10 HOUSEHOLD TALKS ! Henrietta D. Grauel The Home-Maker's Responsibility The home-keeping woman is re sponsible t'or the cleanliness and whole soineness ot' her home, the health and morals of her children, and their sense of honesty and efficiency. This is u big assignment and was given to a woman who came before a down-state judge last week in an attempt to gain control of her children, who had been takeu from her by her husband. But this is not all of the duty that mothers and housekeepers have in con nection with their families. Women are responsible for more than health and morals. If a neighborhood is filthy, her house, no matter how clean she keeps it, will be full of bad air and odors. If dealers are permitted to sell im pure food, unclean milk or keep food in unsanitary stores, all her care goes t'or naught. It' contagious diseases con taminate a school or if school condi tions are degrading, the mother is to blame if she does not use her influence to make the surroundings as good as they can be made. Home life does not begin nor end at the door, but goes into every walk of life. "Where there is no responsibility there is 110 effort." * « • Cream of Spinach Soup.—Cook the spinach, adding as little water as pos sible and save this. Chop the spinach tine and press through sieve. Return it to the water and add a small onion grated; put this, with a quart of milk, into a double boiler and thicken with one tablespoon of flour blended with one of butter. Season and add one cup of meat stock or a bouillon cube. Strain this into tureen and send 'to Serve bread sticks with this. Sicken Salad.—( ut cold chicken or other fowl in small dice; kitchen seis Delicious and Healthful Dishes We do not ha\e corn meal products on our tables as frequently as we might arid this is unfortunate, in view of the fait thnt this is wholesome food aud easily prepared. Corn Meal Mush.—Stir the meal into salted water that is boiling. Cook slowly, stirring frequently. I'se three times as much water as meal. Fried Mush.—When making corn meal mush prepare sufficient for two meals. Mold one-half in a bread pan or square mold. This will keep fresh for several days and makes an excel lent breakfast dish. Slice the molded mush, roll each slice in flour and fry brown and crisp in dripping or in hot butter. Fried Celery.—The outside stalks of celery are coarse and strong and not pleasing on the table, hut, cooked, th«y become tender and delicate. Cut the celery in inch or inch and a half pieces, dip these in egg. then roll in flour that is seasoned with salt aud pepper. Place in a frying basket and immerse in deep, hot fat. When brown place on a cloth to drain and serve at once. The celery should be dried on a cloth before dipping in the egg, else the egg and flour will not adhere. This dish i> called celery sticks and the crisp, brown morsels make n prettv garnish for all meats. Stuffed Baked Peppers.—Cut the tops from tiie pepper, so they make a cap that can be fastened on again. Re move every seed and place the peppers in fresh cold water for an hour or two. This draws out the liotness and the linger you keep the peppers in the fresh water the milder they will be. Fill with a forcemeat made from meat •I* v 'l* vv•> v v •!' ❖❖v•>»>•>v•>•> v•>•> •> 'i- »> »;« «& •> •> <« •> v•> «fr •> »> ►> •{« <• ♦> •> .j» »•« s,> .j, llf You Are Looking I For a Pure Beer— £ Mnclc of the liiK'st .Malt unci Hops—Sparkling FMI- * ❖ tored Water—and Purest Yeast—by the best Sani- | t tary Methods. Order DOEIINK Beer. 1 •> 4 * j DOEHNE f BellH2»sL Ir.deuendcnt ;SIX * <• ;* •?« ❖•> v •> •> •> <• -J •>+.J..j.{..;. .j. .j .j, ....j................ ,j,.................. POISON OF NICOTINE It Affects the Coronary Arteries and Produces Tobacco Heart "Tobacco hoart" is a condition well known to physiciaus. It is really a phase of arterio- iero>is, due to exces sive smoking, and is generally charac fferized by angina pectoris, a severe pain In the chc-t. The New York Med ical Uecord, commenting 011 some sta tistics published in Germanv by Dr. .1. Pawinski. nvs the important von - eJusion to be drawn from them is "that tobacco has a ertain, yos-ibly a sjrecific, affinity for the coronary arteriee.'' These are the arteries of the heart itself, those that suppiv its muscles with MooJ. That nicotine is a powerful poison has lonig been known, 1 wit there has been a wid® divergence of opinion as to whether toba«'o smoke contains nicotine >r not. The investigations of /•uiin'ski Zeibrowski prove that it doen. The quantity of nicotine ab sorbed by the body from tolbaeco smoke is probaibly small, and if smoking be indulged in with moderation it will not injure healthy adults, but, when car ried beyond the limits of moderation or when indulged in by young people if is certain to do harm*to the heart. Its eflect is to cause a considerable thickening of the inner membrane of the coronary arteries, a pronounced de- Take Care of Your Eyes and They'll Take Care of You l'»r ml vice, consult isors are better for this than a knife. ! Season with celery salt, pepper and 1 vinegar. Press with mayonnaise when ready to serve. Garnish with eggs, strips of beets or with red pimento jelly. Individual serving dishes should |be used for this, as they can be made so very attractive. Boston Brown Broad.—These quan titics make three loaves. Raisins may ibe added if desired. One cupful each of corn meal, grnliam flour and rye menl. one and a half teaspoons of soda. ;one teaspoon salt, one-half cup of sweet I milk, one cup New Orleans molasses. Steam two hours and bake thirty nilti ' utes. Apple Saure.—Make the apple sauce n« usual and add a little lemon juice lif fruit is not sour. Season with cin namon and untnieg. llare the white nf nn egg beaten stiff and sweetened. iMix this with the sauce! it is a good addition. MENU FOR A DAY Breakfast Kice Cooked with Raisins Muffins wijh Jelly Kggs Coffee Dinner Cream of Spinach Soup I.eg of Veal, l.arded with Bacon Bread Stuffing f!raw Baked Potatoes Sliced Beefs. Lettuce Molded Wine Jelly with ('ream Small Coffee Macaroons Supper Fried Mush Syrup Hash of Potatoes and Meat Baked Onions Apple Sauce Tea and rice. Ham and rive is especially good and chicken aud rice, well sea soned, is also relished. Mushrooms may be added to the filling. Put the caps on the stuffed peppers and set them in a pan in the oven. Pour a lit tle hot water around them so they will not burn on the bottoms aud brush well with butter. As they bake baste with the water and butter in the pan. •* * * How is cheese served with pie? The cheese may be parsed separately or a small piece placed on the plate with the pie. Very beautiful cheese dishes are shown now for this service. They con sist of the covered dish, the cheese knife, which is sometimes a scoop shaped affair when the cheese is soft, and small platters. This service is of cut glass or of china. MENU FOR A DAY Breakfast Com Meal Mush with Cream Ham and Eggs Toast Fruit Preserve • offee Dinner Halibut Raked with Oyster Stuffing I'rench Fried Potatoes Fried Celery Olive# Stuffed Baked Peppers Pumpkin Pie Creamed Cheese Supper Bananas Croquettes with ' ream Sauce Kscalloped Tomatoes Graham Bread Cake C'ocoa Salted Nuts generation of their middle coat, which is omposed of muscles, and markod changes in the muscles that contract, i and ox|wn,l the heart, thus b-ingiii'g I about disturbances of its rhythmical beating. .This—And Five Cents Don't rviss this. Cut out this slir., j enclose five cents to Foley & Co., Clii i cago, HI., writing .your name and ad-' i dress clearly. You will receive in re i turn a free trial package containing Foley 's Honey and Tar Compound, tor coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidiu"- ' Pills, for pain in sides and back, rheu matism, backache, kidnev and bladder ailments, and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic, especially comfortable to stout persons. For sale in your town bv George A. liorgas. 1G North Third j street and P. R. B. Station. auv Function of Literature '' A ,iook.'' said Dr. lohnson, '' shoulil show one either how to enjov life or to endure it.'" Was ever the function ; nf literature expressed more pun gently i or .justly? Any man who eujovs or en" ■lures has a right to s>, enk if he can. I If he can help others to enjov or cu I dure he has a right to speak, if sie | doubt as to his part in life, while if! ; ho cannot ecstatically enjov lie can at. i j least good humorediy endure.—A. C. i | Benson in Century Magazine. Scared "What was the matter with old Boozie when he .allel the doctor at i midnight last night.'*' "He thought he had lost his sense! of taste. His wife's lint was on the! (dining room Islde and he ate the J grapes off it. " —'Houston Post, ' TTAT\KTSBI'TvG STATMNDEPENDENT,"SATURDAY EVEN T TNCI, PECEMBET? 26, 1914. giiiiii!iiiiimiwiiimniHimiiimmnnßniiiitiniinnwiHiuniiiimiiinim;i 'g Story of | the Blood j S Red Rose | By s Kathlyn Williams | | ■>Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuttiuuiiimiiiuiimiiiitiiiiiiiiiiia 1 fj § From the Photoplay by JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD §~ With Illustrations from the Pro- || f§ daction tf the Seli* Polyscope Co- gj SE B i _ g (Copyright, 19ii. by lbe£eUg i'olyseupeCo.) Continued i nen straight to tbo shepherd's cot tage came the exalted one on the rich ly caparisoned horse, accompanied by a few chosen ones including one at tired as court jester. "Well met, good man," said the ex alted one. addressing Rivarre. "And thou seemest here in the forest to thrive of goodly prosperity and plenty. Might we intrude upon thy hospitality to the extent of a draught of goat's milk? The same, good man, would soothe our red hot gullets. For certain 'tis that we are sorely athirst." Rivarre bowed low to the exalted presence on the horse, and then called to those within the house the order for the milk. Paulo, too, bowed low. "For both shepherd and huntsman had heard Thold, the court fool, address the ex alted one as "Sire." And they knew that they were looking upon his majes ty, King Leofric of Urania. Recalling the warning of Hagar, the witch, Paulo felt a fear so vague ho could scarcely define it. yet a fear so compelling that Involuntarily he stepped to the door of the cottage to warn his Godlva to remain within. But l'aulo was too late. Already tlia fair Godiva had appeared in ilie doorway, coming forth with earthen vessel of milk and followed by her mother with earthen cups. And now the king looked upon Go diva as one transfixed. So instant was his admiration for the lovely daughter of Rivarre and so instantly fierce his passion and desire for maid so exquis ite, that he dismounted that he might the better view her incomparable love liness. And Paulo trembled with rage at sight of this kingly covotousness. And Godiva herself was filled with strange alarms. " 'Tis an ugly wench," said Thold, the jester, close to the ear of the king. "So uglv, sire, that thou hadst better quaff the milk she proffers and fly hence, lest she take thee with her hor rible eyelids." "Silence—fool!" the king replied. "Homage thou shalt pay to beauty so rare. By my halidome, thou shalt make obeisance to yonder maid as to a queen. Grovel, I say. Grovel at her feet, Thold, and k'ss not more than the toe of her sandal, the which being the total of her person thou art fitted to look upon." And in awful fear. Thold, the jester, groveled dutifully ar the feet of Godiva and kissed the toe of her sandal. And the king quaffod the milk tne maiden proffered. And the gentlemen of the entourage drank deeply aiso ot the goat's milk till much refreshed, they waited fo. the fuittier commands ot their august sovereign. "Thy name: sold the king speaking directly now for the iirsl ime to the object of iiis newborn admiration. "Godiva!" the maiden replied, cour tesvlng. "Ay! tis a name most befitting thy form and face,' ih kin* said. Thou art named after the lovely Lady Godiva who, 400 years ago. redo through the market-place of Coventry on a white horse, vith naught but her black tresses .o cover her perfection of per son. I would walk \ ith thee. Godiva —in yonder weeded aislts I would a word with thee away from ali profane ears. it please you. Godiva, to venture hence under my rrotection?' A request from the king was a com mand Paiilo was nettled and fearful ly he trembled with 'age at the b lio ness of the king. But rage most irn "Come, My Godiva," Ha Said. potent was that in Paulo's breast; for ! what could one huntsman do to check the encroachment of a king who had at his beck and call full fifty archers and sundry varlets. No. Paulo was obliged to vkw in passive rage the going of Godiva and his majesty into ] the forest, the going of his dear love j with the klnc against whose evil heart they had been warned by - agar, the witch. I Nevertheless, Paulo slipped away from the cottage unobserved by the king's men who loitered there awaiting their sire's return. And through the forest Paulo slyly and silently crept in the wake of Godiva and the king. i Presently Paulo saw the king stop by a great oak, with Godiva by hi« side. And more than this Paulo be held. He saw the king suddenly take the form ot Godiva In his arms and, though the maiden struggled valiantly against the king's advances, his majes ty again and again pressed burning kisses upon the blood-red llpß of Godiva. The lover lives not. then nor now, who inactively can behold such dese cration of his lady-love. Paulo dashed forward and seized the king by the j throat and felled him to the ground. It 1 was but the natural resource of the outraged lover who had witnessed the outraging of his dear love. But Paulo had struck the sacred person of the king. And fie knew full well that his act would be deemed a riae and that now was the moment of the beginning of his life's tragedy. "Fly, my Paulo!" cried Godiva in '■ great alarm. "Run away!" she urged. j "See, even now the archers come run- J ning to take thee. Oh, what hast thou 1 done! I would have suffered a thou ! sand struggles with his majesty rather I than that thou shouldst have broughL this calamity upon us. See. the is too weak to rise. Flv, my Paulo— fly!" "Nay, Godiva!" protested Paulo. "1 j did but what chivalry would have de- 1 manded of any man, most of all of one t to whom thou hast plighted thy troth. I will remain and suffer what punish ment is in store." "For my sake, dear Paulo!" ex claimed Godiva. "For my sake, fly. j Look! The archers are coming In full force. Fly—for my sake." "For your dear sake, then, Godiva— ' so shall it be." And Paulo, the huntsman, darted away, leaping through the forest with the swiftness of a deer. And the , archers came pellmelllng to the spot where Godiva stood transfixed with fear for the safety of he.* lover and where the king was getting upon his feet. "After him. varlets," shouted the "Seize him—or die." CHAPTER 111. The Death Dungeon. As the archers sped in pursuit of the luckless Paulo, the king turned to ' Godiva. doffed his plumed hat gallant- j ly and said: " 'Tis no fault of thine. Godiva. Fear i not for thyself. Thou shalt learn that j the king of Urania loves tli e too well to cause harm to befpll thine own self, j As for yonder huntsman—" His majesty shrugged his shoulders as if to fay: "Yonder huntsman j must needs pay the forfeit for his temerity in striking one so august as I." And the king gallantly accompanied Godiva back to the cottage of Rivarre. her father, and there waited in gloomy silence, while Godiva told her parents j what Had befallen Pniilo Rivarre and ! his family, aside, wept for Paulo, and prayed that the brave huntsman would escape his pursuers. Paulo, meantime, in flight through the forest, saw that, despite his fieet ness of foot, hia pursuers were gain ing on him. He nailed and took shel tpr behind a tree. And n moment later an arrow from his crossbow sped forth and found its victim —piercing the heart of the foremost archer. Agein Paulo shot a bolt from his bow, and again, the haft brought an archer to the ground writhing in the death asony. Paulo then turned to flee. But In an upcropping root of the tree, his foot caught. He stumbled and fell. And, before he could rise, the archers were upon him. What a fight then took place! Paulo fought like one suddenly denionized, fighting for his ,ife. fighting for his happiness, lighting for iove of Godiva. But what could one lone huntsman do with fully twenty archeis surrounding him? That he was overpowered and Ills hand' 3 tied behind hire was uo fault of Paulo's. Overwhelming numbers alone had made a captive of Godiva's lover. Then back they led hint to the cot tage of Rivarre, where the king await ed their coming. At sight of Paulo, helpless and bound, in the hands of the- archers. Godiva cried out in dis tress so pitiable that any heart save a kingly one of stone would have been moved. Uut the king wanted Godiva for his own. And lie was sufficiently gifted • ith perspicacity to know that Pnu'o, liiH captiv<\ wa. nothing less to Godiva than her heart's love. The king wished himself to win the heart of this tneiden And to do so lie must rid his kingdom of the handsome huntsman whom Godiva had already learned to love. So with his heart of stone prompting his words, lie now an nounced to the assembled company: "The law is even greater than the king. The law says that whoso strikes the king must die. Paulo, the hunts man lias struck the king. He must die." With the cry of a stricken animal Godiva flung herself on Paulo and found a chance to whisper to him: j "Be brave, my Paulo. Surely a chance thou ehalt find to escape. And when thou art free, fly to the cave oi Hagar, the witch. I will meet thee there and we will fly together into the mountains." Godiva then turned to the king and beseeched him to bestow mercy upon her Paulo. But the king only replied in mockery of pity: "A maiden in distress is ever a sight for the gods Chivalry lack 1 not. but the law is greater even than . chivalry. The man Paulo must die." And, at the king's orders, tne arch ers now dragged Paulo away. The king with a bow in which he swept his plumed hat to the very earth, bade Go- | diva au revoir, saying: "We shall meet again, fair Godiva, 1 under happier circumstances. There are other hearts than thy Paulo's pining for thee. It is meet that one so ■ young should find consolation thus in the outpouring of some heart other than that of the first comer who : chances to meet thy gaze. Be thou ; therefore comforted—till we meet j •non." lc. E. AtIGHINBAUGH | I THE UP-TO-DATE PRINTING PLANT 1 S3 Q | J. L. L. KUHN, Secretary-Treasurer I PRINTING AND BINDING I J-W J Ol i Now Located in Our New Modern Building Hj p 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street, Near Market Street I] ffl - i ly BELL TELEPHONE 2012 i W Iff i ====== M m m fjji Commerical Printing Book Binding We are prepared with the necessary equipment o ur bindery can and does handle large edition j&l W to take care of any work you may want—cards, work. Job Book Binding of all kinds receives fa) m! stationery, biU heads, letter heads, programs, our careful attention. SPECIAL INDEXING legal clanks and business forms of all kinds. and PUNCHING ON SHORT NOTICE We ffUl LINOTYPE COMPOSITION FOE THE TRADE. make BLANK BOOKS THAT LAY FLAT AND N i|l STAY FLAT WHEN OPEN. |is Book Printing Li |jij With our equipment of five linotypes, working Pl'eSS WOrk ! i.'] fi i day and night, we are ill splendid shape to take . ~. , . . _ ( Til £■s cave of book printing—either SINGLE VOL- L 1 ? r ® est a "l ™ ost I'l v\i ) UMES or EDITION WORK c omplete in this section of the state, in addition 1 J to the automatic feed presses, we have two |M folders which give us the advantage of getting ,7 jDij Paper Books a Specialty tUe work out in exceedingly quick time. Ky No matter how small or how large, the same will m _ ... I}» rjT' 1 ) be produced on short notice. iO the Public !).A| . When in the market for Printing or Binding of ||J Rilling any description, see us beforo placing your order, pi Is one of our specialties. This department has iJi? trnnh^t' 1 sfvr <.«Tnint° Ur bene lit. iffi) p, been equipped with the latest designed' ma- No tiouble to give estimates or answer question.. U V: i chinery. No blank is too intricate. Our work U.j [fvfij in this line is unexcelled, clean au»i distinct lines, RpmpmbPV fif.j no blots or bad lines—that is the kind of ruling jjs^S |j; ' that business men of to-day demand. Ruling for We give you what you want, the way you want 1 p j the trade. it, when you want it. m § aughinbaugh I 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street 1 r important of these points of view is that of the health of both parties to the contract. The Health Commissioner of Pennsyl vania in mi official bulletin gives the following advice to those about to marry: "First, a man should not marry un less into a family with a history of reasonable longevity, free from hereji tnr ydisease. Ho should not marrv a woman advanced in life, delicate, fee ble or afflicted with any inherited de formity. The age most proper for women in this climate is 19 or 2(1 years and for men 24 or 2j years. Women of a nervous temperatment. those who are extremely irritable, hysterical, sub ject to convulsions or to epilepsy from organic disease ought to avoid matri mony. "in this country marriages before the ages of -•"« and 19. respectively, are cont ra-iudicated, becahse. as a rule, previous to these periods of life the body is not fuly developed, the differ ent functions are not perfect, and anv offspring developed by them in their immature condition must be deficient in vital power." TROIiEY SAFETY A Car Tliat Cannot Start, Wliile Its Doors Are Open Now that almost every person be yo'iid infancy in America has learned that one bell means to stop and two bells to go ahead an ingenious device ijs coming into use which threatens to throw the t.vo bells knowledge into the scrapheap. In the latest type of center door trollev cars, which are rapidly coming into wide service, no signal to go ahead is needed. A passenger sitting in a front seat is mystified as to how the niotornian knows when to start the car after a street corner stop. It is all due to coupling up the doors with the cur rent that moves the ear. When a passenger wishes to leave the ear the conductor caiunot open the doors so lonij' as the motor of the car is running. When the ear stops and the coud'uetor opens the doors the mo term a n turns the handle of his con troller on one no'tch, but the fii't that the doors are ojien prevents any cur rent from reaching the motor. As soon as the conductor closes the doors the current becomes available for the mo tors hii I the ra:' slowly starts. The motorman cin never start the ear while the doors are open; conse quently it is always s ife for him to try to start at any time without wait ing for a signal from the conductor. —- Exchange. Recognized A Pennsylvania lawyer known throughout the Htate for his sharpness once met his match in a very unex pected quarter. An old woman was being cross ex amined by him as to how the testator had looked when iie made a remark to her about some relatives. "I don't remember. He's been dead three years," she answered testily. "Do you mean to tell me that your memory is so bad that you cannot go bank tiiree years!" demanded the at torney. The witness was silent. "Did lie look anything like me?" the lawyer finally ventured. "Seems to me he did have the same sort of vacant look," responded the old ladv.—New Orleans Picayune. Naturally "Yes," said the Roman candle, "I was very distressing. There was my friend, the Fountain of Fire, making a very beautiful display when all of a sudden the rain came down in perfect torrents.'' "Mercy, how sad!" said the little Pin wheel. "And was she very amgryf" "Not angry, exactly," said the Ro man Candle, "but I could see from the way she sputtered that she was very much put out."—Exchange. EGGS AND THE HEN Life Work Nature Has All Laid Out For the Young Chick "There is water a-plenty in a fresh I laid egg, twit no more air than there is j in a hammer," said a dealer iu egigs. "So long as you can keep air ou/t of i the egg it wild remain sweet and fresh, but no one has ever succeeded in keep ing it out, by fair means more than six I days. The oxygen is bound to find its way through an eggshell's pores, nud [ the only way to save that egg then is ;to eat it. It sounds funny, but t'he moment you give an eg? fresih air that j moment von ruin its healtih. " A good, healthy hen not speaking of any particular -tar breed, but just lieu does not iiiltiM her dost'inv until -iie has accomplished 600 eggs—#ftv dozen. That's what nature Ints fitted up the lien to do in the way of just I uneoac'hed and unstimulated "egg pro j duct ion, and she gives t'he hen eight I years to do it in. "The hen divides the fifty dozen ' stunt tip among those eight years, "some years she may not turn out morn than a couple of dozen, but when tho eight years are up she will have man aged her annual output so that the to tal has come out all right. Then the lien has ended her ciareer as an egg producer, and too often, if ahc is In the .'hands of a thrifty owner, begins another career, short and (leKisive ; this time as the summer boarder spring chicken.'' —Pittsburgh Press. More Than He Needed " At the end of five hours and a half if you lire in town," said the judge, "von will be arrested on the same charge.'' "Son may five full hours of that i time back. ' said t'he lawbreaker. "I can get along with the thirty minutes." Philadelphia ledger. English Family Names There are some queer lainilv names HI Kngh.nd. Here are a few sample*: l.ongsi>an.;s, liotten, Bubblejaw, Bla. k ( monster, Kottenheryii'.', S-rapes kin 1 gly, A Idlohend, Hilliinan, Ilusscv' Trash and (la I lows. All these names | have born borne by highly respectable memiben- of soeioty.—London Answers. 1 Occupation is the scythe of time. j Napoleon. BUSINESS COLLEGE* / —. ~ : Oy/i. u , .i-j jyiarne. aueet I'aii lerin fcepiomber First DAY AND WIuHX j > WINTER TERM BEGINS MONDAY, JAN. ITH DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS SCHOOL OF COMMERCE IT, S. MARKET SQU, RE HARRiSBURG, PA. Cumberland Valley Railroad In lifted May 24, IS/14. Train* l.cavp ilurri.iburu— For Wiucheaier JIIU JiarUnsburir *.t j.tlo, *7.50 a. ill, "5.40 p. m, I'or Uuserstuwu. Ciianibersburfr and Inlermtuidiu stations, at '5.03, 11. oJ a. in.. P« lU* Additional trains for Carlisle and MechaniesDur* at ».4!> a. m„ j.m j u.au, u.ao p. in. ' " 1 Kor Dlllaburg at 5.03, *7.60 ana *ll a. m.. 2.18. *::.4 U. ii.3o p. m. •Dally. All other trains daily except Sunday. J H. TONQ£ H. A. RIDOLB. G. P. A. Sapfc