Republican News Item. VOL. XIII. NO 36 <524,000-»544,000 ? ) v Which Do You Prefer • ? \ The average man earns about si, ioo a year. He/' / works 40 years and earns a total of §44,00 in a \ time. The average day laborer gets $2,000 a day or ( / S6OO for a year of 100 days. He earns $24,000 in a * \life time. The difference between $44,000 and $24-r J 000 is $20,000. This is the minimum value of a ? V practical education in dollars and cents The in-C J creased self-respect cannot be measured in money, x \ Why not stop plugging away at a small salary when < s the International Correspondence Schools, ot Scran- V \ ton Pa. can give you an education that will make / V high salaried man ot you ? No matter what line ol \ S work you care to lollow, this great educational ln-£ \ stitution can prepare you in your spare time and r a small cost to secure a good-paying position. Our r \local Representative will show you how you can V r triple your earning capacity. Look him up today, 112 VHeis j ? C. IF 1 . ZBIR/ZEUSTI-T A IST, 5 0.1. S. Representative. TOWANDA, PA. COLE - HARD y No Place Like this Place For Reliable STOVES and RANGES, COAL OB WOOD HEATERS; ONE OP WINTER'S GREAT DELIGHT'S. House Furnishiug Goods, Tools of Every Description, Guns and Ammunition, Bargains that bring the buyer back. Come and test the truth of our talk. i. lot of second hand stoves and ranges for sale cheap We can sell you in stoves anything from a fine Jewel Base Burner to a low priced but satisfactory cook stove. Hot Air, Steam and Hot' Water Heating and General Repairing, Roofing and Spouting. Samuel The Shopbell Dry Good Co., 313 Pine Street, WILLIAMSPORT, PA. January Clearance C3ale; of Ladies'3aits and Coats ! Profits have been entirely clipped oil in this January Salt.'—cosi in no way figur»s in the selling prices. Ladies' stylish Coat Suits, in plain and Mack colors, good assortment to choose Iron). Suits that were formerly sls to $25 are now reduced to 95 S2B to $32 are now reduced to sl4. 4 .»5 #32.50 to S3B. are now reduced to #19.75 $38.50 to $42.50 are now- reduced to $22.50 Made of plain and fancy cloth are being closed out at just one-half the regular |>rice. $lO to $35 values, now marked at $5 to $17.50 Two other lots of Ladies' Long Cloth Coafs have been marked $3.00 and $5 00 Which are less than half the price. Children and Misses Winter Coats One lot children's cloth and Hear Skin Misses' plain and fancy cloth Coals. S Coats, 2to 6 years sizes, navy, cardinal to 14 year sizes, $5.00 to SIO.OO values green, gray, brown and white, were #3.00 tor to #4.00, IK)W -» EN $1 SO 9J.OV H'l.i'v/ O tie j ot 0 f Misses chinchilla cloth One lot of clii'dren's plain and fancy Coats in navy, red, gray and brown, were cloth Coats, #4.25 to $5.00 values, lor #12.50 to 14.00, now $2.95 7.00 Change of Prices on Furs. Furs will take a drop in prices to be in keeping with the Coat Sile. Here will be the chance of the season to select Furs that you will be proud to own. Subscribe for the News Item LAPCRTE, SULLIVAN COUNTY PA. THURSDAY JANUARY 28, 1909. Liquor License Notices. Notice hereby given that the follow ing applications lor liijuor license have been tiled in my office and the fame will be presented to the Court ot Quarter Ses sions of the Peace of Sullivan County on MONDAY, the Btli day of FEBRI' AlO I<)09. at 2 o'clock p. in. CHERRY TWP. Cherry Mills". John E. Gross, tavern license, Dushore. Leonard llilbert, wholesale license. Mildred. Ella Murphy, restaurant license. Frank F, Schaad, distillers license, John C. Schaad, tavern license, James J. Connor, tavern license, Joseph A.Helsman, tavern license, John Daley, tavern license, Mildred, John Nestor, tavern license. Michael F, Donovan, wholesale license. Murray. William Haley, tavern license. Satterfield. Patrick McOee, restaurant license. COL LEY TWP. C. F. llutisinger, tavern license, G'olley DUSHORE BOROUGH. Thomas J. Rrogan. wholesale license. John I). Lane, tavern license, Elizabeth Carmody, restaurant license, Margaret Connor, restaurant license. Robert McGee, restaurant license, Philip E.Grace, tavern license. P. J. Finan, tavern license, B. F. Saxer. restaurant license. DAVIDSON TWP: Sonestown. Daniel ll.'Lorali, tavern license, Harry Basley, tavern license. Muncy Valley. William L. Parmeter and ! Brady llouscknecht I tavern license Dennis Palmatier, tavern license, •J. William Moran, restaurant license. Emmons. Michael J. Devanney. tavern licence. Lopez: •lames P. McGee, restaurant license, ! Steve lialabuk. tavern license, iieorge tHsziewski, tavern license. Joseph 11 rnlienak. restaurant license, Al>e Goodman, wholesale license, Anthony House, tavern license. Theodore Shimansky, restaurant license. Maxim Mtisiala, bottlers' license. EAGLES MERE BOIfOPGII. Win. 11. Vanl'Uskirk, tavern license, HILLSGRoVE TWP. Jacob Caseman,tavern license, Hillsgrove. LA l'i >KTK B< >R< >1 "(ill. Theresa Gallagher, tavern license, •lolin Hitmen, Jr., tavern license. L.H'ORTE TWP. Geo. M. Eie-ter, tavern license,Nordmont SHREWSBURY TOWNSHIP. Smith Bondman, restaurant license. Norman E. Stackhouse, tavern license. ALBERT F. IIE ESS. Clerk. Clerk's otYice.La porte, Pa., Jan. lf>, 1909. Notice to Owners of Dogs. COMMONWEALTH «»F PENNSYL VANIA. STATE LIVE STOCK SAN -ITARY BOARD. . Regulation relating to dogs in Cherry Township, Sullivan County. The attention of all owners of dogs in the above described district is called to the following order of quarantine ot doge adopted by tiie State Livestock Sanitary Board, January 2tj, 1900. Dog owners are warned that disregard ot this notice may lead to the destruction ot their dogs and that they themselves may be pro ceeded against legally. LEONARD PEARSON, State Veterinarian. Harrishurg, Pa., January 20, 1909. WHKKHAS, There is reason to believe that the disease known as rabies or hydrophobia exists in Cherry Township, Sullivan County, and the nature of this disease is such that lor the present all dogs, within certain limits, must be sus pected of being capabel of spreading it. IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, by authority ol the State Livestock Sanitary Board ui der the provisions of the Act ol March 27, 1903, thai all dogs in the above described district are hereby declar ed to be in a state of quarantine, and j must be strictly contined or tirinly secured j on the premises ot tinir owners, and not j allowed to run at large or enter public highways excepting when led or when muzzled with a well fitting muzzle that will effectually prevent biting. 'fois quarantine shall remain in lorce lor one hundred days from the date here of or until removed by the State Livestock Sanitary Hoard. Attention is called to the following sec tions'ol the above mentioned Act: Section •'{. Should dogs be permitted to mnnt large, or to escape Ironi restraint or confinement, or togo without muzzle, in violation of the quarantine, or regula tion, established by the State Livestock j Sanitary Hoard to restrict the spread of I rabies or hydrophobia, as provided by ! this Act, such dogs may be secured and 1 eon lined, or they may be shot or otherwise j destroyed, and the owner or owners there ! of shall have no claim against the person \ so doing . Section I. Any person violating the provisions ofthis act or of a <|nam■> tine, or of a regulation or order 10 restrain, con tine or muzzle dogs, duly established l»y the State Livi stock Sanitary Board torthe purpose ol restricting the spread ol' rabies, or hydrophobia, in the manner provided in the oilier sections oftliis act, shall be deemed guilty ol'a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall forfeit and pay a fine of not less than ten dollars nor than one hundred lollars, at the discis sion ot the court. BANNER SALVE tfr* most healing salvt th« world. I Opportunities Por Men of Small Capital. j One of the most interesting phase? of the remarkable transformation which is being wrought by irri gation in many of the desert valleys of the West, Is the prominent position which newcomers from the East are taking in the clevelopement work. The instances were men from the East with no previous ex perience and training in farming have achieved signal success on ir-, rigated farms are numerous. They call attention to the opportunities in the desert for men of small capital, but with plenty industry and brains, To get away from the crowded centers of population into the broad free country. In much of the preeent develope ment of new agricultural areas in the West the sturdy sons of Penn sylvania are taking no small part. Nothing less was expected of the ex perienced farmer of the Keystone State who ventured out into the West, But the same achievements apparently are being shown by other citizens from the cities. From iron moulder to dairyman is rather a startling change of occupa tion. Ten years experience iu the Baldwin Locomotive works would hardly seem to be the sort of train ing to insure success in dairy farm ing. Nevertheless 11. C. Watson, ! who for a decade labored faithfully as iron moulder in the Baldwin shops, has demonstrated that his previou^ioccupation did not unfit him for another profession. In 1907 Mr. Watson took stock as it were and decided that while iron molding brought him good wages, the annual difference between in come and outgo promised him little for his old age. He sent Mrs. Wat son to the West on a tour of investi gation, with the result that in 1907 he gave up his job in Philadelphia ami moved his belongings to a farm, in West Idaho near the town of Cald well He bought eighty acres of bind, all iu sage brush, but with rights to water from one of the large canals. Although he had never worked at the carpenter trade Mr. Watsou in one week built a house of two rooms and attic, assisted only by bin son 17 years old. In 1908, after clearing, cultivating and planting he cropped 60 acres, ten acres in red clover, eight seeded to alfalfa, five to potatoes, and the balance to oats. He had a good gar den and some chk kens. Mr. Wat son brought one cow with him, ami in February that year, purchased two more at $75 each. In April he bought another for slls and later added another to his herd. He was finally established in the dairy busi ness and soo:i began to supply the home market with butter at 85 cents per pound. From April to Decem ber he produced and sold 1,340 pounds, which returned him the the sum of $412,45. deducting the cost of feed $105., the net return was #BO7 45, or $Ol per head for nine months. All the feed for the herd and for five horses and three colts was raised on the farm, besides near i ly all the food consumed by the fam [ ily. The land has more than doub j led in value so that his net returns for the year are considerably in ex ! cess of what he usually made work ing at his trade. He is free from worry, no landlords trouble him, and shut-downs, strikes or panics do not disturb his rest at night. He has one great ambition, and the fulfill ment is within sight—to own a dairy herd of 100 registered cow?. The great work of bringing water to the thirsty land npon which the government is now spending $50.00(1, 000, has its justification in the suc cess of the industrious home builders who are taking up the new farms, and who are paying back to the Treasury every dollar thus invested by the Nation. What wonder that the daily mail bag of the Statistican Reclamation Service at Washington contains hundreds of inquiries daily from homeseekers all over the land. Strayed or stolen:—White dog with one black ear, other white with few tan spots., has long hair ! with black spot near tail, has col'ar and lock. $5.00 for return. I a. K. Brown, liicketts, Pa. The annual report of captain J. F. Robison, commander of troop B. State Constabulary. Stationed at Wyoming, for the year ending Dec. 31, 1908, has been sent to headquar ters at Harrisburg. It is a very ex haustive document' dealing with the minutest details of the work of the troop during the past year. Some interesting facts contained in the re port are as follows: The condition as to law and order in this district have improved over previous years. Riot calls have been few. In most cases two or three men were able to .quell the dis turbances. Sub-stations ware maintained at West Hazelton and peckville. Dur ing the first ten months of the year and on November 4th. nine addition al sub-stations are established at Benton, Mayfltld and Montrose, Old forge, Picture Rocks, Tobyhannu, Towanda, Trout Run and Tunk bannock. The health of the troop was excel lent, there having been but few serious cases of illness. Troop and individual schools were held during the year, giving instruct ions to the men in the "Duties of Policemen" Game and fish laws, Criminal laws, Drill, Regulations, care of horses and General Duties. All older men have reached a point of proficienty and the newer men especially the recruits are progress ing rapidly in the work, There were 54 horses on duty Dec. 31. The troopers made a total of 1,302 arrests, of which 833 were convicted, 263 discharges, and 200 await trial. Of those arrested 297 were American, 14 Austrian, 32 Germans, 21 Hun garian, 77 Irish, 108 Italians, 75 Slavish, 48 Polish. Costs were collected amounting to $600.60 including 16.68 fiom Brad ford county. The milage travel by the trooper, tluriug 1908 was 113,535 as compar ed with 130,383 in the previous year. The closing paragraph of Captain Uobison's report reads as follows: "The efficiency of the troopers has long since been above question and this fact, in conjunction with the moral tone assumed by the troops, as a whole, has materially advanced the high opinion held by the public of the state poliee. "The salaries of the troopers should jbe raised as railway com panies and other concerns are reach ing out for the experienced men, offering them advanced pay, there by making it difficult to retain troopers of recognized worth and efficiency entitle them to more mon ey than they are receiving." A proposition has been presented to the legislature providing for the elimination of the associate judge as a part of the machinery of justice in such counties as still retain this re lic of the dark ages. Associate judges are now serving in district composed of two or more counties, and if the hill before the legislature shall pass every county in the state j would presumably become a separate judicial district, or some judges would be required to travel from onecouuty to another when duty called them to transact such business as is now left to the tender mercies of associate judge. The cost to the state of maintaining associate judges is a great deal more than these orna ments of the bench earn. It has uot been unfrequently found that associate judges have wrought more evil than good by combining to overthrow the decisions of the president judges in such matters as the granting of liquor licenses and the like. And then in these times when litigation is of such an intricab nature as to require not only legal knowledge as well as wisdom in the disposition of cases the associate judge Is a mere nonentity, the po sition not requiring that the occu pant shall be learned in the law or much of anything else. It would be a step forward If the state were to get rid of its associate judges.—Wil liamsport News. To the voters of Laporte township. 1 request all voters not to vote for me for I will not serve as supervisor if elected. E. C. Burk. 75C PL R YEAP Miss Edith Maben Buried Sunday. Miss Marion Edith Maben was buried by the beautiful and inipn ive service of the Church of Engl,u; I from St. John's church on Janu try 31, the Hector, the Ilev. Thuriow V". Null officiating. The subject of ihe address was ISAIAH LI, 11. "Therefore the redeemed of (he Lord shall return, and come with singing unto Zion." On account of her great interest in and devotion to the choir of win-ii she was a faithlul member from me time it became organized and vest; • i, and as an unique mark of bono.-, she was laid to her vestment, for in these she served the church and God. The many floral tributes, one very beautiful cross ot white lilies, ros <, and hyacinths by Mrs. Ualleg! r and Mrs. Fry; a beautiful pink OIC.J of lilies and sweet peas by the choir; a handsome broken circle of pink and white by the high school and Miss Jessie Wrede; a pillow of while carnations and li lies hearing the name Edith in pur ple, the gift of many friends through the efforts of Miss Dolly, Crossley; White carnations and ferns by (he primary school; pink carnations and ferns by her teacher Prof. Carl (). Bird; white carnations and ferns by Miss Nora Heess of York, show Die love and respect of her many friends. It is always a loss when the good are called to Paradise. But why do we call that a loss which leads one from all uncertainty and sorrow, to be a full sharer in the glorified t>lis of the redeemed; or from the Initi ations of earth to the grand capacitit s and possibilities of the better world; why weep for those vested in whit > whose voices ring in the symphon ies of Heaven. "In that great cloister's stillno-s and seclusion, By guardian angels lead, Safe from temptation, safe from sin's pollution, She lives whom we call dead. A fair maiden, in her father's mansion, Clothed with celestial grace, And beautiful with all the soul's expansion Shall we behold her face." Muncy Valley, Pa. Feb. Ist. lit:)' 1 . Death of Mrs. James O. Jord. u near Souestown, Pa.—One week > last Thursday at Souestown in ti n M. E, church was held the funeral of Nora Jordan the wife of our fal low citizen James C. Jordan. To ihe community her death brought pro found sorrow. Mrs. Jordan wast young woman of thirty two je; s of age. She left a family of six. chidren, mostly quite small, and x step children partly grown up. !!• r husband a hard working man; khrl ami industrious, is left in sorrow ai I with a home that will greatly mi-s a mother's noble life and devot. I service. For a long time Mrs. J - don was afflicted with heart trou' i , tho able to tlo much of the home work, but two months ago she v s taken with severe pain and drops , and after much snffering was reli> , - ed of the troubles of this life MOIK! : Morning Jan. 18th. Her fune: d was largely attended by her many relatives and friends. She was vim second daughter of John and J :io Myers formerly of Lairdsville, but now of Hughesville, Pa. The h - band and the family have the sym pathy of the whole community 111 .their sorrow. S. B. Bid lack Claiming that he is crippled fur life bir having his leg broken a year ago, while being initiated ai a meinr her of fraternal order of Eagles at Butler, Thomas Lewis has instituted a suit against tlie lodge for js.'yMlO damages. Lewis alleges that lis limb was broken by tlfe rough baud ling he received at the hands of the degree team. At the Huntingdon Reformatory each new inmate is required to spend at least one month in the "awkward squad'' and become thoroughly ac quainted with and able to execute the movements in the Manual of Arms and the Buts llitle drill, for military drill occupies an important place in the work of the reforma tory.