Newspaper Page Text
■ /. DNfai£ss* •#s§i ° ’ ’ ?®l^ %lsi ®®i $ Sff§ ¥¥§® 111 a® §>#!§ ®?ffP i J. GROSS Sc CO. | H jMe 3N* *6 M i Semi-Annual i i Clothing i -4>& H MftlC || IN* , * IMS vJHje IK* Awaited by more men then like sales held by any other clothing concern anywhere. 2^. ■4Mb 4^ For the good season that we give a wider selection, of greater values then any other concern can possibly 4^ ££ give. ivfc Any $12.50, $15.00 or $16.50 Fancy Cheviot /+* rv /\ || Smte VL VIII I || Any $12.50, $15.00 or $16.50 Homespun or '/jjjjjfc. Cheviot Outing Suit ijjpjc Any $12.50, or $15.00 Fancy Worsted Suits ■-$£ 4s<& v!K^ — -■s£ — - m LEARN THE W AN" TO II I bfACC A* Cn Corner of Baltimore Street H ®§ffj U VJI UOO (X vl)i and B. and O. Railroad Ave. PI i§*f f wii Suffering Will Not Help Your Disease, but Will Weaken Your Nerves. Folks who think It Is better to bear pain than soothe It—are wrong. Old-fashioned doctors used to say was better, because they had nothing with which to ease pain but dangerous/ heart-paralyzing drugs. But now, that a safe remedy has been found. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills, It is wrong to suffer, for nothing can be gained but weakened nerves. A safe rule to remember is: 'When in pain, take an Anti-Pain Pill. This will soothe your quivering nerves. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills relieve pain by restoring the natural secretions, la which they differ from opium and sim ilar narcotic drugs, which relieve pain by checking the action of the glands. They are sure and harmless, and are the latest medical treatment for the cure of Headache, Neuralgia, Backache, Rheumatism, Dizziness, Toothache, Stomachache, Menstrual (Monthly) Pains. Also nerve irritations like Sea- Sickness, Car-Sickness, Sleeplessness, Indigestion, etc. Pleasant to take, quick in results. ‘‘l have used Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills for sick, nervous headache, and have received the best results. I hear tily recommend their curative proper ties, for they are successful.” —REV. RAY A. WATROS, D. D„ lowa City, la. Sold by druggists, at 25c. Money back if first box does not help. Never sold in bulk. P'DT'T' Write to us for Free Trial x AvXjJ-j Package of Dr. Miles’ Anti- Pain Pills, the New Scientific Remedy for Pain. Also Symptom Blank. Our Specialist will diagnose your case, tell you what is wrong, and how to right it. Free. DR. MILES MEDICAL COZ' LABORATORIES, ELKHART, IND. wusntiig an Rspiea, Washing in Naples is done in any old tub, barrel or dish and generally out side of the house, and by the amount of water used one would judge it to be scarce. Instead of a board a broad stone is used, supported by one stick underneath and the edge of the tub. Water is cold, and the clothes are hung out to dry in every conceivable place. I saw some towels hung out of a window in the palace. No clothes pins are used. When one can afford It rings are strung on to the line; other wise strings are tied to strings, to which a double piece of short string is tied; one corner of the article to be dried is slipnoosed into this and never becomes loose.—Chicago Tribune. A Carious Frait. A writer in the National Geograph ical Magazine tells of a tree growing in the Malay archipelago, the Anda man Islands and Ceylon, which pro duces a fruit used in fishing, with re sults of a remarkable character. The fruit is pounded up into paste and left in bags overnight, after which it is sunk at low tide in deep holes along the reefs. The fish soon begin to ap pear at the surface, some of them life less, others attempting to swim or faintly struggling, with their ventrai side uppermost. In this condition the natives have no difficulty in picking them out of the water with their hands. rinLLiSU Or WUOtb, A Famous Artist Says Tliere Were No Balrusltes In Egypt. Bulrushes are so inseparably associ ated in the mind with the finding of Moses that it is difficult to imagine a painting of the incident in which the picturesque reeds do not figure. But there is a beautiful painting by Sir Laurence Alma-Tadema of the finding of Moses, and the bulrushes are entirely omitted. The great paint er gave the following explanation of the fact. He ascribes the presence of the word “bulrushes” in the authorized version as being due to faulty translation, for there are no such things as bulrushes on the Nile. The word in the original means papyrus, and it seems that in the absence of some equivalent in English the word was used as being the nearest which the translators had at their command. According to Alma-Tadema’s read ing, the mother of Moses fashioned a cradle or ark of papyrus and smeared it over with the white Nile mud, and It Is according to this rendering that he has painted his picture.—Chambers’ Journal. Like Many a Man. A horse was entered in a trotting race. When he was put on the track to be warmed up he seemed to move with great energy, and a number of inexperienced persons put up their mon ey on him, but when the actual race came off a rawboned, yew necked ani mal that had no style about him passed the showy horse with great ease and on the home stretch distanced him. “That horse,” said an experienced race track man who had been wise enough to back the rawboned steed, “which lost out is like a good many people. He spends too much time and energy going up in the air instead of getting over the earth.”—Missouri Val ley Farmer. Self Respect. It is a mistake to associate pride or foppishness with self respect. The one rises from a judicious consideration of what we are, the other from an extrav agant notion of what something ex traneous has made us. The one is true, the other is false, and both can not exist together. A man that re spects himself cannot be proud, and a proud man does not respect himself. Ability. Father—You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Dick. You are now in your twenty-fifth year and you haven’t •iarned a penny yet. At your age I Had already married a woman with £lo,ooo.—London World. A Fatalist. “I understand Colonel Jones is a fa talist.” “Your’re right thar, stranger. He never fails to git his man.”—New Or leans Tlmes-Democrat. Fall Term Opening. The Tri-State Business College, Cumberland, Maryland, l September 4,5, 6. THE MILKY WAY. One of the Great Problems of the Science of Astronomy. Some of the streams of fainter stars ' in the Milky Way are very striking and must convince the most skeptical of their reality, says a scientist. It is possible to draw an arc of a circle through any three stars and a conic section through any five, but where we find ten or twenty stars fall ing into line not once, but in many cases, and that there is a curious simi larity between the strange curves and branching streams which these pha langes of stars mark out on the heav ens, there is no room left for doubt that the mind is not being led away by a tendency of the imagination similar to that which finds faces in the fire or sees a man carrying sticks on the face of the moon. If it is proved that a group of stars is arranged in line or marshaled in any order it would follow that the individ uals of the group must be actually as well as apparently close to one anoth er and that they form some kind of system, having all of them had a com mon origin or been subject to some common influence. What these streams and curves of stars mean and what forces have marshaled them in lines form one of the grandest problems of the future, one that I trust I may live to see unraveled. CHINESE NEATNESS. The Man Is Clean Even if His Sur roundings Are Dirty. Next time you are in Chinatown no tice the finger nails of the inhabitants. You will be surprised possibly to find that they are generally as clean and bright as though they had just come from the manicure. As are his finger nails so is the rest of the Chinaman’s body. It is one of the queer contradictions about this con tradictory people that, although their houses are usually surrounded by a fringe of dirt and although they don’t take to modern sanitation a bit, they are very cleanly in their personal habits. The daily bath is an institution. A bathtub is not necessary. Your China man manages very well with a few cupfuls of water and a wash rag. He completes his toilet by polishing his long nails, and every day or so he visits the barber, who shaves not only the scanty hair on his face, but also his head and the inside of his ears. If he can afford it, the Chinaman puts on a clean blouse every day or two. It is no accident that these people are a nation of laundrymen. It comes to them naturally.—Washington Post. Public is Aroused The public is aroused to a knowledge of the curative merits of that great med icinal tonic, Electric Billers, for sick stomach, liver and kidneys. Mary H. Walters, of 54<i St. Clair Ave., Columbus, 0., writes: “For several months, I was given up to die. I had fever and ague, my nerves were wrecked ; i could not sleep, and my stomach was so weak, from useless doctors’ drugs, that I could not eat. Soon after beginning to take Electric Bitters, I obtained relief, and in a short time I was entirely cured.” ■ Guaranteed at L. N. Meadows & Co.’s S drug store; price 50c. i AN OLD MAN'S TRIBUTE. An Ohio Fruit Raiser, 78 Years Old, Cured of a Terrible Case After Ten Years of Suffering. When suffering daily torture From backache, rheumatic pain, Any ill of kidneys or bladder, Turn to Doan’s Kidney Pills. A cure endorsed by thousands. Read an old man’s tribute. Sidney Justus, fruit dealer, of Mentor, Ohio, says: “I was cured by Doan’ Kidney Pills of a severe case of kidney SIDNEY JUSTUS. When stooping to lift any thing, and often I could hardly straighten my back. The aching wms bad in the daytime, but just as bad at night, and I was aiw'ays lame in the morning. I was bothered with rheumatic pains and drop sical swelling of the feet. The urinary passages were painful, and the secretions were discolored and so free that often I had to rise at night. I felt tired all day. Half a box served to relieve me, and three boxes effected a permanent cure.” A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mr. Justus will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Sold by all dealers; price, fifty cents per box. MISSING PERSONS. Thousands Yearly Disappear and Are Never Heard From. More than 5,000 persons annually dis appear in the United States and are never heard from again. At first blush the assertion seems incredible, but po lice statistics furnish confirmation. The actual figures, based on a conservative calculation, are even more alarming than those given. The tragedies of real life hidden within these peculiar cases, if they could but be brought to light, would rival many of the novels penned by the world’s greatest writers. No sub ject that can he imagined has such weird fascination as that of the thou sands and thousands who have gone down this grand canyon of oblivion. It would be possible to fill many pages with the absorbing stories of these curious cases, but nearly every reader of the newspapers, whether he lives in village, town or city, is prob ably acquainted with some instance of the kind concerning either friend or relative. Men and women who have lost all they treasured most in life in this manner go about vacantly, numb ly, ever waiting for the return of the missing one—a dream that never comes true.—Brooklyn Eagle. No such thing as “summer complaint” where Dr. Fowler’s Extract of Wild Strawberry is kept handy. Nature’ remedy for every looseness of the bowels TIGER HUNTING. tnriiiK tlie Pierce Animals toy Imi tating a Monkey. To call a tiger the proceeding was as follows: The mikir, having first ascer tained that a tiger was in the neighbor hood, would climb into a well branch ed, leafy tree situated near where he supposed the tiger to be, and after hid ing himself among the branches as best he could would commence to imitate the chattering of a monkey and break and drop twigs in the way that mon keys do. Then he would let fall to the ground a bundle of rags weighted so that the thud when it struck the ground would sound as if a baby monkey had tum bled down from the tree, and at the same time would imitate the supposed baby monkey cries. This would be the supreme moment, for if a tiger were near it would often spring out in the hope of snapping up such a dainty morsel as a young monkey, and then a bullet from the gun of the hidden mikir might find its billet in the tiger's body. By this means the mikir was said to have killed a considerable number of tigers, and certainly the man’s power of mimicry was wonderfully good. The call for deer was of an entirely different nature, the sound imitated be ing the cry of a fawn, and as this cry sometimes attracted tigers, too, it had to be adopted with caution, because it was used only in open grass land, from which the caller would not have had much chance to escape were a tiger suddenly to put in an appearance.— London Field. THE MAD DOG FALLACY. With. Some Suggestions on How to Treat a Bite. In all my own experience with dogs I have not only never seen a “mad dog,” but have never known a dog owner—and by that I mean a man who has had experience in keeping dogs— who has seen one. If, then, rabies is so exceedingly scarce, hydrophobia be comes really an impossibility, and the fear of it should be dismissed without a thought. A person may get dog bitten; but, in the language of the New York tough, “Forget it.” If it is a bad bite it may twitch later on, and you may begin worrying, so it is a good plan to get rid of the twitching or throbbing in order to forget. I have been bitten so often that I think no more of it than a mosquito bite, and this is what I do: If it is on the hand I put it under the faucet and wash thoroughly, with the object of cleaning the wound and preventing inflammation from any dirt or foreign substance. While doing this some one is getting the bicarbonate of soda and some clean rags or lint. With water a cream paste of the soda is made sufficient to plaster the wound i well; then, putting some on a rag, it is applied to the wound and bound up. If in the course of an hour or more the application seems to be drying, a little water is poured on the bandage to soak through to the soda or the hand dipped in water.—James Watson in Country Life In America. Fairy Rings. Probably -we have all seen in the fields or on the edge of the woods that circle called the fairy ring. Before fairy folk came to be doubted it was firmly believed these rings were the dancing ground of the fairies. In the moonlight the spirits danced, wearing down the grass under their feet. At least so our grandfathers said, but we must take science's, simple explanation of it. A fungous plant will soon exhaust all the fungous food from the soil be neath it, so that only the spores which fall outside this barren spot will take root and flourish. So the ring is always widening outward, forming a perfect circle unless something interferes with it. The rings are abundant in wet weather, of a buff color or reddish.— t St. Nicholas. Evidence. • A green subaltern who was smoking while on duty was reminded by a sen try who had seen many years’ service that it was against the regulations to smoke near his post, and he advised the subaltern to throw his cigar away. He did so and went on his rounds. The soldier then picked up the cigar and was enjoying it quietly when the sub altern returned. , “Why, how is this?” he asked. “I * thought no smoking was allowed near r your post?” E “That’s true,” replied the sentry. i “I’m merely keeping this alight for ev idence against you in the morning.”— I Harper’s Weekly. | Trout Warnings. In discussing whether or not trout ; hear a correspondent of the Amateur Sportsman asserts that they do not. In his opinion their sensitiveness to ap proaching danger is due solely to the . vibration of the earth along the stream and the consequent of the water. Thus persons standing perfect ly still are able to talk and laugh with impunity, when the slightest bodily movement of either will frighten the shy fish. Ttoe Real Victims. “Was anybody punished for Graf ton’s misdeeds?” “Yes.” “I understood he was acquitted.” “He was, but the business men on toe jufy lost money and missed their meals.”—Washington Star. A Model Husband. “Does your husband ever make you a promise ai,**Jien break it?” “Oh, yes. But Jack is so good! He is always more than willing to make me a new one.” Sorrow is a school of virtue. It cor rects levity and interrupts the confi dence of sinning.—Atterbury. A Natural Result It is reasonable to suppose if the loundaiion o'" a structure gives way, the building is bound to come down. This principle can be applied to disease Take medicine that will remove the cause of sickness, and a cure is sure to follow. Dyspepsia, indigestion, sick headache and biliousness, their founda tion is stomach disorders. Remove this weakness and tlie other symptoms are no more. There is one cure druggists sell for 25 ets. per box. It is Dr, Gunn’s Impioved Liver Pills. One for a dose. They make the cure by taking away the cause. Write Dr. Bosanko Go., Phila delphia, Pa. Sold by L. N. Meadows & Co., druggists. ... i'USIUUiI, “Are y n>. in any way related to the nobility, Mr. Gold waller?” inquired the reporter. “Nope!” replied the rectangular but eminently astute old millionaire. “You see, all my children are boys.”—Puck. Our Flexible Language. '*Pa, what does it mean when you say that one man completely overshad ows another?” "Why—it means that he outshines him.” 1^— Cleveland Leader. 1 i The Herald I Reviews The more Magazines there are, the mote | Indispensable is The Review of Reviews 1 “Indispensable,” “The one magazine I feel I must take,” “The b world under a field-glass,” “An education in public affairs and g current literature,”— these are some of the phrases one hears from noted fl people who read the Review of Reviews. The more magazines there are, the fl more necessary is the Review of Reviews, because it brings together the best that B| is in all the mo£t important monthlies of the world. Such is the flood of fl periodical literature that nowadays people say that the only way to keep up 5 with it is to read the Review of Reviews. Entirely over and above this review- fl ing section, it has more original matter and illustrations than moSt magazines, and a the most timely and important articles printed in any monthly. Probably the moSt useful section of all is Dr. Albert Shaw’s illustrated “Prog- fl ress of the World,” where public events and issues are authoritatively and lucidly H explained in every issue. Many a subscriber writes, “ This department alone is fl worth more than the price of the magazine.” The unique cartoon department, fl depicting current history in caricature, is another favorite. The Review cf fl Reviews covers five continents, and yet is American, fir£ and foremost, fl Men in public life, the members of Congress, professional men, and the great fl captains of industry who must keep “up with the times, intelligent men and fl women all over America, have decided that it is ** indispensable. of REVIEWS COMPANY 13 Astor Place, New York fl i _ ; It will Pay to Place Your Ad in t The Herald t 3 /I V .- —— - ——.—- —— i— - ——| ■* - .... imm, . ~//,—■, :MTi ..//*•• t T :~TZ7T_—. L.l —LIZJZTT.'JI7-T~~T^r7TrT~.~TrZT:~iriT:. 1 a 3 ■ Yellowstone National Park A trip through the Wonderland of America 3 is the ideal summer vacation. You may read i about the geysers and the terraces, the canons and the waterfalls, but you can never appreciate i Yellowstone Park until you have been there. Choice of routes to and through the Park is i offered by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway A very attractive tour for the summer is to t J go to Yellowstone Park via St. Paul and 1 Minneapolis, selecting The Pioneer Limited ) from Chicago. Return through Colorado and [ enjoy the resorts of this line from Denver to Chicago. A dozen other routes via the lines of this company are notably good. Complete ! information will be gladly furnished those interested. john r. pott, Room D, Park Building, District Passenger Agent.' PITTSBURG, PA. i ' • ~ ' ' - Send me books descriptive ot i Name I i Address CUMBERLAND BREWING CO,. BREWERS AND BOTTLERS OF The Famous REINGOLD and ERL ANGER Beers, “SELECT” and CULMBACHER Export Bottle Beers. FREB WEINER, AGENT AT FROSTBURG. for Bottles and Kegs Delivered Promptly M. SUNN’S ONRJN •CURES COUCHS, COLDS, K I HOARSENESS & CROUP. ** Best Remedy for Children. Pleasant to take snd no danger in an overdose. The old original Home Curt* Sold by all Medicine Stores in large bottles for 50 cis Vlade only by DR. BOSANKO CO,. Philadelphia. Pa FOLEY'SKIDNIYCURE Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right A Safe, Certain Relief for Suppressed Menstruation. ■ NEVER KNOWN TO FAIL. Safe! Sure! Speedy ! Satis- R faction Guaranteed or Money Refunded. Sent prepaid R for SI.OO per box. Will send them on trial, to be paid for R when relieved. Samples Free. If your druggist does not ■ have them send your orders to the UNITED MEDICAL CO., box 7A. LANCASTER, Pft. | Sold in Lonaconing by Campbell & Son The Baltimore Fire Caused many Fire Insurance Companies to Fail. Our Companies not only paid their losses without discount, but were so strong that they could, and in many cases did, reinsure the companies that failed “Insurance that Insures.” ORRICK& HARTLEY The Lewis Agency. Established, • 1870. CUMBERLAND, Md. xjgßißtv CUMBERLAND and MmM&k PENNSYLVANIA HBraSggW RAILROAD CO. TIME TABLE PASSENGER TRAINS Sunday, May 21, 1905. s. sssississssssmsssir t> t> t-l>. t-l> t> t-l> CO JC SO On] a? a co in oohto oo woo ooco ai T OOsaNi-H-OXCOCOJJQXiQsfWOaOin Cd * oiOst'-i'xsw .NsyrtOOiorisnsrCgriT-i 0‘ eeco't-txoooQ'f-i'Hoocccflcoco^-saJCßao® is, ' ‘S • SSSSSSSsSSiSSSSfeiSSS V. ' §1 af* £a> “CQ 3<3 cfi|> SHt fl •zH P u 9 ®£H o'© §ls D/P fa |£|SSg§3§3s o 3Sßlf < :;::;: ;3 ;;3 : : GW . §? • sssssLasssssssssas _ ®®®OOOOOOOOOOHHrSHH OjJ tc ce<H i cflffl<H<Hß'co oBmCM g • sssssssssssssssasgia ' S CO CO CO CO CO Tfi TP •*< ■*< rf< Tjt Tji ■*< •# iC ta to On? {OOt'HCOOOCO'H'MOQOOCfICOOQ'MCOoQ'HaD o . £3 £5 £4 SJh I-? £3 £5 S 2h Sh £iP-l 00 XS-I 0t XXV-.'HX GCVs X COOO X YH X ‘•s M Regular stop. “f” will only stop to take on or let of pas sengers. t. On Theatre Nights, when Admission Tickets are sold by agents to performance at theatre leave Cumberland at close of per formance. All trains stop at Hays Street Station Wes tern port Crossing and East End Detmold Siding are flag stops for Nos. 128 and 134. Wrights Crossing and Gas House Siding are flag-stops for Nos. 128,129, 130 and 131. C. G. BRETZ, General Manage BALTIMORE&OHIO RAILROAD (VN AND AFTER SUNDAY, May. 81, 1906 '-'trains will arrive at and depart from Cum berland as follows: Arrive. eastbound heave 2:30 a m No. 1 New York Ex 2:28 a m 2:13 a m No. 10 New York Ex... 2:18 a m 7:46 a m No. BNew York Ex... 8:06 a m No. 18 Baltimore &Way *3:15 p m 8:18 a ni No. 2 New York Ex 8:24 a m *12:20 p m No. 0 Grafton & Way,.. ti2:47 p m No. 6 New York Ex 12:52 p m 0:47 p m No. 14 New York Ex... 7:05 p m 10:20 p m No. 13 St. Louis & Cin. *7:50 p m No. 72 Grafton & way.. 10:42 p m No. 12 Express 10:47 p m WESTBOUND *9:45 p m No. 7 Chicago Express. 9:52 pm 6:10 a m No. 3 St. Louis Express. 5:17 a m 2:55 p m No. 71 Wheeling & Way *7:00 am 8:22 p m No. sChicago Llm. Ex. 2.35 p m No. 1 St. Louis Express. 8:28 p m No. 55 St. Louis Express 3:05 p m *9:20 a m N 0.15 Martlnsb’g &way 1:50 a m No. 9 Pittsburg Ex 4:35 am No. 11 PittsburgLimt’d No. 5 Grafton & Way,. t3:30 p m ♦Except Sunday, t ßeginning June2o. PITTSBURG DIVISION. WESTBOUNB. Leave No. 9—Baltimore Express 2:00 a rn No. 11— Limited Ex 4:40 a r ! . No. LocaI f ........ -6:4£a >n _. - ~so.TS—Chicago jExpress... '...10:00 a m " No 49—Mail 3:lspm No s—Chicago Limited 8:05 p m EABTBOOU D Arrive N". 12 Limited Ex 10:42 pm No. 10—Baltimore Express 2-13 a m No. 16—Cumberland Local :50pn No 48—Mail 12;27 p , No 14—Cumberland Express 6:20 p No. 49 is a local train from Cumberland Pittsburg, and No. 48 from Pittsburg to CT berland. Through tickets East and Weston sale at Cumberland, Md. D. B. MAKTIN, T. ETTZGEItALD? nager ° f PaßßenKer Traffl ° Gen’l. Manager. M. C. CLARKE, Ticket Agent, Cumberland, Md. CUMBERLAND AND WESTERNPORT ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY NOVEMBER 14, 1904. Going West Going East S . £ Sf g gMM'O gU gs g'3 o’S *a ©a gj 50 .£.O 55 fcg >7; GS ig t-l£ Ja ij £ j£ -51 AMAM AM A M AWA M A MiA M~ 15 00 J 0 00 610 720 600 700 {6 00 17 00 710 820 700 800 700 800 810 920 640 750 800 900 800 9 00 91010 20 740 850 900 10 00 900 10 00 10 10 11 20 840 950 10 00 1100 10 00 1100 11 10 12 20 940 10 50 1100 12 00 11 00 12 00 12 10 120 10 40 11 50 12 00 1 00 12 00 100 1 10 220 11 40 12 50 1 00 2001 00 200 2 10 820 12 40 150 200 300 200 300 310 420 1 40 250 300 4 00 300 400 410 620 240 350 4QP 500 400 600 510 020 340 450 500 600 500 600 610 720 4 40 550 600 700 bOO 700 710 820 540 650 700 800 700 800 810 920 640 7508 00 900 800 900 910 10 20 7 40 850 900 10 00 900 10 00 1010 1120 840 960 10 00 11 00 10 00 11 00 9 40 10 50 11 00 12 00 11 00 12 00 10 40 11 50 12 00 100 H 80 12 20 Midland is 40 minutes West and Eck hart is 10 minutes Easl of Frost burg, res pectively. Direct connections at Lonaconing to and from Pekin, Moscow, Barton Rey nolds, Franklin and Westernport. t Week days only Subject to change without notice. DeW. H. Reynolds, President, Wm. H. Roberts, Jr. Secretary and Treasurer, John E. Taylor, Supt. George’s Greek and Cumberland Railroad Time Table for Passenger Trains. Dally, Sundays excepted, commen. : cin* Monday, January Ist, 1898, from Central Station, Cumberland. AM. TM. Leave Cumberland 7:00 1:01 Leave Allegany Grove 7:20 1:20 Leave ClaryavUle 7:86 |if( Leave Vale Summit 7:48 x: 41 Leave Midland 1 Junction 8:08 1:07 Arrive Lonaoonln* 8:10 Sill FROM LONACONING. A.M. P.M Leave Lonaconta* 10:18 4:48 Leave Midland Junotlon 10:24 4:64 Leave Vale Summit 10:48 5:15 Leave Claryaville 10:84 5:24 Leave Allegany Orove 11:10 5:4c Arrive Cumberland 11:80 6:00 KILL™. COUCH AND CURE THE LUNCB w TH Dr. King’s New Discovery ___ Consumption Price FDR I OUGHSand 50c&$1.00 Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or MONEY BACK.