The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, June 02, 1909, Image 7

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    3
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Poetical Tar Makes a Trip Into
the Interior and Corroborates
Talc of Jonah
PROCURES SOME INSIDE FACTS
Pink Pajamas Bearing the Letter "J"
Prove the Scriptural Character was
Previous a Tenant Evicted Eventu
ally and Picked Up by His Mates.
Savannah, (Ja. If higher critics
must expose the myths In Holy Writ
they'd belter make nuothcr guess be
fore they think they're It. For yes
terday, when Jonas Home, of the
barkentlne nolle White, had hoard a
parson say the tale of .lonah wasn't
right he left his new without a word
and went away from there. He said
lie couldn't stand to hear a He right
after prayer.
"It's 'downright sacrilege," he said,
"the way those parsons talk. The
truth, my boy, should aye prevail
It's a winner In a walk. It happens 1
was swallowed once by the very self-name-
whale that swallowed Jonah.
(Have a drink?) This ain't no phoney
tale. And being swallowed thus I
found good evidence Inside, that the
Jonah story was O. K. and that the
parson lied.
"I was just n youngster at the time,
a greenhorn on a whaler, but thought
I knew most everything, Just like your
brand new sailor. Our ship, the Mol
ly Brown, one day was bein' put about
to start for home when up aloft the
lookout gave a shout:
'"A whale as big as Noah's ark!
Great fish hooks, pipe the spout!'
"We dropped the boats and started
out to get him mighty quick. We
pulled to windward, sneaking down
upon him nice and slick. Old Jerry
threw the harpoon in and then we
pulled away. And was there some
thin' doin'? Well, maybe. Somethin'
gay!
"I was standin' at the tiller, think
In' I was mighty big, when Mr. Whale
shoots up beneath and gives our boat
a dig. I landed head down in the drink,
and, feelin, quite romantic, I tried to
yell goodby; instead, I swallowed
some Atlantic. I feels a sort of suc
tion then, and gee, it turned me cold
I knew that I was on my way Into
that critter's hold.
"Then came a bump, and then ker
chunk! But nothin' couldn't stop us.
I knew us I went by that bump it was
his epiglottis. At last I hove to In a
place that was as dark as night. I sat
awhile to catch my wind and get my
bearing right. A funny roar was in
my ears, like tons of rushln' water;
which meant, thought I, we're travel
in' much faster than we'd oughter. 1
tried to get upon my feet, but every
time I rose that durned fish turned a
corner quick and tosod me on my nose.
Then when I tried to fool that whale
by risn' slow and soft, I'd no more got
me half way up when the bloomin'
monster coughed.
"It throw me, cussln', on my face,
and then I feels within my lingers'
grasp a bottle that I knew must carry
gin! I pulled a match and tallow dip
from out my starboard boot, and.
lightin' up, sot out to make a search
for further loot. And when I takes a
careful squint at whore I found the
flask, I spies a pair of sandal shoes.
Now, sonny, let mo ask: What was
them sandals doin' there, in the in
wards of that whale? And how about
that pint of gin? It plainly showed
the tale of Jonah's bein' swallowed by
a whale was surely true, and that the
whale that swallowed him had taken
me in too.
"I'm from Missouri when I hear
theology expounded, but as for them
there Bible tales, I guess that they're
well founded. For facts Is facts, and
when I'd made another find that day
of a pair of pink pajamas labelled
with the letter 'J' I knew that Jonah
was no fake, but truthful to the core,
and that I stood where he had stood
ten thousand years before.
"I was sittin' feelin' peevish, like a
martyr in a pit, when somethin" hap
pened sudden and the critter threw a
fit. My light went out, and holy
smoke! the very next I knew I
was shooting through his thorax at a
rate I call skldoo. I must have dis
agreed with htm the way he chucked
me out. I came a-bobbin' through the
waves and took a look about. I was
tickled when I noticed that my mates
was close at hand. They picked mo
up and every man just cheered to beat
the band.
"Now, any one who don't beliove
the Jonah story's true can come to
me. (Well. I don't mind. I'll have
another too)."
VOICE AT OWN FUNERAL.
Clergyman Makes Phonograph Rec
ords for Use at His Grave.
Fairfield, 111. The Rev. Daniel Bas
Bett Leach, an aged clergyman of
Bono Gap, near here, was told that he
was going to die. Ho asked that his
graphones be brought to his bedside.
Into the machine the venerable pas
tor talked. Besides an address he
epoke some prayers and a benediction.
When Mr. Leach had finished he
had the records repeated. Then he
asked that they be used at his funeral.
His relatives assented, and this his
relatives, songregatlon nnd friends
heard his own voice as they stood bo
aldo his grave. .Mr. I m ' v . horn
In Chenango County. .V . .
TRUTHFUL
JON
X OR WHALES
ALL HIS CHICKS -GET
Farmer Discovers Barnyard Speak
easy After Roosters Hiccough and
Will Give the Gold Cure.
Livingston, N. J. Jacob Foos, a
farmer of this place, is seeking a gold
euro for his chickens. Thirty Ply
mouth Hocks in his barnyard have be
come Inebriates.
A week ago Foos placed an old whis
ky barrel, with an end knocked out,
In an open space near the henhouse
as a shelter for a hen with a brood
of little chicks that had been hatched
out early. When the sun became hot
the hen retired to the barrel with her
brood. After a few days Foos ob
served that every chicken in his barn
yard seemed to bo in a half stupor
oven the young chicks. The roosters
wont about the yard crowing In a hie
coughly way, and the hens clucked in
hoarse, guttural tones.
Foos was puzzled and ho called In
W. F. Merrill, a veterinarian, who In
spected the coops and found nothing
wrong. Then he examined the bar
rel. One snllT at the air of the inter
ior enlightened him.
"The chickens are drunk," Merrill
said. Then ho explained to Foos that
the whiskey barrel, which had been
In a damp cellar all winter, had been
affected by the sun, which brought the
alcohol out of the wood. The hen that
picked nt the wood first must have
communicated the secret to the other
fowl, and all became visitors to the
barnyard "speak-easy."
Foos thought an easy solution of
the difficulty would be to burn tho
whiskey barrel. This ho did, but the
craving for drink had become too
strong in the chickens. An old roost
er, with the Instinct of a confirmed
toper, found his way to an Improvised
silo where Foos kept a supply of malt
which he buys from a brewery to feed
his cattle. This proved a substitute
for the whisky barrel, and soon all the
chickens were clustered about the
silo, devouring the malt. Foos has
shut the chickens off from their new
form of dissipation, but fears that un
less he breaks them of the habit they
will wander off the farm In quest of
strong drink.
LEADER OF THE HOUSE INSURGENTS
1
VICTOR MURDOCK, OF KANSAS.
Representative Victor Murdock, of
Kansas, who led the onslaught of the
Republicans In Congress against the
Iron rule of Speaker Joe Cannon, has
arrived at fame and is now in great
demand throughout the country as a
speaker and lecturer.
HAMMER SAVES A MAN'S EYE.
Doctor Uses Its Magnetic Property to
Draw Out a Steel Splinter.
St Louis, Mo. Armed only with a
10-cent tack hammer, Dr. G. C. Eggers
of Clayton performed an extremely
delicate surgical operation that saved
for George Schmieder the sight of one
of his eyes. A steel splinter an eighth
of an Inch long was removed from tho
affected optic. Dr. Eggers skimmed
over the surface of the eyeball with
the blunt end of the hammer. This
skimming operation was continued
without cessation for nearly half an
hour. Suddenly the sufferer felt
twings of pain.
"You've got It, doctor," he exclaim
ed Joyfully.
On the hammer's end clung the steel
splinter, drawn from the tissue o(
the eye by the magnetized head of the
hammer.
FAMOUS TREE IS HURT.
Michael Angelo's Cypress, 350 Years
Old, Injured by Storm.
Rome, Italy. A terrific storm broke
over Rome, doing considerable dam
age to property and causing the death
of one person.
The roof of tho railroad station was
partially destroyed. A portion of the
roof, In falling, tore off the top of thf
Michael Angelo cypress In the cour
of the Church of Santa Maria Angel I.
ThU tree Is supposed to have beo
plantod three hundred and fifty yon.
ago by tho famous sculptor and
or whoso name It bears.
if I )
PLANNING TO MEET
ATTACK
England Seriously Discusses the
Need of Surface Defenses in
Modern Warfare
MAKES CALL ON THE WRIGHTS
Negotiations Opened with American
Inventors for an Aerial Fleet Col.
Stone Outlines Battles of Future
Air Strategists to Attack by Night.
London. That Great Britain Is al
ready disturbed over the condition of
Its surface defenses and is awakening
to tho possibility of attack by airships
is demonstrated by the wide publicity
i and very serious attention being given
i the discussion of aerial warfare which
i took place a few days ago at the Royal
United Service Institution.
The occasion was a lecture by Col.
F. G. Stone, followed by comment by
a number of the most eminent military
and naval authorities. Col. Stone's
lecture was severely scientific, but In
e'"ect was Immensely impressive. He
spoke of raids by aerial squadrons of
dirigible balloons, reconnoitring the
coasts by day and by night, dropping
destruction in the shape of bombs
upon ships, harbors, ports, and cities,
and he drew nn extraordinary picture
of a battlefield in the next great war
a battlefield In the air, Illuminated,
not by searchlights here and there,
but all ablaze with every species of
illumination. He pointed out that no
existing batteries could hope to reach
airships on the move only when they
hovered over the object of their at
tack would they offer a target for
high-angle batteries.
He conceived that airships would
attack by night, and that the defense
would try to blind the navigators with
the glare of Innumerable lights. The
ships would manoeuvre in the semi
darkness on the edge of the shining
battlefield; then dash into the illumi
nation, drop their death, and endeav
or to escape. It would be found that
surface artillery would be well-nigh
impotent. If a balloon were hit it
was hardly to be expected that the
shell would burst, and the envelope
would stand much laceration without
collapsing. The only defense would
be by lleets of smart, nimble aero
planes capable of soaring to battle on
even terms in tho sky area.
This a few years ago could have
been only a chapter out of an H. G.
Wolls romance. The fact that It was
discussed by cool, unimaginative,
scientific officials and military ollicers
as a matter of course has created a
profound impression throughout Eng
land. Mr. Huldnne, tho War Minister,
lins stated in Parliament that the
War Oillce was opening negotiations
with private inventors for the ne
qi.isition of military aeroplanes. His
reference was to the Messrs. Wright,
arrangements being made for Orvillo
to come to England.
WILD CAT'S HARD FIGHT.
Does not Walt, but Charges, Bringing
on a General Engagement.
Chippewa Falls, Wis. Learning
what an unusually large wild cat had
boon seen in Rusk County, Otto and
Walter Schroebor, of Ladysmith, with
throe hounds, set out to make a cap
ture. Otto, Willi the hounds, was trailing
the cat, when Walter, stationed on a
log, saw the animal coming right at
him. He had a double-barrelled shot
gun loaded with buckshot, and in ills
excitement he discharged both of the
barrels at once.
Tho recoil knocked him off tho log,
and he landed on his back. Before he
could get to his foot the cat was upon
him and a desperate light ensued. In
clubbing at the eat with his gun the
stock and barrel parted. He next bo
labored the cat with the barrel until
the dogs came up and then the cat
turned its attention to the canines.
Cat and dogs rolled and tumbled, spit
ting, growling and yelping.
The men watched their opportunity
and witn a few woll-dlrected blows
despatched the cat. The dogs were
badly injured as the result of the
fight. The men escaped with only
torn clothes. The cat weighed fifty
six pounds, and was one of the largest
ever killed in this section.
GENERAL BOOTH IS EIGHTY
GEN. BOOTH.
Drawn from His Latest Photograph.
General William Booth, founder,
head and commander of the Salvation
Army, was eighty years old on April
10. The celebration of his Birthday
was observed In fifty-four countries
and colonies and In twenty-eight I. in
guages. There were ceremonies t
mark that day In Lapland, A!.v.
New Zealand, New South Wales, .1 .
and under the Equator.
1 THE HIGHER LIFE
H SJitKd Gom cJ Thxitht (rem Pra od Pnfed
3 cl AD Stc.
Trustful Proml'St's.
They that wait upon Jehovah shall
renew their strength; they shall
mount up with wings as eagles; they
shall walk and not faint Rev-. F.
Willis, Reformed.
Promises of Faith.
Faith! Openness to God. Friend
ship with Christ. The presence of
the host and highest In this world
nnd In the world to come. Oh, go
out renewed In faith and be over
cotficrs through tho power of the
grace of God. Rov. D. W. Hillis,
Methodist.
Present Life Is but n moment.
"Paul'sground of rejoicing was
the Inward man. Day by day he was
being renewed. And why should ho
not make this the ground of his re
joicing? Wo confess that tho pre
sent life is but for the moment; that
the tabernacle which we now Inhabit
is passing away and that we must
shortly loavo all earthly possessions.
Regulating Our Live.
Everything In our lifo from the
pontiles In our purse to tho friend
ships of our heart, may hn eoiivivt"d
Into a psalniof praise. Indeed, it la
doubtful if we are properly thanl- fill
If our possessions nnd our ncttoti.i do
not. exemplify the grateful words
which our lips utter. Rev. D W.
Anderson, Baptist.
Overcoming Evil.
Ood is a God of love, full of 'lov
ing kindness and tender mercy, and
his compassions fail not, but aro new
every morning.' He is 'long-suffering,
not willing that any should
perish, but that all should come to
repentance.' 'Turn, ye, turn, ye,
from your evil ways, for why will
you die, O house of Israel?' Rev.
Wallace Smith, Episcopal.
Blaming Ourselves.
We all have a tendency to desire
that we may see the result of our
lives, and have the satisfaction that
we have not lived In vain. But,
more and more as we see the un
speakable depth and breadth of the
world's sin, and the little that is
done to stem the torrent of Iniquity,
the more we aro dissatisfied with
ourselves, and Inclined to think that
we have lived In vain. Rev. M.
Strykor. Methodist.
Cause of our Sorrow.
"Man, an alien from his loving
father-God, has wrongly and unjust
ly accused God of sending all the
sorrow of the world. Goldsmith
was wrong 'In all my griefs, and
God has given my share'; Tennyson
was wrong 'My God has bowed mo
down to what I am.' God Is not re
sponsible for all that happens. God
Is not the author or sender of sorrow
and suffering. God does not inllict
punishment for sin here. All tho
punishment for sin v. as that ondured
on the cross by the Saviour, who
suffered that we might not suffer.
God does not stand with sword in
hand to cut and slash with torch to
burn. Rov. E. M. Luke, Unitarian.
Laws of God.
God's laws aro natural state
ments, of the orderly conditions of
things In nature and spiritual;
necessary and inexorable, otherwise
Hie would be intolerable tho world
frightful chaos making impossible
any plan, any material, intellectual
or hpiritual progress, leaving anar
chy tho only alternative.
God Is the same 'yesterday, to-day
and forever.' his laws unchanging
and unchangeable. In his plan tharo
was no place for catastrophe no
cause for suffering no Intension of
death; but broken himself against
his (ory law. Those laws cannot
bt changed but man must change
his relation to them. Rov. Wallace
Smith.
iK-erios a Xon-K-Hcliin-c God.
The prophet Habakkuk, pro
nounced woes on those who wore
covetous, and dishonest, and proud,
and bloodthirsty, and drunken and
Idolatrous. In the eyes cf the .-.oule
monotheism of tho Hebrow prophets
Idolatory ww a sin to bo ranked and
..used with other sins. 'Shall It
teach? this 'wood' or 'dumb stone'?
Though It be 'laid with gold and sil
ver,' shall it awako? Shall It arise?
bhall it teach? This was the pr
phet s challenge and test. A God
that is worth anything should teach.
If he cannot teach he 1? worthless.
This was the Hebrow Idea, and such
It is a noble scorn that Habakkuk
hurls at the non-teaching gods.
Rev H. Tupper, Baptist. '
Apple on the Berry Bush.
To those particularly Interested in
the growing of apple an experiment
made at Delta, Idaho, will be of value.
In the Spring of last year Thomas and
Francis Hauch, two miners, who keep
a garden and grow strawberries and
vegetables, experimented In grafting
a scion of a four-year-old-apple tree in
to a service berry tree body, and to
their delight the limb not only grew
but blossomed this year and two well
developed yellow apples ripened. The
tree from which the scion was cut has
never bloomed, yet the scion when
grafted into a berry bush blossomed
and bore fruit the next year. La
Grande Obserrer.
To Protect Ilard Wood Floors.
To protect hardwood floors from
scratches, fit corrugated rubber to
bottom ol tables and chairs, fasten
with strong glue. These lips are in
visible. ,, , .
INTERNATIONAL NEWSPAPER
BIBLE STUDY CLUB.
Answer One Written Question
Each Week For ' Fifty-Two
Weeks and Win a Prize.
THE PRIZES.
First 8erles A gold msdal to each
of the first five contestants.
Second Series A silver medal to
each of the next five contestants.
Third Series A Teachtr's Bible,
price $5.50, to each of the next five
contestants.
Fourth Series The book "The Heart
of Christianity," price $1.50, to each of
the next "thirty-five contestants.
Fifth Series A developed mind, an
expanded Imagination, a richer exper
ience and a more profound knowledge
of the Bible and of life, to all who take
this course whether winning any other
prize or not.
Each medal will be suitably engrav
ed, giving the name of the winner, and
for what It Is awarded, and In like
manner each Bible and book will be
inscribed.
All who can write, and have ideas,
are urged to take up these studies re
gardless of the degree of their educa
tion, as the papers are not valued from
an educational or literary standpoint,
but from the point of view of the cog
incy of their reasoned ideas.
June 6th, isua.
(Copyrlplil. 1pni, l,v Hcv. T. S. T.lni-ott D D
The Power of tho Tongue. .Tames
111:112.
Golden Text Whoso keepeth his
mouth and his tongue keepeth his
soul from troubles. Prov. 21:23.
This chapter continues the thought
of last week's lesson, based on the
previous chapter.
Verse 1 What class of persons are
most likely to want to rule, or be
"masters," .ose engaged in good
works or those who neglect them?
Will one who Is In rapt love with
his fellows want to rule them, or will
he Judge them harshly?
Unfaithful Christians always put up
a high standard for others; what ef
fect will that have upon the standard
with which God will measure them?
(See Matt. 7:1-5.)
Verse 2 How much of our trouble
and how much of the trouble we make
for others Is caused by our tongues?
If a man does not do any harm by
his words. Is he very apt to do any
otherwise?
If a man says hard and unkind
things about his neighbors, and in
tentionally wounds the feelings of
others by his words, Is he necessarily
a bad man?
Is the control of the tongue the key
to tho control of the entire man?
Verse " It takes an Iron bit to con
trol a horse, what Is the "bit" which
will effectually control the tongue?
In what respect is an ungoverned
tonc;ue like a runaway horse with a
broken bit, and what are generally the
results in each case? (This question
must be answered In writing by mem
bers of the club.)
Verses -1-5 Is It actually so, that
the tongue is to tho man what the
nulder is to the ship, that Is, does
the tongue govern the Influence of tho
man?
Is it nocepsary at all times to watch
our tongues, compelling them to re
frain from wrong words, and to use
right words; just as the man at the
wheel of a ship controls tho rudder
with vigilant watchfulness?
Is tho tongue capable of setting a
church or a neighborhood all ablaze
with scandal, just as a match may set
fire to a city?
Vorse 0 What are some of the
many "iniquities" which the tongue
can cause?
Can you recall and mention some
of the moral poison emitted by an
evil tongue?
Do persons with an evil tongue al
ways dray their Inspiration from
"hell?"
Verses 7-8 Man can do very won
derful things, In training animals and
controlling the forces of nature, but
cannot "taine" the human tongue, nor
destroy Us poison; to whom may we
apply to have this effectually done?
Verses 9-12 If a man uses his
tongue both for bad and for good,
for "blessing and cursing," does this
not stamp him as a rank hypocrite?
Is It possible for a person with an
evil tongue, to be at tho same timo
well pleasing ts God?
Lesson for ?5nday, Juno 13th, 1909.
Heroes of Faith. Heb. 11:1-40.
BIBLE HOUSE MISDRAWN.
Excavations in Galilee Show Rooms
Unlike Artists' Ideas.
Berlin. German archaeologists ex
cavating In Galilee came upon a hill
or large 'mound under which they
found the fairly well preserved walls
of a house dating from the time of
Christ which belonged to the dwelling
of a well-to-do man. A large outhouse
also unearthed contained jars which
evidently had contained wine and
olive oil.
The foundations of the house are
so well preserved that there will be
no difficulty in making the exact plan
of the rooms, which aro similar In
character and design to those in which
the famous supper of Cana In Galilee
took place.
These rooms are wholly unlike the
conception of Leonardo da Vinci and
other painters, who have treated this
subject. The room in which the wa
ter was turned into wine probably was
not more than twenty feet long by
ten wide and had a low roof. There
were stone benches around the walls
and a recess In the wall facing the
east, in which perhaps the giver of
the feast sat.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
The Farmers' and
Mechanics' Bank
OF llONESDAI.E, WAYNE COUNTY. PA
at the close of business, April a. loot).
HKSOUIiCES.
Reserve fund
Cash, specie nnd notes, $8,42a tfj
Due from approved re
serve agents $15,801 87
f peeks and other cash Items...... U77 ! H
s discounted, not due 55 519 m
Mils discounted, tlmu loans with
r collateral 21 000 no
Loans 011 call with collateral sW 00
Loans upon call upon one or mure
. names in 1111 no
Loans secured by bonds and mo'rt- '
gages 13 sod 00
Investment securities owned eic'lii- '
slveof reserve bonds, viz....
Stocks, bonds, etc tinam Yl
.Mortgages und Jndg-
,..,, n'i;!!ir. 01 rw,ml L'5 m-:a.rM :
ileal estate iHKwinA
Furniture and fixtures . . . Tsui 41
Overdrafts 3 go
$ L'lLMO 41
I.I.UIII.ITIICS.
Capital Stock paid In mcM 00
Surplus Fund Si ho
I iidlvldcd Profits, less expenses
, and taxes paid . ). it.
epos ts. subject to clieek. M
Deposits, special lL'u.m.' 3.H(,(i56 K7
c. .... . nn:m 41
state of Pennsylvania, County of Wayne, rs :
I. C. A. Emery. Cashier of the above named
company, do solemnly swear tl a lie I ve
and heffef. '" tl,U '"-'St f k'"
C. A. EMERY. Cashier.
a:f "or!:'1!:1 swo,n 10 -'" ti.i iM
Correct attest: ItKXA S. Upturn", N, 1'.
M. E. Simons. )
.1ohnK. Kba.ntz. Directors.
. W l. 8km. I
We have no Insurance against
panics, BUT
We want to sell
Every business man in Wayne
county a good sized life or en
dowment policy that he may
use as collateral security for
borrowed money-tldeyouover
tight places when sales are
poor and collections slow-possibly
head off Insolvency.
We want to sell
Every farmer a policy that will
absolutely protect his family
and home.
We want to sell
Every laborer and mechanic a
savins: policy that will he m
pqssiblo tor him to lapse or
lose.
If not L,!fe Insurance
I.et us write someof yourFIRE
INSURANCE-. Standard, re
liable companies only.
IT IS BETTER TO DO IT NOW, THAN
TO WAIT AND SAY " F"
HiTTINGER & HAM,
General Agents.
WHITE MILLS, PA.
"VrOTICE IS HEREBY (HVEN that the
1 undersigned, a registered student at
aw in the (illli e or Henry Wilson. Ksii.. of
the Wayne ; county bar. and a student in
rk Inson Law j-chool, will make applir '
ion to the state Board of Law Examiners, to
e examined on the tltlt ami 7th days of July,
l!Hl!i. lor admission to the bar of the Supreme
.,,ur " cmisylvania.aml to the bar of the
( on it of Common Pleas of Wayne coiintv
,, . . CMESTEIt A. (iAIMtATT.
Iloiiesdale. Pa. .May 2 WOK. jowl
Court of Co mo P V 'W- " J I , '
11 111 I 'I'llllVV ! tl I fill,) 41... I 41.
,, , , CIIAKI.ES p. SUAKllK.
lioiiesdale. Pa.. Mav 17 VML 40t4
VTOTIOE OF ADMINISTRATION,
1' K STATE OK
IIAIIVEY X. FARLEY, late of Buckingham
.,, township.
All persons indebted to said estate are not!
lied to make Immediate payment to the un
dersigned : and tho.su havim; claims against
the said estate are notilled to present them
duly attested, for settlement.
,. , , .JOSEPH W. FAIU.EY.Adm.
Kiiulnunk. Pa., April, im. :J3wli
rTICE OF ADMINISTRATION,
ESTATE OK
, .SARAH A. (iUOMMC'Il.
late of the township of Lake, Pa.
A ll persons Indebted to said estate are notl
lied to make immediate payment to tho un
dersigned : and those bavins claims against
the said estate are untitled to present them
duly attested for settlement.
. , , J.lI.'ltO.MLK'H. Administrator,
Ariel, Pa., April 12, lUOil. 30
If you don't insure with
us, we both lose.
General
Insurance
White Mills Pa.
For New Late Novelties
-IN
YfOTU'E IS HEREBY HI VEX that the
mmuiMgiieu, a registered student at
law In the ollieeot A. T. Searle, Esq., of the
ii,;!Jst1.l,'i1i.',r!!'1,t'1lurr, wl" ,m!lk,,1 "PPlieation to
,Ktl11' l!(';ln 'r l-aw Examiners, to be ex
amined on the f.tli and 7th days of July, 1!W!)
'Tor!' !r"iY,l,m 'V I,,,r, "f tll(! K"lrenm
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