SKILLED JJHE LAW Success of Mr. Taft as Solicitor General. WON MANY NOTABLE SUITS. Victorious In the Celebrated Alaskan Seal Fisheries Controversy His De fense of the McKinley Dill Refused Golden Offers For a Scat on tha Federal Bench. Mr. Tuft's fight years of history funking utility upon the bench of the Sixth federal circuit, during most of which period he was presiding judge, were prefaced by three years of high nccoinpllsliiuent as solicitor general of the United States. President Uarrl sou picked him !o be the legal repre sentative of the United States iu nc tive litigation iu 1SIH), when he was only thirty-three years old and still had three years of his elective teriri upon the superior court bench In Ohio to serve. Solicitor general of the United States at thirty-three! Scarcely more than a boy In years as ripened matu rity Is reckoned and already doing deeds of national moment- deeds of International moment, to be exact, for Inside of two weeks of taking tho oath he had put up to him the defense of the government iu the Alaska seal fisheries controversy, at which the courts and the diplomats of three coun-trles-the United States, Hugland n. d Canada had leen dinging for fourteen years. ltrlelly the sum and substance of It was this: Wo had captured and con demned to be sold the Canadian schooner Sayward for Illegal sealing iu Alaska waters. Knglaud and Canada supported Hie claim of the owner for damages, which we rejected. Pend ing aibitratlon the case was brought unexpectedly before the supreme court. It was clever tactics on the other fel low's part, and It put us In rather a pickle. 'While Canada would not bo bound by an adverse decision if tho case went against her that is, she would not be compelled to accept tho decision as final should wo lose tho fact of our losing In our own court would count against us. The new solicitor general sailed In. Ho read the documents. Ho clutched nnd held fast. When ho emerged from tho murk of international law, treaties, precedent and kindred clarities ho had a 300 page brief ready to present to tho court It won for lilm and for tho United States against two of tho best lawyers In tho land Joseph H. Chonto nnd Calderon Carlisle, Jr. Then it fell to him to defend tho McKinley bill In an notion brought by nn importing firm who objected to paying higher duties imposed by tho bill nnd pleaded that Speaker Reed's way of counting a quorum, by which tactics the bill had passed tho house of representatives, wns unconstitution al. Tho importers urged that enough members present In tho house, al though constituting a numerical quo rum, could break a quorum by not Toting. "If voting nnd not present Is neccs eary to make a quorum, why is tho speaker empowered to employ tho ser geant at arms of tho houso to compel absentees to attend with tho object ot making n quorum?" queried Mr. So licitor General Taft Tho McKinley bill was saved. Tho youug solicitor general won, won, won and kept on winning for tho government for tho two years ho was in ofllco. Then President Harrison set him upon what Mr. Taft felt would bo tho track leading to his real ambi tion tho supremo court bench. Ho unmcd him as circuit Judge. Judge Taft accepted unhesitatingly. He did it in face of the well meant ndvico of friends who wanted him to bo a money maker. Attractive partnerships wero proposed to him by big law firms, part nerships that meant $10,000, ?50,000 and $100,000 a year. Tho emoluments of tho bench wero only $0,000 annual ly. Judge Taft shook his head. "There nro bigger and better things than mon ey," was his reply to these gilded sug gestions. Ho was then thirty-five, no was a poor man, but ho had enough. Ho Is now fifty-one and n poor man still by tho standard of tho dollar. Bulgaria's coup was a ense of tho ,worm turning. Tho sublime porta tread on the plucky mountaineers onco too often. Soldiers' Marching Tests. Our army would show off well in a marching test if the work done by the officers recently Is a criterion. Fifty miles In three days Is good marching, although not great inarching. During tho fall maneuvers of the German troops tho marching test wns twenty miles in one day, and 20 per cent of tho men dropped out before tho end. This is poor marching, and tho French have shown hotter stuff or better training, for only 3 per cent fell out on A march of the sauio length In France. What our officers can do tho men can do. These walking tests for offi cers will no doubt spur tho men in garrison to practlco on long walks. Fifty miles In three days ns the roads average Is good work, although It was often beaten In tho civil war. One corps made a forced march of thlrty ilvo miles In twenty-four hours to get Into tho battle of Gettysburg, and this wns not Stonewall .Tnckson's "foot cavalry" either. Good marching wins as many battles as good fighting. , UEOllGE h. KILMER. A World Language. Langurrgo ranking looks easy to us moderns, judging by tho number of clalmnuts the last fifty years for tho position of "vehicle of speech for nil nations." A hundred different tongues have been Invented, nnd each was said by Its promoters to answer every re quirement. In Dresden Inst August the Kspcrautlsts held their fourth In ternational congress nnd may well boast that 3,000 people, representing thirty nationalities, speaking iu one tongue Is proof that Esperanto Is n success, whatever Its Intrinsic merits compared with numerous rivals. The congress Is described in the Nortli American Ilcvlcw, and It is evident that the gathering was an Impressive one. If tho zeal shown by the dele gates at tho congress goes with them to their scattered homes Kspcrnnto must speedily become a world study. But being a world study and a world language In actual practice are two distinct things. Language has always been a matter of growth nnd not of Inculcation. The human being catches up the first gesture or wonl that will convey tho present meaning, nnd as things are drifting today the needs of tho world will bo conversation with English speaking people. The Ameri cans nnd the British arc the greatest world travelers today. Tho routes where "English spoken here" stnres the traveler In the face are growing wider each year. Our language Is made up out of many tongues, nnd the ease with which Immigrants pick up enough for overydny use Is evidence that It can serve every purpose of n universal speaking medium. A few at least of every people on the globe are already Interested In speaking English some of the time. These few will ac quire It because they have to, and they will gradually Introduce It among their fellows. In this way English will come Into use wherever nnd when ever a uulversal language Is needed. Raising Trees. Forestry Is a big word, and when the term scientific forestry Is used the average farmer In America may bo ex cused If he thinks the subject is be yond him. Anything less than n square mile In extent growing trees Is to the man of American lineage simply a "pleco of woods." And it is a fact that until very recently the study of scientific treo culture or for estry was confined to large areas. It Is fortunato probably that discus sions of the forestry problem of tho country bavo been supplemented by warnings of a threatened famine In Umber. This last Idea strikes homo. No farm can get along without posts and rails. Tho matter of windbreaks, shelter and water sheds for small streams also Interests the farmer. Rows of trees rightly placed will not Interfere with tilling the soil, and since tho attention they require comes out of the crop season tho raising of a few trees Is a simple matter. The timber mny not be marketable for years to come, but value is added to the farm by a tract or patch of woods free of bushes and brambles. An Appeal to tho Pocket. Consumption docs not pay, and the fight against tuberculosis In this coun try must depend for success upon the extent to which the public can be aroused to tho economic necessity of stamping It out Millions of dollars are being expended now to take care of the victims of tuberculosis ono way and another, and It seems that the cost of medical care Is perhaps less than half of the financial burden due to this disease. Ono of tho physicians from Europe attending tho congress on tuberculosis at Washington declared that out of every three persons who die during the working period of life one suc cumbs to pulmonary tuberculosis. Thus society pays tofl to the plague by n loss In working force. To say nothing of sympathy for sufferers, It Is a question of self Interest for every community to stamp out consumption. Tho London board of trade finds that tho business slump affects the flvb loading commercial countries of tho world, Great Britain, Germany, France, the United States and Belgium, so there Is no sense in knocking the 1007 panic at this date. Reaction had to come. Being under contract to Hvo 200 years, perhaps Mr. Wu goes back to the simple life in China because tho atmosphere In this country has not been working his way of late. It was a poor help to Chicago's pop ulation boom for tho homo press to announce that thousands of the Chi cago children go hungry to school. This being n record year for going up In the nlr, defeated candidates ought not to feel that fato has pursued them LrnIcIously. The overworked "short and ugly word" must begin to feel ripe for the Osier dose or retirement on an old ago pension. Warm fall weather never postpones the advent of mlnco plo upon tho bill where "yjo peoplo ruW 1 A BB Original. When I left home for Miss Harmon's nchool for girls my father lived In 1111 nols. When I was ;nv.diiatel he had removed to nanktoii. N. Y. He gave mo tho street and number. Lut lie was n lawyer, and lawyers v. civ In tho. c days proverbial for t!ic!i' wiv.'.-hed handwriting, so I found It dChYult to, make out the nddro. As mur as 1 ' could come to deciphering tho i.anio of the street It was Lafayette. This a.i not correct. It was K.ib'lh street.! Leaving the station on my arrival. I j took a cab and told the driver to take i mo to HO Lafayette street. When I yaw the house I was stirpri-'eil that r.ij j father could afford to live in it. 1 had j left n two story frame cottage in the , west to come to a four rtory stone front house In the east. I paid the poarhmaii and, going up I the stoop, rang the boll. A mr.M came to the door whom 1 had inner seen., and 1 told her to tell mother (hat 1 had ' come from school. !he asked nu whom (iie should say had come. I told her "her daughter, of course." and, going Into the drawing room, looked about me at the handsome furuilmv. still wondering how father had been able to purchase It. The maid went tipslnlr , to make the announcement. I waited quite a long while for her return. When she eai'ie down she told me that no one was at home except my mother, who had recently h-id a rain raet lemoved from one of her o.os and war. obliged to remain In a dur'; room. I v.'ai surprised, for t bad not been In formed of there bohr: anything the matter with her eye. anil as the maid raid I was to go up to her I ran up stairs and through a room Hint had been darkened so that one entering my ' mother's room should not let In any light. The chamber occupied by my mother was so dark that I could scarce ly see my hand before my fare. 1 didn't know which way to turn till she called me, and even then I went in the wrong direction till she had done so fieveral times. Then 1 found her pit ting in an easy chair and put my arm- around her neck. "Why, child." she said, "why did you ! write us that you would come tumor- row? Your brother would have met you at the station." I wns startled. My mother's voice had changed. Could It bo that her trouble with her eye had broken her faculties. "There's some mistake about that, mother dear," I replied. "I wrote that I was coming on Thursday. Thursday and Friday by a bad writer may be made to look alike. Perhaps there's where the error lies." I was about to speak of her trouble when I heard tho door of the nnte room open and shut. Then the door of the room I was In opened, some ono hurried In, and a man's voice said: "Where arc you, sis?" "I'm here." "Ellen told me you'd come, and come a day ahead of time." My brother Tom, ten years my senior, never cnlled me anything but "sis" and "slssey," but there was some thing wrong with his voice. I had no time to wonder what had caused the change when I felt myself clasped in two strong arms and Hps pressed against mine. "What's become of your beard?" I asked. "Beardl I never had one. We've been counting on your coming. Moth er Is shut up for the present, but sha'll come out all right. The doctor snys sho may have the light In one week more. Awful glnd to seo you I mean to feel you, ha, ha! Can't see any thing In here. Have to rely on the touch." And ho gave me nnother good hug and several kisses. "But como out Into the light. I want to seo how you've improved. You won't mind, will you, mother?" "Not If you don't keep her too long." Putting his arm around my waist, he led mo out through the anteroom, and, opening tho outer door, we stood on the threshold between tho room nnd the hall. I say wo stood there, nnd so we did. We didn't get any farther, nt least not Just then. Never were two people more astonished, bewildered. We wero en tire strangers to eacli other. "Great Scott!" was his exclamation. "neavens!" was mine. Ho dropped his arm as If it had boon shot, and I quickly drew nway. "How In tho namo of" "I must have got into tho wrong" At this point ho regained his equa nimity. "If you're not my sister, you're certainly worthy to bo nuy one's sister. At any rate, I'm happy to mnko your acquaintance, oven by mistake, though I assure you I don't usually on so slight nn acquaintance" He paused, nnd my faco flushed crim son. "Come," ho snld reassuringly, "tell mo how It happened." I told him my story, and he replied that his own sister, who had been nway from homo on a long visit, was exacted the next day. Ho Insisted 'that I needed a luucheou nnd ordered ono, and while I was eating It he tele phoned for a carriage. When It camo he got In with mo nnd began a hunt for mo for my homo. My father's namo was not iu tho directory, but I told my now found friend that ho wns an attorney, and, driving to the office of ono of tho profession, wo learned tho nddrcss. Ten minutes later I was with my own family. Tho family li'.to which I had blun dered becamo niy Intimate friends. The daughter caJJcd on mo, nnd the son has been so utlcutlvo to mo ns to wo shall see. FLORENCE NORTON, FOR THE HOUSEWIFE Eanplant, American Stylo. Cut the eggplant In thick slices, ' cover with salt and put n weight on top to extract tho Juice. At the end of two hours fry In olive oil or good drippings. Arrange pnrt of tho plant In layers around sides nud bottom of a cooking pot nnd set the rest ono side. Try In the same drippings ono pound of chopped meat and two on ions (sliced). Put a layer of this meat and onion on lop of tha sliced egg plant. Next should come a few slices ft tomato, seasoning all with salt and pepper. Over this put another layer -if eggplant, then mote meat and to mato, and eo on until all the lucredi outs are used. Add a little hot water to partly cover, put on the lid and cook slowly on top of the stave until the water Is almost gone. Serve hot. Dcrk Rings Under the Eyes. Dark circles under the eyes are usu ally due to some congestion of the veins of the part and ere almost al ways the result of one or more of the following circumstances: When the person U anaemic and the chemical constitution of the blood Is no, what It should be or when the i.vstem U being drained as It would be In exccfilve study. lack of sleep and ' dissipation of any description. An external remedy will sometimes j ln effective temporal lly, but It cannot I pns-i'ply I e permanent while the caife f the trouble still exists. P.:ithe the eyes and the siiP'oiimllng skin with cold water and use friction upon the darkened pait f th. skin. A little tnr i'cvtlne liniment Is" good, ns Is also a iliitl- !t made of o'i part of diluted 'imm'i.iia to four parts of water. I'.e careful that none of the wash reaches the eve. Convenient Clothes Rack. Among the novel Inventions recent! aten'.ed h the detachable clothes rack shown In the lllust ration below. It consists of a framework of rods, which i-: damped to the end of the bedstead. W'turnlly this clolluvs rack Is intended 1 l e employed mostly at night, when f!ii occupant-? are nslir; the bed. some if the discarded garment t being sus HACK FASTENS ON BEDSTEAD. ponded on tho hooks on the upper bracket nnd others folded on the lower arm. In addition, this clothes rack would also prove useful to tho house wife during the day, ns It could be employed for nlrlng tho bedclothes. When uot In uso It cnu be quickly de tnched from tho bed3tend. DAMES AND DAUGHTERS. Ethel McAllister, nged eight years, .raveled safely aloir. from Melbourne, Australia, to New York, a distance of 7"i00 miles. Miss Frelda Kllngel Is tho first wom an driver of a taxlcab In New York city. It is said that Miss Kllngel was formerly a chorus girl, and alio made the change from stage to cab without dltllculty. Mrs. Zella Nutall is now in Mexico as Held director of the Reld-Crocker expedition, which Is excavating the Pyramids of tho Sun and Moon nt Itco tlhuacan. The work Is carried on with funds furnished by Mrs. Whltelaw Hold and Mrs. Crocker of San Fran cisco. Mrs. George Tyler Iligelow of Mas sachusetts, widow of a chief Justice of the commonwealth, was originally a nullify girl nnd remembers John Ad ams vividly. With her mother she wns at the reception given by him to Lafa yette on Aug. 20, IS21. She was then seventeen. Now she's over ninety. Miss Josephine Louise Reynolds of Hull, Mass., a telephone girl, has dem onstrated that one womnu at least cau drive a nail straight nnd saw a board vertically nnd to lino. Sho drew the plan of a small summer cottage and with her own hands, fearless of callous and splinter, constructed 't, tho work manship being good Iu every detail from foundation to t-ooftree. Troubles of tliemrlcnl malingers over "first nights" could well be avoid ed lu the case of some plays by mak ing the first night tho last nud calling It that. When the sandwich mnn at the coun ty fnlr eats from his own stock It's n sure sign that Roosevelt's uplift has struck somebody In tho farming dis tricts. Tho announcement "Jerome Is nfter tho gamblers" would bo more Inter esting to certain New Yorkers plus nn adjective hi front of the Inst word. Among noises which nro a nuisance nnd could bo made unnecessary tho "honk" of the nuto Is at tho front of tho proccFsIon, For Prothonotorv Bkk"" 111111! i Wallace J. Harm:-.-.. N w Portier-'-". Hues, C'litaiiH and Carpets at Mux s t.ll Sc Uo.'s. 22 -it f ; OR liEGISTfilJ AND RUCOKDHR. i A. O. BLAKE. Carpets Cleaned on the Floor. The Oscar Smith establishment ill have one of their Vacuum Cm pel Clean ing Machines in Uoncsdale on October I'.MIi, and will clean the Prcsbytiiian church. An invitation is extended to parlies having any carpets to clean to come and see the kind of work they do. The old stvle of cleaning carpets is'done away willi. You don't have to take your carpets up and beat the life out of ihem, which is injurious to (be carpels, nor do vou have your house torn up for days. They guarantee to lake dirt out i f carpets, "upholstered furniture, bed ding, blankets, etc.. without injury to liesanie, and without creating any dusl, r taking the articles to be cleaned nut "f the room. Any orders or inquiries lift at V. L. Dunning's More will have prompt attention. ''ltf Republican Candidate For Sheriff. M. LEE BRAMAN, JO PH N. WELG gam B r ire surance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Olllce: Second Moor Masonic Ruild. iiij;, over ('. ('. .ladwin's ding store, lloncsdaie. A I'l'l.'AlM-IMI'NT.S. Notice is given that appini: i it oH-'liKllotho wid- ii.ni- i. flit,, li.ht.wlnu itaiiuil ilcicdcni.s have hccii Hint In the Orphans' Coint of Wayne county, mm win nc pn tciucu mr approval on Monday, (let. 11.. IIM-vlst: Vktnr Mller. Iti illn : Personal nnd Ileal, Daniel Mill hell. Hcillli: I'cniou.tl. I.iv II. Mori. .n, Ml. I'lcar.uit ; Personal. Margaret l.umanl, Canaan; Personal and 11,1 '" M..I. HANI.AN.'.Clerk. UoiK'saale. Oct, 7, im. . i ii ' m M iWril HKPOHT OP T1IK CONDITION or tub HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK AT IIONF.SDALK. WAYNK COUNTY, PA., nt the clone of business. Sept 21. 100S. HK40U11CKS. Uiiiiis uiit! Discounts tivenlr.ut Mviired and unsecured t lloMti loKivnieclrciilatloii. I'ninlmn.-. ii I . K.HomM ''hihK .'.e ,.:!t!ci. etc ii uiMitu-li.i .-('. (iirnlttireaud fix- tllli'M 1) io iroiii ,v tlniial Hanks (n.it Itcforvi! .'. .cm.s) line from ai;uovcil icserve .id'iiu .. . ''kvI..i and other rash items . N.ilooi oilier .National Hanks . i- - actioniii iK-in-r ciiiivncy. incis s an, I ivlils... i a.7.K 37 None SS.UM U0 . 2,'U) 00 1,'ttl.MU XI 4U.00U 00 2.V06 Ho IXAta M V.012 4(i ill) (XI 1G yi.ut 00 '.'.730 00 aoil .lui.-tiv Iuri.v-c In Hank, i': ' A, 5-ii.:Ij1 o.i i jviT a-adcv-uotoi -l.l:J IM it. mi'tion iniiit wuii i). s. , n-a.i.t-r, (j.er cent, ot cl lea .il ion) 'lob.l turn I.1AUILITIM. I-J 11 ,(U) 00 i ipha! sto. 1: paid In t IU), ' iriiiiis ninu IvJ iidlvidi-il piollts. less expense mil luvi paid id, tk'ii.i! Il.iiiu t:.MC-outstanding u, i.tle !!:!iu; n..us initblaiidlns .. s lie louit.ei' .Nailoiiul Hanks 1 IW IX) Xi IS itJ l-J ao 00 .lot 72 iMi-iiihiiui; i.an.is and Hunkers Uii ot "IlilVidlMl Ot'i.odltS subject to clicii. .. JI.lfl.0l6 bi iicn.Mid ce.iliicates o iU-1m( .. .. m,l;Jl oo Ccrlilii-dflit-ckH 1,7b 71 ashici's ciut'l K oat stnmlln:: I.oui jj UK) 'oiitls honowt'd olcsuiitl bills icdiscouiiti-d wills ny.,iilc, InchiUint- cerlifl catcsolili'iHisIt for money bor rowed I .ia hi I Ii Icm -1 hail I hose above Ml 22 None Nona None Nono Milieu Total 11X11.123 II Jtale i.f lViinsj It aula. County of Wayne, ss. I. hi J in r. nn ivy. Cashier of the ubove allied Hank, no M.U ionly swear thut the iMiu-Mutciiiciii is tmuto the best of my nowlclrcand U ,.(. v , , , K. I'. TOItllKV. Cashier. :.;r.,.",,.r1yrl!rsc:lils;or" ,o ,K'f,, ,m- ",is CovC-M.,.: H. A. SMITH, N. 1'. A.miiikw Thompson, ) ItoMut (iiiKKMC. MXreclora. h. II. llAItllKNIIKIUIII. I For New Late Novelties -IN- JEWELRY WATCHES SILVERWARE SPENCER, The Jeweler Uiion.nlccd articles only iolj." RlXilSTKU'S NOTICK. Notice is hereby given that Ihu accountants In rein named have gottli-d their resiectlve .ii counts in the oillce of the Keslstcr of Wills of Wayne County. Pa., mid that the same will he inc.-oiitcd at ihe i n-phaiis' Court of said .omity Tor continuation, ut thet'ouit House !u llo.iesdale. on the fourth .Monday of (Jc lohcr next vi : First and linal account of K.C. Dojle. ex- iitorot the estate of Kllon O'Kourk, Wuy iiart. First and linal account of I). C. Dulke and .1. 11. .Sicveii-ion. executors of the estate of It. I. ii'liotirl.e, Wiiyimtrl. First and llu.il ac.oiiul of Paul IC. O'Neill, administrator or the eatutu of Charles C 'ary. I tuck I nuli: in. First and linal accoiuit'of Mayme Kecgan Carey, administratrix or the estate of Will-i-ini II. lSaroy. --ranton. First and dual :ua-o nil of Joel I laynes, ex ecutor or the eMat-ol Jesse W. Hay lies, Pres 'iii. First and llnal aivotmt of Kinina Furle. nd 'iiinistiatrix or the cMato of Patrick 1'urie, t'reston. First and lin.il account of A. K. Sisson and O. N. Hates, executors of the estuteof S. II. Hates, llamas, us. First unit Una' aivount of Lottie P. Lane, idinlnlstratrix uf the estate ot Patrick F. Muran, IajI).iiiou. Supplementary account of H. N. (Iroas, ad iiinlstraloroi ifarriel A. Clilf. Sierllic-. Firsl and llnal acco-.mt of Charlud A. Mc Cuty admlnlM rater ot the estate of An ticw F.iai;: ii Perry. First ai'd llnal lucoiinl of Isaac P. Uavitt, .ivutoi ol Hit! l ist will of VloU'tla liavitt, iiainiiMU-. First and final .'.count of Minnie Kckbeck, dniiiii-l::.. : i.'. oi ihe estate ot Julio A. Kck vk. i':.U :. !;. I'lrM and uu.il account of William II. ' .ho.;a . cu-ulor or Hie estate ii C.collne isle'. Iirclicr. First and linal '.iciount of Kucene Swingle, .eculor of the estate of Peter llotzel, .-oulh 'an luu. First and tin..! account of A. T. Sen rle.cz ulor or the estate oi' .Maria A. llnlteln, 'IVSI..II. Vint and llnal account of E. C. Mumford ..liu.iiiMiaturof thecdtatcotltalph Fleming, he:!) Hidt'C First and linal account of Hattlo M. Conk ..!! Fliuemc S. Hodie. Kxecutors of the .'date of William Hox, liethany. K. V . Uammki.i., Ileclster. tOl'llT PROCLAMATION. Whereaa, 0 the Judge of the several Courts of lie County of Wayne has issued his precept for hold In;; n Point of Quarter Sessions, Oyer mil 1'crnilner. ui.it (iener.il Jail Delivery in ml fur said County, at thet'ouit House, to H''ln on .MONDAY. OCrOHUIt IM, liXH and continue ono week : And directing that a ( I rand Jury for the ('uurts of Quarter Sessions and Oyer and Terminer be summoned to meet on Monday, October 1!). 1SWS. at 2 p.m. Notice is tlierctoie hereby given to tho Coroner and Justices ot the Peace, and Con stables of tha Comity of Wayne, that they be then and there in their lirorer persons, at said Court llnux-, at 'J o'clock lu the after noon of sal.t imh of October. IHU. with their records, iniiuisltions.cxaininat ions and other remembrances, to do those things which to their olllccs appertain to tie done, and those who are bound by rccomilziince or otherwise to prosecute the prisoners who are or shall belli the Jail of Wayne County, be then mid thereto piosccute aualiist them as shall ho Jiii-I. (liven under my liauil, at Hones. hile, this 5th dav of October. 1H0S, and In the l.llst year ot tlie liidcpcndi'iacof ttie United States. WILLIAM I!. UOADKNKIHT. Sheriff. mltlAL LIST. Wnyno Common Pleas X Octobi rTcrni, l'.KW, beginniiiROct.'iU, 1 Mooic. l!ui ivci. s .Frcy. l' " Hrlnk. :i " llorlrce, I " " Hrlnk. a- " " " Smith. li- lioliharhcr. 7-Scars. Kx'r. vs Cole.,, H-F.ckbivk vii Lciiliarilt. !i-Korilman vh Dcnloi t r.l. III Spencer vs Smith, l. r, li -llazcii vs County of Wayne. Ii'-lta.-s vi. Kennedy. 1 '.-Wooiliow vs Kline. i . t .... rC... I.... 1.1-1'mipack K'i trio Co. vs Drake. lii-KrcItniT Urn's vs Dean. ,7Nolanvse..,.Sr J lloncsdaie, Oct. u, IMi. 2Sw3 Dlt.C. It. l!ltADY.DK.NTiHT,IIonesdale, Pa. (Hi h i: HoiiiiK-sa. m. too pi in. Any evcnlnc by appointment. Citizens' phone, 'Si, ltesldence, No. t) X, 0