FULTON COUNTY NEWS. H OPPY'S VISIT 1 ftw -T0 T0WN 2 BT MAUD BUI ELDS. Mrs. Vincent had dismissed tha parlormaid by a gesture. "Con," she said to her son as the door closed on the flowing apron trings, "I've got a surprise for you." "Don't spring it on me all at once; this thundery weather always unhinges my nerves." "I've sent into the country for a ttifo for you." "Couldn't you find one in town?" looking up from his mayonnaise. "You can't tell what these town girls really are; they dress well, talk well, are all right to look at, but it's a mask, and I want you to be hnppv." "Who is this Phyllis from the country? Anything like the young lady whoso golden hair was hanging down her back ?" "Xonpenso, Con. She should be a denr, simple little soul." "They always are. I say, madre, whatever made you think of this comic opera stylo of thing?" "I was brought up in the country, as you know, Con, by simple, un worldly people. My foster sister Martha Perry married a small farm er and innkeeper called Elijah Wortley, and this girl, Martha's daughter, is named after me. I sent Barnes to the station in the broug ham to fetch her," she explained, walking to the window. Con roso from the piano with a smile of amusement as the door opened to admit Mrs. Vincent's maid housekeeper and a shv, child ish looking girl in a horribly pro vincial green frock and a cheap straw hat, trimmed by a palpably in competent milliner with white satin ribbon and impossible roses. Mrs. Vincent hurried forward and took the girl in a motherly em brace, for there was a look of ap peal, almost terror, in the soft hazel eyes. "You can go, Barnes," she said. "I will tako Ilepzibah to her room. Do they call you Ilepzibah, my dear?" "Eppy, ma'am." Con dropped a book and stooped hurriedly to pick it up. - "This is my oldest friend's daugh ter, Con," Mrs. Vincent 6aid, turn ing "to him with a severe face and still holding Ilepzibah by the- hand. "My dear, this young man is my adopted son." "I hope you're well," the "young man" paid amiably as the little trembling hand was transferred to his palm. "We must try and make things jolly for you while you're up." Ilepzibah looking more like a scared rabbit than anything, Mrs. Vincent put an arm round her shoulders, saying kindly: "Como and take your hat off, dear. Ring for tea, Con. Ilepzi bah will bo glad of some after her journey." The "young man," still smarting under that appellation, complied. "Weill" he commented inwardly, with a low whistle. "Of all the". Words failing him, ho shut the piano with a bang. To Ilepzibah's intense relief the "young man" was summoned away the following day on urgent busi ness connected with his late uncle's will and was absent about a month. He returned one evening toward the end of Juno, to learn that his aunt was out dining, but that "Miss Wortley" was in the morning room. Miss Wortley 1 He had forgotten her very existence. At the recol lection of the little country maid an amused smile played round his lips. "I'll just look in at Miss Wortley before I dress and have some din ner," ho said as the parlormaid took possession of his coat and bag. He opened tho morning room door and looked in. At tho far end stood a huge bowl of goldfish, and beside it oiftho floor sat a girl in tent on tho glittering inmates. Could this bo Ilepzibah, this dainty littlo maid in the white china Bilk frock, with the deftly arranged golden hair? He remembered the green garment and the straggling locks uijder tho straw hat. "How are you?" ho said aloud, crossing over to her side. Ilepzibah Parting to her feet, scar let from throat to brow. "Mrs. 7 incent did not expect you tonight," she said. "We tuado a record run or it would have been tomorrow morning. So you sre all alone, eh, Mimosa ?'' "J beg your pardon, sir." ! Con laughed pleasantly. "Oh, I think you must be the original goldfish, you know. May I call you 0 Mimosa San?" "If you like, Eir," looking up in wide eyed astonishment. "I do like why, here's the very thing," taking some largo yellow imarguerites from a vase. "Look here. You put these in your hair just behind your ears so and you're a geisha. See!" turning her toward . a mirror. "You do look jolly." They looked at the reflection to gether, as though it had been a pic ture. "Is it a game?" she asked, smiling at his amused face and forgetting her awe of him. "Yos; you shall sit on the floor iiiiiui ami sing to mo." .. . cant sligOnly" hymns." "Then, failing that, you shall come and talk to mo while I have my dinner; then we'll stroll in the gardens, and I'll have a smoke." Ilcpzilmh was delighted; this was going to. be better than watching goldfish and reading books. . Mrs. Vincent returned early, knowing she had left her little guest slono. Tho drawing room was light ed up and Con's well known voice was wafted into tho night. He was singing a little coon song that was a favorite with him Say, boys, have ftt sren gal That's look In' fer coon like ma while Ilepzibah sat near the piano softly humming tho tune after him, with the yellow daisios fastened in her waist belt and a happy smile in her eyes. Two months passed, and then there came a letter from Mrs. Wort ley, which said: "Mo and her father thinks Ep py's been long enough at yours, dear Ilepzibah, and, thankin you very much for your kindness, would be glad to have her home, bein' har vest an' us busy." "Oh, Con!" Mrs. Vincent cried. "Just as she was getting on so nice ly, and I'm so fond of her!" "Can't you write and ask them to leave her a bit longer?" looking up from his paper. At this juncture Ilepzibah came in, and Mrs. Vincent held the letter out to her. "Your mother wants you to go home, my dear," she said. "She thinks you have been here long enough." All tho color faded from Ilepzi bah's faco and it Mas a second ere she spoke. In that second Mrs. Vincent looked at Con, but he had gone back for his paper. "I have stayed a long time," Ilep zibah replied deliberately, so that there might be no betrayal in her voice. "I think mother is quite rigm, sue 11 ue uusy, as sno says. No word from Con. A cold dread j settled upon Mrs. Vincent's kind j heart. Had she brought suffering upon this child unwittingly? Her intentions had been for the best, j Sho blamed herself bitterly; she could not blame Con, who had laughed at her matchmaking from j the first and was laughing now niav- ! be. And Ilepzibah ? As though in answer the girl raised her eyes, and Mrs. Vincent was stricken with re morso at tho tale they told. "I don't reckon that's done our ' Eppy much good, goin' ter town, master," Mrs. Wortley told her bus- band for tho hundredth time. "The j mawther can't eat her vittles, an' 'as lost all her color." "Sho'll dew nicely in a while; them people has turned her head wi' a lot o' nonsense about fine clothes an' pianner playin'," returned Eli jah complacently. But Mrs. Wort ley was a mother, and mothers see with different eyes from other folks. Ilepzibah had been homo a week. Was it a week? It seemed like a decade. Sho had taken up the threads of her old life at once, but it was a woman not a child who went in and out a woman who was trying to forget. "Draw a pail o' water, Eppy," Mrs. Wortley called, looking up from her breadmaking. Ilepzibah took the pail and went out to the well. As sho fastened tho hook on to tho handle a man came round tho bend of the road whistling a well remembered tune. It was not tho postman this time. Bay, boyi, hare yer wen a gal Thaf a lookin' fer a coon Ilka me? The pail fell with a splash as. far as the chain would permit, and Ilep zibah, trembling from head to foot, turned to see Con vault tho gato and come across the grass with a word on his lips. "Mimosa!" Ten minutes passed, and- then Mrs. Wortley camo to tho back door to find all tho color returned to Hepzibah'8 chccjcs and a strange young man drawing tho bucket up from tho well. Chicago Tribune. Origin of an Old Saying. In the sixteenth century it waa generally stated that "spiders bo true signs of great stores of gold," a saying which arose thus: While a passage to Cathay was being sought by the northwest a mariner brought homo a stone which was announced to bo gold, and caused such a ferment that several vessels were fitted out for the express pur pose of collecting the precious metal. Frobisher in 1577 found on one of tho islands 'where he landed similar stones and an enormous number of spiders. Cornhill Maga zine. Kne Hi Man. A lawyer tells the following Btory concerning a client, something of a wag in his way. with whom ho had long kept an account. When the latter was finally made up, the bill, mostly for trifling services, covered several yards of foolscap, us tho items enumerated tho most minute details. When the client came around to Kettle, ho refused to enter tho oliice, !nit stood in tho door and, holding cue end of tho bill, unrolled tho voluminous document in the direc tion of his legal -adviser, with tho request that ho receipt it. "Come in," said tho lawyer in his most cordial tones. "Not much," replied the client. "You'd charge me rent if I did." Where there's a will there's a way for lawyers to break it. ram rTrTn ha l v n -trt moat hauling In th world. GREAT SHOEMAKERS. ) George Fox's 8ult of Leather and Rog er Shcrr.ian's Common 8enie. Carlylo said that one of the most remarkable incidents in history was that of the mnkiii" of (Jeorgc Fox's s'lit of leather, llo made it him self. The man, the first of tho Friends, and by trado a shoemaker, was one to whom the divine ideal of tho universe wined to be manifest ed. Fox made shoes until he be came so interested in tho books he had studied that he could not hold himself in check. lie had to preach. Ho had no clothes fit to wear, so ho made himself a leather suij that would withstand years of wear. Carlylo wrote, "Let some Angclo or Kosa picture George Fox on that morning when ho spread out his cutting board for the last lime and cut cowhides by unwonted patterns and stitched them together 'into one continuous all including case, the farewell service of his ewI." "Koger Sherman never said a foolish thinK in hi.-? life," said Thomas Jefferson. "Roger Sher man had more common sense than any other man I ever knew," said another eminent man. "When I come in late, and do not know which way to vote," said Fisher Ames, "I ask how Sherman voted. He always votes right." Sherman was one of the signers of the Decla ration of Independence. Ho was a shoemaker until ho was twenty-one years old. People used to point out where ho sat, where ho worked and studied, and where ho could set his book so that he could glance at it in tho interval of the work of the hammer and the awl. Of his con nection with tho "gentle craft" he M as never ashamed. He declared in congress against a certain contract for shoes. "The charges are ex orbitant," he snid, which fact he proved by. specifying tho cost of tho leather and the materials and of tho work. The minuteness with which this wns done excited surprise, and then ho said to tho committee, "I am by trade a shoemaker." Yes, a patriot and shoemaker he was, and in both capacities ho was pre-emi nent for common sense. .success. A Train Problem. It is seldom, indeed, that the fol lowing question is answered correct ly offhand: A train starts daily from San Francisco to New York and one daily from New York to San Fran cisco, the journey lasting five days. How many trains will a traveler niect in journeying from New Y'ork to San Francisco? About ninety-nine persons out of a hundred would say five trains, as a matter of course. The fact is over looked that every day during tho journey a fresh train is starting from the other end, while there arc five trains on the way to begin with. Consequently the traveler will meet not live trains, but ten. What an "Inch" of Rain Means. Few people can form a definite idea of what is involved in tho ex pression, "An inch of rain." It may aid such to follow this curious calculation. An acre is equal to G,272,G40 square inches. An inch deep of water on this area will bo as many cubic inches of water, which, at 227 to tho gallon, is 22,000 gallons. This immense quantity of water will weigh 220, 000 pounds, or 100 tons. One-hundredth of an inch alone is equal to one ton of water to the acre. What Your Temperature Should Be. The temperature of tho body of a hcalthv person varies from about 97 to 98 V- degrees F. It is low est between 2 a. m. and 4 a. m., and highest in tho afternoon between 4 p. m. and C p. m. The body may feel hot or cold at different times, but its actual temperature does not alle.r by as much as a singlo degree, whether a person in good health is at the hottest or coldest parts of the earth, eating or fasting, at rest or taking violent exercise. Webster and the Clock. Once whilo Daniel Webster was speaking in the senate on tho sub ject of internal improvements the senate clock began to strike, but in stead of striking twice at 2 p. m. it continued without cessation more than forty times. All eyes were turned to tho clock, and Mr. Webster remained silent until it had struck about twenty, when he thus appealed to tho chair: "Mr. President, the clock is out of order! I have the floor!" Making Sura of HI Honesty. As the daily train reached a Ver mont village tho other day an an tique looking dmno thrust her head out of the window opposite tho re freshment room and brielly said : "Sonny !" ' A bright looking boy came up to tho window. "Littlo boy," sho said, "have you a mother ?" "Yes, ma'am." "Do you go to school ?" "Yes, ma'am." "And are you faithful to your Studies?" "Yes, ma'am." "Do you say your prayers every night ?" "Yes, ma'am." ' "Can I trust you to do an errand for mo ?" "Yes, ma'am." "I think I can, too," said the lady, looking steadily down on tho manly face. "Here is live cents to get me an apple. Remember, Clod sees von." Boston (iyijiiur. IN CASE (tf FIRE. ' What to Do When a Person's Clothing- C;;oir,e3 Ignited. Quick, intelligent woik is impera tive when a person's clothing be comes ignilcil. Your first move should bo to get tho person at lenrth upon the floor. The easiest and safest way to accomplish this is by tripping. Then roll him over and over. This alono will go a long way toward smothering the flames, but at the same timo lay hold of a rug, cont or anything thick with which the operation can be more speedily and effectually completed. A pailful of water Mill answer tho purpose, perhaps, but do not tako even ten seconds to obtain it. It is of vital importance that you make use of the nearest means. Strive to keep tho flames away from tho upper half of the body, for that is tho most vulnerable portion of tho human anatomy. Should your own clothing catch fire it will require all of vour cour age and training to enable you to act rationally. The natural and al most overpowering impulse is to run. Dont; it oiily makes a bad matter rapidly worse. Lie down at once and roll yourself up in any thing which will asuit in smother ing the flames. Fire has a strong upward tendency, and it will soon envelop your whole body if you re main on your feet. The danger of your inhaling the flames is also greatly increased and internal burns are pretty uniformly fatal. So far I have used the masculine pronoun, lyit all of my directions apply with even more force to the women. It is a sad fact that three fourths of those who suffer from burns belong to the fair sex. This is attributable,, in a large measure, to the inflammable nature of their dress. Good I ousckceping. Cocoa, Cacao and Coca. "Speaking of confusion in the use of words," said a visitor to tho city from Nicaragua, "I read a story some time ago which was credited to a physician, and I was impressed with the belief that ho was either misquoted or that he had got slight ly mixed in his botany. Ho was talking about coca, cocaine, coco cola and things of that sort, and he attempted to straighten out some of the popular errors, but instead of doing so he made matins worse. "Now, I am engaged in tho busi ness of a cacao planter near San Carlos, and I believe I ought to know something about tho business. Cacao is one thing, cocoa is another and coca is still another. Cocoa is the ordinary cocoanut. Cocoa is not made from tho seed of tho chocolate tree, but chocolate is made from the seed of tho cacao, the broma cacao. It is a rather cu rious fact that this word cacao is invariably spelled incorrectly in nearly all advertisements. Any good botanical dictionary will show you tho difference between cocoa, the cocoanut palm; cacao, tho broma cacao, and coca, the cocaine shrub. Yet those words are com monly confused and misspelled in newspapers and other advertising mediums, and the .members of tho medical profession, it seems, arc not exempt from the same mistakes. They are separate things, with sepa rate properties, and have separate uses." New Orleans Times-Democrat. Tho Sense of Smell. Tho eyo is used only for seeing and the ear for hearing, but the nose is one of the organs that serve a double purpose. It is not only the scat of the sense of smell, but was intended to bo the principnl organ through which man should breathe. Its circuitous passages, warm and moist, protect the lungs by taking tho chill from tho in spired air and arresting irritating dust. Tho whole nose is not concerned in the act of smelling. Tho olfac tory nerves, which alone take cog nizance of odors, are situated in the upper third of tho nasal chambers, out of the lino .of ordinary, inhala tion. For this reason we do not usually notice odors unless they aie somewhat strong, but when we whiff draw the air into tho upper part of the nostrils and hold it there for a few moments we become aware of tho faintest scent. Changed Her Mind. The house was "handy to the street car lino" and in good repair. There was tho proper number of closets and the rontal was reason able, but before coming to terms tho house hunting matron said to tho agent: "It is only fair for mo to tell you that we have fivo boys." "That won't make any difference, ma'am," ho said, with a smile. "You will find big families of boys on both sides of you." "Oh, then I don't want tho house at all!" bIio exclaimed. "I want to' find a neighborhood whero there won't bo any boys but mine I" At last accounts she was still hunting. An editor of an exchange re cently got it off quite, truthfully wliou ho went at it in this Btyle: "A lawyer in a court room may c ill a man a liar, scoundrel, vil lain, or a thief, and no one will make a complaint when court ad journs. If a newspaper prints such reflections it is a libel suit or a dead editor. This is owing to tho fact that the people believe what an editor says. What a lawyer says cuts no figurQ." LOOSE MARRIAGE TIES. The Mohammedan Husband May Break His at Will. The Koran says tho husband may divorce his wifo without assigning any reason or giving any notice. Ho may rebuke, imprison and scourge her. lie may twico divorce and twico tako back the samo wom an, but if he a third timo divorce her sho cannot again become his wife until she has married and been divorced from some other man. (Sura, II, 230.) Yet Ibrahim Ilalebi says: "In tho absence of serious reasons no Musselman can justify divorco in the eyes of either religion or the law. If he abandon his wife, or put her away from simple caprice, he draws down upon himself the divine anger, for the curse of God,' said the prophet, 'rests upon him who re pudiates his wife capriciously.'" Practically, however, a Mohamme dan may whenever he pleases, with out assigning any reason, say to his wife, "Thou art divorced," and she must then return to her parents. (Amir' Ali, Personal Law of Mo hammedans, 332; Lane, Modern Egyptians, I, 150, 247.) Among most of tho Mohammedan peoples divorces are very frequent. According to Dr. Van der Berg, an even more fatal influence is exer cised on family life in the east by this laxity of tho marriage tie than by polygamy. In Cairo, according to Lane, there are not many men who have not divorced one wife if they have been married for a long time, and many men in Egypt have in tho course of two years married as many as twenty, thirty or more wives, while there are women ad vanced in age who have been wives to a dozen or more men successively. In Morocco a man repudiates his wifo on the slightest provocation and marries again. Among the Moors of the Sahara it is considered "low" for a couple to live very long together. (Westermarch, 519, 520.) On the other hand, in India, among the Mohammedans, divorce is seldom heard of. Green Bag. A Carlsbad Cure. Tho consulting room of a Carls bad physician seems about the last place in the world for humorous in cidents. Y'et this is what happened in one of these haunts of the sick the other day. A new patient, after having been thoroughly cross ex amined by the doctor, had received minute instructions as to diet, etc., and was dismissed with this injunc tion, "As for smoking, you must limit yourself to three cigars daily; three light cigars and no more." After a few days tho patient appears again in the consulting room. "Well, and how are you?" asks tho physician. "I should be all right," replies the patient, "but your orders about smoking are difficult to follow." "I am sorry," the doctor says categorically, "but no more than three cigars a day. You must just put up with it." "But, doctor, it really is an awful business. Wouldn't two a day do? I feel ill every timo I smoke." "Why, man, what in the world do you smoke for at all if that is the caje?" tho doctor roared. "But, doctor, wasn't it you your self who said three cigars a day and no more ?' Of course I thought they were part of tho cure and be gan upon them, though I've never in my life taken to smoking." Tab leau! Westminster Gazette. Deep Freezing. For many years scientists have been perplexed over the phenome non of a certain well at Yakutsk, Siberia. As long ago as 1828 a Russian merchant began to sink this noted well, and after working on it for three years gavo it up as a bad job, having at that time sunk it to h depth of thirty feet without getting through tho frozen ground. He communicated these facts to tho Russian Academy of Sciences, who sent men to take chargo of tho dig ging operation at tho wonderful well. These scientific gentlemen toiled away at their work for several years, but at last abandoned it when a depth of 3S2 feet had been reached, with tho earth still frozen as hard as a rock. In 1844 the academy had the temperature of tho soil at tho sides of the well taken at various depths. From tho data thus ob tained they camo to tho startling conclusion that tho ground was frozen to a depth exceeding COO feet. When People Ross Early. In mediaeval and modern Europo the prevailing practice down to the middle of the eighteenth century was to havo three meals a day that partaken of at midday, and not tho evening one, being the principal. In those days all classes rose early, 4 a. m. being tho usual hour, and one hour later breakfast was eaten. Twelve o'clock was tho established dining hour. , Supper, a less abun dant repetition of dinner, followed in tho evening.' The Wonderful Spider. Tho body of every spider contains four littlo masses, pierced with a multitude of holes (imperceptible to tho naked eye), each hole permitting tho passage of a singlo thread, oil the threads, to the amount of 1,000 to each mass, join together when they como out and make the single thread with which the spider spins Sts web, so that what we call a spider's thread consists of more than 4,000 threads united. 00 00r irtftn 700 000 anArtrtrtnn 00A000J00L0?0Jn.0?00.00 000 'K0 0m0-ii 0000 0000 For the We have the largest and J-? best assortment of Ladies', JU Misses' and Children's Wraps we havo ever shown. & We can show you a Fur and O Bead Trimmed Cane, good 0 length.atljil.OO. Children's, as low as 50c. A nice Child's Coat, from 6 to 12 vears. at fcl.OO. Our regular stock of La- 0 dies Coats and Canes we be- 0 1 liove to be better than any previous year. Ladies' up 0'. to-date Jackets iu Blacks 5 I For Men We want to call special at- teution to our Men's and Boys' Clothing in Suits and Overcoats. We have a line of Men's Suits in Black Cheviott strictly all wool 55 Overcoats 0. A tremendous pile at any 5 price you want. We hawe a Q Storm Coat that we defy the county on, at tho price. 0, 0 0. 0 0. 0 0. 0 o 0. 0 Shoes We would like to talk Shoes. Ladies you know the Carlisle goods. If you want a cheaper shoe we have the Kreider every pair guaranteed to give satisfac tory wear. 0 0 0. 0 o 0. 0 Respectfully, 6. W. REISNER & CO. 0 00 0.00 000 0000 00000000000.0.0v000.0,0M0' 00f 000 0.00 000 J0''0P.00 0J i the I FULTON I COUNTY t NFWS t Covers the Field. In every part of the County faithful re- t porters are located I that gather the daily happenings. I t , Then there is the State and National, I News, War News, a $ Department for the Farmer and Mechan l ic, Latest Fashions t for the Ladies. The t latest New York, Bal j timore, Philadelphia X Markets. The Sun X day School Lesson, $ Helps for Christian t Endeavorers, and a X Good Sermon for ev t erybody. I THE JOB DEPARTMENT I IS COMPLETE. SALE BILLS, t POSTERS, DODGERS, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, ENVELOPES, CARDS, &C, In fact anything and everything in the best style along that line." S Sample copies of the News sent to any t f: j ui yuui inciiui vi I request, . 1 3 00 0 000 0j Ladies, and'Modes and Blue and y Gray, from $5.00 up. Every garment ftrictly all right in g quality and style. 0 We have a splendid line of JJ DRESS GOODS for Jacket Suits and Dresses. French W Flannels for Waists. Silks ?? in Waist and Dress patterns. Outing Cloths 0c up. Per cales for Waists. A very fair Blanket 45 and 50c pair good size. A hirye lot of splendid all wool Blankets in White, Ked and Gray. 5 5 0. 0 & Boys. B with a satin lining at $G.OO that is a Bumper. You want to see this suit. We know it cannot be matched any where for the money. 8 c: 0 M0 0. 0 0 0 0 0 0A. 0. 0 o Little Boys' Suitees, from 4 to 8 years, from 90c to 2. See them. A spleudid lit tle overcoats, from 4 to 8 years. Men's Shoes $1.00 to $3.25. Children's, 18c to $1.25. Men's, 85c to $2.00. Boys' Boots, 6 to 10, 75c. 11-0, $1.25. Men.s Boots $1.25 to $3.00. Anything you want or ever got. 0 0 000 UMBERLAND VALLEY TIME TABLE. Nov 25, 1901. Leave uo. 2 do 4 no. 6 no. 8 no. 10 no A. U U. M tA. W P. H tP. U P. If Winchester 7 80 i 15 a do MurtlnNburg 8 lis 8 0.' 7 &' Huifemtown .... 6 fio 0 (10 12 20 8 AO 8 fl 10 IK Oreencustle I 11 9 12 42 4 14 8 14 10 8ft Meroerburg.... .... 8 00 10 10 8 Ho .... ChttDlbemburB.. 7 84 9 45 1 05 4 45 08 10 M Waynesboro 7 05.... 11! Oil 8 85.... Shlppensuurg... 7 M 10 05 1 85 6 OH 9 24 11 14 Newvllle 8 10 10 23 1 42 6 25 9 44 II 80 CnrllNlu 8 80 10 44 8 08 5 50 10 Ml MM Meehunleaburtf,. 8 50 II OH t 23 6 II 10 2 12 11 Dlllsburg 7 62 .... 1 40 6 10 Arr, Hurruiburg. 9 07 11 25 2 40 6 80 10 48 12 80 Arr. l'ulltt II 48 8 17 6 47 10 20 4 25 4 2ft Arr. New York. 18 A 68 8 08 8 58 7 18 7 18 Arr. Uultlmore.. 12 10 ill 00 9 45 2 80 2 80 A. U. P. U. P. M. P. U. A. M. A, H . Additional eaNthound l.tfml tvulnu win fun dully, ezuept Sunday, aa followx: Leave uuamoerxuurg o.oo a. m., leave Carlisle 6.46 a. m., 7.05 a. m., 18.40 p. m., 8.15 p. m 8.15 p. m.: leave Meehanlcsburir 6.0H a. m., 7.20 a. m., 8 12 a. in.. 1.04 d. m.. 2.80 d. in.. 8.8IS n. m . 6.80 n in 8.37 p. m. Truins Nob. 8 and 110 run dally between Ila Keratown and Harriaburg and No. 2 Ufteen minutes late on Sundaya - imny. t Daily exeept Sunday. Leave no. lino. 3ino. 6. no. 7, no. 9 Bl timore P. H A. H 11 65 7 65 P M P. M New York .8 60 12 00 9 on II 40 4 35 2 65 J5 80 8 5 Phlla II 20 6 00 8 40 11 45 12 40 Hurrisburg DIllHburg Mechutiiuaburg., Carlisle Newvllle Shlppensburg... Waynesboro.... 8 25 4 OA 8 481 6 20 12 051 8 4 9 08 9 20 9 47 io'iw 6 4' 80 12 27 4 01 e 02 6 20 0012 61 4 2.1 4 3l' I 10 2 05 Chumbersburg. . Mercersburg.... 5 35 6 68 6 40 8 15 7 00 1 3: 6 65 Ureeuouslle .... 1 65 2 17! 6 21 10 30 Hairerstown 7 27 8 24 Martlnsburg 6 44IO 44 8 2l... 7 15 ... Ar. w lnoneatcr. 9 10 A. M P. U.P. M.I Additional looal traina will leavA iTnrHwiim ir bh follows: For Chambersburg and Intermedi ate stations at 5.16 p. m., lor Carlisle aud inter mediate stations at 9.37 a. in., 2.00 p. m.. 6.15 p. m., 0.30 p. m.,11 01 p. m.ialso forMeehanlosbuig, Dillsburg and Intermediate atutionsut 7.00 a. m. and 8.15 p. in. Nos. 1, 8 and 9 run dally between BarrUburg and Hagerstown. Pullman palace sleeping oara between New York and Knoxvllle, Tenn., on trains 1 west and 10 east. Through, ooaobea to and from Philadelphia on traina 2 aud 4 east and 7 and 9 west. uany. Daily except Sunday. X On Sundays will leave Philadelphia at 4 SC p. m. SOUTUKRN PENN'A B. R TKAINS. Pas. Pas. Mix. I Paa. Mix. I Pus. 103 ll t84 tH twi 4 ii A N:M. Arr. aha up. H, 10 00 7 ooiChanibersburg.. 8 4h II 60 4 20 10 12 1 20 Marlon 8 33 II 82 4 Od 10 47 8 16 ..Meroersburg.. 8 OHIO 10 8 80 11 m 8 611 Loudon 7 88! 9 4? 8 08 11 15 9 05 ....Kiohmond.... 7 80 9 80 8 00 A. M . A. M A. H P. M. P. M. W7 r. m 6 07' 6 18 6 651 a i5 a 22 P. M Conneotlon for all stations on Cumborlutid Valley Uallroad aud Pennsylvania Kuliroud system. . U. A. Rinwja, J, V. Botd, ' Ueu'i Pass. Agent. Uupt. County Officers. President Judge Ron. S. MoO. Swnpe. Associate Judges Lemuel Kirk, David Nel son. Protlionotary, &o. Frank P. Lynch District Attorney Ueorge . Daniels, Treasurer Tueo Sipes, Sheriff Dunlel Sheets. Depif- tmi-tfl Max Sheets. ' .snlonera- David Bou, Samuel 11, 'VUHttllth, .airs John 8. Karris, W. C. Duvla, S.'l' VMiarliind. Commissioners H. K. Mikjol, A. V. Kelly John Kisher, Clerk Frauk Mason. Surveyor Jonas I-aae, Couuty Superintendent Clem Chesnut Attorneys W. Scott Alexander. J. N)iri Sloes, Thomas F. Sloim, '. McN, Johnston, M. H. KhaSuer, Ueu. II. Unuiela, Jolio 1 . Sloes. ADVERTISE IN Tbe Fulton Ccunty tas,