1 _ £ AN EASTER oonny ot I tory „ * D jo ru The Sunshine Club Copyright, 1905. by C. N. I.urio MU. Git I'M MY stood looking out of liis window, remark ing to himself that the weather was beastly. Mr. Gruuiiny was a testy bach elor of forty, who lived with his maid en sister, aged sixty. He had accumu lated a snug fortune and. not having anything else to do, occupied his time In what is facetiously called kicking. He kicked at the weather, the party in power, the trusts, the trades uuious. i and he had just l>cen kicking against j the churches for celebrating Easter 1 with what he termed a lot of flummery because Miss Grummy had asked him for a douation to buy flowers for the church. "This is Mr. Grummy, I believe," said a cheery voice behind him. Turning, he saw a lady, aged perhaps thirty, looking at him with the most beaming countenance he had ever beheld. She smiled with her mouth, with her eyes— indeed, it seemed to Mr. Grummy that she smiled from the crown of her head j to the sole of her foot, X.ikt* an; f.iir I that the breeze is upon When it I ; k itit > dimples anil laughs j in the sun. "Yes. I am Mr. Grummy," said tlic bachelor. "And 1 am Miss Bonny. Your sister ; told me that I would find you here, and | I came into see you on a little matter the nature of which I will explain to 1 you before entering upon the matter itself. lam a member of the Sunshine ! club." "I wish your club would improve the j weather," growled Mr. Grummy, but ! with less acerbity than usual. "Our work is to try to make people comfortable. We visit the sick and j place flowers by their bedsides. We ; endeavor to find out people's especial wants and supply them. In short, we ; aje a charitable association, dispensing I our charities so as to give the greatest comfort and pleasure." "Now. that's what I call practical," Jj'rom painting by Plockhor.st. EASTER MORNING. said Mr. Grummy. "This giving mon ey to undeserving people m ho will turn upon you and rob you—this wasteful ness on BUCLI occasions us Easter"— "I am glad you approve of our cause," interrupted the lady with a voice which in contrast with Mr. Grummy's sounded like the notes of a zither beside those of a kettledrum, "because 1 have a ease in point. I know you for a practical man, Mr. Grummy. You know we give comfort simply by conferring with and advis ing certain people who are in any way troubled. I made the acquaintance of the family I have in mind through the daughter, Alice Trainer. I didn't tell you the name was Trainer, did I? Well, Alice came to me about a love affair. She is engaged to a young plumber"— "A plumber! They're all a set of thieves." "Johnny Burnes isn't, for I am his confidant too. He only gets sls a week, but he and Alice are going to he mar ried on this pittance. Now, don't you think, Mr. Grummy, that, inasmuch as you are opposed to placing flowers in the churches on Easter Sunday, you might give me l!."i cents togo with some other similar amounts to get Alice a few decent clothes for the bridal?" "As a practical man," said Mr. Grum my, "I've never done any such work and don't know anything about it. I suppose I ought to and see these people." "You'll find them"— Mr. Grummy held up a deprecating hand. "I'm not going hunting all over town. You'll have to pilot me." "CertuLilly, Mr. Grummy. When shall we go?" "I have only one time to do juything —now!" Miss Bonny, figuratively speaking, had thrown a lasso around Mv. Grum my's ne«-k and led him nm like a lamb, but like a wild bullv at had found a muster, though still restive, to the humble home of the Trainers. He had no fancy for looking over the fam ily condition, though that was his os tensible purpose. He simply intended to be with Miss Bonny, but when he beheld Alice Trainer and saw she had a very sweet t.;- ;unl was devoted to her invalid mother 1,.- was interested. When lie left .Mis-, lloni jf lie gave her the i!.i cents she hail usked lor, and sfie appeared as pleased as if he had given a hundred times as much. "Do you intend going to church Eas ter Sunday?" asked Miss Bonny." "Church? No. Why should 1 goto church? Besides, I have no one togo with me." "There is Miss Grummy." "ll'm. 1 wouldn't mind going if you would permit me to"— "With pleasure." Easter morning was bright and balmy. An hour before church time Mr. Grummy called on Miss Bonny and asked if she would go with him to the Trainers, as he hail un egg for each member of the family. Miss Bonny assented, und together they wulked to tlic Trainers' home. From the mo ment Miss Bonny entered the sunshine of her presence infused itself into the mother- the father was dead—the daughter and little Tom. Mr. Grummy gave them each nu egg, and Miss Bon ny noticed that the hand receiving it sank as if under a weight. Taking Alice's egg. Miss Bonny tapped an end on a table and cracked it, exposing something very like sunshine. It was certainly as yellow as suusliine, fort was gold. Indeed, it was gold coin i. The shell was full of them. Of course there was a flutter, and all eyes were directed to Mr. Grummy, who turned his back, grunting that if he was togo to church he would be ou time and not one of (he laggards that make nuisances of themselves by in terrupting the service. But Miss Bon ny remained to crack the other eggs and found theui also full of gold pieces. Then she ran after Mr. Grummy, who had by this time got half a block away. Miss Bonny was one of those people who can divine what other people want and more especially what they don't want. She knew instinctively that Mr. Grummy would not like to have her refer to the egg matter, so she said nothing about it, talking only about what deserving people the Trainers were. Suddenly she was surprised at lier companion stopping at a flower store. He went in. purchased a large box of flowers and directed them sent ut once to the church to which he and Miss Bonny were going. When they entered the Gothic door half an hour later some young girls were placing the flowers among the others with which the church was decorated. Thus it was that by sunshine meth ods Miss Bonny converted Mr. Grum my from his opposition to everything that he did not approve—and he ap proved of nothing—to a valuable mem ber of society, ready to give liberally and fall in with church observances, especially with Easter Sunday, which became his favorite holiday. Notwith standing this change inwardly, Mr. Grummy is the same outwardly. Though Miss Bonuy has had the care of him as his wife for years, he kicks as hard as ever. Mrs. Grummy has the tact always to find an excuse for his kicking and doesn't mind it in the least so long as he does exactly what she wants him to do. and that is give her valuable assistance for the Sun shine club THE FIRST EASTER EGG. It Wu« I.Hi<l, It IN Said. I>>* u Human Emperor'a lien. Who used the first Easter egg, and was it a colored one? if we are to believe one of the most reliable antiquaries the practice of us ing colored eggs had its origin in the interesting fact that when the Itoman emperor Alexander Severus was born a hen belonging to his parents made the day a memorable one by laying a red egg. That the custom of coloring them is older than the Christian era is proved by the fact that colored eggs have been found in the Collins of Tar tars in ltussia who were buried many years before Christ. The Persians, who have kept the festival of the solar year in March from time immemorial, make free use of eggs as gifts, colored most effectively with their splendid dyes. The Romans made more use of eggs than any other nation, for they were not only articles of everyday diet, but were used upon many ceremonial oc casions. For these people they seem ed to possess some mysterious power of reparation and purification, as when they felt the need of a moral rejuvetia tiou it was their habit to carry eggs to the temples and place them on the altars of the gods. To the ancients the egg was some thing very mysterious on account of the manner in which life was evolved from it. which idea may have led them to attribute to all life a similar origin. There can be little doubt that the use of eggs iu the spring was originally symbolical of the revivification of na ture, the coming forth of new life. We find traces of superstition con nected with Jhe egg, many of which are firmly believed iu today, coexistent with the first record of the ceremonial use of the egg. When the church was obliged to make Easter coincide with the date of pagan festivals these super stitions were grafted onto the Chris tian belief, which accounts for their existence today Laura B. Starr ui \\ oniau s | iome < 'oiupniiion I.ove'M You n k llremn. A Washington youth wrote home after the elopement, "I am marrfNl now, and all my troubles are over." Married men, please don't titter.—Chi cago Journal. j Nobody ever pries Into another man's concerns but with a design to do or to be able to do him mischief. South. Consider The Lilies, They Grow UNTIL the early eighties the fa vorite Easter lily with Ameri cans, who spend over IN MI A year upon this feature of Easter decoration, was the Madonna or Annunciation lily (Liliuincandidum), the common white species of the old world, a native of southern Europe. But in ISM' it was quite eclipsed by the Ber mutlan lily, which was introduced by William K. Harris, a flo rist. under the name of I.ilium harrisii. The new variety had larger flowers than the Madonna lily and more of them. It was earlier, requiring only thirteen weeks for development under favorable conditions, and. best of all, it took kindly to the hothouse forcing process. Then came the bonanza period for the Berinutlan grower, but iu his zeal he came near to killing the goose which laid his golden egg. Competition car ried the forcing process to such a point that the bulbs were dug before they were ripe iu order to get them in to the American market by Christmas or earlier, and disease resulted. In the most prosperous days of the Bermudan lily one grower often harvested 20,000 bulbs from a single acre, with gross protits of £:_\ihh> to $'2,500. The United States department of agriculture ex haustively investigated the lily disease, but the Bermudans were not bound to follow its advice, and little good was accomplished. Here was Japan's opportunity, for the Bermudan lily was originally a na tive of Japan and China. In 1870 Japan sent the United States only s2.<hju worth of bulbs. In 1805 the exports amounted to $40,000. By 1800 they had reached $130,000, and they have been increasing ever since, while the Bermudan product is supposed to be a quarter less than it was a decade ago. But the Japanese made the same error as the Bermudans, and the lily disease is now ravaging the white fields of the mikado's empire. The agricultural department again took up the lily question, and in 10'>0 an attempt was made to transplant the whole lily industry to the United THE GIANT LILV OF INDIA. States. The best stock obtainable was imported and planted in chosen sec tions of the southeastern states. Ev ery scientific method of propagation and growth was tried, but the experi ment proved a failure. The climate was unsuitable. Now the department has couceived the bold idea of grow ing the bulbs from seed, and experi ments along this line have been un expectedly successful. The main advantages of the new method of propagation will be the elimination of disease and the fixation of three or four well marked varieties. We need early, midseason and late va rieties, the first of which will naturally cost more and the last least. One of the most beautiful of all white lilies is the Lilium gigenteum, or giant lily of India, but; only those who are especially favored may enjoy this Easter emblem. It is seldom grown iu America except by scientific horti culturists. It often attains a height of ten to eleven feet, and its large, odorous flowers remain in good con dition for nearly three weeks. " The Lilium longiflorum is a tall, late northern variety that sometimes re quires thirty weeks for the develop ment of the flower. Its southern form is called by the botanist and the Japa nese grower Lilium longitiorum var. eximium and by the Bermudan Lilium harrisli. The intermediate form, Lili um longiflorum var. gigantenin, though requiring about eighteen weeks to force, is a most promising variety for the plant breeder. It is taller than eximium, with larger flowers. The bulb stores better than those of the other types and commands the highest price of all because it is said to be a difficult subject to propagate by vega tative methods. Country Life In America. I.lke a Illy In the Street. Sfe her gwlne long dar. Eak a lily in de street; 'Tain't de Easter hat—lt's des De face dat makes It sweet! En all de lilies know her step En hear her true heart beat! En Miss Springtime wid her flowers, She dress up litter kill; I)e valley sen's de brlghtes' 7Vr de picnic er de hill, But er all de Easter lilies She de bes' en sweetes' still! —Frank Stanton in Atlanta Constitution. SUNDAY MEALS. Do Wot Overeat and You Will Feel ■letter on Hundar. If it is desired to begin the week re freshed and ready for labor, rested in mind and body, the eating customs of Sunday will have to be readjusted. Have a later breakfast, if desired, but have then a very light one even If you are hungry, or, if It must be hearty, then do not upset your digestive hab its any more than may be avoided and have but two meals oil that day and eat no other. It would be far better to have three light meals, lighter than usual, if that could be arranged to tit with the other household arrangements. The custom of noon dinner on that day arises from the usual absence of cook or maid at the later one, and this may be unavoidable. Very well, then; treat this as a rest day for cook and diges tlve apparatus as well as from other labors. Have a light breakfast, a light dinner and a chafing dish supper as near the ordinary hours of meals as possible and remember as you are go ing to take less exercise than usual you demand a lesser amount of more easily digest's! food. Helen Johnson In Good Housekeeping The Resurrection I "=l "tsul [lower, (lie Lily Copyright, 1905, by George 11. Plcard i | —' 11K lily has long been the resur rection Huwt r of the Christian churches. It is a distinction based entirely 011 its beauty -i and adaptability. All vegeta ble growth is symbolic of the resurrec tion. The plant which springs from a tiny poppy seed is more miraculously so than that which comes forth from a more promising bulb like the lily. The stately flower is also the symbol of martyrdom and virginity. The early Christian painters, tow hom the world is indebted for so many of its theolog ical traditions, arc probably responsi ble for that. One of the most exquisite of the monkish legends is to the effect that the lily is one of the flowers which changed their color on the morn of resurrection day. Is it not true, these gentle sophists ask. that the Saviour himself declared that even Solomon In all his telory was not arrayed like one of these? Originally erect and re splendent with color, it bowed its state ly head and put aside its gorgeous rai ment, retaining only its sweetness. The flower which has come to be known in the American market as the Easter lily is a variety of the Liliuin longiflorum, named harrisii, from its originator and first cultivator. It is so easily cultivated and may be ship ped so successfully that its propagation has become a great industry in certain favorable locations, notably in Bermu da, which seems to be peculiarly adapt ed to its production iu unlimited quan tities. Lily growing is now the chief business iu Bermuda, and the frostless and htlmid island is a level stretch of lily fields. There are more than 200 farms on the island which are devoted to the cultivation of this fragrant crop. The major part of the industry con sists in the raising and exporting of bulbs. These are shipped to all parts of Europe and America, and they are easily brought into flower by profes <•*". * \ >'■ < . . - M/. l t v • * 3 • - "A ■' *■' J i : j „■ ~ 1.• * > v ., - tjm 1 3?* •it .• ,-.€? M t ' 7' 1 •- /V* dr Ji 8 A LILY PLANTATION IN BERMUDA. plotial florists and even by the most Inexperienced amateur. A marketable lily bulb must measure at least five inches in circumference. Propagated from a scale —the technical ! name for one of the external accretions to the parent bulb—at least three years of growth and cultivation are necessa- | ry before it can be marketed as a ma ture flowering bulb. Commercially the j bulbs ure divided into three classes- j five to sevens, seven to nines and nine ' to elevens. These designations repre- i sent the average circumferences of the bulbs in inches. A five to seven bulb j should bear five or six perfect bios- j Boms. A seven to nine bulb, if given liberal treatment, will yield seven or eight flowers. The largest size lily bulb j Is expected to furnish from ten to six- j teen extra large blossoms. The prices J of bulbs are graded according to their BiZtJ. The stock used to keep up the succes sion of bulbs is derived from the small er ones, as a rule. Sometimes, however, it becomes necessary to vary the proc ess and to use only the largest bulbs for propagating purposes. When that | happens the price of mature lily bulbs | soars upward, and the supply is visibly I diminished. The lily crop is planted iu October, and most of the labor of pre- j paring the soil and putting iu the bulbs is done by the negro farmers, who are j sometimes in the employ of the great lily planters and sometimes till their own freehold fields. After the crop is In little is required beyond keeping the growing plants free from weeds. The warm sun and the humid atmos phere are depended upon to do the rest, and they rarely fail to do their part in the interesting process. Late in February or very early in March the Bermudau landscape is a thing once seen to be remembered al ways. On some of the larger farms it is no uncommon sight to find 100,000 lilies in full bloom in a single field. The whole island of Bermuda is con verted into a gigantic lily bed. Tha odor which rises from this vast aggre gation of sweets is almost overpower ing, especially in the early morning, when there is no breeze to waft it sea ward. Passengers ou the steamers which ply between the various ports of the group can easily recognize this scent several miles out at sea. The lily plantations retain their beauty for several weeks. Finally, however, the stalk withers and dries up, and all the remaining energy of the plant is devoted to the formation of the bull). During the latter part of June the dig : begins. Tlii U decidedly rendu. :>t 01 the annual po tato digging at tie north. All the sen timent attached to lil\ culture gi\< i place to a very l.cen and careful com putation as to the prubahic outcome. As the bulb- are taken from tbo ground they are :■•>rt«\i into their vari ous classes by e.-;pcrt hands and care fully packed in I ■> each one wrap ped in a pre e covering of dried sphagnum. ■. • v begin in July and are couliutud .i..il the latter part of August. I'llile i'/.e I bulb ! a'id those reserved for next season's planting stock are packed in sand which has j been dried to prevent germination. | Thus prepared, they are permitted to rest for two months before the fall i planting begins. When the lily bulbs reach the great importing centers they are handled ! with great promptness. The importers i forward them in great quantities to i seedsmen and florists, who have placed ' advance orders, and they are then re failed to all descriptions of growers. The annual lily crop brings the Ber-j mudan farmers at least $250,000, and the bulbs and flowers retailed in ! American cities alone amount to more ! than $.100,000. This seems a large sum • to be derived from merchandise so : evanescent as lilies, but the trade is , well established, and the market is as stable as is that of most other luxuries ' and many necessities. Occasionally, i however, the bulb market becomes overstocked. In that instance the sur- j : plus of bulbs is returned to Bermuda I and replanted. Most of the large im porting houses in the American cities 1 have special farms in their patronage | and depend upon them for their an- | i nual supply. A few American firms j | grow their own stocks of bulbs on plantations leased for a term of years, An important feature of the lily trade is the importation of lily blossoms dl- i ! rect from Bermuda. The possibility of doing this successfully was demon j strated about twenty years ago, but little was made of it until within the 1 past decade. This branch of the busi ness has developed recently, and it is now estimated that 10,000 boxes of this commodity are shipped to New York, j The lilies are shipped in the form of partly developed buds, each wrapped carefully in tissue paper and packed in small boxes lined with moistened sphagnum. The cutting and packing are done immediately before the sailing of the steamer, and the arrival is so timed that no delay occurs in the final ■ distribution. These imported flowers nre used to supply advance orders ! from chur lies and societies and are i mostly for decorative purposes. The Home Paper of Danville. I i Of course you read J I Mil MI j| THE nEOPLE'S ft ■'OPULAR 1 APER. Everybodv Reads It. a/ I I Published Every Morning Except Sunday at | i No. ii E. Ma ho ng" St. I i Suhscnption 6 cei, .\r Week. There are several peculiar features incident to lily culture in Bermuda. One of them ii the fact that the indus try owes its present flourishing con dition to the 9 i'orts of an American long resident there. The popularity of the flower was promoted greatly iu New York by a Chinese florist, the late Mr. Lee. Most satisfactory of all. it is practically an An *rican industry developed on British soil. EASTER RECIPES. Five Wajx of »nkiiiK Khk-i Into Tool ItSOIIM* UiMIIVM. Here are some recipes for making Easter eggs, not the colored kind, but the edible variety: Baked Eggs. Break six eggs into a well buttered dish, cover with bread crumbs, season with pepper, salt and 1 butter, then cover with cream. Bake twenty minute; and serve hot. Egg Salad. I'se the required number ;of hard boiled eggs. Remove the yolks carefully, so as to leave them whole, and chop the whites. Serve on lettuce leaves with a boiled dressing and balls of cottage cheese. Eggs a la I'arisieniie. —(Jeuerously butter the bottom of a baking dish, then cover with grated cheese; break eggs upon cheese without breaking the - yolks, season with pepper and salt and a little cream, cover with grated cheese and-bake brown on top. Escaloped Egg;. Cover the bottom of a well buttered dish with bread crumbs, then a layer of sliced hard boiled eggs, covering with a cream sauce to which the yalk of an egg has been added, then a layer of finely chopped meat, preferably ham or chicken; then eggs and sauce, with crumbs on top. Bake until light brown. Egg Thimbles.—Chop fine any good cold meat. To one cup of meat add a scant cup of breadcrumbs, pepper and salt to taste and mix with beaten egg. If necessary add a little milk to make stiff batter. Line timbale molds, bot tom and sides, with paste and drop an egg, without breaking, in center of each. Sprinkle breadcrumbs on top and bake brown. (Jem pans may be used in place of timbale molds. CoiiKciouN Virtue. Sen;.tar lilowen (proudly)—No, sir; no one has ever attempted to bribe me. Senator Ivetchem —Never mind Some day. when it's a close vote, you'll get your chance.—Chicago Journal. Gettlnx Kveu. Barber—Does that razor pull, sir? Customer—Yes, but so ahead. I've been pretty iinrd pushed lately, and this'll even up things a little.—New Yorker. J J. BROWN THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested, treated, fitted with s '<nd artificial eyes supplied. Market Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. Hours—lo a. in. t>sp. m. A. Reliable TIN SHOP Tor alt kind of Tin Roofing, Spoutlne and General Jolt Work. Stoves, Heaters, Ranges, Furnaces, eto. PRICES THE LOWEST! QIfiLITY TAG BEST! JOHN HIXSON NO. 116 E. FRONT BT, KlLLthe couch ' AND CURE the LUNGS W,TB Dr. King's New Discovery ___ /CONSUMPTION prie# FOR I OUGHSand 60c & SI.OO Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or MONEY BACK. T ACKAWANNA RAILROAD. WKHT. A.M. a M. a M. p. y , New VnrS .Iv lon .... iOOO 140 P. M Scran tou »r 8 17. I SU P. 41 Buffalo ... Iv 11 SO I 45 A M. Heran ion ar 558 I'JUi \. M. A. M. P. M. P. b Scran ton . Iv t6 36 *1(111) tl 56 *6 36 Bellevue Taylor 644 1U 17 £O3 644 Lackawanna K 51) 1U 21 210 6 S(J Duryea Sto 10 28 iIS tj 5b Pittston 65a 10 38 217 657 Susquehanna Ave 701 10 37 2lf 659 West Plttßtun 705 10 41 223 702 Wyoming 710 10 46 227 707 Forty Fort 231 .... Ken net 1 717 10 52 284 714 Kingston ar 724 10 56 240 720 Wiikes-Karre ar 740 11 10 250 730 Wilkes-Harre Iv 710 1010 2 31' 710 Kingston Iv 724 10 56 1 40 720 I Plymouth June , Plymouth 735 11 05 2 4ti 729 Nantlcoke 748 11 18 25* 7'37 | 11 unlock's 749 Hit) .1 06 7*43 I Hhlekshlnny 801 11 31 320 758 I Hicks Ferry 811 til 43 330 f8 08 i Beach Haven 819 1148 8»7 809 j Berwick 827 11 54 344 817 | Briarcreek f8 32 .... f8 50 j Willow (irove To 30 .... fb' 54 f8 24 Lime Ridge 840 fl2 09 358 IB 28 I Espy 846 12 15 106 834 Bloomsburg..... 858 12 22 412 840 | Kupert 897 12 26 415 845 CHlawlssa 902 12 82 422 850 [Danville Wls 1J 44 438 905 i Cameron 924 fl2 67 448 Northumber'd ar HBS 110 455 930 tCABT A. M. A. M. P. M. P M Nortnuinberl' *6 45 tIOOO tl 50 "526 • lameron 657 f2 01 f534 Danville .. 707 10 19 211 543 Catawlssa 721 10 32 22d 558 Kupert 726 10 37 229 601 [ Bloomsburg 733 10 41 288 605 j EBpy 738 10 48 240 613 Lime Ridge 744 fio 54 t'2 46 f6 20 ( Willow Grove f7 IS f2 50 ..... | Brlarcreek 7 62 f2 58 f6 27 Berwick 757 11 06 258 684 Beech Haven 805 fll 12 303 641 Hicks Ferry 811 fll 17 309 647 Sblckshlnny 822 11 3) 320 fB 59 Hunlock's 838 (SSI 17 09 Nantlcoke 838 11 44 338 714 Avondale 841 342 722 Plymouth 845 1151 347 728 Plymouth June....,.. 847 .... 352 . Kingston ar 855 11 59 400 738 Wilkea-Barre ar 910 12 10 410 750 Wllkes-Barre Iv 840 11 40 350 730 Kingston Iv 856 11 59 100 738 Lucerne 858 al2 02 t oii 742 Forty Fort fW 00 .... 407 .... Wyoming 905 12 08 412 748 West Pittston 910 417 753 : Susquehanna Ave.... 918 12 14 420 756 Pittston 918 12 17 424 801 l)uryea 923 429 806 i Lackawanna 926 432 810 I faylor 932 140 817 ; Bellevue..... j Hcranton ar 942 1236 450 825 A. M. P. M P.M I Scranton.... Iv 10 25 tl 55 .... ;i 10 A. M Buffalo ... .. .. .»r .... 755 ... 700 A. M. P. M P.M *,M , Scran ton Iv 10.10 12.40 JBSS *2 PM. P.M P.M A. .V New York ar 330 50U 735 650 •Dally, tDally except Sunday, stops on signal or on notloe to conduce j a Stops on signal to take on passenger* for New York, Blnghamton and poluls west. I T. E.CLARKE T. W. I.KK ! (.4 on. Hu riertntendent 4o« PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, TIME T4BLE In Effect Nov. 29th, 1904. A.M. I A.M. P. il. Scranton(DßtH)iv §6 .-h j# 4~i 1 >2-;4 28 Pittston " " 705 fitls§ 210 563 A. M.jP. M. P.M 1 Wllkesbarre... 1 v A.M. $lO 3,". J 2 45 26 00 Plym'th Ferry "#7 25 110 42;f 252fe 07 1 Nantlcoke " 732 10 50; 301 817 ; Mocanaqua .... " 742 11 07 , 82y 037 ; Wapwailopen.. " 801 II lti 381 847 j Nescopeck ar 8 10; 11 20 3427 00 A.M. A.M. p\%f. Pottsville Iv 5 So; 811 55 ' Hazleton " * 705 ...... 245£2 45 Tombicken "j 7 22; 3 05 305 Fern Glen " 7 24| 815 315 Kock (Jlen " 7 >5; 322 322 Nescopeck . .. ar 802 Catawissa 4 00 4 00 . . . 4 M A.M P. M. P M ~ Nescopeck... .Iv § 8 IB,tjll 26 342«7 00 Creasy •• 83( II 36 352 709 Espy Ferry... '■ 18 4: 11 46 f4 02 72u E. hloomeburp " 847 11 50 406 725 I Catttwlssa Iv 8 sb! 11 57 413 732 South Danville " 900 12 10 .4 SI: 761 j Sunbury ar 9 35; 12 40[ 4 so| 815 A. M. P. M. P. MIPTM. Sunbury Iv || 8 42 §l2 48 $ 5 18 9 53 Lewisburg.... ar 10 1.3 1 Milton " 10 08 139 544) 014 Wllliamsport.. " II 01) 141 64010 00 Lock Haven... " 11 69 220 7 37; Kenovo "A.M. 300 830 Kane " 8 25 P.M. P.M. Lock Haven..lv £l2 10H 345 1 Bellefonte ....ar 1 05' II 4 44j Tyrone " 2 101 600 Philipsburg " 510§ 802 Clearfield.... " 654S 845 Pittsburg.... " 655 110 45 A.M. P. M. P. M. P M Sunbury Iv 9605i1 59 * 5 10! 118 31 Harrlsburg.... ar jll 30 j 3 15 j 6 50jl0 10 P. M, P. M. P. M. A M Philadelphia., ar !i 3 17 |! 6 23 || « 28||4 23 Baltimore " S 3 11 ,1 6 00 : 9 4.5 2 20 Wannlngton ... " § 4 20 |, 7 15 jlO 55 3 30 ...... ATM! PTMJ I Sunbury Iv §lO 00 § 2 15j I Jc. Jc. ar 11 45i 4 05: I Pittsburg •' 6 55j§1045| | A.M.|p,M.jP. M.IP M Harrisburg.... lv'jll 46 || 6 20 || 7 SOigllOol P.M. A M. A. M. A M Pittsburg ar!« 6 55||| 160 || 1 50; 5 301 P. M. P M A M A M Pittsburg Iv J 7 10 1 9 00 J 3 00 18 00 .... A.M AM P M HarrUburg.... ar | 2 00 | 4 25 |ll 25 | 3 10 .... KM A M Plttsbuig Iv 9 (j0 is 8 00 .... A.M. P M Jc. Jc. " i 7 30 i 3 00 .... Sunbury ar i, 9 20 J 4 60j.... P. M. A A M A M Washington... Iv 110 40 H7 50 10 50 .... Baltimore '• |ll 00 S 4 40 840 11 45 .... Philadelphia... " [ll 40 | 4 25 J 8 30 jll 40 .... A. M. A M A. M. P M ~ Harrißburg.... Iv | 3 35 | 7 55 §ll 40 J 8 25 .... Sunbury ar jsoo| 936 108\ 613 .... P. M. A M A M Pittsburg Iv |l2 46 1 8 00 2 8 00 Cli-artield.... " 330 920 •••• Philipsburg.. " 435 10 It ... Tyrone " 700 98 10 12 25 .... Bellefonte.. " 8 16 9 3*2 125 .... Lock Haven ar 915 10 30 2 10; -• • • P. M.A MA M PM Erie Iv | 5 35 | Kane, " 8 45! |ji 6 Kenovo " 11 50 J 6 401 10 80 § 1 18 ••• Lock Haven.... " 12 38; ' 7 801 11 25 , 2 50 A.M.! P M Wllliamsport.. " 2 44;j 825512 40 Milton •' 223 913 125 4 Lewisburg " 900 1 15 4 •••• Sunbury ar 3 ifttj 9 4,~>| 164 6 .... Sunbury Iv 645|v55j2 00 ; 5 25 South Danville "j 711 "iO 17 2 21j'5a0"" Catawlssa "j 821 10 26! 2 36] 608 •••• E Bloomsburg.. ' 87 10 43 243 615 •••• Espy Ferry...." 42 110 47 f6 19 •••• Creasy "I 52 lo 66! 2 iv»j 6 :«l ■••• Nescopeck " 02 11 I A M A Mil'. M.j 1 Catawlssa Iv] 10 HBj Nescopeck Iv 823 5505 pJ# Kock cllen ar II 221 •••• Fern dlen '• 851 11 28| 582j 705 •••• Tombicken " 858 11 38 5 38,' 7 .... Hazleton " 9 Ist 11 57 5 59, 7 m .... Pottsvllle " 10 15 1 50] 6 55] 7 AM AMP M SU ° Nescopeck Iv j 8 02 (11 06 j) 3 05 ... Wapwailopen..ar 819 11 20 320 |> m Mocanauna .... "j 831 11 32 3 30,2 g4O •••• Nantlcoke "1 8 54; 11 64 349 5 ! V M 701 .... Plym'th Ferry'if 902 12 02 357 ijq .... Wllksbarie ... "1 910 12 10 405 (AM P M P M ' 7 PlttSton(DAH) ar \ 9 39 112 29 s 4 66 .... Scran ton, " "I 10 08 1 08) s¥' .... Weekdays. ( Daily. 112 Flag station. Pullman Parlor and Sleeping Cars run on through trains between Scsbury, Wllliamsport and Erie, between Sunbnry aild Philadelphia and Washington and between Harrisburj;. Pitts burg and the West. For further information apply to Ticket Agent W. W. ATTERBURY, J K. WOOD General Manager, Pass. Traffic Mb IjIKC. W, BOYD, Uen l'usseng,»r Agent. MJlffl mm... ffe warn 10 jo all Ms tf Printing | r * II; : ITS Hi ;! II will Me. irs mm. *■? i A well printed tasty, Bill or Le if / ter Head, Poster )/i Ticket, Circular Program, State ment or Card 'i W an advertisement for your business, a satisfaction to you New Type, lew Presses, ~ Best Paper, SUM fort " Prnmptness- All you can ask. A trial will make you our customer. We respectfully ask that trial. 1 HI NEWS No. ii R. Mahoning St..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers