JUDITH vs. THE WOLF By MARY C. FRANCIS Copyright, 1906, by E. S. McClure "Forty-live cents from sl. 55 cents. This is your change, sir. Haven't you anything less than a twenty for this twenty-live cent check? Oh, yes; I can change it, Mr. Lauderdale." The cashier opened a small drawer and begau quickly to finger the bills with an experienced air, though her trembling fingers evinced her nervous ness. The youug man at the window cast a comprehensive glance around. The | rush hour was about over, and only stragglers were at their late lunch. lie pressed close to the window and eager- | ly eyed the girl within, his bold, ad- | miring look taking In the smooth, (shin- | lug braids of hair, the sensitive mouth, j the downcast eyes fluttering under the ; long lashes. "Judith," he said In a low tone, "come down to the beach with me tonight and see the new show open, and we will have a late supper and come back ! on the boat." A deep flush mounted to Judith's forehead. She laid bills and silver change on the little marble counter and shoved them toward him without look ing up. "Ten, five, two twotf and 75 cents. No, thank you, Mr. Lauderdale." "Why, not, Judith?" Hie girl cast a hurried glance around, as If looking for help. The giggling of the girls at their lunch near her desk came to her, and she knew that the proprietor was observing it all under ills discreetly lowered eyelids only a few feet away. Judith's heart gave a great thump. Then she looked square ly at her tormentor and said: "Mr I-auderdale, I will not go out with you, and you know It. Please do uot ask me again " A half sneer crept up under the in- j slnuatiug suille of the man. "Oh, cer- j talnly, Miss Moore. I beg your pardon for presuming to nsk you to take a lit ——————————— JCOITH'S EYES WERE FASTENED O.V ONE FACE. itE I>ll> NOr LOOK AT JLER. tie outing Most girls would be glad to have 6oniH fresh ulr on a moonlight night, but you are different." With a languid and disengaged man ner he swept up the money, lifted his hat with the air of saluting a grando dame and. nodding familiarly to the proprietor, went out, his handsome, well groomed figure followed by admir ing glances from the giggling girls. "Jude's g.>t the boss mash, but she doesn't know it." said one. "(jot that secondhand look lately, and Keeker's getting tired of her airs. She'll lie without a Job one of these fine morn lugs If she keeps It up." "Sure," said a girl with a chorus bang, "and you'll be It, Mayme." "Well, if I do Ray It myself, I'll know my business better than Jude. This thing of feeling above your sta tion when you're nothing but a cashier in a restaurant doesn't go Of course they do say that"— She leaned for ward and whispered diligently. Judith mechanically counted out the change for two young fellows, who gayly passed the time of day with her. They were followed by a middle aged woman with a sweet, womanly face, who laid down the exact amount of her check. Judith looked at her with n faint smile. "Ah, Mrs. Thompson, you are the only one who comes In here who never has to have change." "You need every moment you can get." She paused and scanned th« girl's face with gentle solicitude. 'You •re overworked, my dear. Ycd need rest. Do you get enough recreation?" "Yes; oil, yes!" stammered Judith. "I —I go out quite often." The woman looked unconvinced. "I'm going away today for my vacation, and I wish you were going too. Take all the care you can of yourself during this heat. Goodby." Judith leaned back, deathly pale. The one friend she had In the city, even though she did uot know her address, was leaving town. Iler heart died within her. Why had Gordon never answered her last letter? Why had the loss of her money so suddenly changed h's love? Was It a year or a hundred y< irs ago that she was to have been his wife? The burning of the flics <c «med like the beating of drums In 'IP ears, aud as If In a dream •he p-.srcl the change to a stout, red face' s an iVttiu/h to his Jo cose ..-marks on the heat. Becker came ut» an 1, leaning against the counter aud paring his nails, said; "So you want to get off for dinner and an evening down at Coney, I sup pose Eh, Jude?" Judith felt her throat grow dry. "No. Mr. Becker," she said. The proprietor tapped his knife on the desk in front of her. "Look here, Jude. I want to tell you plainly that you're too glum lately. I wish you'd get that graveyard look off your face. Of course it's all right for you not to run around with the married men. but look at all the swell fellows you've turned down. Grant Lauderdale and Dick Tracy are good enough for any girl Now, don't be a clam any longer, for, ou the level, I can't stand for so much falling off in looks. It looks as If I didn't feed you." That night, alone In her little room, Judith reviewed the situation. She felt as If one year In New York had cost her her youth and all her happiness. With her father dead and her little fortune swept away, she had to keep the wolf from the door. Poverty snap ped at her heels like a hungry cur whenever her streugth faltered, and •he felt as If she could scarcely go on so. "Oh, Cordon, Gordon!" she cried in agony until, falling asleep from sheer exhaustion, she dreamed, and in her dreams Gordon Itussell came to her held her in his arms and kissed her. When she awakened it was later than usual. She dressed in fear and trem bling and hastened to the restaurant, determined to retrieve herself with the proprietor. All day she nerved herself and sue eeeded bravely until, in the last dull half hour bet ore supper. Grant Lauder i dale came in with another man. Ju dith's head swam. Why was he there? Would he see her? Presently they came toward the desk. Judith's eyes were fastened on one face. He did net look at her. being accosted by another man. Grant Lauderdale, for the first time, laid the exact change for the check on the desk before her, and the two men passed out. Neither had look ed at her. When she became conscious in the little cage Becker and two of the girls were looking at her curiously. They were fanning her and holding smelling salts to her nose. She looked around wildly. Becker pressed an envelope in to her hand. "You'd better not come back tomor row." he said. Judith heard the wolf. "Am 1 dis charged?" she asked. "Well, no, not exactly. But we won't need so many girls for awhile, and you'd better take a rest." It was an hour before she was able to go; then, refusing offers of com pany. she started out alone. Every thing was a blank. She walked along unseeing. Then suddenly trucks, cars and automobiles confused her. Sho , stood still, started forward, swerved and fell. Again she dreamed, the same beauti- | fill. Impossible dream, and Gordon was holding her hand and saying: "It has been so long, darling. If 1 only had known! All this time 1 have been looking for you. 1 got no word, knew nothing, heard nothing, until an hour after I left the restaurant this after- , noon, and Grant Lauderdale mentioned your name, and I went back to look for you." Judith sat up and looked around. "Where am I?" she asked. "In the hospital, dear, but you won't have to stay here long." "Gordon! Gordon! Oh, am I dream ing again?" "Sweetheart, this Is no dream. I have found you at last!" Feared Left Handed Shave. "I said my prayers this morning for the first time In several moons," said the sporty looking man."l had been brought into that devout frame of mind by a left handed barber. He shaved me. I had had left handed people do everything else to me, like bluing my shoes, brushing my clothes and even cheating me at cards, but never before had I seen one of the left handed fra ternity manipulate the razor. The fel low scared me half to death. He saw that I was afraid of him. " "It's all right,' he assured me. I know my business.' "And he did. Nevertheless, I don't want to try him again. The strain is too hard on my nerves. Every time he whisked the razor around anywhere near the jugular vein I prepared to yield up the ghost. However, nothing happened except that he finished tue ] off looking more beautiful than I evet looked in my life, but for all that I'd rather peg along with only my ordinary share of good looks than to experience another such a set of thrills at his ■ hands." —New York Press. A Brief I'arnhle. A certain man carried a sack con taining a heavy burden, and he had borne it many weary days. Then as he journeyed the angel of knowledge came to him and spoke to him, saying: "What dost thou carry?" And the man replied, "It Is t heavy, heavy burden." "Of what does the burden consist?' the angel asked. "Of my worries," the man made an ! swer. Then the angel smiled pityingly upoi ! the man and said: "Let us look into the bundle of thj worries." And they looked, aud, 10, even a» thej looked the contents of the sack dwin dled Into nothingness. For when the angel of knowledg» teaches a man to look aright he per- j celve* that his worries are but tiny and useless things and the burden of them I grows Inconceivably light.—San Fran cisco Call. SELLING GOODS. The Method* That I.ead to Success la Business Life. When a customer comes In, don't, whatever you do, drag yourself out of the chair BB though you were disturbed from a rest, but Jump up and greet her or him as though you were really glad to wait on them. Act so they will ask for you the next time they come j to the store. The salesman who Is constantly being asked for by cus tomers never has to worry about a Job. Don't be stiff and act or feel as though you were far the mental su perior of the customer. If you do, no sale will result. Just for the sake of argument, let us take all the successes In your city, no i matter what line they are In. Do they advertise? The public, somehow or other, seem to be able to read between the lines, j If your ad. is not truthful they will not j respond. It take« more than a mere cut to at tract the eye to make your ad. pay. There must be solid, honest store news of good valuefe behind It. Never underrate the Intelligence of your customer. He may know more about the article you are showing than you do. Post yourself on every article you are expected to sell, so you can talk convincingly and knowingly. That Is what sells goods convincing talks. Never mind the price; that will take care of Itself Brains. Wbr Prussia 1M SO Called. The modern name of Prussia Is de rived from Borussi, or I'orussi, who conquered the country about 320 B. O. Little is known concerning Prussia and its people till the tenth century except that that portion of the Baltic shore which is now included In the kingdom of Prussia was formerly inhabited by Slavonic tribes akin In customs and languages to the Lithuanians. They came In occasional collision with wavs after wave of the great Teutonic race as It flowed down from the icy north, receiving theli first knowledge of Chris tianity from Bishop Adalbert of Prague, whom they martyred In 997. In the middle of the thirteenth century the Teutonic knights, on their return from the crusades, undertook the conquest and conversion of Prussia. The Borus sla element mingled with ihe followers of the Teutonic knights, and conse quently with the Poles. ENFORCING j THE LAW By LOUISE J. STRONG Copyright, 1906, by K. C. Parcelis Old Ned started and cast an Injured, reproachful glance back at his mis l tress. "There, Neddy; there!" she apolo gized. "I didn't really mean to strike | you. but I'm that worried in mind— what are we g"ing to do, with your | youug master gone, I'd like to know!" She gazed with wet eyes across the meadow, where the "young master," her only child, and she a widow, was at work with the hired man. He waved his hand In response to her slg i nal, and her grief overflowed, antlcl pating the bla.U loncl:ne-s that would be hers when the far est had swal lowed up her boy. victim of a girl's i weakness and her father's obstinacy. "Mi, why did he set his heart upon ! that spiritless Lizzie < lark when there j are so many girls just as pretty and i every bit as good?" she groaned. She had put the question to her son, and he had answered by a look only, but a look that somehow entirely pre "COME IHIWN HERE, SETH CLARK. I WANT TO TALK TO YOU," SHE OKDEKED. vented the llow of argument and per suasion with which she had hoped to convince him. She knew well that had he but Imag ined the errand upon which she was bent now he would have hastened, with shocked celerity, to frustrate It. Mrs. Baker ordinarily would not have meddled with the youug folks' love affairs, but she could not let her son become a disappointed world wan- I derer without making every possible ! effort to avert it. If Lizzie Clark were the cable indispensable to anchoring him to his home, Lizzie Clark he must have—the girl must see that herself. She was certainly very pretty and attractive, Mrs. Baker admitted to her j self as Lizzie greeted her somewhat shyly, and there was a wistful appeal In the sad eyes and sweet face that In dicated plainly that she was unhappy. "As she deserves to be If she will not assert herself and marry Andy, whether Seth Clark consents or not!" was Mrs. Baker's rather vindictive Inward com nient. "Are you going to drive my boy away from me and drag me In sorrow to the I grave?" she demanded dramatically, I unconscious that her blooming person- I allty was in ludicrous contrast to such a dire possibility. "Oh, Mrs. Baker, what can I do?" Lizzie quavered. "Do! You can spunk up! Y'ou are of age. I came on purpose to take you away, and you and Andy will be mar ] rled before anybody can interfere and ! prevent It." "Did-did Andy send you?" Lizzie I panted, pale and frightened. "I won der at it, for he knows 1 cannot do It j while father Is so set against It. Did Andy send you?" "Andy thinks you love him a great deal more than you do, I fear. But you can easily prove your love. Come, just | take the matter In your own hands. I It's the only way." "How can I? Father never would come to see me nor let me come home," Lizzie wailed. "I can't, Mrs. Baker, I can't!" "Well, you'd have Andy, wouldn't you, and »l>e happy, wouldn't you? Why should you care what your fa ther did?" Mrs. Baker argued, forget ting that children usually have some j affection for their parents and that other parents besides herself might wish to keep their children. "Y'es, I'd have Andy," a tender bloom flooding her face, "but, Mrs. Baker, don't you think children care at all for I their parents? Father Is hard about | this, but he always has been the best | father a girl ever had. I love him. I | couldn'-t be happy for thinking of him j here alone and miserable. We are young, Andy and I. We can wait. And j I'm hoping Andy will not go away : when lie realizes how it will grieve you." Mrs. Baker was touched, and in her 1 heart she approved. She said no more, j but kissed the girl suddenly and went out. But she was not going home yet. j She would see Seth Clark and present i him with her opinion of his conduct, ! spite of bluff and blifster. She asked no questions as to his | whereabouts. If he was on the farm | she would locate him. Finally she found him on top of a shed back of the barn nailing down shingles She stood uud watche*' hi energetic movements a few ion i-nts. seeing things which s- 'tiled o fir back in her life that they seemed to belong to another age. "Conic down here, Seth Clark. I want to tall: to you," (-he ordered at lengili. "11. art to heart tali Josephine In ! gtjs Baker, lie asked, not at all sur- I prised, having been observing her out I of the t::il of his eye. "Yes, ~r knife to knife, just as you choose," she retorted sharply. "What's j the matter \*!ih my Andy?" "Why, Is lie ailing?" He m in :ed to look «• ' She scorned his tri lling. | ".Mi Andy i- • \ery grain as good as ! your Lizzi". in.l you know it.and j what ::i c i king up all this runi- I pus for ag ! : .i • i being married?" "Well, 1 h : ii to want my Lizzie, I and I happen not to want your Andy," he explaiue "You arc making her wretched and driving in > b>;. away from mine!" j She caught her breath and bit her lip. ! She would > •( cry before Seth Clark. "They'll both get over it,"he com mented easily as he slid to the ground. "Other folks have been disappointed in not having what they wanted most I ind got over it—or stood up uuder St anyway—didn't let ft spoil their lives and go whining around the rest of their natural span." He regarded her with pointed accusation. She flushed uncomfortably, and some of those thing- which had seemed so far, far back suddenly confronted her very closely indeed. Sin- felt dubious. Perhaps sin- bad better have gone home after all. "Well, 1 can't see the sense in mak ing the children miserable," she re marked lamely, breaking an awkward pause. "There's a certain old law that says, "The sins of the fathers shall be visited upon the children.' Isn't this an occa sion where it can be Justly enforced?" he questioned sternly "You—you mean"- she hesitated in quiringly. "I mean that Andrew Baker robbed me of my wife that should have been, and Andrew Baker's son shall not rob me of my daughter." She looked astonished and burst out Indignantly "Andrew Baker wouldn't take 'No' for an answer. lie he kept on and kept on till 1 just couldn't say it again, especially as" — Iler voice trailed out. "Oh!" he exclaimed in a tone indica tive of sudden, amazed enlightenment, staring at her as if faraway things had unexpectedly confronted him also. "And I flared up and stalked off for good, my dignity terribly Insulted by the little negative. I was as conceited as a turkey cock and stupid as-a pig!" He chewed a straw and ruminated lengthily In a speaking silence. "But Lizzie and I were happy j enough," he observed presently, with ' apparent Irrelevance. "She was a good j woman, and little Lizzie is Just like j her." "Andrew Baker was as good as the best, and I was happy with him!" she bristled. "And my Andy Is like his | father." "Maybe Lizzie didn't try him with a : 'No.' But he's up against her dad's 'No' all right. I'm not going to be rob bed twice. Still"— lie contemplated her downcast face, and his own softened. He turned ills back and unconsciously whistled a few bars of an old love song they used to sing together. "Look here, Josle Ingals Baker, I've never been friendly with you since, else I'd found out before now that things you've thought dead can come to life. I guess things can be fixed for the children provided Look here, I'm going to ask that question again, and j I'm not going to take 'No' for an an swer this time! I'll ask it every time and everywhere I see you. Josle, will j you marry me?" She twisted her lingers in embarrass ment, looking absurdly like the old time Josie to his partial eyes, and fal- | tered: "Well, of of course, if you won't take 'No!"' Funeral Cnkea. i There is a grimh humorous anecdote j of the dying Yorkshiremau who asked 1 his daughter for a -lice of the ham she ! had just removed from the stove and i ! was refused on the ground that "ham's j j not for thou; ham's fort" funeral." It : | may be capped by one found In "Pages I i From a Country Diary." a book of j i sketches of English country life. | A curate went one day to vi-it an i ! aged parishioner, a small farmer, ! whose end was daily expected. Find j lug him r.i h> r better on this occasion i and propped up in bed, he proposed to i read a chapter of ihe Bible to him. | The si«-k m;a gratefully agreed, but j paid sc.- it attention to the discourse because he wa • constantly fumbling under his pii" iw for some form of edi ble which ho mumbled with evident satisfaction bet ween his toothless gums. At la>t the curate stopped reading and asked him what be was doing. The old man smiled slyly. "Why." lie sa d la a triumphant whis per, "they bak't •» >:i,c spooiige biscuits agean mo., vuueral an' hid 'em in the coopboard, but they don't know as 'ow I voun 1 '«• a, and" with » senile . chuckle of dca_;'.!l "when I be gone an' they con e to luke for 'em they wun't v ilnd n n,e >n 'em left!" Tw» <• •• > •!»; He Von kn they say a woman can't keep a -e she That's a H bel. A woman can keep a secret as easily as a m :i can all but two kinds. There are secrets that aren't worth keeping mi I others that are too good to keep. lie Then ye • will elope with me. darling? She V yes. dearest— but, oh. | fJeorge, couldn't we at lenst send out cards announcing tl at? Smart Set. MnoMnlion'* Dpltfrnmii. Wlten Marshal MacMahon in the Crimean campaign took the Malakoff by storm and wrote his celebrated dis patch, "JTy suis. j'y reste" ("Here I am; here I f-tay"i, these words made him famous all over the world. Yet his friends said that the worthy soldier had written them In the most matter of fact maim t, with no thought of phrase niaka The most urprised person over l!e success ot this epi i gram was >' ' ' himself. A Sir •.:« I i)ilc!iiliiil. "Did .Tone ve • • adlcitis?" "Thedoct": el. Some thought he had mo"c a so it* thought lie hadn't."—Pt <I. My spark may grow greater by kin dling my brut Iter's t i per.— Jeremy Tjij- ; ,or - | J J. BROWN THE EVE A SPECIALTY Eyes tested, treated, fitted with j k vid artificial eye- supplied. Market street. Bloonisbtirg, Ph. Hours 10 a. hi. t 1 sp. uj. U H! A Reliable TIN SHOP Tor all kind of Tin Roofing, Spoutlne and Ceneral JoU Work. Stoves, Heaters, Ranges, Furnaces, sto. PRICES TILB LOW! 01 II IN TUK mi \ JOIIN mxso> i | NO. 116 E. FRONT BT. i A CAUTIOUS ELEPHANT. Tlit* SaKariij IliKjilayed by tlt«> Ani misl \\ lie I) Near <( u ickftu nd. One elephant which an officer of the it >yal artillery lent to assist In extri eating some camels which were being engulfed In the quicksands showed an amount of sagacity which was positive ly marvelous. It was with the utmost difficulty that we could get him togo near enough to attach it drag rope to one camel 1 wanted to rescue. In spits of our being about fifty yards from tt.c bank of the river, he evinced the great est anxiety, while his movements were made with extreme caution. Despite oaxing, persuasive remon strance and fit last a shower of heavy blows dealt upon his head by the exas perated mahout, this elephant stub bornly refused togo where he wr.f wanted, but with his trunk shoved ou in front of him kept feeling his way with his ponderous feet, placing them before him slowly, deliberately and me thodically, treacling till the while with the velvety softness of a cat and tak ing only one step at a time. Then sud denly he would break out Into a sup pressed kind of shriek and retreat backward in great haste. When the animal had nearly complet ed a ciii ult of the ground with the same canine and deliberation, he ad vanced to wTihin ten yards of the poor camel, but not an itlier inch would he move, though several men were walk ing between him and the camel with i out any signs of the ground giving | way.—"The Camel," Major A. <i. Leon i ard. Floating Steel. Will solid steel float in water? Steel will float if It be so light In weight its I not to rupture the surface tension of i the liquid. Thus with a little care a | fine sewing needle can be made to float : on the surface of still water, especially If it is drawn through the hair a time j or two, as the minute trace of oil s > imparted enables it tore Ist the wet ting action of 1!:° wafer. It must be itn 'or tood tli t liquids, although they !.nve infinite., le-s en heslve at tract i. .a tli t:: s !. I , are not absolutely devoid of this. If there were no cohesion at all between the particles neither drops nor bubbles would be possible. Consequently every llqnl ] may be | looked upon as covered by a more or less cohesive skin of its own substance. So long as the weight of the steel or other solid body is insufficient to break through this skin It will float on the surface, although heavier bulk for bulk than the liquid Itself.—London j Answers. Say Plainly to Your Grocer That you want LION COFFEE always, and he, being a square man, will not try to sell you any thing else. You may not caro for our opinion, but What About the United Judgment of Millions of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE for over a quarter of a century ? Is there any stronger proof of merit, than the § Confidence of the People and ever increasing popularity? LIOiN COFFEE Is carefully se lected at the plantation, shipped direct to our various factories, I where it is skillfully roasted and carefully packed in sealed pack- I ages unlike loose coffee, which Is exposed to germs, dust. In sects, etc. LION COFFEE reaches you as pure and clean as when I It left the factory. Sold only in I 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. ! The Home Paper j a i of Danville. ! Of course you read i IHF ill HI mml l J!o. i| u- i ■ f I i i j \ THE | PEOPLE'S | ; Popular : ' i APER. I I Everybody Reads It. Published Every Morning Except ! Sunday nl 1 i 1 No. ii E. Mah< ng St. I. j Subscription 6 cen Vr Week. WHAT SHE PLAYED. Tlie I.nut >lu«le That Theodore Thorn* i»* Heard on Kartli. During the last illness of Theodore Thomas, although he was not at any time unconscious or delirious, he hard ly noticed the members of his family a - tli y came and went tit the bedside. Hut one morning lie seemed to be bet ter. 1-e made little jokes with the doctors and hi» sons and talked about bis White mountain home. At 12 o'clock lie seemed tired. The editor of his autobiography says that lie sank into a dr iniy state.and then roused liirn -elt to say to his wife in a lingering, ecstatic voice: 1 have had a beautiful vision—a beautiful vision!" Hu n he drifted off into silence. I lis wife thought he was tired and went downstairs to luncheon, but chief ly with the purpose of leaving him to re-i. He had given her a chime of h'-iN. to be used in summoning the i.. ; \ to tii .il-. and because of his iHi they had never been rung In the house. Now, because he seemed so iiiti Ii better, she played on them a lit tle bugle call that came into her head. "Ito you know what you have play > ed?" asked one of the family. "Taps lit ■ call that is sounded over the graves of dead soldiers." She rushed back to the bells and played the call engraved on a metal plate above them. Afterward she t found that this was reveille, the sol ' tiler's signal to rise. So it had chance I that the last mu <*ic Theodore Thomas heard on earth had been symbolic <>f death and the resurrection. Youth's Companion. i II<>« TortolNe Shell IN Worked. > The soldering of two pieces of tor toise shell together Is effected by means of bol pinchers, which, while they compress, soften the opposed edge . of each piece and amalgamate them , Into one. Even the raspings and pow der produced by the file, mixed with -mall fragments, are put Into molds and subjected to the action of boiling water and thus made Into plates of the desired thickness or into various arti cles which appear to have been cut out , ' ■*' •> solid block. Prophetic. First Author—Have you sold many copies of your book? Second Author (absently) Wonderful. Over a hun dred thousand. First Author—When was It issued? Second Author—Next Tuesday.—Life. Title and ancestry render a good man more illustrious, but an 111 one tnore contemptible.—Addison. THE DAINTY WASP. Apparatus Willi will eh II «• Makrn Hl* ( oiuiillviilril Toilet. "Wasps are exceedingly daiuty lii their habits," says a writer iu the Pil grim, "and, in order that ihey may gratify their instinct for neatness to the utmost, nature has provided them with a set of marvel'>u:-ily delicate combs and brushes. If we look closely at the wasp's legs we will find that each bears mi Its outermost long joint two small, movable spines, known as the apical spurs, and if we examine these with a magnifying glass each Is seen to be provided with a row of fine teeth, so that the apparatus answers for a coarse and fine i xithed comb. "The tidying up process consists of various perfectly definite steps, usually Liking pla -c in a particular sequence. First, it passes both front legs over the face from above downward, and after repeating this movement several times draws thi in through the Jaws. This Is to remove any foreign substance which may have collected on them. The legs ; arc then passed backward from the ; forehead, much as we should smooth j back our hair. The wings are then i stroked again and again from the base to the tip, although the most careful ob server would fail to detect anything ! upon then. The abdomen is next care | fully stroked from base to tip until : every hair points iu the right direction and a uloss as fine as satin is attained, i Last of all, c :-!i of the six legs, in turn, is laboriously drawn between two of its fellows, so the wasp is once more ready to face its world." rtuHfr Knxenren. To extract the essence from any i flower place a layer of the tiowers In ; a clean earthen pot and over them n ! layer of fine salt. Repeat the process until the pot is filled, cover closely and place in the cellar. Forty days afterward strain the essence from the whole" through a crape by pressure l'ut the essence thus expressed In a clear bottle and expose for six weeks In the rays of the sun and evening dew to purify. One drop of this es sence will communicate Its odor to a pint of water. Then He Snlkecl. "Mrs. Guschley remarked to me that It must be pleasant to be married to a clever man," said Proudley's wife. "And what did you say?" queried I'roudley. "I told her. of course, that I didn't know; that I had only been married once." i ■ ' I ■—■ KlLLthb COUCH AND CURE THE LUNGS | w ™ Or. King's New Discovery rnn Price run I OUGHSand 50c&$1.00 ISOLDS Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or MONEY BACK. I IIIHWWII MMJJMX PEINSYLVAWA RAILROAD, Philadelphia & Erie Railroad Division. Northern Central Railway Division. Schedule in Efleet Sep't 21, 1905. Trains leave SOI'TH DANVILLE ah follow-. EASTWARD. 7 11a ru. (weekdays) for Wilkes Barre Haz letou and Pottsville and Philadelphia la. 17 si. in daily) for Wilkes Barre, Ila/lcton Pottsville. Philadelphia, Mahanoy City and Shenandoah. 2.21 p. in. (weekdaysi fur Wilkes Barre, Haz ieton and Pottsville. ■" VL p. HI. (weekdays) fur Wilkes-Barre, and Hazleton. Making connection at Wilkes-Barre with Lehigh Valley for all points North and South and D. & H. for Scranton. WESTWARD. POO a. hi (Weekdays) for Sunbury. Leave Sun bury 9.42 a. rn. daily for Lock Haven and intermediate stations. On weekdays for Bel lefonte, Tyrone. Clearfield Phillips burg, Pittsburg and the West Leave Sunbary 9.60 a. m (weekdays) for iiairisburg and intermediate stations. Pliiladelphia. New York, Baltimore and Washington. 12.10 p. in. weekdays for Sunbury. LeaveSunbury 12.4s p. m.daily for Buff alo via Emporium. Leave Sunbury 1.13 p. in. weekdays for Km port inn, Be llefonte.Ty rone, Clear field, I'hilipsburg, Pittsburg,Canandaigua and intermediate stations, Syracuse, Roches ter. Buffalo and Niagara Falls. Leave Sunbury 1.54 p.m. weekdays for Harrisburg Mid intermediate statiohs, l'iiiladeiphia, New York, Baltinmre, Washington. Butlet Parlor Car to l'iiil adeiphia. Leave Sunbury 8.4K p. in.daily for Har risburg. Philadelphia. New York. Balti more and Washington. 4.31 p. m.daily for Sunbury. Leave Sunbury 5.10 p.m. weekdays fur Renovo, Elinira and intermediate sta tions. Leave Sunbury 5.30 p. ni. dally for liar risburg and intermediate points, Phila delphia! New York, Baltimore and Washington. 7.51 p. in. weekdays or Sunbury. Leave Sunbury 8.86 p.m. daily for Har risburg .and stll intermediate stations, Philadelphia, New York. Baltimore, Washington Pullman Sleeping Car from Harrisburg to New York. Leave Sunbury 9.50 p. m. Sundays only for Harrisburg and intermediate sta tions, arriving at Harrisburg, 11.30. Leave Sunbury 8.54 p. m. Sundays only for Williamsport and intermediate sta tions. Leave Sunbury 9.53 p.m. weekdays for Wil liamsport and intermediate stations. Butf'et Parlor Car. SHAMOKIN DIVISION, N. C. R. W. WEEK DA VS. ' Lesive Sunbury (i 10 a. in., 10.10 a. m., 2.10 p. m. 5.35 p. in. forShamoklnand Mt Carmel. LEW ISTOW N I>l VISI< )N. WEEK DA vs. Leave Sunbury 10.00 a. in., 2.05 p. m.for Lew -Ist own and I.ewistown Junction. 5.35 p. ni. for Selinsgrove. For time tables and further information ap ply to ticket agents. W. W. ATTERBI'RY, J. B WOOD, tien'l Manager. Pass. Traffic Mgr. CEO. W. BOYD, Gen'l Passenger Agent. LA- KAWANNA RAILROAD —BLOOMSBCRU DIVIB ON Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. lln Effect Jan. 1, 1905. TRAINS LEAVE DANVILLE. EASTWARD. 7.07 a. in.daily for Bloomsburg, Kingston, Wilkes-Barre and Scranton. Arriving Scran ton at 9. i'ia. in., and connecting at Scranton with trains arriving at Philadelphia at 8.48 a. in.and New York City at 8.30 p. m. 10.19 a. in. weekly for Bloomsburg. Kingston, Wilkes Barre.Scranton and intermediate sta tions, arriving at Scranton at 12.85 p. in and connecting Hiere with trains for New York Citv, Philadelphia and Buffalo. 2 11 weekly for Bloomsimrg,Kingston.Wilkes Barre. Scranton and intermediate stations arriving at Scranton at 4.50 p. ir> 5.48 p. 111 daily for Bloomsburg, Espy. Ply mouth. Kingston, Wilkes-Barre, Pittston, Scranton and intermediate stations, arriving at Scranton at -.25 p. m.and connecting there with t rains arriving at New York City at a..V) a m., Philadelpeia 10 a. m.and Buffalo 7a. m. TRAINS ARRIVE AT DANVILLE. 9.15 a.m. weekly from Scranton, Pittston, Kingston, Bloomsburg and intermediate sta tions* leaving Scranton at &85 a. m, where it j connects witn trains leaving New Yora City j at 9.80 p. m., Philadelphia at 7.02 p.m. and j Bulialo at 10.80 a. m. 12.41 p. m daily from Scranton, Pittston, Kington, Berwick, Bloomsburg and interme diate stations, leaving Scranton at 10 10 a. in. and connecting there with train leaving Buff ale at 2.25 a. in. 4.88 p. in. weekly from Scranton, Kingston, Berwick. Bloomsburg and intermediate sta tions, leaving Scranton at 1.55 p. in., where it j connects with train leaving .New \ ork lily at 10.00 a m..and Philadelphia at 9.00 a. 111. j 9.05 p. in.daily from Scranton. Kingston, | Pittston. Berwick. Bloomsburg and internie- | diate stations, leaving Scranton at 0 :'•> p. in , where it connects with trains leaving New j York City at 1.00 p.m.. Philadelphia at 12.10, p. m.and Buffolo at 9.30 a. in. T. E. CLARKE. Cent Sup t. T. W. LEE. Uen. Pass. Agt. HP I msL fe want to to all Ms of Priming IB j j 11! I irs h.i :II (1 PIS!. ; ll'S tail, I ■ 112 I j i A. well printed tasty, : Bill or I.e \t / ter Post * A) A Ticket, Circular Program, Sta' e ly\ ment: or Card ( w an aidvertisemen for vciiir business, a satisfaction to you Sew Type, New Presses. ~ Best Pajer, Met fort A Promptness- M\ you can ask. A trial will make you our customer. We respectfully ask that trial. i in m oWm oWm No. ii H. Mahoning St.. td -A.TT* IXjXJB.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers