FULTON COUNTY NEWS. THE BRIEF TIME. Brief time to ting, my dearie, brie! time to staff end elfrh; We only ny good morning end then food night gnnrihyl The eludow In the sunlight o'er ell the wide world glooms; A moan U in the music; the blight le In the - bloom. Brief time to love, mjr dearie. In springtime's roar beame; To drink the honey tweetncie, to dream the old, sweet dreamai The shadow In the eunlight morel to the breath of tlghs. And unwrn iplrlti ever kite down our dreaming area. Oh, dreams, like phantom flying where only shadows throsgl Oh, life too brief tor lighting, end life too brief for long! And the grprn world at our feet, dear, end over- hend the sky. And love thnt lave good morning only to weep gnodhyt Atlanta Constitution. DRESS THEIR OWN WOUNDS. 8om Bird That Possess Great Knowledge) of Surgery. Tliero are not a low birds that possess a knowlodgo of the prin ciples of Burgcry that is not far from supernatural. The woodcock, the partridge and some other birds nre able to dress their wounds with considerable skill. A French nat uralist says that on several occa sions he has killed woodcock that were, when shot, convalescing from wounds previously received. In every instance he found the old in jury neatly dressed with down plucked from tho stem of feathers and skillfully arranged over the wound evidently by the long beak of tho bird.' In somo instances a solid plnster was thus formed, and in others ligatures had been applied to wounded or broken limbs. One day ho killed a bird that evi dently had been severely wounded nc some recent period. The wound was covered and protected by a sort of network of feathers which had been plucked by the bird from its own body and so arranged as to form a plaster completely covering end protecting tho wounded sur face. It had evidently acted as hemostatic in the first place and subsequently as a shield covering the wound. Tho feathers were fair ly netted together, passing alter nately under and above each other and forming a textile fabric of great protective power. Birds are often found whose limbs have been broken by shot with the fractured ends neatly joined and ligated. M. Dumonteil tells of a woodcock that had been 6hot by a sportsman on the afternoon of a certain day. After a long search thrf.bird was given up, but it was discovered the next morning by an accident. In tho meantime the wounded legs were found to be neat ly ligated, an exquisitely neat band age having been placed around each limb. Tho poor bird had in dressing its wound entangled its bonk with somo long, soft feathers, and had it not been discovered it would have died of starvation. To ledo Blade. The Race of Life. I find the great thing in this world is not so much where we stand as in what direction we are moving. To reach the port of heaven we must sail sometimes with tho wind and sometimes against it, but we must sail and not drift, nor lie at anchor. There ia one very sad thing in old friendships to every mind which is really moving on ward. It is this: That ono cannot help using his earlier friends as the seaman uses the log to mark his progress. Every now and then we throw nn old schoolmate over tho stern with a string of thought tied to him and look I am afraid with a kind of luxurious and sanctimonious com passion to see the rate at which the string reels off whilo ho lies th ere bobbin? up and down, poor fellow 1 and wo are dashing along with tho white foam and bright 6parklo at our bows; the ruflled bosom of prosperity and progress, with a sprig of- diamond stuck in it! But this is only the sentimental side of tho matter, for grow we must if wo outgrow all that wo love. Oli ver Wendell Holmes. The Parched Mouth. It is not alono hot weather or hard work that makes your mouth dry. Anxiety, serious trouble gen erally, will parch your mouth and throat more quickly and effectively than anything else. There are persons who will not betray in the least degree by their looks and general demeanor that Ihcy are worried. Many criminals, for instance, appear as cool as cu cumbers, although they are inward ly much pcrturbod, but to an atten tive observer the Btate of their minds is made clear by tho parched mouth. t You may take it for granted that a person who is a prey to deep anx iety will show signs of difficulty in f-peaking. That is because his Mouth and throat are dried, and you will see that he rolls his tongue about in order, to moisten it. lie inust be a very cool individual who can prevent that sign of anxiety. Jucljjo Simpiiton presided over a session of motion court in Dauphin county Monday morn ing. Seveutoen decrees in divorce were lumdetl down aud as soon as the costs are paid, separation will bo granted. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right. A GHOST STORY. ' ' The Black Lady of the Royal Cattle of Darmstadt. Tho most distinguished ghost of all royal specters appears to be the Black Lady of the castle of Darm stadt. !n deep mourning she cornea to announce the d.v.th of somo mem bers of the families of tho grand dukes of Hesse or of the Bavarian royal family. Tho apparition of this lady has from time immemorial produced a sort of panic among tho troopp of tho garrison. Tho bold tst sentinels are afraid of her. One day a young officer of the grena diers solicited from. tho Grand Duke Louis I the favor of acting as senti nel at the door of tho chnpcl through which tho mysterious visit or was expected to pass. "If it is not a genuine ghost," ho said, "I will cure the practical joker of his nonsense." It was agreed that the officer thould order the phontom to halt and if it did not obey fire upon it. Tho grand duko and a few courtiers posted themselves in the vestry of tho chapel, from which they could see the path that, according to tho legend, the Black Lady always fol lowed. As midnight approached the gavcty of the royal group de creased. The clock struck 12. Be fore the sound of the Inst stroke had died awav they heard in the distance "Halt! Who goes there?" Then there wim a shtt. Tho grand duke and the people of his suit came out from their hid ing plaeo and ran into the court yard. . Tho brave young officer was stretched on the ground dead. Be side him lay his gun, the barrel of which wiw torn from the stock and twisted like a corkscrew. There was no wound of any sort on tho body. Shortly afterward Louis I died suddenly in the ducal palace. Naval Off ice n of the Port. The title of naval officer as ap plied to ono of the ofiicials of tho custom house has always been an enigma to most people, and very few have any idea of how it was created. The ollicc dates back to the colonial days when Charles II was king of England, and his broth er, after James II, was duke of York. James received a percentage of all customs receipts in America, and was also the lord high admiral of tho English navy. He had very little confidence in the men whom his brother selected as collectors of customs in this country, and in order to protect his own interests he in sisted on appointing a man whose duty it would bo to approve every permit issued by the collector before it would be valid. As lord high admiral he naturally selected these men from his own officers aud placed a naval officer in every cus tom house in the British provinces in America. Both the cilice and duties remain practically unchanged to this day, and the "naval officer," who is merely an auditor, must still countersign all permits. Mincing Parsley. There is a right way to do this a? well as in doing everything else. If the parsley is wet, dry it thorough ly in a towel; then pick the leaves from tho stems; gather the leaves closely between the thumb and two fingers, press tightly and hold on a board with tho fingers slanting iu such manner that the nails will pro lect tho ends of the fingers from tho. knife. With a sharp, pointed vege table knife cut through the parsley as close to the fingers as possible. In this way each stroke of tho knife does the work completely, the pars ley is minced fine and evenly and does not have to be gone over again. So many minutes are saved and per fect results obtained. This is what '"knowing just how" means to the busy housewife. Twelve times five minutes Biived makes an hour to rest from the busy routine of house hold cares, and surely that is worth the striving for. Lookt Are Deceptive. Visitor I've been in many asy lums, but I've never 6een such a dangerous, wild eyed lot of lunatics as that group over there, and they're without guards too! Attendant Why, man, those ain't lunatics. Visitor They ain't? Attendant I should "say not; they're visitors. v Visitor Visitors ! Attendant Yes, . sir; they're somo of tho leading members of the chess congress which is holding its convention down town. Detroit Today. The Origin of the Menu. A German gastronomioal publica tion gives the following account of the origin of tho menu: At the meeting of electors in ltegonsburg iu the year 1489 Elector Henry of Braunschweig attracted general no tice at a state dinner. IIo had a long paper before him, to which ho referred every time before ho order ed a dish. The Earl of Montford, who sat near him. asked him what he was reading. The elector silent ly handed the paper to his inter rogator. It contained a list of tho viands prepared for the occasion which the elector had ordered tho cook to write out for him. The idea cf having such a list bo pleased the illustrious assembly that they in troduced .it each in his own house hold, and sinco that time the fashion of having a menu has spread all over the civilized world. n a r i n r n n a l.vp. the meet healing eelve In the world. SCARED BY THE POPE. One Occasion When KnUer Wllhelm Lout Hla Self Possession. Kaiser Wilhclm, always a self possessed churactcr, was even as v lad equal to almost any emergency, but there was ono time in his life when his aplomb failed him com pletely, and that ym when he was received in a private audience by Leo XIII. Strange to say, the self possessed young emperor felt com pletely overawed by the presence of the holy father and his entourage. A gentleman who was present and witnessed the whole scene said that a student coming before a row of examiners or a culprit appearing before a court could not have look ed more frightened than did the cmcror when he stood between the folding doors of the audience hall as they opened before him. As he caught sight of the Pope in white garments, stiff, immobile, almost unearthly, surrounded by half a dozen cardinals in red robes, who were looking at him curiously, his half powerless right hand, in which he held his present for tho pope, a gold snuffbox, with his own portrait framed in rubies, shook to violently that he dropped tho treasure. The monsignore who was nearest, in Btooping to pick it up, bumped his head against that of the emperor, who was similarly engaged, and the shock so unnerved his majesty that he quite forgot the hel met which he held in his left hand and which fell to the ground in its turn. At last everything was put straight. His holiness was still quietlv smiling his everyday smile, and William advanced a few steps to deliver his little speech, which he did with a sulky voice. He look ed as furious as if he just suffered from the awkwardness of somebody else, and they say that 24 hours afterward his brow remained as closely knitted as those of a bear. Modern Society. Episcopal Heraldry. In the arms of tho archbishop of Canterbury there appears a decora tion somewhat like a clergyman's collar with an extended linen band, but it is intended to represent a nar row, circular strip of white wool supposed to bo shorn from tho lambs of St. Agnes at Home, which was worn round tho shoulders, and had two such hanging bands, one be fore and tho other behind, while tho crosses upon it are thought origi nally to represent the pins by which it was fastened to tho vestment. This precious strip was called a pall or pallium, and was peculiar to archbishops conferred on them by the pope, and, like most papal gifts, of a high market value. Expensive as was its possession, it was by no means a mere luxury, for by the decretals of Pope Gregory no act of an archbishop was valid without it. If he had not received it, he could not confer orders, con secrate churches or summon a coun cil. The small staff, tho head of, which appears inside the half circle formed by tho pallium as it falls over the shield, is the crozier, a staff with a cruciform hoad that is borne by or before an archbishop alone, though the simple pastoral staff with an ornamental crook, which merely denotes the office of a bishop, is often mistakenly called a crozier. Quiver. A Wonderful Steam Engine. In 1874 D. A. A. Buck, an in genious mechanic of Worcester, Mass., constructed a perfect steam engine of such lilliputian dimen sions as to gain for its maker tho plaudits of tho world. To go into e?act details the engine, boiler, pumps, governors and all were so exceedingly small as to only occupy a space seven-sixteenths of an inch in diameter, or about the area of an old fashioned silver three cent piece. It was only five-eighths of an inch high, yet it contained 148 distinct parts, nearly all of which were silver and gold. It was held together by 52 screws, the smallest being but one-hundredth of an inch in length. Tho engine had all tho valves, gear ing, etc., to be found on tho ordi nary horizontal engine. Three drops of water filled the boiler. The engine weighed but 15 grains when clear of the base plate. Tho diameter of tho cylinder was but one-sixteenth of aii inch; length of stroke, three-fifty-seconds of an inch. ' , Vanishing Bird Races. The flamingo and tho pink cur lew are no more, tho parrakect and egret are going fast, the white peli can is a tradition only, like tho dodo. Some birds increase under the protection of man because ho wages war on more destructive ene mies. Tho quail sots at naught tho brcachloader and the trap if allow ed to forage in the grainfields, but there are others that vanish before the face of man as does tho mist bo fore the morning sun. We may de lay tho end perhaps, but it is at lust the survival of the fit. Florida Times-Union, Testa For Precious 6toncs. Very little reliance can be placed on color as a test for p-aecious etoncs. All red stones are notv rubies nor white stones diamonds. There are yellow sapphires, 'green diamonds and blue spinels. In the1 diagnosis of precious stones it is al ways advisable to apply as many different tests as possible and to be guided by the result of them all, ns almost any single test may mislead. Exchange. it 15171 J ". By IL 1. CLEVELAND ttt)9ee)g Of tho thousands of Norwegians and Swedes set upon the prairies of the Dakotua 20 years ago compara tively few read or understood Eng lish. It f,-as surprising, though, how quickly they adjusted them selves to their new environment. Whilo the women worked in the prairie fields with the men, while all were tillers of the soil and carriers of burdens, they vet found time to master much of tho new tongue, to epen American schools and to pur chase American books and news papers. When the first hard winter came, many of the men and women willingly went to school on such days as tho blizzards permitted and pored over spelling books and arith metic with tho children. In the Hay Meadows school dis trict was a Norwegian family of tho name of Torgeson. The mother, Anna, was perhaps 22 or 23 years old. The father was 30. The three children wero toddlers, too young for school and books. Never theless when winter school opened, Anna Torgeson, with one child at her breast and two at her skirts, forced her way across the prairie to the sod schoolhouse and asked for admission. Torgeson himself did not go with her. Ho was one of the few who opposed any effort to change the order of things that had prevailed in the homo land. IIo pro posed to be a Norseman to the lask of his days. He would speak in no tongue but his own. He would go to no church but the "kirk," and that not existing on the prairies he would do without worship. lie wore his peaked hat, his exilod coat, his skin trousers and avoided' his American neighbors except bj he was forced to trado with trhoitL Although ho soon understood a few words of English when a land offico collector came for the last payment on his final proof notice, he would speak to him only in tho Norse tongue. Then the strong arm of the government reached out and Torgeson was frightened. IIo broke his vows and spoke in English until the title to his land was clear. Tho hay meadows district was a temperance community. The set tlers from tho distant lands of tho north were strongly religious, hard workers, moderate in all habits, kindly to all who met them. That Torgeson should be tho one among them to fail to rightly accept tho new life in the republic pained them. They earnestly labored with him, but he would not listen. When Anna Torgeson made known her de sire to attend the district school, ho swore loudly and, at first said she should not go. Later he answered her pleadings: "Go if you will, but you put some thing between us two you will never get over. I am as my fathers were. If you would be different, all right, but it will go hard with both of us later." Anna Torgeson was straight of limb and bluo of eyes. She was beautiful when Torgeson made her his brido. Mothorhood but added to her charms. She had mind, too quick witter! intelligence, a rare aptitude for knowing tho best and clinging to it. For her children's sake she believed she ought to at tend tho district school. When Torgeson finally gave his consent, ho wound her arms about his neck and kissed him long, but Torgeson pushed her away and growled. Ho would not surrender. He came to America but for gain; when that was had, he would return to his folkland unchanged. All through November and Do comber of that dreary winter. Anna Torgeson mado her way to the Bchoolhouse and worked for mas tery of the English tonguo. Torge 6on staid at the farm minding the cattle and their fodder or brooding over his pipe and cups. That his wife should not side with him was the bitterest thing he had to endure. Ho was not a bad man, only a cruelly obstinate one, and, having started on the wrong path, ho would r.ot turn back and find the riht one. IIo might have made Ida wife's winter a bright one. He could have taken out the sledge and driven her and the children tho short mile to the schoolhouse, but ho would not. No matter how deep tho snow and fierce tho winds, he let them go alone, unaided, un less neighbors gave a helping hand. When January, tho worst month of the season, came, ho made no ef fort to assist them. So wide was the gulf between husband and wife now that he even let tho New Year's day pass without the home celebra tion they had never missed before. Even that night, when Anna Torge bou came to where ho brooded in his chair and, weeping, begged him to bo the man of their first days, he pushed her from him and answered : "I am not of yours. I have not changed. It is you that has chang ed. Let it be." Anna Torgeson went on with the echo,;, praying every night to her uarf,. mat ner husband might yet .. t. ii ? ii i. ,iven uuu oo one wun ner again. ,lho school she was the most apt : dpi!, bho was tho first to learn to spell English rightly. Her neigh bors, many of whom had known her before her marriago, rejoiced over her progress. VTornvson will be proud of his wife ycf," they said. But Torgeson remained bitterly against her. Only tho babies gave her love and comfort. A January day came when the nui rose warm over the snow cow ed prairies and in tho air there was u fu!se whisper of spring. The hay meadows folk on their way to the Bchool shook their head. They had learned that this beauty of nature at such a time meant coming terror of blinding sleet and deathly cold. All through tho morning the sun shine flooded the interior of the schoolhouse and the water dripped from tho snow covered sod eaves, but the pupils within did not trust the warmth. At noon thev ate I their lunches br the onnn door, but none failed to notico tho growing grayness of the sky in the north and tho change in the sweep of the wind. When school closed, a frightful blizzard was upon them. Tho ther mometer had fallen to far below zero and tho air was filled with sleet that cut the skin like chopped glass. The twelve pupils of the school looked at each other in the growing darkness. Every woman present had a man to guide her homo but Anna Torgeson. Every child had a man protector but the children of Anna Torgeson. "The rest of you will go on," said Anna Torgeson. "There is some fuel here. I and my children will stay until this is over." Some offered to guido her homo before they went their own way, but she said the storm was growing wqrse every minute and they must hasten for their own safety. They scraped together such food as they had left from noon and gave it to her. It was not much for four mouths, but for tho baby there was Anna Torgeson's breast. Just as the others prepared to leave Anna Torgeou oalUtl to one : "Sty a marnent. Torgeson will worry. I will send him a note. Get it in him aotnehow when you can i&t lut mjky know I am safe." Ami the wrato in English. "Duar Husband: I am safe in the sdiool wtth tho babies. Don't worry about e. Annie Torgeson." Ir that afternoon, with the most awful starm ho had ever known howling about his home, Tojifeson got that note, and tho b'tfr did not dare to leave him for kis life so fierce was the blast. "I can't read it," grumbled Tor geson. So the other read it to him, and then Torgeson crumpled it in his hand and Baid: "Let her stay there. She cares more for the school than for mo." He sat before his good fire hour after hour, and once in awhile when he thought ho was unoljserved he would glance at the writing of the noto ho could not read. At mid night he could stand it no longer. Ho was Torgeson, the obstinate, but his wife and babies were over in that schoolhouse without much fuel or food. He took with hhn the man who had brought tho note, and they brought the horses out of the sta bles, and they fought as men never fought before against snow and cold, and they gained tho Bchool, a mile away, in two hours, and Torge son beat open the door, and the blast came with him, but tho anger and the old pain had gone from him forever. Bending over tho stove to keep herself and babies alive, Anna Tor geson heard his voice, knew by its note that out of the horror he had struggled with to reach her new love and hope had come, and she leaped to him and was caught in his arms, never to be put from him again. Chicago Eecord-IIerald. fishing Down chimneys. A Sinker as Necessary on the Lines as on Those Dropped In the 8ea. "Fish lines," said a man standing on a roof and apparently fishing with a drop lino down's chimney, "are, as you will observe if you will wait here a minute, not the only ones on which sinkers are used." As he spoke ho ceased alternately raising and lowering the line a little as he hofl been doing as though making tho bait activo to attract some nsh below and hauled up the line altogether, and on the end of it was seen not a bait, but a stubby, cylindrical brash of red splints, and below that a heavy sinker. What the man was fishing for in the chim ney was soot not to haul it up, but to dislodge itsp that it would fall to whore it coum' be taken out at tho chimney openings below. "In the ol4 days chimneys were bigger," this roof fisherman contin ed. '"They used to go down inside t chimneys to clean them, men or twyH, ftonest boys. You've heard, ao doubt, of people being stuck in a chimney, but now, with tho burn ing of hord coal and with less soot and ls need for big chimneys and with the economy of space due to the increasing valuo of land, chim neys aro mado smaller. The flues aro now so small that j'ou can't go down 'em, and you have to clean 'cm from the top. "Of course the brush has got to bo used enough to reach the sides of the flue and clean the soot off, and if there are projections inside the fluo or there is any change o direction m it the brush, being it self pretty largo, but not very havy, might lodge there and hptrc- be yond that point. Hepee the at taching of the sinkep To carry the brush down through the fluo and past obstructions that otherwise might stop itnd a pretty good big one it inuatTe. In fact, a sinker is as neec'a-y hj fishing down a chim ney ac iishLg on tho eea." Now V W 0X00X 0X0 0 0000 For the 0 We have the largest and best assortment of Ladies', Misses' and Children's Wraps we have ever shown. We can show you a Pur and i 0. 5 Bead Trimmed Capo, good length,at$1.00. Children's, as low as DOc. A nice Child's Coat, from 6 to 12 P vears. at 11.00. 0 Our regular stock of La dies Coats and Capes we be lieve to bo better than any previous year. Ladies' up-to-date Jackets in Blacks 0 0 0. 0 6 6 For Men Wo want to call special at tention 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 Overcoats 5 A tremendous pile at any price you want. We have a J Storm Coat that we defy the county on, at the price. o Shoes 0 We would like to talk Shoes. Ladies you know the Carlisle goods. If you . 4. 1 I 1 0 0 0 the Kreider every pair guaranteed to give satisfac tory wear. Respectfully, 6. W. REISNER & CO. 0 00 0 0.0 4 I THE I FULTON t COUNTY NEWS Covers the Field. 3f 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 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, Sc., J. In fact anything and everything in the best style along that line. Si copies of the News sent to any ot your friends on request, 4 0m00 00X0 0 aOe 0 0 100090 0000 0' 00 Ladies. and Modes and Blue and Gray, from $5.00 up. Every garment f trictly all right in quality and style. We have a splendid line of DRESS GOODS for Jacket Suits and Dresses. French Flannels for Waists. Silks in Waist and Dress patterns. Outing Cloths Cc up. Per cales for Waists. A very fair "Blanket 45 and 50c pair good size. A large lot of Bpleudid all wool Blankets in White, Red and Gray. & Boys. 8 with a satin lining at f 0.00 that is a Bumper. You want to see this suit. We know it cannot be matched any where for the money. o ; 0. 0 0 0 0 W 0 0 0 W 55 Little Boys' Suitees, from 4 to 8 years, from 90c to $2. See them. A splendid 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 W .J 0. 0 0. Y0 UMBERLAND VALLEY TIME TABLE. Nov 25, 1901. Leave no. 2!no eino. 8:no. 8no.lOI 110 Winchester...., MartlnNburtf.... Huifenitown .... OreenoiiHtle .... Mercers burg.... tA.M ? SO, 8 15 9 (xi P. M tP. M 2 15 8 03 8 50 A ri 7 85 S 2i 0 no 12 20 10 15 10 S5 11 0 &J 12 4i 4 14 8 SO 8 14 8 00 10 10 Chumbentburg.. Waynesboro Shlppcnaburg... Newvllle Carlisle 7 84 5 10 05 10 23 1 051 12 00 I 25 4 45, 8 85 S U);10 54 7 OS 7 M 6 o; ft 24 II 14 8 441 1 So 8 10 8 SO 8 50 7 hi 1 4: 6 25 8 50 Meuhanlcsburg,. 10 44 2 ai 10 Ml 10 2K 11 51 11 U) 2 1 e li 12 11 12 SO 4 25 7 18 2 SO A, M . LmisDurg Arr, Harrlsburg. Arr. Phlla Arr. New York. Arr. Baltimore.. 1 40 2 40 6 10 0 30 10 20 0 07 II IU 11 25 8 17 ft & 10 4H 6 47 8 OS e oo 4 25 7 13 t 3d 8 68! 12 10 8 11 P. u. 45 P. H P. A. U Additional east-bound local trains will run dally, except Sunday, as follows: Leave Ghamberaburg 8 00 a. ni leave Carlisle 6.45 a. m., 7.05 a. in., 12.40 p. m. 8.16 p. m.. 8.16 p. m.: leave Mechanlosburg 8.08 a. m., 7.2 a. m., 8.12 a. m.. 1.04 u. 111.. 2.30 n. m.. art n m a ail n. 8.S7 p. m. " Trains Noe. 8 and 110 run dally between Ha gerwtown and Harrlsburg and No. 8 fifteen mlnutea late on Sundays Dally. t Daily exoept Sunday. Leave no. lino. 8ino. 6, no. 7lno. 8, Baltimore.... New York... Fhila Harrlsburg... OMsburir P. H A. A.H 11 65 P. M p.h: 4 4 12 10 4 25 7 66 8 60 12 00 8 Oil II 40 8 25 4 85 7 551 2 65 II 20 b 00 8 40 11 45 12 40 12 05 6 SO MecbanTcsburg,. 4 On B 31 s'ie 8 OS 6 20 8 II! 8 SU 9 00 8 1 h 8 4X Carlisle Newvllle Shfppensburg... Waynesboro.... Chumbemburg. . Mercersburir 6 4: 12 27 4 01 4 23 4 SU 6 sr 6 6s 6 66 5 21 6 44 8 211 7 16 8 02 8 20 12 61 8 M 1 10 2 05 8 47 10 87 8 40 8 8(1 1 8 15 10 07 Oreenoastle .... 10 47, 7 Oo 10 00 tiagersiown .... Martlnsburg Ar. Winchester. 1 65 10 SO 7 27i 8 24 10 2; 2 17 10 II 10 II 65 8 10 A. V A. U, P. H. Additional local trains will leave Harrlsburg as follows: for tl'hanibersburg and Intermedi ate stations at 6.15 p. in., for Carlisle and inter mediate stations ai 9.37 a. m., 2.00 p. m., 5.15 p. in., 6.80 p. m.,11 01 p. m.talso forMeehanlOKbuig, Dlllsburg and intermediate slallonsat 7.00 a ui and 8.16 p. m. Nos. 1, 8 and 8 run dally between Hariisburic and Hagerstown. Pullman palaoe sleeping cars between New York and Knoxvllle, Tenn.. on trains 1 wet and 10 easv on trains t and 4 east and 7 and 8 west. - istiuy. t Daily exoept Sunday, t On Sundays will leave Philadelphia at 4A p. m. SOUTHERN PENN'A a B. TKA1NS. Pas. Pas. IMlx. r7 1(13 ll l'as. Mix. Pas. in tm tm AM A M P. M, I 8 45 11,50 4 20 8 83 1 1 82 4 08 8 00 10 10 8 90 7 8K 9 42 liS 7 SO 9 80 8 OO A. U P. M P. H. P. Ml a hi A h!Lt. Arr. .5 07 10 001 7 Ou Chamnersburg. 6 is 10 lit 1 20 Marlon .... t 65 10 47 8 16 ..Mercersburg. 6 15 II OH 8 50 Loudon.... 82 11 161 9 Ch ....Klcluuond... P. II. A. H. A. U. n..nHm,.l,.n ... All H.U.I..,.- .... ...v t 1 Valley Kallroad and Pennsylvania Railroad system. u. A. KiDiii.e. j, p. boyd, tien'l Pass. Agent. Supt. County Officers. ' ' President J mitre Hon. 8. MoO. Swope. Associate Judges Lemuel Kirk, David Nel son. Prothonotary, 4io, Frank P. Lyuob, District Attorney--4Jeorge B. Daniels, Treasurer Theo Sloes, Hberllt Daniel Sheets. Deputy Shoria Max Sheets. ' Jury Commissioners David Kots, Samuel H. Hockeusnilth, I Auditors John S. Harris, W. O. Duvls, H. L. Uarlaud. CommisslonersH. K. Malot. A. V. Kelly John Fisher. Clerk Frank Mason. ' ' . Cotoner County Surveyor-Jonaa.T.ake, County SuperluteudentClem Chcsnut. Attorneys W. Sooit Alexander, J. Nelson Slues, Thorns Sloan, V. MoN, Johnstou. M. K. bhaltuer. Ueu. li Daniels, John 1 . Bines. ADVERTISE IN Tts Ftltn C:::'j Z:zi. 0