| Lady Kitty'./* | I Temptation & -i l) By IZOLA FORRESTER £ g « § 1$ a C*ypi/rn)ht, by lz*»la totTeatcr »#j S , „ *5 They rode slowly, l.ady Kitty some what ahead, probably because the trail Is narrow and treacherous below i Lost Moon, possibly so that Allison ihould not see her face. Half a mile back they had ridden eide by side. The trail had been wider then. Lady Kitty did not care to re member any other reason for the proximity, but the tlush on her cheeks and the slightest possible tilt to her chin belied her powers of forgetful ness. As for Allison, he was shamelessly self possesstnl and at ease. She had even caught him whistling as they turned into Ifed Mountain gulch, and When she had deliberately ridden ahead he had not tried to Join her. Lady Kitty felt irritated by the Im penitence expressed iu his confident attitude and also by the knowledge that he was looking at her. It is not pleasant to feel a person's steady gaze behind one. If it had been any one else she would certainly have reported his unpardonably rude conduct to Major L)lck, but she couldn't report Allison. The major would laugh at her. More than that—and Lady Kit ty's flush deepened the major would say the young cub had more grit than he gave him credit for, and when any one as charming and deliciously lov able as Liidy Kitty had flirted with fend encouraged such a man as Bob Allison she must expect the worst— or the best, according to her point of view. The major could be very ag gravating. And she had not flirted with Alii- I son; not at all. If they chose to call common social civilities flirting in this barbarous land of the lariat and cow pony she was not to blame. It had been lonesome at Lost M<»on, or, rather, by the time the major's party had readied the ranch Lady Kitty had Been so mauy lariats and cow ponies that the novelty had begun to pall, and Allison had loomed up as a welcome distraction she had almost said "at traction" to herself. He was good to look at, this tall, lean, strong young westerner, with his sunburn a cross tint between t in and brick dust and his straight, close lips opening in quick, unexpected smiles and showing white, square teeth like new corn. Bhe hud seen him tirst when he came j to meet them at the little lopsided pine board depot at Oruri. She had ■tood on the platform when the train drew In, and over the major's dove col ored sombrero she had caught a glimpse of a silent, erect figure on a black pony, ids hat pulled down over ! his eyes, his chin up, as he leisurely j surveyed their party. She had liked the clear, cool glance of his gray eyes, j There was something so serenely well balanced ami self sufficient in their ox- i presslon when they met hers that l.ady j Kitty had felt a pleasurable tingle of expectancy, as though the charm of her j femininity had received a challenge. There wan no doubt but what she had j met It It had not seemed serious, , silence, I.ady Kitty merely « part of the trip. He had not jiot trust herself to appeared worth considering, like the jc- memory of tin? girl other men, who, as the major neatly jln mind and the face put It, had appreciated their blessings Vet behind. He was when Lady Ivltty had smiled ou them, bridle, chin up, bis Bhe had felt that In a day or so she .yes, and Lady Kitty could nod goodby and leave him with ught of Rodney. She the same comfortable regret as Red at she had returned mountain Itself, with Its gorgeous, sun set tinted, sandstone peak. Bhe had Vor(1 not taken the man himself Into consid- of south eratlon at all, and now, suddenly, tlip -Long Juju." out a word of warning, the man had js)y pua rded circular leaned from his saddle und had kissed v f,j C h gacrlllces of hu ber. I animals are made. Bhe tried to forget to remember the also lts own private awful moment, but Its few details, of t j llß tribe on reach danced through her mind Insistently. e are j (U t through va- There had been a long silence after Hho 1VH j t . a j endurance, one had told him they were going away run t wlce round the from Lost Moon In the morning. Tho r n ,u es without ston party was going through Arizona the major, Mrs. Major and the major ml- nors, all girls, and herself. From Arl* n«d liny. Eoria they would jro back to said the Rev. Mr. Ana HUiiueui) ine omen pony »«<Jy > "to see you playing drawn nearer to her own brown muaj, j should think you'd tang t Allison's arm had swung around '.er, and he had kissed her. In jj arf p as< ., "1 usually cldentally Lady Kitty was uncertaU r<>tohw | f, )rin ] a st Sun that she had not— No, she had not, p n , KS told herself positively. She had onl: permitted him to kiss her, but tha,, <, r) . kll the Man. was yulte enough. And that was no^ ovl believe the office all—not quite all. She had said m an? Joax The tax thin# to him ly does. Philadelphia "I mltftit have expected that a perso" like you would do that sort of thlun.' She had meant to crush and humlpn the Injuries that they late him, and he had laughed and must be their her ride on ahead. She wondered ui.- Shakespeare, easily whether or not there was an jd Hrr ( r iu»inai«. reason for his cheerfulness. Had «l, never a famous criminal or had she not kissed him? In tt. newspapers take sides suddenness of the attack and tlte «"U«- ( . h f or evidence and as ous contentment she had felt at beli^ rpro^nt i ves Q f the court summarily roped and branded, so 0 even more sei. ">nal speak, by him she had forgotten e irlcan pre <is in this reg^3 tlrely Just how far she had t , lf> fac t that Italians that curious contentment. intg u f pre at cases In the "Walt, please." nr{ , always struck Allison's voice made her pull Vratlon of tone shown and fhort. He rode up beside her T (t lH ttint Americans take trail widened slightly and took a si^. t , st ln w hat concerns the flen header into the gulch. "The Americans are a "We can't g'<t by here," he sa;„ suy the Italians, "but "There has been a washout. We' on t f . V on warm to their have togo back and strike up tj s j.. mountain to Top Booty's. There's path from bis place down to the tr ilf «cott'» Fanerni. on the other side." "lory told of the Lady Kitty did not answer WalU The road lips were half parted, and she procession took Its way off at the distant foothills dream) rt tilll, whence can be seen England seemed more than half most beautiful of land world away So did the major Syas his habit to pause there the others. A curious sense of d j( thp gcen< » t a nd when tak clous peril possessed her. It was j fo ( j r j VH he never fall first time In her life that she hud and call the attention felt sure of herself so far us a n anJon to the most benutl was coucerned Just now she v j ww Few could re wild, Joyous Utllef that If this w> N>ars when, carrying their erner were to usl. h«-r to!*• bis , aßt j our ney, th»* horses she would say "Yes." She wonde ol(1 familiar spot, as It if he would. liin t;) K [ ve a last look at the If they were only not going TON U( , j ov «l SO well row; If only there were not home uJtU on in np iri«n. her father and Rodney of co> )(1 t be «bsen<-e of the Rodney. She almost laughed out l- t y OU ng Willie take care of to think all at once how W I. an . ou t? he had gone out of her life the I should say not' week And they were to I*' marrle uul( j think of having Easter week next spring. l'oor R . ltll you Harper's Bazar. Rodney! She looked at the 11; . ahead on tlie black pony and sl| .||, n i it happily If only he would talk tojj,, t oi«l me her life's history They turned a bend In the path h ,. r ,. isn 't a word of truth In faced a small mountain cabin, t chickens and pigeona wand^ ow ,j 0 you know? haughtily about, and a girl was *;,., a nse she told 11 to him her lng them away from a strag^ k( , rs jp raid fringe of red geraniums that around the stoop. She came to 112 c»ar«<- n»- Wouldn't them smilingly. Lady Kitty the j sa y. Withers, that horse Bhe had never seen such honest, t, f voU is actually no g<md. lug eyes before except ln deer. s y oU wouldn't speak in tha looked up at Allison. the horse If you wanted to "Hello, Rob! Them chlckent Boston Transcript. «"«t terrible. No. dad's Boue TIGERS OF CHINA. I'h<* Knae With Whleta One Will f"urry OM' a I»ru«l Pin. Amoy is an island city on the China coast, near Formosa. There are moun tains west of Amoy, and, according to a correspondent, there arc timers In them. "These tigers lead an easy and Independent life in the caves and dens which abound. They come out oi these every evening just as the shadows creep over the land and the blue mists rise from the lower ground and hide the hills. Then the Inhabitants «et within their houses and keep the door between them and these savage brutes. Many a poor woman coming with water from the well or a farmer delayed too long 111 the fields has fallen victim to them. The nights are spent by the tigers In foraging, and the foxes and wildcats I that roam the hills and the dogs In the village become their prey. "There is nothing, however, that gives the tigers such supreme delight as the capture of a good sized pig- They are truly Chinese in their tastes in this respect. One of these animals will ro at a steady trot with a dead pic thrown over Its back up the sides of steep hills. Jumping over huge l»owl ders and taking cross co.s over the most lnaecessiblo ground. The physic al strength of a tiger s something enormous, and its capacity for devour lng large quantities of food is scarcely less amazing." J...i in the ranch, 'oys the gulch. 1 to to help hin rest up a b on Allison sisafe a little am. down Hoottty," "This is he added c the 1 »i tuple pines hid !>uts," "I'm alf you she said the and Bob vasn't gulch. Y way. dark yet. He comes Kitty "I supje slim looked that the figure iUiot yet pretty <t>olorlng lust the h very of child! luteresti. spoke "Yes, owner- Blmply. led soon ship. as Bob lesitated "Has y delicate,, rise. I'iu'PUk, but "\\ hy o Y t >r a we've that's year. ?h a fi ight < ; kind of, ( i " of Bol»| inoU g the Allisi pines, j -We'll " Il ' s . (toodby, make Idinpl, followed "By.ghtV" him « Uot turn "M%as out of arotm sight. c anyou to "Yo morr«then we go "At OVER I'S tone was .. n lulctenched for a brushed her leaf facej U ide?" "Aider the sun- A e<l up her ad bun THE TALL HAT IN INDIA. Ita ItelKH In Even More neapotlo Ttin 11 It Ik In England. From noon till 1:30 p. m. Is the call ing hour, and, though Calcutta even in winter is a hot place, no man who Is not an outer barbarian will walk into a drawing room without a tall silk hat In his hand. Should he drive round in a dog cart to pay his calls, the man wears a helmet or a "sola tope, while he drives, pulls up at a house door, asks whether "the gate Is shut," and, if told that it is not, puts on a silk hat, wtiich the syco produces from a hat- Ikjx carried under the seat, and goes In to pay his call. Another instance of the British worship of tho tall hat, which the natives consider an interesting form of piety, Is to be seen at the Cal cutta races 011 the day of the \ leeroy s cup. On that occasion the lawns and paddock are thronged by people ns smartly dressed as can bo seen In the royal lnolosure at Ascot, but during the early hours of the afternoon all the men wear helmets. I)lrectly the sun dips toward the horizon all the "bear ers" of the helmet hatted men may bo seen outside the palings of the grand stand incloßure, Jumping up like ter riers to catch sight of their masters, each with a carefully brushed silk hat he has brought for his employer to put on —London Onlooker. van se( .ured you. *t of innocents e at you will be asti we !rulde to stray ing after you." ln «vs lifted. She however. She ( did n .u, I'm sure, but i 1 if 1 were you. ' November, and I t t spring. Even nL usplclously gay ; lf one does forget "Merland, after all, : sc >est, you know." 01 dawning knowl ! as pitifully boy e ln. sorry," he said at It was your fault j 'carry danger sig i t ant wrecks along i irk," she laughed, .s up on Bed moun- I When they found | started the ponies at a faster gait he BOOTH AND BARRETT. [low Ihr BrrnoH H't<Tfrn Thene Two Great Aoforn Ooomrred. The great breach In the friendship Edwin ltoolh and Barrett occurred when Barrett was playing -The Man o' Alrlee" In Booth's theater lu New York city. The plow did not draw, and Booth decided to have It discontinued. So (as he aft erward told of the Incident) he broach ed the subject to Barrett, who lmme- I dlately grew angry " r, ° >' rtU ,npnu to nay tliat 1 can't play It?" ho demanded hotly. Booth assured hlin In a concil iatory way that he gave the first part fairly, but not the last. In a greater passion than ever. Barrett repeated, "Do you mean to say that I can't play It?" Booth, still trying to not offeud Llm. s dd, "1 don't think you have quite ; work'd Into tho last act." Then Bar rett's fury burst Its bounds, and he ter mUiated a torrent of Invective with the ! remark: "Your father's weakness and your brother's crime placed you where you are. But I will live to see you In the gutter and will stand above you. In spite of this tho two grew to be friends again and starred In the combi nation that drew tho bltfg<wt ho-u*es of the time. "I once won n case with one of .Tames Wliitcomb ltiley's pot-ins," says Con gressman ....ck of Indiana, who is a lawyer, "and so I stand for him. 1 was defending a man charged with stealing silk, and it looked so had lor hiui that 1 decided 011 an appeal to tlio jury. I did the best I could with the evidence, but I banked most on the fact that the defendant was a young man with a wife and child and that It would go hard for all of them to have him goto the penitentiary for a term of years. "My whole argument led up to tno point where I closed with ltiley s little poem 'Back From a Two Years' Sen tence.' When I finished, the jury was in tears, and even the Judge and the attorney for the prosecution were af fected. The jury took just one ballot and returned u verdict o£ not guilty. Poftry For flic- .Fury The Tip TtiAt Hurt*. ( -Rome day." said a man who was alvtng off that p«-culiar odor which ad vertices only the barber shop some dnv I hope to meet somebody who can te» me why the tip to the broom boy aggravates me worse than any tip I part with and why I never have the courage of my convictions In connec tion with It I suppose it's becauso I foci that after I've paid 25 cents for n hair cut and 15 cents for a shave and have wheedled luto a shampoo I didn't want I've spent enough. Hun dreds of times I've promised myseir that 1 would not IK? whisked at the I barber's, aud hundreds of times I vn I found myself l*ing whisked, while ! spun round slowly like a lay figure on revolving disk There are some things in tliis world I can do for mj srff and want to do. 1 can reach for Ynv hat without knocking anything ofT the mantelpiece In the next room,.and I can put on my overcoat aud ltgh 1 j dgar and brush my clothes and open n door Now and then I can close a door. too. and that's an accomplish ment Whatever there is about It. begrudge that broom boy tip more than 1 do the contribution 1 put on the plate for foreign missions, knowing, ail I do that some of our home missions „re 'starving to death."- Provident Journal , linrnv of Former lilnK*- Henry 11 sought pence for his soul after the murder of Becket by feeding and sustaining i»eople dally, « proceeding that must have made many a man rejol.e in the fall "112 the "proud prelate." Quaintest of all, though, was tlx- charity of Henry 111., who com manded that "In t!i«» great hall at Win sore, at a good tire, all the poor and needy children that conld bo found were to be fed, according to the weight and measure of the king's children, a queer variant of the more modern sys tem of distributing the Maundy money. It Is to be feared (hut nowadays, says the London Chronicle, the amount of food equivalent to"the and measure of the king's children" ould not go far In relieving "all tho poor and needy children that could be found/" PUNISHED BY PROMOTION. | Curio lßN Lawn Thai Prevailed in Hie I**l»rentlll «* Republic. The Florentine republic bat! a unique method of dealing with its too ardent democrats. Ia 12P3 the state passed the famous "Magna Chartn <>f Flor ence," t<* nirb the cruelty and rftpa* of the lawless nobles, who, lu defiance of the law courts, wen- accustomed to flog and torture t»»*-lr dependents at will. The act practically disfranchised these titled harpies by a clause which excluded them from the slguory—a body In the stute corresponding to the UriHsh cabinet—-unless they renounced tlielr nobility. This curious provision prepared the way f«»r a still more extraordinary clause, which enacted that any member of the democratic party who made himself obnoxious to the government and was by them declared to be guilty of treason to the common wealth" should be given a patent of nobility and thus at the same moment be raised In the social scale and reduced ton political nobody nt the will of the state.-Lon don Telegraph. A Doctor'* Story. At a recent meeting of a woman's club a physician who gave a lecture on tuberculosis told the following story: "One day a woman who was suffer ing fr< n tuberculosis was brought to my attention, and, as we could not get her away from her work for a rest in | the country, 1 did the next best thing gave her directions about ventilation, i etc., and prescribed a tonic to build her tip 1 did not see her again for nearly a month, and 1 was greatly surprised to find her exactly as thin as ever. In fact, she weighed several pounds less than at the time I first saw her. "'You haven't been taking the tonic regularly,' I said. " 'Oh, yes, sir,' she replied. '1 ve took it three times a day, Just as you said "'But, my dear woman.' said I, 'you wouldn't have those hollow cheeks if rou had. This tonic always gives n person a fine appetite 1 - 'Yes, sir; yes, ,!r I got an appetite all right,' came the answer, 'but I didn't get nothlu much to eat.'" The Mean Way It Worki, "If you refuse to marry me," said the wealthy old man,"l shall pine away and die." "Of course," responded the fflrl bit terly "And If I would marry you you would hang to life like a bulldog. But that's the way It goes." —Detroit Tnl>- une. RememDer Protestor Wilton. When Democrats f>t the middle atatti and the coast states are ur K ed to fall In with the Hourbon Idea of free trads, they do not have to hark back on the trail of memory many years to recall what Prof. Wilson's free trade bill did for the Industries of their sections. %it. Carmel News. Parker Will Be Burled Deep. While Parker Is not likely to fall aa far down In the voting In the electoral college as Greeley went, he Is tolerably certain to have the distinction of belli* beat. 11 worse than any other l>»uio crati. candidal has been In a third of a century - Meadville Star. Trying It On the Dog. The various experiments which are und"r way in the nomocracy Just now sur-est the idea that the different lead ers are "trying it on the dog;" but even the canine < (institution can not stand everything at once.—Towanda Repor ter-Journal. On the Safe Side. An old woman who persisted iu bow ing (lurliiß church service whenever the name of Satan was mentioned was reprimanded by the minister for so unseemly a habit. The reproof had. however, no effect, and the minister asked her finally in exasperation why she thought it necessary to bow. "Well," she replied, "civility costs nothing, and you never know what will happen."—Harper's Weekly. ncflntnx It. Jenkins Mr. Ooldlng -if your citv i>» quite wealthy, I'm t >l<l. I Mil I»»* make j nil his money himself? Miss Haekbajr (of Host mi Oh, no! Most of it waa a er—llinbaey from his father.—Ex change. The llumburH Ili»u«-»e. Hamburg's lirst bourse, In 155Ht», was a shelterless, paved meeting plaee, 112 feet long an.l 42 feet wide, supported toward the water front by means <>f bulwarks and ha\ lug Its three other sides surrounded by a low stone wall. In 1f.77 the bourse was enlarge 1 by adding => cloth supplied with a r> >r. The present bourse also differs In many respects considerably from American and other foreign exchanges. No membership ex lsts here, but attendant- and admit tanee to all privileges of the tl»or free of charge are permitted to every re spectable male iierso" I nfortnnilt«*ty Put. "T nele," said the linpe.unlous neph ew, "you ought t<. go and see the new play You would Just die laughing. The old man merely glared. In a few moments later there could 1»- heard the sound of a seratrh;. g p«.» ** altered his will for the forty fourth time. A young man who was about to be married was very nervous and while asking for Information as to how he must art put the question, "Is It kiss tomary to ens the bride?"- Brooklyn I.lfe J J. BROWN THE EYE A SPECIALTY Eyes tested, treated, title.! with <lash t t.i.l artificial eyes supplied. Market Street, liloonisburg, l'» Hours 10 a. m.to sp. m. lioilo! I A. Rella bl© TIN SHOP for all kind of Tin Roofing, Spoutlne and Canaral Joh Work. Stovoa, Hoatora, Ranaaa, Furnace*, ato. , PRIDES THE LOOT! ; QUALITY Till! BEST! i- JO l JOHN HIXSON " NO. 11« E FRONT BT, MALIBRAN WAS A TEASE. I'br Great Frlmu Uonna Wa* Full of MlNchlef uud lnyrlt*. No prima donna was over more de ightfully capricious, more full of mis iiief, than the famous Mmo. Mallbran. \t the rehearsals of "Borneo and Ju let" she could never make up her iiliitl where she was to ' die at night. It was Important for Komeo to know, but all he could get was "not sure," 'don't know," "can't tell," or "It will JU Just as It happens, according to my junior; sometimes In one place, some times In another." On one occasion die chose to "die" close to the foot lights, her companion, of course, belnn compelled to "die" beside her, aud thus, when the curtain fell, a couple of footmen had to carry the pair off, one at a time, to the intense amusement of the audience. John Templeton, the tine old Scottish tenor, was probably never so miser able as when he was cast to slug with Mallbran. Very often she was dis pleased with his performance, and one evening she whispered to him, "You are not acting properly ; make love to me better," to which, so it is said, Templeton innocently replied, "Don't you know lam a married man?" Evi dently the lady did not think there was anything serious in the circum stance, for not long afterward, when In "Somuambulu" she was on het knees to Templeton as El vino, she sue ceeded in making the tenor scream with suppressed laughter when he should have been singing by tickling him vigorously under the arms. Glumm Window*. Glass windows are known to have exluted at I'ompeli as early as A. D. 70 In the third century the windows of royal hoiißes throughout Europe wore glazed. Windows of colored glaßs were placed In many French and Ital ian churches in 074, and the use of glass became general in private houses during the twelfth century. The panes, however, were only three or four inches square, and the material was so infe rior that, while a room was lighted, It was often a matter <>f some difficulty to discern objects on the outside through the glass. For a long time windows lr England were a subject of taxation. lliirii* null rmuf. It is amusing t•> learn that Burns when Just emerging from obscurity Jocularly anticipated that his birthday would come to be noted ymong othei remarkable events. In a letter to his early patron, Gavin Hamilton, In 17K») he says,"For my own affairs I am in a fair way of becoming as eminent as Thomas a Ken-pis or John Human, and you may hence," >rth e\pect to sec my birthday inscrll v.l among the won derful events in the Poor ltobiu aud Aberdeen Almanacks along with the Bktck Monday ami he battle of Both well Bridge." The Ilea I Stern Parent Well, young man,l know nothing t you. but I'm not I very well acquainted with you. Ik-fore you marry my <ia;:ght< 1 like to have ; something In the nature of references | or— Suitor I eau give refereiiees from three clergymen, sir. Parent— That's all very well, but can you tfve , references from many bankers? - Cleveland !«•>'. So In% ciitoi ♦. liiuintf AnlniHl*. It lias l»et ii aa id I.) a writer of nature books that a e. on will amputate its wounded f<»>t and treat the stump in a I rational way to all i> the Inflammation. If one etoii will d.» this, then all coons will do It under like conditions, the same writer avers that he has seen a woodcock with a broken leg mend the leg with a cast made of clay and dry grass. Then will all woodcocks with broken lens do the same thing. Excep tional iiitelligen. ;• of so extraordinary a character d >cs not occur among the animals. If one fox has been known to catch CRibs with his tail, then will all other foxes, under the stress of hunger, where Tal'i iilmtiud. fish with their tails. AII animal will not do anything which n»fe-*•!*> has not taught Its prou nitois to «lo John Burroughs In I iirtepend'Mifc ' | The Home Paper of Danville. Of course you read M Mil B. THE HEOPLE'S —~ Popular 1 APER. Everybody Reads It. Published Every Morning Except I Sunday at No ii E.Mahoning St. I I Subscription o cents IV-r Week. THE POWER TO PLEASE. || A Potent Factor KOP Soee**» Any j t'ureer oil Mll> Adopt. The power t<> please is it tremendous | unset. What ciui be more valuable than a personality which always at tracts, never repelsV It Is u<>t only valuable in business, but also In every field of life. It makes statesmen and politicians; it brings >-lleiits to the law >er and patients to the physician; it is worth everything to the clergyman No matter what career you enter, you can not overestimate the Importance of cul tlvatlng that charm of manner, those personal qualities, which attract people to you. They will tuke the place of capital or Influence; they are often a subs mute for a large amount of hard work. Some men attract business, custom ers, clfents, patients, as naturally as magnets attract particles of steel. Ev j ery'thing seems to point their way, for ! the same reason that the steel particles point toward the magnet because they are attracted. Such men are business magnets, lousiness moves toward them even when they do not apparently make half so much effort to get it as the less suc cessful. Their friends call them "lucky dogs." But if we analyze these men closely we And that they have attrac tive qualities. There Is usually some charm of personality about them that wins all hearts. Success. THE MAGICIAN'S "I riUMB. It Ist ilin Wornt Knemr ' n Sleißht of Hand Trick*. In every sort of magic the magician's thumb is his worst enemy, suys Nina Carter Marbourg In Leslie's Weekly. If he could strike off that thumb and still have its assistance when neces sary he would be a happy man. In closing the hand the thumb usually bends toward the palm In advance of the fingers. Iu tills way It many times is much in the way, und practice Is necessary to get a magician's thumb in perfect training. But when he has practiced in the school of magic for some time the thumb becomes so flexi ble that it will bend nearly to the back of the hand. Cards are invariably the beginning of a magician's education. In handling cards the thumb Is especially In *he way, and this is the reason wlij- this trickery with the pasteboards Is se lected for the beginner. To change one card for another in front of one's very eyes and still to have made no percep tible movement of the hand Is a tilck that beginners learn to perform befoie they have been In the school for any great length of time. This, as may be imagined. Is a difficult piece of work to become proficient in, and here Is Just the place where determination plays a great part in success. BISMARCK CONSENTED. He W«i tlie Final Arbiter of a» Ensr llah I.ote MolcU. When the third son of the Duke of Argyle bestowed his affections upon an untitled woman he felt bound to ask the old gentleman's consent. The j duke answered that personally he bail no objections to the match, but In view of the fact that his eldest son had ei ; : pou-ed a daughter of the queen he ; thought It rl«ht to Inquire her majes ty's pleasure on the subject before ex pressing his formal approval. Her majesty, thus appealed to, ob served thut since the death of the prince consort she had been in the habit of consulting the Duke of Saxe Coburg I U all family affairs. The matter was therefore referred to Duke Ernest, who replied that since the unification of Germany he had made It a rule to ask the emperor's opinion on all Important questions. The case now came before the kaiser, who decided that, as a constitutional sovereign, he was bound to ascertain the views of his prime minister, i Happily for the now anxious pair of lovers the "Iron Chancellor," who was then In office, had no wish to consu.t 1 anvbodv and decided that the marriage : might take place, and it did. KlLLth* COUCH ' AND CURE TKE LUNCS with Dr. Kings New Discovery CONSUMPTION Price OUGHSand 50c & SI.OO OLDS Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or MONEY BACK. [ ACKAW ANNA KAHjWAU. u ISLOOMSHUHI4 DIVISION W KHT. A.M. A.M. A. m. r. m York iv 2 o*l .... 10 <*) «« tcranlon ' W tulTaln ....Iv 11 80 IIS A.M. Icranlon «r 558 10 01 run ion M A Mv M j.. M :<THnl(>n . lv t'iSh MO 10 •<'» •««"ion"vs"«« |.ae.kawanna «50 ♦ lO '! ■' ►u i veu 063 10 2. il3 h. 'illMilln BOK 10SS 217 0 5 4usi|uehanna AV« 'l' }'• jjljj _ IViHt I'lttHlon . ' |O*J. 228 Wyoming - ''o 10 4b 227 .0 forty Fort .... ••••„ *■" :*] I tun net 711 10 W /i I tl Klnthton ar 7/4 10.A 240 -<- W nke'.-li '.rre... a. 7 4(1 UlO 250 7 Wllkea-Harre .Iv 71" 10 41) 2 8!' il ~, 'V ' " 1,1 ,l v* «a r* » M ave,, -w.r:.:."JS ?s " Hrmnreek J**£ fK \ L'unv ........ «4h 12 15 I 0» K! ltloomKbtirK f'j.fr J|? rt ...... H li in **« * CaiawlHKa Wt'2 12.(2 i» llanvllle »!» >»" **; _ Cameron 2 4 ru , 6 ?, ,i, „ ■ NorUmmbcr'd ar « H.> lit KABT v. vl. A. M. I'. M. 112 1 Nortuttmuerr ** 45 ti"00 JljjU Sr:: ::.: »» % £r--:r -i «S 33! fli M i, i uVn'i'r,' 7Jd It'll 2 Sit H( Llnv ::: "-«■ * i{> H j " "* 54 « * ,h: Willow Cirovn 1 * h Kriarcreek • 6 - Berwick 7j ' 'j *s® tl , Keech Hav«n «•« 'j J 11 u-Uk Kerry JII » " •" m , ShtckHhiuny •; p.. Man look's Vll 7 Nanltcoko 1141 i .. Avonrtale Jjf , ? Y t : I'ly mouth J?! ■ IU 'h WilkcH-Karre ar »I 0 12 «» 410 • : WllkeMliarre Iv £lO U4O JSO i ,1/t me aiaosi «n.- 7 ' Kortvioii.:.::.' .... nn Wyoming UUB Jn WeHt PlllHtou.. »1« :••• J" j S«n ann M '►'"■ yea *\ raJuT an " H^ Mt-ranUrti?'•.'•*ar «'« 12 85 «5U 8i anion M. P. M H.M 'v 10 25 tl 55 . Hjrflllo ' r a"M. P.'M P.M A.l Sl . rßn . o n lv 10.10 12.40 t« 86 *2 si ranion p_ M> p. M P.M A. 1 \ew York *r <3O 500 735 8: •Oally, fltally exceptHunday. st.ipH on Hlgual or ou notice to coi.aooto H Htoi.son Hlanal to take on pagflenger* ff New York. Hlnßhaiuton and polntH weal. T K. I'l.A KK K T- W. I.KK lien ><ni>erlntonrtMit. «<«n. TimETi* TIME T4BLE In Effect May 28th, H)0o. A.M.I A.M. P.M. I jsr E " . M A. M. P. M. P.Mi.... Wilkesbarre... 1 v 715 Sl« :k« r- 4a 1® ',' Vi ***" Plyui'th Kerry " 7 ■••••• "a'ij hl7 N antieoke ' . 1 1 ?'« n J: Mocanaaua .... '1« }"• „ ~j"« Wapwallupen.. . 'J ' ; J ,- 0 „ Nescopeek.... ar n •' _ 7 j A ,M.' — . Pottsvllle lv 550 j- 1 ' V.., ir ,| —* Hazleton \ J; :t 05 :i Toinhicken I « ... , r ■> j-, Kern (lien • 21 ;; ■ .►>l""' Ruck men "I <-5 j•> - !•••* Nescupeck . .. ar Ho*2 "V(Vt i Ot'l"" ('utawlssa A~M A.M P.M. V M Nescopack lv 5 8 W.S|J 2'' ■} 1- - Creasy Hl s f 313 ] SJl"" L'aiiv Ferrv • ' I K. HloomsiurH " s 11 ;>0 * (l ' ' ""V*** Catnwli'sa lv 810 III'" 41 1 •?- south Danville " » W \* v ' Sunhury ar H&> !2 i 'l-". - (j M m,. M .... sunhury lv II,» « «»f i'!® " w« : .o HI::.. WilllamßporV.. '• lion 141 .J6;10"0 ; .... Haven... » 11 «• T Heaovo 'A.M. •' '*?' Kane " Jj "**" P.M. P. M. 1 Lock llaven..lv jl"2 1(1 : J Hellefotite ....ar 1 0-' • •' " Tyrone " ?10# b « Pnillpflinrg " •' 10 I h ' r " ' I 'lcartlehi.... " ;'r Pittsburg.... " ti ! |" _ sunhury lv w Jjj |} if Jjjj iol"III llarrtsl'urn.... ar "J" S 3 !•' ' "" P.~>T P. M. P. M. A M Philadelphia.. ar.ji :i 17 6 2jj P H 4 -j| Baltimore "§3ll I« «0 4, -30 ..... Wa*ninmon... " § * 30 lu j- pM sunhury lv §1" "0 S 2 o> Jc. ar II ! ?i ■' Pittsburtc •' 0 112" ' A.M P.M P. M. I'M Harr. B hurK....lv,lMs^ ; Uttßburit ar H 160 II 1 50; 580 .... - IP. M. 1* M A MA M. . . Harriiburn...-arj 20045> 1 1 2.''. | P.M A Ml PittßhUlK lV '•> 40 ' ~ .. I' 7 •«') . ."t CHI ... Mwistown Je. i ' •; .i ( 5" Sunhury ar v p. M j A M A M A y Waßhln«ton... lv 10 40 ..••• • "* i'i' Halttumre " 11 IN' 4 -It' • | ••• Philadelphia... " 11 1" 4 A jJ A MA. M. P M ... llarriabuTK.... lv 3 3.'> : 7 '[ J' 1 Sunhury ar 5 uo, " 16 -• s " lh C~>T. A M A M PittHburs Iv'-ia 45 ' lll : Jt'" <'lcnrlU'ld.... " I:( •" Pliilipsburg.. " I 135 •••••• ••• I } rone " 7 Uo| » « «>| 'f § — Itellefonte.. , HlO » " if w l.ock Haven ar y l;> __ ____ 111 p. M A M A M P l-.ri® '*!• 5 m b'VVi' |o t Kane j S si>| : . . , ••• Uenovo "! 115": « I.uck Haven....'' 12 .'»> 7 •" 11 - A.M P M ... Willlanisport.. " »17 82> -12 I" J •■'. ... >llttun "j :( 2'. i Stl i | "1- * ••• "j H o.' | ? ' ... sunhury ai s 4-, u 4 > i»• •' •' • P M _ Sunhury lv i. i:« t w .'■& :2 00 5 South I'anvilie " 7U i« 17 2.1 ■ ... t'atawlssa "I 7.12 10i!> 2 0 ... K HltMiinsliuru.. * 740 10 4.1 2 4.'» 01» ... K*py Kerry.... " ••••;• ' '• ••• Creasy " 7 .1 10 •" Nesc*»i»«*cU " H o-l 11 u>| 'i •' am A M P. M Catawissa I\ 10 i»*4[...... Nescuperk lv S 2;! ; I(.H-u <tien ar II 22 7 o.> ... Fern 4 Hen "j' Hal II 28| 5 v42j 7 •>. .. Toinhicken " h f>K II :w '• :W . si ( ... Ha/leton " »lu H '7 h &•? 7 , l 'r Pottsvllle "| iu 15 I 3- r i 0 651 *I 1 .. 7m A M P. M . P M j Neccopeck lv koi tl oaf oi_> .. Wapwallopen..ar « p.i II '2O ■■ I ■"> 112" iviocanauua " h ;il 1132 8 2:! 0 52,. NantU'oke ...." 851 II M 840 7 01... P M| 7 11) ... Plyni'th Ferry'lfOOj 12 i'i Wilksharie ..." v in 12 1" H 5- r ' 7 :i> ITS p M P M P M PittstolUl'AH) ar V 13 112 SO ; >lO 8 0... Scranton " " iu 08 1 0. r > 5iC 8 2 1... WeekdavH. « Daily.l Fla« station. Pullman Parlor a.-d Sleeping Cars run c throuKh trains between SuMiury Wli iauispot an«l lirle. between Sunhnry an.. I liila«el|»in and Washington and between Harrishur:-. 1 ttt t>iiri£ nnd the West. I- ~r lurthcr information apply to T '<'ket■ Atfer. W. W. ATIFKHCKY. J K " .„ NV '" "' (jenernl Manager, I ass. 1 rallic Ms 4JEO. W. UOYl>, Oeu Passenger Agent. 11l I HlfilL Wb wait! lo io all Ms of Priming I l | , II!. fs Itll. 111 i PUB. jli s Bail. 1 - A well priu Le;' tasty, Bill or Le \\l ter H Posit* A) A Ticket, Circular y # C Program, State J*Sj ment or Card (y> an advertisement for your business, a satisfaction to you . Dei Type, lei Presses, ~ BestPoier, m Skilled Wort, " ' Promptness \ll you can ask* i A trial will make you our customer. We respect fully ask that trial. 11111 No. ii P.. Mahoning St.. DANVILLE, 5»
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers