ANNUAL STATEMENT. (Concluded.) INTEREST ACCOUNT. To— Bovd Bennett, int. on 34210.50 at 4% 308.Cn Ida M. Zaner, inf. on |SOO at 4 To 20.00 Ellen Carroll on SISUO #O.OO Mrs K. E. Wrede, $«SOO 82.00 Oraee Magarjcle on sls.*>o 87.f>0 Chas. W. Scliworer, Iml. due 1.-1 Int. on temporary loan 25.00 Perclval Wentzel, S.*H»OO 60.00 Int. on temporary loan !!.">. o<> Int. on temporary loan 28.57 Elizabeth Sick, $1750 70.00 Kate Sick. SIOOO 40.0n I'erclval Wentzel, S[JOOO co.oo Temporary loan 0.-5 i'alrlek Ilannon, SIOOO fto.oo Ellen Carroll, SIBOO 35.00 ■'<78 < .>.:;7 FIRE CLAIMS. Fire Warden. Toictififiii). J. YV. Aumlller, Shrewsbury 21.05 .1. M. Zaner, Cherry 81.20 tush llu(Tinastor. Cherry (»J>.os roo. Gorman, Laporte Twp 44.55 t. \V. Dennett, Shrewsbury 21.80 •v. T. More, Elkland 18.60 Jeo. Gorman. Laparte & Davidson.. 58.00 V. A. Gumbel, Hillstfrove 02.70 Total exp. in Co. by Com'w'lth. .$828.55 a nit. paid by Co., proportion being 1-5 of total 04.77 JAIL EXPENSES. Tudson Brown, expenses 04.00 )r. Randall, medical attention .... (J.OO Judson Brown, boarding prisoners...2oß.so Judsoto Brown, commitments & exp... 01.85 Judson Brown, boarding prisoners... 01.70 COUNTY COSTS. "Ikland poor dist. rare .las. Taylor.. 12.00 l\ I*. Martin, burial unknown man 25;00 S. U. Morgan, copying duplicates.. 1.00 sip 8.00 COUNTY BRIDGES. J. W. Laird, labor .'... 5.00 Ym. W. l.ewls. plank 01.20 ames Meyers, plank 12.sn loger Bros., plank 4' I". I. W. Moran, plank 2.02 rohu Coleman, shingles 4 V >.00 ohn A. Rohe, hauling snlngles 1 °~ lames Meyers, replanking 1 5.05 I. W. Laird, labor 0.00 \. L. I'lotts, labor 00.75 ■>!. W. Lewis, plauk 101. foyers Bros., plank 8«1.45 lames Meyers, plank 51.n0 fool McDennott, labor and material 40.42 talph Rohe, plank 4.75 • ohn Taylor, plank 10.00 112. B. Yaw, repairs •» 00 a $024.10 \ltli of .Pennsylvania, v-» \\ ot Sullivan. ss pderslgned auditors of Sullivan •»l»y certify that in pursuance duties Imposed upon us by he several acts of General Assembly, and tie supplements thereto, did meet at the filer 1 of the County Treasurer in the Court louse in the Borough of Laporte on Tues- AV. the second day <»f January, A.I). 1012, n'd did begin to audit, adjust and settle, he several accounts of tii«* County Treas rer. County Commissioners aud all sueb s are required of us by law, for the year Oil ; and did continue so to audit, adjust ad settle the said accounts; subject to our djournmcnt until this date, when we com leted this our Annual Report; and we itrther certify that the foregoing are cor •et to the best of our knowledge and be-* p:. as the same appears audited and set >rth in this report. in testimony whereof we have nereto set ur hands and seals this 10th day of Can ary A.D. 1012. T. R. CUMMINS. O. S. BENDER. I). F. MCCARTY, County Auditors. [ If You Want R'VT'OU can get them by ad j vertising in this E paper. It reaches the best class of I people in this community. iU = L T Use this paper if Syou want some of their business. Use This Paper JlYour Printing if it is worth j doing at all, it's worth do ing well. □ First classwork at all times is our motto. □ Let us figure with you on your next job. ' AGAIN! Ireland's Hope of Home Rule Nearing Realization at Last § NATURE GRACE AND J I' TRAINING FITTED !j| | ST. PATRICK TO !j; HIS TASK |; i I , . ,ft j|» So Well Accomplished, Ireland Was Known ».'! i;l for Centuries as • ! , the "Land of !■' Saints" i fit 112): /gHh T. PATRICK says of hirn self in his confession that | lie was born, at "Rannaven | Taberniae," which is ex j tremely hard to identify. Some, however, claim that i Kirk-Patrick, near Glasgow, in Scot j land, took its name from St. Patrick. The saint was born about 372; was ; a captive and a slave of the king of | Dalaradia, in Ireland, from 388 to 395; | went to Gaul and was there ordained priest; was consecrated bishoj> and | sent to Ireland as missionary in 432, and died at Saul, near Strangt'ord | Lough, County Down, Ulster, where | many years before he had founded his j church, March 17, 465, the day now sacred to his memory. Ireland was then occupied by a great number of petty tribes, most of whom were evangelized by Patrick. So well was the work accomplished that J Ireland was known in subsequent cen turies as the "island of saints and scholars." The method employed was that of dealing cautiously and gently with the : old paganism nf the people. The chief i tains were first won over and then through them thair clans. Of St. Patrick himself much that has i been related is fabulous, but his au tobiographical confession and his epis j tie to Coroticus, both of which are un questionably genuine, reveal a devout, j simple minded man, and a most dis creet and energetic missionary. In his epistle he states that he was 'of noble birth and that hi" father, i Calphurnicus, was a Roman dectiiro. i His Mother, Conchessa, or Conceis, j was the sister of St. Martin of Tours. The family of the saint is affirmed j by the earliest authorities to have j belonged to Britain, but whether the term refers to Great Britain or Brit tany or other parts of France is not ascertained. Some of the quaint stories told in j Ireland about St. Patrick would make j the traveler imagine that the saint | visited the Island for the benefit of j witty guides, or to promote mirth in j wet weather. It is not remarkable ! that the subject of these stories for 16 I centuries, at countless hearths, has been regarded and is today honored as j the greatest man and the greatest ben j efactor that ever trod the Irish soil, j and considering the versatility of the j Irish character, it is not strange that I there remains respecting the saint a j vast cycle of legends—serious, pathet ic and profound. ! It could not be otherwise. Such a 1 people could not have forgotten the he | role figure who led them forth in the ! exodus from the bondage of pagan j darkness. In many instances doubt j less has the tale become a tradition, I the foliage of an ever active popular Imagination, gathered around the cen tral stem of fact; but tho fact re mained. A large tract of Irish history Is | dark; but the time of St. Patrick and I the three centuries which succeeded : It is clearly, as depicted by history, a 1 time of joy. The chronicle is a song of gratitude and of hope, as befits the story of a nation's conversion to Christianity. The higher legends, which, how ever, do not profess to keep close to | the original sources, except as re gards their spirit and the manners of the time, are found in some ancient lives of St. Patrick, the most valu able of which is the "Tripartite Life," ascribed by Colgen to the century aft er the saint's death. The work was lost for many centuries, but two cop ies of It were rediscovered, one of which has been recently translated by jan eminent Irish scholar, Mr. Hen ! cessy. | Tbe miracles, however, recorded In the "Tripartite Life" are neither the most marvelous nor the most interest lug portion of that life. Whether regarded from the religious or philosophic point of view, few things can be more Instructive than the picture which it delineates of hu man nature in the period of critical transition and the dawning of the re ligion of peace upon a race barbaric, but far, indeed, from savage. That warlike race regarded It doubt less as a notable cruelty when the new faith discouraged an amusement so popular as battle. But in many re spects they were in sympathy with the faith. That race was one of which the affections as well as the passions retained an unblunted ardor, and when nature is stronger and less cor rupted it must feel the need of some thing higher than itself, its interpreter and its supplement. It prized the family ties, like the Germans record ed by Tacitus, and it could but have been drawn to Christianity. Warlike as it was.it was unbounded also in loyalty, generosity, and self-sac rifice; it was not. therefore, untouched by tiie records of martyrs, the princi ples of self-sacrifice, or the doctrine of a great sacrifice, it loved the chil dren and the poor, and St. Patrick made the former the exempliers of the faith and the latter the eminent inher itors of the kingdom. In the n\£in, institutions and tradi tions of Ireland were favorable to Christianity, and the people received the gospel gladly. It appealed to them and prompted ardent natures to find their rest in spiritual things. It had created among them an excellent ap preciation of the beautiful, the es thetic and the pure. The rapid growth of learning, as well as piety, in the three centuries succeeding the conversion of Ireland proved that the country had not been until then without a preparation for the gift. Perhaps nothing human had so large an influence in the conversion of the Irish as the personal character St. Patrick. of our apostle. By nature, by grace, and by providential training he had been especially fitted for his task. Everywhere we can trace the might and sweetness that belonged to his character; the versatile mind, yet the simple heart; the varying tact, yet the fixed resolve; the large desire tak ing counsel from all, yet the minute so licitude for each; the fiery zeal, yet the gentle temper; the skill in using means, yet the reliance in God alone; the readiness in action, with a willing ness to wait; the habitual self-pos session, yet the outburst of an in spiration, which raised him above him self —the abiding consciousness of an authority—an authority in him, but not of him, and yet the ever present humility. Above all, there burned In him that boundless love which seems the main constituent of apostolic char acter. It was love for God; but it was love for man also, an Impassioned love, a parental compassion. Wrong and injustice to the poor he resented as an injury to God. A just man, indeed, was St. Patrick; with purity of nature like the patri archs; a true pilgrim like Abraham; gentle and forgiving of heart like Moses; a praiseworthy psalmist like David; an emulator of wisdom like Solomon; a chosen vessel for pro claiming truth like the Apostle Paul; a man of grace and of knowledge of the Holy Ghost like the beloved John; a lion in strength and power; a dove in gentleness and humility; a servant of labor in the service of Christ; a king in dignity and might, for bind ing and loosening, for liberating and convicting. What the Weil-Dressed Woman Will Wear EVIDENTLY there is no intention on the part of dressmakers to widen skirts. They have made some changes that intimate drap ery, which means the buying of a lit tle morq material and the giving of an appearance of fullness to the skirt, but it is seeming, and not real, this fullness, writes Anne Rittenhouse in the Boston Herald. There are slight changes, but noth ing important. Mme. Paquin has sent over a gown which she has designed for wear at the Riviera, and it is a convincing proof that so far she hasn't thought of anything strictly novel. The material used Is a change able green taffeta, and there is no doubt that we will be flooded with this rabric at the beginning of the warm weather, and the skirt has a hip yoke. Now this is new. It is the tunic idea, shortened, mod ified and made practical for a simple frock. It extends for about six inches below the waist at the sides and back, and is lapped over in front with the edges outlined with two rows of stitch ing. To it the skirt is attached in nar row box plaits quite far apart and not stitched down. Above the hem there is a tuck of the material, and down the middle of the Tront there is a two-inch band of thin white lace insertion, plaited across, ind held down by small black buttons; it Ihe edge of the insertion, on each side, is a tiny frill of lace. This is also a new treatment. Neat Touch for Blouse. The blouse has a folded girdle of the silk that comes nearly to the bust and an upper part of white chiffon with black chiffon over it. The betelle ef fects over the shoulders are of Jace and taffeta, and the three-quarter sleeves show a taffeta band. If we can draw conclusions from this model it means that the transparent upper part of the bodice will be as popular as it has been for two years, that the high waist will be continued, and that the bretelle effect, which broadens the shoulders, will be an in .eresting feature and rather new. Every one knows about the fight that is going on by the mill people abroad to have the dressmakers in crease the width of the skirts in the interests of the thousands of men, women and children who have been out of employment for a year; and whether or not it will win time only can tell. Starvation is an ugly word, and it is daily used by the French and English papers in connection with the condition of the clothworkers, who have no jobs and no chance of getting any while the fashion of narrow clothes prevails; much is said against I .Gowns from Paris THE princess gown at the left Is of changeable satin In opal shades. The fronts cross and are bordered with bands of Venetian lace. A ruffle of fine lace headed by a band of fur trims the sides and back of the skirt at the bot tom. and the front is iinished with a band of fur only. The corsage is finished around the low neck with a collar of Venetian lace, finished in front with chains of the dressmakers for not compelling full skirts and long coats, and a good deal of the blame is laid at their door. Other Side of the Matter. And yet upon this subject no one seems to take the opposite side. Here is a day of such high living that mil lions are worried over a mere fact of getting a comfortable existence on this planet, and the price of clothes is no small matter. Now there are thou sands upon thousands of women who buy the materials for their clothes at the shops, and make them at home, or with the aid of a seamstress. What about these women being immensely benefited by the continuance of nar row skirts and slim coats? Instead of buying 14 yards of single width ma terial to make a gown, they need only buy seven or eight yards, instead of eight yards of double width material they need only buy four yards. And because linings have gone out of fashion they can eliminate this part of the expense entirely and because pet ticoats are not popular they can cut out not only the money for white skirts, but the laundering of them. The simple little, tight, short underslip of inexpensive silk or pongee, that now does duty under every gown, is a mere trifle in cost compared to the dozen petticoats that a woman used to own. So, as against the non-employment of a few thousand people there is the cutting down in the price of home made clothes of many thousands of women in Europe and America. The dressmakers, they are legion, also profit by the lack of cloth used in a gfown because they have not lowered their prices, making the contention that the public must pay for their art in drapery, their talent for designing and their genius for fitting. As a commercial proposition, let the good work of narrow skirts and slim coats and a few yards of material to a gown goon. That Turkish Toweling. Tou may remember that Paris used a good deal of Turkish toweling last year, in a tentative way for blouses, top coats, fur collars and cuffs and for bands on skirts. It was whito and it was ecru, and it was expensive, but it did not prove popular. It is now called by many names, such as Terry cloth and agaric cloth, but it remains the same old toweling. Whether or not. it will take is a ques tion for the public to decide, but it really makes admirable blouses and good-looking collars and cuffs. The girl who wants to make a new kind of wash waist should buy some of the soft, tliin toweling, fasten it up the front under a two-inch band of embroidery done in" red and orange and blue, have the long sleeves with tight deep cuffs of the embroidery, and a collar of Irish lace surmounted by a stock of Irish insertion and vivid embroidery. Whole suits are made of the towel j ing. but what is known as linen ratine jis far better. The latter cloth as it is j now, is very lovely, and, it may pos sibly be repeated next fall and ex ploited more than now; so far it has remained exclusive peau do chamois. The latter has been so expensive that the majority of women have not in ] dulged in it, but it has led the fashion for a summer material that is in imi tation of kid, and has a great deal of charm. pearls. The sleeves are shirred and finished with bands of the fur. The long skirt of the gown at the right is of green brocade; the tunic is of fine white laco bordered with bands of heavier lace. The corsage crosses in front where it is caught with a large motif of beads. The long stole are of satin embroidered with beads, and fin ished with rings and tassel 3 of the s a ma. TOFIMONAL 1 SUNWSdIOOL LESSON (By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Even ing: Department, The Moody Bible In stitute of Chicago.) LESSON FOR MARCH 17. THE PARALYTIC HEALED. LESSON TEXT—Mark 2:1-12. GOLDEN TEXT—"Bless the I.ord, » my soul, and forget not all hla benefits; who forgiveth all thine iniquities; who healeth all thy diseases."—Ps. 103:2-3. Events tread upon the lieels of events in the life of Jesus, especially during his early Galilean ministry, and none depict these events more graphically than St. Mark, who is presenting us a picture of him as & servant. Jesus had been upon a preaching tour and now returns to the town of Capernaum. As soon as it was noised about that he was at his hotbe a crowd quickly gathered about the door. So great was the crowd that there was no longer any room in the house nor about the door, that is the crowd was so dense that late comers could not look into see and hear the prophet. That many of these were attracted by his popularity there is no doubt, but it gave Jesus an opportunity to speak and preach the word which ho was quick to seize upon. "He preached the Word unto them." Is this not a suggestion l'or teachers? especially of some of the adult classes. If your class is a Bible class stick to your text or else change your name. The apostles followed his example in this respect; so liave all the mighty men of God. The result of thi3 teaching and preaching is manifest in this record and should be an encouragement to preachers and Christian workers, viz., that it not only attracts the crowd, but that it reveals sin also. Sickness Result of Sin. Willie all sickness may not be the result of sin, yet remove sin from the world and an overwhelming propor tion, perhaps all, suffering would cease. We are promised that in his newer and better kingdom there is to be no more pain nor sorrow. Jesus therefore said first of all, "Child, thy sins are forgiven." How his voice must have thrilled with tenderness and pathos as he uttered these words. But the critics were there; they : ever have been wherever a good deed Is being performed. Note they ! were sitting idly by (v. 6). Showing I no such anxiety as tho four that the i needy might come into the presence ! of Jesus. "Who can forgive sin but one, even i God? Their reasoning was correct j and their conclusion was logical; the trouble was that unbelief and preju dice had so blinded their eyes that they could not and would not recog ; nize the power of God working through his Son. Yes, they went farther and made the fatal blunder of ascribing to Beelzebub this work of God (Jno. ! 10:33). It would seem as though their smug ' self-esteem would at least have been 1 startled when this young teacher I showed them that he was reading the thoughts of their hearts. "Why rea son ye these things in your hearts?" Human reasoning can disprove God, ! but the deductions of the intellect can not satisfy the cry of human hearts after God (Job. 23:3, 4). The greatest lesson for us to learn 1 at this point is that the forgiveness of sin, Is greater in the estimation of God than the relief of human sufferings. Turning to the ono sick of the palsy he said, "Arise!" "What? Why such, a thing is a phys ical impossibility. Surely this young j prophet has gone mad; was not this boy let down a few moments ago through that hole in yonder ceiling, so | helpless that it took four of his ' friends to bring him to this place?" In seeming reply to such a query j Jesus tells the man to take up his bed and walk. Jesus Could Make Men See. Small wonder that the man's new power and this use of that power should amaze those present so that they should exclaim: "We never saw It \ on this fashion." Let ua beware that our eyes be not blind to behold simi lar miracles in this the twentieth cen tury. (Read, "Twice-Born Men"). It is very doubtful if the "all" of verse 12 Includes tho "certain" of verse 6. We must be careful that even as believers we do not crowd away some needy, palsied one. Be ware also of loveless censoriousness. What is meant by glorifying God (v. 12)? The answer is suggested by the spiritual seer, St. John. God'r glory is wrapped up in the Son who delighted to do God's will. God's power is shown over ail flesh in th« Son, and through the Son he is givinf life—eternal life. us glorify God over the fact and hasten to bring others to the feet of Jesus. Let us co-operate as did the four. Let us demonstrate as did th* sick one by our walk. Thus shall we stop the mouth of every critic, si lenca the tongue of every skeptic, anrf glorify the Son who came to give us strength, life, peace, salvation and everlasting life. A suggested outline of the lesson would be: I—Jesus teaching, v. 1, 2. 2 —Jesus forgiving, v. 3-5. 3—Jesus rebuking, v. 6-10. 4 —Jesus commanding, v. 11-11,