SIPIR/riTGr A HSriD 1906. Don't Put OK Buying You £SL Help That New Spring Suit. Boys.' ng for Get one now, while there is a broad variety of SftanU™, styles and tabrics to choose from—be anions the menu and styles that are and be- J ° coming to boys, waders Ol usnion. Come, bring the little men with you, j If vou'll take the time to come here and ex.unine an '' e '". e . h . owa »«i»erb collection oi . . smart, nobbie ftpring Suits for school or j 'lir stylish Clothing for Spring and Slimmer you drees wear that wiir captivate your fancv ' vill be convinced th.it ,t's the sort you want. tThe styles are down-to-lhe wiii. i.iooi..er troo«erß-ti. ? 8e»«o..'» «ob« • , , , , favored style—in attractive tabrics ol minute and cleverly expressed wear-like-iron ijuality, stayed, double With a cash of smartness that stitched and reinforced; sizes S to 10 wi I appe: Ito yoi'. Ihe mater- years; regular 7.»H> value*, <£C ials are thoroughly good and in T .. , ? ecia R . l those we.wes and cosonngs ap-. uvemles Spring Suits. { . P>" ved by fashion as correct. > T»cV Vat Ihe tniiorirg is as near per- 9 ROtn A fection JS Hit most skilful art is- LU H-.Ow ans c.m make ii. I lie fit of each ,o V lhoes ing eUe ''' at l '° yß weHr ' fro "' hal gaim r,t. in every size lor stout, slim, short or tall men. is peift ct. Our prices are as low as really , '.'" st re< ' l ' lve ' l l,l,l ,me of Evm-t --good clothing can be sold for. " p ' lat " l UdiM p ,UKI Child",n --~ Men « ami Boys Shoes. Prices are low j HEN'S SPRING SACK SUITS SML ,HE '« NALI,V <>■'<* at iO to $25 while the sto<>k U complete ami aflord* YOUNG MENS SPRING SACK SUITS, at 8 so tos2o. Headquarters for s Ihe ( orrict HA erdasheiy ai d . GentS Furnishings. , 1 Ha' !< r Spring and Summer A i BtuuDmiALßwm«Bsi.cJ nt <i widc r-inuc of lair prices riAiS AND CAPS | w«wY.ffc - wxmmj ' Jacob M. Wihton, MUNCV VALLEY, PA. No. 2 Folding ' Brownie A wonderfully capable and accurate camera built on the Kodak plan, j Good enough to satisfy experienced photographers, yet so simple that children can use it. k PICTURES 254 x 1 354~ inches. > Loads in daylight'with film Cartridges?* Fitted with meniscus lens, 1 and shutter with iris diaphragm stops. Fall description in Kodak Catalog FREE '? . at any photographic dealers or by mail. EASTMAN KODAK CO., Rochester, N. Y. I WINCHESTER 1 !;2 FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS | 'New Rival" "Lender" "Repeater" pS [I «F you are looking for reliable shotgurl am- I t II munition, the kiwi that shoots where you m point your gun, buy Winchester Factory f3 u Loaded Shotgun ohclis:*"New Rival," loaded with nj H[ Black powder; and*"Repeater," loaded with Smokeless, having Winchester jfl |r Factory Loaded Shell vVind accept no others. M r II ALL DEALERS? oCEEP THEM flj CJ- . KKI'ORT <>l the condition r>f The hll >t National Hank at Pushore. in the Htate iu close of business June Ism. UKsurncKH. b>a"s Mil'l discount* Sl.B**2lß 87 I . S Bonds to secure circulation "O.OUOOO Premium on I', s. \Uaids 1 V)Oofi <tock seemities, mmw h" n v t " v " l , . , '.too oo line from Banks andapprowd lies. Atfl. t>9.4»S t»l JjiMlenintion inl l<l \ , M. Special and l«egal Tender notes 22 '. 8* 23 Total Si:t,S «WT> 71 J.I A KfLlTlKs. Vapital $->O,OOOOO Surplus ami undivided profits 22 78*98 Circulation Ij'oooob De|«osits ;>.'4.2itf7H rolul IWV 5» 71 S ate of Pennsylvania County of Sullivan ss. I M D. Swans easliii • of the nhove named i)ink do solemnly swear tliat thenhove statement is ii ue to the U>tof my n<»\\ iedgt* and In-lit 112. . . , , M. I». s\\ AKTS. Cashier. StioKCill»ed and sworn to In-fore me thi>2th day of June P.HkJ. ALBERT K. HKKS* My commission \pires Kcby 27. W. Notar\ Public. Correct Attest: KG. SVLVAKIA. 1 J NO. l> Kl-.KnKK, Directors. s'AMI KL CULK. ) 7o" The Best place to buy goods Is olten askevl by the pru pent housewife. Money siving advantages i are always being searcl.ed lor j. Lose no time in making a thorough examination ot'lhe New Line of Merchandise Now on ?????? ? ? ? STEP IN AND ASK ABOUT THEM. All answered at Vernon Hull's Large Store. "HI ■grove. Fa. tab im TH«r. tr« •»<>*• fttrl'all PlllmiitU lh«n -»f my utkfi i I TWtl «• ICvuunt ml thctt nylf, »•*<! •** MrCaU'a Ma«aaia*!Tk* IMil iub»> rdMf 1 ih#n any <»h«# LnIH a «..»y »»>ii in it» ti ll* Cr««. Sui... hW i ? v&Si ■ * ** z «w».t .«4 I .I.l' (u. (.k• .i«4 m» M.I IIN. 'II m| HI Wol I ' " LEGISLATURE ADVOCATES OPPEiMHEIMER TREATMENT Special CommittijS of New York As sembly Recommends Its Adoption, by the State For the Reclama tion of the Drunkard. The relation of alcoholism to crime received serious consideration by t.h» senate and assembly in the state of New York during tbe session of the present year, I!XJS, the result being thf appointment of a special committee by tl»e Judiciary committee of the assern bty to investigate and report what they considered to be tbe best methods of dealing with tiie treatment of criminal inebriates. The report of the commit tee will Interest all classes. About 50 per cent of tbe convictions In the criminal courts of New York state are for Intoxication, the punish ment in many cases being a term in prison, where the offenders are treated j lis criminals. On the expiration of their sentences they are sent back to the community with tbe stigma of "convicts" or "jail birds" to seek a J livelihood as best they may. This treatment of inebria:is inhu mnn from a humanltariiri point of view and an enormous exp... .->e to the j staie in the maintenance of jails and | penitentiaries as well as by the sup- ! port of offenders while imprisoned. It : lias been recommended for several • y«ars past in various official reports that some action should be *t:ikeu by the state to better the condition of tlit criminal Inebriate and that he should bo furnished with some means by which lie could. If he so wished, be j come a temperate and law abiding citizen. Tbe special committee made n care ful and exhaustive Investigation into the various methods for the cure of al coholism brought to their njtice and reported as follows, In part: "In Ite Criminal Inebriates.—'The. official report of the stale commission ' of prisons for 1903 states: "The taxpayers of the statu are ar. ; nually subjected to large expense in tlio j arrest und rearrest of persons charged ] with drunkenness, and much of the time of our criminal courts is occupied in their I trial, and about one-half of the expense j of maintaining our jails and peniten- i tiaries Is caused hv the maintenance of this class of offenders during their term of commitment. When a man is intox icated his reason is dethroned for the timo ; being. It Is often necessary for ihe pre tcctlon of the public that he be taken into •aestody and receive treatment at the hand« of the state. This offense (drunk enness, shouid not be treated strictly as n crime. Drunkenness has In it no ele ment of mali c. The law should recognize this distinction. The present practice of i sending him to the jail or to the peniten- ! ttary brand'" as a ciiminal to eonsorl wltb thieves only degrades and dlsenur- 1 uses him and at the same time indicia punishment nd privation upon his fum lly. Rome wiser method of dealing wii'e this offense should obtain. "Pursuant to the above recommen dations, the committee have carefully considered the need of some action for the relief of these dependent and de linquent classes and aiso variolic meth oN of treatment of persons suffering frjiii alcoholism. Recognizing that many of these persons are suffering fr >m a disease, some form of med ical treatment should be given. "In the judgment of this committee tlie best treatment therefor is that of the Oppcnhoimei Institute, as it Is strongly indorsed and advocated b.v large number* of physicians and bu ;i --ness and professional men of standing, national repute and uuijues tioncd authority, the treatment itself being reported as prompt, effective and free from certain objections Inherent ill other systems. A further reason ' foi the selection of this treatment is vis especial adaptability to those classes spi -itied by the state commis sion of prisons and the Charity O" junization society 0:1 account of i!» • implicit/ of operation, no residence at •n institute being required, a;>d also because of its easy administration ir each city and count/ of the state. "Furthermore, carefully compiled re ports show that the Oppenbeimer 111 Btitnte lais already treated with marked success a ronsidi ruble uum b°r of thb .lass of inebriates, many of them at the instance of courts and pro batiou officers, both in New York state «nil elsewhere." The solution of tbe problem bad In mind by the committee as being at o'.ice Wore economical, more scientific and more humane may be shown by a sin NO LIFE, NO AMBITION, NO ENERGY. These are common expressions now a '• lays and the finger post that |«oint with unfailing accuracy to a nervous rubbed ol its vitality by over-ex-rtioi. •verst'ain or excess ol some kind. That anyone should allow litis condition to g<> '•n tc complete mental physical ori-exiisi lain as it surely must if neglected, is a positive crime when the cure is tit hand in Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve l'ills—n ilicine designed expressly ibr tins eon eilion—a medicine 11. Nt cures to stay cured by rcaupplyieg the veiv essential of '.lit—Nerve Force. Mrs. W. C. M.i-Mter of 2120 K till* St., Bloouihliurg, I'ti,, says: - '! was feeling very i>crvi»u« and ver\ ouch run down hint winter when I I>l, A. W. Chase's Nene rill - recoul mended lor siiuli a condition. i r 'oi 11 Im> nd tried them. They l.ave done lite i< world uI'IEOOtI, lulled up und strength elied i\t system jreneralb, made inv nerve* «tro- B and aleaih aed give me a n l'iv anil vigor. I'be ine.li. iiie i» n g0... (•it t'oraior and rebiiinlrr and I can fee ■*. llllillli it liiiflilv lo Mil voile ncejili|( k llho 1 er*e ami general lihikj.' i<»r a Tmu m .lenient or I»r. A. W. 1 h M.- li. in« •"> . lUiAalo. \, V. >,•«• 111 ii purtmu »M I s.jgtiaiure nl \ VV. l iiitce M. I*, ill) »«try pukagv gle illustration. The Philadelphia Even 1 lug Bulletin and the North Atnerisu" culled tha atteiitlou of their readers ro j s, ?<ian. a \eteran of the tJrund Army. 1 who hud spent most of lus time ioi thirty years in jail for drunkenness. He was then under his one hmalrtJ ( and eighth sentence in tlie house ol correction In Philadelphia for intoxi- ; cation. This attracted the attention of the Oppenbeimer physician, who vis- | ltetl the pri. 11 and with the consent of 1 the proper official brought the man un dor treatment. In twenty-four boun he was entirely free from his craving 1 find at the instance of the physician 1 was paroled. He came every day to j the Institute for his medicine and in ' four weeks was completely restored. Ilu has had 11 year and a linlf of good j health, lived as a peaeeabie, orderly citizen, a breadwinner and producer of values and kept bis family off the list j of public or privatfe charity. This is | the work that should be done for the j criminal inebriate in every state of the faloai. The free distribution of Diphtheria ! Antitoxin Inaugurated by Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, Commissioner of the,new State Department of Health, is already ! showing a splendid saving of precious ; j lives. Out of the total number of cases | reported to the Department of Health j j in January in which the free Antitoxin | was administered there were so few | deaths as to bring the death rate down j to 8.8 per cent. This was a reduction j of over 5 per cent, from the December figures. This low death rate as shown by the January records means that in stead of about 42 lives being lost out ; of every hundred cases of Diphtheria, ' as would be found where Antitoxin is | not used, the disease was able to claim only about nine victims. It means that instead of 420 deaths out of every .1000 cases of Diphtheria, the death rate is brought down by the free dis tribution of Antitoxin to SS. Health Commissioner Dixon feels confident that as the custom of free I distribution of Antitoxin becomes i more thoroughly established and the | physicians of the Slate use the serum i more promptly alter the onset of the I disease and in more liberal dases, the | death rate will go far lower. From city, town and country village 1 all over the big State or Pennsylvania I the physicians are sending in their re -1 ports that tell the story of little chil j dren stricken down by Diphtheria, and then of the arrest of the dread disease by the administering of the wonderful prophylactic—Antitoxin. Dread disease it hardly need be called any longer, for the hand of death that was for- I merlv thought to have the little child surely in its grasp, the moment that ' Diphtheria was diagonsed, has now lost its power. At the time that the State Depart ment of Health is supplying Antitoxin i for curative purposes, it is also fur- I nishing the scrum for immunizing. When the family physician is called Into the humble home and reads upon the child's throat the signs that to his practiced eye mean Diphtheria, he knows also that the little brothers and listers of the sick child have by this time probably been exposed to the I disease and may be stricken down at any moment. No need for him to wait and see if any of these other children develop the symptoms of the disease. He may immediately secure from the State's free distributing depots suffi cient Antitoxin to immunize every one of the little ones, and the older mem bers of the household, too. who have been exposed to the infection. It is now the aim of the Health Com missioner to impress upon the physi cians of the State the great import ance of cdmin'stering the Antitoxin in curative doses as si.on as possible af ter the onset of the disease, and tho immunizing doses as soon as it is known thai other children of the household have been in any way ex posed to the disease. The importance of this early use is shown very clearly in the clinical reports that the State Department of Health receives In cases where the free Antitoxin has been used. The January records show in more than one case that if the Anti toxin had been administered earlier, and in some cases more liberally, a life misht have been saved. P AIR SAN ¥) GAS or GASOLINE ENGINES. 1 here are many Gas and Gasoline Engines and 0> "FAIRBANKS" Some resemble it h. construction, others in name RUT THERE IS ONLY ONE FAIRBANKS ENGINE. Engine* that excel I in quality and moderate in co 'A riic.il'mm one to ttu hori>e power. Horizor,/al tl. l.orsc power ujv THE FAIRBANKS COMPANY 7Gi Arch St., PhiladelphU CHARLES L. WING, Agent, Lapoite To the P^Dle: Rich's Famous All Wool Sot j fallen into competition with . ; inferior article. The imitation j perfect that only an expert is al i detic. tin. counterfci' with its . ! and shoddy mixtures, until the |is put into service. [ nscrup' j competitors ai\ representing tliv ! as Rich's All Wool, thus dcce 1 the customer atui injuring our n t ion. To protect ourselves and the I in the future Rich's Socks w ill 1 Red Seal Trade Mark printe i White, a fac.simile of which is s' j above. Respectfully John Rich &, Brot Wool rich, Pa. | _ *>L Banking by Mai ; is simply a matter of dropping letter in the post office — Write f«r booklet telling how is done. We pay 3 per cent, interest savings, and a capital and surpli of $450,000.00 assure the safe of your money. LACKAWANNA COMPANY 404 Lackawanna Aveu'jc SCRAINTON, PA. Roya Baking Powdei i Is made of Grape Cream of Tartar. Absolutely Pun Makes the food more Wholesome and Delicious.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers