LfON COUNTY NEWS. A BURGLAR STCRY. .Torn T cms now me noooer win i imiicu, irs npo "i.v I'tu-lo Aimer livi-il In I,, o. Ill" lioiisc wiih n Ini'jtfl A. niMMslmi with a wing on onti a liirpp plnzan nmiiliiu Mm t loniltli. window opi-nlnn jnoin nml ri'firlilnir to tin Hour, ,n lln' Urst floor nlopt niiiitlt-unil , tlio l'I Jii'lntc J"t opposllc tlui flnilnw " n ,'w 'l',', tins . failliif! I"'" tlio in :i l n portion or Mi'. ,oeslii KIkIc wiih nliout 12 yi-nis nil one nlt-'lit she lu-iinl noun- one .,, to open Die liliHtalrs liull u ln jilio knew It iviis lier duty to ,,n her father, but to do this ulie I have to puss this very window ,,, iiuiilliifr. Kvfi-y inliuile i-oiint-trillion! wiilllut? to tlilnk of the tp great dimmer, sUi- tiouiided out ,1 mid down the Htalin, mid ns wi the Freurh window by her :i hod she ill.stliirtly heard some tine lo open the blind. Mil the foot of the bed to the . nfde tdie fairly (lew, it ml wil lier father with n whisper ini.kly told 111 in nil. lie bound jl of bed, tucked Elsie In hi ..i i...i. i..... i i JIHU iiiiue uoiii oi'i II 111 J III T r to he quiet under every c-lr- aiiri'. iavrlillo tin burlar was milking r progress. He hud opened ilioilf ud wiir now working on allow, nlthouuli It was very -day before uncle had taken Ills all to pieces to clean, and tastily railed away had neglect put It together. So there In the put that revolver together and ..while every Instant he could be burglar making his way In. the long glass door creaked a mil n man's foot was across hold uncle fired, never dreain- lill. but thinking to thoroughly iii in. Hut the chance aim In rt pierced the burglar's heart, Ml over on the piazza without pould be heard running down Ik. ho that they were at the mlow upstairs as my cousin I. la the days before tele- so It was a gruesome time for ill In-fore the authorities could Snl. Uncle fell so badly about lit- couldn't seem to be kind lit- found out about the un-' le mini and had him nicelv paying all the expenses, lie hi.s brother to Detroit and in a new suit of clothes and a dollars. It seems that the rami- from a good family, but iliin into bad comnanv nod lyliinl fallen lower and lower. it the moral: Uncle Tom does vc In liavliur a revolver in That burglar would have Wiiutly If they had screamed. for lias no desire to kill vou. only curries firearms for self- on. I have often heard Uncle a.v lie would give a thousand idio had not killed that man. w, lie was perfectly lust Hied ', hut he said that for years him very unhappy. WASHINGTON CROWS. try Well When Saturday and Sunday Come, rows, said to have been there -? years, caw and sometimes i the turrets of the Franklin Miuol Building at Washing. Jt the strange thing about it lit' lire never seen about the wept on Saturday, Sunday uiuiay. The presence and till' pupils about the grounds aid to keep the crows away, trows are never seen durluir -'tui'a, when there are no dill. HJI. Saturday and Sunday some sort of count of time iiiuc of crows, be known to Holidays are Irregular, but ' know well when one ""l us surely as It does they ' uirreis or about them all com,, early and stay late, c who has watched them "lii-re they roost, for some ''!' My in one direction and ' an opposite direction. OULDNT FOOL HIM. Bound To Have the Meat He Paid For. hi Mauehester, N. II., ,()ul a dug which was in Hie "'whig t i,s H(a(j ,iuly fu. 4 ''un- the name of " Iloruee "He day Horace went to Jlt maud, on which, as usual, l his ten-cent stamp. The i'ut "Is stamp in his drawer, attention to the dog,. " was a good joke, on the Horace did iiikIkikIiiii.I "Ms Wl.v , Klv,,u t ,,, 11 1UI l-lltle l.,,,ll,,r ul, W young 'man all fhe while K his every movement. "'' liilnutes spent In this 'iu to comprehend, and do- ""J a little loke In return. '')' Walked mi t.i tin. Iien.-li lUui'ti-i- uf In li, unit uiili..il I"1 Indignation and triumph ' every wag of his tall. ''Trains on the Man. JV of a room of one of the riling schools In South ,4lluu of South Africa ucar- '"''l Ktlliiiir. Toe lining inr. il-VUV lli.u.. .1... ,!l i.. i, ", ill. litem ii I e 111 4. Illlll II, I.. ,.!., I,.... fill inn- i'iiiii nun ""y const rueted lo scale IW Won of the children. tells of a city lad vlsit-"'imnti-y who looked all over 'or Klruwboi-ries and was disappointed bucuuso ho tlioui. A dose Inspection 'pu"ili did not reveul uny ' ai"l he chased the Hook of -'ir tho ful.m in u vain ou- ''I'lire g:oosobeii-ios. Ho ""uiiied how butter is ob ,, -iiiving half an hour's In 'tl'" barnvard billvgoat. Uncle Jack. Vou ain't dot no Uncle .lark; 1 dot one, he brings me back Most the purl lost linns 1 got; Sec the sallor-niaii he bought? Won I put dliii in tin- wind Hof his arms des spiinied and oplnned. I'on't you wish you had one, too, 'At yore uncle brlliged to you? Vou ain't dot no Uncle Jack 'At carries you 'round plggy-bnck Th'ough the best rooms till yore lna Says she's sure she never saw Seeh a fool is uncle Is. Kon't you wish 'nl yon was his Nephew, getting presents, too. While he's scolded 'stead of you? Onect my uncle made a boat 'At I used to float and Moat In our bathtub, till one day I got w'hoophi' cough, an' they Chopped It up for kludllTr wood. Uncle said they never should Chop up boats like 'at wlfout Cause, and ma she said git out. ANIMALS AND MIRRORS. What Dogs and Monkeys Think of Themselves in the Glass, I unv a performing monkey the oilier day. lie went through many tricks very successfully. Toward the end of the performance he was or dered to put on his corked hat before a hand mirror, which lie did. He was next told to set It straight, and he tried on tils headgear repeatedly, at. different angles, causing much laugh ter. When all was over and the organ man, bis helper and the two monkeys were preparing to depart. 1 saw that "the (tclieral" bad stolen the lillle mirror and was si inlying his own countenance with great delight! lie had placed tin- glass on top of the hand organ, and In bent over it again and again, making the queerest faces. He afterward picked up his mirror and looked at himself earnestly and contentedly at different angles. His face hail been very sad, like the faces of most monkeys I have seen, but now the wrinkles smoothed themselves out, and he nearly smiled. Why Is It that dugs hardly ever look upon a picture as anything but a tint, surface with patches of color dotted over It' In all my large canine acquaintance I know but one dog who sees that portraits are likenesses of people. As for his own rellcctlon In a glass, a dog generally mistakes it for an enemy, and "goes" for II! I.ntcr, when knocks on the nose and absence of scent have done their part in convincing him of his mistake, a dog will look coldly, not to. say de spitefully. at the mirror. Sometimes It Is as If dogs resented their reflec tions as caricatures of themselves. CHINESE BOYS. They Will Make Better Soldiers Than Their Fathers Ever Were. In China the boy soldiers are better drilled than the men. Kvcry Chim-se banner regiment has Its troops of boy soldiers, carefully exercised, and far superior in discipline to the rest of the army. They carry old Hint-lock muskets, and show themselves expert In the use of those antiquated weap ons. The military spirit, which seems almost extinct in China, if tin behav ior of the Chinese armies In the war witli Japan Is any Indication, seems to be strong yet in the children, and this fact gives some promise that the fu ture of China will not be altogether clouded. American boys could not show greater earnestness or readiness than these little soldiers of tin- Orient, to whom China will ere long be look ing for support and defense. These boyish evolutions took place at the re cent triennial review of the forces of the wouthern provinces of China. Will Not Rust Metal. A curious phenomenon is that metal never rusts In the waters of Lake Tltl caca. Vou can throw in a chain or anchor, or any article of ordinary Iron, and let It He for weeks, and when you haul It up It will be as clean and bright as -when it come from the foun dry. And, what Is stranger still, rust that has been formed upon metallic objects elsewhere will peel off when Immersed In its waters. Tills is fre quently noticed by railway and uteam boat men. Itusty car wheels and rails and even machinery can lie brightened by soaking tlieiu iu the waters of Lake Titicaca. Car for the Cows. Kxperts In liaby farming recommend (lie use of milk from tho same cow, ami hence the little daughters of the Czar take their cows with them when they travel. During the visit of the Czar to (ieruiany a palatial cow car with two Holsleln cows were attached to the Imperial train. Mother You lire having a JcUy game! Isn't It good of grandpa to play with you like tlilsV Little Girl Well, but I'm playing with lilin. To muke corn pone, put one pint of meal Into a bowl: pour over sulllcielit lioiliii;1' water just to moistn it: It must not lie wet. t'ovor, and when cool add u tabli-siiooiifi'J. ufV" , ning, melted, , lightly bet , unit two eg , ... .u, mm a i-k Hour milk t'( , , , l,il1lt,f U":'l a teaspoon, u. 'ou have addeu,() tubWl,oollW ! s,lvel1 f,k thoroughly. 'J 18 Mf. waU'r ad11mpana..dbakoln.if1'n1i"1'' ,a B,'ttll,,roven for half an -v 'I'W ' Homo Journal. W,r'-Julv Lndio' ' TO THE YUKON liY UAH A BOLD AND DIFFICULT ENTER. PRISE. Interesting to Men Impelled by Gold Hunger The Terrible Dead Horse Trail Up the Dangerous White Pass. Of all the Industrial auxiliaries which tho closing century has seen set up on the American continent the rail road Just finished from Alaskan tide water Into the valley of the great Yu kon Is the boldest and most dltlleitlt, and promises to b(? tlio most useful. A your ago the gold-besprlnkled Yu kon watershed was accessible Only to the hardy mountaineer and at tho cost of much money. Immense labor and Borlous peril. Of all those who ventured up the Pacific through tho Alexandria archipelago and l.ynn Canal as far as Skaguay and Dyea nt least a quarter turned hack Intimi dated and disheartened, for In front of them loomed the precipitous coast range, with the terrible pond Horse Trail on the one hand, and on tho other, ot.ly five miles north the Chll koot Trail from Dyea, even more ter rible, with Its dreaded avalanches and Its cemeteries of numerous dead at Sheep Camp. To cross the divide was at the risk of limb and life, for It involved hitch ing along a narrow and Insecure shelf through a dark defile over a turbulent river and climbing rocky walls that defied almost any creature not armed with claws. In Chllkoot Pass, back of Dyea, several scores of adventurous Argonauts had been buried beneath the tremendous slides of Ice and rock from the summit, and the Indian trail from Skaguay over White Pass was populous with buzzards feasting on the carcases of a thousand horses which perished there In a single au tumn. The narrow vale through which flows down to Lynn Canal the stream known as the Skaguay is one of tlio most humid portions of tho earth's surface. It Is carpeted with heavy moss, and the thick-set evergreens and ti-ngle of dead trees are satur ated with water and veiled with lich ens of gigantic size and motley color ing, and kept wet by tremendous storms of ruin uud by an incessant downllow of melted snow from the summits of mountains where winter makes Its perpetual homo. Tho cli mate of the sea roast and adjacent islands is equable and mild, the win ters being scarcely as cold as thoso at Washington, D. C; but the valley of the Yukon Is cold and forbidding, constituting a strange contrast. To men Impelled by gold hunger the coust range was only a temporary bugbear. American enterprise did not long remain Idle In tho presence of this menacing obstruction. Chll koot Pass is nearly a thousand feet higher than White Pass, on account of which Important fact the great stream of eager transit turned in the spring of 1898 from the former to tho latter. Hut even here the Thlinkit Trail was so terrible that, while thou sands of the hardier succeeded In getting over and setting their frail boats afloat on the Upper Yukon at Lake Dennett, a hundred every week turned back, appalled and disheart ened. One of tho visitors to Skaguay in the fall of 1897 strolled up the Indian path which had even thus early ac cumulated so many of the carcases of horses falling from tho sloping rocks that It had borrowed from that, circumstance the grewsome name of "Dead Horse Trail." He "was a man of mature years, shrewd, strong, alert, fearless, and not unacquainted with personal exposure In Indian wars and hazardous enterprises Mr. George A, Bracken, one of the early pioneers of Minnesota. lie climbed the trail to the summit of the White Pass, and concluded that though almost Inac cessible to horses and dogs, It was practicable to build a wagon road through the dark defiles and up tho frowning acclivities. From his tour of Inspection he returned to Skaguay, where a company was formed for tho purpose of building and cutting a road through tho lowest pass of the coast range to Lake Bennett, the pro jectors to reimburse themselves by charging a small toll to travellers. W. A. Croffut, In Frank Leslie's Month ly for April. A common sight In Capo Colony Is a herd of ostriches accompanying a railway train as it speeds on its way. President's Kruger's ultimatum was the first that had over been received by Great Britain. Ki Diiy Sea Shore I'.xcursions via. Ciimhci laiKl Valley Railroad. July .Mil, I tlth. August Jd and KUIi. The ( 'iiiuliei hiiiil Valley Kaih'ond bus lixi-il on Thursdays July -'-Lh, l'.Uli. August -1 and hitli for their Annual Mid-Summer excursions to the Sea Shore, tlio time allowed on these ex cursions being sixteen days instead of ten as in former years. I'.xcursion tickets to Atlantic City, Cape May and other South Jersey re sorts will bo sold from all stations on the Cumberland Valley Kailroad on above dales forC. V. K. 11., train No. 4, leaving Mercerslnng at :.'lll a. in., at if."). IK) for tho round trip, and will In good to return on any regular train leavlilg the Sea Shore destination and Philadelphia on any regular train (ex cept the New York and Chicuo Lim ited) sixteen days from dale of Issue, For full Information call on local Ticket Agents. A draft of lifly young men, nearly all farmers from Ohio, arrived tit the navy yard In llrooklyn the other day on the way to the uavul training sta tion at Newport. So far over oOd of theso sturdy young landsmen from the west have come on to join the naval service, Hlobbs "And 110 Incur there's to be u Cork Trust." Slobbs-lWell that ought to keep its bead above water." RHEUMATISM and CATARRH CURED I1Y Johnston's Sarsaparilla QUART BOTTLES. IN THE S"HAD0WCF CEATK. A Whnl Fnmlljr Cnred. Mrs. C. II. Kingsbury, who keeps a millinery and fancy goods store nt St. Louis, Gratiot Co., Mich., and who is well known throughout the Country, says: I was badly troubled with rheuma tism, catarrh and neuralgia. I had liver complaint and was very bilious. I was in a bail condition; every day I bo gnn to fear that I should iievcr be a well woman; that 1 should have to settle down into a chronic invalid, and live In the shadow of death. I had JOHNSTON'S SAIISAPAI'ILLA roe., oiilineiided to Inc. i TliuK l-'Ol'lt BOTTLKS AND IT CTUKI) ME, and cured my family both. I am very glad that I beard of it. I would cheerfully recommend it to every one. 1 have taken manv other kinds of medicine. 1 prefer JOHNSTON'S to all of them." 1IK IIIUA l(t'M0., ll.lrolt, Mlih. ! '- S.iii' III 'I I Mill s I : 11 X A Legendary ilislory of 1 1 1 Ilol v Cross, Tlx history ol'tin- cross, ;is re lated in :i Very iiitcresestiiiu' old book, published in tin city of ('ulenl i-i'!.', in the year I -Is!!, is siunew h;il til'Ier this fashion. When Adam was about to die, Neth went to the ,'ai.e of J 'aradisi. to i 1 1 1 1 -1 r oil from the Tree of Mercy, instead of oht;iininr it, he was presented with a branch of the Tree of k'llu. loiov .y tk,, icliaiiel Michael, who told hint that w hen the tree bore fruit his father would be cured. After Adam's death, Seth planted the 01 tit. cli upon ills "-rave, where it ",ivw hi in 11 liiree tree, which was cul down by Mulotni n fur his e-i;!ple. 'There seems to have been dif lietilly in tn a kit 1.!.,' use of ii, so that it was thrown aside, ami sei' ed as a lt idue over a pool of water. 'The (,)llei-U of Silebil, a ho probably crossed it when she made her memorable visit to tin- wis"st of men, warned him, prompted thereto by a .vision, that one who would lie the ov.-;--thl'ow of the Jewish empire; jso Solomon had the tree buried deep in the earth. The poo! of 1 U-tb-esda formed on tin-spot, and its medicinal q'.l.lli! ies may well be supposed to Lave In-.-ji imparled by tin- tree which a.-. '-for ihe healing of tin naiii.-.'ii-.." The wood rose to tin sUi i'aee at the appointed time, and was taken by tin; car pent ers to make the cross. After the crttcitixion it. vn.s a'aiii buried in Lite earth, where it is feigned to have- remained till it Wits discovered by the Kmpress lh-lena. throtie'h angelic interpo sition, if we remember rightly. Tin third of May is kept, as an annual feslival in honor of the event. Koncrvillc's Oil Well. Some of tlio people of Kouzer villi have not yet ubondoned the hope th:it their town will bo a building place for oil- well derricks mid for it biu,- city which will thrive on an iuexhaiistahlo supply of petroleum. Kot much hope is entertained of a yield of oil from the well tin Isaiah Moniluin's properly but it is said there are strong evidences of crude petroleum in a cistern on Isaac Smith's land. Several years aji'o oil made, the water in thucistern unfit for use and Mr. Smith tilled the bottom with it thick layer of stones and then cemented it. This kept tho water pure. Ilecenlly he dugout tin; cement and stone bottom and the oil hits reappeared. lie has not yet determined up on his future operations. The li pud from tin well has been nnaylized by expert chemists iu Jtiiltiuiore and pronounced to be U7 parts witter and three parts oil. It is believed by mauy that it deepening of the well will result in tiudinff of a much lari-r per cent, of oil and they may form a company to bore down a hundred feet or more to test their theory. MAKLS. Next to mi infernal cat squall ing in tiie sleep hours, 11 mare crazy for her colt is the next most tiuuoyiiifj; thine'in theanimal kingdom. A frenzied mare, dancing and champing mid squealing for her woolly chump of a colt, with its tail full of cocltleburs, drove a sweet little poem out of us this morning. Tho mare will lind her colt, the st-iiMous will como and go, anil other mures will go crazy about colts yet unborn; but that little poem is lost to the great world forever. If you are oinj,' to lutv a Buggy or Wagon this sim mer, bo sure it is ;i Blue Ribbon. Stylo and price start them, and quaiity keep thcin jjoin. The fellow who wastes his energies trying to Jrae; a high priced v;.o:i, loaded down with high priced reputation, will Ii. ve i i take your dust when you pass him with a 3! cie IRiJbJbon, We bft - nl y talk god work, but sell OOOD WORK. Quality, first considered; style, novelty, and price guaranteed. Fur luriher infoi m.aion. call on or address li. X. AKl'US, Sipcs Mill, Vi Agent Fcr Fulton County. VWWWVAWVVAWVV'AVWWV, WW, mm r . f. i ' v ''fit; ' ? .ii. ' piquets, 50c. SHirt Aoists. A nice ai tide loose collars and cull's reduced from 50c. to 30c. I Boys 2-Piece Suits, in black and in summer colors. u with shoi'i pan's; .ilsosmne pan Is. V i -ft Just In. A large lot of Men's and Boys' Summer Pants reg ular price 75 cents; our price, 50 cents. Latest Silk Ginghams and Zephyrs for Ladies' Shirt Waists. Just the thing for Summer Wear. . K. JOHNSTON i V.AAVWwWAA. iOCCOOCOOOOOO i The Hot Weather is Now Here. Come and see the Wickless Blue Flame Oil Stoyes. A Stove that costs less than one-half to run it. Saves Time. No Dirt. No Ashes. No (i reuse. Burns the same oil used in lamps, Perfectly sale. By the use of this stove you have a nice, cool kitciien all the time. Also, other cheap Oil Stoves on hand at prices with in ihe reach of every family. I have on hand the largest assortment of Poultry Wire and Fly Wire uf all sizes, at bottom prices. Fruit Jars, Jelly Glasses, Crocks, Preserving Kettles and all kinds of Fruit Canning Goods. g ALBERT ST0NER. oxxxxxxxxxxx amoup r i w.i?i!''Jni:fV SHIRTS ! Aen's and boys' working shirts, 25c, 3'k. and 50c. Aen's and boy's tine shirts, in percales, wi:h loose collars and cull's- attached and detached at 50 and 75c .Wen's silk front, and striped white Nlfo wilh long MEN'S HOT-WEATHER COATS. Both in light colors, and Bril liantine Skeleton Coat, with Patch pockets. Also a lot of new Linen Dusters. o xxxxxxooooo Saves Trouble. No Dust. No Odor. No Smoke. THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS COVERS IHE FIELD. In every part of the County faithful re porters are located that gather the daily happenings. Then there is the State and National, News, War News, a ! i 1 Department for the Farmer and Mechan ic, Latest Fashions for the Ladies. The latest New York, Bal timore, Philadelphia Markets. The Sun day School Lesson, Helps for Christian Endeavorers, and a Good Sermon for ev erybody. THE JOB DEPARTMENT IS COMPLETE. SALE BILLS, POSTERS, DODGERS, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, ENVELOPES, CARDS, Ac, In fact anything and everything in the best style along that line. Sample copies of the News sent to any of your friends on request, uM 1 5 10 K LAN 1) VA LLEY TIMKTAMLK. Nov. 11), ISOil. I.kuvc mi. li no 4 no. Ojmi.H no. Ill A.MitA.WjtA.II tl'.M l-.ll Wlui-hesli.r 7 :U J -ir. .... MurtiiixlHii-K H i.vii :Wi nidi .... llilKi-rstiiu II II 15 imill! -."Ii I tl(l!!0 (ircclH'llMln (17 11 !: I'J 4-.' 4 IV. 10 4'.' Mi-rrt-i shiny H :h i; f l in a mi- i 'liuniht-rxImrK. . 'l :mf J5 Tifti f,'t; ifta Wilynesliimi 7 im' !!! lftl 4 (Hi Sllipl sIiuik... 7 hi III lSj I AM tt '.'I II -JH Nttwvillr H ml Hi -.'Ii I 4:t n Hn n 41 I'urlUlc s -.'7 in HI ! if, 11 iki'is m) Mi-lllllllll--.lllll'tl.. H 17 II t7 -J V.-7 t) si i;j ;7 InlNlmri' 7 f.'; ... 1 411 h m Air. HiiriKlMiiK. I' If.' II S 4li ll a.i ) 4h Ait. 1-liilu 11 4ki x im s 47 111 ai 4 '." Ait. New York. 111 5 M H IW H ft I 7 .It' Ait. H11I l i 1 nt . t . II .Vi a II 8 mi 8 a jfi A. si. 1 1. w. I. m.i. M. a. M. Ailillllniiiil trains will Imve UiulMe fur Jlur rMiuru iluily. i-xoi'iil Suiiiluv, ill ft.fni a. ri . 7 Hi 11. 111.. I -'Hi p. 111.. :i.:m p. iu.. D.;w p. in., null from Mi-i-lianit-sliiiiv 111 11. 1 1 11. in , 7. .hi 11. in., H.u-u. in.. I .it p. in.. .'.;iti p. in., una :l.f:i p. 111...VJ11 p. ni.. il.:15 p. in., 11.nl p. in., slopping lit Sec-und blruul. HiirrlslnirK. to 1,-1 oil passeniorK. 'I'nuus No. unil in run iluily liotween llurrlti Inirx mill Hiim-1-siown. unil ou Humluy will mop ut iiitt-riiu-iliute stations. J Hilly. t Duily exvt-pt Suiuluy. l.euve no. I .no. .Hiuo. fi no. 7 110. 9 !. II A. H A. M , !-. Wr. M Hilllllliin- II M 4 Vi K do 4 Bn Ni-W Yolk 7 4H 1L- OT I H Ml I Nl I'liiiu 11 -ju 4 -.-ii k ri r.' 'jt 4 .in lliirilsliurK ft im 7 oh 11 4r a H 7 ! imisiium - 4i 4 -Ji Moi-liunieslHiru.. ft In HIMIJIKS 8 Nl 7 Sti t'urlle ft 4n Hlfiir.'irt 4H1 H111) Niwi Illlll 11 nil I'J Ml 4 87 8 91 Slilpp.lisliuiir... Hi; 11 IM I III 4 ft4 x 37 tiyiit'slioro HI 117 '1 II-,- 11 III riniiiiiii-isiiiiiK,. iiar, waft 1 a, ft ift a ftft .Mc-rt-ill-NlMiru H HI 111 47 till ireeiiouHi.lt .... 7 im In iki I ftft ft a7 9 ill HuKt-rstowu 7 Ul in ir -J 17 fl on 9 ail MurlinsluiiK H JI II In 11 4ft Ar. Wliu-liesier. H HiilJ :V 7 an A. M.l. M. I-. M. I. M I-. M. Aililltlounl local truliiH wlllleuve llurrlslmri-' il;illy. ext-i pl Suiiiluv lorCurllsle uud IiiIitiiiimIi me stuiioiis ui 11. ;ift a. iu., -.Mm p. in., ft.ift p. ni.. ll. '.'ft p. 111. iiiiiI II. an p. 111., also for Mei-huulcs liini'. llilKhuiK null Inti-riiiedliitu hIiiiIoiih hi 7. mi n. 111. anil a.i7 p. in. Nik. I anil run dally lit-tween llurrlNbunr unil IliiKcrstown. liully. Dililv exeept Siiliduy. Ii Uu SundiivN wlllleuve riilliidelpliln ul 4.3o p. 111. rulliniiii piiluec slueiilni' eum between New ork iiml Kuoxvllle, Ttnu., ou truius 1 weM 11 nd III eusl. Tlimiitili eouehes to und from I'hlludelpliln on Irilius 'J and 4 east and 7 and 9 west. SOUTH HUN 1-KNN A U. II. TKAINS. ' l'us. Il'us. !Mlx. I -tll7 uolla nollll 1'. M A M a M I.ve. Arr. ft -,'aio im, 11 ftfi i;iiuinlierslurtf. . l'us. 'Mix. l'lls. 1IH P. tl. 4 i.--i 4 li a an ni 8 Im P. Id. noiirnoim iA Miil' 9 ift1 ia an ft ar 10 I'.'l 7 IU! 11 lljin 47 K in 11 HI 1 1 1 on! lift It an; 11 Ift! 9 '.Ml .Murlou .. 9 una in . Mereersliurif . ... . l'.oudoii. ... .. . Uicluuoud... H ani K OKI H mil A. M. 11 HI 10 in 9 ft.il I. H.A. M.'A. M, I-. M Cimnecilnu for all Ntiitions 011 Cumberland Yulley Hullroiid uud I'euiuiylvunlu Hullroud system. H. A. HilMil.K. J. v. UoYI). (ien'l 1'usa. Anent. Supl. County Okficeus. President Judne Hon. S. MeO. Swopo, AsNoeluie Judi;e l.euiuul Kirk, I'eter Mor ion. I'rollionotiiry, &o,- Frank I'. I.yuoli. Disiilui AlUniicy Ii.'i)ikj 1J. Duuli'ls, Treasurer Til t-oSlpes, Sllel'ilf - IHluiel Sheets. Deputy SlierllT-Juines Uuiiiel, Jury IJonunlsslouerH- Duvld Hotx, Silinuel 11, Iloekeusiulili Auditors - Jouu s, HurrU, D, 11 Myem, A. J. Laiubersoii, CiiniiulsslouerH h, W. Cunuluiihuui. Albert l'lesslniier, John Sluukurd. t'lerU- S. W, Kirk. Corouer-'TlioinuN Kirk. County Surveyor -Jonan Lake, Count y Superintendent Clem Vhusliul. Anorue.s -W. Seoii Alexander. J. Nelson Slpi-s, Thomas K Sloan, K MoN, Johnston, M. H. Mhailuer, Ueo. II. DunielH, Julm 1. blues. ADVERTISE IN The Fulton County News J
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