CUPID'S ODD PRANKS WHY SOME WOMEN FELL IN LOVE WITH THEIR HUSBANDS. Peculiar Keu«ou» Thut nt Times In line nee the Fair Sex lu Matters of the —The Woman Who Won a lid V% ('dilcii u Woman lluter. If there is one question more than another to which it Is difficult to get or give a satisfactory answer it Is surely this: "Why did you fall In love with your husband?" In 19 cases out of 20 woman would probably confess candid ly that she did uot know or else she would declare conclusively that she did because she did, and that ought to end the matter. In the rare cases where the lady con descends to declare her reason the an swers are both interesting and in structive. "Whatever made you marry the pris oner?" a I.ondou magistrate asked a tvoinan whose face bore "striking" evi dence of her husband's affection. "Be cause he punched all the other fellows' heads," she answered, "and nobody else dared make love to me." Another good lady confessed that she fell in love with her husband because he was the "only man who ever dared to snub her." While other men were stumbling over each other to pay her court and attention, he always treated her with absolute indifference and even rudeness. The consequence was that she de- j termined to bring him to Jior feet and his knees. She succeeded, but lost her heart In the attempt. "I fell In love with my husband," one lady recently declared, "because he was the only man about whom no j one was ever heard to say an unkind j word. Even the women, although he paid them no special attention, were ' agreed that he was 'a darling;' and, al- j though he was plain, almost to ugli- ( ness, and old enough almost to be my j father, I loved him and determined to I marry him long before he had any such thought of me." Not long ago a Yorkshire lady of wealth and beauty shocked her friends by marrying a poor cripple. It bad come to ber ears that be bad long lov ed her in silence and had counted each Jay happy if lie only caught a distant glimpse of her. She discovered that ie was a devoted son and brother and i man of unusual gifts and culture for ds bumble position, and, moved by >ne of those sudden, generous im •ulses to which some women are 11a ■le, she sought an Interview with him, old him that she bad learned his sc ret ami offered him ber band and for une. This may appear a strange and iiprobabie tiling, but thousands know mt it is literally true. Another lady whose marriage result i from a similar Impulse gives this tplanation of it. Among the friends ! her family was an old bachelor with reputation for crustiness who had sown her from a child and bad often irsed her iu early days. To ber be id always been gentle and kind, and ie bad loved him "iu a way" as long she could remember. One day she said, "Why have you •ver married, Mr. ?" "Marry, my dear? Why, no one auld ever marry a grumpy old man .e me!" 'Of course they would!" she answer- Indignantly. "Why, I would marry u myself!" 'Thank you, my dear!" came the un pected answer. "Then we'll consider ; matter ended." n spite of her surprise and misglv ;s the girl loyally kept her promise, 1 she lias never bad reason to regret • "moment's Indiscretion." . lady friend of the writer married ■ husband for the very illogical rea tliat he was an avowed woman er. He made no secret of bis aver i to the fair sex and declared it so stantly that, as she says,"l vowed vould convert him and make him nge his mind, at least so far as one my sex was concerned." lie was difficult to convert, for within 12 iths he had forsworn his creed so as to conduct one of the "bated ' to the altar, and now he declares t be 'loves them alL"—Tit-Bits. Dentil Gulch, ravtne in the northeast corner, of owstone National park, in Wyo ?, Is known by those living uear by >eath gulch. Grewsonie as is the e, It Is exceedingly appropriate. It V shaped trench cut in the moun >ide and begins about 250 feet e Cache creek. Apparently It s a natural shelter for the leasts e forest, as food, water and shelter there, but entrance to the gulch us death to any animal, for the jnous vapors that rise out of the ie are more deadly than the bullets ie huntsmen. r ages this death trap in the Itocky itains has probably been luring the bltants of the forest to their doom, i the rains of spring the bones of lead of the preceding year are car down to the creek and the gulch ed for the death harvest of the ner and winter. e geologists say that the lavas h lill the ancient basin of the park lis place rest upon the flanks of itains formed of fragmentary vol ejects. Gaseous emanations are i out in great volume. These come, dentists say, from deposits of al and crystalline travertine mixed pools in the creek. Above these ■its the creek cuts into a bank of ur. In the bottom of the gully is all stream sour with sulphuric wonder the poor animals seeking •r in the gulch meet death there. A rnrioun Trap. •urlous labyrinth In which ele s are captured alive Is to be seen Ayuthia, formerly the capital of The labyrinth Is formed of a • row of immense tree trunks set in the ground, the space between gradually narrowing. •re it begins, at the edge of the , the opening of the labyrinth is than a mile wide, but as It ap ies Ayuthia It becomes so nar hat tho elephants cannot turn 1. noting no danger the wild ele enters tho broad opening at the end, lured on by a tame elephant, radual narrowing of the bound is not observed until the ele finds himself In close quarters, ng reached the end of the laby the tame elephant is allowed to hrough a gate, while men lying t sii|» shackles over the feet of itives. The sport Is a dangerous 'f the enraged elephants some erush the hunters under their fitf «i Smooth Hon«l In Summer. lie summer when roads get d up they can be materially irn at small expense by running ieni with a barrow, having the owu i|iiite llat. If the roads are • muddy this treatment will hem 11 r \ faster, and also make juch more pleasant to use after ave dried. ! Women Bread The disfiguration caused by skin disease, even more than the tormenting irrita tion which is so commonly associated i with it The use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical \ pimples, eruptions iin d , ot^lf the white only when the hair is excessively oily. When the hair is dry and lifeless, a slight oiling of the scalp after the bath is permissible. Great care must be taken that the fatty matter is sweet and pure. For this rea son vegetable oil is best. Cocoanut oil is safest for general use. If the scalp is tense and dry, a composition of one-third lanoline and two-thirds carbolated vase line warmed and beaten together may be applied with benefit. As before stated, it is the exception where atiy oil application is necessary. With.proper care, uiassuge and cleanliness the glands about the root of each hair will do their part. "I wonder why they call the hotel bell boy 'Buttons,' " said the inquisitive trav eler. "Probably," replied the bachelor, "it's because he's off when you need him most." —Philadelphia Press. ARTIFICIAL GEMS. Glssn That Shinoit V.lke DiHinontU, hut Lone* I.Uttter, To meet the growing demand for arti ficial jewelry the process of making "precious stones" has been greatly im proved within the last few years, aud its further development has enlisted the services of some of the most skill | ful chemists. The material chiefly used is glass, but it is not the ordinary glass of com ! meree. It is prepared with the greatest care by highly skilled artisans, for up on its clearness and perfect homoge neity depends the quality of the imita tiou gems, which are far superior to the j cheap grade of counterfeits that rely on silver backings for their luster. The glass can only be made from ab solutely pure quartz or, better still, from rock crystal, as quartz frequently contains minute veins of iron which would impair the clearness aud color of the glass. The bicarbonate of potash i and the oxide of lead which are mixed ! with it must also be chemically pure. 1 Other ingredients of less importance I are borax, which promotes the llux, I and a small quantity of arsenic. The best glass for imitation gems | consists of rock crystal, 32 per cent; bl | carbonate of potash, 17 per cent; oxide j of lead, 50 per cent; borax, 1 per cent, | aud a trace of arsenic. Carefully pre- I pared by competent hands, this tnix ] ture produces a grade of glass which I in brilliancy and iridescence yields lit -1 tie to the genuine diamond itself, aud j these qualities may lie further enhanc i ed by the substitution of potassium for tlie bicarbonate of potash aud an in crease of the quantity of oxide of lead : us; «i. Stones carefully made by this process ; can only lie distinguished from the gen ] unie by experts. This is true, however, j only so long as they are new, for imita | tion gems wear off, become blind and lose their lire with aire, and it is to rem- j edy these defects that the efforts of I I chemists are now directed. Opaque gems, like the turquoise and | j the opal, are made from glass whose ] transparency is destroyed by the addi- 112 tion of oxide of zinc after pulveriza- I j tion. The color of the turquoise is pro- 1 duced by means of oxide of copper and ' cobalt.—Chicago Times-Herald. A Reluctant Candidate. During a local election in a German town only one man appeared at the nomination desk. "Whom do you nominate?" inquired the official. "Myself!" was the answer. "I)o you accept the nomination?" "Well, no." The otlicer laughed and said: "Then we must try ngaiu. Whom do you nominate?" "Myself:" "You accept the nomination?" "No." A subdued "donnerwetter!" escaped | the lips of the perplexed official, but he went on: "For the third time—whom do you ! nominate?" "Myself!" same the Invariable reply. ( "Do you accept the nomination?" The man rose up, and a smile of I satisfaction spread over his face as he ' answered proudly: "Having been three times solicited j by my fellow citizens to accept the j nomination, I can no longer decline to i accede to their wishes." lie then re- j tired.—Tit-Bits. Orljcin of "a Horn." A western man at a fashionable bar In New York called for a horn and then had t<> tell tlie drink mixer that it was whisky lie wanted before he got his order filled. "Curious," commented the western er, "how people in the east can't under stand plain English. Anybody down in Kentucky knows what 'a horn' is and how it got its name." "How did it get its name?" inquired a bystander. "Well, along about 100 years ago the first distillery ever established in Ten nessee was set up in Davidson county. It was called the Red Heifer, and the customers who assembled at the still, especially on Saturday afternoon, to drink and gamble, got In the liabit of speaking of a dram as 'a horn of the heifer.' As Tennessee was the first state to be settled west of the Alle ghanies the phrase spread all over the west and southwest, finally being con tracted into the single word 'horn.' New York Times. Alphabetical AhaNr. The prosecuting attorney In a law suit had waxed especially indignant at the defendant, whom he characterized as an "abandoned, baneful, cynical, diabolic, execrable, felonious, greedy, hateful, irresponsible. Jaundiced, knav ish. lazy, meddlesome, noxious, outra geous and profligate rowdy." "The learned counsel on the other side," said the attorney for the defend ant when he rose to reply, "should have put his adjectives In a hat and shaken them up a little before using. You must have noticed, gentlemen of the Jury, that they were in regular al phabetical order. This shows that he selected tliem from a dictionary, be ginning with 'a.' He stopped at 'p,' but in his manner of reproducing them he has given us the 'cue* as to how he got them." This turned the laugh against the other lawyer, and he hist the case. A Bright Jury• In a larceny case in Maine it was agreed togo on with only 11 men on the jury. The trial lasted several hours, and then the jury retired to deliberate upon the evidence and find >i verdict. After being out four hours the jury reported that it could not agree, and accordingly it was dis charged from further duty in the case, and the prisoner was remanded to the Jail. A little later the attorneys for the respondent "got at" one of the Jury men and asked him how the vote stood in the jury room. "Well," said lie, "we balloted about 20 times, and each time there were 11 votes for conviction, but at no timo could we tret 12 votes for conviction, so we bad to report a disagreement." A lilt of llowrry I >iji 1«»a> lie. This gem of metropolitan English is vouched for by the New York corre spondent of the Pittsburg Commercial Gazette: I heard this bit of dialogue between two Bowery hoodlums the other day: Said one as lie pointed to his slilny black trousers: "Oh, Chimmy, howeher like me blacks?" "All right," was the response, "but dey ain't ez good ez yer lightest." "G'wan, yer guy; git wise. I)ese is | dose, only I had 'em dyed." And then they got aboard a car. "I suppose people around here raise I their own vegetables?" "Some do; others merely plant them." —l'uck. It may be that you haven't more trouble than others, but that you have more time to think about it.—Atchison Globe. 1 DO IT VUUKNKLK. You can tell jnM a> well as a physician whether your kidney-- are diseased or healthy. The way to do j- to takea hot tie or glass tuuihler, and till it with urine. If there is a sediment —a powderlike substance at the bottom alter standing a day anil a night, there is something wrong with tlie kidne vs. Another -lire sign of disease is a desire to urinate often, and still another sign i» pain in the back. If urine stains linen, there is no doubt that the kidneys areallected. Any and all diseases of the kidneys, liver, bladder and of the urinary passag es and const i pa tion of the bowels are cur ed by I>r. David Kennedy'* Favorite Itemed y- There is noqiiestioii about its being the best: and surest medicine in the world for such troubles. It quickly relieves and cures inability to hold mine and people, young or old, who take it are not compelled to get up a number of times during the night. For putting an end to that scalding pain experienced in passing urine, nothing is >o good a* Dr. David Kennedy's Fa.vorite Remedy. It corrects the bad etlects of whiskey and beer; is plexsant to the taste, and does not seam to be medicine at all. Diseas es of the kidnevs and the bladder often require the use of instruments to push back the sandy matter so the urine can be voided. In such cases Favorite Rem edy should be taken without further de lay or the disease may prove fatal. 11 is sold for one dollar a bottle at all drug stores. It is well worth many times its price. If you wish to test Dr. David Kenne dy's Favorite Remedy before buying to send your full post ollice address to the Dr. David Kennedy Corporation, Rotid j out, N. V., and mention this paper. We I will then mail you a sample bottle free, ' as well as circulars giving full directions [ lor its use. livery reader of the M<>.\- Tori: A.mi-.uk \n can depend upon the [ genuineness of this liberal offer and all i sufferers from kidney troubles should take ad vantage once of it at MEN AS THEY PASS. Senator Elkius speaks Spanish like a native. He learned the language when he was a young man in New Mexico. Alexander E. Orr comes nearer to tilling the role of Father Knickerbocker both in appearance and action than any other New Yorker. Daniel Wells, Jr., who celebrated his ninetv-tlilrd birthday recently, has lived 00 years in Milwaukee and is now the only antebellum congressman living in that city. If Senator Cockrell of Missouri lives to complete his tiftli term In the sen ate, he will have equaled Benton in length of service. His present term will end in 1905, rounding out a con tinuous senatorial service of 30 3'ears. M. Santos-Dumont, whose tlying ma chine recently made what is reported to have been a successful trip around Paris, is not a Frenchman, but a Dra ■iliau, so if he makes the thing go the tviuiuph will belong to America after all. W. I. Buchanan, director general of the Fan-American exposition, refuses to li»come the head of the Louisiana Purohase exposition at St. Louis. He eays that he is in need of rest and that he intends togo to South America to take it. Aaron D. Weld of Boston is practi cally the sole owner of Ludlow, Mass., a town of 3,000 inhabitants. Mr. Wold is president of the Ludlow Manufac turing company, a concern which fur nishes employment to nearly all the laborers and which pays nine-tenths of all the taxes collected In the town. Professor James Dewar, who has been so prominent in the researches toto tho GUbjoot of liquid air, bupuu hie 2:periments in 1&74. He was born in Inardine-on-Forth in 1842 and edu cated at the Dollar academy and at Kd iatmrgb university. He received the first llodgkins medal of the Smith sonian Institution in 1800. Dr. A. Kuyper, the new premier of Holland, is one of the broadest minded and strongest intellectual forces of Queen Wilhelmina's domain. He was made an LL. D. of Princeton universi ty in 1898, and it was through his in fluence that a free university, uncon trolled by the state, was founded in Amsterdam some years ago. ■ rotherlluesH In Brockton. Here is a story told by ProfessorT.ar jett Wendell about Dr. William Ever ett: The latter was going out to Brockton one night to deliver an ad dress and ran across Mr. Wendell iu the Old Park square station. "Come along, Wendell," he said. "I am going out to Brockton'to speak, and I want some one respectable to sit on the plat form with me." So the professor went along. When Everett arose to speak, the hall, which was a large-one, was only passably well tilled, and even the com paratively small number present began to grow smaller as one by one people slipped away. Mr. Wendell began to think that Brockton must be a singu larly cold hearted place when sudden-' ly he noticed people cointng in by twos and threes and silently taking seats wherever they could find' them. Soon the hall was full, with standing room only, but still they came titl tlie aisles and walls were lined witlH Interested listeners. The supposed deserters had simply gone out and told the people of Brock ton that here was the) greatest m an they'd ever heard and 'gathered theru in by the score.—Boston Won by IIIn H'lt # A story is told of an English clergy man who owed his appointment to a rich living to a lucky pun. lie was tutor to the son of a nobleman and had not long taken orders when he attended'the funeral of the'rector of the parish in which the nobleman's seat wast situated. Ttie fattier of his pupil was»patrou of the living and {was also present at the funeral of the {deceased rector. There was a young clergyman present also whose grief \vs»B so demonstrative that the noble patnun was much affecteil by the sijfht and ask»-d if the young man was a son of the deceased gentle-nan. "Oh, deai - , no, my, lord—no relation at all," said .theitutur. "No relation!" exclaimed the noble man in a surprised'tone. "None, my lord; IM* IS the curate, and I think he Is not weieping for the dead, but for the living." Ills lordship, \vho*\vas something of a wit and a cynic htniself, Has so de lighted with the boiauot that he con ferred the ltving upon thie ready pun ster. The 'in me ">m •» ' i3ro. Iu countless ways is the world grow ing more and more like one huge eity, remarks the Newark Sunday < all. Now comes the news that the time ball lias appeared in fiiroff ' airo and that it is dropped automatically at 1- UJ. every day. I.ate in this month the time ball will lie gin business in Alexandria. But more than tills, they have just estab lished an interchange of weather tele grams, sent out at K o'clock every morning, between ''airo, Alexandria, Athens, Brindisi, Beirut and Malta. The latwt is that ■ Omdurnoan, which Kitchener took from the Bedouins so fhort a time ago, is (getting ready for a timabtdHlke Alexandria and Cairo- WILLARD STATUE SKETCH. Mis* Menrn' Conception In Lifelike mid ruli of Vl^or. The sketch with which Miss Mears of Oshkosh, Wis., has won the, honor of making the Willard statue is the result of nearly a year of labor, says the Chicago Record-Herald. It is small, being only 10 inches high, the total height, including the base, being only two feet. It is remarkably per fect in detail for so small a figure and gave the committee such a clear idea \ of what the finished marble model j would be that Miss Mears was instruct ed to point up her final work from the sketch. [ The sketch represents Miss Willard in one of her famous attitudes. She is standing perfectly upright, in a nat ural and graceful position One arm | i> slightly extended, and the hand rests upon a reading table or ecclesiastical! stand, while the other arm is at the side, with a roll of manuscript in ttie 1 hand. The head is thrown back slight ly, as if Miss Willard was about to : survey an audience. The face has a; spiritual look, and the mouth reveals j a smile half sad, half pleasant. So truthfully did the sculptor portray the j combination of vigor and strength and j spiritual shading in the face that many | of the intimate friends of the late Miss Willard have wept upon gazing on the sketch. Although Miss Mears never saw Miss Willard, her work being done entirely J from photographs and personal de-! scriptions of friends, it is said that her j production is more nearly like the, great advocate of temperance than any \ of the latter's photographs. IlandfiOine Pnj For a CrtckKer. The annual cricket match between j Yorkshire and Lancashire which lias Just been completi d at London lasted three days and attracted a daily crowd of over 10,000. According to custom, J. Brown, the Yorkshire professional, got the proceeds for good service. He received £4.000 (f'JO.OOOI. which breaks the record, says the New York Sun. The normal pay of a professional crick eter is under £5 a week during tht i season. ifit——— 1 Making Characters—not Money i SWhen Williamsport Dickinson Seminary was founded, money 0 making was not in the thought of its promoters. To give young A men and women thorough intellectual and moral training at the § lowest possible cost was its paramount aim. It remains its para- 0 0 mount aim. Buildings have been added, equipment increased, 0 0 the faculty enlarged, but the school is true lo its first principles. | Williamsport Dickinson Seminary ir is a Home and Christian school. It provides for health and social culture 0 an carefully us for mental and moral training, taking a personal intercut 0 0 in each pupil. A splendid field, with athletics directed hy a trained 0 2 athlete, make hall field and gymnasium of real value. Single beds and A howling alley for ladies. .Swimming pool for all. Nine regular courses, 1 0 with elective studies, offer wide selection. Six competitive scholarships I 0 are ottered. Seventeen skilled teachers. Music, Art, Expression and 0 A Physical Culture, with other branches or alone, under teachers with best 2 2 home and European training. Home, with tuition In regular studies, > J from 5240.00 t08250.00 a year, with discounts to ministers, ministerial can -0 didates, teachers, and two from same family. Kail term opens Sep- 0 0 tember 9th, 1901. Catalogue free. Address ■ J Rev. EDWARD J. GRAY. D. D.. President, Williamiport. Pa. 0 .. - r '."a The Home Paper i j of Danville. Of course you read j i mi«., \ THE lIEOPLE'S 1 KOPULAR I APER, Everybody Reads It. Published Every Morning Except Sunday ! No. 11 E. iVfcil .•v..- ne* St. i / I , Subscription << 1 v '' 'c. L - - J -?wm HAiNtttEST AND BIC-ST WAY TO ' JAN OLE A PAN Ts BY THE HANDLE. Si—l •>' <»//.- ; ?r:'d Route between I niUWFU. ! . Aj\ Trartit Manager. I .. J Ah One of the Fiimlly, "I understand that there are hundreds and hundreds of young and middle aged women in the large cities who are out of j employment and likely to remain so un less they change their point of view and instead of seeking hopelessly positions al ready crowded turn their energies where they will always lie needed," says a New York society woman. "As most of them have seen better days, are fairly well ed ucated and have had some experience I ask if it would he beneath their self re spect to take positions iu the homes y mail. KLY BROTHERS, Oti Warren Street, New York. D. L & t RAILROftt), TIME TABLE, Corrected to May i, 1901. NKW OKK AM- AM* I'M Ban lav si |,\. 2 (HI i 0 OU IUO 1 hristoplici St.. 2 I*l 10 (JO 1 (JO llobokcn :;o lu 15 i 20 Ncranton \i ii ■ 152 5 4:1 I'M AM I'M I'M | liullali) l.ve II ■«) li t. Scranton \r 515 In Wl ■ • AM* AM* I'M) ! I'M* I:AKTII> . . 011 10 155 iSU ' liellovue . . •' 5(1 ..,. ! 1 Tayiorville r. V. 111 i:> 2 u:i I Ear k a wane. "HI 111 23 2ln ti 0t» Duryea 7(13 10 28 2 1;; 1; II!) I Plttsion .07 111 :;l 217 ti j;j Susquehanna A\e... 7 111 In 13 2 l!i 1; |i; : West Pittston 7I ; in:> 5 223 n |>t j Wyoming 717 l(J ill i 27 ' li 21 Forty Fort lie 11 nett 721 in 111 234 1; :i(l Kingston ar. ■ " il 2 441 1: 35 I Wil kcs-liai ri' Ar " I' l "10 2 sti i> 4S Wilkes-Ham I.w ' in XI 2 :ai ii _'n Kinuston Iv 7 .'ill in :,i 2io 1; ,-{,5 J'lvmouth .1 0ne.... Plymouth 7 s || It; 2 4'.' ii 1 ; Avondale 7 42 .. 'ill I !V anticoke 715 111 I 25s ! 1; ;.| II unlock'.' 7- »I II 17 3 Q(> I li 57 Shlckshinny ""I ii 2!l 320 ( 710 Hick's Ferry s HI ' ■ 33d f7 21 Hcacli l avou s ' h " 3 37 7 28 Herwlek 5 23 II >1 344 733 Hriar Creek IS 2K 112 3 511 { . Willow Grove 112 54 I I.iuie s ("12 (111 3 5s Espy s •'>■" 12 15 4 tx. 7 f»2 Hloomsburg ,s ," 7 57 Kupert 12 27 417 I HOl Catawlssa '' 12 16! 4 22 H «I 5 Danville ' 12 47 4 li H2O Cliuiasky 4 42 Cameron 12 >7 44s , NO'tTHBM ISKItLAND .Ml) 5 INI j K45 Ar. AM I'M I'M I'M GOING gjAST. NKW YDHK I'M* I'Mt ! PavclaySat. Ar. ii 35 s(m | .... Christopher St... 3 :!0 465 I Hoboken 3 15 4 4S 1 i Scranton.... 10 05 12 55 1.1.... - AM I'M* AM' | AM* Bufl'alo Ar Koojl2 4 5 700 N'raiilon I.\ 155 54s 11 — AM- I'Mt l'M + I I'M* Scranton - ... 42 12 30 4io h45 liellevue .... !> 37 4 41* Tayiorville 32 4 40 s 35 Lackawanna 2li 4 32 » 27 I luryea 923 42« *25 I'lttstun 11 11' 12 17 424 S2l Susquehanna Ave.. H> 12 14 420 sis West Pittston. ' :i 4 17 s Hi Wyoming !' iw 12 ns 112 sl2 Forty Furt 04 1 07 ! .... I'.ennett '•' (I 4 03 .s 04 Kingston s6s 1159 400 sit' WilkfN-Kai-r)- ll."in 360 750 Wilk« s-liai n Ar ?s 12 111 410 Hln Kinpstdn SSK II .jii I IK) «02 Plymouth Junction "'1 352 I Plymouth 547 11 51 347 753 Avonit.sie s 12 3 42 Nantii oke s n 4:; 33H 7 41; Hunlock s S ii 2 331 (7 11 Shickshinny 5 22 u29 320 731 Hick's Kerry s 3OH 17 21 lieuch Haven 5 (J'r 3 J ;i • 12 lierwick " 11 05 12 58 705 Hriar Creek • 12 5.3 ; fii js Willow (iro\.- 'I 41 12 50 l.i we Klil)i ill 50 Kspy 732 lu 4s 210 ii II lllouiusliurg 724 ju 40 234 li its Kujiert 117 jq 3- 229 ti 32 >:atawissa ]- lo 34 224 ti 27 i»:tnville •' •"* 10 19 211 •li 12 l'tiul, sky •••.••! Cameron '' 12 ui fo 03 !.'D_v am 85 rr_l v ..; . ' *'oiuicctlons at Kujiert with Philadelphia 4i K'-ailini; Railroad lor Tamauemi, Tamaqua, Williams|,ort, Suntiury, Pottsville, etc. At Northumiierlaml with P and E. I»iv. P. It. K. lor Harrisburir. Haven, Kmporium, Warren Corry, and Erie, baity. * Daily except unday. 112 Stop on Minial. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. TIME T4BLE fri feet June 2nd, 1901- AM |A ivi.i I'M.P. M Seranton(l)SiH)lv g6 45 >y 3s 218 37| Plttston -• •• 7 08|f 1000 J S 42' 4 Sar*]... A.M. A.M P. M.P.M Wilkegharre,.. |v« 730 sio :r. 306i9 00 Plyin'th Ferry - I " 37 iin 42 I 3 18 16 N anticoke •' 74« 10 50 326 6 17j **l **" Mocanaqua .... " SO4 11 07 '! 4t5 li 37T"". Wapwallopen.. •• hl2 11 in ;s ."'i 6 flr" Ncscopeck ar 823 11 2ii 407 700 fl -VT A.M. P.M.I Pottsville Iv § "1 .VI ';il ;vi 5 Hazloton " 705 12 Is '!"!! Tomhicken " 722 ! 103 Fern (lien " 729 1 I 10 .!!!!! Rock ttlen "l 783 || im< Ncscopeck..... ar sO2 1 135 !!!!!! A. M A. M P. M P M ~~ Ncscopeck iv 523 sll 2»i 407■" 00 Creasv " 833 11 :«• 4 lti 709 Espy Ferry "18 43 II 4li(f 4 24 7 2IJ \\\" E. lfloomsbur)J, '•! 847 II 50 4 2!< 7 IVj _ Catawissa ar 855 11 57 4 :i."i 7 32' Cntawissa Iv 855 II 57 435 732 Suutb llanville '•! 9 14 12 15 453 7 51; Sunbury "j 935 12 40 515 «15 A. M. P. M. P. M |'.M. Sunbury Iv 942 1 lo j5 45 11 45 liewisburg.... ar 10 13 1 4". 61* Milton "I lu OS 139 61410 CO Williainsport.. II 00 230 7 111 10 50 Eock Haven... " 11 59 3 40. 807 Kenovo " A.M. 4 10 9 (Hi j Kane "! S 25 I P.M. P.M.I l.ock Haven..lv ;12 10 3 45' lU-llcfonte ....arl I 05 ii 144 ; T\ rone "1 2 15 H 0 00 Pliilipwburg " 441j N26 t'leartield 5 37 S 9 09 1 j Pittsburg.... "j 055 11 :x> 1 1 |A.M. P.M. P. M. P M Sunbury Iv 9505 155 525 :'S 31 Harrlsburg.... ar! II 3n jj 315 40 - ti 00 1 Uenovo "| 11 -.0 ti 45| 10 30| Eock Haven "J 12 3S 7351125 ,3 00 lA.M.j IP M Williainsport .. "i 225 h3O 12 40 4 (Hi Uiitun •' 222 919 1 271 4 .>2 Eewisburg "| 905 I 15] 447 Sunbury ar 321 940 I 55j 520 .... A.M. A M I' M P Ml" Sunbury Iv ;ti 5(1 9555200 :5 48 South llanville" 7 13 iO 17 221 609 \\\\ t'alawlssa " 7 3ii| lu 36 2 .'Uii 6 271' K Muomsburg.. " 7 ::•» 10 43 243 632 Espy Ferry " 74 ; tin 47 16 36 Creasy " 752 in 56 2>> 646 ] Wescopcck " 802 11 o£j 305 655 A M A Ml». M. P M ( atawissu Iv 535 1U :*! Nescopcck Iv js 5 15 : 7 05 Kock (Hen ar II 22 j 7 2S Kern (Hen " 901 112*1 541 731 " Totnliicken " 907 II N IT 742 Ha/.leton " 921 lISS (i (•:;, 805'* ** * Pottsville " 10 15 (i 55 AM AMP M P M " Neseoj Iv 802 11 05 .3 0 , 655 Wapwallopen..ar 810 11 20 319 709 Mocanaqua " 820 1132 329 721 Nanticoke " 847 II 54 34S 742 P Ml l'l\ 111 lb Kerry' I 557 12 02 35; I 7 52 Wllksbarre ..." w (>t> 12 111 405 800 A Ml P M I* M P M I'iltstoiH IIAH) ar u a«.i 12 i 5 4 fii, 536 ■•••• Scrnnton " " 10 0s 121'5 21 \9 05 Weekdays. " Daily. I Flag station. Pullman Parlor and Sleeping Cars run on throUKh trains between Suubury. Williainsport and Erie, between Sunbury and Philadelphia and Washington and between Harrisburg, Pitts j burg and the West. For lurtber inforination apply to Ticket Agents /.j:. iri /cii/N*fh\, J. n. wood, (iai'l Manager. (Jen*l I'ltss'ii'v Ai/ iShoes, Stylisil! Clieap! ISelialole I Bicycle, Cymnasium and Tennis Shoes. THK CKIJ.HRATED C.H'lisle Slh»p)s AND THK Siia^ - Proof li libber Itools A SPECIALTY. A. BCHATZ, sons IEW! A FLellatoi® TIW SHOP Tor all kind of Tin ftooflng« Spouting and Gonoral Job Work. Stoves, heaters, Ranges, Furnaces, eto. PRICKS THE LOWEST! QUALITY TOE BEST! JOHN HIXSON NO. 116 E. FRONT BT. JOHis W. PARNSWOETH j INSURANCE Lift Fire Accident and Steam Better! Office: Montgomery Buttdliue, Mill Straet, Danville, - - . Penn'a PHILADELPHIA & READING RAILWAY CORRECTED TO .lUNE 2». 1901 TKAINS LEAVE DANYILLfc (weekdays ouly) For I'btladelphla 11.35 a m. For New York 11.25 a in, For I'atawlssa 11.26 a. in,, 6.04 p. ui. For Milton 7.32 a, m., 4.00 p m. For Williamsport 7.32 a. 111., 4.00 p tn. Trains for Baltimore, Washington and lii* South leave Twenty-fourth and Chestnut .Streets, Philadelphia, weekdays—3.23, T. 14 10.22 a. in., 12.16, 1.33, 8.03, 4.12, 5.03, 7.26, 8.26 p . 111., 12.21 night. Sundays 3.23, 7.14 a. in., IS. 10 1.33, 4.12, 6.03. 7.26, 8.26 p. m. ATLANTIC CITY RAILROAD, Leave Philadelphia, Chestnut Street Whar and South Street Wharf for Atlantic City. WEEKDAYS- Expre55 8.00.».00,10.46 a. 111,, l.ou (Saturdays only 1.30) 2.00. 3.00, 4.00, 4.30, 5.00, 35.40, 7.15, 8.30 p. in. Accommodation 6.00 a. 111. 15.40, 6.30 p. 111. Sundays Express, 7.30, 8.00, 8.30, 9.00, 10.00,1100 a. m., 4.45. 7.15 p. in. Ac cominodation 6.00 a. m„ 5.00 p. in. 81.00 Ex cursion daily 7.00 u. m. Additional Sunday, 7.30 a. 111 Leave ATLANTIC CITY DEPOT-Week davs. Express— Monday ouly, 6.45) 7.00, 7.46, (from Baltic Extension only, 7.55) 8.20, 9.00, 10.15, 11 a. ill., 2.50, 5.30, 5.30, 7.30, 8.30,9.:i0 p. IM. Accommodation 5.25,7.05, a. 111.,3.50 p. m. Sun days Express—B.4s a. m., 8.80. 4.30, 5.00, 6.00, 6.30, 7.00, 7.30,8.009.30 p. 111. Accommodation— -7.15 a. in., 4.32 p. m. Parlor cars 011 all express trains. LEA V E PHI LA 1 >ELPH lA. For CAPE MAY— Weekdays—B.3o, 8.45, 11.45, a. m. g1.50) *4.10, £5.30 p. in Sundays—B.4s, 9.15 a. in., 5.00 p. 111. For OCEAN CITY Weekday* a, 111.. 2.15., + 4. 20, F, : *' P- i*fiT)days--8.45, 9.13 a. 111.,5.00 p. 111. For SEA ISLE CITY - Weekdays—B.4a a. 111 2.15 +4.20,55.30 P- m. Sundays 8.45 a. m., 5.00 p 111 SI 00 Excursion to Cape May, Ocean Citv and Sea Isle City 7.00 a. in. dally. 'South St., 4.00 p. m .tSonth St., 4.15 p.m., TSouth St. 5.30 p. m.,BSoutb. St., 1.45 p. in. f#«\V YOKE ANI) ATLANTIC CITY EXPRESS. Leave NEW YORK (Liberty Street) 9.40 A. M (Saturdays only 1.00, p. m.) 3.40 P. m. Leave ATLANTIC ClTY,—Weekdays 8 30 a 111 ils p. 111. Sundays—s.3o p. 111. Detailed lime tables at ticket offices. W.O BESLER, KDSONJ WKEKM Gen. Superintendent General Agent. Free Tuition By a recent act of the Legis lature, free tuition is now granted at the Literary Institute and State Normal School ItlooniNburg, 1*«. to all those preparing to teach. This school maintains courses , of stuilv for teachers, for those preparing for college, ami for those stu