutic agents known to medi-
cal science is water. It is always at
hand and even a rudimentary knowl-
edge of how to apply it in the treat-
ment of disease is one of the most
valuable kinds of information that
could be taught in our public schools,
and yet there are many physicians
who know but little of the wonders
which may be performed by its use.
A few days ago I received a letter
from a lady, telling about a neighbor
who had suffered for a long time with
a diseased jaw-bone. A number of
able physicians had failed to give re-
lief, and finally the surgeons were
called. They decided to remove the
man's jaw in order to save his life.
The operation was to be performed
in a week. The woman who wrote
me was a life member of the Home
Health Club, and she mustered up
courage to tell him of a lecture I had
written upon the subject of curing
diseased bones by the application of
hot fomentations, and she gave him
the lecture to read. He lost no time
in applying the treatment. and when
the time came to operate the surgeons
found such a decided improvement and
fiealing process going on, that they
were astonished. The operation was
not necessary and the man has been
perfectly well for several months.
Another woman tells of how she
nursed her two grown daughters
through smallpox and saved the bal-
ance of the family from having it,
although all of them lived in the same
house during the entire sickness and
all by the simple means of which I
had told in one of my lectures. All
of the means for the prevention as
well as the successful treatment for
smallpox are at hand in nearly every
home in the land, and by a practical
knowledge of their use the danger of
Jaccination is avoided and the horror
and dread of the disease is forever
removed.
MOSQUITO BITES.
During the summer months we are
In no danger of frost bites, although
I recently received a letter asking for
the Home Health Club method for
that annoying and painful condition.
Instead of frost bites we have mos-
quito bites, and in many cases the
stings of bees and other insects, which
are not only painful, but in some in-
stances quite dangerous. There are
many people who seem immune, and
the poison of insects or even of poison
oak, sumack or ivy has no effect upon
them. I think the question of the puri-
ty of the blood as well as the condi-
tion of the skin are all factors to be
considered in determining the suscepti-
bility of any one, as for myself the
sting of honey bees, hornets or even
bumble bees do not leave so much
pain or swelling as common mosquito
bites will have upon many others. I
have had patients upon whom a mos-
quito bite would cause a hard and
painful swelling almost as large as
half a hazel nut and they would re-
main to itch and burn for two or three
weeks. Almost instant relief can be
had by anyone from the effects of such
bites and stings by briskly rubbing the
spot for a few moments with smart
weed, a common plant which grows
in nearly all parts of America and is
too well known to need description.
(When the smart weed is not at hand
or cannot readily be secured, plaintain
leaves wlll act with almost equal sat-
isfaction. Indeed, a poultice of bruised
plaintain leaves is said to counteract
the poison of many snake bites, and
is a most excellent remedy for bruises
and burns. The common plaintain,
which grows in the dooryard and by
the roadside, is the kind to use. A
letter received this morning from a
lady who lives in this State says that
plaintain leaves well bruised and laid
on a boil is the best treatment that
can be given, and that the seed stalk
of plaintain used as an infusion is an
excellent remedy for dysentery; also
that an infusion or tef made from
blackberry leaves will give relief from
hemorrhage of the bowels in cases of
typhoid fever. These remedies are al-
ways at hand and can be safely used
by any one.
! Another remedy equally safe fis
iven by the same lady, to counteract
he dangerous lock-jaw which is liable
to ‘follow hurts by rusty nails or iron.
Two tablespoonfuls of wood ashes (if
very strong half the quantity), scald
With a cupful of boiling water, thicken
with cornmeal and apply when nearly
ld as a plaster.
Whenever one receives an injury
with a rusty nall, which penetrates
the flesh beneath the skin, great care
should be taken to see that the hurt
does not heal upon the outside before
it does upon the Inside; in other words,
the wound must be kept open and
made to heal from the inside, then
there will be no danger of lock-jaw,
CLUB NOTES.
Hebron,
Dr. David H. Reeder, Laporte, Ind.:
Dear Doctor—I have suffered for
years with burning feet. Can you
tell me the cause and remedy for the
same through the columns of the
Home Health Club? Sincerely,
Mrs. M. G. I.
Every other night bathe the feet and
limbs, up to the knees, in as hot water
as can possibly be borne. A little salt
added to the water will be all the bet:
ter. This should be continued for half
an hour each time, maintaining the
temperature of the bath by adding hot
water to it.
Follow this bathing with hot water
by plunging the feet in very cold
water for about ten seconds. Rub
briskly with a towel. On the follow-
ing morning sponge gently with vin.
egar, rubbing the feet well. The re-
sults will be thoroughly satisfactory.
Los Angeles.
Dr. David H. Reeder, Laporte, Ind.:
Dear Doctor—I was fifty-five years
old last March, but I only feel about
forty, and can thank the Home Health
Club for information received. I am
a man who does not jump at conclu-
sions very quickly. I wait for returns,
and I have them and are satisfied. I
am troubled with catarrh of the head.
I have lost smell and taste and would
‘like to know how to regain them. Rec:
ord number is 3806. Yours truly,
P.G
Such letters as the above are highly
treasured by me; they make me feel
a satisfaction which can only be ex-
perienced by those who know their
efforts to do good are fruitful. That I
have thus been of valuable service
even to one suffering creature repays
me for much of the labor I have per-
formed in preparing these lectures. 1
hope that all who are benefited will
show their appreciation by writing me
about it.
Where catarrh has been of such long
standing as to destroy the senses of
taste and smell the case is rather diffi.
cult to attempt treatment at a distance.
But if the lecture n on the subject
of catarrh, some time ago, which has
since been republished in pamphlet
form, is carefully studied, and the di-
rections therein given are carefully
and faithfully carried out, I think a
great benefit will result, if not an ab-
solute cure.
Ohio.
Dr. David H. Reeder, Laporte, Ind.:
Dear Doctor—Will you please teil me
how to get rid of moles on the face.
Is there a safe remedy for me to use
without danger of causing them to
form cancer? Thanking you in ad-
vance for a reply, I am, very truly,
K. C.
Unless the moles of which you speak
are quite prominent I would advise
you to let them alone. If they are
very large and wart-like, the best
method of treatment is to go to a
thoroughly reliable and skilful derma-
tologist and have them removed. It
this is done in a very skilful manner
there'is little, if any, danger.
Penn.
Dr. David H. Reeder, Laporte, Ind.:
Dear Doctor—I have been a reader
of the Home Health Club lectures
for a number of years and am always
interested in the Club Notes, for thd
reason that the advice given and the
remedies prescribed are always with-
in the reach of anyone. I hope you
can, through Club Notes, advise md
what to do in the case of a swollen
ankle. The foot and leg to the knee
are swelled and over the ankle joint
is a reddish purple spot as large
around as a teacup, and smaller
spots have appeared on the other limb.
They come slowly and after a week
or so have to be lanced. The doctor
says it is rheumatism, the joints of
the arms being stiff at times. The
affected foot and leg look so full and
puffed, and the skin is very shiny. It
came almost at once, the lameness in
the ankle and then the gathering.
Perhaps I have made this inquiry
lengthy, but I am so hopeful that you
can advise me what to do, as I am so
anxious to get well and strong again.
Very respectfully, M. L. C.
You should remain in bed and the
foot and leg should be placed in a
thorough hot fomentation, after which
it should be sponged with warm vine-
gar in which there has been dissolved
a teaspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful
of red pepper to a pint of vinegar.
These ingredients should be put into
the vinegar before it is heated, and
the liquid should then be strained be-
fore using. All kinds of meats antl
¥ats should be excluded from the diet,
and the patient should drink large
quantities of fresh buttermilk daily;
three to four quarts will not be too
much. This will keep up the strength,
reduce the inflammation, and also aid
in eliminating uric acid from the
blood.
All readers of this publication are
at liberty to write for information on
subjects pertaining to health. All com-
munications should be addressed to
Dr. David H. Reeder, Laporte, Ind.,
and must contain name and address
in full, and at.least four cents in pos-
tage.
The Man in the Iron Mask,
A means has been found for enab-
ling the sojourners on the Jersey sea-
coast to defy mosquitoes. A mosquito
mask has8 been invented by some gen-
ius. It consists of a wire framework,
covered with netting, and when slipped
over the head protects that part of
one’s anatomy from the pests, giving
one time to defend the other parts
ore effectively.
Mountain lions are overrunniog Yel-
lowstone Park.
The postoffice letter boxes are now to
be painted green,
Australin is considering the intro-
duction of the metric system.
The German Government purchased
g vile for an embassy in Washington,
, C.
Tired of bad treatment, the nursing
sisters employed at San Isidro, Spain,
went on strike.
F. A. Delano, Vice-President of the
Wabash Railroad, has abolished the
entire secret service department of the
company,
In consequence of a plague of flies
traffic in the principal thoroughfares
leading to Cardiff docks had to be di
verted recently,
The Dominion Government is about
to enter upon the construction of gi
gantic military works in the city and
district of Quebec.
Claiming the right to serve as Brit
{sh subjects, twenty Victoria (B. C.)
Chinese have applied for enrollment in
the Fifth Regiment, Canadian Artil-
lery.
The Court of Criminal Correction, at
St. Louis, Mo., has ordered that bar-
ber shops be exempt from the Sunday-
closing law, on the ground that such
places are a public necessity,
An express train which makes ne
stop between London and Liverpoo!
has been introduced by the London
and Northwestern Railroad Company,
The 201 miles are covered in 208 min
utes.
The 500 theatrical agencies in New
York City have heen defined as com:
mon employment bureaus by the Ap-
pellate Division of the Supreme Court,
which ordered them to take out li-
censes.
A Mexican and a full-blooded Paw-
nee Indian were married in the Pro-
bate Court at Pawnee, Kan,
LABOR NOTES,
More than 100 laundry employes at
Los Angeles, Cal., quit work.
Brockton (Mass.) steamfitters have
secured an increase to $3.50 a day.
Michigan laws prohbit the employ:
ment of any child under fourteen years
old.
There are more than 900 women
teamsters and draymen in the United
States.
A controversy over coal screening is
threatening to tie up all Michigan
mines,
Fourteen miners were killed and a
number injured in an explosion at An-
derleus, Belgium.
Thirty-nine miners were killed by an
explosion in the Borrussia coal mine,
at Dortmund, Prussia.
International Brotherhood of Team.
sters has been holding its annual con
vention at Philadelphia,
It is estimated that one-third of the
150,000 boot and shoe workers in the
United States are organized.
General farm wages in Arkansas
have fallen from $18 a month to $10
within fifteen to twenty years.
Seventy-five laborers at Culebra,
Panama, sstruck on account of the de-
lay in the payment of their wages.
One business house in Chicago re-
ports that the abandonment of the
union label for a few months cost
them $47,000.
A movement is now on foot to organ-
ize the professional baseball! players
under the laws of the American Fed-
eration of Labor.
The employes of the Vienna, Lodz
and Kalisiz Railway have decided to
use the Polish language in the trans-
action of railway business.
It was said that the Brotherhood of
Painters, with a membership of 6500,
is making preparations fer a strike
against the Master Painters’ Associa.
tion.
In spite of the fact that the utiliza.
tion of water power for the creation
of electric energy has increased to an
extraordinary degree in recent years,
it is to be noted that the power so
far used is only an infinitesimal frac-
tion of the aggregate water power of
the world. says the Daily True Amer.
ican, of Trenton, N. J. There has
been a remarkable development in sci-
entific research and of the commercial
application of principles well under
stood by electrical engineers, yet the
aggregate water power utilized for
electric energy in the world is prob-
ably 2,000,000 horsepower, which is
about .twice the steam power used in
England and Ireland combined.
Which?
In an English inn, where some la:
borers were sitting one evening,
mathematics became the topic of con-
versation, when one of the company
propounded the old-time problem: “If
a herring and a half cost a penny and
a half, what would three herring
cost?” There was a silence for sev-
eral minutes while all sat smoking
and thinking. At last one of the
thinkers spoke: “Bill, did you say
‘errin’ or mackerel?”
Pennsylvania Railroad.
In effect May 29, 1904.
Main Line.
Leave Cresson—Eastward,
Sea Shore Express, week days.. . 62am
Harrisburg Express, (éx Sun.). 926a m
Main Line Express, daily... .110lam
Philadelphia Accom., (ex Sun.). . 1253 pm
Day E 237pm
51pm
8§1lpm
.1257pm
Leave Cresson—Westward.
Sheridan Accom. . 810am
facie Express, dail 3 x am
ay Passenger, m
Pittalyirg 1K ge $57 bm
Chicago ak. 434 pm
Pittsburg Accom.. . 4583 pm
Shetidn Accom., week days... . 707p'm
Main Line, daily........cccoceria vena . 76pm
Cambria & Clearfield Division.
In effect May 29, 1904.
Leave Patton—Southward.
pan Ho 703 at 6:50 a. m. arriving at Cresson
n No* 709 at 8:38 p. m. arriving at Cresson
:25 p* m.
Leave Patton—Northward.
. 704 at 10087 a. m. arriving at Mas
1G a m. dad at Glon Critpbell at
No 704 097 p.m.
NEWSY GLEANINGS, |
(Pennsylvania Division.)
Beech Creek District.
Condensed Time Table.
Read u Read a
Exp Man June 10, 1904 |
047 Nois No 30 No
Ka Po whe lo fi
4 ar . on v
"0 1 Weaver 636
23% Arcadia
830 100ar Mahaffey Iv 700
1228 1v Kerrmoor ar
1219 Gazzam
757 1212ar Kerrmoor iv1®
762 1207 New Millport 14 4
745 1201 Olanta 7
737 1154 Mitchells 748
7011122 Clearfield 8%
635 1057 Woodland 846
624 1045 Wallaceton 80
615 1035 Morrisdale Mines 201
6051025 lv Munson ar 9 15
532 9551v Philipsburg ars
625 10 45 ar " lv 850
600 10 20 ar Munson v9 18
555 10 16 Winburne 923
582 956 Peale 943
513 933 Gillintown 1001
504 928 Snow Shoe 1006
406 833 Beech Creek 1057
853 821 Mill Hall 1100
345 813 Lock Haven 1118
326 750 Oak Grove 11338
316 740 Jersey Shore 11456
240 710 1v Williamsport arlz2o
pm am pm m
pm am Phil’'a & Reading RR m i
225 650ar Williamsport lv +12 20%11
18 36%1130 lv Philadelphia ar 730 6
Am pm . Pm am
4 00 lv. NY via Tamaqua ar 940
M430 730lv NY via Phila ar 1040 pa
Am pm ym m
*Daily. tWeek days. 37 p m Sunday. $1108
sm Suaday
Connections—At Williamsport with Phila
jeiohis and Reading Railway; at Jerse,
with the Fall Brook District; at Mill
with Central Railroad of Pennsylvania;
Philipsburg with Pennsylvania railroad
Ng¥ and ¥ CR R; at Clearfield with the
falo, Rochester and Pittsburg railway; at
haffey and Patton with Cambria and Clea,
division of the Pennsyvania railroad; at
haffey with the Pennsylvania and Ni
western railway.
(eo. H, Daniels, Ww. H. Nortnrups
n. Pass. " n.
- New York Willi mera Ba.
J. P. Bradfield, uen’l Supt., New York.
Pittsburg, Johnstown, Ebsms
burg & Basters
R.R.
Condensed Time Table in effoct June §, Mil
Leaving Ramey.
am
PM pm
845 1 8
85 1
9 1
9 1 :
sdeola 931 js
hilipsburg.... 725 94 00 40
Leaving Philipsburg.
am ameaem pm pm pm
Fhroas
mey...
—
eh 0c
Philipsburg... 5650 740 1100 230 HE
Hn itive 603 754 1114 2 [1
utzdale. 621 813 1133 9 .
OF ..eenveneen 038 In 1145
altzvale ...... 638 1160 4
'ernwood....... 648 840 1200
SUNDAY TRAINS.
To Philipsburg.
em pm pm pm
'srnwood 825 J208 $
altzval § 3B 1214
mey... 4 1218 1230 6
Houtzdale. 852 1230 103 $
Osceola...... 911 124
Philipsburg............ 825 18 7
To Ramey.
em pm pm
Jixiigebu 940 200
sceola... 954 314
outzdal 1013 1230 2
mey.., 1025 1243 §
AILZVAL0. errem sorrs. 10 30
Fernwood...... ...... . 1040 8
Bellefonte, Lock Haven, Williamsport,
ing, Philadelpnia and New York, Law
ville, Corning, Watkins, Geneva and Ly
fipitas, Mahaffey and Fat on; Corton
ul unxsutawney, gway,
Buffalo and Rochester.
Qonnections at Osceola Mills with Hol
dale and Ramey with P R R tfain lea
Tyrone at 7:20 p. m.
For full information apply, to
J. O. REED, Superintendent
Philadelphia &
Reading Railway,
Engines Burn Hard Ooal—No Smoke
IN EFFECT MAY 15, 1904.
Trains Leave Willlamsport From Depot, Fool
of Pine Street.
For New York via Frisloiphis 7:30, 10a. my
12:29, 4:00, 11:30 p. m. Sunday 10:00 a. mu
1:30 p, m
1:30 p. m.
For New York via Easton 10 a. m., 12:20
noon, Sundays 10 a. m. ‘
For Philadelphia, Reading, Tamaqua, y
hanoy City, Ashland and all points in Schu,
kill coal regen 7:30, 10 a. m., 12:29, 4 and 1
p. m. Sundays 10a, m., 11:30 p. m.
Trains for Williamsport:
Leave New York via Easton 4, 9:10 a. nay
1:20 p. m. Sundays 4:25 a. m. and 1 p. m.
Leave Wew York via Philadelphia 12:15, i
8:00, a. m., 2:00 and id m. Susdays 12:18
m., 4:25a Sein and 9 p. m.
Leave Philadelphia, Reading Terminal, a
Conneotiong—At Philipsburg(Union #tal
with Beech Breck ‘mllrond on for and fs
a. m-, 8:36 and 10:
11:30
and) p- m. h
rough coaches and parlor cars to and from
Philadelphia and New York,
Tickets can be Jrocursd in Willlamsport
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.m, and 4:35 p. m.,
Pi Sundays 4, 9:00 a. m., 4:08 p.
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 Hunt
fovery day except iad for Mt. Dernedot
:35 a. m., arriving at Mt. Dallas at 10:20 a. ma,
Train No. 3,(Mail) leaves Huntingdon (everg
day except Sinday) for Mt. Dallas at 5:50 p.ms
arriving at Mt. Dallas at 7:30 p. m.
Tra#n No. 7, (Sundays only) leaves Hunti)
don for Mt. Dallas at 8:35 a.m., arriving at
Dallas at 10:05 a. m. ;
Aa~All trains make connections at Mt. Dale
las for Bedford, Pa., and Cumberland, Md,
Northward.
Train No. 4 (Mail) leaves Mt. Dallas (very
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 excapt Sunday) for Huntingdon a$
:40 p. m,, arriving at Huntingdon at 5:15 p. m
Train No. 8, (Sundays only) leaves Mt. Dale
las for Huntingdon at 4:00 p. m., arriving aé
5:30 p. m.
All trains make close connections with
R. R. both east and west at Huntingdon.
CARL M. GAGE,
General Manager
A Kansas City judge has decided
that “there are no loans in courtship
and that anything which is glven can-
not be recovered.” The girl who is
asked in court to return courtship
gifts shouid Hot only get the costs on
the plaintiff, but she should recover
cash damages‘for the humiliating pub-
city, adds the\ Atlanta (Ga.) Const
tution. J X
NEWYORK