Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, January 04, 1906, Image 3

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    112 "IKST NATIONAL BANK
OF DUSIXOEE, PENN'A.
VI TAJ. - - ff 50.000
PURFI.U3 - - SIO,OOO
Does a General Banking Business.
S. I>. STKRKiKIIIC, M. L>. SWAKTB.
President. Cashier
J. BRADLEY,
Attorney at-Law.
Ollice, corner 4 ot Main and Muncv Sts.
LArOK'I'E, V\.
Having opened an otlice at 1328 Arch
St., Philadelphia. I shall still continue to
practice in the several Courts of Sullivan
Couutv.- When not in my oftic person-lily
a cotiipet.nl person will he found in
charge thereof. Bonds ot various kinds
furnished.
j-RANCISW. MEYLERT,
A t tor noy-rtt- La w.
_flice in Keeler'n Block.
LArOIITE, Sullivan County, T'A.
Hush J. Thomson, Albert I'. Heesa,
1871. 1»02.
THOMSON & 11 HESS,
LAWYERS,
DUSIIOItK, I'ENNA.
1,, intr I >i-i!ince/l'ele| hone.
January 1, 1903.
T J. & F. H. INGHAM,
s »
ATT.HtNi'VS A r LAW,
\ iv- r.-• ntlemiori to
in this and aborning counties
_ A PORTE,
r J. MULLEN,
Atto."«ey-at-Law.
LAI'OKTK. PA.
OPKICK ii* <'reNrv neibDiito
SPA" rorsT Rons*.
T Ti. ckomn,
V *
ATTORN KV-AT -I.AW,
UOTAHY VUBUC.
OVFIOB UNH \l* -;Tr teKT.
DTIBIIOHR. _ 1A
O~J~ MOLYNEAUX, D.D.S. j
V, ,
Graduate University of I'onnsylvsima- |
X li\V A I,!'. A NY, PA.
At Lopez, i'.'., Wednesday and Thursday j
week.
LA PORTE HOTEL.
j.-, w, UiVLLAGHEK, ] J rop
Newly erected. Opposite Court j
house square. Strain he:'.!, b.itli rooms,
hot and cold water, reading and pool
room.and barber shop; also good stabling
and livery,
, uMUCNCKIi KKl'Olil • • t!.«■ < liii.iiiiun oil'ln
v.. National Hank at lmshcnv. in tin* Mate
of at el»o of busim» Nov.
luor>.
KJiSntKCKS.
Loan, and discount* *««)
1 s. It.ui.is t.. secure circulation , i i
Premium <m t\ ». Bond* -."'SSooo
Stork securities Soo So
lumiture ■•••• ,
line I'mm Hllllk* Uli'l nppniv.-d i.es. Ast. 1.1 >■>! 'I
Kcdcmptiou iunil I". s. Ticasuier ,
a|K.-i iul and Leßtil Tender notes - u - l,;i1
Total SJKv'.'.U .'!!>
LIABILITIES, __
. i..0.(.iX) («
surplus ami undivided jirofils
< iri-iilali.ill Ju,
Dividends unpaid „.
IH-lKisits
Total 4111i,39t 39
Slate of Pennsylvania County m Sullivan ss.
1 M I) Swarts cashier nl the a liovc uiuned
bunk do solemnly swear that the iilmve statement
is tine to the best of my knowledge im-l .«-nel.
M. U. SWA UTS t'asiner. _
Suhsetihed and sworn to before I,u ' '^ s '
day of Ann, P.Hfi. AI.ISKUT I". Ul-.I.SS.
Mv cominission expires l-Vey -V.Not.tr> 1 uolic.
Correet Attc.-t:
E. 0. SVLVAUIA. )
.IN(i. |i UKKSKK. Inreelois.
SAMI'I-X COLIC, )
For a we!i Kept
Up-to-date
Stock of
Merchandise
Far pries that ar
Right
For curteous treatm nt
(
Busch'hausen'
his strip is manufacturedun«lera U.S.patent
and is the neatest, strongest and most durable
window shade holder on the market, and we
guarantee it to be as represented or money re
♦anded. The price, Kxpress j-aid, to all points in
Pa., Md., Del., N.J. and N.V.Oue Dollar per doz*
tther states sl.2i>. Your order soliciteo.
»OHN A PARSONS A CO. Catawissa. Pa,
I-sisiSSrup Xq PICS 'aaiij U| ss(-|
•pooo S9ISEX diuAs qanoo )s»a w
SIIVJ 351311V 3U3HMS3UnO *
if County L-at \
L Local and Personal Events ]
Tersely Told. j
Mrs. Mike Flynn who litis been
very ill, is sii»bly improved.
Mrs. A. J. Bradley and daughter,
I Kdna nr<' visiting friends at Lopez.
F. M. Crossley and daughter Mar
gnruitf spent New Year Day with
friends in Columbia county.
Lewis (Jumble has moved his
moved Ins family from this place to
I'ieture Hocks, where he has em
ployment ilia blacksmith shop.,
Mr. Tom Sheean and sister Annie
are spending the winter with their
sister Mrs. Kdward Flynn, while her
husband is in Mississippi.
Miss Julia lUirns of Mildred spent
a few days of last week with the
; Misses (laliagher.
Miss Trisken Buschhausen of St.
j Basil's school, Onshore, spent her
: vacation with her parents here.
Mrs. 1, It. lJussler and little son
| are visiting her husband's parents
I at Ilugliesville.
Mrs. Irene Spangenburg of llick
etls, is visiting iier parents, Mr. and
: Airs. (Jeorge ltose.
The infant daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Flynn was very ill last
week with a gathering in its head,
but is now better.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Eddy of
Wilkisßarre spent Christmas with
relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. F. \V. Meylert
spent Christmas with Captain Chase
and family at Lagles Mere.
Attorney and Mrs. Mullen and
Miss Julia O'Donovan spent Christ
; in.is witii relatives at Say re.
Fred Shannaba-eher of Forks
ville i> snivel ing with scarlet fever.
! there are two other cases in the
| same village.
Airs (Jeorge Snyder of Lestersliire
,X. V., is .-.pending several weeks
: with In-r parents, Mr. and Mrs.
j'harles Landou.
Mr. Jacob Wliiton of Muncy Val
ley, visited Mr. Jacob Ilerr on
Thursday.
I'he Home Mutual Life Insurance
Company meets at Forksville, Jan
uary iith liitlti.
C. L. Woodward, editor of the
Sullivan Star, was a Laporte visitor
Wednesday.
Miss Hazel Hansel h is returned to
Williamsport after spending a week
with her patents tit this place.
Miss Mary by Kddy of New Alba
ny spent her Christmas vacation at
her home beie.
The engagement of Miss Alma T.
Lauer to Hev. l'lugene A. Ileim has
been announced. The wedding to
take place next summer.
llev. T. 1", Hippie is holding re
viva! services at Kaglos Mere. The
trustees of the A'aptist church of that
place have very kindly given the
us.- uf their church in which to con
duct services.
There will he a "Dime Social"
held at the home of T.J. KeelerV,
Saturday evening, January (i, under
1 lie auspices of the Ladies' A id Socie
ty of the baptist church. A most
cordial invitation is extended to all.
Prof. Harris Spotts, principal of
tiie Muncy Normal School, walked
out of a bedroom window in his sleep
at his home. His only injury was a
sprained ankle.
John Ward, of Halston, a brake
man on the Susquehanna and New
railroad, while trying to stop his
train was accidentally struck in the
eye by the brake wheel, lie will be
laid up for some time.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hackley are
suffering injuries received in fall
ing. Mr. Hackley's injuries consists
of a badly bruised knee, and Mrs.
Hackley who was just recovering
from injuries received by a previous
fall, sprained her wrist in falling
while out for a walk last Saturday. |
Mr. Simeon 7/reiger with his son
Carl and daughter Kdna, left here
Wednesday morning and started on
i their way to Median Junction Miss.,
; where they will all have employ
ment.
Alfred A. Cole, youngest son of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Cole, died
! Thursday evening, December 28,
: aged years, ten months and
' ten days. In September last be suf
fered an attack of typhoid lever,
which was followed by tubercular
trouble, and for fifteen weeks he had
, been u gr-at sufferer. The funeral
and interment was on Sunday.
Miss Josephine Colt of Wyalusing,
who is a sister of Mrs. E. V. Ing
ham of Eagles Mere, where she is
well known, went to East Orange,
N. J. last week where she litis a (im
position as assistant matron in the
orphan asylum at tnat place.
Mrs. Jerome Heed of Laporte
township is in a sanitarium at Home
N. Y., where she was operated on
for tiie removal of a large cune»v.
1 ler condition is serious as the c.tii
i eer was of the most malignant km'
John 11. Furrell, father of County
Treasurer Earrell, one of the oil
residents of Onshore, died at his
home, Tuesday morning, aged 75
years. Funeral services will beheld
at Ml. Basil's church to-day (Thursday)
at 1(1 o'clock A. M.
Assistant Postmaster, Milton
Botsford, of Nordmont. has a queer
looking net made of a hag and an
iron hoop, as a souvernir of a- rob
bery recently in which he was the
victim. The highwaymen ap
proached him stealthily in a lonely
place, threw the net over his head,
jerked liini oft' his feel and took a
box containing S2OO.
Mrs. Sohina Mullen, wife of
Martin Mullen, of Overton town
ship. Bradford county, died I>-
cember 2S, Mrs. Mullen was a
native of county Mayo, Ireland,
she married Martin Mullen in INSO,
and with her husband located on it
farm near Overton. She leaves to
mourn her loss, a husband, a son.
Atty. E. J. Mullen, of this place and
a daughter, Mrs. John Walsh of
Kingdale.
The State Supreme Court, Tuesday
granted a new trial I" Charles John
son, who was convicted of inu ,- der in
the first degree for killing his sister
in-law, Margaret Johnson, and her
niece, Anna Benjamin, aged ten j
years, on September I*, liml, at
their home near Towanda, Bradford
county. Bigler .Johnson, brother of
Charles, and lu.shand of the murder
ed woman, was hanged on July
last, for participation in the crime.
With every synipton of hydro
phobia. Joe Alley, a Syrian died a
terrible death at West Berwick,
last Tuesday night at ten o'clock,
lie was bitten by a dog last sum
mer during the dog days. The dog
is still living and was not mad at.
the time he attacked the young
man. It is said that tlie bog also
bit another man about the same
time.
If any one is laboring under tin !
impression that bears are becoming
extinct in this county, their theory
may easily be disproved by an occur,
ance near Forksville the other day.
Mr. Sturdevant who lives on the
Dr. Randall farm near that village
took his dog and gun and started out
on a fox hunt, but before he had
gone far from the farm he encoun
tered a whole family of bears which
were enjoying a ramble through
the woods. Mr. Sturdevant, whore
first thought was to commit a wliol
sale murder, went about the work
very deliberately and soon had the
largest one and one of the smaller
bears corpses at Ins feet. He then
went after the other two and suc
ceeded iu wounding one, but it
made its escape, and the fourth one
got away unbanned. Mr. Sturde
vant found it necessary togo for a
horse and wagon to get the largest
bear home.
Services in M. E. church, Sunday
evening, at 7 o'clock; theme, "The
Christian Runner in Relation to his
Spectators", followed by Epvvortb
League.
Wanted to Wed —Girls lti to 25
Please write to a farmer's son, and
don't be so bashful, for all letters
will be strictly private forever.
Money no object. My age is 25,
height, 08 inches, weight, ltiO,
brown hair, brown eyes. I don't
use tobacco, drink whiskey or gam
ble. Now. dear girls if you wish
to win my love, here is your last
opportunity, flirts excused.
O. M. Breitmire.
Munoy Valley. Pa.
fOLEYSHONEYHCAK
Cures Golds; Prevents Pneumonia
From waste paper alone one rail
road last, year realized S.">,(HRI. Pins,
pens, nails, old brooms, bottles, tin
cans, and wornout machinery ot* all
sorts are gathered up by the railway
companies and turned into money.
: Even the ashes are sold or utilized
l"'>r improving the roadbed. The
greatest corporations in the world,
says the Chicago Journal, are not
above taking care of the fractions of
pennies. The railroad scrap heaps
of the country last year reaching the
value of £1,250,000.
NEW JERSEY ENTERPRISE.
An Ex-ivrimciit Station For South
Sew Jcr*e>' ContPinnlutcd.
Cumberland county (X. J.) Pomona,
No. 4. Nt a recent session appointed a
committee from each grange to take
preliminary steps toward the estab
lishment of an experiment station in
south Jersey, as the soil and climate
of the location of the present experi
ment station in New itruuswick are so
different from that part of the state
that many of the experiments are noc
now satisfactory. This committee met
recently by special invitation of Pro
fessor E. K. Johnstone, principal and
superintendent at the Training School
For the i'eeble .Minded in Vineiand, and
organized the Pomona experiment com
mittee, with Walton 10. Davis, Shiloh,
chairman and George A. Mitchell,
Vineiand, secretary. They visited and
examined the experimental work being
done at this model farm and dairy by
Professor Johnstone and his able as
sistant superintendents; also visited
the laundry, cannery, workshops and
other places of interest at this wonder
ful "home." Especial experimental
work was assigned to each member of
the committee, which, with work to be
done by members of their respective
granges, is to lie reported at a future
meeting.
\utiounl Secretary'* Report.
National Secretary Freeman's report
for the quarter ending Sept. 30 makes
a very creditable showing of grange
growth in all parts of the country.
Maine adds l-l and California 8 to the
number of subordinate granges; and
each puts a dormant grange again in
line. Michigan leads the procession
with 47 new granges and."> reorganiz
ed. Ohio and Maryland each add 22,
and West Virginia reorganizes 11.
New York gains Hi granges and Penn
sylvania 17. New granges in Oregon,
Washington, Colorado, Kentucky and
South Carolina indicate that grange
territory is extending and will soon in
clude every state in the Union.
To|»ic» t or IliKciiKhioii.
What can be done by farmers of this
locality to develop the resources of
their farms in the most profitable man
ner'.'
What can the national grange do iu
addition to what it is now doing to ad
vance the interests of the American
farmers V
What can be done to increase the at
tractions of the farm home to make It
the brightest and happiest spot on
earth V
To what extent should the national
grange urge the interests of agricul
ture before the national congress?
I'eiin«> It an la (.l anun 0|»(»oni* Oleo.
Some of tue granges iu Pennsylvania
are taking up the question of the use
of oleo by the government and are pro
testing against the same. Carpenter
grange. No. 4.j-t, of Lycoming county
has sent, .a strong resolution to the
president and to the state senators
protesting against the use of this
counterfeit butter at the League Island
navy yard. It condemns the use of
sale of oleo by or to the government,
and calls upon all in authority to main
lain an unyielding warfare against the
liefarions traffic.
In Special SonhIOII.
Special state grange sessions of the
New York state grange were held in
Newburg and Poughkeepsie in October.
At the former place eighty-three candi
dates were given the sixth degree and
at the latter eighty-one. These degrees
were conferred in preparation for the
taking of the seventh at the national
grange. Pennsylvania and New Jersey
have also conferred the sixth degree on
a large class for the same purpose.
A Worthy Catron.
Hon. S. Fred Nixon, whose death oc
curred recently and who was speaker
of the New York state assembly for
several years, was a member of West
field grange, No. l(l!», of Cattaruugus
county and was universally esteemed
all who knew him.
Gbtppewa
%tme muns.
Lime furnished »n cai
load lots, delivered at
Right Prices.
Your orders solicited.
Kilns near Hughesville
Tenn'a.
M. E. Reeder,
r.finriite Your llowi !h With CtiPenretfc*
r.mdy Cathartic, curt constipation forever.
9c. :jc. I' C. C C. fail, tirutf;-ista refund wouo.v
Holiday Announcement
CHRISTMAS TOYS.
I will he pleased to have you look over my line of toys and candies be
lieving that you can find lieae just the things that would make your little
ones happyon Christmas Morning.
"PRESENTS Then for the older ones I have Ornamental Tea and Water
FOR Sets, Fancy Cups and Saucers, Cream Oitchers, Plates,
EVERYBODY. Beautiful Decorated Lamps, and a host of other suitable
articles. Special attention is called to my
CLOTHING DEPARTMENT. These cold, taw winterv da\ s are ,-dinrp re
minders that warm clothing is needed. Come and 100/- over my large stock.
Here you will find Overcoats for Children, Youths and Mm, Nobbie Dress
and Business Suits, with Hats, Shoes and Shirts, Collars and Cufls to match.
My Corduroy Coats and Pants stand hard wear and are neat, warm and
inexpensive. My stock of Sweaters for boys and men run from the cheapest
that's good, to the very best; don't forget to come here when von need one.
I have Underwear for every member of the family in both wool and cotton,
fleece lined.
WOODSMEN I /.'cc-p a large stock of both rubber and leather Shoes.
ATTENTION! Leggings, Socks, Pants, Shirts, Caps, Mittens, Gloves.
Underwear, etc. besides axes, cross cut saws, sets, files, ete. especiallv for
woodsmen. Give me a chance to supply your needs.
At all times 1 have in stoc/- Groceries, Provisions, Notions, Hardware
Drugs and Medicines.
A. E. CAMPBELL.
SHUNK. PA.
Pflll Quit's
for Men, Boys and Children
are now here lor inspection.
Suits in black cl.iv and unfinished worsteds and 1 hi bets
Homespuns, French and English Fl: nncls, and Scotch
Goods.
Bo>s and Childrens' Suits in all the new fabrics and
Quakes.
Prices as well as variety are e xtraordinary. Ali new
in i up to date line ot Gents Furnishings, Hats. Caps, etc.
Also the only place in town wht rt* you can o%t the
"Walk Over" 31)oe.
J. W. CARROLL'S,
Hotel Carroll Block, DUSHORE, PA.
JACOB HERR
Re-iii a rk i n Sale,
Going Out of Business
All our Men's and Ro>s' Suits and Overcoats. Gents
urnishing Goods Etc., will be re marked lioni 20 to 30
per cent lower than actual cost ot manufacture, legard
less of price. "I his sale will eclipse anything ever before
ittemptcd by any clothing st »rein Sullivan county.
S7OOO worih of goods must be sold by April Ist. I must
leave this town by April is'. All I ask is to come and see
Jacob Herr's Remarking Sale, at
LAPCRTE, PA.
One Hundred Dollars ($100) reward, it any one sees me
doing business «-:t Laporte alter April Ist.
All I ask is to come and see
Jacob Herr's Re-marking Sale,
LAPORTE, PA.
GENERAL STORE
OD t>aporte Tannery,.
FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK ALWAYS POUND HERE.
lust received a special purchase ot '"Kiches" Flannels,
Lumbermens' Shirts and Drawers, Men's, Ladies' and
Childr ns' Mitts, Gloves and Hosiery.
There's Lots Here to Show You
From the City.
Fresh stock of Diy Goods and Notions, Boys and
Men's Hats and Caps, full line of Snagproof Shoes and
Rubbers. Ladies', Gents' anil Children's Goodyear Rub
bers Woodsmen and Boys Shoes to suit all.
Our Usual Quality of Groceries and Provisions
are Equal to the BEST.
JAMES McFARLANE.