Sullivan republican. (Laporte, Pa.) 1883-1896, March 25, 1892, Image 2

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    W. M. CHBNE? - - - Editor.
F.UOAtf, MARCH 25tb, 1892.
E V RTFTTEI) A F POST-OFFICE, I.APOKTE
PA.. A»9RCOKD-CLASS MATTER.
J. V. RETTENBURY,
WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER,
DUSHORE, PA.
SULCI VAN COUNTY OFFICIAL
DIRECTORY.
H<>N. JOHN A. SITTSF.R, President Judge
p 0 address, Tunkhanuock, Pa.
lION. J NO. YONKIN. M. J. PIIIT,LTPS,
Associate Judges, P. 0. Address -Yohkin, Du.
shore—PHILLIPS, Muncy Valley, Pu.
A. LO'JAN UKIMM, District Attorney, P. 0.
addres l.al'orte, Pa.
A WALSH, Prothouotary, Register & Recor
der, P.O. address—LaPorte, Pa.
JOHN IJTZ. Sheriff, P. 0. address—Dushore.
Hon. RIISSEL KAItNS, Representative, P. 0.
address —LaPorte, Pa.
At. R. BLACK, County Superintendent, P.O.
address —Forksville, Pa.
WILLIAM MURRAY, County Treasurer, P.
O. address—LaPorte, Pa
8. K. MoBRIDE, W.J M. 'CBENKY, I). W.
SCANLIN, County Commissioners, P. 0. ad
dress— McBRIDE, ;tlills(irove, CHENEY-
I.a Porte, SCANLIN—Dushore. Pa.
R. M. STORMONT, Commissioners P.
O. address —LaPorte, Pa.
W. B. HILL, Coroner, P. 0. address—LaPorte.
CHRISTIAN CAbE.YIAN, O. S. SIMMONS,
Jury Commissioners, P. 0. address, —CASE-
MAN, Piatt—SIMMONS, Sonestown,,Pa.
G. C "WRIGHT, U. BIR.J, J. 11. SPENCEK,
Auditors.
NATHAN PERSI'N, County Surveyor, P 0
address —Dushore, Pa.
HUNTINGDON'S AMAZING
STORY TOLD IN DETAIL.
Boys and Men, Victims oi Insani
ty and Death, Alter the
"Solitary" ami the Lash.
HUNTINGDON, Pa., Jan. 21.
President Mahlon H. Dickinson and
Secretary Cadwalder Biddle, of the
State Board of Public Charities, ac
companied by Senator Francis A.
Osbourn arrived here this evening
from Philadelphia,'and were joined
by Western members of the board,
so that there will be no delay iu be
ginning to-morrow the investigation
of the alleged crulties.and barbari
ties toward inmates of the Hunting
don Reformatory as set forth in the
sworn testimony of boys who de
clare that theyjwere victims;] of the
most brutal treatment.
Aside from this evidence, the
Inquirer , which began and has fol
lowed up the deyelopements, origin
ating with the transfer from the in
stitution here to Moyamensing Pris
son, of ten boys. ground of
"Incorrigibility," all of whom have
pince been discharged from custody
by the Quarter Sessions Court of
Philadelphia,'now posseses an array
of facts which have been marshaled
for presentation during the investi
gation that will doubtless prove a
surprise to the officials of the Re
formatory.
There is every reason to believe
that this investigation, directed by
Governor Pattison upon the request
of Senator Osbourn and based main
ly upon the evidence of Jacob John
eon, Fdwavd Conlan and William
Woods, will perforce become of the
most sweeping character; that it
will not stop with the cases that
have already appeared in the public
prints; but that it will have to take
in some charges even more astound
ing than the chaining up, the wliip
plng and the blackjacking of young
prisoners sent here for a first offense.
(Senator Osbourn, it should be said
had not intended taking part in the
hearings here, though invited to do
BO by the board, both because of his
personal and professional engage
ments, preferring to wait until
Wednesday of next week, when the
investigation, it is expected, will be
continued in Philadelphia.— l>\*
quirer.
Till: BAKER BALLOT LAW.
Its Constitutionality Being Test ed
Before a Scranton Court.
SCRANTON March 20.—The case
of Ezra 11. Kipple and others
against the Lackawanna county
Commissioners, in which the plain
tiff prays for injunction restraining
the Commissioners from complying
with the requirements of the Baker
ballot law, was argued yesterday b<>-
fjre Judges Archbald, Connelly and
Gunster. City solicitor Burns and
P. P. Smith represented the plaintiff.
County Solicitor Knapp and Charles
K. Binney. secretary of the Ballot
Reform Associttion of Philadelphia,
appeared for the county.
The attacks made upon the law
all went to prove that it was uncon
stitutional. First, because it
is especial legislation, inas
much as it does not provide for
elections to vote upon questions of
increase of corporate debt, etc., and
is therefore not uniform. Second,
it does not apply to all voters alike,
for it divides them into three classes
the first being those who belong to
a party that cast over three per
cent, of the total vote, the second
being those who belong to a party
that cast less than three per cent, of
the total vote, and the third is the
body of independent voters who
have no party allegiance. The law
legislates differently for each of
these classes and is therefore, not a
uniform law. Again it was held
that the law is unconstitutional for
the reason that it confers judicial
powers on ministerial officers; con
veys legislative powers on officers'
organization and bodies possessing
neither legal nor certain existence ;
it is uncertain in its provisions, ap
application and operation, and the
subject of the act is not cleaily
stated in its title.
The defense set by Mr. Binney
and Mr. Knapp was that the law is
perfectly right, proper and constitu
tional and a public blessing "with
which it would be a crime to inter
fere. In rebutal they claimed that
the law is not special in the sense
indicated by the opposing counsel,
and that it provides for all elections
the provision being to the effect that
elections to decide questions of in
crease of corporate debt, adopting a
city charter etc., are by the direction
of the Constitution conducted in a
like manner to the municipal elec
tions lor which the Baker law pro
vides. Mr. Binney spoke for two
hours, during which time he made
a full exposition of the ballot reform
law. The court took the papers and
reserved its decision.
(il ITLAI mtrXK W IIEN HUNG.
Given a I urge Bono or Brandy by
tiie Doctors to Brace flini Up.
WASHINGTON, -March 20.—Tilden,
former chemist at the National
Medical Museum, speaking of Gui
teau. President Garfield's assassin,
and that the assassin went to the
scaffold in a semi-drunken condi
tion.
"Mhis," added the doctor, "was a
necessity. You are aware that
when a squad of soldiers entered
the jail rofunda a short while before
the exection, and came to order
arms, with a loud bang, Guiteau
fell over in a dead faint.
"His nervous system was shatter
ed, and the physicians felt they
would be unable to get him to the
scaffold. A consultation was held
I and it was decided to give him a
dose of brandy. This was done and
he got a big dose too. Not beir.g
used to drinking the dose went to
his head, and his 'oh, Lord' song on
the scaffold, was, in my estimation,
a drunken effusion."
COVERED WITH SKELETONS.
Nan Nicholas Island and Its tirue
some Story.
Prom the San Francisci Examiner.
On t'.ie lonely wind-swept Island
of San Nicolas, eighty mileß of the
coast of Ventura county, where as
far back as the memory of
man runs, hundreds of grisly white
skeletons have dotted the valleys
and hillsides, local archaeologists are
now gathering the relics of a strange
extinct race.
The island is ten miles long and
oval in shape, being four miles
across at the widest part. Strange
utensils of serpentine, sandstone
and steatite are found there among
the human bones, and the isjaud
and its erswhile inhabitants have a
history so curious that it is difficnlt
of comprehension.
In 1835 the padres of Santa
Barbara, learning that there were
but sixteen of the strange Indian
race then living there, determined
to rescue them from the island.
They went over in a sloop and suc
ceeded, as they thought, in getting
all on board. At the last momenj
an Indian woman returned for her
child, and of the frequent storms of
the channel islands springing up,
the sloop was driven away without
her. The sloop went on the rocks of
Point Concepcion aud all on board
were lost.
Sixteen years later Captain
George Gideyer aud two men went
from the coast on a sloop to hunt
otter off San Nicolas. On landing
they were, like Crusoe, astonished
to discover huraxn footprints in the
sand. They saw no one, however,
a storm compelled them to put to
sea.
It was two years thereafter that
the adventurous captain, revolving
in bis mind of the foot
prints in the uncanny island, de
termined togo and discover and
bring over the lonly woman of
whom he had vaguely heard. MGD
accompanied him, and at length
they saw on the surf beaten shore a
woman with long tawny hair,
dressed in a queer garb of colored
blrdskins, and scraping, with a
bone-knife, the blubber from a seal."
They surrounded and approached
her stealthily, and although sud
denly confronted, she did not ap
pear to be afraid, but smiled, and
then falling on her knees prayed to
the sun. The wild woman offered
no objection when by signs she was
made to understand that she was
togo with them in the boat.
They leached Santa Barbara,
across the rough sea, and the first
tiling the Indian woman saw was Dr.
S. L. Shaw, now 80 years old and
yet living there, riding a horse. She
had never seen nor heard of any ob
ject like it and thought the man and
horse were one, and ehe knelt on
the shore and offered her devotions
to it. Two weeks afterward the last
inhabitant of rock-ribbed, tempest
tossed San Nicolas died from eatinsj
food to which she was unaccustomed,
furnished by her rescuers, and the
curtain fell on her strange race for»
ever.
Wild dogs had eaten her child.
Iler dress of red and blue feathers,
a wonderful creation of barbaric
hands, was sent to the l'opc of
Rome. Relic hunters have gathered
motars, pestles, olla9, toy steatite
canoes and other curious things
there for some years past and ship
ped tlieui to various Eastern and
European universities. Skeletons
and part* of skeletons have also
been collected in large numbers,
but today the bones of thousat ds
of Indians are scattered about there.
Some lie face down, indicating that
they have fallen in battle. There
arc so luany human relics there that
San Nicolas is known as the "Isle
of Skulls."
"The lonly island, whose highest
part is but 1,040 feet above the sea,"
said a resident of Ventura last night,
' is noted for the high nrUsiic class
of many of its relics. Had the
woman rescued, then 52 years old,
not died a stor3' passing strange
would no doubt have been told of
the race so long hemmed in by the
waste of waterß about. As it is,
much of the strange story is shroud
ed in mystery forever.
ESTELLA ITEMS.
W. W. Boyle, is still confined to
his bed.
Seth Griffin of Canton, WHS in
town, Friday.
Uncle Sam Norton of Bai'e Moun
tain, is very sick.
Miss Viola Plotts, has returned
home from Hilled rove.
C. B. Jennings and R. B. Plotts
made a flying trip to Dushore, Fri
day night.
S. W. Brown has gone to work for
A. Q. Little. Seth is a very in
dustrious boy.
M. E. Middaugh drives the finest
horse in town. He says: Black's
bay will have to take second prize
next Fall.
Lost:—One red calf, on the road
between Hills Grove andEstella; the
finder will be liberally rewarded by
returning the same to Frantz Bein
lich.
The Farmers' Institute, held at
Forksville last week, was a grand
success. It is something that every
firmer should take an interest in
and put their shoulder to the wheel
and help roll the old farm wagon
along.
C. B. Jennings drove his team
from Canton to Forksville, distance
24 miles in two hours and forty
minutes and he says, he did'nt think
it worth while to put it in the paper
until he saw what one IlillsGrove
team had done.
Rix.
SONESTO WNITTEJIS.
Our town is moving along about
as usual.
Several persons in town and vicini
ty are on the sick list, among which
are Samuel F. Eddy, Mrs. Leroy
Steinbach and A. W. Sones. Hope
thej T will all soon be well.
Squire, when is the sidewalk
going to be repaired ?
Our stores arc all doing some
thing this spring.
You can find something at Bodine
& Warn's that you can't find else
where.
The Medicine Show that lelt our
town over a week ago, did a thriv
ing business while hero.
Ask J. W. Buck and George
Stackhouse about the new citizens
of Sonestowu. Who'll be next ?
We hear that S. L. Boone expects
to leave our town, this spring, and
then we shall miss his smiliiig
countenance on our streets.
Both of our Ministers who preach
here, are returned to us for another
year, and we believe the people are
well satisfied with their return.
The interest in the Eagles Mere R.
R., has somewhat cooled off, not so
much talked of. Everyone pre
diets its speedy completion as soon
as spring opens.
S.
Every little while some new law is
discovered in Pennsylvania which
no one knew anything about before.
Down in Elk county says an ex
change, a jury found a man not
guilty of assault with intent to kill
on the ground that he was insane
when the ollense was committed ;
whereupon the Court sentenced him
to the Western penitentiary, to le
main as long as he was of unsound
miud. The judge says there is a
law, passed before insane asylums
were in existence, and still unrepeal
ed, by which lunatics may lie sent
to the penitentiary. It would have
been better for the prisoner h id the
jury found him guilty, for the
sentence would have been only for a
few years, whereas now he may have
to remain in prison during the term
of his natural life.
A J'ATiUUi l'J WOItK.
Kvery j etoon who Is oj } oced to Trade
Slavery ami favors American Industr.ai Inde
pendence secured through the policy of Pro
tection, should read the documents published
by the American Protective Turiff League. As
a patriotic cl:lzeu it is your duty to place theso
documents in the haiuls of your friends. They
are Interesting and instructive, aud embrace
discussions of ull phases of the Tariff question.
The l«eußue publishes over 50 different docu
ments, coMiprhOiK nearly WO pago* of plainly
priuuu, carefully edited aud reliable informa
tion. Aznoojg the authors of these documents
rre, Ren. J .r:n G. Hialne: Win. -ftcKinlev, Jr.,
Govern- r«»i OiiiO; Senator S. .M. Culloin, of Illi
nois; Senator .loneph N. Uolph, of Oregon:
He iut«»r A. S. Paddock, of Senator
Ff ve.of Maine; Senator' "asey,of XorthDakota;
Senator Justin 8. Morril, of Vermont; Senator
N»" •"•! \y. \.*dt!cU, ««f Hhode Island; Hon.
Thomas 51. Oudlny. t-f New Jersey; lion. Kobett
P. r.Tic>\ - I Wniditiiptori; I'rot. J. P. Dodge,
of tiso Afericu.tui.il I'epurtii't nt at Washing
ton; Ooiuiuoc ue V. . IJ. T. Unites; lion E. A.
llurr&horr, N"w V« rk ; ConKr**sn>an Dollivor.
or Iowa; ll«-ii B. K. Jones: I)av»d Hail it eo. of
H >S(OTI; Kr-Oivnpre*sma:l Perkins, of Kaiihas.
Dr.K. I*. Mu tor, o/ New Yofi« ; lion.Geo |»rap r
of Mass.: Ilrm. C. L. Edvi rds.of Texas; .l - d •
Win. l,awref>«e. of OIuo; Hon. I). (». llarvn ; .
of New Writ; lion. Ge ». S. i'. mrwell, of
ll«»n. K. 11. Aniniiriown, of Jtcw York: Knoch
Knsley.of Tennessee.
This complete eet of documents trill be sent
to any address, post paid, for Fifty iSO) Cents.
Address, Wilbur F. Wnkeman, Sec'y, No.
West Twenty-Third Street. New York.
• npHE ItIPANS TABULES regulate the stomach, #
• J. liver aud bowels, purify the blood, are pleat*- ft
• ant to take, safe and alwavrtelfectual. A reliable •
2 remedy for liihouaness. Blotches on the Face, •
7 Bright a I>isc&«e. Catarrh, Colic, Conntipation, •
x Chronic Diarrhoea. Chronic Liver Trouble, Dia- #
x betes, l>i»ordered Stomach, DizzmesH, Dysentery, J
Z Dynpepftia, Eczema, Fiatulenee. female Com- X
Z nl':unts, Foul Breath, Headaehe, lieartbum. Hives, Z
+ Jaundice, Kidney Complaints, Liver Troubles, X
• IAJSS of Appetite, Mental Depression, Nausea, m
• Nettle ftaah,! I'ainful Diges- Z
• tion, l'lrrplcs, Rush of Blood •
• to th* Hea d, Hallow Com- #
5 plezion, Salt Kheum, Scald 9
5 Head, Bcrof- uia,Sick Head- 2
2 ache. Skin Diseases, Sour 2
0 Stomach,Tirod Ket ling .Torpid X
• Liver, Ulcers, Water Brash 2
• aud every other symptom •
• nr (liwflWthfltl Iroaiiltw from •
2 impure blood or a failure in the proper perform- 2
2 anceof their functions by the stomach, liver and 2
X intestines. Persons given to over-eating are ben- X
X eflted by taking one tabule after each meal. A X
Z continued use or the Kipans Tubules is the surest X
cure for obstinate constipation. They contain A
0 nothing that can be injurious to tha most deli- 2
• cate 1 gross $2, 1-2 gross $1.25. 1-4 gross 75c., #
• 1-24 gros:i 15 cents. Sent by mall postage paid. •
• Address THE KIPANS CHfclilCAL COMPANY, #
• P. O. Box 672. New York. •
•••#••••••••••••••••••••*••*••«••«
Hllfr.ltl FF\S SAI.K.
By virtue of n writ of Lev Fa. issued out of
the Court of Common Pleas of Sullivan county,
nnd to ine direc'i d ami deliv* red. there will
be exposed to public fale at the Court liouf>e,
in LaPorto, P». t on Saturday, Mutch 2<«tb
at 1 o'cl< ck p. w. y the following described re il
estate, to wit :
All that certain lot or piece of land in
Shrewt-bury township, Bullivaii county, Peuna.,
in the village c: EaglcsMt rc, bunded on the
Noitb by lot of Mcndenhall; on the Kast bv an
alley; on the South by lots of the tiaglesMere
L.ind Company, and on the West by Mary
Ariman lot; being about 55 feet by 180 feet;
and being about 110 feet South of Allegheny
Avenuj. Having ihureon erected a large
frame barn.
billed, taken in execution and to be snld as
the property of Geo. H. Mendenhall, at the
suit of A. 0. Little.
JOHN UTZ, Hixb Sheriff.
She.iff's office. La Porte, Pa., March let 1892.
SHERIFF'S N.4LE.
By virtue of a whit of Vend. Ex. issued out
of the Court o r Common Plea* of Sullivan
c<-untv and to me directed and delivered, there
will be exposed to public sale at th« Dushore
House in the borough of Dushore, Pa., on
FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1892,
at 11 o'clock a. m..the folljwing described
real efta'e to wit:
A lot, piece and parcel of land lying and
being in the towu.-hip of filkl.tnd, county of
Sullivan and State of Pennsylvania, bo inded
and described as follows, vii
Beginning at a post and stones c »rncr of
Fred Knsbickh's 1 ind on the tract line; thenoe
on said line by land of Jonathan Rogers, norta
574 degrees W. 83 rods to a post corner of
Mr*. I. K, Brown's land; thence on line of
same, ?ou:h 34 decrees w $t 94i r »ds to a stone
corner ol W, T. More's land; ihonca by his land
south 57| degrcs east 82 rods to a stone bet
for a corner on line of said Kosbach's thence
alorg his line, north 31J dogrecs east, 94$ rjda
to the plaoe of beginning; containing 48 acres
and 126 perches strict uieasnre, more or less.
Foity-t!»ree acres improved and in good state
of cultivation, balance timber land; having
erected t'lereon good two-story frame dwelling
house, frame barn and other outbuildings; go id
apple orchard and other fruit trees thereon.
Seised, taken into execution and to bn sold
at the suit of Chancy B. Wheatky (use) vs
Thomas Wbe.ittay
JOHN FTZ. High Sheriff.
SheiifFs office, LaPorte, March 11, 1892.
OUR MOTTO"!
What doeß it mean ?
Square Doaling.
With less it would be folly to
be content, for more than that it
ia unreasonable for 30U to ask.
Look out for ihe man that says he
will give y»u something for
nothinir. he will do no such thing.
We don't do anything of the kind,
we don't even pretend to, we will
give you as good as you can get
elsewhere for your money and
better than you can get in most
places. We have no use for silly,
meaningless arguments. It is us
much to your interest to deal with
us as it is to ours.
New goods are constantly ar
riving and you will be pleased
with the style and finish of the
goods as well as the price we have
put on them. Come in and see
them.
Respectfully yours,
J. V. RETTENBURY,
DUSHORE. PA
SPECIAL .
UH!
HU I COLE
OF Dushore are headquarters
for all kinds of hardware—
Tools, pumps, stoves nnd
ransres, house furnishing
goods paints, oils, «n i
varmbhes. Special induce
ments to builders.
MANUFACTRES of copper, tin
aud sheet-irou-war<\ Roof
ing. spouting HIHCII OIL
DISTII.LS etc,, a specialty. Our
prices are beyond all compe
tition, and we invite your
patronage.
tlLLiSii'.L Si i,u.
HMQDARTERS "
FOR
SUITS MADE TO ORDER.
C. F. HE'i'LER & CG. PROP'S.
11U*HOKE, I*A.
We guarantee perfect fit and constant
ly keep on hand a coodly supply of
tlie latest style of ctoth, from which
you can select. Our prices ure tlie
lowest. We ere also n ent for the
>V ilkes-Barrc ftteum Dye AVorks.
C F HEYL£R & CO
Merchant Tailor.
MAIN ST., DISJIORK, I»A.
Me. 7-91.
Diicicy Co.
DONLEY BROTHEIIB, I'ItOrBIETOUS.
STEAM MARBLE JK GBAMTE
WORKS.
MANUFACTCKEUS OF MOM M liNTA 1.
AND CEMETKRY WOltK, JX ALL
KINDS OF MAHBLE AND UI'.ANITE.
In b'.iyinjr diicittofG. E. DONA n OK
(ieueral Agt. yo» will save the mid
dlemen's profit, as we manufacture
all our work from tlie stone
aud give our customers the benefit
which the mid die men receive.
WORKS AT
NEWARK VALLEY, N. Y., AUBURN,
N. Y-, vxi) DLSDOKE, PA.
G. E. DONAHOE General Aprt.
DUSHOHE, .... FEN N A,
CROWN ACME
Ills Best Eu/fliag Oil that Can lie
Made Irom PetrDleum.
It gives a brilliant light.
It will not smoke the chimney
It will not char the wick.
It has a high fire test.
It will not explode.
It is without comparison as H
perfection Family Safety Oil.
It is manufactured from the finest
crude in the most perfectly equi|>ped
refineries in the world.
IT IS THE BEST.
Ask your dealer for
CROWN AOME.
Trade order 3 filled by
ACME OIL Co.,
Williamsport Pa.
LOGAN GRIM,
ATTORNEY AND SOLICITOR,
Laporte, Pcnn'a.
Land Titlcn and Equity practice a specialty.
opposite LAPORTE HOTEL.
WILLIAMBPORT AND NORTH BRANCH
Railroad. In effect Mondav, June 16 'VI
l |f> I 4 2T"
N. 1 N. STATIONS. S. 3
P- M. A. M. A M. M.
i25 10 0a A..WiH'miporU.L 948 424
SIB «6« ...Montoursville.... V56 4 m
5 o- 1 V44 L Halls A JUO7 448
S. ! s. N. K.
4 985 A Halls L 10 1U SPS
437 8 32iL....Penijsdale 10 18 6OS
4 30, 9 20;..0pp'« Crossing. 10 10 615
425 9 20i....Hui£hcsville.... 11 1 25 520
4 16j « 11 ...Pictureßocks... 10 34 529
412 9 07>....Lyon's Mi 11.... 10 38 63S
4HI 905 hamouni...,i. 10 40 535
40" 8 581....G1en liowr 10 47 &42
3 sli' 8 51.Krlkins io f>4 549
3 581 848 ....Strawbridgc..;. 10 57 862
3 50; 845 ....Beech Gico.;.. 11 00 555
3 47 1 8 42|...Mnrcy Valley... il 031 558
340 8 3i;..,..Sonestown 11 10 605
3 351 8 301 Hlidtwill 11 l.s 610
325 8 201....L0ng 8r00k.... II 2£>j 620
3 20; 815 Norduiont 11 3«| 625
At Picturo Hocks stages connect to and from
Highland Luku.
At Munoy Valley stages connect to and from
EaglesMero and Forksville,
At Nordtnent stages connect to and from La-
Porte, Dushore. and Towanda.
REN.J. U. WELCH, tie..era! Manager.
Hughesviile, Pa.
Headquarters For Suits Mail
TO ORUEK.
C. A. HESS, Prop.
SONESTOWN, PA.
I gusrantee perfect fit and constantly keep
on hand a goodly supply of the latest style
of samples from which you can select.
My prices are the lowest Repairing,
cleaning and pressing done on short notice.
C. A. HESS,
MERCHANT TAILOR.
Main St., Sonestown, Pa.
Jan. 8-1)2.
LaPorte Bank.
LAPORTE, I'A.r
Do a general Banking & Collecting
business. Any business intrusted to
us will lie carefully attended to.
Agents for Steamship Tickets to
and from all parts of Europe, and
for Fire Insurance Companies.
J. ALFRED JORDAN, CASHII-R
RUSH J MCHCJIRY M~ DBF*
MEDiCAL DOCTOK I'HYSICIAJN, AXD
SURGEON AXD DOCTOK OF
DENTAL SURGERY.
Dentistry a Specialty. Vitilized air
for the Painless Extraction of'J'eeth.
OEKICK IN UARfc.l *8 BLOCK, MAIN 81. DUBUOAJS PA #
DUSHORE AND NWROMONT
STAGE LINE.
F. M. C ROSSLEY , Proprietor
UNTIL IITHEK NOTICE STAGES
WILLRIX OX IOLLOWIKUSCHEDT'LE
Lea\e Laporte at 6:15 a ni. lor Nordmont
Airivi* at Noidmont 7:.'< or. IU
Leave Noidinont ut 11:15 a. m.for Lapoite
Ai rive lit Lap rte 1:00 |». in.
1 eave L:i| oiteat 5:00 p. tu. for Nordmont
Arrive at Nordmont fi:3o p. m.
Leave Norduiont a' 7:00 p. in.for Laporte
Ar.'i»e ut Laporte 8:30 pin.
L uve Lapoi te a* 8 a. m.for Dnshore
Leave Dut-horj at p. m> for LaPorte
Sawed Shincjles
The best in the iaarket and
at low bottom prices
'l liree grades constantly on hanil
Will deliver if desired.
Write—S. MEAD,
Ma\ 23' DO. LaPorte, Pa.
T. J. & F. H. INOBAU
Attorneys at Law,
LaPorte, Peuna.
Legal Business attended to in this
and adjoining (Jounfi.'S
Telephone communication direct
January, 1888-
•JiJV»ENRY X. DOWNS,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Ex-Prothonotary, Register A Recorder of Sull.Co*
;©&-offi(*e in Court House, LaPorte Pa.
HOTEL KENNED 1 12, LAPORTE
DARBY KENNEDY. Proprietor.
Everything First Class.
Charges Reasonable. March 7, '9O"
CAKMODY HOTEL, DUSHORE.
MIKE ARMODY Proprietor,
Even thing First CUss.
Charges Reasonable. Jan. 31, '9O.
MJCKLEN'S ARNICA SALVE.
The Best Salve io tlie world for Cut«. Bruises,
Sure?, Ulcers, SBU Kheuin, Fiver Sores, Tetter,'
Chapped Hands, chilblains Ci>rns, and all Skin
Eruptions, and positively cures Piles. or no pay
require!. It ia guurai t«.*ed 112 ati.-faction, or
mum-y refunded Trice 26 gents per box. For"
sale hy Ponieruy, Dusliore, aud A. E Botoibid
Nurd nont.
IArORIE nOThU
J K. KMtSS, Propri.itoii.
A largo am' coi«unodi' us hou»e, possos
hiuH ail tlid attributes of a krst-class hotel
The Hut id well supplied. The patrouag*
9t (lie public r<.woc:fully Holioitod. .