FULTON COUNTY NEWS. HOW THE BISHOP SMOKED I'MllipM lironka n a Giicxt of Ito.vulty at Windsor. There in n very funny story told of (ho ,isit of Bishop Phillips Brooks to Windsor cnstlo ns the guest of her Jimjesly Queen Victo rin. Ilisliop Hrooks, nfter being hos-pitnbly- received nt the cnstle, was phoMii to liis room. Ho then pro ceeded to light Iiinnccuptoined cignr. Very noon the smoko renehed the. nostrils of a custodian soinewhero not fur away, who enmo to the door and asked the guest not to smoke, as it was forbidden. llisliop Brooks then came out in to the corridor and went on Binok ing there. The custodian again beg ged him to desist. The bishop went back to his room and out upon the balcony which opened from it and resumed his cigar there, thinking that he was now in tho open air. Again the custodian came, this time passing through the bishop's room, and said, "Smoking is not permit ted, sir, anywhere in Windsor cas tle." Then he once more disappear ed, and Bishop Brooks, who gave up a cigar with very great reluctance when he had onee lighted it, return ed to his room. He had no sooner done so than a happy thought occurred to him. There was an open fireplace in tho room. The bishop lay down on his back on the floor, put his head up into the chimney and began to pmoko there. This time ho was un disturbed. Before the smell of the cigar hud betrayed him. Now tho smoke went up the chimney, which is what chimneys are for. The cigar was finished in peace. Boston Cor. New York Mail and Express. A DOLLAR A Ililf. A certain druggist was awakened at an early hour the other morning by a loud ring at his night bell. lie looked out of the second slorv win dow and saw two men wildly waving what seemed to be prescription blanks, s he hastily donned his clothes, descended to the store, turned on the lights and opened up. lie was mad all the way thror.gh when he saw that each piece of pa per contained the following sen tence, "One portion of whisky," and was signed by Dr. Al K. lloll. lie paw that one of tho men held a f?"2 bill in his hand, and a thought struck him. lie said : "I do not know this physician, Dr. 'Al K. Iloll, but if you are really sick I can 1iil the prescription." Tha men, who wanted a diink badly, protested that they were sick and were each given a drink. The druggist took the prescriptions and the if? bill and calmly rang up $'? on the cish register. "What." yelled the men in cho rus, "ain't tliere no change ?" "Xope," answered the dni' man. "I always charge apiece for till ing Dr. lloll's prescriptions after closing up time." And he turned out the lights and closed up the store. Cincinnati Enquirer. TEST OP Ql'ICKE8S IS I'KNCIXG. A very interesting method of testing the quickness of a sword thrust consists in photo chrono graphic measurement. The move ment of the foil point is loo quick to be measured by the eye, but by tho aid of the photo chronographie apparatus it is plainly shown. The fencer is dressed in white, placed in front of a black background, the foil is chalked, and a metallic "span gle" is fastened to tho tip by wax. The photo chronographie machine beiifg set in rotation, the trajectory of the tip of tho foil during the movement of the fencer is shown by a series of dots. As two successive images are one fifteenth of a second apart in time, it follows that by counting these im ages the entire time occupied from the beginning to the end of the movement can be determined. In a rece'tt test it was found that tho stroke occupied a little less than four-tentlis of a second.. By this means two swordsmen can be com pared and their relative quickness easily and exactly determined. A CTHIOl'S EXPERIMENT. The following is a curious and in terest ing experiment: Take a piece of cardboard about live inches square, roll it into a tube, with 0110 end just large enough to (it around the eye and the other end a trifh rmaller. Hold the tube between the thumb and linger of the right hand do not grasp it with tho wholo l;a:id. Put the largo end closo against the right eye, and with tho left hand h'd a book against the side oi' the tube. Keep both eyes open, and there will appear to be a hole through the book and objects pvu a- through the, hole instead of through the tube. The right eye fees through the tube and tho left eye ecs the book, and the two ap pearances are hi confounded that it l . impossible to separate them. Tho left JiiiihI may be held against tho tube instead of tho book, and tho liole will to bo through tho Iiaud. Foil Salk. A mule 8 yours old, weight from 900 to 1000 pounds, pun tie, pood worker strictly nil right. Owner's rcusou for soiling is that he has more stock than ho needs. Price right. , , J. M. Kkuun, - Kuobsville, Ph. 4 I The Curse I That Failed t BY WHICH JOSE" Rl-MAREZ By Marguerite Stabler, I Jose Ilemarez sat on tho sunny side of hispatio and counted himself a happy man, and he had reason. The sun was warm, his crops were bountiful, and Luisita was his. In his complacency he did not sco the vengeful glance of his one time rival as tho dark figure of Pablo Varo rnnntcrcd by. lie sat and smoked, with tho fatuous smile born of tho pride of possession, incapable of any emotion beyond his simple two ply nature his love for Luisita and his hatred for Pablo. But nothing of the situation was lost on Pablo as he swung by with his long, loose strides. His manner suddenly lost all its devil may care indifference, for Jose's self com placency stung him more keenly than Luisila's inconstancy. Bah I How lie would like to run him through with his stiletto tho little, fat necked puerco! The sight of Jose sitting so contentedly under his own vino and lig tree goaded him beyond tho last notch of en durance, and his ire was better di rected than' he guessed, for it was those very vines and lig trees that had wrought Luisita's decision. Luisita was a nice girl, with brown eyes and trim ankles and the usual amount of romanticism in her head about marrying for love, and all that. She loved Pablo and had admitted as much to him, but there were younger sisters in her family to bo considered, and the paternal authority had stepped in and assort ed itself in favor of Jose and hU broad acres in the fertile Santa Ynez valley. So, with n few de spairing Sinn's and an unctuous feeling of martyrdom, she had duti fully yielded her point and straight way plunged into the details of her trousseau, solaced by the prospect of going to her martyrdom in a sat in gown. If Jose had flaunted his success openly in Pablo's face, if he had taunted him with his defeat, then ho might have challenged him to fight and at least have had the satis faction of giving him a sound thrashing. But this ineffable .self complacency was beyond his reach. Even he, Pablo, could not thrash a man for sitting in his own patio and smirking to himself. Still tho more ho thought about it the more deter mined he was that he must thrash him, and, suiting the action to the thought, ho faced about and made for Jose's vino clad patio, lie would whip him; yes, and' soundly too. But ho must make Jose strike first, in order that he might not be culpa ble in Luisita's eyes. Jose had not changed his posi tion or expression, for every smoke wreath framed a picture of Luisita's brown eyes and trim little ankles. When Pablo appeared so suddenly beforo him, black with rage, Joso batted his beady little eyes nervous ly in tho effort of focusing his thoughts on a nearer and less pleas ant object. lie did not look at all like n man who might bo easily de coyed into a fight, but Pablo was de termined. With a threatening ges ture, ho sidled up to the gate. "Como out here, you coward," ho commanded. "I havo a score to settlo with you." Jose, basking in his complacent mood, was loath to see it go. "You como in here and have a cigarette with me," ho answered, deeming it wiser not to notice tho manner and tone of Fablo. "Not I," returned Pablo. "I do not 6moko with such as you, you miserablo little cur. Como out hero whilo I wipe tno ground up with you 1" Pablo was twice Jose's 6ize, and it required no great stretch of the im agination of the latter to seo him self made into a mop in his tor mentor's brawny arms, so he grew more and moro conciliatory. "Come in and have a glass of wine with me. It is made on my own place," ho ventured. Tho pic ture of the unlovely front he would present to Luisita with his nose bro ken and his teeth gone mado him wary. Could ho have dono Pablo an underhanded mischief to any ex tent he would havo availed himself of tho opportunity, but to light never! It was uu-Christian. The unfortunate hazard about his own vintage, however, took tho form in Pablo's mind of a taunt of his pou sessions. "Como on," he cried, "you miser able, skulking, thieving, lying cow ard! I daro you to como out and light mo like a man! You're afraid to afraid!" edging up closer and closer as Jose, for tho first time, shifted h'u position and looked at hir.i undecidedly. "No," bo finally answered, as if weighing the charge; "no,1 I'm not that. You have a wrong impression of mo if you think I'm that." By this timo Pablo was half way tip tho steps,menneing and challeng ing. "Como out here and light, you upstart!" ho shouted, holding his hot face so cloe that the slightest puss from Joso would have struck him, and then his punishment would havo descended, swift and sure. "You brass faced ape, como on with your tricks! Come on now, or I'll y-eak xour head!" Pablo's wholo frame dilated with the force of his rage till he towered like a'i irniptivo volcano, pouring sizzling streams of invective upon his victim's head. Joe had no fancy tor a trial ftf their slrenglh. "No," he persisted iinpcrturlmbly ; "you know I'm not that, and you are very much mistak en if you think that 's what I am." Pablo menaced, threatened, tan talized, thrusting his clinched list into Jose's face, cl"ering every in dignity a man will not take to make him strike out, but he would not, for Jose, considering the disparity of their size, was thoroughly con vinced that lighting was im-Cliris-tian. 4 Ba filed and exhausted. Pablo stamped and swore like a madman. "Stay there, then," ho fairly Snick ed. "Stay there in your seat till you stick to it! Sit under your aceur.v d vines till you die and rot, and may everything you touch die and rot, you and the woman you have stolen from me, you thieving, lying half breed mongrel! May she bring a curse to whomsoever touches her, and may her children grow up to curse their father and bring lis graeeupon theirown heads! You olf scouring, you plague spot, you lo v flung, underhanded meak thief, you you"' Breathless and exhausted, word" failed him. But as he de i;i ared around the corner, shaker, villi his wrath, he still muttered execrations between his teeth. In the blindness of his rage he did not notice the ef fect his words had h.-.d. I'mler the tirade of Ids curse Jo.-e had c:ia..; "d color and gone from pasty yellow to streaked hh:c. Xow he ;'.roe stiilly and backed through the do rway, his eyes still turned in the direction Pablo had taken, as if expecting to see his cur.io descend i:i vi.-ible form. All his self satisfaction, all his smirking complacency, was suddenly gone. Pablo's tremendous rage and terrible earnestness as he stood over him and glowered, red eyed and fu rious, into his face so terrified the little man that he was like to faint, lie turned his ashen face toward tho window and would not have been surprised to tee Pablo's form, with cloven hoofs and fiery breath, ridi.ng through the air, while his upwrouglit fancy supplied tho hi.-s-ing tone, "May she bring a curse to whomsoever touches her ; may she, may you" Mailro do Dios, he was a ruined man, for this was Good Friday and the change of the moon ! .Many were the curses ho had known to have been called down in this way, leav ing a train of desolation and de struction in their wake. Old Juan Tieuda was now crawling about on crutches because the l'alli brothers pronounced a curse upon the feel that had carried their nheep away, and he well remembered the tiuui his father's hoivos had all died of glanders because there was a eurre upon then;. Jo.-e had never pene trated beyond the ccrine.! of his little valky, and the local traditions and superstitions of the Santa Ynez bounded his mental horizon. Until tho shadows grew long and cold ho sat and cower jd in his cor ner, his mind circling around llnve awful words and the blight that would surely follow. Turn which way ho might, his doom confronted him, and there was no escape. He felt himself powerless in Pablo's hands, and the scathing words, that had burned themselves into the core of his soul, rang the changes on "May elio bring a curse!" till the perspiration stood out on his fore head and tho gooscflesh on his body as ho waited, not knowing when tho curso might descend. But with the coming of tho morn ing there came a sudden flash of illumination. A quick light leaped into his eyes, for the words "may whomsoever" took on a new mean ing to him. In tho attitude of mind that says "You're another!" Joso bounded to his feet with a definite plan. Ho began to see the possibili ty of outwitting Pablo by shifting this deep crimson curse to his (Pa blo's) own head. To see him blight ed by his own curse, withered by his own word:-, starving, begging from door to door, dying like a dog in tho streets, accursed by his own flesh and blood, would be worth any price. It was still early when Jose, puff ing from the briskness of his walk, found his way to the home of the lovely Luisita. His presence at so early an hour took the household by surprise. Ho found the trim mi kles guiltless of any disguise ami tho cloud of soft ringlets, through which the lovely brown eyes w tfont to glanco at Mm, screwed i;p into mysterious little knobs all over her head. Notwithstanding, at tho sight of her his courage almost failed him. All his hope and plans the past year hrtd centered in her brown eyes and trim little ankles. It was Luisita his fancy pictured opposite him at his solitary meals and Luisi ta beside him on the sunny side of tho patio; it was for her ho had planted his hollyhocks and mari golds, and it was Luisita who was to have been tho prop and compan ion of his failing years, for ho was many years her senior now, Luisita being only a littlo young thing, But Pablo's words soared high and above all his other thoughts. ' Never for a moment did his super stitious littlo soul 'doubt Pablo's power to call down a curso upon liim, and, of all people's, his was most to be feared, fur his grand mother had postessed tho gift of tho evil eye. "May tho bring a curso to whom soever" ..Ah., Luisitawas ..yorv lovely, but she was only "Luis'iln, aTi lohlj' whilo', to see Pablo overtaken by his own curso would bo vengeance absoluto and perfect, and tho savage within him arose anil clamored for revenge, stilling all tenderer feelings in its intensity. He was going away, he told her folks, far away, perhaps ten miles beyond the valley, and, Knowing Lu isita's glances had never wholly turned from the handsome figure of Pablo, he chuckled to himself at the obvious outcome. Luisita would be easily consoled, and when she was married to the hated Pablo, just when he thought himself comforta bly ensconced in the seventh heav en, the curse upon "whomsoever'' she married would descend. Then would he, Jo. e, tome back to gloat over him, mock him. jeer at him, watch tho IV, i! ure of his every un dertaking and recall the :vr.o of tho cursing. Oh, that would be a proud dayl Jose's wanderings covered many months. He penetrated not only ten but hundreds of miles beyond tho valley. He saw things and did things ho would have thought be yond belief in the shadow of his own little patio and returned at length with his horizon a tri.le broader, but his longing lo gloat over his fallen rival no w hit abated. So promptly the day after he reach ed home he betook himself to r-eo the desolation wrought upon Pablo during his absence, to taunt him with the curse wherewith he had ruined himself, to repeat the words "Stay there, then, till you die!" and so on, for he had it all at his tongue's end and would repeat it slowly while he watched his victim writhe and cringe before him. But as he made his way down the little, crooked street, his lips mov ing with the monologue he was pre paring, he slopped suddenly, and his jaw dropped. There sat Pablo Varo on tho sunny side of a little patio, looking the very happiest of men. and with good reason. The sun was warm, the subject of crops didn't bother him in the least, and Luisita, nestling beside him with the nina on her lap. was ineontestablv his. Not until then did Jose realize that ho had outwitted himself and that ho was many times a fool. Argo naut. LSKIJ IIEH TEETn. "It is strange," remarked Mrs. Manhattan, a refined looking wom an, whose -10 years of life had been passed in one house, "that people are so careless nowadays in giv ing recommendations to servants. Things have changed in that re spect as well as in many other ways since I began housekeeping." "You have always kept your serv ants so long," said a liatei.er, a young married woman, "that J thought you never had any trouble with servants." "Well," responded Mrs. Manhat tan, "the maid that always answer ed my doorbell you know, 1 prefer maids to manservants in the house left me last week, and I advert ed for another housemaid. Among tho many that applied for the posi tion was a young woman who had a very nice letter of recommendation from Mrs. Newlyrich. I engaged her. Yesterday I heard my new maid say to one of my friends who had called: 'Just put your card be tween my teeth, ma'am. My hands are wet.' ' llxchango. EATING BITERSTITIOSS OF THE I'lJIS. Tho coasters of tho Fiji islands will not cat until they can sit flat upon the ground directly over a tri angle made of three small fish bones. Then they only handle tho food with the left hand. The inhabitants of tho interior of the same islands will not partake of food while a cloud is in sight, espe cially if the cloud lies in the west, fearing that the Great Air Whale, whose bellowing (thunder) is often heard in that country, will pounce upon and utterly annihilate thera for such irreverence. She Declined. Few' American youths havo cares made for them. Those who deploro this and shun the stings of self effort may find touic in the reply of a western girl to an offer of marriage. A young man of moro book learning than forco of character lost the young wife who toiled to support him, returned to his na tive town for consolation nud found it. Some months later she too, passed away, and the sad youth soon appealed to a well known clergyman for assistance in lindiug a helpmate. The minister introduced him to a western girl of health and ener g",y, who the next day received a plaintive note from the widower. He declared that the Lord has made great infoads upon his mari tal affections, and it now seemed to be his will that she would re pt;r the breaches of his life. The reply which the clergy man keeps today as one of the choicest specimeus of a varied collection, reads simply: "Mend your own breeches." Youth's Companion. A BIT OF BUSINESS. Turned H'.h Kivul's I'iircl!U';e to Ills Own Account. A short lime ago the manager of cue (if the big stor.s in this city found that a rival establishment had just received a large consignment of a very lino quality of lace. Needle, s to say, Hint laco was also very ex pensive. He immediately sent one of his subordinates over to the rival store with instructions to buy half a yard of the aforesaid hue. This he lui,;.: up in a conspicuous position with a very legible price mark attached, and the price marked wa; very rea sonable. Then he gae some in structions to the girls behind tho counter and retired to await devel opments. Two shoppers sooa. liaj pe.i.-d along that way, and the piece of lace caught their at lent ion. "Isn't that just too beautiful!" exclaimed one of them. But instead of answering her di rectly her companion grasped her by the arm and whispered excited! v, "Look at the price !" In answer to their eager question the shopgirl answered nonchalantly- "That there lace? I don't think we've got any more. Wait a min ute." The two women waited while the girl consulted long and seriously with one of her fellows. The con sultation was about a dance which was to take place that evening, bat the would bo customers never know tho difference. When it was over, tho girl returned and informed them : "Sorry, but we're all out of that li.ee. ( i uess you can get some over in Blank's, though," mentioning the rival establishment. The two women hurried away, fearing thai the sup ply in the other store might also bo exhausted before their arrival. It wasn't, but Ihev did not b:iv anv lace, and, furthermore, thev advi.-c all their friends to slop at Hash's, because the prices tliere are so rea sonable. "But," they added, "you've got to get there early or the nicest things will be all sold out." New York Sun. the noY An Tin-: r.oo. There is no truer friendship than that of the boy and the dog. There are no happier days to which the grown man may look back with a tender regret for their passing than the days spent in the old home fields with the faithful four footed companion of youth. Confidence be tween boy and dog was perfect. The dog perhaps was not a thorough bred and had come into die wor minus a pedigree, but ll" boy ac cepted him for what he was : '.d in the blessed ingenuoiisiie.-s el' ;,ih;,'i may even "nave found an occasion of added pride in the d g in seine characteristic which he now kuovs was highly to the nnimai's di-or- !it as determined by the bench : I :. standards. And as for the d'w, en his part, too, he took the bov for what he was. asking of him no more than that he should comic i iuuI ,m make of himself a demigod for un stinted confidence, affection and worship. If the scientists would de vise a way to represent tho care free happiness ol boyhood days m sonic equivalent of loot pounds, the amount of it justly accredited to the companionship of bov and dog would bo expressed in many tons. ForesUand Stream. WAR STARTED nY GLASS OP WA TT. II. Tho war of tho Spanish succes sion was caused by a contest be tween Austria and Franco as to whether 1111 Austrian or a French prince should sit on the throne of Spain. The war had boon determin ed on for several years before the dentil of the old King Charles 11. but about the time of his death an English lady in Paris was raising 11 glass of water to her lips al a crowd ed reception. A French gentleman jostled against her and spilled the water 011 her dress. Her escort look up the matter, and a duel resulted, followed by so general a quarrel be tween the French and F.nglish resi dents that it was facetiously said the war was brought on by the up setting of a glass of water. rnorrcn. The firo of a legal examination n a hot one, but an accused person who stands its tost doesn't oft, n emerge with a character the better established. Aa individual of somewhat doubt ful appearance was applying for a situation as van driver. On bei:ig asked for references he mentioned one of the dealer's old hands, who was called in und questioned in lo the applicant's honesty. The ref eree rubbed his chin meditatively for a moment and said : "Honest? Well, guv'nor, his hon esty's bin moved ag'in end ag'in. Faith, bo's bin tried sivin times for stealin and cslicapcd every tnhv.o!" The applicant was not engaged. London Tit-15 its. After all wo must come back to the old truism; Unit ii.cu and women tire like water; they always lii id their true lovvl. And where you live happiest, that is your In' el. There's polluted water ii'id there's clear water. Hut one law is inexorable; tho closer you get to Nature, the truest and simplest thing there is because It is closest to God, tho clearer always will you Unci tho water. April Ladies' Homo Journal. :0.0i0m 0 0 000 ." 'i mm"a0 iipp 1100 rn 0000 01000 . l 0 P 0 01109. na 'n ' o 0 0 0. 'n 0t 0 m 4 v.f I t 10 " X HU K0 J Wo are mw ron.'ly Largest Stock Maw v;' h'iV'.j owr hud, and at prieos that bent ev ery thin;; in Uip-cyar-. iist by Tiitper :vt. In the bettor iui;i'i s, prices run from.'";, to lets. per !).;:, with Ceiling' v : d H.rd'!.s to mutch. ai ciiii huy paper for .:. g sod sized roosu for what tho express would cost you if you sent away for it, and yon get the paper just as cheap here. We How o our Shoes in shape to show you- a splendid stock cheaper than a year ago, and pr i.tior. We will have, by the time you see this, a lot of Summer Stuffs thsitwo know will please you. There is a new thingr . -.1 aw f.0 u' V.0 .t a, .10 y t A0 n '0 . 0 r. .-"ft 0 V0 A .0 '' M0 'J r.0 :: 1 r.ti 0 Mercerised that makes a heautifu and jrray stripes- loo and washes elegantly. 1 rw 0 W0 ..-;u A good Kag' Carpet lor cents. Mattings from Id cents up. Window Shades all l.i'ids and prices. See them. 1 4.1 ' e I ' ( a ; ' W 1 if a i 0 1 :l ; , 0 1 n Respectfully, G. I. REISNER & CO. 1 M 1 V. ( . tlX 9 ; i v ! . V! 0 . . ir.0l.00000P ifi. - j:0.t. THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS & t Covers the Field. Iii every part of the County taithful re porters are located that gather the daily happenings. Then there is the State and National, News, War News, a Department for the Farmer and Mechan ic, Latest Fashions for the, Ladies. The latest New York, Bal timore, Philadelphia Alarkets. The Sun day School Lesson, Helps for Christian Fndeavorers. and a Good Sermon for ev erybody. 3 !: it i i ! ! JOB DEPARTMENT IS COMPLETE. SALE EILLS, POSTERS, DODGERS, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, ENVELOPES, CARDS, Ac, In fact anything and everything in the hest style alone; that line. 8 Sample copies of the News sent to .my 1 of your friends cn I request, .' r :U"frtlrt fi 0T - - - 0 njn0r .00 00 00 0" 0 0ie - 0000 , 0 '., . 0' V..." ft r 0 0 k n W to show you tho of Wall Paper I 0 o 0T V0 0. ,r 0i 0. 0 0 0 0. 0 0 0A 0 Gingham, waist- ox-blood, blue, s like silk, and wears a ii o 0 la 0 0 n. v it ?5 0. r v ii 0 b 0 C2 0 0 V :t 0 0V..I 001. 0 m j 00 0 0 - - 0ti.0 s0a.r nu 0 00 000 lii:EULAND VALL12Y TIMK TA1JUC March IS, lsiol. I.i-i've no. no 4'no. (1 no. 8 no. 101 Hi) inclicMiT M:irl inMiur;.' !l.ll.'tM'.-LO 11 .... d-(Vmistle .... Yu'n'iv.Durtr ( ImmliiTslniixT.' Wuyiu'Nlim'i i MiiirnshurK... c vlilu I'lirl'.-le Mi'rhiuiicMiurtf,, 1 MlNlmi'i: An-, tliirrlnburir. Arr. 1'hilii A rr. Svw oik. Arr. Ilultlniorc.. A.M'tA. M!tA. 'I. Ml'. 2 mil ii i 7 :w. .. s ir.: f im.ia I'. H 3 171 7 x, (i 4 . . 4 l'r! K 4 L-.l I.' a ai .... 10 -:o in i: i ti. e: .... jtjinjiii 7 u . T 7 lis 7 .ri HI (lis I 8 ("1, 10 -.'ll 1 rK'ir8 u.,i'i u (Hi s :n .... S ft !'!! w II 'J.! i.i r -tit! ii i:i n 4j n"i U Hi! id us It; mi ' o st.jio riix w h ii ii i.; 7 Ml.... ii ': u J" ; m i." in A. M. 1 1 i: a 41" o 4o lu 4f i a 4r, X IT h 4711(1 -JO 4 ii 4 :.'." I! Kl h lj 3 fv) 7 13 7 13 3 III a 45 Hit i ;hi I'. M.l'. M.P. M. A. M. A. M. AilillUimnl trains will lisive Curllsie foi n.ir rlMiurj; il.iily, exuL-pt Suuiluv. lit 5.i'io u. ui.. ', u a. m.. irj.iu i. m.. Uip. in., il.lh p. in., uml from Mi-uliiinioimrK al il. 14 u. in.. 7..10 u. m.. Man. in.. !." p. in.. -'.:iti p. in., una 3.53 p. m.,5.20 p. ill., iinil il. in . m MoppiiiK ut second Klreet, lein istmr;,', lo U-t oil !.iNsiMjiu.rH, Trains No. s. 1 In nud '1 run Uuilv between 1 1 it wrsiown and llnrrisiiurv. No. a will inn thirty minutes line on Sundays These trains will -lop at inteiiuediute siaiioiis ou Suudayb. Ouily. t I:u.y except Sunday. Leave UO. I ;DO. 1 no, 5 no. 7ino. Oi ll.iltimoi-e i N"-v York ! l,l.i!M J Iliiivisljuii,' lliil.Jun-K Mci'dii iiic.sl'Urtf.. , l 'ani-.!e WwvnJe i MiiipensturK. . . 1 Wa.1. nesl.iiro. . . . J ' 'liiiliilier--ljtji-'.. j Mei eer nun: l iii-eneaslle .... I liat'iTstnw n .... Miii'liiivhuric 1 Ar. Winchester. i. m : a . M A. M ftt 8 6n 1"! Jfi! 8 III b!t 1 1 4f P. M )l X, 4 ia m t x ii a I 6: i a. ra II --'i'! 4 ft no, 7 ia a.") ;4 an a 4ti 4 an . .iia 4i S IS. s 5 Id! h il no' ii 6 is! H 1 1" 4i'i 1) H In id 7 Ho 10 7 ail io h ai'n a mlii is i a n.-,! 3 M' 4 Hi 4 37 4 fl I) 10 f Is 0 II fi 37 H i- 4M 3; i a a; i.i ia m 8 lf ii l ml 8 Xn J- s'iia i'aa 9 13 a I in 3.1 l a." I f; a r in v A. M A. 1'. M i'. ii. i e. ki. Oil. Andliioniilloe.il trains will leave HtirrixburK daily, except .Sunday rort'urlisle and inlertuedi ti'c seuions in ti. 3; ii. ul., a. no p. m., f.i.sp. ui H.as p. ni. and l.,n p. m., nlM) fr Mechanics linri;. ImlsliuiK und Inteiniediuie taullou ut i. i" a. in. and 3.a7 p. In. N'os. i. a and H run dully between llarrhsburK ! Yorli and Klioxvule iii I iitiiu palace s'.eeplnu oiun between U-iw ilu. lean., on u-uiu 1 wvt ; hiiii I ,ISI. j TlmiiiKii coaches to and from Philadelphia, on trains a and 4 east und 7 und a west. ; I 'ail v. ! I'aliy except Sunday. i on Suiiiuiys will leave IMiUudelphlu at 4 IT , 1). Ui. sou rm:uN i'knn'a u. k. thains. Mix. I il'iiH. iMlx.il Tt"i' I'. M 'l'.3i till tltl, nm I'as. TIkS P. M 4 Si I 4 I.I 3 Do ' 8 r.4 3 IV P. ,M. A m l.ve. Arr il :Vi i.'humbersburK. . 7 111. Marlon 8 lit! . .Mereerxlmrif. 8 fsi, Loudon. u i:." llichmond.... i. i I A Ml A M e ar, 1 1 f' 9 I3ll 3-: .S a;f In no Ii M ID ia Ii II 10 47 : ii ::i ii ns! II 3s II Iftl 8 4ii,il in 8 9 4 a 8 10 9 Sol P M A. 41 . ' A. U P. M ! ronncclion for Hll NtatloiiH ou (,'umberland Valiey Knliroud und I'enusylvuulu Ituilroau s si em. ft 11. A. Kiiiiu.K. J, F. Ikirn, Ijeu 1 I'ass. Agent. Supt. County Officeks. rresldcni Juiltre Hon. S. MeO. &wopo, Associate J uilKt.-s Leiuuol Kirk, i'eior Mor ion. rroiiiiinoiary. Aa,- Kruiik P. I.yneh. li-1 1 Kit Attorney lleorKO U Dunielii, Tre-i-ui cr Thro SI pes, s iierhT- I'anU I Shm-li,. 1 ii'imiy ShcrilT - Jaiut s Humcl, ,!ur i'oin'il,.loiiers---l.avid Kolx, buniuel 11, ll.'Chou-inilh. A.idMoiT.-.loim S, Harris, U, H. Myers, A. , 1 ii mln-rsoii, . , . Cimiiuw-loners-H. JC. Malot. A. V. Kelly John I'i.liei. I 'lei I, -l-'mnk Alasou. .i i.'oi oner - ' - 'oi my S'lrveynr Tunas I.iihe, Coiinly Supci ilitendent---t'lelri CheMllli!. A I ioi ue s - H' . Seoll Alexander. J. Nelson Slp's, Thonnis 1-. Sloan, y. MuN. ,ohusto:i, M. It shalluer. Ueo. il. DanleU, Johu 1-. Slues. . ADVERTISE IN The Fulton County New?,
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