A CORNER IN PARADISE By KEITH GORDON Ciwright, by P. C. Eastmrnt "\\ hat do you suppose Adam and Eve talked about?" inquired the girl In the Hongkong chair, with a yawn, as she settled her Burne-Jones propor tions u trifle moi'f luxuriously in the barbaric splendor of the pillows and clasped her large, shapely hands above the shadowy darkness of her head. "Love," replied the man, with la conic promptness. "There wasn't any thing else for them to talk about, so far as I can see." Miss Chesterton's glance slowly de tached itself from the enchanting pic ture of turquoise water and topaz is lands afforded by the oval opening In the curtain of vines that screened the veranda and rested coolly upon him. "There was the weather," she argued sweetly, "and the birds and flowers." "You forget that Adam was a man," observed her companion, with just a perceptible stress upon the lust word. A silence followed, In which the ap palling beauty of a California August held them spellbound. Miss Chester ton drew a sharp breath; then she re sumed the conversation once more. "All men don't," was her somewhat Incoherent remark. Dinsmore bad the air of a man sud denly recalled to consciousness from a state of suspended animation. "Don't what?" She flushed and looked injured. Al ready the unpardonable sin loomed large in the perfect beauty of their small, quiet world. "Don't forget what one's talking about," she retorted crisply. He gave an amused laugh. "You mustn't lay It up against me," was his contrite plea. "You see, I feel like a fly caught In the amber; like—like by Jove, it's too beautiful!" She nodded understaudingly, nnd again a silence fell, unbroken save by a wistful bird noto. Meantime, slowly and painfully, measuring every inequality with its yel low, jelly-like length, a slug crawled steadily along the garden path and up and over step after step until It gained the veranda where the two were sit ting. Neither of them perceived the new comer, though it was a fine, large specimen, fully eight inches long and as large around as one's thumb, of the sort sometimes sought for by east erners who like to carry the proof of their stories back with thein. It made >■■ RANK SLOWLY BACK UPON THE CUSH IONS. Its way along the tloor of the veranda and up one of the wicker legs of Miss Chesterton's chair as If It recognized the woman as unerringly as did the ••rpeni :«f old. A little scream broke the stillness. Coming back from a dreamy, sensuous ••ntemplation of the passion flowers that hung like Jewels among the dusky rafters of the porch. Miss Chesterton's ■tartied glance fell upon the long, fat, glutinous snail stretched out upon the arm of her chair, ns If enjoying a well earned rest after the prolonged trip from hs home at the root of the clump of calla lilies. "Gracious:" she exclaimed ns Dltis *iore leaned toward her questionlngly. "How on earth did it get here?" "History repeats itself," was his meaning reply as he watched the In truder, whose horns pointed upward In an aggressive fashion. "I hope you are Impressed by the fact that Its er rand Is evidently with you. You will notice that It Is perfectly contented t'lere, and by the way It opens that lit t e circular window in the side of Its Lead I should think It was listening for what you might have to say." For a moment they watched the slug rurlonsly. Then a droll thought light ened her face like a flash of sunshine, and Dinsmore waited for an explana tion. "I was thinking of Eve." she said •oft If. "The sight of the serpent must have been as bracing as a tonic after the enervating beauty of Eden. No wonder that she listened. It's a positive Joy to rest one's eyes upon •uch ugliness after all this blinding beauty. Absolutely I've been fighting the heartache—wrestling with a desire to moan and weep." "And yet you screamed at the sight ef It." The words In themselves were in nocent enough, but the tone was thoughtful, and Dinsmore's long, searching look gave them a siguiti cance that caused iier to feel conscious and then redden with annoyance be cause she had done so. To divine that underneath his words might lie an lm- j plication that her efforts to discourage his suit meant 110 more than her star- ! tied cry at the appearance of the slug was womanly intuition. But to show that she had divined it was a very different matter, a break more worthy of some rustic schoolgirl than of Eloise Chesterton. lie continued to gaze at her until she felt like an in ject impaled upon a pin point for the benelit of an interested student. At last she could endure it no longer. "Probably Eve screamed, too, just at first sight of tin- serpent!" she remark ed desperately. Then, with an Inward groan, she wished she hud not spoken. Dinsmore laughed out, a little note of triumph in his voice. "If you think so, I'm sure that she was his reply, "Thank you fox I settling n point that was puzzm*, me." Defiance sparkled in Miss Chester ton's eyes. "Reading between the lines," she ob served, with much deliberation and ap parent Irrelevance, "Is a misleading habit. For instance, take my own case. I mean wfiat I say and nothing more. You can't read between the lines, be cause there is never anything to read." At the words the slug crawled a little farther along the arm of the chair, as if something had made it un i easy. "Incredulity!" ejaculated Dinsmore in a suppressed voice, his head thrown back upon his chair and his eyes lifted to the passion flowers. His companion sat upright, looking at him with fiery scorn. He met her eyes brazenly. Never had he seen her appear so superbly beautiful. But he only said: "Don't sit up like that in a Hongkong chair; it's inartistic. Moreover, it's un gracious, and a woman should never be ungracious!" "You're horrid, Ralph Dinsmore," was the only reply she vouchsafed him, but he noticed that she sank slowly back , upon the cushions. One couldn't af- I ford to look awkward In the eyes of , tiny man, even a man that one fully j Intends to refuse. The warm KOl<l of the afternoon sun light was gradually paling, and a chill was creeping stealthily into the suave air. Dinsmore, recognizing the signs of late afternoon, looked at his watch. Just a half hour until the 5 o'clock boat would bear him away from this corner in paradise back to San Fran cisco. He drew a small case from his pock et and calmly handed It to Miss Chet» terton. "You like old Jewels. See what you | think of It,"was his matter of fact ■ comment. She obeyed him, drawing from the case a ring of quaint workmanship in which two beautiful pearls were Im bedded. "Beautiful!" she exclaimed enthusi astically. "Exquisite!" But she did not look toward him. "What It is for and where did you get it?" she added, struggling to appear natural. For an answer he leaned toward her and took It gently from her clasp. Then he lifted her left hand and calm ly placed it on the third finger, holding the hand firmly In his while he said authoritatively: "That is what it Is for. As for the rest, it has been in the Dinsmore fam ily for 200 years, worn always by the sweetheart and wife of the eldest son." "But you haven't asked me," object ed a faint voice. "One doesn't bother about those de tails In paradise, beloved," he mur mured happily. "Adum knew that Eve was his, and by the same token I know that you were made for me." The slug was squirming slowly to ward the garden again. Ktlqnrtlr. It Is the true leaders of society who are the least haughty and reserved. The grande dame by birth, breeding and association knows, like the gentle man born and bred. Just when, how and upon whom to bestow her pleasant ■mile of recognition. She is not afraid, as are those less familiar with proper social usages, that she might commit a social solecism and do the wrong thing. It Is this woman who speaks the kindest to the weary shopgirl. It is she to whom the laboring man lifts his apology of a hat as she thanks him for the ceasing of his busy broom or the holding open of a door for her. It was such a woman who heard the re tort coming from the sweeper of a crossing when she thanked him for lifting her over the deep mud. "I fear I was very heavy," she said sweetly. "No, indade, mum. I do be used to carryln' bar'ls o' sugar," said he—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Worked Splendidly. Brown—What puts you in such a good humor this morning? Robinson—l've just got a patent out for my new ink eraser. I wouldn't take £IO,(XX) for It. "Didn't you get a patent last year for inventing an indelible ink?" "I did. and I sold It for £6,000, and now I've Invented an eraser that will even remove writing done with my own Indelible Ink." "What are you going a next?" "I'm going to invent another Indeli ble ink that can't be erased with my new eraser. I tell you there Is money In this patent business If you only go about it the right way."—London Globe. A Poor Ileelp?. "Don't talk to me about the recipes j In that magazine," said Mrs. Lane, with great energy. "Wasn't that the very magazine that advised me to put on that sody solution and leave the ta blecloth out overnight to take off those yellow stains?" "I'm inclined to think It may have been," said Mrs. line's sister, with due meekness. "I sent you a number of them in the spring. I remember." "Well, and what happened?" asked Mrs. Lane, with rising wrath. "Didn't the stains disappear?" asked her sister. "Disappear!" said Mrs. withering tone. "It was the tablecloth that disappeared. I don't know any thing about the stains." l-ate Brglnnlng. Bir Walter Scott began to write his celebrated novels at forty. Milton be gan "Paradise Lost" at fifty. When "East Lynne" appeared its author, Mrs Henry Wood, was forty-five. Cromwell was forty-one when he be gan his public career. The year of the hegira was the ttfty third of Moham med, and Marlborough reached his In dependent command at the same age. In spiritual examples Abraham was seventy five when cnlied out of Cha ran, and Moses was eighty when he stood before Pharaoh as the champion of Israel. They Were All Right He was a typical backwoods farmer. His first visit to a city restaurant, how ever, had taken away none of the ap petite he had at home, where every thing was placed in large dishes on the center of the table and each one help ed himself. The waiter had piled the food around the plate In the customary ffttle dishes, which the farmer cleaned up in turn. Settling back in his chair, he hailed the passing waiter: "Hey, there, young man! Your sam ples are all right. Bring on rent Of the stuff " Judge. "Yes; she and her husband have quarreled. It seems he told her she was Just too sweet for anything since their marriage." "Well ?" "Well, she was insulted, of course. That was as much as to say she wasn't 'Just too sweet for anything' aiwnya." —Exchange J; Slbcn the] Mist j \ Cleared I ( By Kate Clear? ) Isabel had known that the meeting •with him would be u shock, but she i liad trusted to the hope that, belli*; ' forewarned, she would also be fore- i armed. And she felt helplessly furious | to realize that she had grown cold and ; white the Instant he stood before her. | She had been crossing to the parlor ! from the dining room after luncheon i when Roy Catnerou had come along the hall. "Isabel!" he exclaimed, his voice low and significant. "Isabel!" She was more beautiful than the girl he had wooed. She had bloomed out In the atmosphere of luxury* and In the assured social position that had come to her with her marriage. And he found tills new charm immensely at tractive. lit- rejoiced that the hand she gave him an Instant trembled In tile own. lint his eyes, that dwelt as If in fascination upon her face, were dark with unutterable reproach. Her first words were plteously defen sive. "It was all in the papers," she fal- ! j tered. "Every one believed it. Your own mother accepted the news of your death as true." "I wish to God that it had been!" he said passionately. "When later I read ! of your marriage—well, I hated those | who pulled the Spanish knife out of my , , side!" She shuddered, her sweet lips paling. "But you look quite well; quite like ; your old self," she said anxiously. "Oh, I got over that hurt all right. It's the other I can't get over. Put on your hat and come down on the beach, Isabel—that Is, if your liusbaud doesn't object," he added, with a slight sarcas- i tic curl of his handsome lip. She drew herself up proudly. "My husband," she said coldly, "ob- | Jects to nothing that I do. I will go ! with you for a short walk." And she told herself the while she flung on her golf cape and crushed a : little scarlet Tamo' Shanter down on her dark hair with hands th:it still shook that this was the only time she would speak with him alone. She owed him an explanation, and he ! j should have it. He must not be per mitted to construe her emotion at sight ; of him Into belief that she still har bored a romantic attachment toward him. • • • • • • • Towering cliffs hid them from the j sprawling, fashionable town. The roar of the surf came up to them in a low, i booming, thunderous monotone. Ahead, , behind, over the vistas of sand and j vast surges of the ocean, hung a fog, j dense. Illusory, silvery, mysterious. In its rifts phantom ships were visible, ! dipping and courtesylng on their noise- ! less course. "It's all very harmonious," said Roy j Cameron grimly. "Might have been made to order as a setting for our lit tie comedy, eh? Nothing around us | but vague obscurity and we three the most hopeless of all the ghosts that walk!" "We—three?" she repeated, not com prehending "You and I—and the ghost of our vanished happiness!" he said. "Oh!" she murmured. Then for a little while they walked on In silence. "Isabel," he asked suddenly, bending forward to look Into her uverted face, "why did you marry that rich man?" Her wifely pride rose instantly in arms at the insinuation. "You speak as though Robert Graeme < were a ri«-h man only," she said In- : dlgnautly. "He is a good man—a wise and honorable man." "But you did not love him," Cameron 1 went on mercilessly. "And you were I engaged to me." ] "They told me you were dead in the I Philippines!" she burst out, harassed i and eager to have the talk over. "My 1 brother Frank was In tremendous mon ' etary difficulties. There was disgrace I of some sort ahead for him. Mother 1 was breaking her heart over the whole matter. And then then Robert asked me to be Ills wife. I knew he could j fix up everything. Besides, I was very fond of him. 1 always admired him t very much!" she ended defiantly. "Ah!" he said quietly—too quietly. "That was the way, was It?" They had walked rapidly, quite out stripping all the others sauntering in the same direction. Isabel was breath less from has e. The hulk of an old boat drawn high on tlie beach offered shelter from the rising wind and the too insistent cluinor of tlie waves. Mrs. Graeme sat down on an embank ment of sand some children had made In the shadow of the boat. "I shall rest a few minutes. Then we will go back," she said. She was wholly unprepared for the violence with which he broke into speech. "Back! You would go back to him? When it 1J I, Isabel—l, who have the best, llrst, real right to you! If It were not for that accursed blunder about my death you would have been waiting for me still." White, stricken, shocked, she sat there while lie raved on. She had nev er imagined such madness nor such seltishness, for it was all of himself he spoke nil for himself he cared. He would miss her so. lie had great pos nihilities, which only she could inspire. If she would only go away for awhile —let Graeme get a divorce for deser tion! Then they could be married and leave this part of the world. lie knew of a good opening in Havana. Ills love should make recompense to her - She found her voice there. "Love!" she repeated. "Love!" And he quailed n little before the grave scorn in her eyes. "You would have me break my pledged vows, degrade my loyalty, bankrupt my life-for what?" She paused, shaken by the revulsion of feeling that overwhelmed her. Was this her ideal lover? Was this man peevish, passionate, wearisomely per sistent the hero she had enshrined in her heart? "Oh, hush!" she said brokenly. "Hush!" He thought she spoke thus because of the approach of others. Two men were leaning against tlie hulk of the boat on the farther side Hut it was ouly after she had spoken that she rec ognized her husband's voice. "If it were not for a certain knowl edge I possessed, Travis," lie was say lng, "1 would not have urged the child to be my wife, long and dearly though I had loved tier. It was not even that | I could help her family out of a dire difficulty were 1 one of them nor yet wholly because 1 was aware r" the , unstable character of the v for j whom she had, I understood .lriish ! preference, it was chieli; ause I knew I could not live long. t* heart trouble—of an incurable kind, my doc tors tell me. She does not suspect, of She it. all that is sweet uud pure and womanly. But It does me good to know that one of these days when she is free again she will have the protection of my name, even though 1 am no longer with her. She will be still a young and beautiful wo man and a very wealthy one. You understand, 1 am ouly telling this to you in confidence, because you are such an old friend, and I could not bear to have you doubt my motives. Shall we walk on?" i They went back toward the town, oblivious of the two In the shadow of the boat. Isabel rose quickly and looked ont over the tumultuous waste of waters. A fluctuant color was hot in her cheek. Her eye* were full of a brooding bril liance Cameron had never seen in them before. "You heard?" she asked him. "You knew that was my huaband who spoke?" He nodded, misunderstanding her emotion. "If what he said is true, i Isabel, I —will wait." She flared out on him then. He would wait. He was not fit to brush ; the shoes of that other man whom he flouted! That other man whom she honored—whom she loved! She spoke In no uncertain terms. He quivered with the merited sting of her disdain. But he understood at last. And when she had flung away from him and was walking rabidly back alone he follow ed and caught up with her. "I'll go away tonight. Forgive me If you can. See, the mist Is clearing off." The silvery veil was rolling up like a scroll from the tossing, peevish bil lows, and the sun was shining forth, dazzling, resplendent. "The mist has quite cleared," she said. And then lower, "Thank God!" That night Itobert Graeme, marvel ing at her greater gentleness of words, the new tenderness of her smile, thrill ed to think that perhaps his one wild dream was coming true after all and that he might win the love he so craved. "Dear," she said to him, "It 1s such a beautiful world. I am finding out that—l am happy!" He bowed his bead over her hand that she might not see the rapture in his eyes. And both found the silence sweet. Kfw York Ttnementi. "It Is surprising how many New Yorkers there are who do not know that they are living In tenement houses." said one of the Inspectors of the tenement house commission. "I went into a tenement house In lower Lexington avenue on an official visit to Inspect the plumbing. It Is one of the old houses of the downtown district and not a tenement In anything but the official wording of the law. " 'I want to Inspect this tenement,' 1 said to the woman who came to the door of the second floor apartment. " 'What did you call it?' she de manded severely. "'l'm a tenement house Inspector,' I explained, 'and the luw says'— "She did not let me get any further, but burst in with: 'l'd have you know this is not a tenement. It's a respecta ble apartment house.' "I knew my duty, and I had a look at the plumbing In Bplte of her pro tests. Finally, against her will, she was convinced that it really was a ten ement houso under the law. " 'Well, Just wait till my husband comes home," she declared. 'We'll have to move Just think If it ever got out that we were living In a tenement house and had to be inspected I* "—-New York Tribune. The Snionl. An east side educational worker who is teaching in a night school for newly arrived Kusslan Jews was remarking on the difficulties of grounding them In English studies. "Some of them come to us with the barest smattering of English words," he said, "and no knowledge of Amer ican customs except the few Ideas they have picked up since landing. I was trying to teach a small class the sea sons of the year the other day. For a time the>* did not seem to understand what I was driving nt. Then the light broke over the face of one young fel low. " 'I know seasons,' he declared. " 'How many seasons are there In the year?" I asked. " 'One, two,' was the unexpected aa swer. "'What are they?* I saked. " 'Busy season and alow season,' came the answer, quite promptly. "That young man will have a saving* bank account before he has been her* sic months."—New York Tribune. A Cnrfona Oath. The following curious oath was until recently administered lu the court* of the Isle of Man: "By this book and by the holy contents thereof and by the wonderful worki that Ood has miracu lously wrought In hearen above and In the earth beneath In six daye and ■even nights I do swear that 1 will, without respect of favor or love or gain, consanguinity or affinity, envy or malice, execute the laws of this Isle Justly between our sovereign lord the king and his subjects within this Isle and between party and party as Indifferently as the herrlug's back bone doth He In the middle of the fish." Barns' Beat Poem. It Is said that a boy was once askod In the poet's presence which of Burns' works he liked best. After taking thought with himself for a little he declared that he liked the "Cotter's Saturday Night" by fur the best, "al though," he added, "It made me greet (cry) when my father bade me read It to my mithor." This statement seemed to Impress Burns, for presently he said to the I lad, "Weel, my callant (boy), It made me greet, too. more than once when I was writing It by my father's fireside." Mlaard n Few. "Yes," said the cierk nt the Sklnnem house, "we have I.SOO servants." "Well," said the departing guest, "1 must have overlooked four or tive. l'ui quite sure I haven't tipped thut many." Pittsburg Post. ■ ■ . Grovadleaa P»»». Cholly—l did think of going in for i politics, but I was afwald 1 wouldn't ; know Just how to tweat my infcwluhs, | don't y' know. Peppery—Your Inferi ors! Oh, you wouldn't be likely to j meet any of them. — Philadelphia Press. | Thr Swird. A sword is out of place I". time of peace, and It is of very little couse- : quence In time of wur, except to adorn a bl){ general or a lodge man in a pa rade.—Atchison Globe Thf-n 4 baoi "Why. Mary." said her mistress. "I j told yovi to make up uiy room an hour I ago, sud here it Is in terrible disor j der." "Yis, mum, and ! did," said .Mary, I "but the master came into put on a ! clean collar, mum. and he l.>st the i m*"* " THE POWDER WORKED. i An Inreatlon That I'rovi>d Too Mnoh of a Kui'crmi. A certain inventor tmcc hit upon the happy device of desiccating etrgs. He turned dozens and dozens of eggs into a powder that you might carry in a pill box. All you had to do when you wanted an omelet or a scramble was to drop a pinch of the powder into water. A teanpoonful of the stuff would swell up to fill a quart tin, and half a cup ful would be enough for the meal of a j company on the march. Now, this ln | ventor by diligent effort succeeded In | making himself known to a great man i In a European country, a man who I moves armies by the crooking of a finger, so to speak. The great man was delighted with the desiccated egg scheme, and a box of the powder was sent to him so that he might try it on the army. Fate, however, decreed that it should be tried on the dog. It lay open on the great man's study ta ble. and there the dog nosed It out. He licked up the powder, an amount of it that forty conscientious bens could not replace with a month's hard la bor, and he liked the taste of it. It made him thirsty, however, and he swallowed nearly a gallon of water to assuage that thirst. The powder im mediately began to do what It was ex pected to do when water struck it, and before the eyes of the great man that unhappy dog swelled up and swelled up till his seams gave way. Just forward of the port beam he sprang a leak. This Is a perfectly true story. The poor dog actually burst. That particular invention has never been recommended to the war office.— Washington Post. VULCANO'S VOLCANO. A Kttiral Weather Prophet aud In fallible at That. As a natural weather prophet, and in fallible at that, the volcano on the is land of Vulcano, twelve miles north of Sicily, in the Mediterranean, Is ba lleved to hold the record. The fol lowing Is from an account of a dinner given by the Geographical Council Club of England In IS',>3: "Captain Wharton, the hydrographer to the ad miralty, told how he had once an chored in very deep water on the east side of Vulcano, the southernmost of the Lipari Isles, but that he had kept up steam with the Intention of being off Immediately if the wind changed to the east. He mentioned this to an Englishman who lived on the island and was in charge of some borax works. 'But,' said the man, 'there Is not the remotest chance of the wind going around to the east without full warning.' 'What warning?' asked the other. 'Oh.' was the rejoinder, 'the volcano always warns us" 'The vol cano!' said Wharton. 'Yes, the vol cano. A "fumarone" always emits a whistling sound before the ea3t wind begins to blow.' Shortly after this Wharton was looking at Strabo and, to his astonishment, found that that writer mentions the fact. The Eng lishman had never heard of Strabo in his life. Strabo died as an old man about 23 A. I so that this excellent 'fumarone' must have been giving its warnings well nigh 2,000 years at least." Mr. Bascomb was as firm about poK tics as about everything else. lie made a boast that nobody could change his views when once they were formed, and It was true. "But, father, suppose they don't even suggest having Llpb Godding for rep resentative?" pleaded Mr. Bascomb's son after a painful half hour of argu ment. "I don't believe anybody but you has thought of him." "If they don't have Llph Godding for representative," said Mr. Bascomb calmly, "I shall winter my vote, that's all."—Youth's Companion. Doraeatlc Economy. Mr. Younghubbe—Don't you think, i my dear, that you are cooking twice as much as we ihall need? Mrs. Young hubbe (artlessly)—l am doing It on purpose, darling. Tomorrow I want to try some of those "Hints For House keepers—How to M .ke Dainty Dishes From What Was Deft Over Yes terday." | The Home Paper of Danville. Of course you read , 1111 IB J II THE nEOPLE'S J KQPULAR I APER. Everybody Reads It. ~ Published Every Morning Except Sunday at No. ii E. Mahoning St. Subscription 6 cen > Week. CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL. Ouly One F.nsllnh King, Henry IV., Han lleen Kntombed There. The ancient cathedral at Canterbury i shelters Hit* remains of only one Eng lish king. Ilcnry IV. That this par ; ticular monarch should have been en tombed there is the more remarkable since he breathed his last In the Jeru i snleiu chamber of Westminster abbey, and It might naturally have been sup posed In the circumstances that he would have been laid to rest in the ab bey, where so many other of England's kings sleep their last sleep. It seems, however, that Henry before his death gave orders that he was to be burled In the cathedral at Canterbury oppo | site the tomb of his uncle, Edward, | the Black Prince. For hundreds of years a story was current that on the way down the rlr er a hurricane arose and that the peo : pie on board the vessel, convinced that the storm was caused by the fact that a king's body was on board, cast the corpse into the water In the dead of night and, tilling the coffin with rub. bish, brought it with all pomp and clr j cumstance to the cathedral. Some years ago the dean and chapter resolv ed to get at the truth of the story. So they opened the royal tomb and the king's lead coffin. For one brief moment dean and chapter gazed upon the kingly lineaments of that monarch whom Shakespeare describes as "sky aspiring Bollngbroke." Only for a mo ment, however, as the body crumbled ; to dust almost at once. But Canter bury now knows beyond all doubt that an English king rests within Its walls. Divorce I.awa In Iwrdtn, The divorce laws of Sweden are elas tic. When the incompatibility of tem per reaches the culminating point one of the parties proceeds to Copenhagen, the nearest foreign town, which is on ly twelve hours distant, and remains there for fourteen days, notifying the Swedish consulate, which circum stances are regarded as legal evidence of desertion and sufficient ground for divorce. Ilia Line. "So Speeder has turned out to be a confidence man. Does he sell gold bricks?" "No. lie's an architect and plans those $2.;300 houses that cost $8,850 when they're finished." Cleveland Leader. If one could remember when asked for advice that his friend wants only 1 confirmation of his own Judgment It would save much heartache.—Toledo Blade. . J J. BROWN THE EYEIA SPECIALTY. Eyes tested, treated, fitted with ,<lass* > »nd artificial eyes supplied. .Market Street,"Bloomsburg, 1 Pa. Honrs—lo a. m.to sp. m. IB IE!! A Rellatol© TIN SHOP Tor all kind of Tin Roofing-, Spoutlne and Canaral Job Work. Stoves, heaters. Ranges, Furnaces, eto. PRIME LOWEST! QUILITV THE BEST! JOHN HIXSON NO. 116 E. FRONT ST. kill™.cough 112 and cuß Ejtmi LU NCB w ™ Dr. King's New Discovery ___ /Consumption priet Fun I OUGHSani 60c 4 SIOO ISOLDS Fre» Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or MONEY BACK. 1 ACKA VV A.N ±N A UAIL.KUAIJ j■" BLOUMSBUR<i WKHT. A. M. A. M. A. M. P. New York ...lv 200 .... 1000 « P. M -icranton ar bl7 ... iSC P. M. Buffalo ... . iv II 80 245 A M. Scranton ar 558 IU US .... A. M. A. M. p. M. I' - Scranlon Ivt6 3b *IU 10 tl 5f '6 8 Bellevue Taylor 844 1017 iOB 6 4 | Lackawanna 850 10 24 2lt 8 6 I Duryea 863 10 28 i lis 6 6 i Plttston 658 10 38 217 6 5 Susquehanna A 701 10 37 219 6 6 j West Plttston 705 10 11 22X 7 0 I Wyoming 710 10 48 227 7 0 Forty Fort 2 81 : Bennett 717 10 52 234 7 1 | Kingston ar 724 10 56 240 7 2 Wllkes-Barre ar 740 11 10 250 7 h Wt'kes-Barre IT 710 10 40 281 71 K ng-ton lv 724 10 56 210 7 5 , Ply mouth June Plymouth 785 11 05 2ti 7 J Nantlcoke 748 11 18 258 7 3 Hunlock's 749 lilt) 808 7 4 Shickshlnny 801 11 31 820 7 £ i Hicks Kerry 811 fills 330 f8 C Beach Haven «19 1118 8 m 81 Berwick 827 Uol 844 8 1 ' Brlarcreek f8.32 .. fa 50 | Willow Urove f8 3« ... fs 54 fg j l.ime Hldge 840 ri2U9 358 re 5 Espy 846 12 15 406 8S Bloomsburg 853 12 22 412 8 4 Kupert 857 12 26 415 8 4 Catawlssa 902 12 32 422 8; Danville 915 12 44 488 9( Cameron 924 fl2 67 148 Northumber'd ar 985 110 455 9 2 FAST A. M. A. M. P. M.P I i Northuinberl' # 6 45 flOOll tl at' 55 Cameron «57 f2 0J fsd ! Uanvllle 707 10 19 2lj 54 I Catawlssa 721 10 32 223 5 £ Kupert 726 10 o7 229 6 ( Bloomsburg 753 10 41 288 6 ( [Espy 788 10 48 244 6 1 1 Lime Kidge 744 flO 6) f2 4f re 5 Willow Orove f7 48 f2 5P . 1 Brlarcreek 752 f2 J8 6 5 Berwick 75T 11 06 268 8t Beech Haven 805 fll 12 803 6*4 Hicks terry 811 fll 17 809 6 4 Shickshlnny 822 1181 <2O ffi 6 Hunlock's 883 881 f7 C Nantlcoke 838 11 11 838 7 ) Avondale 811 812 7 5 ' Plymouth 815 1159 817 72 { Plymouth June 847 .... 852 . • Kingston ar 855 11 59 400 7 8 Wllkes-Barre ar 910 12 10 110 7 5 1 Wilkes-Barre lv 840 11 10 850 7 3 Kingston lv 855 11 59 400 7 3 ' Luzerne 858 al2 02 408 7 4 I Forty Fort f9 00 407 . I Wyoming 905 12 08 112 7 4 j West Plttston 910 417 7 5 Susquehanna Ave.... 813 12 11 420 7 6 f'lttHlon 919 12 17 424 8 0 Duryea 923 429 8 0 Lackawanna 926 482 8 1 Taylor 932 440 81 Bellevue Scran ton ar 942 12 36 450 8 2 A. M. P. M F.M Scranton.... lv 10 25 J1 55 .... 11 A J Buffalo fr .... 756 7 0 A. M. P. M P.'il > a bcranton ....lv 10.10 12.40 J3 85 *2 0 P.M. P. M P.MA. a i New York ar 380 500 735 6 S , 'Dally, fDaliy except Bunday. I Stops on signal or on notice to continent a .Stops on signal to take on passenger* fo I New York, Blnghamton and points west T. E.CLAKKE T. W. LKK 4i«>n Miii'*rlnren<l»nt FEMMMII iiiiiiiig, TIME TA.BLE In Effect Nov. 29th, 1903. A M lA M p M - j Scranton(DfcH)lv § 6 8| 39 47 1 !< 28 Plttston " " 7 05'fl 15 §3lO 563 A. M P. M, P.fll ..... Wllkesbarre... 1 v A. M. 510 35 I 2 46 3# 00 Plym'th Ferry " s 7 2T.il 10 42 112 2 52 tl 07 Nantlcoke " 732 10 50 801 « 1" .... Mocanauua .... " 742 11 07 Z2q 8 87 ..... Wapwallopen.. " 801 11 16 831 ®47 ..... Nescopeck ar SlO 11 26 342 700 .... AM 1 ' A.M.pm Pottsvllle lv 5 V 811 55 Hazleton 705 ...... 245£2 45 ..... Tomhlcken "I 7 22 3 05 8 05 Fern Glen " 724 815 315 Kock 'Hen "i 7 6 322 322 ...., Nescopeck . .. ar 102 \ .... Catawlssa 4 00 4 00 . . , \ UiA. M P. fll. P M Nescopeck... .lv 48 js Sll 26 312 37 00,...., Creasy " 8 8 11 36 852 T 09. Espy Ferry... ' fM: 11 40 f4 02 7*■ E. Bloomsburg " 84" 11 50 106 725 j | Catawissa lv 856 11.57 413 732 South Danville " 9 14 12 15 431 751 i Sunbury ar 935 12 40 4 55; 815 A. M.P. M.tP. M'P!M. Sunbury lv I! 9 42 §l2 48 § 5 18 9 53 Lewisburg.... ar 10 13 1 45j 548 Milton " lu 08 139 54410 14 Wllliamsport.. " 11 00 141 6401000 Lock Haven... " 11 69 220 737 Kenovo "A.M. SOO 8 30| Kane " 8 25 j P.M. P.M. Lock Haven..lv |l2 10 33 45 ! Bellefonte ....ar 105 i! 4 441 Tyrone " 2101 600 | Phlllpsburg " 5103 802 Cleartleld.... " 6549 845 Pittsburg.... " 6 5o ; #10 45 ......I ' : A.M. P.M. P. M. P M Sunbury lv 8 9 60 § 1 59 > 5 10 88 31 Harrlsburg.... ar £ ll 30 $315 I 6 oOjlO 10 jP.M. P. M. P. M. A M Philadelphia.. ar S 3 17 |l « 23 || 9 28 14 23 Baltimore "§3 11 600 j 9 4 r > 2 20: Washington ... " j 4 20 |, 7 16 310 55 3 30j __ — ft - Sunbury lv $lO 00 5 2 15: 5 Lewistown Jc. ar 11 45 405 1 Pittsburg "j t> 55;§10 45: | A.M. P, M P. M. I'~M Harrlsburg.... lv 11 46i1l 620|| 720 gllo.) P. M. A M. A. M. A M Mttsburg arH 6 55j!| 160||| 150 , 5 30! jp. M.I P M A M A M| Pittsburg lv | 7 10 | 9 00 t 3 00 8 00 .... A.M | A fll P M Harrlsburg.... ar!; 2 00 j 4 25 fll 25 | 3 loj I ! P.M A Ml Pittsbujg lv: 9 l 0 3 8 00: A.M. PM Lewistown Ja. " 1. 7 31' 3 3 001.... Sunbury ar: h » 2> t 4 60 .... P. M.| A M A M A M Washington... lv 10 40; '! 7 5o|;10 00[..., Baltimore " 11 Oo'l 4 40 840 11 46 ... Philadelphia... " :ll 40 i 4 2Sji 830 t ll <«■.... A. M.j A M A. M. P Mi Harrlsburg.... lv ) 3 3.i ! |j 7 551 gll 10 ? 3 25i ... Sunbury ar jo OOlj 9 36! 108j 613 .... P.M. A MAM Pittsburg lv jl2 46 j 3 00 5 8 0o I'learlield.... " I 330 920 .... Phiiipsburg.. " 425 10 1 ••• Tyrone " . 701 I 8 10 12 25 .... Bellefonte.. " 816 932 125 .... Lock Haven ar 915 10 30 210 •••■ P. M. A M A Mi P M Erie lv j) 5 35 j j Kane " 845 36 00 .... Kenovo " 11 5o j 6 Wi'lO 30,5 1 13 Lock Haven.... " 12 88 7 30: 11 25 250 •••• A.M. jP Mj Wllliamsport.. "j 214 112 825 gl2 40 350 Milton •' 223 9 13; 125 408 ••• Lewisburg *• 9 0"> ! 1 15; 4oi •••■ Sunbury ar 339 9 45 ( 164 6 " •••• 1 M. AM P M P M Sunbury lv 45 | vsßj 200 625 South Danville': 11 >0 17 2 211 5„0 •••• I'atawissa •• 32 10 C 6 2 36; 608 •••■ IS Bloomsburg.. ' \ 37 10 43 243 g 15'.-.• Espy Ferry.... 42 fio 47 18 19-••• Creasy " 52 10 68; 2 i>s 630 •••• Nesc'ipeck " 02 11 Oft, SOS g4O .... A fll A fll P. M. « atawissa Iv 10 S8 >escop« ck Iv 823 .. (505 p M •••• Kock (Hen.... ar 11 22 i •••• Fern (lien •• 851 11 28| 532j 705 •••• lomhlcken " 858 11 :!8 538 7 .... HuEleton " 910 11 57 659 734 •••• Pottsvllle " 10 15 150 655 740 ... A fll AMP fll 806 N'escopeok lv 3 8 C 2 |ll 04 jj 8 05 Aa|.wallopen..nr 8 1!> II 20 820 p •••• >1 ocannuua .... "| 8 311 11 32 830 i g m •••• Nantlcoke .... "I 854 11 64 349 fi 112... •••• P Mi 7 0 T .... I'lym'th Ferry f9 02 12 08 357 7iu .... Wllksbane ... "j ulO 12 10 4 (K5 AM P M P fll f - ? iS l'l»tPton(DAH) ar : H B9 12 29 3 4 56 Scranton " " 10 cs 108 5 v .... Weekdays. i Daily. 112 Flag station. Pullman Parlor and Sleeplnsr Cars run 011 through trains between Sur'iury, Willlamspori and Erie, between Sunbnry »i>J Philadelphia and Washington and between Harrlsburj, Pitts burg ami the West. For turther information apply to Ticket Agent W. W. ATTEBBURY, J. K. WOOD General Manager, Pass. Traffic Mg UEO. W. BOYD, Gen Passenger Agent. urn i rnii... We want to do oD Ms of Prating 1 u * 11 . I'S 111. II 111 MR I li s unit. A well printed tasty, Bill or Le \f / ter Head, Poster A//r Ticket, Circular Program, State L) 1 ment or Card (V ) an advertisement for your business, a satisfaction to you lei Typo, Nei Presses, ~ Best Pager, Skilled Wort, " Promptness- All you can ask. A trial wili make you our customer. We respectfully ask that trial. II Ni No. ii E. Mahoning St.. DANVILLE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers