Montour American. (Danville, Pa.) 1866-1920, January 14, 1904, Image 3

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    : OUR MISS I
HEMMING |
By C H LI.WIS ♦
t •
A 1
i♦-♦
He" name w - down on ji,,, |, ;l
ger list i'f tbe 1;\„, I»uke, bound from
London to 1ml; . as .Mi-- ltertha l'lem
rniug. She was fairly good looking, of
excellent tigure and was witty and
magnetic Before a day had passed
all the single men and half the mar
lied ones w ere determined tog. t an
Introduction as soon a- pos- ble In
two or three days she had been iut.ro
duceil to even lirst class pa---nger of
the sterner sc\. during the next
two or three -lie picked and culled un
til what was known a- the l'lemming
crowd numbered about fifteen men.
Twelve of tie -c were young men or
widowers, while the remainder were
married men whose wives were ill Eng
land or India. It was the money crowd
of the ship.
When the -hip had been out about
u week cards were inaugurated to
while iway tie spare liotii- It was
a matter of surpri to every one, «s
soon as the playing -ait fairly started,
that M.-s l'lemtniiu wa - so adept with
tin past boards and I.ad -itch universal
j. .oil luck SI handled tin- cards like
If, -I •k< -t . until* and the Jackpots
■ *r way with wonderful regular
ty (»n two .r " tee occasions she
i, 11 ! i MI 1 ati-d re cards in such a way
that had she been a man she would
have -. •-n • ailed down, but as it was
•he was given 'he I -netit of the doubt.
V 'ii ! won s::r.ii of me I cashed
1 .-ni out of the game.
be'"-. \ II satistii d in my ow n
II ;■ 1 I hadn't been given a square
deal, and frein that day Miss l-'leni
iiiing ! . -I no further use for me. When
1 tried to bask in her smiles as before
the vr los were not at home to me.
She ; d coiiiid d to me that she found
uie congenial, but there seemed to lie
some mistake bout that after 1 had
decided to lose no more money.
llcr greatest victim was the soli of
;in I . I:s11 manufacturer who was go
ing out to I nil I to spend some of his
father's surplu- cash. II - exact losses
wl'cn 1 -1* deciil d to quit no one but
himself could -ay, and lie gave no in
formation, but it was hinted that they
footed up a hatful of money. In the
enr.r- of three weeks the l'lemming
[oTj
htl K IIIMiJ.KIi THE I'AKDK 1.1K12 THE SL.ICK-
Ksl (lAMI)LKl;.
crowd was dissolved. One after an
other withdrew as he was cleaned out
of his spare cash, and Mi l'lemming
was certainly several thousand dollars
to the good.
Soon after (!•• poker g itnc- ceased
we wi : treated to several sensations
in succession. The lirst was the disap
pearance of several diamond rings and
a brai • let wh, had been left on the
piano by a playi r. Alter a little it was
found that the ewelr.\ had been taken
w hi I- ,ly - x J.I pie were in the cab-
In. I'i r i'f the- were married ladies,
the li ft Ii was M •- l'lemming and the
sixth a \ ling i .an The cabin was
turned up- de *1 - n in the search, but
the missing valt: tbl- could not be
found. Then eveiy one of the six per
sons demanded that ins or ln-r -tate
rooin and lugga; b • sear< - hed. but the
captain I"-la-d i . m .- up l»> suggest
ing that • u» of he servants w i- the
thief and that the plunder would in
time be recovered.
Three clays later a married woman
had a more sensational complaint to
make I luring her temporary absence
from her stateroom s,,tiie one entered
It and stole <:,ii(i in cash, a gold watch
and a costly pin. ller stateroom was
unly two doors below mine, and at the
time named 1 had caught n glimpse of
Pome one entering it. I just got sight
nt a -kirt, but I was sure in my own
mind that it was one I had seen Miss
l'lemming wear.
The bold robbi'rv was a shock to
♦•very one No one's belongings would
be safe until the thief was discovered
It was natural to tirst suspect the serv
ants, and the captain bad them before
him In sinve -ion ami tried his best to
tlx the guilt While this was going
on the mate and stewardess were
searching quarters and baggage, but
no trace of the plunder could be found.
Some thought the thief had thing the
stlltT overboard to - s. ape detection, but
the majority settled down to the b"
lief that one of the passenger- was tin*
guilty party.
Many who had jewelry and small
sums of money hasb-iwd to the pur- r,
und people began 1001. ng at each other
111 an unpleasant waj One half prob
ably suspected the other half, but that
wasn't discovering lite criminal I fell
sure I could give a good guess ns to
who It w as. but guessing and declaring
are two different things Miss l'lem
ming was loud in her indignation and
feverish in her anxiet\ The average
detective would have reasoned that
rather overdid it.
Four dii.v- later another stateroom
was entered and more jewelry taken,
and right in the midst of the sensa
tlon a lady missed a pair of diamond
earrings which »Le had put out to
••lemi iSo i/ri-it w m the indignation
and so intense tin* desire to catch tin
thief that all passengers and servants
were held together on deck while a
Bean h was made of • verything below
This search was most thorough and
exhaustive but not one of the missing
valuables was located It was, how
ever, the end of the thieving, as every
thing In the line «,f jewelry was locked
up in the purser's sab The remainder
of the voyage was anything but com
fortable. as every one felt that he
might be under suspicion, and then*
were very few farewells exchanged at
the parting.
I went up the country to Allahabad
and had been theiv six months when
an Englishman was arrested for trying
to defraud a bank of a large amount of
money. It was my province as a uews
paper man to write up the affair and
later onto come lit contact with the ,ac
eused. Ihe instant I saw him 1 asked
if his name was l'lemming and If his
sister hadn't come out to India on the
Iron I Mile He laughed heartiU at the
question, but did not answer it until he
found there was evidence enough to
send him to prison for a long term.
Th- ii In- I \[ :e d that he was Miss
rii'imniiig I i— ot onl\ that, but
I i admitted lo " one Haiisoiue, a
thief .Mid arper b; dh "wanted" by
the Kn;;lislr"police for many offenses
against her in ijesiy - laws
Kansom. had many times taken to fe
male di-J'ii-es when closely pushed,
and heap dtl young lady so well as
to always deceive Not a man or wo
n II on bi i I'd tl--' I roil I'like had tlio
h ~st suspi. .HI t! it he was masquerad
ing \s the robin : - aboard. I laid
tin • , at I door. I he smiled in re
ph I h : I d a doubt that he
w si! i : ■' where lie hid his
plunder 1 cannot say. No wonder he
had plucked us at cards, for In* was a
notorious sharp. He went to prison for
lifteen years and died after half his
sentence had expired. A year before
his death he escaped, donned female at
tire again and was finally found serv
ing in an aristocratic family as a parlor
maid.
Mm!' I'fßrr Willi I In- Kill lor.
Aii < ikini-oini business man got mad
at the editor of a local paper about
- uiH'thim. which appeared in print and
notitied the editor that he would in fu
ture have his printing done at a job of
tioe where the\ didn't have i paper to
roast everybody. He thought, ol course,
the paper would have to quit business,
lint it kept going.
In about two months the man's
daughter was married, and they had a
big wedding, but not a line appeared
in the paper. Later on his wife gave a
reception to visitors, but not a line ap
peared In print
Later on the man's youngest child
died, but the editor apparently didn't
know it. The next fall a mass meeting
was held in town to see about public
Improvements, and this business man
made a big speech. The meeting was
written up In full, except this man's
Speech. This was skipped. Then the
business man called and asked the edi
tor what he had against him.
"Von got mad last year." was the re
ply, "and said you were going to have
your work done at the job printing of
fice, so I thought I'd just let your job
printer print the account of your daugh
ter's wedding, your wife's reception,
your child's obituary and your little
speech."—Enid (Kan i Events
Wive* of M«'ii.
I'cw great men have paid more en
thusiastic tributes to their wives than
Tom Hood, says the licnver Times
"You will think." lie wrote to her in
one of his letters, "that I am more
foolish than any boy lover, and 1 plead
guilty. I'or never wits a wooer so
young of heart and so steeped in love
as 1, but it is a love sanctified and
strengthened by long years of exp- ri
em* 1 . May Cod ever bless my darling
the sweetest, most helpful angel who
ever stooped to bless a man."
"I want thee much." Nathaniel Haw
thorne wrote to his wife many years
after his long patience had won for him
the flower "that was lent from heaven
to show the possibilities of the human
soul." "Thou art the only person In
the world that ever was necessary to
rue. And now I am onh myself when
thou art within my reach."
The wedded life of W irdsworth with
his cousin, "the phantom of delight,"
was a poem more exquisitely beautiful
than any his pen ever wrote "All that
she has bei n to me," the poet ollce said
in his latter days, "none but Cod and
myself can ever know."
t hurcli•-« an I'lueen of llefuiti- In War
iiur ancestors transacted a good deal
of business of one kind or another In
and about their churches. To begin
with, the churches of old England in
turbulent times were regarded as
places of safe custody for public and
private property. In the border land
o! Kiigland anil Scotland the idea was
carried out still more completely, and
churches, or at least their towers, be
came regular fortresses and not in
frequently were objects of offense and
defense. We may note in rural Eng
land that in the case of ancient church
es the towers are often not merely dis
proportionate in size to the rc-t of the
church, but are carefully and strongly
built, evidently with an object.
Even in peaceful Surrey and Sussex
the belfries are veritable strong rooms
with barred windows and massive
doors and often contain a massive
treasure cliest. Hither*, at the first
alarm, money and valuables were hur
ried. for beyond the security of thick
walls and bars ami bolts there was an
ngis of sanctity which in a supersti
tlmis age protected the building from
the most ruthless of foes. The fortress
like construction of many of the bor
der land churches is an interesting
study of antiquarians. London Stand
ard.
TLIE Dahlia I u Hngl'iuil.
The dahlia has become popular
among English gardeners. In the wild
plant the flowers are single, with a dull
ray and yellow disk. The varieties of
the cultivated forms are almost end
less.
The original w as discovered In Mexi
co b\ Vincent Cervantes aliout 1754
ami was tirst brought to the botanic
gardens of Madrid, and the same year
it was introduced into England by the
then Marchioness of l'.ute The plant
became extinct in Itritaiu. It was
again brought there in l*ol, and in
that year i- found the earliest men
tlon of the dahlia, named from Andrew
I Mill, a Swedish botanist and pupil of
I.inmcus.
In Mexico the tubers are cultivated
as food on ii e, oil lit of the quantity of
ititilin they contain, but in Europe,
though many times tried, they never
became popular.
I'.nny \V II y of Meuxnribx: ll«*iyhfM.
Anybody who knows how to take tie*
altitude of the sun or a star with a
sextant and wishes to take that of any
distant hill, steeple or the like should
put a tea tr.i\ ou the ground, till it
with water and then retire from it mi
til the top uf the llill, steeple or what
not is l'ctlci ted in the liquid Now take
Hie sextant ..ml make tin image of the
summit ooiin do with its reflection in
the liquid The angle of elevation
thus, obvioi|s|\, have been lin-a-il
double Half of this will give
mea-ui ■ iiii-nt tequircd
Home Influence.
It was during tli reading Ii on 1-.
one of our public schools that a little
lud read in a jerky, expres-ionh-ss w r,
"Mamma, see the hawk
The reading was -o very poor that
the teacher said. "John you know you
would not talk that way to your motli
er."
"No'm," replied the lad
"Well, now.' lid the teacher in a
kindly v. ay. "you read it • xactly a- vou
would say It to \ oui mo i
And here is his rip y IA ok IIHHII,
at that there hawk' Philadelphia
F
| HIS WINTON
SLOWNESS
By HARRIET
G. CANFIELD
( uiiinght, •> i « Mi t iuro .
'1 In' lirsi \\ intou I a i ' •.1 Hi'' ■ i
had iin hired tin- lasting displeasure of
tin- lirst Allni-lit 1 believe In' li.nl
been slow ill paying a debt al least
there was a general impr< s.ou tliat
"tin' W inton sl«wii"—<" was ii sponsible
!'• •!..<!■■: r-1 l
cat W nitons lather and *n were
slow ut speech iinil movement Mrs.
Winton ami Sue • 11• I not sliari' la ' lie*
family failing."
Wlii'ii Amos Allu via's ;f• • had died
In' had pei suaded a younger brother to
"mow in and inn tin' farm they
were two miles out of town and l.»raee,
who w;h tli' ti fifteen. was sent east to
a .voting ladies' seminary, i Hiring her
four yi'iirs' a I •-••in •' from Hlglunead
her once vivid recollection* of tin* en
mity between tin' Albrights and Win
tons grew dim a nil shadow y Win n,
ou the day following graduation, she
was iii\ ited to spend aw • «'k at a class
mate's home it was with no feeling of
apprehension that she heard ln-r friend
say, "Hrother George has asked Jack
Wlntoii to come down with him from
Harvard, und we shall be quite gay."
The Wintons that sin- knew had a
son, but his name was John. This
young man proved to be well built, self
possessed and i lear of skin, and John
Winton had been a long. lank, freckled
boy, very bashful, she remembered.
To be sure there was a certain drawl
in her new acquaintance- speech,
which reminded her of "that boy," but
perhaps all Wintoiis were slow spoken.
The four young people thoroughly
enjoyed the week they spent together,
and it was with delight that Jack Win
ton discovered on the eve of his de
parture that Mi-s Albright's destina
tion was the same a> his own. "I'm
glad that we travel together," he said.
"Yes," Grace assented hesitatingly.
Jack's face tlushed, and he turned to
his host with the explanation, "Miss
Albright has just recognized an old en
emy in your humble servant."
"Oh. nor' Craei; protested. "If our
fathers are foes we need not be." And
she lipid out her hand to him, with a
friendly little gesture
I Miring the three days' journey wi -t
--ward their friendship progressed rap
Idly. They were in the midst of one of
many animated conversations when
Mr. Amos Albright boarded the train
at X., a station some thirty miles from
Ilighmeail Craee -aw him coming
down the aisle.
"There is father," she said hurriedly
"Ile'll not recognize you, I'm sure! 1
believe I'll introduce you as Mr. Jack."
When Mr. Albright bent to kis- his
daughter's upturned face he looked
keenly at the young mail beside her.
"Mr. Jack, father." Grace murium>d
1 ami Mushed guiltily when the two
men shook ha nils gravely, and Jink
offered the newcomer his seat
"I'll move opposite," he .-aid in his
pleasant drawl, "if yon don't object."
Before they reached Highuiead lie
found himself drawn into tile conversa
tion* To his daughter's delight Mr. Al
bright seemed to enjoy talking with
her friend. "Sensible young man!" he
said to Grace when Jack went into the
smoking car just before the train pull
ed into iiighnicad. <>n the homeward
drive he spoke of him again "I've sel
dom met a young man,"he said, ";H
Intelligent as Mr. Jack Queer name,
isn't itV If my ey» -w. re shut while he
was talking I'd declare he was Win
ton."
"lie is, father," Grace confessed "He
is Mr. Jack Winton."
Amos Albright looki-d at hi- daugh
tor for a moment in dumb amazement.
"I'm sorry." lie said at last, "but that
set til S him."
Jack Winton refused to be thus sum
marily "settled." The mvt day he
came to i all and was received so coldly
by his unwilling host that lie knew at
once that his identity had been re
Vealed.
"Mr. Albright," he said in hi- delib
erate way, "I'm Winton. as you've ev:
dently discovered, but the W nitons are
not such a bad lot, after all. Aren't
you a bit prejudiced?"
"Not a whit more than your father
Is." Mr. Albright said stiffly.
"Yes, 1 know. Mother and Sue hadn't
a word to say when I spoke of calling
here, luit the pater raised a storm al
most forbade tne to come lb-ally, now.
what have you against me the Win
ton slowness?"
"Yes. I hate a laggard in anything
That's enough to condemn you, sir! My
daughter can receive you, if she wishes,
whenever you may call, but I must ask
you to excuse me now and always." A
chilling request, but Jack went away
happy in the thought that Grace still
considered him as a friend and had
asked him to come again.
In spite of the enmity between the
heads of the two houses Mrs. Winton
and her daughter were exchanging
cal's with Grace Albright before the
Hunni"- waned Amos \lbrhrht "-till
disapproved of Jack, though he could
discover nothing objectionable in Ids
conduct. The young man seemed to
be an able assistant to Ins father, who
was at the head of a well established
business "Blood will t. 11," he to
himself, "and the old Winton slowness
will crop out s<line day " When Jack
came one evening in October with the
not unexpected request for his daugh
ter's hand, he said Impressively "If
Grace hives you, and -In- imagines she
does, i w ill consider your proposal care
fully You may call tomorrow morn
ing at •! o'clock, and I will let you
know uiv decision "
"Six .'clock!" Jack exclaimed. A
look of i ?ihii• i - iossed Mr. Albright s
1.,. "i -s. he said, "but perhaps that
i - too ciilv I'or I W ill ton
"Not at all," Jack calmly as-uml
him It w;• J evident that Mr Albright
in. tiif to test bin I In' idea amused
him greatly, and lie laughingly related
th<' result of hi- call to his mother si rid
Sue
"It a test, mother," lie said, "and a
on |oo Nothing short of all
eiii I liquake w ill _• i uie up at • I
mil-: wake then if I'm to keep my ap
pointlll--nt it «•
"Noll-ell-1 Sue i lied "There's the
old alarm - lock "i oil <an set the alarm
for •> and put it at the head of your
bed. .link "
"Jllst the tioiig, lie iid gratefully,
"and I'll do it now '
I, ile ,u tile e\i llillg 111 - mother stole
into his .ha lulu'i and m-I the hands of
the litt|e i loi I, t'oi u id an hour "Jack
will nev r notice," she said to herself,
"and be dr- •-- so slow "
j After hew - asleep Sue tiptoed 111.
There was no light in the room, but
she found the ■ lock and set it an hour
ahead oi tine as sin- thought Neither
mother no.- daughter knew that the
Hlecpei was doomed to wake at >i
o'clock, out prompt Iv at that hour the
alarm sounded IVrliaps Jack can tell
than any un< else can, and I will give
you his no iunit of it:
1 was awake in a moment, and if j
evi r a \\ nt"ii hustled 1 did then. I •
let the old hoi -e have full swing, and ;
we i rotted ait to the farm in great j
s|,ape. \i 1 the shades were down, and
the phn • wan silent as the grave. 1 '
rang the bell and Mr Albright put his i
head out "I the window Ills lan ;
guage w isn't i.v polite It was hard
work to keep from laughing when he
shouted What in thunder do you :
wani 'Your daughter,' 1 shouted
back "Man alive, he cried. 'I said 0.
and il - only half past ii" Maybe that
didn't surprise me!
" 'Perhaps ,t's too early for an Vl
bright,' I sin gested. 'Shall I call hit
ci
"'No,' lie growled; I call answer you
now Ii this is a sample of Winton
slowness the stock is improving, and
""And I may have (JraceV 1 inter
rupted him.
" "i'lague take you!' he cried 'I sup- ,
pose so." I hen he closed the window
with .*i bang, and 1 camped ou the por- h
iintii (Jrai-e came down."
I he Kvolutl»ii <>f Name*.
volut;• >ll oi names from foreign
ton-ins into English is in main cases
e, ( s\ Eroin the (oTiiian Bauer to the
English Bowers and from the French
Boul.ang■ r t" the English Bulling' r is
but a step as it were But there are
no people who are often* r more liu- :
lnoroiisly a< l used of altering their '
names than the Irish. Thus <Tehau j
has be. oine Kehan: Carroll, Karl: I>il
lon. I>x 11 xll I»iv\er, lievcreand Devyr;
Mi i ui ty, Macarice and Makart; Slat
tery. Slater an*l Satterlee; O'Brien,
Obrion and I'.reen; McUinness. (iuin
iiess ..i;il Innes; ltellly, Itelyea; Iniffv,
1»11fax Md lutliii. Magoflin; Qulnu,
(jueeit I .ai iv Eougert; Haggcrtv,
iiagg.iri; Sully. Sonic. The English
s iigcr, I'.: all :n. merely dropped a let
ter when he went on the stag*'. He
was a Hebrew , and his real name was
Abraham.
<»I«I < 11hIohi Handed Down.
How man} can tell the origin of the
habit of closing the eyes in prayer'/
Ear back in the pa-t the sun was the
lin: '> ei'sa I object of worship. As it
rose abovi the horizon the devotee
thanked il for its return to bh-ss the
world As ii set in the west lie im- 1
ploi-ed its earlv return. His face was
iilwavs tow ird the --un in prayer, and
his eyes were closed to prevent blind
ness "| lie habit has passed down from
father io son for thousands of years.
Though the object oi worship has been
e1,,, ugeii. custom survives.
\o!*r ii*i it ( urativt*
The ( 'hiiiese (Jocior sets up a terrible
racket when • • d to treat the sick.
This is supposed to drive evil spirits
away, and it nii>|Uostionably acts well
in a great inanj cases, t'iviilzation
deiuaiiils r- -i nd ipiiet All noise is
barred from tie - kinoin. The ('bl
uest' have demonstrate*! unknowingly
a great ps;. I.olog .al or psychupatho
logi' al fact, A patient of mine had re
ceived tin last rites of the church, the
pulse had cased at the wrist and h"
had sunk into that coma which pre
ccd - di ith. Some one in the next
house struck up the "Anvil Chorus"
from"II 'i'ro\atore " I was very much
annoyed and distressed and tried to
1 stop it Suddenly the pulsation at the
wrist began igain, the patient grad
ually ope j 1111 his eye motioned to Ills
s stir. She b* nt low. and he whispered
in her car, l e duin te d'-a; that is my t
favorite tunc" We roused him, fed
him id today t• 11 years after the
evi hew. ;h- Jlo pounds. The
therapeutics brat ion or noise is
yet to I" written So I have discov
ered that anything that can arouse the j
stile ons- oils subliminal self w ill cure I
my pati* ni when all drugs rail, and j
noise i- a 'er v cheap ; geilt. Medical
B:v I
I)<MT 1IU«I
1 'eer re\' is.- the apparent order of '
natun for tin-y sleep in th* daytime
1 and fed at iiiglii. 1 low much sleep
the. do tale s a matter of contention
even among experieiici d stalkers. Some
ls ly little, i tla rs much <»n the w hole,
we ire iin .ined to agree with the for-
II.• 112 >r i! I.as to be lciuembcred that
tl'.\ chew the cud when lying down.
Two 1111 J st experienced and observant
foresters, th" one in Argyllshire and
tlie other in Aberdeenshire, thus gave
tln ir opinions I>• • r s],., por rest from
about 10 or 11 a. m to 1 pin." "I>eer
sleep from noon to."i p. in."
It is no uncommon occurrence to
come on de ■■ asleep A stalk >r in the
Bre ki omit had the rare experience
; of coming upon a parcel of seven stags,
all sound asleep A herd was seen to
move in < Ilenfeshic, but one stag re
mained behind, lying motionless On a
i careful approach he was found to be
asleep. Perhaps, however, the odil'-st
occurrence of this nature happened in
Bracmore, when a stalking party on
going up to the stag which had just
been shot found a three-year-old close
to It fast asleep In fact, it is by no
means rare to get within a yard or
two of a sleeping deer. Scottish field.
Poetry II ml Science*
Poetry has perhaps no place in the
exact science-, partly because exact
ness is incompatible with poetic license,
partly because of the unalterable tend
ency of the poet to get things wrong.
A curious example of this was noticed
in a lecture at the Camera club by Mr.
Duncan on cuttlefishes. The modern
cuttlefish is a di scemlaiit of the fossil
belemuite, but the only descendant of
the coeval ammonite is the paper nau
tilus. Better known i- th*' Portuguese
man of war, w . :. which the paper nau
tilu- is sometime- confused and which
Is really allied with the belemnite
group, because, while iis shell appears
external, it is not really so The poets
Pope, Byron and .lame- Montgomery
all easily I* nio i; •• error, ami Pope's
well known lines in the ' Essay <m
Man"
I.earn ■ ! th* llttlf i aulil to sail
.S|)i i a'l I -i' .ii !.<i • a Ii lhe ch .. ing
fc'ah
embody a wrong description of this
very interesting survival. Pope believ
•d wiili many oi i el people, that the lit
tle nautilus comes to the surface keel
downward and spreads some fleshy
oval and < ili.iry expansions in the form
oi two sail- id -ix little oar-. But it
does nothing of the kind The two lit
t,i. oval expansion- the -ails are nc\ j
ei raised at but always tightly '
Clasp the shell. Ile y form, in fact, J
part ot 111" sle I Moreover, the nau j
Ulus to ihe surfa.-e upside doxvu, j
if we may so * vpn -s its position. |
.Vatiidon post.
>ln H'M l-'iit ure.
\ man i- bundle of relations, a J
Unot i r i'i>• '•. wh"-o flower and fruit (
age is the world All his faculties re
112, . ton !ures out of him. All his fac- j
iltlcs predict the world he is to in- j
habit, as tl •■ tins of the fish foreshow
hat wat'-r exi ts or the wings of (in
.•agic iu the ' gg pn suppose a medium
>f ght air Insulate and you destroy
1 ,*m lie l antiot live without a World
Emerson j
EZRA BRIMS'
RtVtNOt
TALMADGE
•. i 1 \l- '. n• j
My 1 1 icinl tin* |JO>UII;ISI>T and t:>-n
erul slon-kfi p'-i ■>l H,irle\ li< was .-it-
on tin- front p«>r< Ii ol' iih establish
tii> at lazily I'Utlin:; Hiiall elotids of
L' 111• ■ -null,.- into lie an anil blinking
com fori a lily at liis -1 ij.i><• i • i feet,
win 11 w if I' -uim a |iu>t on
a level with hi~ lace. 1 -poke to biin,
and tin- feet slipped down with a thud
"Howdy," In' said. 'Some warmisl,
ain't ItV"
1 nodded, wiping lioin my 1 tlie
perspiration ud> i> d l>y in ill ad
visi-d walk ol two mile- o .*r a road
iinshad< d from a nn-r* lie- July sun.
The family at tho farmhouse where,
from motives of I was spend
in;! nij vaealion had gone to a funeral,
and 1 had \v aried of my own eompa
ny. Where!oi• the afternoon being
too hot for tishing. I had come to liar
leyville to sei k eompaii.■ >nshi|i.
"I'd have went to Ike's funeral my
bell." said the - tori keeper when I Lad
rxplained thus to his understanding,
"only the lest of the folks wanted to
po, and I didn't like to close up the
place on account of the postotlice. I
was down to Ike's when the great
damp breath blew his lamp out. I set
up with him two or three nights along
at the hist."
"lie was a close friend of yours?"
I asked.
"Well," sighing explosively, "there
ain't much doubt he was considerable
close, and we was always friends, liiiu
and me I had a feeling of sympathy
for him during the last years of h;>
life 1 , too—sort of an admiration for
him, because he took his medicine like
a man 'Tnin't every male human that
does."
"Then In- had long been an invalid - .'"
"No; that ain't the idea. He wasn't
sick a great while. The story dates
back nigh onto twenty years, when
him and Ezra I'.riggs was rivals for the
hand of Martha Telford. 'Twas nip
and tuck between 'em, but Ezra finally
won the match. Ike was fool enough
to get mad about it, and when his pa
died, leaving among his' Other effect> a
mortgage on the old I'.riggs place where
Ezra was living, his parents both being
defunct, lie foreclosed the thing and
made a regular dickens of a bad mess
Ezra could liavi paid if he'd had an
other six months, bnt Ike wouldn't
wait. That was the beginning of a
mighty hard time for Ezra. Nothing
he touched after that seemed to pros
per. Him , - r I Martha there wasn't no
children conic at last to live in a house
not much better tliaji a shanty down by
the mill yonder, and the woman's love,
so my wite and daughter <ny, suit of
took sick and died. I've heard tell there
ain't much female love that's proof
against poverty .eiig drawn out, and
heaps of what parses for real honest
affection leaks away through the worn
out places in woman's cloth's.
"It's my opinion that Martha wasn't
a real comfortable person to live with
during the last two or three years of
Ezra's life. I've got a suspicion, more
or le s founded on !'act. that she was
sourer than the dregs of vinegar and
that her patience suit of shot off like a
(latllng gun once it had bu'sted Ezra
took sick finally v th somebody or oth
er's disease of ». Miething or other that
the dir tors - .| y ,< incurable, and he
didn't keep up after that, just poked
around and groaned till tie- trouble
knocked him down into bed
"II" kept his own counsel pretty
much, but I've got a notion he was
miiniiiK « 112 ■••nut; nr idtterness against
Ike most < 112 the time tl en. I said to
niysrll tv, mill lie a It!, ssing if the old
death a •-'>■! would only llop down and
carry hii off lie fore lie done anything
that would -hock the c immunity
"Hut I was worrying unduly. How
ever much l,e may have been figuring
on revenge, there wasn't no bloody vio
lence mixed into his figuring. He did
give the community sort of a shock,
though, such as 'twas Most of us
con Id u t understand then why he done
as he did, but it > ;,s clear as molasses
to ine now.
"The river yonder five years ago
last March got on a ripping tear owing
to a sudden thaw, and among other
things it done It swooped down across
Ike's barnyard and carried off n lot of
live stock and things, including Ike
himself, who was trying to rescue a
valuable ram he'd paid a big price for
at the state fair.
"He went along with the flood and
never STOPPED (J]] J„. stuck In tho
branches of a small tree about seventy
or eighty feet from shore near where
Ezra's house j. And as chance
would have it Ezra heard hi in yelping
for help and dragged himself out of
the house, w here he was staying alone
with his disease while Martha washed
dishes up to the li"tel over at Rottom
village.
"Now, 'twould have been no more
than natural for a man in Ezra's po
sition to have done nothing but gloat
ov r the s;ip 11: on. But Ezra didn't
do nothing of the kind He hustled
..round as fast as his dist ;se would
let him to save Ike hi'tor- the tree
come unrooted
"He got a long rope Hid tried to
throw one cod of it to I!. but it fell
about five feet short every ''me. so i«•
waded out into the water, though the
doctor had told him "tv a Id kill him
to get his feet wet. W! u Ike had
tied one end "112 the nr • ;■> himself
Ezra tied tl other end to a fen- post,
and the current done the res!.
"That wetting of his 112 ; ml le.;)
was the beginning of 1. '- finish
That night he ' id a ' ] ||. md his ills
ease simply cot • nonage The doc
tor s d 'tw:<- i. jm * less the minute h"
-••en lnni and ' v,> him a week to live
t' he didn't drop oil i:i the meantime
And Ike wei! 11, » cone around peni
idu and lit: 1 : 'l' ;i s . uything the Old
Testament ever p •odiieed. saying I zra
saved his jit- tor he couldn't swim a
Stroke, ami ask.a- if 11 re wasn't any
thing lie con d d" i" II ike amends IO
him l liert w siit. . : course I lie time
had none by for (hat But Ike hung
II round the pla. • clothed in figurative
(. (Ckdolh and -lie- most of the time
tin Ezra ! ssed along t" the next
wot Id "ifht d ys ltd
It seemed to me rather a pretty storj
~112 the gi le; love hath no man than
tii is son and In p oais of tire upon his
In ad sort, :• I I said as milch to the
Stole I ci-pel
"Shucks: i 1 it v isn't Ezra's revenge
Iii all. though 1 thought it was till I
|. riled dift' l ellt r./l t Was simply
i\ iug Ike foi the torture that was
all. Two d a> s before he died he sent
for nic, mid he >-;i\-, with a shivery
• buckle, when le d sent the others out
of the room ''ld ft'ii lid I've got to |e|l
Si me lii I. I_x t and I've, hose on you
It'll be eis ■ dying if I know that
soiucbi d\ alive knows how I got even
wilh that cuss I've forgive him and
all that, but, sa\ and he drew tuu
down i loser to him. i ve made mm aim
Martha promise solemnly with their
hinds to hing mini , that they'll get
in i ried soon decent, and, oh.
giory won't -lie itist knock the fillister
off of him'' He was chuckling hard
when 1 left him, and I reckon he died
'buckling My wife said lie looked real
peace'ul and contented and -alisfied
and 11 of ini ural in his , oiMn."
"And II ' I asl.eil ali'-r a short in
ter il dnr. tg which the -ton-keeper's
gaze r> - lid ujc ,i a distant hilltop where
White -loll* - leaiued ill the -llfishine
time mot. he sighed, more softly this
time Poor Ike!" lie murmured. "I
never -•■*• a man who seemed si, glad to
die as him
LLLC«'NSIVE HLMTK J .
Energy is a line thing, but, like
steam, it needs a littlo restraint and
careful guiding If the safety valve
iloesn I work there's likely to be a
breakdown or a blow up now and then.
Ihe iiervousy, fidgety woman Is a
dreadful bore She nifties up the at
mosphere and makes everybody wish
she would take a vacation and rest up
like -i\tv Some of those people who
fly around the fastest do the least
work, and the proper thing to acquire
is balance. Work as hard as you want
to. but let up when the moment for
letting up arrives. There is a limit to
human endurance, and when you go
beyond the limit you never get back
into the valve of strong endurance and
line vitality. It is the mail or the wo
man who knows how to work and how
to rest who gets things done all tine
and shipshape and without tearing the
roof otl it- feet. These remarks may
be blunt, like a chisel, but they're as
true as the fact that the Lord made lit
tle apple- Chicago Kecord-Herald.
Odd Nlr«*ot Nit men.
in < Icrkenwell. laigland, there is a
street called Pickled Egg walk. It
takes jis name from Pickled Egg tav
ern, which formerly -tood there and
made a -n ialty of serving pickled
egg- Aii interesting London thorough
fare - Hanging Sword alley, which
- mentioned in lii'-kens' "Tale of Two
4 'iti* - London has also Pickleher
ring street. In Leicester is a street
called the Holy Bones and another
called Callows Tree Cnte. Hull has
a street with the extraordinary name,
the Land of Croon (linger. Corydon
lias a street named Pump Pail, and
there some years ago lived Peter Pottle,
a dealer in furniture. The most daring
of farce w liters might well have hesi
tated to invent a combination of name
and address so improbable as that
which really belonged to Peter Pottle
of I'ninp Pail.
Tne LMhor of a Watch,
The little balance wheel of a watch
vibrate- five times per second. Imag
ine that lids wheel, instead of swing
ing back and forth like a pendulum,
should roll on continuously over a given
surface. Its circumference in a gentle
man's w at' h of ordinary size is two
and a quarter indies, and it makes a
sweep in each direction of about three
fourths of its circumference. In other
words, ii would traverse in one second
a distance mea-uring about eight and
a half ire In s. A cording to this com
putation, the balance wheel of a watch
would tra\ '| in a year over a distance
of„ :: I'.TT miles in round numbers, and
i; we id take li e Utile wheel .iust six
year- i ,_ht months to circumvolve tiie
globe by way of the equator.
Your Tongue
If it's coated, your stomach
Is bad, your liver is out of
order. Ayer's Pills will clean
your tongue, cure your dys
pepsia, make your liver right.
Easy to take, easy to operate.
25c. All druggists.
i Want j r moustache or beard a beautiful j
i brown or ri«*h ? Then use
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers j
. . . \ . s|' !
A Hint Ilt-*Jrnlile.
"You're all run down," said the doe
tor "What y ii need are *juiet and rest.
You oujrlit not to be worried at all."
"Will you i'Ut that in the form of a
prescription, doctor, and give it to my
wife';" asked the man. Kxehamre.
Success is nothing more than the re
sult of iloinjr whatever you can do not
only well, but just a little better than
inybc.dy else. Maxwell's Talisman.
Masai
CATARRH
In a'.l its ptftL'fs there g(r{\
ER
Ely's Cream Balm
c ■ ansea.fK'othe.-nndhi 'i>B ciM " u
M
away a c <1 in the head
quickly.
Cream Balm is placed Into the nostrils, spreads
over the membrane and is absorbed. Relief is im
iiiL'iliatcand a cure follows. It is cot dryinc—dees
tpi Once sneezing. Large Size, 60 cents tX Drng
j-iets or by mail; Trial Si/.e, to cents by mail.
LLY BROTHERS. WW irren Street, New York-
Free
Trial
" i »rfe«t <hopp»r v " 9tji» c P />#•«••
Write for cook book by • * l\ VICT
oilman Jlrtt and food ( hopper 10. 11. At rrurdft 112« • M)r,
j oti: or cii-reai 7ke. You: HONKI RAtl ifoot ntuftclvrj,
ROUIAH IV6 t 0 . 140 I'foo *««., Boq»I Joy, ft.
Nothing has ever equalled it.
I N thing can evi r surpass it.
Dr. Kings
New Discovery
I r., />(I\NI'*PTI(IX p r j C e
SO. A 11.00
A Perfect For All Throat and
Cure: Lung Troubles.
Money back if it fails. Trial Bottles free.
J. J. BROWN,
THE EYE A SPECIALTY
1 x, s tested, treated. fitted « it li <1
~ it|,.l ait ihe ml eyes sii|H'lie*l.
Market Street, IJloonisbni*;, l'.i
lliull - in a in t" ■ I', m
A i AMILY QUARREL.
Urn Until I iiilii.jc \ll ♦* r I lie Poet
llu«l Interfered.
11l lii.st!; I *;t 1 >«• r - William
Kii-t iii il t lii-it Shellej was
staying iii tin* vli 1:• ol* tin' i; I sbornes
a luo-t .11 ■i; i in uii-til in •> in i ill. It ap
pour* thai In- -«*r\iints, (Jitiseppe aud
AiiiiUii/i:ita. w ho were man and wife,
qimrreleil. and Slu-lli'y, bearing Glu
Bi jipi' aliiislnn III* \\ iff very savagely
aud also ill ii 1 IH-c. rushed upon him
with a |>i-»ti•!. shouting "I'll shoot you!
I'll shoo! you' rin startled fellow
ran I'm- hi* \<r\ i:f«- Shelley after
him, till tin servant, coining To a shrub
bery «ii ' ■ - maiiiiLfil io slip uuder
tlnin, S ;u his • anerni'ss. darting
past 1 . I lif servant in a few min
utes tu iu>l it pus* It- to dodge back
in!' the house unpen flved Shelley,
seeing I:.f ii no iia.re. at last went back
to the inn-, where, to his unutterable
surprisi he found (liuseppe and An
nuuziata sjjt'ug together In Ibe most
amicable manner, addressing each nth
e: as • vain' and "iarl*-mia." "Hut
were you not quarreling even now'.'"
exclaimed the perplexed poet. "Quar
reling'.' uaspeil (jiiisepp' in ama/.e
ment. "Nn, slgnor, we never quarrel
ed." "Hut I have been running after
you in order to shoot you." "No, si-
Knor, \ >u IK-vi-r ran after me. I'm I have
been s tting he i. ■ for tie last hour or
more. ) .u inu*i have faueied all this."
And 11iuseppe and Anuun/.iata, who
had bolli been • misiderably fr L'ht< n -d
continuing to assure him tb: ' !' ■ ■ had
hud no quarrel, and Mar\ Sii >lley,
whom they had let into the - • ret. spy
ing the «ame Shelley was at hist utter
ly injsiitied and inclined himself to be
lieve that lie must have fancied it.
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD,
TIME TABLE
In Effect Nov. 'J'.'th, T.MJU.
\. M. I A.M.. P. M.
.Scranton(l>SiH)lv «t> > t; 112-A Jx
Pltuton " " 7051 It Is<{ 54 10 "> 5-'ij
\. M A. M P. M, P.M
Wilkcstmrre... Iv » r §lO :tV 2 4". its ihi
I'lyui'tli Ferry 7 ;j I in w l 'J vj 16 <>T
Nanticoke •* 74J 10 V) J fit t) 17
Mocanai|U» ..." hhi 11 ni 32n 837
Wapwallopen.. " *lO 11 Hi 3MI t> 47
Neacopeck ar Bi* UK > 7 0W......
\ ,\|. A.M'. [V M .
I'ottsvllle It .mi >ll o-i '
Hazleton ' ' 705 245 i' 2 451
Tiimhicken " 7 aOS •; or>0 r >
Kern (}len " .-4 15 :> l"i
Bock (.lien ; .i i 22 > 22,
Neacopeck . .ar *• rj
l alawi—a 1 0" 4 <*>
\ M A.M P.M. p M ~~
Kcscoiieck... .Iv 5 K If* -ill 2>> .I 4J i*i
Creasy *3' it .>i» 352 7 09.
Kspy Ferry... •'I «4. 11 4f, I 4IU 720
E. Bloomsourt " *47 iI 50 4 (*> 725
Catawissa l\ s ">5 14 1:; 7 a-j
South Danville " 14 12 15 431 751
Sunbury ar 3."> 12 4(i I 5T> Kls
A.M. P. >l. P. M I' M
Sun bury iv m 42 Si- is $5 18 9 ~31
Lvwishurg ar 10 11 4"' 54*
Milton " lu " s 13» 111 111 II
William sport.. " UOO 141 (> 40 10 001
Lock Haven... " 115!' 220 7 ;7 1
Kane "j 8 25
~~ I'.M. P.M.!
Lock Haven..lv -i- 10 '
Betlefonte ....ar 105 1 it i
Tyrone " 210 ti 00
I'liilipslnirg " "> 10 i 8 02 1
4'leartleld " 5 >1 ' s 45
l'ittsliurg " 0V» 10 4r>
A.M. P. M. P. M. P M
Sunlmry Iv 960 j 1 -"•!• sin s3l
Harrlstiur«.... ar II 3o Ji 315 t> s(' 10 10
I'. M. P. M. P. M. A M
Philadelphia., ar >3 17 623 :i 423
Hattimore ";3 11 Bno H45 'J :.ll
Washington ... "S42o|, 716 10 55 :! 30
|A.M. P.M.
Lewistown ,Ic. ar 11 15 105
Pittsburg ii 55 no 15
A..M . P. M P. 51. 1> M
IlurrishurK.... Iv 11 46 a2o|| 720 ;1105
I'. 51. A M. \. M. A M
hittsburK ar 55 -1 '5" 1 ' 50 5 :>o
I'. M.! 1' M A M A M
I'ittstiurK iv 7 1" 00 .(onus 00
A.M A V Psl
IlarrlSburK.... ar 200 4 £>■ 11 25; 3Jo
P.M A M
PlttPtiUlK Iv 'J 10 ."8 00
A.M. P 51
i.ewiitnwn .K\ " 7 t" ;3 00
Sunbury ar » 2>- ; 4 s<i
P. 51. A M A M A .51
Washington... Iv 10 40 7 5" 10 50
Haitian>re " 11 Ho 440 840 11 45
Philailelphia... " 11 40 4 2."' s i" 11 10
A. M. A .51 A. M. P I*l
HarrlsburK Iv 335 755 ;ll 4u .3 25
Sunbury ar ■OO « lit; 108 ■ 6 I ;t
P.M. A MAM
Pittsburg .... Iv 12 45 • <«• *oo
1 learfielil •• 1' :( :m
l'liilipsburg.. " 125 10 10
Tvrone " 700 s lO 12 2a
Heileronte.. " SI., .... !• 32 1 125
l.ock Haven ar !i 15 10 30 2 it l
P. M. A M A M 1* M
Krie iv 555 : t .
Kane " S 15 ;ti 00 ....
Renovo " 11 -5o . o 40, 10 30 » 1 13
L.ock Haven.... " 12 :is 7 ;o 11 25 2 50";;..
A.M. I' M
Williamsport.. " 2i l 825 ;12 in :l 50
Milton - J 2-1 913 125 4
I.ewishuri£ " 9 O.'i I 15 422
Sunbury ar 3 ■ 9 15 1 5-1 505 ;
A~M AMP M P M!
Sunbury Iv ? ti 45 I 9 55 : 2 Oil - 525 ....
Snuth lianville " 7 II '0 17 221 550 ...
(Jatawlssa '* 7 32| lo C 5 2 in 8 081 ....
K Jiloomshurx.. " 7 '' 10 43 2 I', 815 '
Espy Ferry...." 742 110 47 f8 19 ....
Creasy " 752 lo 58 2 ->5 li 30
Ne9Copeck " 802 11 05, 305 840
A M A~M P. M. P M I"
t 'atawissa 1\ 10 :>8 ....
Nescnpcck Iv 523 S 5 OTi '< 705
Hock (Hen ar II 22 7 2*
Kern (Hen " ssl 11 2S| 5 :!2 7 :>t
Tnmhicken " 8 -5S II :;s 5 is 742
Hazleton " 010 1157 559 , 806 ■
Pottsvllle - lo 15 1
AM A .51 P M P M ~
Nescopeck Iv :8 02 11 05 ; 0.5 s8 10
Wapwallopcn..ar 8 1:1 11 20 320 ti 52
Mocanaqua .... " 8 il 11 32 ;30 701
\ant ienke ... * i 11 54 349 719
P 51
Plym'th Ferry' 19 02 12 02 1 17 2s
Wilksbarre . •• «in li 1" 4 IMS 7H5
A 51 P 51 P M P 51
Pittstoi; 11A 11) ar 9C9 12 - 4 fti 801
scranton " 10 oh I 1 > 521 \ s '2v
Weekdavs. Pally 1 Fla« station.
Pullman Parl. i » Sleeping Cars run "n
i hrnuifh trains hciween *•». ' l ll ry. Wiiliainsport
and l.rie. between Sunbtirv nu.i Philadelpnia
. 111 <I W;i-hinKti'ii aini iictwreii iiarristiur;r- Pitts
t'lirx and the West
Inr lurther inlormati in ari'lj tnTn-ket Agents
\\ V\ ATTKRIit K5 I K. Wt»(»!»,
<it*n I Manager Pass. Tratlic Mgr.
1.1:11. w. I«n l>, (.in Passenger A sent.
•JOHnsr W. FARNSWORTH
INSURANCE
Lift Firs Accident and Sleam Boiler
CHUc*: Kontsomwy BuSldlnc*, Mill Street,
Danville, - - Penn'a
] A< KAWA NN A KAI LRU AD.
U BLOOMSBURG DIVISION
W EST.
A M. A M. A. M. P. W
New York Iv .... 1000 14t
P. M.
Seranton ar 817 150
P. M.
Buffalo IV 11 30 t45
* M.
Hcrauton ir 55W P'Ua
A. M. A. M. P. M. P. W
Scrautou 1 v tb 35 *lO 10 tl 55 •« «Ti
Belle vne
Taylor 044 1017 103 el 4
l.ackawHnliH 6 m 11124 210 B si»
liuryea t, b.i lu 2b 213 853
PittHton ti 58 10 33 217 857
SiiNquelianua Ave 701 10 37 219 8 fiit
Went, PittHtoU 70, 1041 22:1 702
Wyoming 710 10 40 227 707
Forty Fort 2SI ....
Bennett 7 IT 10.12 2 34 7 14
Kingston ar 724 10 240 720
Wilkes-Harre ar 740 11 10 250 730
Wilkes-Harre iv '."1" 10 40 230 710
K iiigHton Iv 721 iO 50 24U 720
Plymoutii June
Plymouth 735 11 05 249 529
Nantii-oke 74; 1113 258 737
11 unlock'* 749 1119 30# 743
shicksbimiy 8 111 1131 320 753
Hlckn Ferry 811 11143 330 is us
Beach Haven 819 11 48 337 800
Berwick 827 11 54 344 4
Brlarcreek 18 32 . f3 50 ....
Willow Grove f8 38 13 54 112» 24
Ume
Espy Hli 12 15 4CO 884
liloomHblirg 853 12 22 412 840
Ittijiert 857 12 25 415 645
Catawluna 902 12 32 422 81 0
Danville VIS U44 433 9 oft
Caraaron . 924 ri2 67 44::
Northumber i 1.... ar 935 110 455 930
EAST.
A. M. A. M. P. M. P at
.Nortliunilieri *0 15 tioOO tl 50 •.'■ it
Cameron h57 .... fb HI
Danville ... 707 10 19 211 fi it
Catawtoaa 721 1032 223 s6B
Ku pert 728 10 37 229 601
Bloomaburg 733 10 4J 233 801
Ewpy 7 ::» lo 4s 240 818
l.lme Bulge 744 NO 54 U4Bf« J<
Willow (irove f7 4h f2 50
Briarcreek 7 52 f2 5S 112 6J~
Berwick . 757 11 05 258 8 M
Beech Haven 805 flll2 303 841
Hicks Ferry 811 flllT 309 #«7
shkkatiinny 822 1131 i2U 18 59
H Hillock's 8 iii 331 17 09
•Nantlcoke ... 838 11 44 338 7lt
Avondale . 841 342 722
Plymouth 845 1152 347 7 W
Plymouth June 847 352 .
Kingston ar 855 11 59 400 738
Wllkes-Barre ar 910 12 10 410 750
Wilkes Barre Iv 840 11 40 350 730
Kingston Iv 855 11 59 400 738
Luzerne .. 858 al2 02 403 742
Forty Fort 19 00 .... 407 ....
Wyoming 905 12 08 412 7
West Plttston 910 417 75S
Husfjuehanna Ave 913 12 14 420 7bf
Plttston 919 12 17 -4 24 801
Durvea 923 429 BU6
Lackawanna 928 432 81<
Taylor "32 440 817
Bellevue
Hc-ranton.. ar 942 12 35 450 B*6
A M. P. M. P M
Scranton Iv 10 25 1155 .... 1110
a. y
Buffalo ar .... 755 7 0
A.M. P. M P.M A.M
Scranton Iv 10.10 12.40 J3 35 *2 ' •
P. M. P. M P.M A. *'
New York ar 330 500 735 150
•Daily, tDaily except Sunday.
fStops on signal or on notice to conductor
a stops on signal to take on passengers lor
New York. Binghamton and points west.
T. K.CLARKE T. W. LEE.
tien. Muperfnteudent. (ien. Pass.
Shoes Shoes
Styiisn I
Cheap !
ZReliaole 1
Blcycio, Cymnasium and
Tennis Shoes.
THE CKLEHRATKI)
Carlisle Shoes
AND THE
Siiaj; Proof
Knhher Itools
A SPECIALTY.
BCIIATZ,
SBIP NEW!
A Reliable
TIN SHOP
Tor ail kind of Tin Roofing,
Spoutlne and Canaral
Job Work.
Stoves, Heaters, Ranges,
Furnaces, eto.
PRICES TUK LOWEST!
QUILITY THE BEST!
JOHN HIXSON
NO. 116 E. FRONT ST. '
PEGG
The Coal Dealer
SELLS
WOOD
- AND -
COAL
—AT—
-344 Ferry Street