BUT HE COULI) FIGHT MARSHAL MURAT'S PRINCELY VANITY AND PRINCELY VALOR. A Hostler Who Keaehed the Throne Because He \S um Miglily lo Battle. Married Xapoleon'n Sinter end I.oved Her Too. 1901. by G. L. Kilmer.J , *- Napoleon call I ed liis "right arm" because tbat was just the truth of It, began in a stable ami climbed to a throne. Mu rat was a man of princely mold, what may well be called a "born prince." He was more princely, in fact, than the real tiling, for those who come to it by divine right are apt to be narrow, haughty and weazen souled ns well as weazen bodied. The whilom hostler of Bnstide looked every inch a king and acted up to his appearance. It reads well in print for a writer to say that his hero "struck terror to the foe." It seems that Murat struck death and all that to the poor fellows on the other side, but he also struck them with admiration, so princely was his bearing. If they must be thrashed, it was a compensation to have it done by a foeman of knightly blade. As pris oners and under a truce the Cossacks would rave over Murat's noble looks and splendid horsemanship. lie was a sensation to them, a sort of superhu man creature. In battle he would se lect the finest of them for antagonists and if possible take them prisoners, then shower them with valuable pres ents. On one campaign he exhausted his own purse and the wealth of his friends, even parting with his watch and borrowing others from comrades to give mementos of the occasion to the wild horsemen he had vanquished with the sword and with princely kind liness. The time was ripe for a Murat as well as for a Napoleon In the days fol lowing the revolution. The leveling up process was a failure on the whole. But the people were tired of the old order of selfish princes who were all for self or for fellows to the manner born. A cry went up from the downtrodden masses for a division of the good things "wrung from the hard hands of peasants" for the enjoyment of the few having Inherited privileges. Murat had Bprung from the soil, but with the an cient ideas of chivalry. He was fond of display of all kinds and made his vani ty a virtue. When he got his first sword by valor in battle, he engraved upon It the motto, "Honor and the Ladles." In a practical age he would be set down as a dreamer and a poser. Hut he acted out his dreams. He was what he posed for. a man of lion heart who fought for prizes to give away. Murat's father was a lowly innkeep er. The boy was given a college educa tion and destined for the priesthood. He ran away and had numerous adven tures, serving in the army of the king and against the king. When stranded, he returned as a prodigal son, and the father, instead of killing the fatted calf, set him to work cleaning horses for the nobility who patronized his humble courts. It wasn't difficult for a clever young fellow to outstrip the kind of noble masters he had. They hus banded their inheritances, for they knew that once los* they hadn't the stuff in them to recover, to create, to win, new glories and fortunes. A pret ty cheap lot of nobles— nobles In name and in divine right only—were pushed from their stools by the dashing, dar ing spirits who rallied around the Cor sican king smasher. It was an act of romantic devotion which won for Murat a crown and the lady of his choice. lie stood by Napo leon In the coup d'etat which changed him from an adventurer into a mon arch. For that Bonaparte gave him kingship of the two Sicilies and the hand of his sister Caroline. Every Inch a king, he was also a man to charm the eyes of woman. He loved Caroline to the hour of his death —loved and cher ished her long after he had ceased to believe in the imperial destiny of her brother. But it was not for his services as a courtier that Napoleon took Murat to his bosom. He had fought beside him !n Italy and in Egypt under the shad ow of the pyramids. Napoleon gave marshal's batons to men who had worn knapsacks, and he was not one to hand over a throne and one of the rosebuds of his family to a mere schemer at court, a creature of transient useful ness. Murat "talked back" to the em peror. He told him to his face not to tight at Smolensk and to keep away from Moscow. A tongue so bold would not have been brooked in a person less than his "right arm" in battle. An Iron heart and an Iron will do not necessarily go with battle courage. Murat was a man of sentiment and emotion. So was Napoleon if one can believe some of his biographers. One day Murat felt that Napoleon did not appreciate him and made up his inind to die. Sending his staff and guards away, he rode straight upon a Russian battery which was firing steadily into the French lines. Finally turning his eyes around. I>< found that General Belliard of his staff had remained by Ws side. "How is this?" said Murat. 'Have I not directed you ail to retire?" 'But, sir," protested Belliard, "every anan Is master of his own life. As my foneral is determined to dispose or mo own I must be allowed to fall with aim." Murat's temper was disarmed iy this appeal of devotion, and he turn ed back out of danger. In stature Murat was tall and stately, with the tread of a monarch. With a *ace of the soft oriental type, he never iheless had an eagle eye. He always •hose the fiercest charger for his horse tnd rode so well as to attract admira lon on all sides. His costume was ever jorgeous and everything about him nost imposing. Made of the richest naterial. his uniform glittered with jold and was set off In red or purple. A liamond studded sword hung at nm tide, suspended from a golden girdle, n the field Murat wore a chapeau nagnificently decorated with a white >lume of ostrich feathers and another • 112 heron wing. His hair was jet black tnd worn very long. In cold weather ilurat covered his gorgeous trappings vltb an equally gorgeous green velvet •elisse set off with rich sables. Mount (l upon a horse whose caparison was lodeled after the Turks. Murat would nve been a frak in the camps of the epublican arm cs had it not been for is noble bearing and his valor. The an was majesty itself, and the splen dor seemed t<> belong to Inn In the western army of the civil war there was but one l<-rider who could appear before the i ops i'i the gaudy uniform of a inaj r g i!> .-1 ai:d not be ridiculed to bis face That was (ii neral C. J. Smith. He looked the part, and the bttge feathers n-:>l glittering epau lets were as necessary to him as plum age to the eagle. Murat was a good target for the enemy. !-:it the Trench gave way before him in ni!:i;e. If they hated splendor in kings. tiny par doned it.even admired it.in a man who could fight, just as though nothing was too g. mil for the soldi) r of lion heart. More than ■ ■ I ■ 11' Mu rat's imposing iig. \vn i tof strength. In the a- !i V -cow he led the van and one day found himself, with only a handful of the guard, sur rounded by Hying nitmdron- of Cos sacks, who didn't attack, bet annoyed the march by swm ;> ng do v. u on the column and compel It '•> halt and deploy for a battle v iii !i they did not accept. Finally >.!: t rode out alone and galloped up t > • of the squad rons. The wild i > i the steppes were at first as|>. • •! tb n daz zled by this bold; .ss l•' .. ng in front of them, he waved hi-- hand contemptu ously and in a tone of command cried, "Clear the road, you reptiles!" They obeyed, and Murat looked calmly on, waiting for his astonished guards to come up. Generalship is not to be expected in the dashing leader, but Napoleon fixed Murat's place in military annals by that one immortal phrase, "the best cavalry officer in tlie world." What commander would not at any time give his own right arm to secure a matchless leader of quadrotis? In tlie campaign of Austerlitz Murat operat ed the cavalry corps on his own hook, like Sheridan under Grant. Before the great battle he won ten signal victories and captured more of the enemy than he numbered sabers in his command. In a crisis Napoleon would give Mu rat 10,000 to 'JO.OOi> cavalry and turn him loose upon the foe. Idolized by his men, he never lacl:ed followers in the hottest adventures. At Eilau he rode straight upon the muskets of the Russians who were thinning his ranks with an awful fire. The guards charg ed after, and with his bridle In his teeth Murat shot and sabered right and w, // R --R •Jr- •» t MAicsiur. Mt ;:AT. [Napoleon's "riiil.: nm."] left, using sword and pistol, and the Russians broke in terror before this thunderbolt of war. In his closing years as king of Na ples Murat was the royal soul that he had set himself up to bo In a ouan 1 with Napoleon he was :- • d to hand over his scepter, but he only answered the messengt r. who was also a marshal of the empire, "Tell your master to come and take it " He afterward fought again for Napoleon, he fought for his own little realm, and he fought like a hero for his own life when pressed to the wall. At last lie show ed that Charles I of England was not the only monarch who emtld "at h ast die like a gentleman " l.ed to excep tion, he wrote a noble farewell to""My dear Caroline," commencing. "In a few* moments I shall have ceased to I've." To the soldiers who hot him to til he said: "Save my lace. Aim at my heart." Being offered a chair and a bandage for his eyes, he iM "No. I have faced d( atli bug and oft n < ough to be able to meet it wit ;> >• \ -open and standing." flow many ;ti kings have done better in lift- or died better than the ex-stable b \ .loachim Mu rat? GEOI K L. Kir.MEtt. Stop feeding corn and give hay but once dally, then at ultilit after oats have boon digested. Allow drinking water before and not after feeding. Three times a wick give horse a bran mash and in It mix it tablespoonful of bicarbonate of soda. Allow a lump of rock salt to lick at will. If horse docs not improve after two weeks of this treatment, Rive him in food three times daily two drams each of pow dered ginjrer root, wood charcoal and bicarbonate of soda and half a dram of powdered nux vomica. Ilemcd} I'or Side Bone. Shorten toe; cut away semicircular portion of the wall under the side bone at ground contact surface so that when a bar shoe Is applied the wall will not come in contact with the iron at that part. Clip hair from enlarge ment and blister twice a month with powdered cantharides one dram, bini odide of mercury one dram, lard one ounce, robbing the blister in for lo minutes and washing it off in 43 hours; then apply lard daily. Treatment l-'or Founder. Founder Is In the feet onlj Put on tar, oakum, leather sole and flat, wide webbed shoes which come in contact with the walls only Clip hair from coronets (hoof head > and blister twice a month with ma; • of cantharides rubbed in for J.~> minute - and washed off In three days, after which apply lard daily to blistered surface. i onich I:i I'iKM. Give ten
  • o not prick an enemy with ;i two pointed needle, as that hurts your self :;s much as it does him;" "A mother is like the cow which sustains the family in time of drought:' "One hand washes another;" "A sittins; hen never gets fat," an answer to our "roll ing stone" aphorism. When all is quiet lu the land, they say, "We are sitting down building houses." Another say lag Is, "A man who is patient eat? fatted beasts, but an impatient mat has to content himself with the tiesli ot a lean goat."—Chambers' Journal. \ hnrnt minded. Cassldy— Kill\ thought he wor ia court Instld avon th' baseball grounds. O'Toole —He <1 I ? Cassldy- Vis; whin th' umpolre foiu ed him $lO he prayed a Jury troll.—Chi cago News. EDUCATION" OF GIRLS THE LONG FIGHT OF WOMEN FOR KNOWLEDGE NOT YET ENDED. I'ei-HiMleikt Opposition of I (nmorva tiu-s tot oedueation—The West tins Unayn Beeu llure l'ru*rii«ive Than tlie Kiixl. Coeducation is the great social achieve ment of the nineteenth century. A hun dred years uso there was no public provi sion anywhere in the world for the higher education of women. "Why do you want togo to the academy?" said a shrewd, matter of i o-t New England farmer, l'r. s Stone, in ls.i.», to his bright, as piring daughter. I.my. "Your mother learned just enough arithmetic to count her ci-'gs and < hickens and figure up her butter money. She lias got alone: well enough. \\ hat was good enough for her ought to be good enough for you." So he refused to givi Lucy money togo to a seminary. ami Eney had to teacli coun try gel latsl a week, year after year, to pay her way at Qua bog and Wilbra hit 111 and South Had ley. "Girls cannot learn ({reek and Hebrew and algebra," said her brother, when Lucy expressed her wish togo with him to college. So Lucy had to save up S7O to enable her to travel across the state of New York to Buffalo, and thence (as a deck passenger) on a Lake Erie steamer to Toledo, in order to reach the brave western college bearing the lion .i]-4 d i.-Hue of the missionary Oberlin. which alone in the whole round world admitted women to equal educational opport: - is. Graduating there in 1847, sin- be mi her divinely appointed work it - v- n"> equality in the same year, hi U:e . eof It had cost her 12 years • i and privation to gain what i «'i century girls enjoy with -1! U ->t of sympathy and appre t x- hat Father Shepherd, the i .a,; • o! Oberlin in 18.12, justly called "tLi mi : I and neglected sex," sus tained Miss Wiliard and Mary Lyon and Catherine Be> eher in their efforts to lit women to I c the wives of missionaries and the com. anions of scholarly men. The persuasive eloquence of Frances Wi : i t and la ii' stiiif L. Rose and Lu cretia Mott and Ahhv Ivelly and the sis ters Grin he won frr women tlie priceless privilege of free rpeech, and prepared the way for Lucy Stone and Antoinette L. Brown and Paulina Davis and Eliza beth Gaily Stantoo and Sus-in M. An thony. us they in their turn blazed the path for .Tulia Ward Howe and Mary A. Livermorc and a i am v of women lec turers atal rcf ei: o . *.vi ■> 112 llowcd. Every state west of 1 em. ylvuuia. fior-a Ohio to California, opened it colleges and univc.-ities tow. men. Geneva col lege in 1815 was the iirst medical school in the world to admit a v -a mi a ; a stu tlent, an i in 1547 1 h I ..e | astiri of seeing my sister. Elizabeth Blackwell, receive her diploma, and hear her pro nounced by the faculty to be the leader in every department of study of her class of 130 young men. But it had cost her sew n years' heroic effort to get what hundreds of young women now obtain every year without opposition. But conservatism dies hard. Failing to prevent coeducation by direct method*, it has resorted to compromises. To meet the growing demand by women for higher education the aristocratic east, with its class distinctions and inherited preju dices, has combated coeducation by flank movements. Women's colleges were established at Vassar, Smith, Wellesley and Brvn Mawr. Graduates of coeduca tional colleges were employed in many cases as presidents, professors and in structors in those institutions. A more subtle form of compromise has rtcoiriy been devised in order to stave off the Inevitable. Western Reserve ami Brown and Columbia and Harvard have practically instituted women's depart ment-. under such titles as Barnard, Rad cliffe, etc., which have been endowed by rich men and women. In these, women pursue similar studies in separate classes under the professors of men's colleges, receiving diplomas certified by the presi dents of these colleges as indicative of equal proficiency. And now a new step in differentiation is proposed. Physicians have ceased to predict physical deteriora tion of women as a result of college stud ies, but certain presidents and professors of men's colleges now s< ek to ward off coeducation by asserting that classical education und the higher mathematics unfit women to be wives and mothers. A sympathetic crusade against coeduca tion had gradually been initiated by east ern Dame Fartingtons. G. Stanley Hall, president of Clark university, of Wor cester. Mass., has stirred western edu cators by his misleading utterances at Chicago. President Hail, describing "The Ideal School" to his summer school at Worces ter, is actually reported as saying: "There are many people who never ought to be educated, and who would bo better in morals if they never had been to school. We are coming to under stand the vanity of scholarship." And, again, he proposes to segregate the sexes after the girls are thirteen and the boys eleven years of age. He says: "Boys can hereafter rarely do their best work under female teachers, because they feel their manhood, and tho sexes will pretty much part company. The girls need reverent exemption from com petition. In soul and body girls are more conservative, while boys are more radical. Facts, ideas, laws, principles should be in their atmosphere, and they are of vital importance. They have en tered the stage uf apprenticeship to life." So it appears that "facts, ideas, laws, and principles" are not adapted to wo men. What a mistake nature has made in putting boys and girls as brothers and sisters into tlie same families, since they need to part company so early! Presi dent Clark's address is a surprising mix ture of sense and nonsense, containing many admirable suggestions, but assum ing that the sexes are so intellectually distinct that they require different edu cational diet at separate tables. This is in modern form the old assault upon the principle of coeducation. But the Atlantic ocean will not be driven back by a few apostles of exclu slveness and class distinction. Tho great fre<-, broad, liberal west will pay slight deference to these petty antagonists. Every 3 ear great state universities from Vermont to California will graduate thousands of young women with the af fectionate esteem of their masculine rlusaiiuites, while the- more conservative ins 1 it nt iou- Kradimte their hundred*. Coeducation has < yynf *>rrm* MiMWiIRWppE Speaking on the development of the boar before the lowa Swine Breeders' association. Mr. 11. Streator said: I would rather do the work than tell you bow it should be done, as there is no laid down rule. Very often a change ui condition requires different treat ment. I will try to give you it rule that, seldom fails. In the first place I would select a young boar with a quiet disposition, which nearly always do notes good feeding qualities. I would want him growth}- and a good individ ual, with a good, large bone and a strong constitution, with its much stylo and finish as possible. I would want his sire, dam. grandsire and grandain to have good development—the devel opment that I expected the young boar to have when fully matured, for like produces like, and that which is bred in the bone, with proper treatment, will come out through the flesh. After having selected the kind of young boar, I would give him kind treatment, as nothing w ill ruin a young hoar quicker than ill treatment. I would give him a well fenced lot, with good shelter. The lot should contain not less than one fourth of an acre, and if larger till the better. This will furnish him with plenty of pasture and room to exercise. If the boar is of a quiet disposition, his lot may be ad- Joining other bogs, but should he bo of a nervous disposition I would have his lot away from other hogs. In regard to the feed and feeding! It makes not so much difference what the feed is and liow it is fed. I would feed him regularly twice a day with corn and oats and swill made of ground oats and ship stulT. He should have some salt and plenty of wood ashes, and under no condition be over fed, as it. will do liiin more harm than good. For good development it requires good breeding and good feeding, feed alone will not develop the nice little boar into a large, tine boar; neither will It increase the size and bone, but you 32 I ■>- 5-13 I'M AM I'M I'M Hutlalo Lvt- II 'JO 2 '< Ncranton Ar > 15 10 I*l AM + AM ♦ I'Mf I'M SORA WTON •> "I"' JO It") I ■>'> 5 "(0 liellevue #SO . Taylorville '• I" 03 ■"> >'. i Dackawanna '"I I" 23 *I" 0 Oii Duryea 7OS 10 2H 213 i; i Pittston "07 Hi 81 2J7 i, 18 Susquehanna Ave... II" I" '■■■'; * hi West pittston 7 I ; 111 2'J ; 0 J!< Wyomiuif 717 111 111 227 ti 21 Forty Fort Bennett 7 -'I In 10 231 i; ..u Kingston ar. ' 2 It) ii :i5 W ilkes-Harre Ar 7in II in 2 til i> 4K Wilkes liariv I.vi- 731 l<: :»< 2 at i; _'n Kingston i\ •80 10 >1 240 6 .."i Plymouth Jo n0... . Plymouth I s 1 Mil 2 4'* o ; | I Avondale 742 . a r.4 —.. Nanticoke ! I ' " '•< •** . '■ >1 . Hnnlook'r /5] II 17 3 btf j (I;, 7 Shlckshinny s " 2!' i 27 ll s . KV-'TTHRHBBRLAHD I ''l • LHI H1 ' r. AM I'M I'M I'M 'j* >irs*( • iA >l. NKW YotE I'M 11 I'M| Barclay St. Ar 3 6ou Christopher St... 330 IE". Hoboken 8 151 4 4*> . Scran ton 10 051 12 65 . AM I'M \.M \ M Buffalo A i . Koo IJ i". THI Scrautun I'\ 1 •"> 11 AM" I'M i I'M ' i'M* Scranton 942;12 bo 4 ftO x i't Bellevue 37 4 40 Taylorville >2 4in x 35 Lackawanna —•» 4 o2 s 27 Uoryea 9 28 4 x 25 fittston '•» l'| il2 17 424 X2l Suequi liacna Ave. I" 12 4 420 xls West fittston.. #lßl 417 s|{ WyominK W Oil 12 "X 412 s]2 Forty Fort » <»* I 07 .... Bennett : ul ' •• • 4"3 sni Kingston, * II , r n 400 xO2 Wilkes-Bar N " II 50 360 750 Wiil;i-s-l!arii- A 1 '•» 12 in 410 Kln Kingston s •'• s II!' 100 XO2 Plyuiouth .1 unction | s sl 3i2 Plymouth h l7 11 51 34, 7 ;,;j Avondale 8 42 3 42 Nantlcoke 888 11 4:: 33s 7JO llunlock s «82 331 tT 11 Shickghinny *22 11 2 u ic> f2 08 , I."> BrlarOreek J 12 VI fii 5x Willow Grove ' 1 "(l , '2 50 Lime ?•' . 2 4'i fii 50 Kspy ! 7 -12 10 4S , 210 641 Bloomsburn L r'i 10 It? - 24 8X Kupert •_ 'lO 37 220 ii 32 Oatawieea !- 10 34 224 027 Danville 8 " s 10 1!' 211 612 t'hul sky •• •■ ■ • Cameron .... I 2 11 fii 03 Nom HUUHUUL'D.. iio 0' * '' *5 50 AM r.M 0 I'M I'M Connections at Kupert with 112 hilailel|ihla & Reading Railroad for Tamanend, Tamaqua, Williamsjort, Sunbury, fottsville, etc. At Northumberland with I' and K. Div. P. 1!. K. for Harrisburg. Lock Haven, Emporium, Warren Corry, and Erie. ♦Daily. + Daily e\c«'i)t undiiy. 112 signal. PEIISYLVAIIA RAILROAD, TIME T^BLE 111 Effect June 2nd, 1901- AM A.M. P.M.P. M Serantoi.( IticH)lv :tS 4'i ;0 3S 2 I s 427 j I rittston •• •• 708 I 1000 §2424 52 [ A. M. A. M I*. M P. AI I i Wilkesbarre,.. Ivs 7 3" jio :i.'i 3 i"> >3 ooj , l lym'th Ferry " I 7 37 110 42 I 3 It! f6 "7 Nanticoke •' 740 10 ~H 326 ti 17 [ titi | Mocanaqua ...." 804 11 07 ' 16 037 '"... i Wapwallopen.. " 812 II Iti 3 047 | Nescopeek ar 8 11 2ii 4 (>7 700 A.M. \.M. P.M. I I'ottsville Iv § "i .'iii ;I1 .V> t Hazleton " 7 o.j 12 4s Tomhicken " 722 I 0-i t Fern Olen " 720 110 !!!!!.! ] Kock <»len "I 7 3."> j."!".. Nescopcck ...,ar 802 1 :!5 '.1!... ' XTM A. M P. M .PM~ Nescopeek Iv 8 2.'! Jill 2ti 40" 700 Creasv •' 833 11 ;ai 4 ltj 700 EspvFerry.... '• is 43 n 4r. t 4 21 7 2> ;;;;;; E. Bloomsbarg, " 847 11 .">o 4 2s• T Catawissa ar 855 11 .">7 4 732 Catawissa Iv 855 11 4 : . 732 South Danville "i »14 12 !."> 4 .">3 7 ;,j Sunbury 935 12 40 515 xl 5 A.M. P.M. P. M KM. Sunbury Iv 042 i 1 loj 4~i o 4:, Lewisliurg.... ar 10 13 I 4". 6 1>- Milton " lu OS 139 61410 00 Williamsport.. " II 00 2 3oj 7 10 10 50 Lock Haven... "j 11 50 340 807 Kenovo "jA.M. 440 900 Kane " X 25 1 ~~ P.M. P.M.I Lock Haven..lv ;12 10 345 Bellefonte ....ar! 1 0-j i 4 44 Tyrone " 215 000 1 Philips burg " j 4415 X 20 ' Clearfield.... " j 637» 9 09 Pittsburg.... 0 55 1130 I A.M. P. M. P. M. H M Sunbury Iv »60§ 1 55 5 2". s :jl Harrisburg.... ar 11 30 S3 15 055 H) 111 P. M. P. M. P. M. A M Philadelphia., ar S3 17 023 ||lo 20 425 Baltimore ",S 311 ono 04. 230 Washington... "j> 4 10 7 15 .0 55 4aj lA.M. P, M.' Sunbury Iv §lo (KI J 2 031 Lewistown ,Ic. ar 11 40 350 1 Pittsburg " 0 A.M. I', M P. M. I' M Harrisburg.... Iv 11 45 345||7 15 ; 102' P.M. A.M.AM Httsburg ar jt! 55'U II 3o,|| 150 530 II ' ' P. M.| P M A M A M PittsburK Iv 710 000 3 00HX 00 ,A.M | A ail | P Mj Harrisburg.... ar | 1 55| 42n 9 30. 310 . . Fittsbuig Iv 1 8 00 P M .fj. .fj. " ...... 730 ;3 10 Sunbury ...... ar o 2 |! - 5 00 P.M. A MA M AM Washington... Iv 10 40 7 5o 10 5o Baltimore " II 41 4f> S4O 11 45 Philadelphia... " 11 211 425 s3O 12 25 A. M.: A Mj A. M. P M Harrisburg.... Iv 3 3"' 755 11 lo -4 00 Sunbury ai 505 9 30' 110 5 10' P.M.! \ M A M , Pittsburg Iv -12 45 3no Xon Clearfield.... " 400 1 92* .... Pbiiipsburg.. " ; 4 50) 10 12 Tvrone " 7 15 X 10 12 15 Bellefonte.. " x3l 032 120 .... Lock Haven ar 9SO ; 10 80 217 I*. M. A >1 A M I' M Erie Iv | 5 H.v Kane " 8 4nj 000 '".. i{enovo " II."><» ; 0 4">i 10 30 Lock Haven.... " 12 KX 735 11 25 300 A.M I' M Williamsport .. " 225 830 12 40 4IK Milton ■' 222 910 127 4 LcWistiurK " 005 I I'l 447 Sunbury at 321 9 4ti 165 5 2t> .... A.M.! A Ml' M P M I Sunbury Iv 51. sn ! 055 2 I*l 54S .... South Danville" 7 13! 10 17 221 009 .... Catawtssa •• 73 i| 10 35 230 6 271'"'" EBloomsburg.. " 730 10 43 213 632 Espy Ferry...." 743 110 47] f0 38 '[*" Creasy " 752 Hi 60 2V> 046 ['//. Nescopeek " 802 11 oj, 305 655 AM A M P. M. P M I t atawissa |\ X ;t5 10 :w Nescopeek Iv ; .*> 15 ; 7 05 Bock (Hen ar II 22 7 28 ' FernOleu 001 11 2*. >4l 734 Tomhicken " 0 <'7 11 3x 5 17 T42 Hazleton •• 921 ll 5S «i n:;, gO6 Pottsville " 10 15 1. Vi A M A 51 1' 51 I' M Nescopeek Iv 802 11 05 •05 e55 Wapwallopen..ar 810 11 20 310 709 Mocanaqua .... " 820 11 32 329 721 Nanticoke " 847 II 54 . I> 742 ■•••• 1' 511 Plym'th Ferry •112 s .-,7 12 ir2 ;5; t7 52 W'ilksbarte ... " 006 12 in 405 800 AMP M P M P M Plttston(DAH) ar ?» 29 12 55 r 4 ftti 836 Seranton " " 10 08 121 521>9 05 j § Weekdays. 112 Daily. I Flag station. Pullman Parlor and Sleeplne furs run on through trains between Sunbury, Williamsport and Erie, between Sunbury and Philadelphia and Washington and between Harrisburg, Pitts burg and the West. For further information apply to Ticket Agents J.n. HUTCHINSON, J. li. WOOD, den I Manager. Oen'l /Vm'n'r A SHOP Tor all kind of Tin Roofing, Spouting and Ceneral Job Work. Stoves, Heaters, Ranges, Furnaces, eto. PRICES THE LOWEST! QLILITY THE BEST! JOHN HIXSON NO. 116 E. FRONT BT, JOHN W. FAENSWORTH INSURANCE Li Fire Mem aid Steam Beilei Office: Montgomery Building, Mill Street, Danville, - - Ponn'a PHILADELPHIA & READING- RAILWAY CORRECTED TO ,lI'SK». 1901 I'KAINS LEAVE DANVILLE (weekdays only) Fcr I'hilmlelphia 11.25 a m. For New York 11.25 a m. For Catawlssa 11.25 a. m,, 6.04 p. m. For Milton 7.32 a, m., 4.00 p m. For Williatnsport 7.32 a. m., 4.00 p m. Trains for Kaltiinore, Washington and tU• South leave Twenty-fourth and Chestnu! Streets, Philadelphia, weekdays—3.2B, T. 14 10.22 a. 111., 12.10, 1.33, 3.03, 4.12, 5.03, 7.26, 8.20 p m., 12.21 night. Sundays 3.23, 7.14 a. m., 12.16 1.33, 4.12, 5.03. 7.26, 8.26 p. in. ATLANTIC CITY RAILROAD. Leave Philadelphia, Chestnut street Whar and South street Wharf for Atlantic City. \V eekdays—Expressß.oo, a.00,10.45 a in., 1.00 (Saturdays only 1.30) 2.00, 3 00, 4.00, 4.30, 5.00, $5.40,7.15, 8.30 p. in. Accommodation 6.00 a. in. $5.40, 6.30 p. in. Sundays Express, 7.80, 8.00, 8..30. 9.0i1, 10.00, 11 00 a. ill., 4.J5. 7.15 p. in. Ac commodation o.ooa. m., 5.00 p. m. 51.00 Ex cursion daily 7.00 a. m. Additional Sunday, 7.30 a. in Leave ATLANTIC CITY DEPOT--Week days. Express-Monday only, 6.45) 7.00, 7.45, (from Baltic Extension only, 7.55) 8.20, 9.00, 10.15, 11 a. m„ 2.50, 4.30, 5.30, 7.30, 8.30,9.30 p. m. Accommodation 5.25,7.05, a. m., 3.50 p. m. Sun days Express—B.4s a. in., 8.30. 4.30, 5.00, 6.00, 6.30,7.00,7.30,8.009.30 p. m. Accommodation— -7.15 a. m., 4.32 p. in. I'arlor cars on all express trains LEAVE PHILADELPHIA. For CAI 'E MA Y Weekdays 8.30,8.45, 11.45, a. m. i? 1.50) *4.10, $5.80 p. m Sundays—B.4s, 9.15 a. m., 5.00 p. m. For OCEAN t' ITY—Weekdays—B.4s 11.45 a. in . 2.15., +4.20, 5.30 p. m. Sundays—B.4s, 0.15 a. m.,5.00 p. in. For SKA IsLECITY Weekdays—B.4sa. m 2.15. +4.20, *5.30 p. m. Sundays 8.45 a. ni., 5.00 p. in. 51 00 Excursion to Cape May, Ocean tit v and Sea Isle City 7.00 a. m daily.* South St., 4.00 p m., + Sontli St., 4.15 p.m., iSoutli St.. 5..30 p. in.,fsouth. St., l 15 p. m. NEW YOliK AND ATLANTIC Cl'l i EXPRESS. Leave N EVV YORK (Liberty Street) 9.40 A. M (saturdavs only 1.00, p. m.) 8.40 p. m. Leave ATLANTIC ClTY,—Weekdays 8 80 a m . 2.15 p. m. Sundays—s.3o p. rn. i Detailed lime tables at ticket offices. W-O HESLER, KI'SOS J WEEKS Gen. Superintendent General Agent. i Thp Runslan I'rliiee««e». In liussiM itif term "prince#®" doe« not mean very tuucli, for the slinplo reason th&l there are so many* of then and tliat it is never n royal title. All the feuiale descendants of a prfince of a certain kind are princesses, aijd the re sult Is that litany princesses at*' as poor and of as little account as any ill used princess of fairy tales. For instance, I'rince (ialitzin is the head of one of the most powerful families in Russia, hut there is a Princess Galitzln, a cous in of Ills, who earns a frugal living by riding bareback steeds in short skirts, spangles and tights in a fourth rate circus. A Princess Galitzln,j another cousin, married an Italian adventurer and now occupies the place of attend ant to the mother of the khedlve of Egypt- 1 lie real royal princesses of Russia are styled grand duchesses. They are the daughters and Misters of the czar. Tlie\ are very iuipprtant la dies. As soon as they are baptized they are given the insignia of the Order of the Great and Holy Martyr father- I Inc.—Chicago Record. lowa almost from the date of its admission lias been called the Hawk eye State, llawkoye was the name of a noted Indian chief, who in the early days caused no little trouble.a long the western border of American civillza Hon.