FULTON COUNTY NEWS. Published Every Thursday. B. W. PECK, Editor and Proprietor. AlcCONNELLSBURG, PA. MARCH 12, 1903. Published Weekly. 51.00 per Annum in Advance. AHVKKTIS1 Nil KATRS. 1'i-r square of lines 3 times II M. 1'rr xjnartr e;i''h NUhvoituent Insertion... A!l mi vi't t iM'rnnts triM'rteil fur lesa three nuir.th'. eliitnred ly the square. V). than :i mo. .lf '". . am. .. 40.10. I vr. : '.no h MM 5 .00 f ru-f)irUi enliiinn. One-h;iif e.iumm.... m" '-'luiiin J-.i no. I 4ii.m. I K'i.00. No'rilliL' Insert ed for levs th.in (1. L. rofe.ss.oual Cards one year K. A VAP OF WOOD. A map of Oklahoma and Indian Territory, showing all . political divisions and the priucipal water coursos, made entirely in mar iiotry of forty-three kinds of the various woods indigenous to the two .Territories, is a standing at traction on the floor of the Lower House of the Oidahoma Legisla ture. It is handiwork of S. O. Moreland, of Shawnee, a stone mason with no technical knowl edge of cabinet work, and in the makiug occupied the spare time of the past nine months. In size it is about three by four feet. The border, representing the white paper upon which maps are printed, is cottonwood, the most widely and evenly distributed of Western trees. It is framed in black walnut, with heavily turned pilasters at the end, and is under glass. The various bits of wood composing it are sawed to show the grain to the best advantage, highly polished and shaped to conform exactly to the territorial subdivisions shown on the latest published maps. The map will be given a prominent place in the Oklahoma exhibit at the Louisi ana Purchase reposition. The woods used for the several counties and reservations are: 1 .paver, red cedar; "Woodward, willow; Wood, red elm; Grant, blackjack; Garticld, bois d'arc; Kay, hickory elm; Noble, hack berry; Pawnee, box elder; Payne, cotfee beau: Logan, black walnut; Kiugtisher, honey locust; Blaine, white sumac; Dewey, wild cherry; Day, china berry; Koger Mills, red bud; Cutler, catalpa; Washita black locust; Greer, sycamore; Kiowa, soft maple; Caddo, chit tiiii; Comanche, burr oak; Cana dian, water elm: Oklahoma, per simmon; Cleveland, birch; Lincoln shell bark hickory; Pottawatomie, mulberry. Reservations Qua paw, grapevine; Peoria, paradise; Ottawa, white locustj'Wyandotte, irouwood; Kaw, black hickory; Osage, ash; Seneca, burr oak. Nations Creek, rod oak; Choc taw, pecan; Chickasaw, yellow pine; Seminle, pawpaw; Chero kee, white oak. GRASSHOPPERS IN UTAH. One cent a pound will be paid for grass hoppers if the Senate concurs in the House amendment to Senator C. P. Lar sen's Grass hopper bill, aud if the Governor gives his approval. The House, after considerable debate, passed the bill with one amendment, re ducing the bounty from li to 1 ceut a pound, which makes the rate GO cents a bushel. The de bate brought out considerable in formation about grasshoppers, tho lairs, haunts, ravages and modes of capture. No soouerhad the bill come up when Child of Weber county, rose to oppose it. "It's time to draw the lineon this giving of bounties," he said. "We have grasshoppers in our county, but we dout ask the State to como to our rescue. I believe we ought to leave this to the county com missioners. If this thing goes on we'll have grasshopper hatch ries down south." Chipman told of the experience in Utah county, where 50 cents a bushel of sixty pounds was paid, the to tal amount expended last season being $25000. Austin moved an amendment cutting the bounty rato from H to 1 ceut a' pound. Child brought out the information that eight or ten bushels of hop pers could be caught in a day, and suggested that at this rato it would bo more profitable to raise grasshoppers than wheat. Mc . Farland tried to strike out the clause making an appropriation, but failed. Anderson wanted the bounty fixed at 50 cents a bushel, but failed. Tictjen explained i that in Utah county the grasshop per s had in mauy places destroy' ed 90 per cent, of the crop. He I told how the insects were usually caught. Either just at dawn or just after suuset a coupla of men carry between them on horso back a long frame, over which canvas is stretched, and lope along over the field. The hoppers ily up and are caught in the can vas sack. Austin's amendment j was finally adopted. j Stewart offered an amendment j providing that the State pay half instead of all the bounty. This was lost, and then the bill was put on its final passage and carried. Salt Lake (Utah) Herald. FEAUFUL ODDS AGAINST HIM. Bedridden, alone and destitute. Such, in briet was the condition of an old soldier by name of J. J. Havens, Versailles, O. For years he was troubled with Kidney dis ease and neither doctors nor med icines gave him relief. At length he tried Electric Bitters. It put him on his feet in short order and now he testifies. "I'm on the road to complete recovery." Best on earth for Liver and Kidney trou bles and all forms of Stomach and bowel complaints, only 50c Guar anteed by W. S. Dickson. Drug gist. CANDLE FISH. Alfred Yngvo of Castle Valley, has in his library a package tied with red silk that resembles a bundle of smoked herring. In a visitor's presence the other even ing he took one of the long, lean, shriveled fish out of this bundle, held a lighted match to its head, and it began to burn with a clear llame like a candle. He used it as a candle, indeed, in leading his visitor in the dusk through his house, exhibiting his bibelots and treasures. "But this fish this, fish that burns like a candle what is it, anyway the stranger asked. "It is a candle fish, a thaleich thys pacificus," returned Mr. Yngvo. "It is very fat, and the Indians eat it, use it for illumina tive purposes and also make a calendar out of it. "It is fourteen inches long and as round as a sausage. It looks like a smelt. Not till March does it begin to run, and the Indians hail its appearance as a harbinger of warm weather a sign of the spring's coming. They rejoice then; they celebrate their Easter festival. Thus is the fish a calen dar. "It is a first rate candle, as you see. That is because it is so full of oily fat. It can be burned either with or without a wick. These that I have brought home with me have wicks in them; they burn better so. But without wicks they burn pretty well, though then they smoke a little and have a fishy odor. "They are eaten in oil. I tried them once, but it was no go. They were too oleaginous for me." IN A DYNAMITE FACTORY. Dynamite factories are in full swing near Dover aud Farming dale, N. J. and the men who work in them seem well content with their dangerous occupation. They wear rubber soled shoes, and their tools are covered with rubber or are made or wood, so as to avoid the possibility of fric tion and consequent accident. As a further safeguard the va- i ious utensils in which the deadly explosive is mixed or manipula ted are lined with lead, and a mis hap is of rare occurrence. Nev ertheless, these men know that the fabrication of dynamite con 8titutes a work of danger, and many of them develop "nerves" when they are now at tho busi ness. This trouble wears off quickly, or, as in some instances, not at all, and the victim is seized with nervous chills and tremors whenever a loud noise is heard in tho factory. Finally he is obliged to give up his position and seek work of a more congenial nature, The men are paid from 2 to 12.25 per day, and the labor is not papticularly heavy, nor are tho hours as long as those of other workmen. No smoking is allow ed from the moment they enter the factory until they leave, and only men of quiet, steady habits are engaged. A spirit of good comradeship seems to exist bo tween tho workers, and when op portuuity presents itself they talk to each other in tho most friendly way. But woe betide oue of their number who earns for himself the sobriquetof "But ter Fingers, "a term applied to in dividuals who allow things to slip from their hands to the floor. He is sure to earn tho enmity of his companions. This is due to the fact that sometimes a slight jar, such as is caused by the drop plug of even a small substance, will precipitate an accident, and the culprit who evinces such care lessness more than once may as well resign gracefully before he is frozen out by his fellows. Tho dynamite workers are a very intelligent body of men. Ma ny of them possess a comprehen sive knowledge of chemistry and can tell visitors to tho factory all about the destructive ageut which they handle under tho direction of scientists. Oue of these work men, a middle aged Swede, claims Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dy namite, as a relative. What ho does not know about explosives is not worth knowing. He talks of the properties of nitro glycerine with the fluency of oue who has made an exhaustive investigation of tho subject, and he says that he devotes every spare moment to experimental physics. Why a man of his typo should elect to re main in a dynamite factory in the role of an ordinary workman is a problem which he alone can solve. But evidently he likes his job in the nitroglycerine department and he talks enthusiastically of the results achieved by his distin guished relative's invention, not only in warfare, but in tho works of peace, such as the mining ope rations of New York's rapid tran sit underground system, which will preseutly do so much to fa cilitate travel and tratlic. Men of various nationalities work side by side in these New Jersey factories, and when rep resentatives of tho different coun tries were asked if they minded the element of danger in their daily labors they answered in the negative, and a few of the more communicative workers express ed the opinion that there was more chance of being killed in Philadelphia by a trolley car or automobile than by an explosion at their post of duty. HUGE BANK CHECKS. Wall street banking these days involves the use of some very large checks. Single items for $5,000,000 or $10,000,000 are fre- iiuently seeu, says the New York evening Post, aud much greater amounts are sometimes transfer red through the interchange of a narrow slip of paper. Most of these items are collected through the clearing house, except in cases whero they are deposited in tho bank on which they are drawn. At the time that the Third Ave nue railroad changed hands, two checks aggregating $34,500,000, were given out. One of the checks (for $17,000,000) passed through the clearing house May 1900. It was drawn by Kuhn, Loeb & Co., on the National City Bank, and was collected by tho Bauk of Commerce for tho Morton Trust Company. Another check, drawn by the same firm for $17,500,000 on the bank of Commerce, did not pass through the clearing house, it being collected by tho Morton Trust Company from the bank di rect. Previous to that, on Febru ary 1, 1901, a check for $23,127, 000 was drawn by J. P. Morgan & Co., on the First National Bank. That was also collected direct without passing through tho clearing house. In connection with tho purchase of Southern Pacific stock by the Union Pacific Company, a check for $14,890,000 was drawn on the Mercantile Trust Company March 5, 1901. The check given a fortnight ago in payment of Lake Shore's hold ings of Reading stock was for $21,500,000, and ranks, so far as knowu, as tho second largest check over used in local banking. An interesting question often asked in Wall street concerns tho amount of capital that a large bank could raise at an hour's no tice. That Is, how much accom modation could a bank extend a customer unexpectedly confront ed with pressing need, or for tho purpose of financing a great deal with. A banker of international experience is authority for the statement that Wall street facili Your Column. To snow our appreciation of the way In which the Fulton Count; New In being adopt ed Into the home of the people of thin county, we have set apart inm column for the FREE use of our suuscrlbem.for advertising purposes, ubject to the following conditions: 1. It Is free only to those who are paid-up sub scriber. 2. Only personal property can be advertised. . Notices must not exceed 80 w rds. 4. All "legal" notlors excluded It. Not free to merchants, or any one to adver tise goods sold under a mercantile license. The primary object of this column Is to af ford farmers, and folks who are not In public business, an opportunity to bring to public at tention products or stocks they may have to sell, or may want to buy. Now. this space Is yurs; If you wanttobuy a iore, If you want hired help, If you want to borrow money. If you want to sell a pig, a bug gy, some hay. a goose, or If you want to adver tise for a wife -this column Is vours. The New Is reud weekly by eight thousand people, uml Is the best advertising medium In the couniv. Jurors. List of jurors drawn to serve at March term of court at Mc Counellsburg, beginning Monday March Hi, 1903 at 2 o'clock P. M. GKAXD JUKY. Ayk. Frank Duffy, Charles Nesbit, Abner McLucas. Belfast. M. Truax, Frank Layton. Bkcsh Cuekk. T. H. Akers, Dublin. G. W. Comerer, Ir win Cook, James Stevens. McConnellshuhg Valentino Iloupt, C. C Bender. Licking Cueek. Geo. W. Mel lott, Johnson Wilson, W. Scott Brant. I aylou. John W. Bergstres ser, Samuel Speck, Simon Fix. Thompson. JamesC. Snyder, Grant Brakeall, Scott Gordon. Ton. David Hershey, John Forney. Union. William Schetrompf. Wells. Warren Anderson. PETIT JUIiY. Ayr. U. G. Humbert, Wm. Keefer, Samuel Mellott. Belfast. Joseph B. Mellott, Carl Mellott. Bethel. II. K. Markley, Al bert Hixson, James E. Mellott, George M. Gardner. Brush Cheek. Elijah Hoopen gardner, Samuel Hart, Carey Layton, C. W. Spade, Lemuel Smith. DuHLiN.-r-George Locke, Irwin ilsou, GeorgoDoran. Mc C on n ellsi tunc;. I s a a c Hull. Licking Cueek. B. F. Desh ong, G. S. Hoop, John W. Hoop. Taylor. A. L Shaw, Andrew Bolinger. Thompson. Eli Covalt, Doyle Morgret, Dennis Everts. Ton. T. B. Stevens, Benjamin Cline, Bert Henry. Union. Nelson Beatty, C. H. Feoff, George Scriever, Vernon Northcraft, Frank Lee, Jackson A. Hendershott. Wells. J. Cal Kirk, James A. Woodcock, E. G. Foster. ABOY'S WILD HIDE FOR LIFE With family around expecting him to die, and a son riding for life, 18 miles, to get Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs aud Colds, W. H. Brown, of Loesville. Ind., endured death's agonies from asthma; but this wonderful medicine gave instant relief and soon cured him. He writes: "I now sleep soundly ev ery night. " Like marvelous cures of consumption, pneumonia,bron- chitis, coughs, colds and grip prove its matchless merit for all throat and lung troubles. Guar anteed bottles 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free at W. S. Dick son's drug store. ties in this regard are superior to London's, in that adarge under taking could be financed herewith much'greater dispatch than on tho other side. Said an officer of one of Wall street's most important banks: "It is no trouble at all nowadays to Taise $5,000,000 or $0,000,000 within an hour. I have seen it done too often to think for a mo ment that it would tax seriously a large bank's resources. Five times that sum, say $25,000,000, can be raised at twenty-four hours' notice. It has been done. Of course, no one bauk could do it, but the great Wall street insti tutions are linked together in such a way as to provide almost unliminted resources for tho financing ofauy safe deal. Tho large banks think little of $1,000, 000 or $2,000,000 loans these days whereas in former years they at tracted general attention, for such large amounts were realized only after considerble negotia tion. But that has all changed now." '"A" PINGPONG PUZZLE. Whenever a new game is intro duced there is sure to be a piny of some kind or other not covered by the rules, and a game of pingpong is now holding up a tournament un til a law is created governing tho point at issue. Last month a game was being played on a regulation table. A chandelier hung over the middle of the table, and a ground rule had to be made. It was that balls hitting the chnndelier would bo in play or out of play according to where they fell, unfortunately there was no rule about balls striking the gas flame, which is one of the first con tingencies which should have been provided for. It was during a hot rally that the celluloid sphere attempted to put out the em, and as the illuminant was the more powerful the ball van ished with a puff of smoke. The striker showed that the disaster happened on his opponent's side of the table and offered to piny the nco over again. His opponent de clared that as the ball did not drop in the play he won the point and declined to play it over agnin, and until the point was decided the game and tournament will remain unfinished. Philadelphia Tele graph. Knitting For the Nerves. A curious story of the late Rob ert Louis Stevenson is related by Mr. David Graham rhillips. Mr. Phillips tells how Stevenson was found at his hotel, in New York, one day sitting up in bed, swiftly and assiduously knitting. Stevenson at th time of the story told by Mr. rhillips was in the hab it of smoking a great number of cigarettes dailv. Frequently, in deed, lie smoked as many as a hun dred, and then would come times when he would try to cut down the amount. It was at one of these times of cutting down that the inci dent mentioned took place. As Ins visitor entered the room Stevenson looked up, nnd a bright smile lightened his gaunt face. But he did not cense from his knitting. "I must do 60111011110"; in between cigarettes," he said. "It keeps' my nerve3 quiet." And he added, with another smile, It would surprise Jou to know how it affects me when accidentally drop a stitch." Sat urday Evening Post. Vegetarianism and Divorce. Judge Halsey granted Mrs. Lou ise Koss a divorce from Theodore Koss, u Grove street seed merchant, on the ground of cruel treatment, the defendant having withdrawn his answer and permitted the cae to go by default. One of the charges in volved in this ense is the husband's insistence that his wife should live the life of a vegetarian. "My husband objected seriously to my eating meat," said Mrs. Koss, "and when I went out to visit friends, sometimes to see my own family, he suspected that I would eat meat while I was away. He in sisted on my getting home at 7 o'clock under penalty of being lock ed out. I never was home later than 8, and I was locked out two or three times. I was not a believer in vegetarianism." Milwaukee Senti nel. Our Dividing Lines. The subdivisions of tho states of tho Union used by the census bu reau may well supersede the older dividing lines now in use, which place Ohio in the middle west and Minnesota in the northwest. For census purposes the states are di vided primarily into Atlantic, cen tral and western, the Atlantic being separated into north and south at Mason and Dixon's line. The north central states cover the irregular trianglo formed by Ohio, Kansas and North Dakota, while the south central includes those states from Kentucky to Texas. The western division includes all the states west of Colorado's eastern boundary. An English Book Criticism. English writers may well claim that book reviews in this country are colorless if a recent notice of a new novel by Benjamin Kidd, writ ten by Frederic Harrison, ono of the most prominent "of the British critics, is the kind of thing they like over there. Hero are some of his phrases: "Gaseous volume," "a mass of sonorous fatuity," "supreme absurdity," "misty jargon of pseu ilo scientific metaphysics," "this blatant stuff." Philadelphia Ledg tr. Helping the Hen to Cackle. Candersheim, a German village, aas recently been en fete. The oc lasion wits the honoring of a hen that hud laid her thousandth egg. Many of tho houses were decorated with flags, while in the evening the Iiroprietor of the hen entertained lis friends at a supper, at which the Iirincinul dish was a gigantic ome et. The function was a splendid success, nnd tho health of the hen was drunk with great enthusiasm. Men Wanted. Choice country laborers, farm hands, and woodsmen, under 30 years of age to work several years in Wisconsin for $25.00 a month and board or $1.85 a-day without board, , Address Ed Keichenbach, York, Pa, T THE 1 FULTON & I COUNTY -26 jNEWS ! i i Covers the Field. i a 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 i ic, Latest Fashions for the Ladies. The latest New York, Bal timore, Philadelphia Markets. The Sun day School Lesson, Helps for Christian Enaeavorers, and a Good Sermon for ev erybody. THE JOB DEPARTMENT IS COMPLETE, SALE EILLS, POSTERS, LETTER HEADS, ENVELOPES, CARDS, Ac, In fact anything and everything in the best style along that line. X Sample copies of X the News sent to any 1 of your friends cn X request, CUMBERLAND VALLEY TIM E TABLkT May 2(i, 1!02. Leave no. Sno I no. 6 uo. t no.lOl 110 A.M tA.JtA M P M !. P. M Winchester mil i lis a Martlnsburti f lf 3 ir: 1 ill HuKerslown .... O.V 9 (Ki 13 SO 8 60 H (I. 10 IS UretmcitKili! .... ill B s-.'ll 4 11 8 47 10 a.'. McrcershurK , UoiO lu 3 WJ .... UbuuibemburK.. 7 ail g 45"TIisT7"fi 8 50 1058 Wvni'biro 1 It oul 8 HA .... Shlppensburg... 7 MllOO tfi b 07 9 II 11 19 New ville H IO0 &! I il 5 ill l!l 11 i9 Carlisle 8 X0 10 U 2 03 ft h:t 9 51 1 Ci MeubitnluKburg,. 8 fit) 11 Oft li 1 1ft 10 18 li 21 Dlllnburif 7 bi .... I 40 ft 10 Arr, IliirrUburg. 9 07 II lift It 4.0 6 8ft 10 3:1 12 40 Arr. Phllu II 48 S 17 6 47 10 au 4 aft 4 i- Arr. New York. 13 ft S3 8 08 Hi 7 13 7 18 Arr. BuUlmore.. IS 10 8 1 1 6 00 9 4ft 2 30 7 15 A. M. P. M. P. II. P. II. A, U. A. II Trulu No I-' e Mt ruim dallv except Sunday betwrcn HnKerKtown und lUrrhnuiK. leuvtnK llHKernlown i.M uud urnviDjf ut Hunisburu at 1.40. Train No. 17 went, runs dally except Sunday between Hrrtsburi uud OreencaHte, leuvlDK MarrtxburK 6.16 and arriving Ureencantle 7.bu. Additional eant'bouuU local truin will run dully, except Sunday, uh lollowu: Leave Carlisle 6.46 a. m., 7.0ft a. in., U.40 p. m., 8.16 p. m leave MecbaniCHburg 8.0M a. m., a. in tuit a. in., 1.04 p. in., n.30 p. in., 3.30 p. ., 6.80 p. tn.. Train Nox. 8 and 110 run dally between Ha lternlov.il and HurriHburg una No. i Ufleei minutes lute on Sunday Dully. Dully except Sunday. Leave no. lino. 3iuo. 6, no. 7no. B, low llultlmore New York I'hlla HarrUburg Dillsburg. Mechanlusburg.. Carlisle Newville Shippeusburg... Waynesboro.... Chuuibersburg.. Mercersburg.... (ireencustle .... ilageratown .... Murtlnsburg Ar. Wlnctiea'.or. P.H A.M P.H II 5ft 7 6ft II l 5 00 8 bo P.M. 6 M 8 25 8 SO II 06 II 23 11 42 12 W 12 18 12 M 12 65 12 00 8 5ft 8 40 II 461 M 40 II 40 8 25 4 0.i 3 43 i 01 4 2.1 4 30 6 36 4 6H 6 66 6 21 5 44 I 29 7 16 P. M. 6 IB 6 40 8 101 li! 06 8 9 9 10 9 10 10 10 II II 811 !7 01 00 12 61 6 at) 'e'io H 15 7 06 I 10 t 05 I 3J Tift S 17 7 8 a 9 10 A. M. A. Additional looul tralna will leave Harrlsburj as follows; For Carlisle and Intermediate stu Hon ui 9.37 a. m., .oo p. m. und 8.26 p. m., also roralechanicsburg Diflsburg and Intermediate stations ut 7 00 a, m.aud 8.16 p. m. Trains Nos. 1, 8 and 109 run dally between UarriHbiir. and Ilagnrstown. 1'ullmuD palace sleeping can between Nev York und Knoxville. Tcnn., on train t wea and 10 east aud between Philadelphia and Welsh on N. & W. Hallway on trains 1U9 west aud 12 east, except that on Sunday the Phiia Uelphiu sleeper will run east ou No. t Through ooachea to and from Hblladelphi on tralus 8 and 4 east aud 7 and 9 west. Dully. t Dally except Sunday. SOUTHERN PKNN A B. K. TRAINS. l'aa. Pas. Mix. PaR. Mix. Pa. W 103 ttll tH tOO I8 P.M am am Lve. Arr. am a m p. m, 6 07 10 00 7 0u Cbambersburg.. 8 4h II 60 i Hu 6 IH 10 12 1 211 Marlon 8 83 II 82 4 M 6 66 10 47 8 15 . .Merueraburg. . 8 00 10 10 1 90 16 II on g 60 Loudon T 3s 9 42 I Of 22 11 15 9 06 ....hlobuiond.... 1 80 9 80 t 00 P. M. A. M. A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M. II. A. Kinr.i.t, Uen'l Put. Agent. 1. T. BOTD, Supt vfk0, 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCB A v4 TftADC Marks r'rtf 1 Copviiiqht &0. Anron iwnilnf akotrti and dMcrtption may lllTeHilllin UniDllll IKLi- luvMttlon t probably wrttin our opmUiii trm Comniunlra. Llotitiatrtctlr oohfldtmttaJ. Handbook ou Vmiwts aantfretB, OldtMl auenvy fur twcuriiig atiiui. ttpteUU notice wit houi ctiflrv. la tbV Scientific Jfceritia kandsomely Illustrated weekly I.smat elr. ImIUjii tif any solauiuso Journal. Tvruis, 8X r s fmr uonttut, (L Mold by all newsdaalen. BUSINESS DIRECTORY, I1AHIII US. R. M. DOWNLS, l'IKST CLASS TONSORIAL AKTIST, McCONNKLLSHUHU, 1'A. A Clean Cup and Towel with ench Shnvo Everything Antiseptic, ltuzors Sterilized. XSfHhop In room lately occupli d by Kd Druse ISAAC IN. WATSON, Tonsorial Artist. Strictly up to rtnte In all styles of hnir cm. U?.?1 Jiutci- eu,;v shaves. Huy-rum, Creams, Wllch-hiizel. without extra charge. Kresh towel to enoh customer. Latest Improved tin puratus for sterilizing tools. Parlors opposite Fulton House. LAWYKHS. M. R. SHAFFNER, Attorney at Law, Office on Square, McConnellsburtf, Pa All legal business nnd collections entrusted will ecelve cureful and prompt attention. HOTELS. gARTON HOUSE, EDWIN HlSllONa, I'HOP., HANCOCK, .111), rounder the new management hns been rclurnlshed and remodeled. Hood sample rootn. Headquarters for commercial men. miton County Telephone connected. Livery and Feed Stable in connection. CIIIKCIIKS. PRKSBYTERIAN. liev. W. A. West, D. D., Pastor. Preaching services each alternate Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. and every Sunday evening at 7:0tl. Services at Green Hill on alternate Sabbaths at 10:30 a. m. Sabbath school at 0:15. Junior Christian En deavor at 2:00. Christian Kndeavor at 0:00. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:00. Methodist Episcopal Hev. A. 1). McCloskey, Pastor. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Preaching every other Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Suuuay evening at 7:00. Epwnrtli League at 6:00 p. m. Prayer-inectin" Thursday evening at 7:00. " United Pkkshyticiuan Tlev. .1. L. Grove, Pastor. Sunday school at l):.:o a. m. Preaching every Sunday morn ing at 10:30, and every other "Sntiduv evening at7:00. The alteinule Sabbath evenings are used by the Young Peo ple's Christian Union at 7:00 p. ni. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:00. . h EVAKQKLK.Au iiUTHV.KAN Rev. A. G. Wolf, Pastor. Sunday school 11:15 a.m. Preaching every other Sunday morning at 10:30 and every other Sun day evening at 7:00. Christian En deavor at 0:00 p. m. Prayer nioeting on Wednesday evening at'7:00. Kkfoumko Rev. C. M. Smith, Pas tor. Sunday school ut (1:30 a. m. Preaching on alternate Sabbaths at 10:00 a. m. and 7:00 p. ni. Christian Eudeavor at 6:00 p. in. Prayer meet ing ou Wednesday evening at 7:00. TKK.MS Ol-- COI KT. Tho first term of the Courts of Pul ton county in the year shall commence on the Tuesday following the second Monday of January, at 10 o'clock a. in. The second term commences on the third Monday of March, ut 2 o'clock p. m. The third term on the Tuesday next following the second Monday of June, at 10 o'clock a. m. The fourth term on tho first Monday of October, at 2 o'clock p. m. HOKOI GII Ol TICKHS. Justice of the Peace Thomas 1'. Sloan, Li. H. Wible. Constable John H. Doyle. Burgess H. W. Scott. Councilmen D. T. Fields, Leonard Hohman, Samuel Render.M. W. Kuce. Cleric William Hull. High Constable Wm. Buumgardner. School Directors A. U. Nace. John A. Irwin, Thomas F. Sloan, F. M. Taylor, John Comerer, C. 1J. Stevens. GENERAL DIKIXTOHY. President Judge Hon. S.Mc. Swopc. Associate Judges Lemuel Kirk.Da vid Nelson. Prothonotary, &c Frank r.Lvnch. District Attorney George B. 'Dan iels. Treasurer George B. Mellott. Sheriff Daniel C. Fleck. Deputy Sheriff Jury Commissioners C. H. E. Plum mer, Anthony Lynch. Auditors John S. Harris, W. C. Davis, S L. Garland. Commissioners H. K. Malot, A. V Kelly, John Fisher. Clerk Frank Mason. County Surveyor Jonas Lake. County Superintendent Charles E. Barton. ' Attorneys W. Scott Alexander, J. Nelson Sipes, Thomas F. Sloan, F. McN Johnston, M. K. Shaffner, Geo. B. Daniels, John P. Sipes, S. V. SOCIETIES, Odd Fellows M'Coiinellhburg Lodge No. 74-1 meets every Friday evening in the Comerer Building in McConuells burg. Fort Littleton Lodge No. 484 meets every Saturday evening in the Cromer building at Fort Littleton. Wells Valley Lodge No. (107 meets every Saturday evening in Odd Fel lows' Hall at Wells Tannery. Harrisonvillo Lodge No. 701 meets every Suturday evening in Odd Fel lows' Hall at ilurrisonville. Waterfall Lodge No. 773 meets ev ery Saturday evening in Odd Fellows' Hall at Waterfall Mills. Warfordsburg Lodge No. fiOl meets in Warfordsburg every Saturday evening. King Post G. A. R. No. 3(!5 meets In MuCounellhburg in Odd Fellows' Hall the first Saturday in every month at 1 p. m. Royal Arcanum, Tuscarora Council, No. 121, meets ou alternate Monday evenings in P. O. S. of A. Hall, in McConnellsburg. Washington Camp No. 407, P. O. S. A., of Now Grenada, meets every Sat urday evening in VyO. S. of A. Hall. Washington Canip, No. 654, P. O.S. of A., Hustontownj meets every Satur urday evening in Jr. O. 8. of A. Hall. John Q. Taylor Post O. A. R., No. 680, meets every Saturday, on or juBt preceding full moon in Lashley hull. at 6 p. m., at jjuck v alley. Woman'i' Relief Corns, No. 80. meets at same date and place at 4 p. in. Gen. D. B. McKibbln Post No. JC2, G. A. S., meets Die second and fourth Saturdays In each month at Pleasant lUdga. ' li
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers