FOLDED HANDS. : Pale withered hands, that many changeful ears Had wrought for others, soothed the hurt of tears, Rocked children’s cradles, eased the fever's smart, Dropped balm of love in many an aching eart; Now, stirless, folded, like wan rose leaves Y pressed, Above the snow and silence of her breast, n mute appeal, they told of labor done, inside, while its owner limped off to And well carned rest that came ere set of | crawl under some bush or other,” sun, . “Didn't you feel mean?” From the worn brow the lines of care had | “Yes; mean and bitter at the same : swept ; time, for something about the man re- fit if an an wy iiss, he while sie steph, minded me of Mary's husband a little, ; away And given back the peace of childhood’s ay, And on the lips the faint smile almost said, “None id life’s secret but the happy ead. Bo gazing where she lay we know that pain And parting could not cleave her soul again. And Ye Here sure that they who saw her ‘ as! In, thes dim vista which we call the past, 0 never knew her thus and laid aside, Remembering best the maiden and the ride, Had sprung to greet her with the olden speech, The Gear pet names no later lore can ac ‘And “Welcome home they cried, and grasped her hands. So dwells the mother in the best of lands. —Margaret E. Sangster. The Peddler’s Pack. VERY now and then the swinging signboard creaked and groaned as if it were determined to attract at- tention. And it was usu- ally successful. In addition to the name of the inn it bore a weather-worn representation of something that faint- ly resembled an overgrown soldier's knapsack. “What does that signify?” inquired a traveler, glancing up at the picture. “Ah! They don’t carry things of that sort nowadays,” answered the gray- haired landlord, pointing to a pile of commercial travelers’ sample cases, #but the ‘road boys’ were not such aris- crats when I was younger. Then, they used ‘packs’ just like you see pictured up there. I was a bit hard on them fong ago, and ever since I've tried to make up for it by treating them as well as I can. It was in one of their ‘packs’ that the biggest slice of luck T've ever known came to me.” As he spoke he shuddered and sighed in a manner that betokened mystery behind his words. We were high up on the wagon road that runs through Serafina Pass, and the name of the little inn, “The Trav- elers’ Refuge,” was thoroughly appro- priate, for not a bagman that went that way but was fain to rest for a space within its hospitable doors. p The landlord, it was clear, was most anxious to have an opportunity of un- bosoming himself further, but he maited until his daughter, a buxom matron, had left the room. “Yes,” he mused, half to himself, “I was a bit hard on one of 'em—there’s no mistake about it. It ain’t a pleasant story, but I like to tell it just to remind myself that the worst thing a man can have «in this world is a hot, obstinate temper. You see, I came to this coast soon af- the gold fever broke'out, and set- down in tke Josita Valley, below ere, ranching. I was a widower even then, and had brought with me from the States my only child—a daughter, past seventeen, i “She was a pretty girl, if I do say it, end, being as good as pretty, you can imagine I was quite wrapped up in her. Of course I was anxious to keep her with me, and, if not that, at least I looked for her to do something better than fall in love with a peddler.” B “And did she?” “Yes; you see in those days the coun- try was full of young fellows who had struck out for themselves, and were frying to get a start by carrying knick- knacks around from one mining camp fo another, Some of them were lively chaps enough, and well educated, but I was fresh from the States, with all the Eastern prejudices, and it almost drove me wild when Mary told me she wanted to marry a young fellow who brought his pack through our district a good deal oftener than the trade seemed to require. I was a hot-tem- pered fool in those days, so I stormed, threatened, locked Mary up for a week and sent word to her lover that I had Joaded my gun for wildcats and ped- dlers.” “What did Mary do?’ “You might have guessed it. One day when I came back from a cattle sale she was missing. I chased her a couple of days, but they had taken to the fall timber and it was of no use. After a while I got a letter, and 1 wrote back, saying that I disowned her, and that he had better keep out of range of my rifle.” , “What did you do then?” ° “Suffered, mister—just suffered. 1 knew I was wrong, but I'd have died rather than give in. For three years] lived like a toad in a rock, hating the whole world. All the pleasure I had was in watching for peddlers. One peck. evening, after a terrible rain storm, | «Oh, a man who took one wife too one of the tribe came to my house and many.” asked for shelter for the night. He| «My! Maybe they'll be after me was a thin, weak looking fellow, with his face covered by a huge ragged beard. He carried on his back an enormously long and heavy pack, and seemed so exhausted with his tramp through the mire that I hadn't the heart to do more than order him off the place.” “That was pretty hard,” said the lis- ‘fener. . “I suppose it was. The peddler wouldn't even give him a bunch of straw in the stable, and no other house within twelve miles, Instead of com. plaining, however, he merely begged that I would let him leave hls pack, which he sald contained goods of value, under shelter from the rain, 1 finally consented to this, cross my threshold, I carried his pack However, I locked and barred all the doors and windows, as usual, for some road agents had been around those parts about that time, and had stood up and robbed several ranchers, and, as I told you, I was all alone. Some- how, I couldn't go to sleep when I went to bed. After tossing around for awhile I got up and sat by the fire, brooding over my trouble and trying not to think of the poor chap shivering out there in the cold and rain some- where. 1 looked at his pack sitting up in the corner, and wondered what made it so long. As I watched it I fancied I saw it move.” “Saw it move?” “Exactly. I wouldn't believe my eyes at first, but after watching in- tently for a while I distinctly saw the front of a hand pressed against the canvas from the inside. Like a flash, then, I understood the whole thing. The peddler was one of the road agents’ gang, and knowing I had cone siderable money about the house they had adopted this plan for smuggling one of their crew inside the house. Af- ter I had gone to sleep the fellow in- side could let in the rest and finish the job. I walked quietly across the room, took my gun from the antlers, knelt down a few feet from the pack, aimed square in the centre and pulled the trigger.” “Go on,” murmured the listener, with a shudder, “But the gun didn’t go off,” contin- ued the landlord, clearing his throat. “The nipple was rusty and wouldn't work, so I laid down the rifle and got an axe from the kitchen. It had been newly ground that day, and, when I lifted it over my head, I counted upon cleaving that pack, robber and all, clear to the floor. Just as I raised the axe and braced myself for the blow I saw a ghost.” “A ghost?” ; “Yes, sir. The pack opened, and T saw sticking out of its top the curiy yellow head, blue eyes and rosy cheeks of my Mary when she was a little tot of four. The shock staggered me so that I sank on my knees. I wiped my ges, and wondered if I had gone crazy. I was almost certain of it when the ghost stretched out a pair of chub- by white arms and said, ‘Deevin’, grandpa! ” “Ab,” said the guest, with a relieved sigh, “I begin to see. And what did you do then?” “I don’t exactly know,” said the landlord, softly, “but if there is any- thing that will bend a stubborn neck quicker than the arms of a little child, I'd like to know what it is, I put the tired little prisoner down by the fire, opened the door and held out my arms.” “And the mother—" “Yes,” nodded the landlord, “they were both there, and, mister, I guess that’s the end of my story,” and the old man wiped his eyes. “You must excuse me,” he said weak- ly, “but that was a wet evening, and somehow I haven't got quite ary since.”—Grand Magazine. Viking Ceurage. ‘Whether on the high fjeld or below the roaring foss, or in the wild fish- ing life which is common to the Nor- wegians along 2000 miles of rock: bound coast, you cannot fail to mark the extraordinary coolness of the Nor. wegian in the moment of peril, hig marvellous indifference to exposure, toil and physical pain. He is the strong man. Born of & hardy race, bred in air so keen and pure, he is physically powerful beth by inherits ance and habit; what the chance vis: itor might mistake for stolidity experi ence shows is unruffled patience and an unquenchable perseverance. A lib. eral education in the heroic legends of his forefathers from before the memory of man has endowed him with a soul of endeavor, and deep down in this soul, quite ineradicable, you will find a whole love for his country and a whole faith in her future.—London Express. Togo’s “Don’t Worry Club.” Perhaps the granite coolness of the commander of the United Squadrons of Nippon is largely due to the sfrict observance of the principles of Yomei, who taught that the cardinal element in the make-up of a great man is the poise of the soul so serene that no trifles such as the turmoils and affairs of the earth and its life should have the power of disturbing its equili- brium.—Adachi Kinnosake, in the In. dependent, \ Had One Too Many Himself. “Serves him right!” murmured Mrs. Henpeck, looking up from the paper in which she had been reading of the arrest of a bigamist, “Serves whom right?’ asked Hen- next.”—Philadelphia Public Ledger. Result of One Smile. One smile makes a flirtation. One flirtation makes two acquainted. Two acquainted makes one kiss. One kisg makes several more. One engagement makes two fools. Two fools make one marriage. One marriage makes two mothers-in-law. Two mothers-in-law So, as I had sworn none of hig trade should ever HOW OLIVE OIL IS MADE IN TUSCANY. The Olive, Stone and All, Is First Crushed in a Mill Run by Ox=Powe* =Succeeding Proces:es., The olives, stones and all, are first crushed in a stone mill run by ox- power, ' The mass of pulp transferred in flat wicker baskets to the *torchio,” or oakea press, from which the ofl ooozes into a vat below. The presses at Dievole are very old, elaborately carved with the arms and devices of some early padrone. Tre- mendous pressure is applied through a primitive capstan arrangement, which the men work by heavy wooden levers, walking round and round on the stone floor in a track much worn by the tread of laboring generations. There are commonly two or three squeezings of the pulp, the product of the first being of the finest quality. But the process, once begun, must be carried forward continuously, lest the oil should spoil in the making. It is finally drawn off into huge earthen jars of immemorial pattern like those in which the Forty Thieves of the Arabian tale concealed themselves for nefarious pur- poses. And it stands thus for a week in the adjoining clearing-room, called the “chiaratoio,” after which it is ready for the market.—From “Life on a Tus- can Farm,” by T. R. Sullivan, in Scrib- ner’'s. WISE WORDS. There are no prizes for those who will not pay for them with persistence. When a man thinks more of his skin than of his soul he is likely to suffer in both, One of the keenest sorrows of life is the thought of the sins we leave to our children, Some people never think of being grateful for one meal until they are hungry for the next. Men who put all their faith in gold generally ask if you belong to a church before they lend you any of it, It is a pleasant sight to sce anybody thanking God, for the air is heavy with the hum of murmuring and the roads are dusty with complaints and lamentations.—Spurgeon, How often do we look upon God as our last and feeblest resource! We go to Him because we have nowhere else to go. And then we learn that the storms of life have driven us, not upon the rocks, but unto the desired haven, — George MacDonald. Character is great and worthy in it- self, and not because of the greater or less fame of a deed through which it manifests itself. It is not the kind of thing through which we show our- selves, but the kind of self we have to show, that counts.—Scottish Reformer, A Long Nose. In a village in Maryland an old dea- con, in shaving himself on Sunday prior to church time, made a slight cut with a razor on the extreme end of his nose. Quickly calling to his wife, says the Philadelphia Public Ledger, he asked her if she had any court plaster in the house. “You will find some in my sewing basket,” she said. The deacon soon had the cut covered. ‘At church, in assisting with the collec- tion, he noticed every one smile as he passed the plate, and some of the younger people laughed outright. Very much annoyed, he asked one of his as- sistants if there was anything wrong with his appearance, “Well, I should, say there was,” an- swered the assistant. “What is that upon your nose?’ “Court plaster!” “No,” said his friend, “it is the label from a spool! of cotton. It says, ‘War- ranted 200 yards.” Query. Among the papers of R. H. Stoddard that Ripley Hitchcock edited there is a letter which Oliver Wendell Holmes, the poet-physician, is said to have re- ceived. This letter was written many years ago by an ignorant country prac- titioner, and it is interesting because it shows the low level to which, in the early part of the last century, it was possible for medical education to fall: The letter, verbatim, follows: “Dear dock I have pashunt whose physicol sines shoze that the winpipe is ulcerated of and his lung hav dropped into his stumick. He is un- abel to swaller and I fear his stumick toobe is gone. I have giv him every: thing without efeck his Father is wealthy honble and influenshul. He is an active member of the M. E. church, and God noes I don’t want too loose him wot shall I do?’—Kansas City Independent. Which Honey is the Best? This question will probably be dis- cussed as long as individual tastes differ, but mild flavored honeys will al. ways be most popular and blended honeys will lead among them. In New England when the honey-flow is slow and the combs are filled from many kinds of flowers, then is the honey most delicious. The same is known to be true in some other parts of the country and doubtless is so everywhere. Such homey keeps the palate seeking far the elusive flavors and never cloys it. It is blended flavors which have made French cookery so famous.—American Beekeeper. A Prayer Before Work. The day returns and brings us the petty round of irritating concerns and duties. Ip us to play the man, help is then CANINE CULTURE. A Boston spinster owns a dog, One of those high-toned “towsers,” That's so well bred and nice, 'tis said, He never pants—he “trousers.” =Philadelphia Post. REVISED QUOTATION. Orator—*“Man’s inhumanity to man makes countless mill—mill—-" Auditor—"Millionaires!"—Life, SURE TO REGRET IT ANYWAY. Fuller—*If you marry that girl, you'll regret it.” Waller—*But no more, probably, than it I married some other girl.”—Judge. KNOWLEDGE. “I was surprised at the way you flirted with that young man. You know you're a married woman.” “Yes, but he didn’t."—Philadelphia Ledger. THE ENDLESS GRIND. “But why do you live in the city if you don’t like it?” “I have to live here to make money enough to keep up my country place.” -~Town Topics. NOTHING TO LONG FOR. “What a discontented, dissatisfied look Mrs. Fullerton has!” “Well, what could you expect? She has a husband who gets her everything she wants.”—Town Topics. A PREJUDICED IMPRESSION. “What is your idea of a classic?’ “A classic,” said Mr. Cumrox, “is something you have to listen to bee cause somebody else said it was good.” —Washington Star. EARNINGS. Office Boy—“Wy, cert, I want more pay; I'm only getting ‘four’ a week, and give my mother all I earn.” Proprietor—“What do you do with the other three and a half ?’—Puck. ENDLESS CHAIN. “A soft answer,” remarked the party of the first part, “turneth away wrath.” “True enough,” responded the party of the second part, “but wrath also turneth away a soft answer.””—Louis- ville Courier-Journal. HER POOR TASTE. a He—*“When I married my wife's eye- sight was very poor.” She—“Yes; it must have been.”—Il- lustrated Bits. DIVISION OF LABOR. “How do you and your wife spend your leisure time?” “Well, I think up schemes to make money.” “And she——?" “Thinks up schemes to spend it.’— Cleveland Leader. A PRUDENT SUGGESTION. “Many people have suffered embar- rassment because of their social asd pirations.” “Yes,” answered Miss Cayenne. “Be- fore you insist on getting into the swim you want to make quite sure you are a swimmer.”—Washington Star, NO PAIN. * Casey—“I seen in the paper the other day that a docthor out West performed a surgical operation on himsel’ an’ cut off his own thumb. What d’ye think o’ that?” Cassidy—*‘Oh, I suppose he put him. sel’ under the inflooence of ether before he done it.””—Philadelphia Press. ABSURD. “I see that a prominent statistician says that considerable more than one- us to perform them with laughter and kind. faces; let cheerfulness. abound with inddstry. Give us to go blithely on our way all this day, bring us to our resting beds weary and content and undishondeed, and grant us in the end the gift of sleep. Amemy—Robert make a red-hot time.—Chicago Jour. . igeemed all broke up when he found I nal, Louis Stevenson. ers.”—Chicago Tribune, half of the world’s population is femi- BE brett) Neen dave Sgian nine.” Jain Ling xpress, daily. jis m ““ 3 3 ©) a Accom. (ex m I don't believe it. If that were so, | Ph! Janina Awe ( 350m how would we account for the fact| Mail Ex ress, daily.. . 50pm that ‘one-half the world doesn’t know | Bastern Express 8 apm how the other half lives? "—Philadel- Leave Cresson— Westward. phia Public Ledger. Sheridan Accom., week days... . 810am Pacific Express, daily 832am Way Passenger, dail 156 pm SUPPLY AND DEMAND. Fistsiun Ex ress $¢bm : . 0 al.. m “I tell you,” said the passenger with Pittsbirg Accor 5 45 hm “ i i Sheridan Accom., week days 7pm the skull cap, ‘there is someihing | SheHdan Accom, wesk days... 756 pm wrong with a country where a prize Cambria & Clearfield Division. fi > ghter can make more money in one In effect May 29, 1904. night than a college professor can Leave Patton—Southward. nats in Bye Jeontt adit Jain No. 708 at 6:50 a. m. arriving at Cresson ou're right, pard,” sai e pas-}at7:50a. m, ; senger with the loud check suit. hy 709 at 3:38 p. m. arriving at Oresson “There's too blamed many college pro. PROMINENT PEOPLE, J. M. Barrie is extremely fond of his native Forfarshire. The King of Belgium is developing a | mania for building. President Loubet has finished hls NEW YORK ENTRAL & HUDSON RIVER R. R. sixth year in the French Presidency, than 3000 newspapers and 1000 letters. Edward Everett Hale thinks that options on $500,000 worth of land in Mexico. The Pope has consented to sit to M. Carolus Duran, the French artist, for his portrait, The Emperor of Abyssinia has deco- rated the German Emperor with the Star of Ethiopa. Chauncey M. Depew still holds more directorates than any other man in the United States. The King of Belgium is developing a mania for building that recalls King Ludwig II. of Bavaria, Theodore Roosevelt has been made an honorary member of the Texas Cat- tle Raisers’ Association, M. Combes, recently Premier of France, has returned to the practice of medicine in his native village. Lord Kitchener is making an annual custom of a “Peace day dinner,” te celebrate the conclusion of the South African War, Ambassador Whitelaw Reid has given $500 for the endowment of a bed for American sailors in the Union Jack Club, London. The Xing of Spain has inherited his father’s remarkably sure eye and steady hand, and he is already one of the best shots in his kingdom. The Czar of Russia, it is said, holds some $6,000,000 worth of stock in the Pennsylvania Railroad, the New Jer- sey Central, the New York Central and the Northern Pacific. . SPORTING NOTES. W. B. Jennings’ Proper won the Long Island Handicap. Bryn Mawr polo team defeated the Rockaway Hunt quartet at Cedarhurst, L 1 P. J. Dwyer’s two-year-old colt Quorum won the Atlantic Stake at Brighton Beach, N. Y. James B. Brady’s high-priced colt Oiseau won the Spindrift Stake at Sheepshead Bay, N. Y. Sydney Paget's Cairngorm won the Bay Ridge Handicap at the Coney Isl- and Jockey Club course. Arthur Smith, with a score of 278, won the Western open golf champion- ship at Cincinnati, Ohio. The American Yacht Club’s Mimosa III. won the first race in the challenge series for the Manhasset Cup. In a close finish the Queen's West- minster Volunteers defeated the Sev- enth Regiment team, of New York. “Alec” Smith, with a card of 70, es- tablished & new golf record for the pub- lic links at Van Cortlandt Park, New York City. Squadron A, N. G. N, Y.,, defeated Great Neck at polo by a score of 93% to 6% goals in the final match for the Rumson cups. Charles E. Courtney, coach of the Cornell navy, urges that the distance of intercollegiate races be reduced from four to three miles. Miss May Sutton easily defeated Miss Winifred Longhurst, the Irish sroman lawn tennis champion, in the all-Eng- land championship tournament. Winners in the round robin lawn tennis in doubles at the Ardsley Club were H. F. Allen and C. F. Watson, Jr., and George L. Wrenn, Jr., and Reginald F. Fincke. Marvin Hart knocked out “Jack” Root in the twelfth round of & finish fight, at Reno, Nev., and is hailed as the heavyweight champion by James J. Jeffries, the retired champion. Hundreds of Indians Want Werk. Tohn R. Brennan, Indian agent a: Pine Ridge agency. has sent a circu lar broadcast over the Western coun try. stating that he has at his disposal 806 able bodied Ogaliala Sioux In dians who want employment for the season. He calis the attention ot contractors to the fact that these men are good wbrkers. They will work at railrcad grading, ditch digging, sheep lierding or ranching. —Custer Cor respondence Denver Republican. When former Confederate generals speak by invitation at Memorial Day exercises in the North, and the Presi- dent of the United States sends flow- ers to decorate the graves of South- ern dead at Arlington, on the Com federate Memorial Day, there can nu longer be doubt that the chasm be. tween North and South has closed and that there is once more a united country, asserts the New Ycrk Tri bune. The latest count against the automo- bile is that it is helping to spread the pestiferous gypsy moth beyond its present abiding places in Massachu- setts. Pennsylvania Railroad. In effect May 29, 1904. Main Line. Leave Cresson—Eastward. Leave Patton—Northward. fessors and too blamed few prize fight. afte at 1:48 a. m. und at Glen Qumpbell at | Train No. 704 at 10:47 a. m. arriving at Mas King Edward receives daily no fewer everybody should sleep ten hours a day, ! John Alexander Dowie has secured N (Pennsylvania Division.) Beech Creek District. Condensed Time Table. u Read do Exp Man June 10, 1004 Exp i 037 No No 30 No m pm am 920 100 ar Patton lvy610 IY P00 129 Westover 63 8 230 Arcadin 7 830 100ar Mahaffey Iv 700 8 1228 Iv Kerrmoor ar 8 i219 Gazzam 4 767 1212ar Kerrmoor Iv72 4 7621207 New Millport 784 420 746 1201 Olanta 74 428 737 11 64 Mitchells 746 4A 701 1122 Clearfield 825 i% 635 10 57 fi land 845 6 624 1045 Wallaceton 860 589 615 10 85 Morrisdale Mines 907 5 605 1025 Iv Munson ar915 b b 82 id Philipsburg ary 3s 6 625 1045 ar " Iv850 68% 600 10 20 ar Munson Ivo18 600 556 10 16 Winburne 923 608 582 955 eale 043 628 513 9383 Gillintown 1001 646 504 928 Snow Shoe 1006 650 406 833 Beech Creek 10567 ig 353 821 Mill Hall 1100 7 345 813 Lock Haven 1116 808 826 750 Oak Grove 1183 828 316 740 Jersey Shore 11 45 2 240 ¥7101v Williamsport ariz2 9 pm am Pm pm pm am Phila & Reading RR m pm 225 650ar Williamsport 1v 112 20¢11 30 18 36 #11 30 lv Philadelphia ar 780 689 Am pm . PM am Be lv. NY via Tamaqua ar 940 30 §7 30 Iv NYvia Phila ar 1040 $002 sm pm Pm am *Daily. {Week days. #7 p m Sunday. $1100 sm Sunday Connections—At Williamsport with Phila geiphia and Reading Railway; at Jetey Shore with the Fall Brook District; at Mill Hall with Central Railroad of Pennsylvania; at Philipsburg with Pennsylvania railroad an and ¥ CR R; at Clearficld with the B falo, Rochester and Pittsburg railway; at Mae baffey and Patton with Cambria and Clearfield division of the Pennsyvania railroad; at Ma haffey with the Pennsylvania and Northe western railway. Geo. H. Daniels, W. H. Northrup, Gen, Pass. Agt., Gen. Agent, New York, Williamsport, J. P. Bradfield, yen’) Supt., New York. Pittsburg, Johnstown, Ebeas- burg & Eastern R. R. Condensed Time Table in effect June §, 1088, Leaving Ramey. am am pm pm pB Fernwood ...... 845 108 840 Waltzvale.. 866 110 860 Ramey... 640 900 118 8 63 Houtzdale. 6 52 912 127 407 " 711 : 428 *% 7 440 YO am am am pm pm pm Philipsburg... 550 740 1100 230 453 810 Osceola...... 603 754 1114 244 500 824 outzdale. 621 813 1133 3803 508 ix amey.... 6838 826 1145 815 587 8 Waltzval 638 830 1150 820 542 Fernwood. 648 340 1200 330 362 S. pm 12 8 1218 1250 8 1230 102 6% 124 648 18 700 pm Pm pm 200 810 214 824 1280 288 is 142 245 8 8 250 Fernwood.. 10 40 800 Connections—At Philipsburg(Union Station) with Beech Creek rallroad trains for and frome Bellefonte, Loc Haven, Williamsport, Reads , Philadeipaja and New York, Lawrenee ville, Corning, Watkins, Geneva and Lyons Clearfield, Mahaffey and Patton; Curwensvil Dubois, Punxsutawney, Ridgway, Bradfol Buffalo and Rochester- Connections at Osceola Mills with Houts daleand Ramey with P R R train leaving THone at 7:20 p. m. ‘or full information SPP. to J. 0. REED, Superintendent. aon a. Philadelphia & Reading Railway. Engines Burn Hard (Ooal—No Smoke IN EFFECT MAY 15, 1904. Trains Leave Williamsport From Depot, Foob For New Y Kove Pollan 7:30 'or New York via adelphia 7:30, 10a. 1229, 400, 1130 p. m. Sunday 10:00 a me 1:30 p. m. Por New York via Easton 10 a. m,, 12:29 noon, Sundays 10 a. m. i {For Phila elphia, Reading, Tamaqua, Mae hanoy City, Ashland and all points in Schuyle kill coa) region 7:30, 10 a. m., 12:29, 4 and 11:38 p.m. Sundays 10a. m., 11:30 p. m. Trains for Williamsport: Leave New York via Easton 4, 9:10 a. my, 1:20 p. m. Sundays 4:25a. m. and 1 p. m, Leave New York via Philadelphia 12:15, 4:28, 8:00, a. m., 2:00 and 7:00 p. m. Sundays 12:16 &. m,, 4:25am, 12:00and 9 p. m. Leave Philadelphta, Reading Terminal, 4:08 a.m’, 8:36 and 10:20 a. m., and 4:35 Pp. m,, an 11:30 p. m. Sundays 4, 9:00 a. m., 4:06 p, me and, 11:80 EB: m. hn rough coaches and parlor cars to and from Philadelphia and New York. Tickets can De broeured in Winamspor 8 the City ticket office and at the depot, foot Pine Street. Baggage checked from hotels and residences direct to dé3tination. . EDSON J. WEEKS, General Passenger Agent A. T. DICE, General Superintendent. Reading Terminal, Philadelphia. Parlor Cars on all express trains, Huntingdon & Broad Top Mt. Railroad. In effect Sept. 7, 1903. Southward. Train No. 1 (Express] leaves Huntingdon Prey day except Sunday) for Mt. Dallas at :85 a. m., arriving at Mt. Dallas at 10:20 a. m, Train No. 8,(Mail) leaves Hasungdon (every day except Sunday) for Mt. Dallas at 5:50 p.m. arriving at Mt. Dallas at 7:30 p. m. Tra%n No. 7, (Sundays only) leaves Hunt; don for Mt. FA at 8:35 a.m., arriving at ML Dallas at 10:05 a. m. &ar-All trains make connections at Mt. Dak las for Bedford, Pa., and Cumberland, Md. Northward. Train No. 4 (Mail) leaves Mt. Dallas (eve: day eXcent Sunday) for Huntingdon at 9: a. m,, arriving at Huntingdon at 11:10 a. m. Train No. 2 (Fast Line) leaves Mt. Dallas every day except Sunday) for Huntingdon a$ :40 p. m,, arriving at Huntingdon at 6:16 p. m Train No. 8, (Sundays only) leaves Mt. Dal- las for Huntingdon at 4:00 p. m., arriving a$ 5:30 p. m. All trains make close connections with R. R. both east and west at Huntfngden. CARL M. GAGE, General Manager Blaine’'s Friend Was Still, Blaine had a personal friend in the custom rouse at Portland. Cleveland, had been elected and inaugurated, ind Federal officeholders were hang- ing to their jobs by their eyelids. Blaine called at the custom house one day, and seemed surprised to meet his old friend, saying: “What, Bill, you here still?” “Yes,” whis: ‘a. Mm. 4 rain No 708 at 6:07 p. m. pered Bill, “mightily still.” Boston Herald. Whi has s carrie to see 4lling tempt poised in wa pleat can m some mana of the in this when if the reveal think them.’ for wl eas is J One + of the bon a: way fi wide, much there shade Sashes having pearar row either signs. ribbon TOWS ( the fo trimm bon o like a ...cashm | with s Ld Sunr fn bab housel these They wood ! extend and si covere are la cracks fiercel) low th parlor ‘A pillo then t well c noon this m boasti health, tion of date.— NOT Here a gard should farmer a prosj The on last ye sent ov Twent, one ¢ Mass., that th els in t be bot the pri owned Ther: onions deal m the pr doubte Crop w odorife comma part of The ¢ in this tic sery women ers in p+ with al obliged thing servant consul |] Italian try. D© people weeks |] as in th ambitio ment 4 offices ! ograph in fact, of emp seems teams, streets domesti The Italy o warm t woman sex con various relates Forno, being 1 miles of cept a ried mg of ten n back I large Db to each baskets merchai