JAVA'S OLD TEMPLES THE SPLENDID RUINS THAT MARK THE CENTER OF THE ISLAND. They Dnte Hack to the Klshth or Klnlh Centnrr nnd Show That Their Rntldera Were Fur Advanced In the Art of Architecture. i If most people were asked to name II109 countries of the world In yhlch nre still to be found splendid archi tectural remains of bygone civiliza tions, the names of Egypt, India, Syria and Mexico would at once be forth coming, but few would pluc; the Island of Java on the list. Yet not one of these could show ruins liioro numerous or more splendid, says tie Loudon Globe. This may seem an exaggeration, but the same opinion has been universally expressed by the most eminent writ ers on the subject. As to the date nud rise nnd fail of a civilization which has left behind It such splendid memo rials authorities nre much at variauce, but for the most part they aro placed between tho beginning and the eighth ' or ninth century of our era. Certain It Is, however, that at one time the island must have been ruled by a Hindoo or Buddhist people far advanced In the arts of architecture and sculpture. Among the finest and best preserved of these ruins Is the great temple known as the Tyandl Barabudur, sit uated near the center of Java, In the sultanate of Djokjakarta. Originally designed probably as a dagaba or rest ing place for a portion of the ashes of Buddha, this building rises in the form of a terraced pyramid, the part at pres ent above the ground being about 330 feet square by about 120 feet high. The terraces at present visible are seven in number, the whole being surmounted by dome thirty feet In height. Each of these terraces Is covered on the Inner wall formed by the terrace above, and In the lower terrace also on outer walls running round them, by a series of bas-reliefs which for extent, variety and artistic merit have probably not their equals In the world. Running In a double tier round the lower galleries and in a single tier round tie upper ones they are esti mated to have a total length of over throe miles and represent by a continu ous serleu of pictures not only the birth and life of the Lord Buddha in his final Incarnation, but also a large number of the "Jatakas" or previons lives of the master in the gradually ascend ing forms of animals nnd of men iu various positions in life, and record bis good deeds in each of those lives. Thus we have the story of the Bodbl satva when on earth In the form of a hare. Indra, the lord of heaven, In the form of a traveler, weary and hun gry, comes down to test the virtues of the various boasts. He receives fish from an otter, n dish of curds from a Jackal and fruit from a monkey, but the poor hnre, having nothing else to offer, presents his own body to the hun gry traveler and throws himself on to a fire to be roasted. Interrupted now In many places by the work of a thou sand years of earthquakes, tropical storms and fanatical Mohammedan de utroyers, this wonderful picture story runs up through gallery after gallery to where, In the central domo, entirely closed In and hidden, stood the final Jmage of the master, free from any ornament, crown or aureolj, the Bud dha raised above all earthly desires or passions. In the whole of the series at present fibove ground ttero were originally no fewer than 2,141 complete bas-relief pictures, of which 088 are still in a fair state of preservation. Cohere were, In addition, In nlchos round the ter race walls, 441 statues of Buddha lar ger than life, besides smaller ones past counting. The whole of tt work Is done not in soft stone, easy to manipu late, but In the hardest ard most In tractable kinds of lava nnd trachyte. Alfred Bussel Wallace In his classical work on the Malay archipelago re marks, "The amount of human labor and skill expended on the great pyra mid of Egypt sinks into insignificance when compared with that required to complete this sculptured bill temple In the interior of Java." There is, however, one peculiar point In the construction which tends to show that the builders were not as good engineers as they were sculptors end architects. Round the entire base there runs what looks like a broad pavement of cubes of' stone laid but not cemented together. This broad pavement bag been removed In sec tions, each section being replaced In turn, and underneath was found an other terrnca, larger than any of those now visible and having Its walls part ly, but not entirely, covered with 160 more bas-relief pictures In fine preser vation. These were photographed and rovered In again. The total mass of square blocks of stone covering this bidden terrace amounts to 7,000 cubic yards. The conclusion is Inevitable that this biddoH terrace was meant f r the orig inal lower terrace, but tbnt with the building partly completed and the first set of sculptures still unfinished the builders found that their founda tions were too weak for the huge structure and were obliged to sacrifice one terrace to strengthen them. Had not this been necessary the building would have stood up even taora colossal than It is. The temple of Barabudur is only one among many in Java. At the village of Prambanam, also near Djokjakarta, are the ruins known as "Chandl Sewa," or the "Thousand Temples," consisting of an outer parallelogram of 84 small tem ples, a second ..of 76, a third of 64, a fourth of M nd a fifth, or Inner one, of 28, In all 206 small temples in 'five concentric parallelograms. In the cen ter Is large and beautifully orna mented cruciform Inner temple. Most of tk e smaller temples are In ruins, but some ars still fairly perfect. At Loro Jongran, close by, are four teen small and six huge temples of Hindoo deities, fcivu, Durgu uud Gan esh being still represented by finely carved statues. At (iuuong Praw, an extensive plateau reached In former times by four flights of stone stairs, each of over 1,000 steps, on the north, south, east and west, are remains of nearly 400 temples, and, to quote Wal lace again, "The whole country between here and Prambanam, a distance of sixty miles, abounds with ruins, so that fine sculptured Images may be seen lying in ditches or built Into the walls of luclosures." The nbove buildings are all of a re ligious character, but others may have been used for lay purposes, such as the so called "Water Castle" In the city of Djokjakarta itself, where may be seen the remains of high walled In cisures with bioud tanks, now over grown with weeds, but st 11 showing their stone terraces and the stone steps leading to the water, bavli.g probably originally formed the pleasuuee of some Hindoo potentate or possibly, from their very high wall;, of his harem. In other parts are many ruins of forts, palaces, baths and aqueducts, and at Modjo-Agong over a large stretch of country every road and path way shows a foundation of finely laid brick work, the paved streets of some old city of which only traces now re main. One thing Is noticeable in all this architecture like the ancient Greeks, the builders knew nothing of the ex treme utility of the arch In masonry; consequently few roofs remain. But in some places, as at Mendoet, near Bara budur, complete roofs remain made by horizontal courses of masonry, each overlapping the one below It till they meet at the apex. Of course the roof for this has to be very high for the breadth spanned, but for small spans the system serves Its purpose fairly well. From tho above descriptions it will be seen that If some of the energy spent on Pompeii and Egypt could be Bpent on excnvatlons In Java discov eries of the greatest Importance might be made. London Globe. THE CHINESE DOCTOR. How He Mnkeiv Eznminittlnn and Administer Medicine. The method of treating sick persons adopted by Chinese doctors In some cities Is similar to that of the other physicians of the United States and those of Great Britain. They depend much, however, on the examination of the pulse. Their sense of touch is so wonderfully developed that it is said they can determine the condition of the heart as well as some of the other organs merely by the feebleness or strength of the beats, but they say there are no less than twelve different movements of the arteries In the hu man body, all of which can be detect ed by feeling the fingers, wrist and arm. When a patient calls on blra for ex amination the doctor first presses the arm, wrist and fingers, touching nearly every part. Sometimes ten or fifteen minutes are occupied with this examina tion. Then he may ask if the patient Is married or single and also his age, but this is about the limit of the ex amination. Apparently he can tell the nature of the disease without question ing further, and If the caller wishes a prescription be writes one in the ordi nary Chinese characters on a gener ous sized square of paper. Ringing a bell, he hands the pre scription to the Chinese attendant who enters, for each physician has his own shop, filled with the lngred'ents which he uses In treatment. If ho has a large practice, he may employ a native chemist, who makes up the prescrip tion. One of the curious features of Chi nese medical treatment is tho way In which the physicians administer their remedies. Nearly all the oiHces of the principal doctors have what may be called a tea room attachment. This is a spacious apartment, well lighted, fre quently ornamented with oriental pot tery and pictures and containing small tables, each with two or three chairs. If the Invalid does not wish to take his medicine at home, he is ushered Into this room and while seated at one of the tables drinks bis prescrip tion as he would a cup of tea or a glass of wine. With but few excep tions the medicine Is In liquid form and served hot In dainty Chinese bowls, for most of It Is composed of a decoction of herbs. Each table contains a bowl of raisins, and when the attendant brings in the medicine be also brings In a glass of tepid water. If the drink Is bitter, as It usually Is, the patient can eat some of the raisins to remove the taste, while with the water. he rinses his mouth and throat Then he is ready to go borne, returning the next day for another examination nnd dose. Cham ers' Journal. Ad vie From Goo nod. For sententious wisdom one would not usually consult either the book sellers' catalogues or the tribe of mu sicians, but a bit of advice from the composer Gounod to the violinist Ernst seems worth detaching from a London catalogue of autographs. Gounod writes in words that apply to other arts than music: "Not too much piano, plenty of music: tot too much head, plenty of heart; Not too much study, plenty of reflection; Not too much piecing together, plenty of invention. "Don't listen to those who will tell you one mustn't Imitate the masters. It's not true; on must not imitate a single master, but all. In tblB lay their greatness, nnd one cannot be come a great master except by being of their family. Happy be whose re lationship Is the closest" New York Post PETER THE GREAT. II tutor? Show That the Old Ruler of Rouia Wnu n Monster. Years ago, when a low standard of morals prevailed, the epithet "Great" was bestowed upon any monarch who won battles and enlarged the territory and resources of bis kingdom. Itmatter cd little then to the historian what might be a king's private character, provided he uudu bis nation formidable by Its brute strength and full treasury. Even if ho was a bad man they eulogized him as a good ruler. Peter I. of Rus sia Is called Peter the Great be causo he transformed n barbarous Into a scmlburbarous nation. But no one can now read the following summary of his chnracter without a feeling of disgust. Voltaire, in Ills "Philosoph ical Dictionary," says that "Peter was half hero and half tiger." Macaulay declares- tun "to the end of bla life he lived In his palace like a bog in a sty, nnd when bo was entertained by other sovereigns never failed to leave un equivocal proof that a savage had been there." Teter, when the fit was on him, lit erally caned everybody from bis cook to his counselor, from the meanest peasant to the highest noble sparing neither age nor sex. He would get up from the table nnd flog the host who wns entertaining him. He would stand at the door of the senate house and flog each senator that went In. Lefort was an Intimate and trusted friend, yet on slight provocation he wns knocked down nnd brutally kicked by his Imperial master. But oil this flog ging was lu the way of recreation. When Peter "meant business," It wns a more serious matter. Incredible as It may seem, It Is nevertheless well authenticated tbnt one of his own sis ters It Is said more than one received 100 strokes of the whip on her back In the presence of the whole court. j In 1713 Alexis, his only son who out lived infancy, was for some offense of no great seriousness several times tor tured In the presence of the diabolical father nnd In the end died either from the effect of the torture or by assassi nation. For sympathizing with Alexis the Princess Golltsyn, the bosom com panion of the Empress Catherine, was publicly whipped by Foldlers. For the same reason tho brother of his first wife, Eudoxln whom he had thrown Into prison was tortured and then torn In pieces on the wheel. Nothing ever told of Nero Is more horribly gro tesque than this, yet this man, or mon ster rather. Is paraded before the world as Peter the Great. SUCCESS THOUGHTS. Tho best In others will only come out tomeet the best In you. The man with an Idea has ever changed the face of the world. One reason why we do not make the most of the winning material in our selves Is because of a magnified Idea of the great superiority of others who do things In the world. As a rule no good comes from criti cising otbers. Anybody can do that, but the man who can accept his own honest estimate of himself nnd resolve to profit by It has achieved something. No matter what you are doing, think your way. Don't go without thinking. Think everything out Don't run with out a schedule. Have a programme and go by It Think! Thlnkl Think! Success. Mr. Noble'a Promlae Given. In the early stages of his ministry the Rev. Mr. Noble preached for some time in a village. In Maine. One day a committee called upon hiin to settle with him for his services, nnd, after stammering nwhllu, signified to hlra that his further services were not de sired. "What does this mean, gentlemen?" asked tbe parson. "AVhy," replied the spokcsinan, with some hesitation, "the people have got tho Impression that you are Inclining to universal salvation." "Gentlemen," answered Mr. Noble, "I never have preached that doctrine, but if I ever should I promise to make the people of tills town nn exception." Boston Herald. Women and Flna. It seemed as If it would take a whole paper of pins to mend that torn dress. The wearer appealed to her car neigh bor. "Have you any pins?" she asked. The woman had none, but passed the query on, nnd iu a little while every passenger was feeling along concealed edges and turning back lapels. At last sixteen pins were produced. Fourteen of them were contributed by men. "We never need them as much as the women, but somehow we carry them and they don't" said one of the latter. New York Post Early Railroading. In the pioneer days of railroading It was sometimes necessary for the freight conductor to run forward over the roofs of the cars to shout orders to the engineer. Traveling at night was generally avoided, though one f road adopted the expedient of running ahead of the locomotive a fiat car loaded with sand, on which a bonfire was kept burning as a headlight Serins Donble. "You brute!" exclaimed Mrs. Lush ley. "It makes my blood boll to see you come home In this condition." "ST dear," said Lusbley, "you look beautiful when y'r angry." "Indeed?" "Yesh. Anyhow, you sherfn'ly look doubly beautiful to me Jusht now." Philadelphia Press. A Simple Troth. Reporter Well, to make a long Btory short Editor A good copy reader Ib necessary. Cleveland Leaded A VERY CAREFUL WOMAN. Lady Eldon Coold Not Abide Any. thins Like Extravagance. Lord Chancellor Eldon was energet ically aided in bis parsimonious habits by his wife, of whom It wns snld that she and her daughter bad but one bon net between them. Tho ltev. H. II. Bnrham, author of "The Ingoldsby Legends," records In his diary nn nmuslng Btory of Lndy Eldon's penu riousness: "June 1, 1822. The chancellor le very fond of shooting. One morning last year his lordship, Intending to en Joy a few hours' sport after a rainy night, ordered Bob, tho puny, to be saddled. Lady Eldon told him ho could not have It but comiwfiy being In the room, gave no reason. In a few minutes, however, the servant opened the door and announced that Bob was ready. "Why, bless nie," cried her lady ship, "you can't ride lilm, Lord Eldon. He has got no shoes on." "Oh, yes, my lady," said the servant, "he was shod last week." "Shameful!" exclaimed her ladyship. "How dared you. sir, or anybody have that pony shod without orders? John," continued she, addressing her husband, "yon know you only rode him out shooting four times last year, so I had his shoes taken off nnd have kept tliom In my bureau ever since. They are as good as new, and these people have shod him again. We shall ba ruined at this rate." CATCHING A LOON. The Way n Hnntrr Got On;, nnd Why He Let It tin. Once, nnd only once, I caught n young northern diver, snys Graham West In Recreation. It was In July In the Lnurentlans In n Utile lake far back In the forest covered hills loons always nest on small Islands In lakes, never where foxes can get at the egirs or young. The birds nt first are coal black. The one I took was the size of a plgeou and It took mo twenty min utes to get It. When pursued the lit tle fellows make for the open deep wa ter, never skulk among the weeds, nnd rely pntl:ily upon their woi.derful div ing powers. You can only catch them when they nre very young and on a perfectly calm day when yw can see tliom the Instant they come up. I followed the bird so quickly tbnt I wns always nenr when It rose nnd by shout lug and brandishing the paddle frightened It Into diving before It had regained Its wind. At len;:1h it could not dive more than n foot or two be low the surface nnd then I caught It In my hnnd. It wns savage and sea sick In the canoe. The mother kept near It from first to Inst, swam round the ennoe. calling most plaintively the while, the note being "Whe-ou-ou," quite distinct from the usual mocking laugh, "Ha-ha-ha-ha! Iln-ha-ha-ha!" I paddled the little loon about a mile and then put It overboard very gently, nnd the mother led It off In triumph. Mont Men Have It. "That man who turned the corner a moment ago will probably go Into No. 140," snld the lazy man on the front steps. Tho woman stood up to look. "It was 147," she said. "That la near enough," said the lazy man. "I knew he would stop some place in this part of the block." "But how could j 911 tell?" asked the woman. "I could tell by tho door key grab," was tho reply. "Most men bnvo It. Not one man in a hundred waits till be gets to his own door to take out his latch key. The minute he turns i.ito his own block he unconsciously digs Into bis pockets." New York Post. Bee Comb. Bee comb or beeswax, the material of which tin? honey cells in the beehive are composed. Is a wax produced by a system of chemistry carried on In the "wax pockets" which an located In the abdomen of all working bees. It is a peculiar substance and is said to be analogous to the fats of higher ani mals. Originally it w'ns supposed that this wax was taken up in an almost pure state from the flowers by tho bees, but recent experiments carried on by the leading botanists and chemists of the world conclusively prove that the bee Is capable of elaborating bis peculiar wax, although confined to a diet purely saccharine iu its nature. How He Got the Moon. John Henry Maedler, the astronomer, whose favorite study was the moon, having learned that Fran Witte, the wife of the Btate councilor, owned a wouderful model of his pet luminary, spent years trying to gain possession of It As her husband was living, ho could not marry the owner of the mod el, so be married her daughter, and at the death of his mother-in-law the cov eted moon became his. A Lemon Wanted. A mother was showing her donr little Joe a picture of tlie martyrs thrown to the Hons and was talking very solemn ly to him, trying to make him feel what ' a terrible thing It was. "Ma," said be all at once, "oh, ma, j Just look at that poor little Iron right ' behind there. He won't get any." ( A Harnh Order. 1 On the bench near an English town a sign bearing this legend was nailed to a post: ' "Notice. Any person passing beyond this point will be drowned. By order, of the magistrate." 1 Parried. ) Young Husband I wish I were sin gle again. Wife What for? You mon-; ster! Young Husband To have tbe Joy of marrying yon again. Wife Ton darling! ' HARD QUESTIONS. They Sonnd . Simple, but Yon May I Find the Answer Elusive. ' "How many holes are there in a laced boot of the ordinary type? Do you know how many there are In the pair you are wearing? That Is another question and it J a little ambiguous, for tho average man's ordinary laced brats nre generally given away by his . wife before ho has had time to count the boles. "Which of the feet of a horse touch the ground in trotting?" asks the examiner. You may Imagine the whole class raising arms and shout ing, "All of 'em!" ; Any ono man mny fog another with Ignorance, for our knowledge Is In patches. Is It worth your while, sup posing you have any business to carry tlirougu, to ascertain how many V's there, are on a clock face? Do you want to know how ninny ribs there are lu the cover of your umbrella? This Is the umbrella maker's business. You want only to find the time of day nnd avoid the rain. "Thousand words," says an editor to the nninleur writer, ' who may be an umbrella maker. It happens ninny times a day. The ama teur never knows what exertion and what space this means. But the Jour nalist knows exactly the amount of gray matter, black ink and white pa per the demand implies. How many words nre there In this paragraph? Now quick! THE JAPANESE GIRL. She In Gentlenens Ilnrlf, With an Air of Dnlnty MndeMty. There were not many Japanese wom en nt the party, which made me won der, considering the fact that there were hundreds of men present, but perhaps the absence of the many might lie explained by the uncomfortable and self conscious air of tlie few who were there lu most unaccustomed for eign finery. Not that they wore it so badly. Not nt all. That Is a fiction of the foreign woman who Is pleasantly blinded to the Imperfections of her own kind. Of course there nre no Japanese gills with Gibson figures of lissom grace nnd Fifth avenue strides of splendid freedom, but the same thing may be said of many other women lu ninny other climes. Everybody cannot be an American girl, you know, and I declare I think tlie Japanese girl runs some of her European sixers a very close second In her ability to wear un graceful clothes as gracefully as pos sible with very limited assMlnnco from Mother Nature. All Japanese waist lines run up In front and all Japanese girls nre "pigeon toed." but all Japa nese girls nre gentleness Itself, and their dainty modesty serves to conceal a multitude of peculiarities. Leslie's Weekly. THE GOOD OLD TIMES. A Teit From Which In Span Lota of Stuff and Nonsense. I take no stock lu tbe lamentation of tbe sentimentalists about what they call "the good old times." There Is a deal of stuff and nonsense trolled off on this text. Every man over fifty who Is not precisely a boor Is described as "a gentleman of the old school." Wo need but turn to tlie English satirists from Fielding to Thackeray to learn that all tho essential Ingredients of "Vanity Fair" bnd their existence 100 or 200 years ago. In tlie proportion that there were more nature ond coars er fiber there were livelier doings. In proportion that there were fewer dra matic persons upon tho stage there was better play for the Individual. I confess that I like a little blood In mine. Sincerity even in wickedness has a flavor quite IU own. But he who falls to see tlie world as It Is and re fuses to take It as ho finds It falls in evitably betwixt the three legged stool of a very false philosophy and tho high backed chair of a very 111 judged perversity, with consequences some times serious nnd always humiliating. Henry Wattorson In Louisville Courier-Journal. Snrccss Follim-lnw Fnllnres. We believe that nowhere Is the man who has failed, without impeachment of his integrity, more sure of encour agement nnd assistance thnu here. Nowhere Is there n more general and more active willingness to lend a help ing hand to ono who Is down and Is struggling to get on his feet ngnln. Certninly In no country Is a single failure so seldom accepted as final, and In none nre there so many In stances of successes following failures. New York Times. Giant Monument to a Child. Mount Grace, In Warwick, Mass., seems to be In a way a giant monu ment to a little child. According to tra dition, the Indians captured a Mrs. Rowliuson and her child. As the party were passing through the woods on their way to Canada the child died and was buried at the foot of the mountain. The child's name was Grace and the mountain has been Mount Grace ever since. Worse Than Lout. "You lost your money In Wall street, did you?" "I wouldn't say I lost It," answered the precise though unworldly man. "The word 'lost' Implies a remote pos sibility of Its being found again." Excbnnge. Proa-rennlna;. "Don't you find It hard hustling for yourself?" "Yes," replied the ambitious young chap, "but it's not half so bard as hus tling for other people." Detroit Free Press. Gratitude Is a fine virtue, and yet It Is wearisome when carried beyond Sue bounds. Le Sage. ' Tlie one Pcrdn. There was a certain old New Eng land minister who bnd a blunt way of getting right nt the bottom of things. With n solemn air he announced from Jio pulpit one day tbnt a button had neen foup.il In the collection. "Only one In 'Ivldunl In the church could have been guilty of this trick," be said, "and I shall expect this person to replace the button with a coin." After service a member of the church owned up to being the culprit nnd asked: "How did you know I wns tbe man?" "I did not know," snld the clergyman. "But you snld only one person could have done It." "Just so," was the reply. Two persons could not have put the same button on tbe plate." Onnip In the I.ea-N. People who are subject to cramp In the legs should always be provided with a good Btrong piece of cord, espe cially In their bedrooms. When the cramp conies on take tho cord, wind it round the leg over the place where It Is cramped, take an end in each band und give It a sharp pull, one that will hurt a little, and the cramp will cense Instantly. People much subject to cramp In bed have found great relief from wearing on each leg a gurtcr of wide tape which has several thin slices of cork stitched on to It The Tool He I.nrkoil. "Why don't you go to work?" said a charitable woman to a tramp beforo whom she had placed a nicely cooked meal. "I would," replied the vagrant, "If I had the tools." "Vi'hat sort of tools do you want?" asked tlie hostess. "A Uuifo and fork," said the tramp. Tit-Bits. We Ent Too Flint. "The trouble Is that wo eat too fast," said tbe man who worries about health. "That's right," answered the man who worries about money. "Some of us eat so tnut that our Incomes can't keep up with our grocery bills." Wash ington Star. He who comes up to bis own Idea of greatness must always have bad a very ow standard of it in bis mind. Haz Jtt. . Imlnltrrnt. "Katharine, you will always find me nn Indulgent husband." you mean Indulgent to me or In du.. nt to yourself?" Discussing the merits of n man's op ponents gives him a decided ascend ency over them. Goethe. Orcrhenrd In a Baa, First Old Lady He was a bad char acter, but I believe he repented at last Second Old Lady Oh, no, he didn't. I saw that he died Intestate. London Globe. Tidy. "s Spooney's wife a good house iior?" "Weil, I should say so. Why, he has to keep a private detective to watch his clothes so he can tell where to find them. She's so tidy." Liverpool Mer cury. "DO IT TO-DAY!" "And tn Ciink thftt ten month at;o I looked like tins 1 owe it to ucrman syrup. JThc time-worn injunction, "Never put oiT 'til to-morrow what you can do to day," is now generally presented in this fon:i : " Do it today !" That is the terse advice we want to give you about that hacking cough or demoralizing' cola witn which vou have been struggling for sev eral days, perhaps weeks. (J'iake some reliable remedy for it To-day and let that remedv be Dr. Bosc'.ice's German Syrup, which has been in v.f.e for over linriy-nve years, a lew aoses 01 it win undoubtedly relieve your cough or cold, and its continued t:3e for a few days will cure you completely. tJN'o matter how deep-seated your cough, even if dread consumption has attacked your lungs, Gentian Syrup will surely etfect a cure as it has done before in tliourinds of ap parently hopeless rases of lung trouble. JNew trial bottles, 25c ; regular size, 75c. At all dr.-.jcsts. a For alo by Boyle-Wood ward Drug Co. Paying a Debt of Gratitude Note what Mr. Mott Allen, of Union City, says : Was badly afflicted with rheumatism for more than eight months and at times bad to get up at 11 o'clock and stay up the balance of tho night. Could not dress myself without aid from my wife. I am now entirely cured, and by the use of only one bottle of Crocker's Rheumatic Ro-nedy. For sale by Stoke & Feicht Drug Co. WANTED: Boy about 16 years of age to do clerical work, Must be good at figures. Address in own hand writing : BOX 357, Reynoldsville, Pa. WJmB Wanted! " Girls to learn Cloth Picking . 1 W!.-J" f ana w inaing. Enterprise Silk Co. PENNSYLVANIA KAlUtOAD 1 BUFFALO & ALLF.dHKNY VALLEY DIVISION. Low (.Irwin Division, In EHect May 28. 1'Jtl5. Eastern Sta.idnrd fine. KA8TWAI111. STATION,. ho 109 No. 113 No. 101 No IS A. U. A. M A. hi. V. U .... s II l S t DO .... II 2.i II (lf i (ft .... 9 II IX 4 IK S 5 20 IU -M II 41 4 Ml a -m iu a; 4 5 Ill :4 II W 6 01 ft 411 10 ft'J 12 10 S - 8 0r It 1(1 12 21 S :!!' ttl KM 11 2(1 55 50 tH 41 II 2(1 ts 4M 6 W.I It 42 12 02 tl 15 tB 4(i til 4'J t(i 22 6 H:i 11 ST I 15 0 30 7 0(1 $12 OS 12.') e 40 I H 1 S? 7 1? 7 2.) 1 50 7 30 7 ) 15.) 7 ill 7 as 2 Oil 7 4.1 R 01 2 211 8 Hi f l:i 2 UK 18 $ 8 40 .... i 3 05 i 8 45 A.M. P. M. P. M. P. H 1'itlshui'M I' H. s w 7 n : 0: . J.- v.' tl o u :2 ;u il tn :ii 950 A 58 10 05 10 18 tied Hun l . Lawsonhutii . . .'. New Hl-lhli. Oak lildnc MuyDon sutuinerviile . . . urookvllle lllWlL . Fuller Kcvno dsvlllu Pimcoast ! mils Creek Duiiois... Sabulu ' A intcrburn ... l-NMinljt.M Tyler Ili'imezotte. ... Utunt Oriftwoocl r i. rgd.0l.tt. m.. ' KUU MHDl.- III'V, II... .......111.. 1 1 ...1 u. 12.511, Fulls Crock 1.14, iirrlvcTliuHi ynoUlMvlllif us 1.20 p.m. Ilo 108 A. M. 8IATIONS. tirlftwood Uiuni Bennuismto Tyler I'ciiiilicld Winiurliurn .... almlii llnHols i-'Hll:reik No.liO P.M. f 5 50 ttl 111 0 2A 6 5.1 7 04 7 10 7 23 7 115 7 42 t7 47 7 S8 t8 1? t 18 8 :to 8 47 9 OH 9 12 ! 'a 0.) ti 12 t6 1(1 ti SO l 4i tti 54 fllllCOUNt UeyiiciUitjVilli!.. r'ulltir I'lWIi tlrookville fsiimmfM-vllIe.,.. Mayixirt, 0:ikKilj;e New Htfi li-hiDi Lawaonliiim.... Keel Hunk FittKburu 7 05: 7 2(1 7 37 7 4.1 7 51 8 21 H J U 1.'. 8 9 30 A. M. c m ' . ' ' " litilt.'l' 4.00 n. di. 1 -V, ii J.1'!',1' '''yoi'viiif i.d, ni-K.kviiio 4.. (I, ItPfl H;ii,k C.'io, iii riv, s I'ltisb.. -ii I).:) .m. On bunditys (inly Iniii, ,mivih Driftwood lit 8.20.1. in., iiirives liiil!.,j !0 00a. m Koturn hin li.,iv,.s Duliois 2.1,1 . ,., H,ru.,.s lmfl, tloily '' "'" S"'1',I"K liitormedlule ut. Truitis marked run dully: e dully ex. oiit snowS' ""s"vUo"' wli-ro ViBnul. "niuHt be I'hiiadoljiliiu & Erie Itailruad Division 11 vfSnal May 2Sth, 1!K)5. Trains Icavo Driftwood an follows: EASTWAKIi ,'vni,mr'ri'"lMl- weekdays, for Sunbury V UkeslMtrrp, lluzlototi. Hoi wville,Smiiton. Um.sburir and .the IiKl-idipu ulu sta tions iirnvintr a- l'lillutiiilphia (1:23 p.m.. .V-w Voi-k,!':o0 ,.; Baltii!,ore,H:ou p in. r? 'wr,',OM'7:IS" n'r l'"Hn,an I'arlor car ii v '"'"'"-Port to I. hlladcipbla and paH- h""e "' I'hlllUlflulllH 1" WHUamsport to Baltimore and Wiisli- 12:50 u. m. Train 8. dully for Munhury, Ilnr riHhuriCMiid principal iiitornieiliatCstatioiiH. arrlyinn at 1'hlludWphla 7:.ri a. m New .York 10:23 p. ,., llalunior,.-::,opP ,-wash" iriKton :j., p. Vest ibulcd pari;," earn a id pasKeii!!,..! coaches, Huthilo to Philadel phia and WiishiiiKUin. "Luiiiiiauoi 1:0(1 p. in.-Tn,i , jHlyt f()P j, rbun( and Intermedial,., stalions nr. rlvlriK at l'lnladulphiH4:2;(A. m. ; New 4ork. 7.13 a. in.; l,a iimoie, 2.20 a. rn.i Washlnirtou 3..I0 a. M. I'ullii.an Meepnm cars from lliirrlHl.uri, 10 Philadelphia and New York. . f iill.uielphiu passenners can remain In 8leei.nr undisturbed until 7:30 a. m. 1 1 tuft p.m.- I rain 4,dally for riunlmry, llurrlh biiru mill iii-ei-mediaie stations, ai rlvlnirat I hli:tdclihh, 7:17 a. in.; New Y ork, U:33 A. M. on week .days atiu 10.38 a m. on 8un day; Italiiin.To, f:l5 a. Washington, t.:M) ' sleepers from firle. win. NVu,"""lrt; in Philadelphia, and Wllliaiuspoit, to Washington. Hiissenner coaches rrom Kile m Philadelphia, and Wllllumsport.lo Itiillimore. 12:lil 11. m.-l'raln ii, dally from points south orilurrlsbiiiK, arrivinn KalUlnore 7:2ft a m.. Wll""'f ":i a.m., with through Pullman cars and passenger coaches to Washington WESTWAKD ':E,1;oHumT"t,n 7 dHl" 'ur Uuff"lu :41 a. in. Train II, dally for Erie, Uidn way, and week days for lluKols, L'lormout and principal Internn diatestaiions. 'loOa. rn.-i'rHiu 3, daily for Kite uud Inter mediate points. :45 p. m.-l'ruln 15, dally for Huirulo vis st'iHons'm'UlSO f''r,''''i0 l,,turn"lliite S:-P p. ui.-'-Traln 81. daily for Emporium and lutei-niFdlatesiutiotix. JOHNSONBURU UAILROAD. p. m. 3 If) . 3 2 . 3 25 . 3 20 . 3 12 . 3 i7 . 2 ..il . 2 40 . 2 20 . WKKKOAYN. ai Cleiniont I v Woouvale tjttimwiod mini's Kuri losiunter r-InilKlit Glen II awl Joh nson hit iff Iv ItldkWayur a. m. 10 40 . Ill 45 . 10 -ill 10 52 10 50 . II 114 . 11 15 . II 33 . 11 50 Uidgway & Clearfield Railroad and Connections. WEEKDAY. p.m. p.m. a. in 2 1(1 ar Ktdiwuy ly Croyluiul Shons Mills Blue Ruck Carrier Brnclfwu vl Limes Mills McMlun imiiI Harveys Umi Iv Falls c'kar lv Du Hois ur a.m p.m. Ii 5(1 II 55 . p.m. 8 04 8 Oil 7 Ml 7 52 7 42 7 38 7 34 7 30 1 49 i'40 1 37 1 27 1 23 i'ls u 00 8 55 8 51 8 47 8 37 8 34 8 30 8 25 8 20 8 08 5 10 7 10 12 15 (I 00 7 l.i 12 III ( PI 12 23 7 2H 12 211 32 12 311 lV07 II 12 7 :i7 12 40 ll 211 7 41 II 30 7 4-1 12 4!l ... 7 SO 12 55 i 40 8 0.1 1 25 II 55 7 25 t 10 7 10 12 55 II 30 1 1ft 6 15 12 52 5 311 12 24 II ;i:i ur f- al imI "u lv 7 1 1. (I ::9 Keynoldsvllle 8 0" I 29 1 )2 7 51 K (15 U,-oWUJ.. o -t 4 SO 11 44 S 1 511 8 30 :o New Hethl'm 9 2.1 2 3s 930 Red Bunk 10 02 3 20 Iv Plttsljilrirar l' !(:". A -tn 4 05 11 05 1 30 9 00 via. .m .m. p.m. p.m. p.m. For tlr.ie tables and adJlttonal Informal Ion consult ticket, airenra. VV. W. ATTEttBUUY. J. K. Woon, en I Mummer. Pus ': i-nilic Mrr GEO. W. IIOV'U, Gen'l I'.-iwenjXt!, piTTSBUKG, CL ANION & SUM- J- MF.RVILLE RAILROAD. PassenirnrTraln Schedule. First Class Trains. liai y except Sunday, eorinectlnii with H. K. It. Trains at Suniniervllle. OOlNn BAST. No. 1. No. 3. No. 5.. Clarion, lenve, " So a.m. 11.15 a.m. 4.',5 n m rltrattonville, 7.58 11 "3 A a '" Watersou, 8.07 " 11.32 " iV'nm Carrier 8.33 " 11.5s S.c' um bumuiervllle,ar.8.;ift ' 12.00 ' 5.1ft p.m". uoino WEST. No. 2. No. 4. No. 0. Pummervllle. lv, 8 '0 a.m. PMSn.m. .Dp m Carrier, 8.V2 " 12.1" ' 11 j Waterscn. Si. 1 s ' 1.'. 13 n is Htratt ouvllle, 9.27 ' 12.52 " 1)57 Clarion, arrive, 9.35 1.00 ' 7.05 In effect Sept. 1, 1005. For further Infor mation address the Company's Keneral oflice at Brookvtlle Ha. No 106 No l02 No.il A. M.IA. U. 1'. tl. i a so mi 10 .... til 10 til 3ti .... 0 25 11 45 .... 8 50 12 12 .... 7 Oil 12 ii .. . 7 05 12 25 ... 7 IK 12 ,)'.) .. . 7 -i 12 55 (5 00 1 1 15 5 111 tr 14 8 Of- 1 2,1 5 27 ts 20 .... S 4J t5 50 8 IIS 1 5ti B uu 8 411 2 11 t) 15 tU 01) J2 24 8 32 W 12 2 -it) 6 8 0 ' 2 3'- 6 45 9 i'i J Oti 7 14 10 02 3 2oi 7 25 S12 J5 i 5 30! 10 00 p. 111. P. ni.jp. m.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers