In the Matter Of Elizabeth By 3. T. STERN t'oyj riKl* l - li " 4 - l>y !s. T. Stem There were two Elizabeth Lang hams. For fifteen years they had lived almost side by side, and neither of them had learned of the other's exist euee. Three hundred feet of metropoli tan space aud several hundred thou sand dollars separated them socially and completely. The elder Miss Lang ham resided near the middle of the block lu a plutocratic white stone man slou. At the corner of the same street In a modest flat house lived the other Elizabeth Though neither of them was aware of the circumstances, these two pos sessed one link in common. Ills pur ents knew him as .lames Carruthers. His clients and professional friends called him Jack, the coifliselor. Miss Langham knew him as her oldest ami, he hoped, her best friend. Elizabeth Langham knew him as her employer. Elizabeth l.anghan. often wondered that Jim had selected her from two dozen applicants for the position of ste nographer In his legal establishment. A callow graduate from a business col lege, she had hardly hoped to gain ac ceptance over a score of experienced typists. The true reason—her name— she never guessed. Still Jim had no reason to regret his choice. Miss Eliza beth was neat, pretty and hrlirht Jim dictated to her daily, and she tran scrlbed without an error. Not so Miss Langham, the focus of fifty bachelor aspirations. Jim tried dictation there only once. "Mr. Carruthers," said Miss Langham coldly, "you are taking a mean advan tage of our friendship. You have no right to criticise my other friends. I am proud to number Judge Newton among my friends." "But he's fifty if he's a day," Jim persisted. "So shall you be, Mr. Carruthers— some day. Good night." There were tears after Jim had taken his departure, but that Jim did not know. He did know, however, that Miss Langham had dismissed him, and he sorrowed accordingly. "It's that fellow, Colonel Newton," he mused. "Since they've elected him a judge Elizabeth has been indiffer ent to me. Mrs. Judge Newton evi dently sounds better to her young ears than plain Mrs. Jimmy Carruth ers." So he floundered homeward in the slush of a winter evening nnd nursed his first great sorrow. Sorrow maketh a sympathizer. Jimmy, blue and hopeless, became hu manitarian In a week. One morning when his stenographer, Miss Eliza beth, showed him a court summons which hud been served upon her, de manding that she pay the sum of $250 forthwith or .suffer the entry of judg ment for that amount. Jimmy simply radiated consolation. "Who Is thl3 Mine. Nellie who is suing you?" "I never heard of her," was the re sponse. Jim scanned the papers closely. "Mine. Nellie," he said after he had finished, "seems to be the trade name of a being whose Christian appellation is Michael O'Malley. He says you ordered one blue dress of the value of $250. He swears that you have re fused to accept It, and lie sues accord lngly." "There must be some mistake. I nov<-r ordered a dress one-fourth ns expensive as that. Nor have I ever laid eyes on Mine. Nellie." "Where do you live?" he Inquired. Her reply astonished him. "No. Sixth avenue." "Is that near Forty-seventh street?" "It is on the corner. The side street is very fashionable. This summons must be intended for some wealthy woman near by who doesn't pay her bills." When Jim saw that the papers were signed In the name of the Hon. William Newton, justice, his mind was made up. He told his secretary to have no fear. He was happy to show his appreciation of her faithful and long continued service. He tried the cilse himself. His rival sat on his ben hand glared savagely at him at least that Is Jimmy's re port of the judicial attitude. As It happened. Mine. Nellie was not present in the courtroom, having been detained elsewhere on jury duty. In his place he sent two of his as sistants. One of them took the stand nt once a florid faced lady she was, who confessed amiably that she had been a dressmaker for twenty-one years and was approaching her thir tieth birthday. "It's this way, judge, yer honor," she testified glibly. "Mine. Nellie sent the dress, and she sent It back, saying it didn't lit. I didn't have nothing to do with It, but the lady In our house as dtd has assured me that It fitted to perfection. Mine. Nellie says Miss Langham should be compelled to pay." M.this point Jim felt called upon to explain matters. "You see," he start ed to say, "they've got the wrong"— Judge Newton waved him aside. "The Issue In this case Is simple. Does the gown fit? That Is all. I would like to ask Miss Langham u question or two. Take the stand, miss." Miss Langham did so. "What is your name?" "Elizabeth Langham." "Where do you live?" "No. Sixth avenue." "You may retire to my private cham ber and don the dress. The plaintiff's eil>erts will accompany you." Miss Langham commenced to weep. "If you please. Judge Newton," she stammered "Do as J say," ne responded testily. "The court will judge for Itself." Five minutes later Miss Langham reentered the courtroom clad In the gown under dispute. Mine. Nellie's expert beamed with satisfaction as she addressed the court "You can seo for yourself, judge, yer honor. It fits without a wrinkle." "I should call that an amazingly good lit," said Judge Newton, frown ing, adding hy the way of judicial con cession, "and mightily becoming. It tits, doesn't It?" "Yes," said Miss Langham, "but"— "That's all. Judgment for Mme. Nel lie for the full amount." Once more Jim rose from his chair. "Won't you permit me to say a few words? There has been a mistake." "There has not, Mr. Carruthers, un less It be your own In endeavoring to defend a case In which the evidence Is so palpably in favor of the other side." On the way back to the office Jim consoled his client. He promised to appeal the case to the highest court In the country. In his heart he knew that the case of Mine. Nellie versus Miss Elizabeth Langham would never be heard In court again • •••••« When Miss Elizabeth i rom tier coupe at 0 o'cloclt that evening she found her household In an uproar. Mathilde. her maid, was almost breathless. "If you please, ma'am," she gasped, "there's a man In the iwrlor a sheriff or something, and he's been holding the best peach blow vase these two hours. I sent for the police. The police says he can't do nothing. He told the man to wait. There he Is now, ma'am, sitting on the best gilt chair, with the vase In his hand, ma'am." The intruder advanced as Mtss Langham entered the parlor. Yes, he was a deputy There was a judgment against Elizabeth Langham In favor of Mine. Nellie. Didn't she remember the dress she ordered from Mine. Nellie? "Hut I sent it back. It did not fit." "Of course," said he suavely, "that may have been the defense. A judg meut is a judgment, however. Will jou pay up or shall 1 make a levy?" he add ed, casting longing glances at the vase. "This shall not go unpunished. It is an outrage," said Miss Langham indig nantly. "Wait until 1 ring tip my friend. Judge Newton." "Your friend?" The deputy laughed. "You will receive instructions from him." "1 have received 'em already. It was Judge Newton that entered the judg ment against you. Here are the papers. This is his own writing." One glance satisfied Miss Langham. She bade Mathilde bring her check book "I'll pay," she said. "In the meantime you may release that vase it is hardly a tea store souvenir." That same evening James Carruthers sat In his den, reading Dante's "Infer no." He had finished "The Sorrows of Werther" the day before. At liis elbow, still to be perused, lay "The Joy of Liv ing." The telephone bell jangled twice, but he did not hear. At the third call he rose from his chair. A moment later the volume went speeding on Its way across tho-room. This is Jim's end of the conversation that followed: "Represent you in the matter? Glad ly. I'ald It, you say? Tried to take— oh. my! Newton? Beastly impudence! Called tonight after all that happened? You treated liim right. Yes, d-e-a-r-i-e. In ten minutes." The next morning Jim Informed hts stenographer gleefully that the Mine. Nellie matter was settled out of court and that she might retain the dress as a gift. Later he called upon the deputy sheriff. "I am sorry, counselor," said the olli clal, "that duty compelled me togo against your client. Funny thing how we collected it. I found the defendant resided at Sixth avenue. I saw It in the court record. She said so. Those are flats and, says I, that Judgment ain't no good. Afterward some one rings this office up and tells me the de fendant didn't live there at all. Says she was a swell and lived around the corner in Fifty seventh street. lie was rlgtit too. She paid up like a lamb. 1 wonder who it was that tipped us off? We got the money all right. Hut, say, a guy that'll give away a lady like that Is as mean as dirt. Eh, Jim?" "Well, that depends," replied Jim, "upon the motive." I The Inane of Itaoe. In the twelfth chapter of the book of Judges It is told how the G i lead i tea slew forty and two thousand Ephralm ltes at the passages of Jordan lie cause they pronounced "shibboleth" "slbboleth." That was a race issue. By their faulty speech the forty and two thousand proved themselves to lie of another race, and they were slain. Uvuil mu ii-ni lilalui)' ami learn that in the dark backward and abysm of time the hand of every man of one race was against the hand of every man of all other races. Stranger meant enemy, alien meant foe. Then the race Issue was at its strongest. Centuries have passed. Almost universal tolerance has come about. While races still preserve their national identity, ingress and * egress are, for the most part, free and I open. The sons of one race mate free ly with the daughters of another. Without loss of caste or taint of dis honor a French girl may marry a Neapolitan, a Swiss maiden a Prussian youth, a Norwegian Olsen a German Gretcheu, a Russian an Austrian, a Spaniard a Portuguese, an Englishman a Scot. The population of the Fnited States Is an amazing composite of nil these and other races. San Francisco Argonaut Would Open Hln Eyf». "Thinks lie never makes a mistake, eh? Single man, I suppose?" "Yes. Why?" "Well, if he had a wife 1 think she'd quickly convince him of that mistake." —New York Press Mm and Truth. Archbishop Whately of Dublin once asked a young man how it happened that truth, although always sedulous ly sought after, is so rarely found. When the youth demurred giving his | answer, Whately said: "I'll tell you why; It is because men always prefer getting truth on their side to being on the side of truth!" \ Wonderful Actor. Winks Talk about stage realism! j Y»u should see Strident in "I.ove and Woe." "Jinks lie can't hold a candle to my friend Mouther. Why, sir. lie ' played the heavy villain in "Woman's j Wrongs" so realistically that his wife , sued for a separation the next week. | Then lit* Sulkeri. "Mrs. Gnschley remarked to me that | It must he pleasant to In* married to a ! clever man," said Proud ley's wife. "And what did you say?" queried Proudley. "I told her, of course, that 1 didn't know; that I had only been married once." Hiirarii In the Time of Homer. The horses used in Homer's time were war horses. The warriors were drawn in chariots. The art of riding was known, but it is alluded to as something unusual. I'lysse* at the time of his shipwreck "bestrode a plank, like a horseman on «i big steed." There are reasons for believing that the practice of riding was much later than that of driving. Rial the myth vf the centaur, whei-«, according to Shake speare, "man i* Incorpsed and demina tured with Ue> beast," probably orig inated at an early period when the ap- j peapiiiee uf a man on horseback was a no.« sight \ l*«»r Mollere. A reinarkanie incident is reported for | theater in Paris The play WHS "TnrtufTe." and at the end of the | fourth act tin* manager of the company came in front of the curtain and said. "Ladies and gentlemen, we shall not go ! any further with this piece, for the tifth | act Is unworthy of Moliere." Mow the I audience t iok this announcement Is not j stated. Perhaps they went home and read the tifth act critically in the seclu- j aluu the library . I The Reckless [ Hour A By IZOLA FORRESTER | Copyright, 1I«H, by Izo'a F"rre«ter When she came out of tha theater bit of the carriages hail g' ue except ! one. Some one stood beside it walt ' log. She stood for a moment In the lobby ' entraneo and fastened the diamond clasp on the chiffon and lace stole around her throat. The pin had been safe enough. She had volunteered go ing back to the boxes for It, and had found It sticking in the velvet arm of I Aunt Victoria's chair, just where she [ had left it. "Did you think that I was never coming?" she asked as he reached the carriage. The figure turned i quickly at the sound of her voice, and she found herself looking into Thorn ton's eyes. She caught her breath and , B topped abruptly, startled and hesi tating, afraid to let hlin guess the great flood of gladness that swept over her at sight of him. When one believes a person to be in Manchuria It Is some what bewildering to meet that person alone on Broadway at 11 p. m. He did not speak, merely opened the door for her. "There is some mistake," she paused. "Of course there Is a mistake. There always Is when I come In for anything good. The fact remains that the rest have gone and that I was told to wait for you." "Who told you to wait?" lie took her by the elbow and helped her imperatively Into the carriage. "I was with Mrs. Culverton. She was In the third box, and 1 was late. Then Cully c.'yne along and took her home himself. I believe your aunt told him to wait for you, but he wanted togo directly home, so I took his place. You don't believe me?" "Oh, yes, I do. At least 1 believe part of it. You always twist the truth and the fairy tale together so perfectly one can only guess at which is which. I believe that Mr. Culverton was asked to wait for me." Thornton ignored the discrimination. I lb- was gazing intently at the pale young face. It must be true all he had heard at the club. She did not look happy. It was Vic Wilmington's affair, the digging up of Estevan. She always had some two-for-a penny title tagging after her. It was only three weeks off now. The thought brought with It a flash of recklessness. They would have her for a lifetime. Tonight for one short half hour she was his. He leaned toward her suddenly. "Gladys, are you sorry to see me?" "Don't." Her eyes met his in half de Bant entreaty. "It Isn't fair." "Fair to whom?" "To him." Thornton's jaws squared aggressive ly "He hasn't anything to say about It yet. You needn't be frightened. The wolf won't car. you. Won't they even let you be glad or sorry?" "Don't; please, please don't." "Say you are glad to sec me." ' I'm not glad to see you. You went away of your own free will. I wish you had stayed." "Until lyvas over?" "No, forever!" she retorted passion ately. "I never wanted to see you again." He smihvl. It was Gladys* way to make one last final charge when she knew she had lost the day. "You ne\er wan tec' to «»»e me again." he repeated, "because you are going to marry a man for whom you don't care a snap of your finger, and you did love me." "I did not." She faced him with proud, hurt eyes and flushed cheeks. lie laughed with a riotous sense of happiness In her pain. If he still had the power to hurt her there was hope. It was the reckless hour. "You did, sweetheart, and you do now, and you always will. You know you will. Manchuria or the moon. It won't make any difference, not if you marry a hundred times, not if it's years before we meet. I can always come back liko this and look In your eyes like this and see love In them like this." She met his steady gaze, defiantly at first, then In open confession, as he said, and before he knew It she had covered her face with her hands and w;m crying. He felt suddenly helpless and ashamed. "Gladys, don't do that I'm a brute, dear. I'm sorry. I won't say another word. I'm going back this week. Stop, dear. Gladys"— He deliberately drew her hands away from her face. It was a dear face, lie had carried its memory with hUn around the world and it had brought him back to the stnrting point. He had i been poor—not decently, openly poor, but living on hope and blue sky and terrapin. There was another Darby Thornton who bestowed spasmodically unexpected and Irregular checks on an undeserving grandson, also advice and admonitions. The weight of gratitude had become too trying. Darby had never been able to even up the balance between the acceptance of the checks and the following out of the good ad rice and the admonitions. He had thought that Gladys had known lie was next of kin to Job's turkey. Everybody else did He did not mind. In a way It rendered him harmless with undesirable parties so far as matrimonial Intentions were concerned. Put Gladys was desirable He had known that she loved him. He had left the day after the accident. It had been her frank betrayal then that had shown him his course for her sake. They had been on the train with a party bound for the Whitney place at Rosemead. There had been an accl j dent in the tunnel to the train ahead, and the one they were on crushed into | the rear cars. In the darkness there had come the sudden jolt aud jar of grinding brakes. Some people came in a headlong rush from the front cars, and a woman's scream rang out shrilly above all. He had just stopped be ; side Gladys' seat to speak with her, and she was laughing up at him when the collision came, it was over In an Instant. All he knew was the vivid tense of her arms clinging around his neck as he caught her up out of the seat and their lips had met for the i first time with death three car lengths Kway. He had l*-ft Uosemejid that night. It wns all he could . lit- thought ebe wculd understand. If not, there was no danger hut Mrs. Wilmington would enlighten her. The Manchuria business had been an opening held out by the old Darby Thornton for some time. It was a chance to make good by going out there and clearing up the old boy's mercan tile interest* before the war broke out. He hint Muck to it ami made good, and the reward hail come most unexpected ly when said old boy hao you think I would have kissed you that day if I had not? And you are right about the other too. I shall always love you." lie bent toward her with keen, half shut eyes. "And yet in three weeks you will be his wife." "No, I won't. I>o you think I could— after tonight? I shall break the en gagement tonight. You have accom plished that at least. Now, take the j first boat back to Manchuria." He smiled slowly and happily. She | had not heard yet of the accumulated ; possessions. "We've turned out of the park," he said. "1 don't want togo to the house | and face a crowd. Gladys, look at me. j No, straight in the eyes, please! Try to think quickly. I've come all the way around the world to see you. I've al- j ways wanted you, you know that. I | was afraid before, and Iran away like j a coward and didn't even give you the chance to refuse uie. Will you refuse me now*/" "As If it made any difference?" Her j eyes were clear and true and some- i what indignant. "If I have enough money to satisfy even Aunt Victoria and her little count, isn't there enough for you? If you go back there"— "What?" "I shall give away all the money and come after you?" "Come, now!" Her lip were half parted, her eyes wistful and troubled. "It will be easy to come back and break the engagement then. You will only have to present your husband." "If I «L»red"— He t »;•;•<• ) on the glass slide and | ga\e an : t<> the driver, and they turned back down the avenue Just as the bells wi-r. chiming midnight. Ohio In .!npnn. "Cincinnati N in Ohio, and Ohio Is also a Japanese word meaning 'good morning,'" -aid a native of Tokyo. "When you g> out iuiw< * illn*.' I lie »..u lll***?*. will all say to you '< thlo.' They do not wait for an introduction. It is con sidered courteous to greet strangers thus. "All American whose home was In Kentucky, but who did business In Ciin iniiati. :! traveling in Japau ami wa - considerably perplexed that ev cry one who met him on the streri should accost him with tho word 'Ohio.' He was of an old Kentucky family and. Ilk most Kentuckians, was proud of the state of his nativity. The second day in Japan, when he was met with the same greeting, he turned to his interpreter and said: " 'What in the name of all that is mysterious make 4 these Japanese think that I came from Ohio? Even If 1 did come from that state I would not want to have it thrown up to me con tinually.' "Before the guide had a chance to reply a young man passed and again saluted the American with an 'Ohio' "The Kcutti kian turned on the Jap anese young man and said: " 'See here, i tiie patient's temperature by the exposure of internal areas to the air. Because of this the best surgeons work with a meehanieal preeision and econ omy of movement. Everything is ready before the operation commences; an as sistant i- at hand to I >ok after the de tails of actual work, such as holding back the edges of the iuel ion, adjust ing the ligatures, etc.; an expert in an- j aesthesia handles .he chloroform and wateiies tiie subject's pulse and respi ration in order that tin l operator's time may l>c devoted wholly to one point, and a deft nurse, adept in the use of every instrument, needle and chemical preparation, is at the surgeon's elbow ready to hand out at a word some times before the word the shining im plemcnts al. ady tiled in the order of their probable use. Two visiting surgeons at one of the New York hospitals got a markedly varying percentage of mortality in a common abdominal operation. "What is the difference between the two operators V" 1 asked of one of the house staff in attendance. "About twenty minutes," he said suc cinctly. Met'lure's. it is not an uncommon tiling to hear a man or woman say, "Titer • is some thing the matter with my stomach." They never stop to think whether they themselves are not at fault instead of the stomach, it is so easy to blame the stomach. It can't say anything back. But the truth of the matter is the stomach is all right; nothing the mat ter with it at all. It is what is put Into the stomach that is causing the trou ble. The stomach knows when it re ceives something that will be injurious to the body or when it has been over loaded. and it profe;: : against the in digestible article or the surplus amount of food. It is acting as a 112 ! tid and sending out a warning agai: ' this abuse. Rut instead of being gr:.N fill to the stom ach and leaving o;i" the Indigestible | food and the big dinners the man or tiie woman continues to load it with pie and cake, pickles and sauces, pork and pancakes and all sorts of horrid* tilings, and then they complain that then- js the matter with T .»* > n Mall. Pn Sense Decide t coffee sold loone (in bulk), exposed to dust, gerniH and insects, passing through many hands (some of them not over-clean), '"blended, you don't know how or by whom, is lit for your use ? Of course you LION COFFEE Is another story- The green berries, selected by keen Judues at the plantation, are skillfully roasted at our fac tories, where precautions you would not dream ol are taken lo secure perfect cleanliness, flavor, strength and uniformity. From the time the coffee learen _ the factory no hand touches it till it is opened in your kitchen. nils hia made LION COFFEE the LEADER OF ill PACKAGE COFFEES. Millions of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE daily. There is no stronger proof of merit than continued and increas ing popularity. "Quality survives ull opposition." (Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every package.) (Save your Lion-heads for valuable premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. 1 i " ' —| The Home Paper of Danville. Of course you read j i ■ K[ ii ' m I J THE N EOPLE S POPULAR I APER. Everybody Reads It. Published Every Morning Except Sunday at No. nE. Ma hoi ngSt. Subscription 6 ccn i'-r Week. 'I IIIN >liirt-luif<* » I'll II ii rr. James Whilcomb Kiley, the dialect poet, received tiie degree of doctor of laws on Washington's birthday from the 1 niver>:i,\ of Pennsylvania, says the Philadelphia Press. Afterward ho visited the Academy of Fine Arts, where his p >rtrait by Sargent hung. "While S rgciit was painting my portrait," tl:* poet said, "he showed me a copy • 112 an unusual epitaph that one of his friends had sent him from Virginia It was the epitaph of a cer tain John Custis, and it read: "'l'nder this Marble Tomb lies ye body of Hon. John Custis, Esij. City of Williamsburg and Parish of Brutou fonnerlj of Hunger's Parish on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, County of Northampton, the place of his Nativ ity. aged seventy years, yet lived but Seven Years, which was the space of time he kept a Bachelor's House at Arlington.' "On tiie other side of the tomb," said Mr. Kiley, "these words were carved upologetieail> : " 'This Inscription put on this tomb by his own I'ositive Order.'" Broke tlie ltf(i:iil«tlmiii. At one of the western army posts In the days of Indian lights there was a young lieutenant who was careful bi see that tlie regulations relating to sa luting were faithfully observed. One day a soldier who was leading an ob streperous mule to water and had both hands fully employed In the task was met by the lieutenant. The soldier, who had an occupation which demand ed ills undivided attention, failed to sa lute the martinet, who Immediately called him to account for his remiss ness. "Why do you not salute an officer when you see him?" he demanded. "You hold this mule and I will," calmly returned the man. But the lieutenant did not Insist, and the regulations were broken.—Philadel phia Ledger. I.oiiKfellon. Conspicuous among the multitude of famous and Interesting persons whom Moncure D. Conway mentions In his autobiography is the poet Longfellow. At the time Mr. Conway was study ing in Cambridge in 1853 Longfellow was the professor of poetry in Harvard university, and it Is plain that the af fection and reverence the poet then In spired In the young student have sur vived the half century that has passed. "Longfellow's personality was po tent among us," says Mr. Conway. "His modesty, his amiable man toman manners toward the young, the absence of alts or mannerisms, his transparent Veracity of mind and respect for all sincere opinions, were very engaging, ne was universally beloved." KILLTHE COUCH ' AND CURE THE LUNGS """I Dr. j New Discov&ry ___ /CONSUMPTION Price FOR I OUGHS and 50c &SI .00 Frce Trial - Surest and Quickest Cure for till THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or MONEY BACK. 1 ACKAWANNA KAILKOAD. j " -BLOOMSBCJRG DIVIBIOU * KMT. A. M. A M. A M. J'. > , New Yuri Iv 100 .... 1(11)0 1 41) P. M -cranlon .11 r t> 17 I il P. M. .11 llnlo IV i) Hit 2 4ft A.M. SiTHtl' Oil . lir ">SB 111 \. M. A. M. r. ;> P. b Serantoji |V tb 85 •111 IU 1155 'li 35 IMieviie ThvIOI IM 10 17 iia 6 -14 l.aikawntiiia ...... 8 51) IU 24 I i'i 850 l"u-*ea 863 10 28 iii (i 5a I'IIIKIOU 858 103.8 l»7 857 >'iHi|iieliHiuiH AVe
    6 240 7'20 1 I'ly iiioul li June .... Plymouth ,85 11 00 2fj 7 2!) I Nautlcoke 148 111S Ji: 7t37 I UuillOCk'H 740 |1 IM {OP 7 4.S ; shU'kHiitnuy Sui 11 ;n <2' lllrks Kerry *ll 111 4fc i M 18 u:i Bench Haven SIW 114 c .w'7 SDK Berwick. 527 11 S4 844 817 i Brian-reek f8 82 . fij Si; Willow drove fh ad .... 112:( 54 f8 24 Lime Kldge 840 M2:.H 858 18 28 Kspy .. i<(i I. 15 < u«. 884 Bloouiriblirtt. 858 12 22 412 810 Kupert 857 12 'l': 415 845 (.'HIKWI-Hi a 02 12 82 4 *2 8 so Danville.... ... H 15 IV u 4 88 » Of. Cameron H24 f!267 448 Nort linniber i 030 w. I A. vl. A. M. 112 M I M Norltmmnerl •0 15 11000 tl ;>0 •r ) , 25 < laiueron * .">7 72" 112 I UttTllw... .. 707 10 tV 1 548 I HI.HW IHHH . ? 21 ll' £2 .... r»f Rupert ..0 72b 1017 it ti SOI lilooiiiHburg 783 11)11 Hi 005 Kapy T.« HI 48 24C ti 1.l I.line iliilge 71l lit! 64 112. if fo 20 Willow Urovn..,, 112; 4r ... , (i , .... Brlurcreek 762 .... r; ~8 827 Berwick 757 1106 253 884 I leech Haven .... 8 <:a Ml 12 A tin 841 | lilcks Kerry .. 81l fl!!7 BUV 647 shickshinny -22 il (I .120 fli stt li unlock s B>B 8-; 17 00 i Manliooke.. 8 >'B li 4 ,;r, 714 Avondale »4l 542 722 ; Plymouth 845 llil ii 7 ,728 j Plymouth June 8" 17 .... 8 . Kingston ar B''s 11611 pi on sign.il or on notice to conduct . ! a Stops on signal to lake on passengf:i« for ! iNew York, Blnghauitou and points we»l. T. R.CIiAKKK T. W. L.t K ■ le" "il|.«rlnlend»nt PEIISTLVANIA RAILROAD, TIME TABLE In Effect May 28th, 1905. A M.iA.M. P. \l. ! Scr:intim(llxH) v fjii 27 -V •'•> I 4'l <"• 15 j Pitt "ton ** 05 I i II $2 18 *i 85 A M. A. M. P M P.M; Wilkesharre... Iv s 7 15 s'lo ;c> . 21' 3 no. j Plvtn'tn Kerry " 22 f# 07; • Nulitlenke '• 81 Ml .50 »M rt 17| M«iin."|Ui .... •• 7 IS II o; 2.1 rt 37 W iipwallu|>eii . " 7 > II lii "47 ! NcM-cpeck.. .nr ill 11 2i; 8427 on A.M. IA. M. P.M.! PuUgville Iv 05i sll '>-i ! H:i7lctnn " ' 7 i>s 2I 1 I • • Touilni'ken "i 7 22 3 ! I'ernCllen " 721 II";, I Hook 4llen .... "i 7 f> -2 8 22 I Nesenpeek . . ar, 808 j Catawixsa [ iim 4ou . . I % HIA. M P. VI P M ! Ne j c.i|.e. i,... .Iv« 8'» Sll 28 .42 .7 !«• 1 t'reasj • Blv || .■. 3.8 7 ll' ! fctpy Kerry... '' I 8 2t» II 48 7 li' jE. Itldi.tcsburk " 34 11 .V> 4u77 2 > ! (.atnwi .i 8 |sj I A. M. P. M. p. in P.M. Suuluiry Iv II » 4:: §l2 48 (> it 1 ,;i I l.ewisl)urg.... ar 10 1.8 I 4"> 1 4'» , Milton lu 08 1 .8710 11 I Williann(Mirt.. "! II 0» 1 ll 8 :;5 Kk.nu l.ufk Haven... "j 11 50 220 7 15 Henovu "A.M. .S "0 845 Kane " ii 15; j Krle '• U 2bj P. M. P. M.' I.ock Haven..l\ >l2 10 3 3 45 Bellefonte ....ar 105 1 1; .... | Tyrone " 2loii Bon Plillipsliiirg " 510s 802 ('leartleld " 6 51 J 8 45 Pittsburg.... " 855 "" 4, r i A. M. P. M P M. P M Sunhury Iv 9&0 $ 1 s>> 520 S Hi; Ilarrlsliurg.... ar ll 3n §3 15 7 Ooj 10 In P. M, P. M. P. M. A »1 Philadelphia., arji} 3 17 il 623 || !l 2> 4 28 Baltimore "s3ll || 8 110 !• 4 > 2 :.n ...... Waxolngton ... "|j 4 20 I, 7 15 10 55 8 .fil 'A.M. PTM. Sunhury Iv §lO 00 § 2 05 | ~~ A.M P, M P. M. P M llarrlshurg.... Iv 11 46 620|| 7 '2O 110. P. M. A M. A. M. A M Uttchurg ar Jli s."»!it 160 |j 110 5 iio Ip. M. p M A M|A m.i Pittsburg Iv . 710 00 300 800 A. M A M P M Harridburg.... ar'J 2 00 J 4 25 II 25 j 3 10 j | P.M A M PlttHliUllf Iv I y (il) s w ••• A.M. PM I.ewißtnwn J?. "1 7 itli ; 3i« •••• Sunhury ar ; »20 4 60 ... p. wj A M \ M" A M Washington... Iv 11140 75" 10 4< .. Baltimore • 11 00 44n 840 11 " .... Philadelphia... " 11 lei 425 ;o 11 4o .... ATSK A MA. M. P M ... Harrlsburg Iv 3 3.", j7 55 11 40 820 .... Sunhury ar j6OO I * 3*> 1 O*U 6 0.5 .... P.M.I IA MA M Pittsburg I\ ;I2 46 300 8 0".... I'lenrlleld.... " ' 3 ;«i ! I 20 Phillpsburg.. " 4 2->' i ion Tyrone " 700 ll 8 10] 12 25 .... Hellefonte.. " s 10- ! II 82 I 2-» .... Lock Haven »r •» 15 j 10 801 2 101.... K~m" A m a M P M Krie Iv 5 .*»" ... Kane, 44 1 v 551 555 10 1* I ... Henovo " JI 60 (i 10 *J'> 1 |:; Lock Haven.... 4 * |*j ;;.s 7 11 -0 (Ml la.m. P M .... Willlamsport.. " •• 17 8"> 12 40 4 l'e 1 Milton "j ;; a,, !t 18 I! 45 4 I- .... l.ewi."burg " » 0.1 I 1.l 486 Sunliury ai "3 42 Wls 151 5 I VM. VM. A M P M p M ! Sunhury Iv 15 | w .'>s 200 5 25| | South Hanvllle" 7 n i 0 17 221 ft 51 fatawlosa •• 7 [■_> 10 C.5 2 81; 8I8 I ']]. K Hluouisburg.. ' 7411 10 48 218 Ii l l E«py Kerry—"l f6WL... 4'reasy " 7 ,i 10 18 255 r, ;* Nescopeck " 4U | 11 Oi ( .8 05 1; 40 .... ~.M A M I'. M I'aliivvissa I\ 10.88 Neßcopeok Iv 23 ? •> i's PM His-k (lien ar .... II 22 7 or. Kern Tomliloken " « 11 :!8 ft:it 7.51,"'. I llazletun ..... " •, jll j7 ;,=,(• 7 PottßVllle " |J, |., I 8, # si , " AM A M P.M. P * Nescopeck Iv , hCI H "5 ; 8 o> Wapw:illopen..ar slo H ;I 1 r. r 1 MoeanaqUhll32 , ; t . , Nanttcuke "1 „ tit,4 340 7 ~'j P Mi 7 IO .. I'lv in 111 Kerry ' 1 <,(>' 12 02 .. 1 'y W llksbarte ..." „pi 12 10 ' 3 7 ;1- "" IAMi PM P Ml PM I • I Pit tslonl I>A H) ar v | ? 12 30; ,tn 81H..... Seraillon " " lo OS 105 525 ,8 21' Weekdays. I Daily. I' Klag station. Pullman Parlor Sleeping Cars run ou through trains between Sunhury, Willlainsporl and Krie. between Sunhury ao.l Philadelphia and Washington and between Harristiurs. I'ltt iiuru and the West. K>tr lurther Information apply to Tl< ket Agent W . W. ATTF.KHI BY. I K. \Mm|i tieneral Manager, Puss. TraHie Mt;r t; lu. "V. 805 l>. t.eii Passenger Agent. in ipr iff lIIJfL ft mt i» in all tois of Primii I inn 112 * * dUD 111 J IIS H. ' II ll Pits. | lis tea*. if r A well printed tasty, liill or Le W / ter Head, Postt * A /A Ticket,# Circulai y t Y Program, Stale 'JiC - L>J ment or Card s n\ , \ \ > an advertisement 7 s v for your business, a • salisfaction to you New Type, if Presses, ~ Best Paper, Skilled Wart A Promjuess- All you can ask* A trial wili make you our customer. We respectfull" ask that trial. II fill 11 No. 11 H. Mahoning St.,