F ULTON COUN'.Y NEWS. Long Distance Weeping. A vi'i-y allotting incident occur ad iu this city a few days ago, which incidentally proved expen sive to tho man who brought it about. A number of years ago two little girls in this city were left orphans, and though iu no way relatei.! were by chance brought up and kindly cared for by the same person. A strong affectum gre v up between tho two girls, which was warmer from the fact that neith er had any parents or brothers fir sisters to lavish their nffectnus upon, aud their love grew and strengthened as they grew to wo manhood. Finally some turn of the wheel of fortune separated them. One remained iu Portland and in due lime was happily married. The other went away "up country" aud finally was also happily mar ried. An intimate correspondence was kept up between the two for a few years, but was finally drop ped, owing to changes of location, aud years passed without either seeing or hearing of tho other. A short time ago the one living iu Portland heard that the other, with her husband, had taken up her residence in a town only 100 miles or so from this city. Cir cumstances redered it impracti cable that she should go on a jour ney at the time, aud her husband suggested that she have a talk with her friend over the long-distance telephoue. lie rang up the distant city and called for his wife's frier.d, and after a reasonable time was notifi ed that she was at the phone. Lie then called his wife to talk to her, nud the following conversation took place: "Is that you, Sadie?'' "Yes, is that you, Susie?" "Yes." Then both began crying for joy and kept it up for half an hour or more, without being able to say a Vword. 'Tho unfortunate man who had arranged the interview, seeing that his bill was mounting into the hundreds arid bid fair to con tinue to mount indefinitely, called it off for the time aud the two friends continued to cry without expense. A meeting between the two friends has been arranged for, a neither of their husbands is will ing to take the chances of financi al ruin by allowing them to tack le the telephone again. Morning Oregouiau. Some Odd Tales About Heredity. Doctors disagree as to the influ ence of heredity, says the Now York Sun. Some hold that a great deal hinges upon it; oth ers believe the contrary. ' There was a loan collection ol old portraits exhibited in London lately and a young girl was an orphau and wealthy but with out near relatives. As she- passed through the gal lery one particular portrait attrac ted her attention, aud she went back to it more than once. "It is such a nice kind face," said the girl, rather wistfully. "I imagiue my father might have looked like that had ho lived." As most of the pictures were ticketed- the visitor had purchas ed no catalogue, but, before goiug away, Miss B. bought one at the , entrance and made a last visit to the portrait for which she had felt so stroug au attraction. To her astonishmeut she . found hei own name opposite its number and learned on inquiry that the original was one of her direct an costors. Another occult coucidence or . psychological phenoinouou hap pened a few years ago to a South orristatesmanand financierwhoso family had ulwaya leeu of rank in his native State. This goutle- mau was overhauling old docu tuon ts and letters which hud been . Kionnl in a musty chest for years and iiHouded to publish auy of value. To his surprise, ho unfolded a letter, yellow and time-stained - which whs written in his own pe culiar handwriting, or soemed to have been written by hiir., al though the date wns two gener ations before his birth. The sig nature of the surname, which was tho same us his own, was sl m irkedly characteristic that lie "':ld scarcely hdievu his own li.cu'4 did not pea the letters. Historic Elephants. The history of the extinct mem bers of the elephant order has al ways proved of interest, because of the association of primitive man as a cou temporary of the mam moth. Older elephants than this big furred elophant are known to science, and amonj them stand out very prominently tho masto dons. One of the unsolved points regarding elephant history iu the past has been the nature of the links, which on tho evolution theory, are bound to exist by way of connecting these giaut creat ures with their ancestors. Dr. C, W. Andrews has been making a notable find in' Egypt, such as may servo to supply the gaps aud to produce the missing links in the elephant chain of descent. Ho has found the fossil remains of an auimal which, while smaller than the mastodons, is evideutly closely related to them on the one side. Beyond this comes anoth er fossil find of a still more prim itive elephant that takes us back in the family history to the hoof ed quadrupeds. This last form may come to be regarded as the point of departure of the elephant branch of the mammalian tree. The British museum will proba bly bo duly enriched by the exhi bition of these primitive types of elephant life. London Chronicle. Quaint and Curious. A three wheeled cab has made its appearance in Lon don. The third wheel runs in front of the vehicle, and is to save the passenger from accident should the horse fall. The umbrella has taken a firm hold upon the native of ludia, or at any rate, upon the Bengali. No less than 3,000,000 umbrellas are imported iuto the country every year. Sleepy grass is found in New Mexico, Texas aud Siberia. It has a most injurious effect on hor ses and sheep, being a strong narcotic or sedative, and causing profound sleep or stupor lasting 24 hours to 48 hours. Snow is said to offer surpris ing resistance to penetration by rille bullets. Experiments made in Norway have shown that a snow wall four feet thick is abso lutely proof against the Norwe gian army rifle a weapon of ex ceptional piercing power. Samuel Snell.of Holyoke, Mass. has a strauge hobby. Though 3 years old and wealthy, ho devo tes all his spare time to the mak ing of stone coffins. During the last j years he has made and disposed of over a hundred of these, asserting that they keep the body in au excellent state of preservation after burial. Now they are using a grass- cutting automobile in the West. An engagement ring is a neces sary adjunct to a prize flight. Our own misfortunes are al ways the greatest. Thehideof the hippopotamus iu some parts is fully two inches thick. Greek fire was probably made of bitumen, sulphur, naphtha and nitre. , Onions, in large quantities, are shipped from New Zealand to the United States. In Newfoundland aud Labrador cramps are said to bo guarded against by carrying a cod's head or a bone from a haddock caught without touching the boat. Owing to the unexampled pros perity of the whole country aud of every interest there never was a time when advertising brought better returns than it brings to day. There nover was a better time to increase trade and to es tablish a business couceru in the knowledgs and confidence of tho whole people. Philadelphia Kec ord. Small men with small purposes do not help make towns or cities lively and progressive. IV forgo ahead as acommunity there must bo plontyofpush and plenty of generosity among tho people, not tho middle class and poor alone, but the rich people also. There must be a spirit of generosity abroad in the corn m unity and the spirit of pinch must bo relegated to tho rear. We must look at things iu tho way that whatever helps tho town helps tho people in it. Whatever keeps tho town back, keeps in the roar all who have a living to make. Foley's Honey and Tilt cures voids, prevents pneumonia. THE BUFFALO BILL The fir-i nf (ho now ipiic of ten dollar bnli'alo hills va- placed in cir ruliilioti ly the treasury department Nov. t. Tho not o is named ImilVohill It ,".'M;se of the ocnlral figure, which i a larj,'e buffalo, standing in a posi tion ns though to charge on nn ene my. It is the largest single figure ever plneed on a Irea :'iry note. Al though the buffalo hill lias been in circulation only n short time, a num ber of them have found their way hack to the treasury for redemp tion, being either too mutilated, smeared or disfigured for farther use. In nil of the hills thus return ed the buffalo has been sillily disfig ured. The explanation for the short life of these hills is that they were put into circulation before being properly cured. There was a great demand for ten dollar notes at about the time the new ones came from the engraving and printing bureau, and the buffalo hills had to go out before they were properly cured. To Abolish Jackson City. The famous suburb which served ns an outlet of the tough element of Washington is about to he abolish ed. It is just across the bong bridge in Virginia and out of the jurisdic tion of the federal government. All elforts to suppress it, have been in vain, and it lias been the nightly scene of unrestrained lawlessness, disorder and crime. The Pennsyl vania 1'ailrnad company has bought it) the land on which the vicious re sorts of dnekson City stand, and these places will be torn down to make room for the new bridge across the river. When the owners found that there was a demand for their propertv, thev advanced the price, and for some of these resorts the Pennsylvania railroad paid enor mous sums. The company ink-mid to wipe out Jackson I'ily. He Bowed Low. Lieutenant Colonel the TTon. TT. C. I.egge, one of King Edward's equerries, is a man of medium height, soldierly looking, fair mus tached and possessed of tho happy knack of making himself agreeable to all and sundry, lie was one of the late queen's equerries and has many amusing tales to tell of his experiences at tho court. On one occasion a provincial mayor who was about to be knighted was so overcome by nervousness that when he knelt down he rolled upon the floor and remained there, looking for all the world like an overturned sheep, while her late majesty was hard put to it to keep her counte nance. Comet and Murdered Presidents. Kneke's comet has heralded the death by assassination of three pres idents of the United States. Presi dent Lincoln was assassinated on April ", is;!.",; EnckeV comet ap peared Jan. .'.", ISlio, and was visi ble five months. President (larfichl was the victim of the assassin's on slaught on July 2, IMS, and died Sept. 1!); Kncke's comet appeared Aug. 20, 1 SSI, and was visible to the naked eve. President McKinley wns attacked on Sept. (J and died on Sept. II, 11)01; Kncke's comet ap peared on Aug. 15, 1!)01, and was visible for several weeks. London IN ews. Pen Picture of Ibsen. Ibsen, plainly dressed though he i usually is iu a tightly buttoned black frock coat, is something of u j dandy within his limited scope. His j shirts are ever spotless, and his ties ! are irreproachable. 11ns is Lho only form of vanity of which the stern looking doctor is guilty. For tho rest, he is a rather taciturn individ ual, given to few words, uttered inj nn abrupt manner, and lie pays lit tle heed to outward manifestations I of politeness. lie is at his best aft er a hearty meal, but is hardly a clubbable person at nny time. Victoria's Skeptical GranCcon. There is a little s";ory nbout Prince Edward of Wales (old in The P.rit ish Weekly, which declares it to bo perfectly true, lie said the other day to a lady who wns visiting the royal children in their nursery, "Do you think that great-grandiuaimiia is quite happy in heaven?' '"Yes, dear." replied the lady. "Don't you think so ?" "Well, 1 am not quite sure," an swered the little prince. "You see, she will have to walk behind the nugcls there, and here she always walked in front." A "Sanriety" Incident. Harry Lehr, New York's popular "Squire of Dames," was importuned by a young woman from the west for an introduction to Mrs. Astor. "What excuse can I give for in troducing you?" objected Mr. Lehr. "I don't know you." "Of course not," persisted the other. "Therefore-it may make a hit and be a big card for us both." "Couldn't dream of it," smiled Mr. Lehr. "I f 1 favor Mrs. Astor, I may olfend othtr'ladies, and I can't afford to take the risk." New York Times. Man's Body In a Shark. Tho other day a Carnarvon man, who is engaged on the Liverpool steamship Canada, writing home to his relatives, referred to the capture of a big shark nt East l.oiulon, South Africa. When ripped open, tho monster, which measured eight een feet long, was found to have quite recently swallowed a soldier bodily. The man's body and uni form were intact save for a smell Imrtiui of one shoulder, which n..4 leeii cut off. London (llobe. " CONDENSED STORIES. How Millal; Secured Unconventional Treta-.vncy as a Mtckl. J. O. Jlillais in his life of his fa ther, the fairer:, artist, tells of tho immense pains mid trouble taken by the latter to secure good subjects and good models.' The best of these is the tale of the painting of "The Northwest Passage." .Millais was determined to have a real veteran adventurer as his model and knew that the fittest person wns thnt un conventional character Trelawncy, the friend of Bvron, privateer, pi rate aud the author of that extraor dinary work, "The Adventures of a Younger Son." Put Trelawncy, while retaining nil tho willfulness nud temper of youth, had become businesslike and a teetotaler in his eld age. lie was not going to sit for nothing, and he would not be painted with a glass of grog! Lady (then .Mrs.) Millais made fresh ad vances. At last Trelawncy said: "Well, I have some shares in a Turk ish bath. If you will take six tick ets at 's. (id. each, 1 will give your husband six sittings, one after each time you patronize the bath." So the mutter was arranged. Ibit Tre lawncy refused to have any grog painted in the glass. Millais put it iu afterward to give a needed bit of light ami color. Trelawncy was an gry, but tho grog is still in the glass. Wants Things as They Are. Some amusing stories are being told which illustrate Kaiser Wil helm's preference for having things represented as they nre rather than ns they might be. When the Ber lin sculptor, Schost, was command ed to model a statue of l'riedrich Wilhelin I. of Prussia to be placed in the imperial palace, he made the mistake of idealizing the monarch in his desire to produce a line work of nrt, and the consequence was that the lirst. sketches laid before the kaiser represented a majestic and calmly dignified figure which totally lacked the characteristics of l'riedrich Wilhelin. "My dear Schost," was Kaiser Wilhelm's crit icism after closely inspecting the sculptor's production, "you must represent the king more forcibly as inexorable simply. After nil, he wns a bearish fellow. Well, make him one." Schost followed the ad vice and produced a cast of the statue of the king which was full of energy, powerful and blunt. "Fa mous!" exclaimed the kaiser on be holding it. "Make him thus, only take his lint oil'. Where court cus toms rein one doll's the hat even when one is inconsiderate and h king." Not Her Idsal. Pudyard Kipling tells this story against himself: lie had been pre sented to a young hidv, who almost immediately began to whimper and If Iff e - V.' -1'Y 1 mm "on; I tuck iiii .' ven: v.-)-;:n: so nu and wo jiandsciu:: !" whoso eyes were so full of tears that he felt compelled to usk if she were ill or if anything were the matter. Looking nt him between her sobs, tho disappointed maiden broke out, "Oh, i thought you were so tall and so handsome!" Kelvin's Appropriate Keynote. The jubilee of tho submarine ca ble, says the London Express, re calls a little story of Lord Kelvin, At the time Professor Thomson, ns he was then, was engaged on his deep sea soundings work he was one day discovered by n visitor experi ment iug'witli a lung coil of wire. "What is that for?" inquired the visitor, pointing to the wire. "Making sounds," replied the pro fessor. "Ah," said the guest jocularly, "what kind of note does it give off ?" "The deep C, of course," enino the answer like a shot, ncompanied by the well known twinkle in the pro fessor's eye. , Partisan Arithmetic. An arithmetic published in Rich mond during the civil war contain ed the following example: "If one Confederate soldier can whip seven Yankees, how many Confederate sol diers will it take to whip forty-nino Yankees?" C n ! i rh. You Know. London tailors make a fortune in Xew York every spring and fail. They send their representative over from London, end th latter put up at the best hotels in New York city and take innumerable orders for suits of clothes from the younger members of the swell clubs who cannot go over nnd who desire to own En'.li-h clothes with tho Englhh murk in the neck of tho cout. New York Sun, MB i A DANGEROUS MAN. Of all tho strange methods in- , vented by man 1o separate him from , hfs trouble the rangest is that de- i vised by one Jose Diaz of the City j oi lexieo. dose una a stomacn ache. To euro it he made a bolus of dynnmite and inserted in it a deto nating cap, to which was attached a thread of copper wire. He swal lowed the bolus and with the cop per wire hanging from his lips went out to seek an electrical connection. He met a policeman lirst and un der questioning explained the situa tion. After an oflicial consultation Jose was taken into the suburbs. Ho was made to lie down, and a long rope was fastened to his feet. Then the copper wire was made fast to a fence, and three policemen at the other end of that long rope drew Jose nnd tho detonator apart. T'' ilvnnuiitc remained in his in ti : department, however, and Jose is now shunned as n dangerous ehuructer. She Can't Laugh. i Susie E. Jenkins, twenty years j old, of Philadelphia, suys: "I have seen nearly all the funny shows that : have come to Philadelphia in recent j years, and not one of them could t make me laugh. Mv mother has often tried to make ine laugh by tickling me, but even that won't work. Ever since I can remember people have been telling me funny "stories and cutting up all sorts of capers in the hope that I could bo induced to smile, but all their ef forts have been in vain. Xo; I have never consulted a doctor about it, for I have always enjoyed perfect health. I want to exhibit myself in public, and olfer a prize to any one who can make me laugh. It must be a queer sensation." An Ancient Bit of Cheese. An object of considerable interest was sold in London tho other day j no other than a preserved fragment of a "Protestant cheese." I'rom the i inscription on the base of the glass j shade we learn that in gratitude ' for his aole vindication of the Prot estant ascendenev in parliament on April 2T,, IS .'.), il. 11. H. the duke of York was presented by the in habitants of the county palatine of Chester with the largest cheese ever made 11!) pounds in weight of their own producing. The duke gave a small portion of this cheese to Mary Isabella, duchess of Kut lnnd, nnd it is this fragment, pre served by Professor dimming, which came under the hammer, re alizing $9. Washing In tho Philippines. An American sojourner in the Philippines says in a recent letter to friends at home: "I want to go home. I want some washing done. To show you how bad -I send you under separate cover a handkerchief and collar just back from the laun dry. Take the handkerchief out and bury it nnd snve the collar as a souvenir. They don't pretend to get the dirt out of your clothes here. Thev take them clown to the river, hard water and partly salt, souse them in, take them out, lay them on boards and with stones bat them full of holes and pound the buttons off. Then thev 6mooth them out I' with a plunk." A Tragical Joke. According to the San Mario (Ar- j gentina, south Italy) correspondent ! of the Independ.inec Beige, a wed- ding feast became "funeral baked I meats." A voung tradesman, M. ' Costello, was married last week to a country lass aged nineteen. In putting the ring on the bride's fin ger in church he let it fall. At the j breakfast one of the guests utilized tins mishap for the subject of a joke. Its effect on the bridegroom j was unforeseen, lie left the table "pale as death" and, retiring to the . nuptial chamber, blew out his brains with a revolver. Tho bride lias lost her reason. I Nordau Likes Markham. Mr. Edwin Markham's verse is tho object of tho queer approbation of the erratic lr. Max Nordic.!. "Edwin Markham," he declares, "is a great poet. I place him higher than Walt Whitman, as his form i-i more artistic nnd beautiful. There is sometimes a Miltonic ring in his verses nnd Swinburnian richness in his rhymes and rhythms. And ns to his philosophy nnd emotion, they are of the noblest kind. It honors Americans that Mr. Markham's pn; etry should havo been able to cre ate nt once a sensation anion-: them" The Longest Stone Arch Bridge. The work upon tho great stone arch bridgo which is being cructed by the Pennsylvania railroad across tho Susquehanna river at Kockville, about five miles abovo llarrisburg, is rapidly nearing completion. The masonry work of tho bridge, con sisting of forty-eight seventy foot spans, has been completed, and the contractors are now putting t lie as phalt covering over the arches. When this is completed, the work of filling in, grading nnd ballasting will bo begun and the four track put down. Work upon this the largest stone arch railroad bridgo in the world was begun less than two years ago. Philadelphia Reconl. It's queer that whilo tho ihty n ro growing; longer tho hours ar just us short. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right. r 000.0.0.00A0'0000. G. W. Reisner & Co.! 0 0. M0 c a 0 55 Coats and Canes 0 . ' 6 0 0 0. 0 0 0 0 0 Will sell, while they at less than cost. CAPES JJ that sold for 512 . now 53; 59 Capes at 56, and cheaper JS 5 ones at a proportionate cut. 0 COATS, 0. X V r 0 This season's goods that fj coats for 55; 56 coats for 4. V as 2ic 0 Children's capes 3? The stock of these goods C interested, come quick. 8 0 Men's and Boys' Winter Suits and 0 0 0 Bovs' Ovfirnnats. b 0 0 0 " 0 .0 S Overcoats that sold for $14, Zz to 2. in Doys we nave tnemtor 1.25. 1.50. 2.00 and no 0. 0 0 0. 0 T5 up not many left. We TT -0 -m JLaaies lumbers at !JUc. just half price -that are are as good as the best Come soon. . have your size. 0. 0 0. 0 0. Respect fully, G. W. REISNER & CO. 0 0 ,00M.0X0.00.00.0000.c - THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS Covers the 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 Department for the Farmer and Mechan t t i 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, BILLHEADS, LETTERHEADS, ENVELOPES, CARDS, Ac, In fact anything and everything in the best style along that ine. ?8 Sample copies of the News sent to any of your friends on request, - 0P0P'00.00 13 0 Less Than Cost il . K0 0A. last, their Capes and Coats 0 S3 0. 0 .0 a 0 0 sold for 510, now 57; 58 Children capes as low as low as 75 cents. is limited. If you are q M0 now 10; and so on down S will close out a lot of j y. ' v 0 0 0 0M. 0 -if we o 0 0 0 W 0. 00'.00000X00JiM,0X00 CUMBERLAND VALLEY TIME TABU-:. Nov 2.1, 1001. Leave no. 8 uo 4 no. 6 uo. 8 no. 10 110 A. M t. M tA. M,P. H P. M M Winchester 7 au t is B fci MtirtlnsburK 8 IN t irj 7 :is HuKerstown .... 6 50 9 0c IS 20 3 hi 8 ! 1(1 IS cirnenciwtle .... I II 6 ! 13 4'4 i II 8 u iu 3ft McrcerHlurK.... 8 Oil 10 10 8 .Ho OhuniUersburtf.. 1 31 9 4b 1 Oft 4 S 9 v6 10 r(3 Waynesboro 7 05 .... II! 00 8 lift I Shlppensburg... 7 53 10 051 1 45 SOI) 9 IM'tl It Newvllle 8 lojio Zt 1 ii bib 9 44.11 SO Carlisle H Su 10 44 2 03 6 50 10 oili 1 1 M Meohunlcsburg,. 8 50 11 on & 6 11 10 tit Hi II MllKburg 7 h .... I 40 6 10 Arr, Hiirrlsburg. 9 07 11 25 2 40 80 10 18 12 M Arr. Phil 11 48 3 17 6 47 10 So 4 itfi 4 6 Arr. New York. 2 13 6 53 8 08 8 53 7 13 7 18 Arr. Baltimore.. 12 10 8 11 6 00 9 45 2 80 2 80 A. M. P. M. P. M. P. M. A. . A, M . Additional eut'bound local truing will run dully, except .Sunday, us follows; l.euvo Chumhei-Hburg 6. 00 a. ni., leuve Curlisle 5.4n a. m.. 7.oft a. m., 12.40 p.m., 8.16 p. m,. 8.15 p. m.i leave MeebunlusburK U.uH a. m., 7.2B a. m., 8.12 a. iu.. 1.04 p. m., 2.30 p. m., 8.3M p. m., 6.80 p. m., 8.87 p. ni. TralnH Kos. 8 and 110 run dally between Hn IterHtown and Hiirrihburu and No. 2 fifteen minutes late on Sundays Dally. t Dally except Sunday. Leave no. no. 3ino. 6;no. 7, no. 9i Ilultlmore. ... New York... lJhlla Hariishurg. . . Dillsburif. P. H A. II AU II 65 7 65 11 20 5 00 r.u p.u 4 4U 12 10 4 25 7 55 8 bo: 'i'm 12 00 9 00 It 40 8 25 4 85 2 65 ;5 30 8 26 II 46 12 40 Mecluttiiosburg.. 4 On 8 48 4 01 5 -J 8 III 12 05 8 441 cut-llsle Newvllle Shlppensburg... Waynesboro.... Chumbersburg.. Mercersburg.... Cireeneastle .... Hanerwtown .... Murtinsburg Ar. Winchester. 6 4 -.' 8 Itt 8 8012 27 9 08 9 ill 9 47 1007 9 00112 61 4 23 4 SO 6 85 SO 9 IN 10 87 9 Stl I 10 8 OS 1 83 IRS S 40i 8 15 7 00 7 27 8 24l 9 10 t 68 10 47 6 65 10 cm 10 22 11 10 11 65 6 51 2 17 6 4 1 j 10 44; 10 30 n 2)1 7 15 A. U. A. H Additional looul trains will leave T'ai-rlsburir as follows: For ChumbersburK and Intermedi ate stutliim at 6.15 p. m for Carlisle aud Intur medlate stations ai 9.37 a. 111., 2.00 p. m., 5.1.S p. 111.. 11.30 p. ni.,11 in p. m.iulso forMtibanie-biii'g, Ullltburir and iuieruiedtuie statlousat 7.00 a. ni. anil 8. 15 p. m. Nos. 1, s nud 9 run dally between llarrisburg and HaKerstown. l'ullmun palace sleeping oars between Now York and KnoxvlUe, Teun.. on trulus 1 we.tt and 10 east. Through coaches to and from Phlladclpli! on trul 111. 2 and 4 east and 7 and 9 west. Dally. t Dully except Sunday. ' ' j on Sundays will leave Philadelphia at 4 Jki p. m. SOUTHEKN PKNN'A H. K. THAINS. Pas. W7 P. M 6 07 PUN. 118 P. M. 4 W) 4 in) 8 HO 3 OH 8 (V t IN 6 65 IS e 22 P. M P. M. Connection for all at ut Ions on Cuniberlurxt Valley Ruilroad and leniuylvttnt& Kailroatl aytttem. H. A. Rmm.a, J. V. Bom, Gn'l i'niw. A ffeot. Hupt. "KIDNEY DISEASES ere the moi;t fatal of all dis eases. CHI CV'O KIDNEY CURE It a IULlI O 6uaraat.fi. Rezedy or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the Best for Kidney and Bladder troubles. FRICB SOc ivxi HX ADVERTISE IN The Fulton tatj lizi. Pas. Mix. Pas. iMix. 13 ttll tt(4 tclll amah r.ve. Arr. A mI a m I0 00 7 00 Cbumbersburg.. 8 45ll So 10 12 7 20 Marlon 8 33:11 a.' 10 47 8 16 ..Meroei-sburg.. 8 " 10 lo 11 OH 8 60 lAiudon 7 88 9 43 II 15 9 c ....Hlchmond.... 7 so 9 80 A. H. A. M A. H P H. i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers