{ title: 'Havana journal. (Havana, Chemung Co., N.Y.) 1849-1893, April 27, 1889, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031479/1889-04-27/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031479/1889-04-27/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031479/1889-04-27/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031479/1889-04-27/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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RAII4:R*QA1?‘S; ,?RA1LR0.A.P.S.7'* NOver boera tell o ' Btiiy Martin; . W«l, »o w, Stranger, yo'r,ht«f* m ust achol Bill w u rth o doade4t*hot,fur«»rtlni 'N a)l ANxoiiy—inake no inlstakel ,81zed yo* up fur a tenderluNer, She Box S Ra.nge In s uNaa splutter, B ut yo’re the freghest, Im ustedm lt. • i* ' /’> ^!* 1 ‘ 1 - 1 f'' t6 'v‘ I ’ llowed % how fhUr w a m 't no buddy Hednit-heerd tN lh1 P latoipui! “O’d h e shoot better'd Carver;” Cud het Bill didn't monkey—h e shot t e r kill 1 '-v, ■ \ THOSE WHO NEVER SLEEP. CAR DRIVERS’ REASONS. CROWDED PROFESSIONS. 3N$>;iT£i1ii13N‘.¢ja;rIn51$2sx%14:~.11A,;Ijri§i£zxY,- 2 :9’ DETECTIVE ON THE PECULIARI-, TIES OF H IS CALLING. ^ W ily T hey W o n ’ t W a l t W heu You W an t T h em to a n d W ill W hen Yon Don’t. “Oh, how m 'eanl” T h a t's w hat a la d y o n F o u rth a v en u e looked a s 11 d ie w as sa y in g t h e o ther d a y when she signaled ps tre e t car, a n d the dr: ver, instead of stopping, whipped h is horses an d swung past on the ru n . “Some of ’ em swear,” said the driver to a man smoking o n th e f r o n t platform.“ Yes, sir, women, a n d pretty women, too The) swear right ou t so as’ l can hear ’ em some- - Hmes, when I w hip u p an d l»av,< 'em 9tand- '\5 ,™ the crnssin’\ ;“ W hy didn’t you s to p and let her on r asked the m an in a somewhat indignm d tone o a st your e y e ba.-k )»»u'li set* au- 1 o ther c a r not m ore'n a h lo c k l-.-hin.l It’d t w orth my position to s to p fur Ben Harrison under those circum stance^ T hem ’s the o r ders, sir, and If a sp o tte r w s \ .,u break ’ em you get y our walkin’ iiapt-is. We don’t leave people in th e lurch for fun, you know We g e t lots of ita rd looks and har.l words for doin’ it, ami t h a t w ith o u t our d<-*-rvin’ The people d o n 't understand tlmt if th.-r e a r close behind it’s o rd e rs t-> ■> rm h t alon . - r - - — •“ ’■A a nd not stop f o r n o one. We leave it to the PnP llbllinil Ift tlipl* ’filTI 11n ] earbeh d to pick em up. “Sometimes, too, we’ve g-t t i leave folkb wheu we’re-a little behind tim>-You know that we try to ru n horse car--u exact tnu and as n rule succeed p retty w.-il If we get in from a trip half a minute l it-w < _-\ e got t ■ explain. If we’re a minut. iat.-there’s the devil to pay. I f we’re tw o minutes late we’ve got to give mighty good i--u--us for it or we’re suspended for th ree day - Didn’t know that, did you? People gi-n r i”) don’t, or they wouldn’t swear a t ns s>. om - n .” “But.\ said tb e smoker, \I : seen Broad way cars stop several minut.--in front of the theatres at n ig h t wafting for u I ..-id Some times three or fo u r Cars wili hunched in front of the Metropolitan <>|» -ia bouse or Palmer’s w aiting for a loud passengers from the theatre. This deiay often incon vemences passengers who a n m a hurry.\ \They ain’t quite so s t r i.t about time on Broadway,” said thq driver, “owin’ to the frequent blocking o fth e str.-e!,. which makes exact time impossible. At same time, drivers and conductors who lay iu front of the theatres like tbat run gr-nt risks. No company'll let th e cars , . s-vpt when they have to, a n d If spotter--ftmld see ’ em stondin’ there th ey ’d be uius.., l tell you.\ \But what possibio»bject could they have in waiting for a load a t a ri-k to themselves? Tho size of th e loadd they c a n v don't make any difference in thM rearn u u . Joes it?” “I t ’ s this w ay,\ said th e droer. “Every car has a certain ‘book,’ —t h a t i t has taken in a certain am ount of m ono a day on the average, for years, maybo. It is spoken of as a $$3 car, o r $23:50 car. 1 a $25 car, or whatever its average o r bo. k 1-Now, you see, if any oar fa lls bolow it-hu..k the com pany asks question^, Tbey w.u.t to know if tho driver makes a hafiit of u, - t btoppiug for folks to save himself th e trouL),-. o r they ask whether the conductor gobbles the fares. Suppose, for insttoce, ja $25 cor drops to $22 or $20. T hat d riv e r and conductor a re under suspicion and liab leto k b e laid off for other men who can keep! thu'-cor's hook up to the scratch. Anyway, a fcottei is liable to be put aboard'to sen if aft is straight, and then look o u t for tro u b la l-.'Bven if he finds every .tejag-sto^bti.Jasep^yqtooyeetopen. It’s the spotter’s business to moSo trouble, and he generally minds his business.” \Does a small book generally mean th at a conductor doesn’t ring fares up?” hsked the man with the cigar. The driver winked knowingly. “I t pretty generally means th a t very thing,” said he. \I had a conductor on with me once whose book got ab o u t $5 a d ay below the average. They put a spotter on the car, and, by Jovel they found th a t he w as puttin the whole $5 into his own pocket. H e got his walking papers, and, sir, he hadcheek euough to go up afterwards, hold os you please, and demand an explanation ,-f his discharge from the super. “‘We didn’t think it was perlite for us to allow tho stockholders iu the road to run the cars,* was all th e super’d s a y to him .\—Nen York Sun. ADMOMTION TO YOUNG MEN FROM ONE WHO IS EXPERIENCED. Tj wOc o h Li n e b e t w e e n Ph il a b r l m h a, . MORB, WiSBWOTOK. AHn JtH* SOUTH, OXNAl - - ‘ .b o o g a ^ w , Bu f f a l o , a t o n u &a b a F -- ~~ # ~ H ow F re n c h , EnglU HtJuid A m e ric an T h ie f Takers-W o rk T h e i r P o c k e ts—Shadow ing B a n k C le rk s—T h e D iffere n t M ethods—A tra m m o m o o iuL angley \ - - a n a ; N .Y . l l a i i W a h U i l a B ff* o t J a n .3 8 , i 881). i y j a ii H i Difficulty o f Choosing th e R ig h t R oad. T h is Age H as Vo Room for th e Non- SoxmH/Lpi^dfiai>vU*v **&$!#•$ k u m i tt e * • • -...-» \•■* — -yibera out o t the a t expiration pf ’ ‘ V *■ • - ‘Jb tftfte ttw K A ite t * 0* I j i ' i s w k o , ^ ^ JottA- t ffiB n ss M ii y 6:50 a . M .-K oonester E xpress dally e x c e p t Sunday, to r” ----- ** -----— Bdffalo, and I 8 ;1 3 A , ------ .f t burg, York, B aitim ote,W ashington,L an. . . caster, PlUiadelphia.NewYork, a rriving a t pniiaaeipnia, 6:50 p.* m .;N ew York, ?:85p-rn-; B a ltlu io re ,ft« p . in.; W ashing ton, 8:0Q p. m. Buffet p a r lo r oars a re r u n on t b i s train tr'oin W Ulainspprt t o Philadelphia, and th rough passenger coaches t o Baltimore. . . 1 0 : * 3 a . m.—W ’ mBport Acc. dally except Sun- day.arrlvlng a t Elmira 11:80 a .m . Heaves Blmli'a S p. m „connecting at; W’am sport With ex p ress train for pEfladOlpnia, a r- rives a v RhUadolpfiia 4:86 s t m .;N e w York 7:iu ». w uiiLLiuiuiu, u.iu u,., W ashington, 6 .-80 a .In.Pullm an sleep- ing oars tromHarrisbUrg to Philadelphia a n d H6w York. EbUadeiphla gasseng. ers oan. rem ain in sleepers undisturbed u n til 7:00 o’clock. -------_il . altim ore. 5:16a . jn ; ' ■ - a r a 3?ans. , . : o i a x p . m.—Nia g a ra Express, dally exoept Sun- -day, to r Canandaigua, K ochester, Bttffa- -lo.-and JS iagara Palis... ___ 7.-13-P. M. Accommodation, d ally e xcept Rim - -day, to r Klmlra. ' ^ — n g t on ii — _—.— _..... P ro d u c e r T o Succeed Men M ust W ork, {W 2?§§r)§???\‘§>?. ’ ?“’[‘vi'?-‘-* ‘ *f§§;:%5%é ~'.\e3-‘1‘:$?¥3Ev •Few Cases Recited. W h eth er T hey Have D iplom as o r Not. monkey—h '-v, ■ . - , \ . None o’ th et glass bAU fooUn1 ln-hts’n— BUI wam ’ t built off up sech plan, Men’ehls.marks, 'n-he knowed h is bls'n; , Nevor but onca he tolssed jhlsinan. ■ , How wax thett Wai, th u r w am 't much to i t — H ew uz down in ttie Qlly bend, Rldin’ th e round u i^ a lm p stth ro u g h It— All uv a suddeni ^ v r cornea.the end. BUlgot goneon aSOuoreeter. Livln’ , th a r ta a 'd p b e to w n — Lord! The angels bevel* wus sweeter I 'TaU, ’n big oyed, plnlW brown l , Broneo J l r a ,’e i th eJn q k w u d m ix lt, He g o t gone bn wie self same bute; Bin g re at pards atore t h e t fix it— Then, in course, 'tw a s a case o ' shootl E h ll r e c k ’ n XBeeniteshobtln'l Shllt m y ear—hilt FflhtShed him Fa’r *n’ sguar'. J f o f 'k f h e t yo’r e tootip’; Sartlhi stranger—I'm Rronco J i m .' Been lookin’ fpr me? You’re Billy's'brothert Wal, I never dld l’a m to r u n l One time’s about th e yuneez another— F a ir play, partner—resch fur y o ’ gun I ' —Charles F. LuttunU ln Time. O ne pf t h e best know n detectives in the U n ite d S ta te s s a t in th e lobby o f the W indsor h o tel y esterday afte rn o o n , a n d a f te r repeated solioitation; by a r e p o rte r fo r T he Times, con-, se n te d to t a l k a b o u t th e business. “T here is a ll the difference in th e world,” he sa id , “b etw een the m ethods used by the se-i w e t service agents o f different countries. £ e o p le who r e a d F re n c h novels have a n idea ia t the disguises spoken of in th em as being w o rn by t h e Lecocqs o f th e different stories a r e som ething u tte rly u ntrue. * S tra n g e as it m a y seem, how ever, i t is true. “A F re n c h d e tective who c an n o t so dis- guise, himself t h a t his superior c an n o t recog- nize him co u ld n ot find em ploym ent in a n y detective bureau. T he disguises a re wonder- wvwv.vti VWUAVWU) AUOum ava(UCWUUUCA' fu l, too, a n d even t h e steong lig h t of d a y eV>nmn ma — iA l shows no imperfections in them. THE DIFFERENCE IN METHODS. Du y u u w -.uder th en th a t’, co m in g back t o * you a f t e r an e x p e rie n c e of n e a rly t h i r t y y ears iu > -ne o f these o v ercro w d ed p rofes- sioqs, I sound a u o te of w a rn in g a g a in s t choosing a p ro fessio n h a s tily , a n d c au tio n you t h a t , unless y o u h a v e u n u su a l endow m en ts a n d e x t r a o r d i n a r y luck, n o m a tte r which profession you m a y s e le c t, you will pro b ab ly find y ou rse lv e s , in five y e a r s , m u c h iu th e cm litio u o f th e tr a v e le r w h o , c o m in g to c e r tain c ro s s ro a d s w h e re th e fin g e r b o a r d s in d icated to u r diffe re n t ro a d s a s le a din g t o th e p la c e w hich h e desired to re a c h , ask ed a c ou n try m a n w h ic h wa* th e b est ro a d , a n d was to ld g p 'W a ll, s tr a n g e r , y e k in j i s t t a k a yer chi.-e, hut w h ic h e v e r on 'em y e ta k e , b e- fore y e 'v e gone n m re 'u a m ile, y e 'll be d e n ie d Bure t o wislit ye*d tak e n som e o th e r 1\ » ^ R 8 S K l > »S S r a ' i a : : ’‘^ ‘ i d by gas) , a nd every a p p lia n c e ,' T hreeN ew Y orkandO hlC a- •go ro u te s -rth e“ Solid PuU m an t i n e” via Sala- m anca and N . Y., P. & O. R . B., Shd th e Chicago k Alantlo R ailw ay: t h e E rie k Chlcago, U n e v la c. * 6 ., a n d th e. cago R ailw ays; th e u ffa lo a n d th o d i — c l n n a t f ^ ... j h . F o r t ‘-‘N la g a ra F a U s T ru n k Railway N e w Y o rk a n a n d L o u te f w ith NO. EXTRA CHARGE FOR EAST t i m e ! The o n ly line r u n - jjJjjp ^^^ ----------- ,---------j . ....... an Op.aches betwieenNew York a n d Niagara Falls. Best equlpment and tralnservlce, Ijn estscen ery .R atesaB io w as the lowest. Take th e E rie .. ' We s t w a r d p r o s i Ei.h i r a . ' -^TA?TONG,\-|:Np..l.~ -»l'N6.-6,-f -'T H R /J o S im ii.m a y W to u n d o iftle a tG w rg e F . ^ ^ * .W ^ N e w »p a p e rA d v e rtia liig B u re a u (ip -C ontracts m a y -pa-m ade far m n ^y y o f i c w . \A\. . . . J ) 8 . B ,T . 8 MBLZKR, • . . ' FBtYSIOIANAND SURGHON. ^ S a - g 5 a i r t j r Clerk's-offlee. . Day offloe er-aoow east-o f postpmoe o v e r.H o liett's D ru g store, calls, n i g h t or d a y , will: receive • p ro m p t attention. • ~ .., . w ye*d If you could know how many, how very many, men m my profession are n o t earning, and never will earn, a decent living, a l- though many u? them possess every quality deserving of success, except the power to coinmm.d it, and how lurge a proportion o f them do n,,t, and probably never will, earn as good a ii'in g as a first class carpenter, bricklayer or machinist cuuld easily earn; if you could know, as you will know in ten o r twenty years from now, how many college educated men have suffered, and will con- tinue to suffer, shipwreck on the rocks th a t lie hi tlie way of a professional career, you would understand why I have felt it to bo my duty to ufter jnme words of warning fo r the benefit of those who liave ears willing to hear. E lm lra ,,.,..A r. Co r n in g .... L 9 32 Am , “Them a r e two sorts of detectives In Fi-ance—sta te detectives and the municipal o r city force. Among the former no one knowB. who his fellow detectives are, and as they never work in pairs the necessity for knowing each other is not so great. The working of th e French bureau is very th o r -, ough and more like the American method th a n the English. “The la tte r never think of disguising them-1 selves, and go to work openly. If a bank Is robbed in France a new assistant teller or clerk appears in the bank a day or so after- ward—he is a detective, of course, and where in England the detectives would be called in in fro n t of a ll tbe employes and ask them all .manner of questions, th e French would say nothing, a n d nothing more would probably be heard of the robbery until the thief was caught. “The English have a great system of stool pigeons. Among th e vicious of all classes, male and female, are always those to be found who, fo r the sake of being protected in a certain way, carry all tho news of the crooked work done among the swell mobs- men, as high d tp s thieves are called, to Scot- land Yard, where is situated the criminal in- vestigation bureau. I f ‘H arry the Swell’ is flashing a g re a t deal of money about, the fa c t is a t once reported to the police, and if t o y large fprgery or robbery has recently oc- cu rred , ‘H a rry file Swell’ is liable to prove a n alibi. Inside th e g reat portico of Scotland Y ard Is a large case containing the pho- tographs o f a ll the detectives employed by the bureau, an d the crooks o r thioves can have free access a t an y time to study the faces of those who a re liable to be after them a t some fu tu re timo. This stool pigeon sys- tem is not used much in America, as the po- lice d o not p u t much fa ith in it. “I n France p r England, if the employe of a b ig banking house is suspected of irregular- ities hia habits are w atched and the facts as- certained, while in A merica a m an will be set Upon the tra c k of th e supposed thief, make his acquaintance and ingratiate himself into the suspepted man’s confidence. He will spend-, as much or m ore money th an the sus# pect, and will go in to to y dissipation with him. In tile event of irregularities in any large concern th e American detective becomes an employe of the corporation—whether as a porter or a director of a bank. The clew and the working up of II is made muek more of b jia n American th an by any one else. He will jum p a t conclusions from a faint some- thing, aqd frequently h it the m ark, where the stolid Britisher would be stumbling in the dark. - - tsr- Vf- 1845 PM 816FM 180“ 3110“ 818“ M EAD, AMOER** ASD COUNSELLOR A* LAW. office l n c a m p b e u Store,(second floor,) Main, S t ^ H f t y a W j f . Y* . V / / W i t t . ad eip m ar aiid n o w to r n , arriving a t P h lla d e lp h a 8:85 a. m.j New York, 11:30 a. ■ m.:, Baltimore, 8:15 a. jn.:-W ashington, - 9:30a. m .. Palace sleeping c a rs are r u n on; ^ .th is tr a in trom Bocheater ,to Baltim ore andW ashlngton, W illiam sport to PhUa- aelDhla. aHd through passenger coaches 1 0 : 5 8 p . j l ^ -P a ^ L i n e , dally e x cept Sunday, TRAINS FOB HAVANA FKOX TH* BOOTH. O le a n .,“ sala.m anca.A r. D u n k irk ..,.A r.1 Buffalo.,.......N iagara F a lls” Susp.BrldgeAr. A Dorchester stre e t' cpr, the other n ig h t, was rolling along over the desert region |-8omewhere on Dorchester avenue.’ All-th e w ere oocupled. Among th e passengers was a young lady,-a n d I n front o f her stood her esco'rt, a, slender y ou th and swell o f t h e most starch y s o r t Presently th e e ar stopped an d “ft intoxicated .m an — a big, burly indi- vidual—ontmted. H e swung uneasily from sideito side fo r a few moments, and th e n a man w ho sat-next to th e young lady moved; along a n d le ft a little space on th e seat. The d ru n k a rd made a lunge for th e place a n d came In to an unpleasant contact w ith th e younglady. • *' . \ “Aw—aw—m y d y ah feUow,” protested th e dude, “you mustn’t d olthat, you know.” - The' inan, though quite intoxicated, w as not apparently in a fighting mood; h e grinned, g o t up mid stood in th e ' middle of thq car, stirging fro th side to side ag ate; Now an d then he bumped against the dude, who repeatedhiS-prhtestation: “A w. m y d y ah fellow, you mustn’t do th a t, you1 know 1” ' . -. E u t preeently th e drnnkard showed a dis positioa to foel th a t h o was being tram pled upon. H e rOaswrted his right to the f r a g ment of a soat and m ade another lunge fo r it. “Conductah! conduptahl” called the swell. “Aw—this m an jn iiaf fee ejected trom th e cah, don’t y ou knew, ‘H e ’ s inebwiatod I\ The conduotor depliimd to interfere. T h e plate, fa c t u n d o u b ted ^ was th a t he was coward ahd daro-Pot touch the drunkard. The. dude’s facexhotesd no sign of any emo- tion w hatever; h e loaned over, took th e drunkard by the coat'^pllar, stood him on his feet, started him tovtard the door, oponod it wifh his disengaged -mn'd, pushed th e fel- tovVout, a n * .pff-pn. the: pavement. - ,/S*. t JK ;• he come b ack /w fth ’fac e as expree- a s e ver. ^ • ' ‘’Aw Kv ery disagweeablA don’t you knowl” ho said.—Boston Transcript. ^ 1 porter A n K x c ep tlp n o l D ude. J ) B , GEORGE M. POST,\ 7 PHYSICIAN AND SURGKON. Offloe a t residence, on H e n ry stre e t. o a ila tn iS offloe. N ig h t 499 Lo o a i, Tb a ik s WX8rwa k u f r o mEl mir a .6 . 1 5 F . M . , e v e ry d a y ,fro m E lm ira. Stopi a t a ll sta tio n s, arriving a t PalhtOd P o s t 0.47pm. 1 .4 0 P ,M ., w eekdays, from Elm ira. Stops a t a l l stations, arriving a tP aln teiP o s< 2 .2 flp .m . 3 . b o a . M ., every day, tro m Elm ira, ^c o rn in g 4.80, Addison 4,47, Canlsteo 5.88i and arrives a t Hornellsvlllh p.87a. m . ----- 1.48, x». M ., Sunday, trOm-Elm lra. c o rning 8.08, Addison 8.50, Cameron 4.40, and a t all s t a i tlo n s on ’s ig na l, arriving a t HornellBvlUe; 5,45 Ui IUi 4 . 3 0 P . fflt .siindi stopfflng a t North 1 ____ Com ing 5.18 a n d a rriv in g p./n. o. 2l.--G ,10; F , M „e v ^ r d a y , from Susque- _ r a t a ll s ta tio n s exoept Corning 9.44, arrives P a tn te d Fainted Post 9,48. RoohesterK xpressieavesElm ira,6:SO m in., dal- ly e x c e p t Sunday, arriving; a t H ayana-at 5:68 a. m . ' . N lagaraEX pressleaves Philadelphia 7:<oa.m., B altlinore 7:80 a. m ., dally e x cept Sunday arriving a t Havana 6‘8 i p .i n . B uffetP ar- lo r oars a re ru n ou th is t r a i n from P hlla- delphla t o w uiiam spoft, a n d passenger coaohes trom Baltlmore to C anandaigua *And Rochester, ' F a s t Line leavesPhiiadeiphia, U:so a. m.; W ash- ington, B:so.a. m.: Bahlm oro, 10:1& dally except Sunday, a rriving a tiH a v a- n a 10:68 p. m. Passengor coaouos aro ru n o n th is tr a in trom Philadelphia -to WH- l l a m p o r t and B a ltto o re ^ to ^ a tk ta s . . i m .i m s h ln g to n ,10:00 p* in .: Baltimore, . 11:80, p .m .,a a lly .a rrlv ln g a tH a v an a ,11:04 -a.m. Paiaoesioeplng c araaro ru n o n th is ' tra in Irom Phlladelphla to W llllam sport. a n d W ashington, to Canandaigua an d . Kochester. T ra in s going. North, leave E lm ira S ta tio n as follow s l-r^ ; L . HUNTER , V . S., > V e terin ary Col- T re a ts a il diseases; _rdqmostlo anlmala. Residence, oh Franklin. S t., on tne SOutn side o t Gleh B ridge, 42m(S Do not misunderstand me. I have no thought of underestimating the g re a t advan- tages of a college education, for no college man is likely ever, to do th a t, hut 1 do w arn you against the stumbling block of over- estimating its importance, and of supposing, as too many students did in my day, th a t a college diploma is of itself a species of title of nobility, the open sesame Jo fam e and for- tune, and that its holder, being too well edu- cated to work, must necessarily adopt some profession. THEV NEVER WENT TO COLLEGE. X > A V I D SM IT H , _ - ■ - BRALEU IN BOOTS,8H£)K8,ANDRUBBERB ...... ' a n d R epalrlng as usual. Franklin street, oppc fflte Ball Brocflc House, W atkins, N, Y. • f t Custom Work io- •^'3. # 4 M. R O E , A tto rn ey and' Couhsellor-aWaw. offloe oyer Sellen’s Grocery Store, F e u rth s tr e e t,■ W a t- k in s , N .Y , / • , ' ■ - -f~.‘..‘ \ E a s t w a b d . f e o m El m i r a . -C orning,... Lv K lm lra......“ Waverly......“ Owego........“B ingham ton” ' Susqu’lum’aA r 123PM 1 58“ 8 20“ -953“ 8 88“ 416“ 19 2Or* 10 55“ 1 1 2 6“ 1204S.iT 1244“ 180X31 228XX '3,57“8 8 4“ 8’54“ 4 8 9“ 5 0 9“ NO .2. Remember th a t a very large proportion of the most successful and illustrious men whom this country has produced were n o t college educated men, and some of them did n o t even have tho advantage of a fair common school education. Ten of tho tw enty-three presidents of the United States—Washing- ton, Monroe, Jackson, Van Buren, Taylor, Fillmore, Lincoln, Johnson, Grant a n d Cleve n S. FROST, ' . ■•• AGRICULTURAL IMPLKMBNTS.kO. ; R ochester E x press,........ so a. m N o rthernE xpress,. ............... 10;80 a. m N iagara E xpress, ...... :4 P a st L i n e , ......... ........ t:0 T rain s going South leave canahdaigua.si ---------------------------------------------.,5:ki p . m 'l;2 0 p - m Station . . . . as f o l l o w s - WllUomBport Accommodation.. ......8:66 a, m E lm ira Accommodation., ........ 6:80p.m SoutnernKxpresa.......... 8ffl5 p .m T§'\\.\.' W 33.». i %%-i P ropi l e tt r Sohuyier A g ric u ltu ra l W orks a nd ................... lor ste am , an nd ready -W atkins, Deo. 10th , wr s t Mill, constantly-under ste a m , a d re a d y * for Jobbing a n d gristing.-' 745AMI1055AMI,,.. . 7 55“ 1055“ * Local T rains Eastward. “■ ' c o r .3 6 A. M .,from m in g ; sto pp in g a t Big ts9.& , North,ElmirS 9-53, arrlTlng a t£ l< n lra ft-o m . ' Jersey c ity .A ri _N e w Y o rk ...” Il085l< 9 F l a A ... 10.00’a. . Jobbing 1 f a m i l t o n & ORAMER, - - nxAtttigIH' FRE S H ME A T S I N E V ERY V A RIETY . .5, ‘. I\ N .c‘v\L’:“‘ Cleve- land; tw o of the chief justices of the supreme court of the United States—the g re a t John Marshall and John Rutledge; ten o f the fif- teen chief justices of the supreme court o f Pennsyi vanin, Benjamin Franklin, Patrick Henry, Henry Clay, Washington Irving, John Greonleaf W hittier, Horace Greeley, Thurlow Weed, Jam es Gordon Bennett, John Sherman, Allen Q Thurman, and hundreds of others whom I might mention, whose names are part of the history of this country, had none, of the opportunities which you are enjoying. And probably not one in ten of tho self made millionaires of this country, the hank presidents, the merchant princes, tho railroad kings, the g reat financiers, o r the responsible editors of our great newspa- pers, were ever inside of the doors o f a col- lege. .v ‘r w -' ‘s-1’f‘\-‘.\F..‘.}.\fIJ -~ s'- V -3.. “_...~..d=.‘E,'C“t. M 80DTTS SA T BRANCH* D ally Except Sunday.»' T ra in s lesve Stanley a t 4:05 p . in. to r Phelps, Newark,-W aPlngton, godns Bolnt a h d interm e- diate stations. , • , 10.00’a. . No. so.—7 .3 3 A,.Bt., w eekdays, from Corning arriving a t l)lngham ton 9.57 a. m. No, log,—13,55: p . m., e very day,from Fainted Post: Stops, a t all sta tio n s, arriving a t Eim tra 1.83 p, Ut 9. N0a112;—i a .o o , r p m every d iy , from P&lAted FOst: stops a t all Stations, arriving a t E lm ira KWOjMUi3 — — - — -------------—^ IK THRIR BRASOX, lffl:^and Oysto^m_tJaelr seMon.. P ay .~4 N‘; H _'.:'\ .9 v..~:\- ->3 BTITIHS XtOOI. HAVAKA ,H.-T, ‘J y; ; ,2.» ' D . HILL S , . - PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON: KtiAh in GtseffO County. N .Y .l KWOjMUi3 — : — - — . ------—9 .4 1 VM every day, from Coming. Stopping a t Klmlra 10.14; a t w a v e rly 10.86p. m . $£“ fr’ '36‘ ','.x\_ A‘ :1’ ‘’.‘L'.‘’.\ I'- ';.’ \\»V.\.i \.\’\- '1'31.és,-.~. ***AAi» nu e -v* t*f ui(iu Qy jj* m BULU O «U U> iff - - Mori-is H a n iira n o b .-—Trains leav es Bloss- ^ J k a t 6:15 a .m .,9 .8 0 a .m .a n d 1.00 p .m . Be* _ o m a B lm A t 6 .60 a-m.,10,80 a. AU tra in s oonn’eot w ith t h e Coming', cow an-' e s q u e * A ntrim Railway a t LawrenoevlUe. S. T.SEELEYTDlr. passenger Agent. ^ a S s.I5 ^ m :4 is :¢:\o§\-J‘-.«“x’4 Pr” .'r‘(2\-‘ ‘L ‘4' its a ». \:....»,,).. i ...-....,.--...,. » an damn-, V- ,_ ,'’’'\$‘,;;' 19» H‘ 22>: “ gi ».,,‘.~\.’ -< gt.‘-.:‘r “,f«., i\’”“='f-;‘.\:A T’ '.-..?;«‘:t!.‘‘ I‘ 1.12; »é.<m‘<’w in '5 Am » /._..';‘(' V t;.:.'3‘.,._l ,;;l#:r: / 33.1vz-:v>r \. \\u '7'.’ 1.-,{§{€*f\ .‘.\z*;. ff, ' \1‘I..-.0‘ \ FALL B800K COAUIOMl'ASi'S RY’S A. DURHAM & CO., B A N K E R S - Are fuiiy eq.uippodlor e very k ind o t le g itim a te Banking. a n d soiiolts t h e aooounts ot p riv ate E L IA . DUNHAM, JAMES M. DUNHAM, FRED J . DUNHAM, H a v an a , J a n . l it b , 1886, | -^■i i - Offended Politicians. Took effeot Nov, ll, ,1888. H e re in S t Petersburg, too,rate h av e admir- ers o f Boulanger. A company p f merchants were feasting a t a hotel. Q neof the gentle- men-took up a paper and read th e account of Boulanger’s election ln Paris, -“ L et Us drink Bomanger’s health!” he; said’ a n d the re s t haShd th e proposal with delight. A fter th e y ham imbibed p retty freely, another gentle- man ObservedH'lVkat do you say , don’t you think w e ou g h t to send BoUhinger atelegram of congratulatlpni” The suggestion was ea- gerly adopted and acted upon. To save th e genital's' pocket, his admirers even paid fo r a rqsly. N ex t day they ’initr again a t th e place; expecting to rcteive an answer from Boulanger, h u t none Came,“ 111 m an- ' c o r f w e did wrong in v ilrin g to h im l” one'of th e company indignantly exclaim ed “Itjcertainly-does not speklYlnTliis favor 1” rem arked another.“ As m a tte ts stand, we will-p a y h im .o iit by drinteng Bismarck’s health 1”—Which they did;—fit,. Petersburg Jasfock. ' • lege. The world will not ask whether you have a diploma, hut it will ask what you can do; and the Only way th a t you canosatisfy i t on that point is to do som ething\hat conclu- sively demonstrates your capacity. Superior physical strength is no longer a t a premium, for machinery has to a g re a t ex- tent taken its place, hut intellectual superi- ority never commanded so high a premium as it does today. The man who is intellectu- ally hut half au inch taller than his fellow men is bound to forge to the front. Thera never was an age in the history of the world wheu there was so good a market for brains, but they must tie the genuine article. The world is not easily humbugged, and the man who attempts to hoodwink it is bound to “To be a good detective a man must be good possessed of courage, brains and coolness. There is no mystery, however impenetrable it m ay appear, but w h at can be solved if the rig h t methods are employed. There was a case I remember in Chicago some years ago. “A well know n business man was found murdered one morning in his office. The crim e had evidently been committed the n ig h t before, fo r the body had been cold a long time, t o d the man’s family h o e tte to ed for him to come to his home the evening prfv vious. His valuables had been taken, tjj© safe had been rifled, a n d beyond the ghastly bullet hole in the back of tbe man’s head, there was nothing to indicate w ith what tne orime had been committed. No pistol could he found, p ra ST NATIONAL BANK OF , WATKINS, N .Y . C AD J TAL 9SO . OOO . Organised 18 6 8. Reorganized 18 8 8. Wm.N. Lo v r , Pres. Jo h nW, Lo v r .Cashier. Hon. Ad r ia k TcTmR.Vloe-Presldont. ' Singing by Proxy. Dir b o t o x s;—Wm. N r Love, Nelson Nivlson, Yon. Adrian. T a ttle , George H aring, M. H . Gray; -- - - * TB S. O. ColegrOve, A, F, Chapil , “It,” said Mrs. I.aiv try in a recent intei view, \has been eight y. urs since I went on the stage, it was iie.-p — ity th a t brought ua there; I like bread and butter, n rd had not them oney to g e t it When Mrs. Lahoucher, come to me and suggested th a t I should makt my first veuture ia amuteur theatricals fo: the benefit of a chui ity I was just making up my mind to sta rt a murket garden, for I felt sure I could succei-i m th at, an d I had a vague idea that cal-biig,-and cauliflower and asparagus, having the stamp of m y special attention, might be g n eu a short vogue in Covent Garden market I went on the stag, determined to accept criticism from whoevci offered it, and I do b e l i e - t h a t th e orchestra and stage people are fa r tbe best critics, for tfiey see all sorts and conditions of acting i will tell you something fuuny th a t happened to me a t my first professional appearance, which was in January, lssfl. I was to play Blanche Hay. and, if y. u remember, she ha- a song in the second net. I do n o t sing, con sequently it was necessary to h av e some one behind the screen t-i sing for m e while 1 played the accompanin-eut and imitated all the movements Tb-first night it was u great, success, so much s. - th a t Clement Scott insisted that I was doing all the singing, but tho second the singer lia-l cither gotten so in toxicated with her own melody or had looked tdb often upon th e wine« hen it w as red, fo: long after the tim e for her to stop sbo kept on singing, and, though she was conducted from off the stage, tin-audienee could still hear her warbling away os she was taken out tho stage door.\—Chicago Herald. \get left\ It wanta scholars, not sciolists; poets, not poetasters, statesmen, not poli- cians, inv.-utois, not imitators I t demands, above all things, originality. It will b esat- isfied w ith nothing less than tho very highest degree of excellence, in scholarship, iu me- chanical pursuits, in business, in literature and in each of th e several professions, IT S CAUSE, NATURE, SYitPTOMS, PREVEN- TION AND CURB IS t i e I blMeof A n e w book of 72 p a g es by d , d . Jclaw son.M . p ., w h o has h a d a large exper- ..lenee. a n d great suNsese in t h e tre a tm e n t 0 1 I b l s dreadfuV disease, i t contains' valuable in- form aflon »r t h o s e l a a n y w ay afflicted with. ‘a s K a r * * - w m i,e 8 e ,w BETHESDA SANITARIUM, HAVANA. N. Y, 860| ri5|1140; p mi 807 2671 812 1 45 too L v WeUSboroAlt 112201 610| “I was p u t on the case and reasoned th a t as th e robbery was evidently committed for gain the m urderer m ust be in poor circum- stances. I visited all th e pawn shops in the city, and found th at five revolvers had been pawned between 6 o’clock tbe previous even- ing and th e morning. Three were 45 cali- ber, the size evidently used to kill the man. Two of th e men were well dressed and the o ther wasn't. The la tte r was described to me) t o d I took tbe paw nbroker down to the different railw ay depots where trains were m 039 1032 910825785 Fo p m 780 783 , .Blaokwells. . .c e d a r R u n ... ..W a te rv llia ... .Jersey Shore,. 815 902 lv. Wllllams’t. ar 4 00 9.50 Tpe m in o r members of a dram atio com- pany a re p aid about as well kH th e meinber* of thesteff, of asuccessful metropolitannews- papfer—-perhaps more. The ste rs fare b e tte r thah the, editors-in-chief. B u t so m any of th e t sta rs are spendthrifts—notoriously “Adonis” Dixey and S tu a rt Bohmn. I t is impossible to give the average incomes of L an g try , Mrs. Potter, Booth and B ar- because, while they d ra w crowded hqu^es iu one place, they play to e m p tv soats in to o th e r. Kyrio Bellew reoelves\ |S50 a .week to r - f o r ty weeks,’ Charles Coghian ithe the Stone; Mary Anderson’s profits .this sea- son will, be unusually large, ab o u t $4,800 a week fo r fo rty weeks, o r t|92,()00; JV tocfi W ilton is pAid $600 a weekj D e IVOlf H op- per .and Dighy'Bell each ahotffe 1250; F re d Leslla receives f 500 a week from th e Gaiety company, and was offered |800 aw eek b y Rudolph Aronson; Ellen T e rry is paid <600 and. George,Alexander $200 a week.—P hilto delphia IT ete. . The incom e o f Aotoni. coon m a t e r i a l in d e m a n d. But th-re never was a time vvhen the world was willing to pay such high prices as it will pay today for what it ueeda I know Iaw- yjrs, doctors and editors with incomes o f from $25,000 to $50,000a year, but theyiTm—~ few, and they a re worth every dollar th a t they g e t Popular preachers command sal- aries th a t make au average lawyer's mouth water Theauth ir whocan write books th a t will compel people to read them can got prices tbe tenth p art of which would have made Homer, Milton and Shakespeare bo- nanza kings. Milton received £10 in his life- time and his widow £8 after his death for OohkkotiokS.—A t Lyons with Main Line N. Y , C._& HAR. R.>R Train8 2, ^4 and; «,_mako close __________„ a H. R. R .B. Ali n a rth bound trains, make good con- nootlonsE ast an d W est.- ^D re s d e n —W ith p enn Y an Branch S. G. * O :P%l;MIOS; !¢ ay leaving. W e went through three trains, and finally located the man in a smoking car. I arrested him, and much of the dead man's property w as found in bis possession. I t ’ s hoi muob of a sto ry — if the man hadn't pawned the pistol he would certainly have got off, b n t i t shows how much little things am ount to, a n d will give you ,an idea of how a detective w ill go to work. “Those who are intrusted w ith the handling of lafge sums ot money a re frequently Watohed b y detectives, particularly if any mohey is missing from th e institution. Bank clerks are particu larly liable to be kept under surveillance. N ot long ago a leak was known to exist in one of tfle banks of tbis city. E very clerk Was shadowed by a detective un- til finally-th o thief was discovered. His m other made good h% defalcation, and being ‘ o f good fam ily;’he was perm itted to ‘ resign.’ “T he lifeof a detective is startlin g enough, b u t i t gets tiresome a n d monotonous, and I expect sOon to reth’e. I remember otie case tb h t happened in New York. A very swell reception w as given by one of the leaders of society. One of the guests had left a valu- able solitaire in tho ladies’ dressing room on tho Washstand, nnd, forgetting It, had left it. On h e r r e tu r n t o find it , It h a d o f course dis- nppfiared, N obody k'riow w here if was. The b u n k s of dll th o se rv a n ts were searched, b u t n o ii'a c o could b e fo u n d o f th e jew el, which w as w o rth a b o u t *4,000. I .finally found i t -Vpj-e Afcbad. b ^ n4^ in n paw n- shop b y jta F ro n c h Woriaa*. I took the v isit- ing,„list of tlie hostess a h d fin ally , a fte r a week’s search, found t h a t one o f th e guests, a rich w om an, h o d a. F re n c h m aid, t o d t h a t s h e : hadtgbne to E u ro p e s h o rtly a f te r th e recep- tion, “t had to w hit for h e r return, made ihe acquaintance o f t h e m aid, and took her to the p aw nbrokers w here he identified her. She confessed a h d her misteees redeemed th e dianiond* and paid all expenses. I never fold on her. * ^ Y o u #$0ulio pawnbrokers are irapor- ta u t facfor# t e oar business, and th a t th e y ora freq u en tly of service in detecting crime, Btui, pawnbroker* encourage robbers, for If “I t ’d a sin g u la r muihess in ever' f t e u t o t h e t S l f taker,“ F a e y ia atL , wajtohut, lik e everythlngslsSf One of f t / ’ -s-Dinrver T f tm . Don’t purchase one u n t l l you haVe exam ined e ith e r the . E S T Y or M ASO N & H A M IL IN , tw o o t the m ost reliable m an u fa ctu re rs ot - Hlmrods—W ith N orth ern Central R. R. hfJOrolng-AVlth N, Y. L. E. * W. H. R , ahd D. LaWr’enoovlUo—w ith Cowahesque Branoh 0. d * A .R 'j v T ioga R. R. Jem eyatw re—Seech C reekR R. . - WlNlamsport—ciose connection to and from , Heading, Philadelphia a n d a lfp o in ts south',\via; p o r ta n d ’ phlladelphFm °m Williams- “Paradise Lo'-t.” Rider Haggard can today get $10,000 for a single story of 300 pages, and our leading magazines havo paid popular authors as high as $100 a page. Scores of college graduates apply in vain every month for situations on newspapers, hut let one of them write hut ten, lines or even a head line that indicates real talent for newspaper work, and he cun immediately get a good situation and can soon command a salary o f $5,000. Tho mail who m ute TVanamaker's advertise- ments a few years ago was paid $12,000 a year fo r that work, and any one who can write equally good advertisements can easily get as good a salary to-morrow P IA N O S A N D O R G A N S i n t h e world. Don’t.fooi away y o u r mouey witb. ahodaygtedShW llea th e aboyo' m akes only cost- a l i t t le more. . W ill Guarantefc P etfect SatisfactloR J With these gooas. call on or address the Gem eraiAgent, ■ h i r a m c o r n i s h , J r .,. ' , 4 A s a ^ erA ge,it xvrw H a v a n a P o st Offic^. ' ^B end 8 2meht staritps to A . Ordway A CoJ BOaton.Haaa., for henc modlcal work published?. P . H lk V e r s io n ,. To a ll polnte NOrth,,, TO W atkins... ’ , 7:oo a. m. ..5:61p.m . To points south or W illiam sport...... 8:00 p.na. .„ Ma il s ASh i v r : ' From aRpolntsSouth 7:21 a, m. Prom pointt South ot Elthira ....io:Nta. m; From E l m l f a , E a 6 t a n ( l W O s t , o s i n. m. From Watkins io;4 s l m prom an points North....?jjo s S ni MAILB OLOSI: ' ers n ,. A to a d ' under a harrow w ould doubtless give a different account of his. experience from t h a t which tho farm er guiding the im plement m ig h t furnish. ’ “Only those aroused from m idnight elum- hor on sMpboal’d by the terrible cry, ‘M an overboard)’” said a traveler,“ c an compro- liend,to th e full its terrible meshing, tho fe a r nnd In its suddon-alarm.” “O myqs, th ey can,” said a, little man who did n o t look as if he had over le f t his native town. “I heard i t once whetr I wasn’t n e a r tho ship, and I realized it m o pt h t o any one else.” . H E R E YOU A R E ! Thaddeus Stevens was oue of th e most ve markable men of hm tm r.\ or of any time. During his long career 111tho house of repre- sentatives,, he-was the acknowledged lender o t his party, a n d no oue ever th o u g h t of dis- puting his primacy. I'm-quickness of wit and sarcasm, ho had no equal, an d any one who; looked horns with him in delmtp was quite cerfein to'home off secoud best. It is related of, Mr. Stevens th at, when a young mod practicing law in Pennsylvania, he was trying A Cause before a judge who was dis- posed to.l-ule on every question ag ain st him. Mr. Stevens b o re this for some time, aud then, hastily gathering up his books and papers, sta rte d for the door. The judge.' somewhat surprised a t this, hailed him and asked i f he m eant, by leaving in th a t manndr, to show contem pt 0f court.“ No,” replied Mr. Stevens,“ I am leaving in o rder that 1 may n o t show m y contempt:\—San Froncisco Argonaut. ' Leaving Id Timfe* 9.‘ 3\ $33..‘ r-C IG A R S — V :ttm caae. thousand, lax or ono. ____ — TOBACCO— ’ by t h e ounce, pound, p all Or ton. — IiE A L E R S—- thvltod to oaliand get Whoiesaleprloes. . , ,-J\ *•“ JnvltesltO panaA dgetprfoos, ■' - '^ -< 2 0 N $ .IT M E R S ^ - .W I N E S A N T i-L I Q trO R S —” 1 a ll grades for m edical and fa m ily usO.» ■ —M IN E ftA li W A T E R — ' get But whatever line of intellectual work you may msnlvp to do or whatever profession you may adopt, rememberth a t the secret of suc- cess consists in doing thoroughly whatever you nttempt, and in doing it better than any one else has ever dune it. No man ever suc- ceeded greatly in business, or politics, or lit- erature, iu law, or medicine, of preaching, in any other way Genius is tho happy faculty of selecting the p articular kind of work to? which one is specially fitted; of doing only that which one can do best; and doing it to the utmost measure of one’s ability There is no such thing as genius which can accom- plish great resuits without work. Tbo iitory of it is a fairy tale, which self conceit tolls* as an apology fo r indolence and inoapaclty. Behove mo, th e world is not waitihg fo r your graduation to crown you w ith laurel wreaths, or to lay tho treasures of fortune (it jo u r feet. W hhtevor measure of success you way achieve must be won by patient tolleuicL pro-eminent merit. Tho only person whom this ago bos no room fo r is tho non-producer; b u t ther* never can bo a surplus of bread winner* ,or o f’ brain workers who a re worthy Of th q name. —From Rufus E. Shapley’* Address Befors th e Union Philosophitel Society o f Dickitcton College; , , ; ' 1 points ...?jjo ni OKKOK noons- .F ro m 7:00a, m.,_to 8:00 p. m. Sunday; from t1:80, a, hi., to 12:80 p .in . Aloncy order offloe from 8:00 a! m., to7:00p.m.. S.J.BHOWN, P. M. “You couldn’t,\ said the traveler, scorn- fully. - ' .- ' ’ ’ .> , 0 . L. “Yes, I could,\ persisted the little man. I w as th e ; m an who was, ovorhoardi Y outh’s Companion, »— lnew'41§o5i§ot‘T§h§. coir ‘ 7’ \ \ *1’ ' gxonery. am, just: Vrew1veg.g°3%',‘.Gf“E*°’”\&°n;e‘ S P E C IA L INBUUEMElVTS th e M 8 T Ua ^ o l D g 5 t t e 01 low Pr^oedanN }%$3; ..E.':.«..,9.é*‘ze;%.é*s:?:L 'm;;:;‘§;moneY?9P15!}§’!°““‘i.‘ .< ,. ”. : :lM ~' IE! WEST. T » Nothing‘ run a or published. ¢‘b.ooiMW1°. ’:3s:w:§8§m.3§4:£‘¢a:.«s;2¢¢:;:z?a%:.:»3r;;*g:>z:% 2=g,g,=g_¢,;&.$5,,-;*,.‘*::%‘.‘:‘.s¥%€§°“%..:‘$}¢T “.5” e ' ; t5.-.l 10 9° ‘’° ‘:“,i°\.- §%%zxaaé\'i3a§a?;:s’%;‘a:s\§‘5¢:é‘3a%:a?;?3#&; The Oldest Obelisk. The oldest of a ll theobellste U th e beautiful a g re a tto o ts n t o ity which h M Y to ite to 'to d W t f o ^ to h rtUo behind. T h e c ity w ai th e Bethshemerti o f th e S orip tu rto t t a famous on*, whiOhis m»morable to ali B M * readers The Greeks cidied f t Heliopolis, th e City o f th e s to , because th cre th e worship o f the mm i_^ -ohiet ^ t e r - t o d ite .most sto re d ahrthss.'t'A ttent* Amerioan. v - •“'■ : p t 4 i t^ n a NO. * S lie Ito »D look, . W A T K IN S , N . Y . _lM4yl PRANN SMALL,-Proprietor. W est H a lf , >1» ‘*5 „ - , D YM fc * * m fr* a a ii* ;4«« V ^^ O r ro&atM twioG to* turee timofl S R c i i t i i i c ' tolget a t a U ttS« le™t 'r *nw>UnY hUnuatomerx E r t s h B ro w n e ll Coffpea roaated byliimaeirathiaCoffteHouse at • H A V A N A * IV. Y , I t seems strange th a t newspaper men, so oagar to advertiso and make famous; o r notorious, all m anner of men and things, in- stinctively shrink., from seeing -their own namMttUrlnt. I t matters hot w hether th e reference to th em bo short or long, oompli- taentery or otherwise, th e Vast m ajo rity of journalists do n o t want themsolraa“ w ritte n np.” TFfiy is i t ! Let these whp wish tp moWOft# upon and anaiy*a th* rsMoni for thtaqttoir fact,—Low»U Critlo, Tho M odest Newspaper Man. FOR SALE. S K S & r The shad was orsated fo? a imrpoto, an d iet)W ^'W «*>.to|,ito atoam for «u the “That’s a littlo boy < “aud ho never crft*,” “That’s bepaw wsver washed/’ rojoin*a |»jw m J*ter. H ^ B u b ite H b t for th e JotaotAx.. Going North, R ead up. ExrdKxp.iKxv. Stations, Going S o u t h ,. Read np. ex f .a o o iRx f .1 85 5 6 48|1848J 7 0S | 118 658 102 6.48)1258 687)1845 68011888 ....118 g 6 1 1 12}i 608 1801 5 40 1140 p m la m “S-86H-B0 4 58 818 8 47 7 18 8 88| 6 53 310 686 4881 754 405 788 S. G .O .g O. R ’ 1 a mip m ■ 1085 6 85 ) 1840 6 45 18:1 785 7 8 2 |...P e n n Yam . | 8 08| V 68 828 818 801 767 750 7 48 780 780 TOO y , , . . Lyons. ..lv .^ ..G e n e v a .,,.. . . . . D resden.',... a r p m 2 0 5 v rtr.e o rn ln jf“ * ..Lawrenoevltle. ...Knoxville-.,., . .. w e s t n e i ( f . ... Harrison Vauey. T io g a.; . . . .Stokesdaie jo . 120 ...Hlmrods.,.-..'- ....D u n d e e .,,.. R O okstream .., Reading Centre W atk ln sG len ...WedgewoOd.v ..B eaver Dams,. ...P o e t C re e k ... ....C o r n in g .,... 917 988 9 87 945 958 9 .58 1012 1021 1040 154 310 8 88f 235 245 866 816 839 400 1868 1980 a m tffl-60118812251242 100 1147 1220 680600 p m •690 605 » 840 722 \768 -