. COUNTY NEWS. L.I.l) s a harx. in- oliiliiron at the blolstst Wcduosdiiy Mrs. rl-V.ior. a iniikllnapd if Jvist Pikeland town fclcr county, wont to tlio 3 linriiW licrsi-li. Po 1,ln siuicido can bo ns '. bholcfta uoto ou her bureau which road: jusbaml I lcavo every frou to raise our children Susan H. Anthony's 1'iirdic Mfe. ilno children wore? at Qrs. Faber prepared their Jth hor usual care, sot and when they came " them tojro ahead with '-I Then who loft them I ieim time for them to re "chool they begun wm" ere .she was, uud her hter, Ida Faber, went rn to investigate. There, high from a beam of the .ho saw the body dang C was quickly cut dowu, as tnon extinct. 3 ir to carry out her pur i Faber had to climb a Ider to the loft. She j f,,n tad of the rope four found the beam, and Se other eud iu the same jrouud her nock. Then fed off the ladder and ll' Ogled.' t Construction In KS1)!. lilway Gazette in its eur fe gives an interesting re ?railway construction in ..fed States, Canada and ) 'iu lb9H. According to j,4f(V.- miles of road were " ho United States by ZM js, 6")(5' miles iu Canada jeu companies, aud !!(" Mexico by ten compa ct 1898 there were added s iu the United States, $ iu Canada, aud 49.") I Mexico. For the four g years the average in ad States was only about F ' 1 1 4S s a year, uuu luu un .1899 exceeds the ascer- uioh Of construction in since 1W0, when SJlL'y track were laid. The JJin iu (American history 78 miles in 1hk7. tlj Gaatte's estimate for AiWa hiilds the lead with j. Next follows Miuue- h 874',' miles; Arkansas, L- insylvauia. 512; Califor- Michigan, 109; Idaho, ama, l(i();Oklahoma, 157; ; pi, Ai Florida, 139; vi ft and Georgia, each 137; .'ifico, 125; South Carolina, or h Carolina, 103; Missou ri Among individual rail ;I0 Chicago & North wes w in construction, with it. Tlien follow the Illi .9. pal, with l'Jli; the Atchi jtipeka f& San to Fe, 1(50 . 1(0 Choctaw, Oklahoma & m i the .Minneapolis & St. ,,(02; tho Chicago, Mil- B Ul 'It 1 11,1 T .1 fr'B. ni.iuui, -.in, auu UH) Pacific, 91. d Hot-Water Cure. J' phe almost always yields 1 jaultaQeous application of 1 1 the feet aud back of 'i-W folded, di ppi id iu hot I''iing out quickly and ap k jr the stomach, acts like iijuu-ii'i of colic. ia-1s iiiji domestic remedy si: Huiu Uy cuts short con jl the hmgs, sore throat patisin as will hot water, 'I'kUieti promptly and thor- r i M inid(d Neveral times iu hot water, quickly phi, Hud, nppliod quickly ,'FM(,i,f pain, will.iu most ronmtjy relieve toothache ',fu!''.;u pa'vrl if taken freely a bef.nj bedtime, is one tt pisiblo cathartics in j. lues f constipation, while ' , lio:,t, $oothiug effect upon , ach and bowels. "f llanuolor towel fold u;.il li'ioH leugthwiso and vi f lt.WiUr, then slight 1 "t jand applied about ( i 'I C ll d MiilTm.il. I j Willi a"k of croup, will f tliesutterer iu the iuimitoH if tho ilan- f hot. Journal of For nearly half a century Su san R Anthony has been presi dent otthe Woman's Suffrage As sociation. Now, on the eve of her With birthday, she presses to hand the guidance of that or ganization over to younger hands. The Woman Suffragists met in convention last week in Washing ton. February 15, Miss Anthony's birthday will be celebrated with much ceremony. A public meet ing will be held in the Lafayette Square Opera House and repre sentatives from every State iu the Union, as well as from for eign lands, will be preseut to pay tribute to the distinguished lead er. Susan Browuell Anthony was born iu South Adams, Mass., February 15, 1H20, the daughter of DauioiaudLuey Head Authony. Although born in Massachusetts she was educated partly in New York and partly in Philadelphia. Though Mr. Authony was a cot ton manufacturer aud oue of the wealthiest men iu Washington county, N. Y., he desired that his daughter, Susan, should be trained for some profession. Ac cordingly she was educated in tho best private schools for a teacher, the only vocation then thought of for girls, and at 15 Susan found herself toachiug a Quaker family 'school at $1 a week aud board. - With a natural aptitude for the work Susan was soon pronounced a successful teacher, and to that profession she devoted 15 years of her life. She was an active member of the New York State Teacher's Association, aud iu their conventions distinguished her self by her able pleas for the rec ognition of the principle of equal rights in all honors aud respon sibilities of the Association, Miss Anthony has been deeply interested iu the subject of tem perauce. Iu 1H-I7 she joined the Daughters of Temperance, aud iu 1851, organized tho New York State Woman's Temperance As sociation, the first open temper ance! organization of . vomeu. Miss Anthony was secretary of this organization. Since 1'2 she identified herself with the suffrage movement. The most dramatic event of Miss Anthony's life was her ar rest and trial for voting at the Presidential election of lH7l Ow ing to what she afterward looked upon as the mistaken kindness of her counsel, who was unwilling that she should bo imprisoned, she gave bonds, which prevented her taking her case to the Su preme Court, a fact she always regretted. When asked by the Judge: "You voted as a woman, did you not?" she replied: "No, sir; I voted as a citizen of the United States." Miss Anthony was found guilty of the offence by the Judge, not by a jury, because it was a ques tion of law. She was lined 100 and costs. Sho replied to the Judge: "Resistance to tyranny is obedience to God, aud I shall never pay a penny of this unjust claim," and she is rejoiced inuev er having douo so. Sho worked earnestly for wom an suffrage, aud aud lost almost 10,000 in tho publication of a weekly paper in New York known as The Revolution, iu less than two years time, Fron 1870 to 1880 she spoke every night iu the week for equal freedom and power for womeu. She accomplished much for her movement, and her name will g down aud stand unique as a true uud bravo worker for her cause. A J)IS;l STIMi IIA1HT. on Tin: sait: sum:. 5" for a man to be l that ho eventually "Papa," said the beautiful girl as she sat dowu beside tho old geutleinau aud pulled his paper away, "Harold wants to have a talk with you to-morrow." "Oh, he does, does Ik;?" return ed the old gentleman in a tone that was not calculated to inspire confidence in a young man. "Well, what's the matter to night!"' "He prefers, papa," replied the beautiful giil, "to wait until you are at your office." "And what is the particular 1 advantage of my beiug at my of fice;"' 'Hie can call you by the tele phone there, and we have none in tho house, you know," answered the beautiful girl, Hoys should early be taught the heiuousness of the offence of spitting, both from the basis of decency and danger to public health. It is much easier to pre vent the formation of a habit of this kind in a boy than to correct it in a man, and heroin lies the mother's part iu the warfare against spitting. No extension of woman's rights is necessary lo make mothers 11 power in this neglected realm. All that is required is a return to ;i duty once faithfully discharged but iu the rush of modern life neglected the vigilant maternal supervision of boys daring the years iu which their habits are formed. The boy who is taught that to spit on the hearth the stops anywhere about the house is an infringement upon the rights of the family that will not be toler ated, is not likely to infringe upon the sidewalks, the floors or steps of public buildings, or iu tho cars. In the meantime, however, there is a generation of full grown active spitters to be reckoned with iu the interest of the public health, aud it is the opinion of those who have given careful at tention to the matter that these can be reached more effectively by the dissemination of knowl edge, upon the subject than by city ordinances or State law. PAID 1 OR IT IN LAND. Texas' new State capital did not cost the commonwealth one cent in money. It was built by virtue of si eontnict with a com pany which received kind in pay ment. Texas has more land than money, and rather than borrow t h.e funds by issuiug bonds the legislature decided to use some of the surplus land iu this way. The company is composed of Chi cago men, aud it agreed to build 11 capital costing :s,000,00 for about 3,00(1,000 acres of State's laud. This it has done. The cap ital has been completed to the State's satisfaction, and the com pany has secured full title to the land. The laud thus secured has been converted by them into one vast ranch, the largest iu the world. It stretches through uino counties, out- of which it covers entirely. The area of this ranch is 5000 square miles, or greater than that of tho Slate of Connecticut, aud nearly 1, 100 square miles greater than the combined areas of Rhode Is land and Delaware. The graut lies in tho northwestern corner of Texas, is about 300 miles long, and averages about 25 miles in width. Its elevation varies from 2,300 feet at the southern to 4,700 at the northern eud. Over 1,500 miles of barbed wire fencing have beeu used iu euclosiug the tn;ct aud ruuuiug cross fences. The greater part of the laud is fertile, and there is plenty of water ou it. The Drift From Farm to City. New York city has an asso ciation of a number of prominent men aud women who are endeav oring to solve tho question "Why do so many persons leave the country aud come to the city?" The New York Commercial Ad vertiser reports a conference held lately at which George T. Powell read a paper advocating the idea that "an imperfect knowledge of agriculture" furnishes at least oue reason for this drift city ward. About 1'5 people of note were appointed a committee ou "the promotion of agriculture." Among the names were such fa miliar ones as Professor Walter A. Wyckoff of Princeton, Mrs. Hallingtou Hooth, Professor I. P. Roberts, Mrs. Josephine Shaw Lovell; Abram S. Hewitt, William E. Dodge and R. Fulton Cutting. Among other measures consid ered with the object of spreading agricultural knowledge was tho establishment of a school of hor tieulture near New York city. Mr. Powell, who lias boon seek ing information for four years past in regard to agricultural conditions in New York state from farmers, merchants, bank kes aud manufacturers, says re ports show a general inquiry about and more frequeut sales of farms and indicato a revival of interest in land. Somo men can preserve more dignity in patched shoes than other men can in high hats, Ul VANTEJ GOLD. Oiic V.1..U Vi lil'.'n of thv Monpy !i;Hinlf Itl n Drink. Must rnaslV.il slulli'S Hie tolil lit 11)0 xpenso ul' tlit- I'itir nox i I'ai'ilitit,' their In'!; of f.) inili:n'i;.v Willi ImnUx uud tlirlr inctlioits. Out; tiiim- to tlx ours of the KiiimliTcr Hint iippm-cut'ly lins tho merit of uewni'sn. ".My wife hntl xiivt'd up lit!!- pin moticy, or what hIiu hii'ln't hml oeen nloii lo uho of It," nhIiI the rchttor of the Htoty. "until she hml $10 In hllltt of VMI'louH cIcllonilliMlioiM. 41'liis kIic vn extremely ileHlrnitH of securing Knlil for, ntid every tiny when t en mo home to dinner tthe would luuil me over the coiils heenust' I lmd forgotten to proeiii'i' the KliinliiK metal. I'iunlly slit! said she would ntteml to the mutter herself. Tlint evening slit! greeted mo with u trltiiiiphinit Hindo. " 'I Kot my cold.' she exclaimed us noon as I entered Hit! house, 'hut I hail a time In iloiiii; It, though.' "Tlien Hhe told me how nlm had Rolii; to tht mint with her hills and been re fused the coveted coin because tho nolo weren't Rood notes. Next she hustled 11 round to n hank and secured four $10 Kohl pieces. These didn't suit her because they weren't new and shiny, so Hhe trotted back to the mint with them nnd exehaiiKed them, for two double ennles. fresh from the dies. I listened to her recital and asked her to let me see the coins. " 'I.ei you fee Iheni!' she exclaimed In surprise. "Why. I haven't them nny more, you K",se!' lie Olive Klicu .' . u , .1 o I i. 1 u IT. A ii.itiilie nl f. '.li'u man who lifts been lnohlnj; over ills old school exnin I II -i I ' ! .-lints wrlti .-' In The Academy cxircssiiiK his cluc'ilii at the discov ery of the fact thi.t he knows less than he dltl years no. "1 knew some things then -arithmetic, for example. Today I n in at the mercy of any waiter who brings me change. At booking ollices I keep vast crowds waiting mill miss liiK their trains while 1 do" laborious subtraction sums In my head, but nt iiehool what u hand I was at figures! Look at this: "Three grazier. A, I! and l rent n piece of pasture hind for a mouth. A puts on 1:7 cattle for IM days, It lit for HI days and (.' l'.! for r days. If at the end of the Inoiith the tint and other flinrfjo amount to t'U;l "s. Hid., how much of this iiv.;',ht to be paid by eaehV "1 eoul.; do that In ISM. I couldn't do It no,.'. I have n Idea where to he Kin. It I. lay lie easy, but the point 1,4 that I have not the key. There Used to be a .iiic-slery with x. and I could maiiaue it. .Now that I pay Income tax Mini have statements of account from my publisher every half year I can manage it no longer. And 1 seem to have known stoolocy too. Zoology! I seem to ha ve been able to describe and ! draw diagrams of the In art and prlncl- j pill blood Vessels of the t-rayilsh. Once --piinl heavens- once I was M well I Informed boy. Today I don't see how ! I should pass the third class college of ' preceptors." London Academy. I I: r f ' r rn I e t 'ion ". , Kennci ! r, II ls eoia.l, y Trance. Now the Mil dii . 1 ( ; firl ; ' "V it o:nfrv's '. :, ! -i I. m' I'i i mi i i!i:ir - sinned In , ;.it ! l.-d fro in I mi duet i a:. i ; i of ii In I !." I' ;i;le8 'Haven't them any snore' 1 re peated. 'What did you do with them';' "She looked at me with mlnclcd scorn and contempt. "'I deposited thelil In the Sav ings banii, of course. That's what I wnnted the Kohl for. What did you think I was K"hii; to do with them': Keep t lieui itrouml the house to look at?' "Hut I was too busy latiiilnsi Just then nnd for half an hour afterward to make any reply." Cincinnati Kn qulrer. THE FORCE OF HABIT. How 14 Onrr Played n Mean Ti lek un t ii tl.-i I. W Yllllrrn. K. W. Subi 1, Iu The Saturday Even ing PosL tells an anecdote of I'l-eder-lt;k Vllllers. the famous war corre spondent. VUllers had been under lire for some days, the enemy bombardilii: the force to w!;ieh the artist .;i:; at tached, so that the a iii val of a siu'll was a enmmnuphee cii'cumst:i!:ce to be treated In the usual way. Cut of '.'.lis. ordeal he came tiineallied to Loudon nnd whs sti'olliiifj down the crowded Strand. On n sudden the pedesiriaa.i were iijipnllcd to see him l!ln;,' himself at full letiKth upon the .'reus,, , mud !;. pavement and there lie on Ids f.'.tv. fluid as a dead man. I'roni all direc tions men rushed to render bli:i as sistance. They turned him over to nil) bis hands and t.tibotton his co!!:ir. exiectini; to find him in a lit. I'.tit n i On Ids face they found not the p::::i nnd pallor of epilepsy, but li.ii'i':..;! ment and mud. VUllers, when tii,.v Inid hold of him, ipiickly jumped to Ids feet, shook the mini f'oni Ids Imwi Is and clothes ami then looked around for an explanation of his o, :i appar ently Idiotic net. The expla na! ion wa. forthcoming. A few yards behind him stood a horse nnd cart. The carter had a mo ment after VUllers p.issed p. tiled Un pin and allowed the cait box to dump upon the ground u load t.f Kinvel. "".-e henvy bentns of the cart, of course, struck the wood pnvitu: with a re soundlni; "dull thud," ami the clean gravel hissed out with an evil rear. This combination of sounds, the war nrtlst declared, was Identical with the striking of n live shell, and Vllllers, forgetting that he then stood seme thousands of miles from the seat of war, automatically flung himself down to nwalt the dreadful explosion. Tlio Nnvy Man's Life. i "Laymen call our life exciting and ; think that we see a lot of the world." j said the navy man. "but It's a big mis I take. What do we know of any of the ! ports we visit'; The pier, other boats that may happen to be there nt the : same time, and the English club of the town- that's all we see. And It's nil ! we know about. After you've touched fit a few ports and gone through the i mi mo performance over and over again, I you get mighty tired of It. "As for our life, what Is It but il perpetual club life? There are a few professional t lull demands, but the rest ! of our time Is spout In much the same 1 way that a man spends Ids at his club ! In smoking, reading, in swapping lies, in making oneself agreeable to one's friends who may do him I he hon or of a visit and in making oneself agreeable to some oilier fellow's frlend.t who may do him the honor of a visit that's the sum of our ex istence, aud when you think that's it for day Iu and day out. you can but agree that a w hole lifetime of it might begin to pall. ' "It's like wearing evening clothes all the time or spending one's life at til-' opera, or always having dessert and nothing else lor dinner. Ail piny aud no work makes a dull boy of alnmi-t any .lack. I sometimes wonder how any of us uav; men manage to list; superior to our opportunities for sink ' lag into stupidity's lowest depths.." ' New York Sun. are put rp here. I he chief ertr.t I of the iar.,ine l:n!t:suy in I'll, led stales being tin' , card ; u c,.::.. of Maine, though some sari':. ; a.e now put up on the si of ( aii'.'oni.a. The packing of sar.iln. s In this country was bivoii iibo.it l.'"'ii. Thousands of --i pie now Cud em ployment In on pai l r.tid another of the work In cnieldng I'. ii. i:i nial.iin cans and In i a uni;:.. uud paoku.g and marketing un I so on. Sardines are put t.p In (.Tenter va riety than formely. there bt li'g t ow ndays sardines pm i.od In tomato sauce, sardines In mustard, spired sar dines ami so en. but the (. real bulk of sardines, belli Imported and domestic, are still put up In nil. Sanlimr. are put up also in a greater variety of packages than formerly, there being, for example. varloti:i sizes nnd shapes of oval this, and some l-'raneh snr dines are Imported hi ; lass, but as the great bulk el' all mrdines lire still put up I'i oil. so the great bid!: of them are Mill put up la the familiar Hat boxes, the (mat majority of these being of the sizes l.uown a i halves and iiiar ters and far the greater number of these being Iii quarters. Sardines are pat-hod 1(10 tins In a case, nnd the eon sumption of sardines In this country Is roughly estimated at from l.r00,ooo to L'.iKin.iKio cases annually. I.Ike canned goods of every deserlp lion, sardines are cheaper now than they formerly were, anil American sar illiies are sold for less than the Import ed. American sardines are now ox ported from this country to the West Indies and to South America. Now York Sun. JUM MKIILAN1) VALLEY TIM K TA I1LK. Nov. Ill, 18'lil. l eave Ino. S no 4 no. ft no. 8 no 101 Wlni'hi'Nicr Mio-i iiiMnii u . , . H;ucrMnw n .. ( irei'iiiMist If , . Mereerxliurir. . f 'liumlnT-,lnirK. . t iiVIiisIhiiii ShipjielislHii... Men t .oli-le MeehiiiiiesburK,. Ait. IHIMiurir... Arr. llat-rlslitirK. Arr. I '111111 Arr. New York. Air. Ilultlnioru.. ft I 7ill A, M A. M ;to H l.vil 11 HOl'.' -.ul 4-' m : i ! 1 1 in 1 7 liti 7 4 in nr. H e:, in H -y, in ml H I ", 1 1 C7 7 Mi . . . in it -jr. II inj 2 l.ll ii rii A. M. U 4.Y IS Ml I or, i j : l tf. 1 41 a (i 2 -n I 4n 4f, f t; 8 ( Hltlt) Hi! M-l I 'P. M,l. M ;ml 3 I7.... 4 nvin -jo 4 to 4 6 hi ii ir 4 i .. H Jn II V"5 n 4" II 44 ft lf I J ll. ft -J7 j I i 27 5 mil ft 4.YI4 4.ri III '.II 8 W. l.:, 4 1 X fl li' A. M Aililltloiinl tnilin will lenve CiirlNle for Ilnr ristnirif tlally, except Sumtuy, lit fi.Tdi u, in., T.tii ii. in.. I J. in p. in., In p. m.. W.lle p. in., nail from MeehiililesliiiiK lit ft 14 a. m., 7.30 it. m., .I2. in.. I. or, p. in., i.iir, p. m.. f a.n p. in.. loiiln.M p- m., Mopping in Set'ontl street, lliirrishurK, to let oil piis'-cntfi.rs. Trams No. 2 n nil to run ilalty between Harris. I'iu ion) lliu'ersiow n. mid tin Sunday will stop ul ilitcrmedlutc stations. IHiliy. t 1 Hilly except Sunday. Iliiltlirore New ork l'hllii llarrif-lmrir Iilll-tliilrir. McchioilcMliurK- ( 'nrti-.le Newvilie StiippciiNiiiiivr. ., a nrtoro t 'Ii nuli'M'sliiiiy.. Mi'li'illsll.HK.... I Jl celiensl r It Hire, it i n ll Mai l inVi.u Ar. Winchester iiio. t no. K j'P. M A. M it ne I .v. I 7 in f.' er it -.ii 4 mi It im 7 no is it s ia r 4 ii h :tr, n na s i; ii ii. in :ii fi lis n :c H o III 17 7 in in er ; Jl in :. s -;i ii ll I'I.' x, . M. I. M no. no. 70. Ill 'A. Mf. m'"T. M H hi Ii 111 4 :tn I H fill 1 Nl. H M Ii 4 ItfV II 4ii! H Nl 7 Wii ii 4iil 4 IS tkV 4 III' H If. ti :? 4 sii s Ii Ml 4 M; 11 H'! I 5 IH H l?i i IS II In, i ; is :is ii ;i r ! fl .m t Mi II ir In in! i rn il ii in '.i' e. v. i" m. v. M. He :ol (lie Inffii-iiiiilliiu. An Ungllsh paper tells HiIm story t.f the Into Joseph YYhltnkcr. the publish er of Wllltakor's Almanatd;: "For the first Issue ho wanted, along with simi lar Information, tho amount of the sal nrles received by n number of certain high functionaries In the civil service. Application to those personages them solves was uniformly met with only flat refusals. Accordingly the Alma nack appeared with n list of tho olll clnls, each credited with n purely Imag inary sum. "The result was Instantaneous. I In re ly had the first edition come out bt foro those whoso salaries had been underrated wore Impelled by 'umour propro' to write Indignant correction!!, while the polite statements of the In land revenue authorities wore similar ly ellleiicioiiH where tho alleged amount was at all In excess of the actual Income." Slllllnl Ills Mime. "It seems so strange." said tho lady who had returned to visit the old scenes again, "that your sou Arthur Is n I t., When 1 knew him. I never suspected that he had an Inclination in that, direction. I suppose, though, that you have seen It In him from the tlrstV" ".No," the young man's mother re plied; "he never gave any Indication of It as a hoy. His selioiilboohs are not, as one would naturally suppose, scrib bled full of rhymes, lie did not lisp In numbers, as wo read thai other po ets did. Indeed Arthur was about as plain and practical a hoy as could have been found anywhere." "That's the way ho always seemed to mo. When was it discovered that he hnd this gift'" "Well, tho lirst time wo noticed It on him was one day after a henvy sign, which hnd projected out over the street, fell us he was walking along and struck him 'in the head. As soon us he regained consciousness he seem ed to bo a poet." t'hlengo Times Herald. CHOCOLATE FIENDS. There Are Tlnc Who fleoome Slaves to This Nerve Soolhiiiu' I'linil. "The manufacture of chocolate," said J. It. Auso of ltra:;il, "Is a great Indus try, (if nil the chocolate hean.t Import ed Into the United States two-thirds go to one linn In I'.oston, and tho other third Is distributed among the other manufacturers. The chocolates sohl are of various grades. The Caracas chocolate is supposed to be the best. "If you take the various grades, tech nically known as the Caracas, the French, the (ierinau nnd so on, and take n piece of each and place tlieln in a pan of water and allow them lo dis solve, nny expert will tell you which Js the best chocolate. The better grades will leave no sediment. The others will. This Is explained by the fact that In the cheaper grades the shell Is ground up and used as a 'filler.' Tho lighter the chocolate the better the grade. The cheaper grades are dar'i owin;; to the ground up shell. "It is a iiuocr thing about chocolate consumption. There are chocolate fiends, just ns there are opium liends, tobacco slaves and Ihpior slaves. 1 cannot tell you why It Is. but if people begin to eat chocolate tho habit grows upon them. I don't think any amount of chocolate hurts any person. Of courso the cheaper grades of chocolate have n large percentage of sugar 111 them, and sugar Is to n certain ex tent Injurious, but for the chocolate Itself I don't think any one oats enough to hurt him materially. In contradistinction to the exhilaration of alcoholic drinks chocolate seems to be a soother. Persons who are nervous and Irritable 11 ml It a food that In a way calms nnd soothes and satisfies them. It Is iueer, but It Is the truth. The consumption of chocolate Is In creasing enormously In the United States." New York Tribune. Aiidilioiiit loenl trains tvi Icuw IliirrKliurtf duly, e vei ,it sin ul. i y foi t.ii: 1; .c a. at liucrmcill n I e -1 it ioi.s a ii. ;Ct a. in., J.m p. m.. .'..!. p. m., il. :r p. mi. nnd in..-,;, p. m., nKo for Mechanic s I'lii'!. I il ll.-l n t i; an, I liitenni'iiiino station., tit 7. en n. iu. A ,1 of l lie allot e 1 1 iiins will sloput -111" I'crl . 1 l.i.-Tl-.li.llv. To I a lie on ir.si'lii'. Is. Nov. i;m! ii run dally between Uai risli.in lout Hiii.'er.aovt ii. I'i'liy. t i ally except Sunday. !i (Mi Mnid-.i.ts will leave I'liihuli lphla nt 4.30 p. in. 1'iiiitni'ii pulaee '.ieeiiiai: ear- lielween Now York .mil Kiioxvllle. Tcnu., on t ruins I west anil in oust, Thro'.iuli coaches lo and from l'liiladelplil'i ou trains i and I east and J mid west. S4)1!T1IKKN I'UN.V'A 'iCritAiss. (I'as. Mix. pas. Iloi.l nolfl Ills Arr.'4 A m '! M p. I'as. I'as. Mix. if.r noia noiii 1". M A M i A si I. ye. r :::i In mi, il fvi.t'liainlierNtiiiru R m 10 ti 7 ir Marlon il :m in 41; s l('i..,Mereersiiuri.. II r ll i! II 0.V Loudon H IV. II l,Y ll injArr. Hleliniiind. I. M. A. M. A. M. ti ih ii :io 4 ifi u oi ii mi 4 to H lie , I in :l Hi i s es ni in' a us H in. ii ! a in A. M. A. M. 1'. M. Connection for all station on t'uiiilierl A Valley Itailroad and l'einisylymila Itiiilroad syst cm. ii. a. liioiii.K. ,1, r. Hove. tleii'l 1'ie.s. Atrent. Supt. County Okkk kus. Pre idetil .hid -e Hon. s. Met'. Swope, Aoelale , lue.ee-. Lemuel I. Irk. Peter Mor ion. I'rotlioiioiiiry. &.- Frank 1. Lynch. ll' -triel Alloinev I leotire II. Illiuii N, Trcasi'icr 'l'lieoSIies. SlielilT lliiilii-l Sheels. lleouly Siier.ll .l.oiies Kiimcl. Jury roin"ii- .loners U.iyid llotz. Samuel II, lliioUet.Miiilli. Amliiors .loliu S. liai'iis, I), II. Myers, A. J. 1 . ! Illl'CI ol. (.'oliei.i loners L. W. Ciitltlillghnni, Allil'l t l'ies-,ini r. John stlinktirtl. fink f-. 1 . Kirk. I'oionrr 't'honias Khlc. I 'mini v- -ln. v.., , i .,.,.. 1 ,,r t '.mill y Superinlenileni t'ieiu t'licnill. e.vi W. Seoli Alexi'lli'er. ,1. NeNi; Altoi-nev ou ' " ... i ii ii a, iji ii. i . : i-i-.oi i!... a I ., i.' to i.' ii .v . 'I" mii,,-. , . ,-m ,iii. i . .o-.. .1 nun. inn, M. 11. Slialliier. lieo. 11. Daniels. John 1', .Si lies. Tkkms ok Uockt. The fl'-vt lermof the Courtsof Kulton coun ty hi the ye..!- shuii coiiiinc tice ou ihe Tae-ilny follou im; Hie second .Monday of .luneary, rt in o'clock . iM. The second term commences on the third Monday ol Aiurch, at i o'clock IV M. The third term on the TueMlay m vt follnvr 1 ll the seeoial Monday of June' in In o'clock A. M. The four! h term on i lie lirst Mon li, y of tieto tier, ut i o'clock I. M. Tiny nitilea. In IttiHsia niinintiiro Illbles are often worn as watch charms. One of thesw IUblos Is owned by a Hostonlun who received It. from a friend living In Itus Hln. It Is about one Inch long, three foui'ths of nil Inch wide and three eighths of an Inch thick and contains tho first live books of tho Old Testa ment. The text of tho book Is In lie brow and the titles In Latin. It can only bo rend with the help of a power ful magnifying glass. Ill Line of Criticism. "I understand," snld the neighbor, "thnt your husband Is a dramatic crit ic." "No," replied tho littlo woman bitter ly; "he Is even worse than that, lie Is a household critic." Chicago Post. , DlNunlHed. Wiggins Whose umbrella Is this? It looks like tho one I lost. lilgglns I don't seo how It can, for I scraped tho handle nnd altered It generally. Ohio State Journal. A New A ruble Notation. There Is n city magistrate living up town who Is possibly raising a mathe matical prodigy In the person of his 8 or 4 year old daughter. She has on ly recently begun to attend the kinder part en nnd yet meditates changes In tho system of enumeration now in vogue which, while BtartlliiB, are cer tainly suggestive. When nskod tho other tiny to count. Bbo hesitated somo aud then lisped: ' "Nono, Home, one, two, free, fore." New York Tillies. Coffee was not known to tho Greek r Romans. Hulled From n Itnii-Iil Tunn, "One of the funniest experiences In my hotel life," said an old clerk, "wus that In which a man registered his name without writing his town after It, us Is the custom. When 1 called his attention to it, he said: '1 hadn't forgot It. but I feci a little lilt timid about It. The last time 1 was away from homo I registered tho name of my town and the clerk asked mo what state It was In. I got mail In a minute and wouldn't stay iu the house. 1 went to another house nnd registered from Itrooklyu, and the next tlay I appeared In tho paper credited to New Yolk. 1 showed it to the clerk, and he said he changed my place of residence on the book because nobody ever registered from Itrooklyu.' "1 told Ihe mini ho need have no four of having the Incident repeated Iu our place provided he wanted to write the name, lie said he would think about il and asked to be shown his room, so I saw no more of him un til Into In the night, lie then asked me If 1 had an alias, lie studied it minutely for n few minutes, measured distances with Ids two h.rls, like a farmer, and Ihen he calleii me and pointed out Hie inline id' II town. 1 imkei! Ii ' id If that was his. " 'It Is Hie name all right,' lie replied, 'but I don't know whether the town Is still there. It Is ihe booinlnest town you ever see, and when 1 left It was gi-owiu so fast that fanners in the iiiljolnin slate were biunili their fences to keep Hit! town from growlu right over 'em.' " Chicago liner Ocean. It.nv lie Milken Friends. I A Missouri paper says thnt Senator i Cock roll keeps In closer touch with the ! people of his state than any other until 1 in the senate. One of his halills, ae- cording to tapltol gossip, Is to read In the senate the inline of every con stituent who sends him a petition. Olhor senators content themselves with presenting petitions iu nu Indell nlte hunch, uud In this Impersonal fashion they arc noted Iu Tho Congres sional Kecord. Cockrell's way Is dif ferent, and when The Record uppcar;! there are tho names of Ida constitu ents, looking very large. Korthwltli to ouch person thus distinguished goes tt copy of The Itceord, which Is shown with much pride at the country store or pobtulUfc. uud the voter is a friend of Cock re for life. Artificial lllniiKiiiila. It Is well known that Iu the manufac ture of carbon stool microscopic dia monds are formed, anil the curious fact Is stated by The Scientific Press that from the examination of a num ber of steels from n variety of process es Identical results were given. A piece weighing .".(l(l grams was cut from a lump of steel ami treated with nitric acid, the Insoluble residue collected being mainly graphic carbon. After being washed with water It was boll oil three limes with fuming nitric acid, which partially dissolved tho residue, hydrofluoric acid nnd then fuming sul phuric being used, there then remain ing nothing but graphite, which, after being washed, was incited with chlo rate of potash. The insoluble residue obtained fell to the bottom of n vessel tilled with Iodide of methylene, the lit tle transparent octahedrons visible through a microscope, which burned ou a sheet of platinum without any ash, being the diamonds. I AkConndlsbun;- & Fl. Loudon j Passenger, Freight and J Express Line. R. C. McQuade, Proprietor. ! Ut'N Daily iiktwuks Mr('oNNKi,iiu'itu and i KlIHT UirimN. ! Leayink' iMet'oiinelWiiirir at li::m o'clock, P.M., makim connection with aftenioou train ou S. I'. It. It. I Keturnlin! leave r'ort Loudon on the ai.'lval of I the eveulmt train on S. 1". ll. !. 1 am prepared lo carry passengers nnd ex ; press to make connection with all traliis ut Kt. ' Loudon. EDWARD BRAKE, Fashionable Barber, One Door I'.nst of "Fulton Hoiikci," McOONNKt.I.SHniMl, PA.' Kli-sl-olnsH Stiuvini and Hair Cuttihtf. Clean towel for every customer. DR. STEVENS, Dentist, MXUNNNLLLSBUKli, FA. t.cn Jimic of I . of P. Ten Years' lixptr. Icncc. Plntys Hold. Platinum. Silver Alu minum, t 'citulnal. Maimer, and Kuliber Alumi num Hucd. .Metal with ltutilier A t tticlmieut. Plntfn from tft 3.00 up. llridues. Ktcinuoiiii t rinvns. hoan t towns. Hold t'lips. l'litlinoid flips. I llliug of Natural Teeth it Specially unit till work tiiiiirnnucd. luroriiiaiion liy mail or iu pc i-noii. 1 lie ThUtle of Scotlniul. Once upon a time many hundred yenrs ago the Danes made war upon the Scots and Invaded their country. One dark night, as they wore march lug upon an encampment of sleeping Scots, one of their number trod upon a thistle. Tho pain was so sudden and Intense that the man gave a loud cry. This awakened the slumbering Scots, who Rprang to arms and defeat ed tho assailants. In gratitude for the ilellveraneo the Scots mudo the thistle Jlii'lr national emblem. Journal of Kd-ttcntlon. .Iniinn'n Clillilren. From one end of Japan to the other B child Is treated as a sacred thing, bo It one's own or a stranger's. Kuch one carries Its name and address on a ticket round Its neck, but' should It In deed stray from home food and shelter inid kindness would meet It anywhere. The llulli-r Illlile. One of the Interesting articles that each governor of Massachusetts trans mits to Ids iiueccssor Is tho llutlor lli blo, the history of which General llut lor wrote ou the lly loaf its follows: Jan. 1, 1K.11. Wtifii j mini' Into tlie exi-cullYe ctuiiulinr a year auu, I could nut Uml a copy of the Holy Kerip-tun-fl. I iiipuM caeli Kovrrnor took H uwMy Willi him. A frit-ial gave mc tliii. 1 leuvu it an a liL'uil'U IraiiHinlllciiiluiii tu my miccciwor in otllre, to Imi rcail by him and Ilia ueccmior, cai-li In turn. IIksjamin V, Uuti.uk, Uuvuraor. I'c Kialiiiliiiii Checked, "No." ho complained, "1 have never luccet'deil In getting anything for noth ing. I have always had to Btrlvu hurd for everything that has come to mo. I" "What about the mumps you had last winter';" his wife Interrupted. Chicago Times-He'' -Id. Advertise Your Sale Antl Have Ycnr Sale Bills Printed at ihe News Office