The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, January 07, 1910, Image 8

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    9
TUB CITIZEN, Fit I DAY, JAKUAlll ?, 1010.
FACTS IN rKW LINES.
THE MOST RELIAIIJ.E MEDIUM FOR
SPREADING INFORMATION
SHERMAN.
Charles Harrison of Hnllstcad,
spent tho past week with his moth
er, Mrs. James McClure.
Howard Early of Brooklyn, re
turned to that city on Friday after
spending tho past week with his par
ents In this placo.
Mr. .1. L. Stewart of Binghnmton,
was n business cnller In this placo
on Saturday.
Rev. C. J. Moon was called to
Brandt on Friday td preach tho fun
eral sermon of Mrs. Andrew Blank.
Mrs. S. T. Smith visited her daugh
ter, Mrs. F. A. West, of Binghnmton
recently.
Among the numher to attend tho
Masonic banquet Saturdny evening
nt Deposit wore Mr. Jacob Gardlnier
and grnnddaughtcr, Muriel, 'Tiny and
Florence Arneke. William Rockwell,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lowe, Mr. and
Mrs. W. M. Evans, Mr. and Mrs. J. F.
Reynolds.
A large party of young people from
Deposit spent Wednesday evening
at the home of George Arneke.
STERLING.
We find it rather dimcult to write
Jnnuary 3rd. 1910, but so It Is.
We are having a thaw and have
hopes when this snoV leaves us we
will have an abundance of water.
A small congregation Sunday and
the Sunday school candies will not bo
distributed until Jan. 17th, which is
rather procrastinating Christmas.
No school at the High school build
ing this week on account of the
measley time so many are enjoying.
Miss Susan J. Cross returned to
Moscow to-day and Margaret Howe
to Holllstervllle.
W. B. Lesher left for Honesdale to
day to attend to his official duties as
one of the county auditors.
On Thursday, Jan. 13th, the G. A.
R. Post expert to have an oyster din
ner and have invited the Odd Fel
lows. The East Sterling Sunday school
haa their Christmas exercises yester
dny which was postponed on ac
count of the weather.
Mrs. A. C. Megargle had a small
sale a short time ago and expects to
close up tho house and go to Phila
delphia this week.
The Civil Service Commission an
nounces that on Saturday, Feb. 5th,
1910, an examination will be held at
Sterling, Pa., for the position of
Fourth Class Postmaster nt Jubilee,
Pa, Application forms can be secur
ed from the Postmaster at Jubilee
and must he filed with the Commis
sion at Washington by January 29th.
IIAML1NTON.
Dr. B. G. Hamlin is home from
Camden on a short vacation.
Mrs. F. Orchard is confined to her
home with rheumatism. Mrs. Min
nie Brooks Is caring for her.
Frances Orchard returned to tho
Stroudsburg Normal School on Mon
day last.
Almus Olver of Weedsport, N. Y.,
Is visiting at J. H. Boyce's.
J T. Stocker is on the sick list.
George Poet, Jr., who has been
spending the holidays at home, has
returned to Deposit, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Spangenberg
left here on Monday enrouto for
St. Cloud, Florida, where they will
remain during tho winter.
Robert Spangenberg and H. F.
Nicholson are busily filling their ice
bouses.
Charlie Howe of Nobletown was a
caller in town on Sunday evening.
Howard Peot and family of Hollis
terville, took dinner at F. A. Peet's
on Sunday.
Miss Alma Schuller has returned
from her vacation and school has re
commenced. Henry Blake has Installed a tele
phone. Joseph Quinton has been
putting In telephones at BIdwell Hill
and vicinity. Among those who have
them are Roscoe Conkling, Alexan
der Catterson, Luclan Brink and
Michael Gerrlty.
Eugeno Mitchell has gone to Vir
ginia for tho winter.
H. C. Pelton visited in Scranton
last week.
Mr. Leslie Van Campen of tho
Globe Store, Scranton, spent Sunday
at W. H. Alt's.
Florence Williams left on Jan.
1th for SImsbury, Conn., to visit her
sister, Mrs. Chas. Andres.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Clarence Wright of
Scranton, and Kate Moore of Ariel,
called on Salem friends one day last
week.
STEELE.
Mrs. Oscar Clarke and son, WU
Ham of Doposlt, Mrs. William Wright
and family and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Spangenburg of Carbondalo, spent
New Year's day with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Haley at Steene.
At this writing Mrs. Warren Buck
land la critically 111 without any
hopes of her recovery.
Mrs. Kathryn Countermnn of Mon
roe county, is spending tio holidays
with her son, Samuel, at Koone.
Our pastor Rev. Mr. Davis preach
ed a very Interesting New Year's
sermon here at tho chapel on Sunday
afternoon, taking for hi Btext Psalms
3 1st chapter and part of tho 3rd and
XSth versos.
Mr, and Mrs. George Wayman of
South Canaan, spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. William Wood at
Steene.
Mrs. Ira Stevens of Scranton, who
has been spending tho holldnys with
her pnronts, Mr. and Mrs. Found
at Prompton, has been quite 111 since
her nrrlvnl here. At this writing she
Is slowly improving.
Mrs. George Hnyduck Is seriously
ill nt her homo nt Stcene.
Mrs. Arch Snodlker Is so much Im
proved thnt she gels to tho store a
few hours each day lately to help
her hUBband who has had his hands
full during tho holidays.
Elmer Hnmlln of Honesdale, visit
ed friends in this section on Sun
day. The Lake Lodore Ice company will
commence to harvest their Ico some
time this week, the weather permitt
ing. Mrs. George Fox passed away on
Wednesday evening at her home nt
Steeno after an illness of two weeks
of pleuro-pneumonla. Tho funeral
services held and burinl made at
Simpson on Friday of last week.
Mrs. Oscar Clarke of Deposit. N.
Y., visited friends at Honesdale on
Monday.
JiAKH COMO.
Mrs. Sarah Decker and daughter,
Hazel, are spending a few days with
friends in Carbondale.
Miss Mary Healy has returned to
Scranton after spending Christmas
at her home.
The Christmas tree exercises in
tho M. E. church was a success. All
spent n very pleasant evening. A
number of the town people presented
Mrs. Emmet a purse of money, also
the Epworth League presented Rev.
and Mrs. Emmet another purse.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp and
dnughter Inez, have returned homo
after spending a week with friends
In Stamford, Conn.
Mr. and Mrs. George Gilchrist spent
Christmas in Binghamton.
GOULDSBORO.
Mrs. Joseph Mathews and children,
Madeline and Augustus,' returned
Friday from New York, where they
had been spending the Christmas
holidays.
Miss Emily Garagan returned Fri
day from Wilkes-Barre where she
had been spending several days.
The regular business meeting of
the Epworth League will be held on
Friday evening In tho basement of
the church at S o'clock.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Eilen
berger -Saturday, a son.
Mrs. Ella Heller of Binghamton,
and Mrs. John Garagan of Scranton,
were the guests of .Mrs. Charles Gara
gan last week.
Mr. Northcott of Scranton, deliver
ed an address in the Odd Fellows
hall on Tuesday evening.
Miss Ruth Hopps- of Scranton,
spent Sunday as the guest of Miss
Mary McAree.
Chester H. Rhodes, who hns been
spending the holidays with her par
ents, Merchant and Mrs. A.
Rhodes, returned to Lehigh Univer
sity on Monday.
A GENIUS WITH A JIGSAW.
Pennsylvania!! Tnms Out Almost:
Anything that Way.
On a farm near Jacksonwald re
sides Ezra M. Yoder, who- certainly
Is a born ?cnlus. He is known In the
neighborhood as tho maa to whom
to go when you havo a puzzling arti
cle to got made in woodcraft." Tht
product of the-jigsaw Is the hobby of
Mr. Yoder, and In his Uttlo shop ho
has spent many a day, when farm
work was not pressing him for time,
with his little wonder worker, and
the result has been that be has pro
duced many articles of great use.
Perhaps the most remarkable; piece
of handiwork that he has completed
with tho Jigsaw, consisted of three
sections of wood, so arranged to
gether after being sawed that they
represented tho Lord3 Prayer. Each
of tho three sections was worked out
of a solid piece of oak board. The
letters are of ornamontal design
and wore sawed out without a sin
gle break, notwithstanding the fact
that tho lines are exceedingly deli
cate.
To start tho little saw on the va
rious ornaments It required the bor
ing of 1,720 hole3, which were drill
ed Into tho wood with a bit one-sixteenth
of an Inch In diameter. The
eawa are bo delicate that frequently
tho friction caused by working thorn
burns thom off, and It took Yoder
by surprise when he had finished
with only elx dozen oi them used.
Among his peculiar little homo
made trinkets aro goblets, rings and
lodge emblems, the latter made out
of bono, and so many havo been com
pleted by Yoder that he has one of
each design of the many fraternal or.
ders.
Besides being an expert with the
Jigsaw and lathe, Mr. Yoder Is some
thing of a musician. Ho plays the
piano, mandolin, guitar and violin,
He Is left handed and It la necessary
to reverse the strings of the In
rtTumente In order that he can play
them. He Is one of the moat popu
lar younr man of the neighborhood,
Is veil Informed en farm topics and
Just as successful In tilling th sell
as wltk Bis saws.
BASHFULSTANLEY. l
His Respnnso to a Speech of Eulogy at
a Dnnquet.
Wllllim; II. Khlulm, tells In Mc
Clure's MtiKuxtiic of u dinner of the
Papyrus club In Boston at which Hen
ry M. Stanley, the explorer, was the
guest of honor:
"Whether ho (Stanley) snt or stood,
he fldgctoil and answered In monosyl
lables not becnuso lie was unnnilabli?
or unappreclatlvc. hut. because ho this
man of Iron. God's Instrument, whose
word In tho Held brooked no contradic
tion or ovnsion. ho who dolled obsta
cles and danger nnd pierced tho heart
of darkness was bashful even In the
company of foflow craftsmen.
"His embarrassment grow when aft
er dinner tho chnlrmnn eulogized htm
to the audience. Ho squirmed nnd
nrcrtcd his face as cheer after cheer
confirmed tho spenkcr's rhetorical ebul
lience of praise. 'Gentlemen, I Intro
duce to you Mr. Stanley, who,' etc.
The hero stood up slowly, painfully,
reluctantly, nnd, with n gesture of dep
recation, fumbled In first one nnd then
another of his pockets without finding
what ho sought.
"It was supposed that he was look
ing for his notes, and more applause
took tho edge off the delay. Ills mouth
twitched without speech for another
awkwnrd minute before, with a more
erect bearing, he produced the object
of his search nnd put It on hi head.
It was not paper; but a rag of a enp,
nnd with that on ho faced the com
pany as one who by the net hnd done
all that could be expected of him nnd
made further acknowledgment of tho
honors ho had received superfluous. It
was a enp that Livingstone had worn
and that Livingstone had given him,"
ISLAND COMES AND GOES.
Rises In August and Disappears Regu
larly In February.
Ona of Michigan's unsolved myste
ricfi y tho island that every summer
comes to the surface of Lake Orion
and every winter goes back again to
the depths from whence It nrose.
Its periods of appearance- and dis
appearance are- nearly regular. It
comes to tho surface about the middle
of August and goes down again about
Feb. 15. What causes it to act thus
strangely Is a conundrum that none
has been able to solve, but to keep it
above water or compel It to remain In
the depths have been alike without re
sults. On one occasion a number of farm
ers and teamsters resolved to put tho
island out of moving business. In
their efforts to do so they hauled many
loads of stone and deposited therm on
it during the early part of winter, be
lieving that when it went down In
February It would go down for good,
weighted as it was with the stones.
But tho following August saw It bob
up serenely from below minus its load
of stones.
At another time an effort was made
to keep it on the surface, and it was
chained to tho surrounding country
with heavy log chains When its
time for departure came it departed.
and the log chains departed with It:
The log, chains were never recovered.
The Island is composed of soft mild
and rushes, and there are some sken
tical souls who attribute its formation
and appearance nnd disappearance tt
tho gathering of vegetation iu one spot
by the currents of the lakaand its sub
sequent decay. Boston Herald.
"Window Leave-."
lu South Africa Dr. R. MarloUi dh
covered six species of plants posses.
ing what are styled "window leaves."
They are all stemless sueculcnts, nnd
the egg shaped leaves are imbedded
lu the gruuud. only the- apexes rv-
mainlng visible. This visible part of
the leaves is Hat er convex-, on the sirev
face and colorless, so that the light
can penetrute it and reach:tho interior
of the leaf beiow. which-is green en
the inside. With the exception of the
blunt apex, no part of. tho leaf Is
permeable to the light, being surround
ed by the soil lu which, it Is burled.
The first of these plants, discovered: lu
& species of bulblne. London Graphic.
The Manly Man.
"After you've been two weeks- to: tho
house with one of these-terrible handy
men that ask their wives to bo- sure
to wipe between the tines of the
forks and that know. Just how much
raising bread ought to have and how
to hnug out a wash so. each place will
get the best sun It's a real Joy to get
back to the ordinary kind of man.
Yes. 'tis so!" Mrs. Gregg finished with
much emphasis, "t want a man who
should have sense- about tho things
he's meant to ha'so sense about, but
when It conies to. keeping houso I like
him real helpless, the way the Lord
planned to have- him'." Youth'a Com
panion. A Costly Funeral.
The most costly state funeral which
has over taken placo was perhaps that
of Alexander tho Great. A rouud mil
lion was spent In laying Alexander to
his rest. Tho body was placed In a
coffin of gold filled with costly aro
rootles, and a diadem wan placed on
tho head. The funeral car was embel
lished with ornaments of pure gold.
and Its weight was so great that it
took eigbty-rour routes more man a
year to convey It from Babylon to
Syria.
The Main Thing.
Chief of Detectives Noit glvs us a
description of your mlssln cashier,
now tall was h? Business Man 1
don't know how tan hs was. What
wsrrits ra Is that bs wan 910,000
short
Jsys are ear wines,
fjrurs. tUthtw.
Tho Chtneso pupil reciting his les
son turns his bnck to tho teacher.
Tanning of snnicesklns for women's
holts has become a lucrative Industry
In Madras. ' i
Sweden Is organizing a movement
to prevent young men from emigrat
ing from thnt country.
In southern Italy there nre some
20,000 persons (living In ten vil
lages) who speak tho Greek language.
Mrs. F. A. Seward of Walpolo, N.
II., has a cat that cnught and brought
homo n rnbblt weighing three and a
1ml f pounds.
Indian statistics give tho tons of
coal mined per year per person em
ployed as follows: India, 101; Eng
lnnd, 290; tho United States, C9G.
The Increase of population In Swe
den during 1908 wns greater than
during nny of tho last ten ycarsr
amounting to 01,887, or 9.05 por
thousand.
Tho total quantity of radium which
has been thus far recovered for scien
tific use throughout tho world Is esti
mated not to exceed a quarter of a
pound.
Researches In Germnny show that
a given quantity of redhot coke will
absorb four times the amount of wa
ter that will bo absorbed by the
samo coke If cold.
A tuberculosis congress will be held
In Athens next year, to which will he
invited not only physicians, but all
the mayors and other prominent peo
ple of Greece.
The detailed formula of overy
patent medicine has to be filed with
the Austrian government and other
requirements fulfilled before Its Im
portation Is allowed.
Dr. Naff, the director of the depig
ment of health ot Philadelphia, has
started a movement to eradicate ade
noids in the school children of tho
Quaker City.
The government commissioners ap
pointed in: Italy to report on the ques
tion of woman suffrage recommend
ed that women engaged In trade have
tshe right tn vote for members of the
chambers of commerce.
Poison for catching noxious ani
mals is in Norwny obtainable only by
exhibition of a certifiaate from the
police authorities containing certain
information about the purchaser, the
nature and use of the poison, etc.
A waterless: lock for canoes he
two7n two lakes of different levels In
a Boston pnrlt. consists of concrete
Inclines, with a runway sot with rol
lers In tho centers and footways, on
either side on which persons walk In
dragging the craft over the summit.
On-i of the godfathers of tho Ger
man wown prince's youngest son Is
Count Zeppelin. The gift of the sir
navigator to tho- little princo was a
huge lamp mndaof glass and bronze.
Tho lamp is an exact reproduction of
tho dirigible ballot i Zeppelin ill.
A Skowhegan (ye.) man who haa
been experimenting with kites to
quito un extent declares thai, the time
is comfiig when fishing will' ho done
from Using mnehines instead, of boats.
He say that fish are afraid' of boats,
but that, they will bite at', halt sus
pended" from kites.
The novel life belt of P. Guterman,
an English Inventor, Is a metal strap
adjustable to miin or child' with four
air filld metallic floats.. -about the
size of an ordinary cocoanut. It is
claimed! that thr wearor of the blt
must always assume and keep a per
pendicular position in tile water.
Two ohildren, aged nbout six and
eight, wandered Into the receiving
ward at! a Londun hospital: The eld
er handed tho doctor in charge the
following noto from Its mother:
'They havo awful cauf. I think it Is
hwoopihg eauff You wait a mlnlt
and hear them cauf." She was right.
The first post route la the United
States; was established ih 1872-. It
was hutween Now York: and Boston,
and tho schedule was once a month.
To-dny. the yearly cost of mail trans
portation oil our railroads alone Is
aboutt $45,000,000. Tho railway
postoffice Hues cover 208,48 4 miles
and employ over 15,0-00 officers and
clerks.
A Russian princes who was rob
bed of money and jowerly to the val-
uo of about ?C0,000, at a hotel In
St. Morlta told tho- police, that all
she regretted was the loss of her own
pearl necklace and tho necklace of
br pet dog. Tho dog's necklaco con
sists ot fourteen largo pearls attach
ed to a thin band of gold and is
worth about $2,250.
Eight new sanctuaries tor birds and
animals havo been set apart in the
state of IVctorla, Australia, by the
government within a year. This Is
in addition to tho ordinary protec
tion afforded by law to kangaroos,
platypus, magpies, laughing Jack
asses and certain other animals and
Is Intended to prevent tho extermina
tion of native creatures.
This Provos It.
They sent htm up for being full,
And full ho must havo been.
IIU brother had to halt lilm out.
And It took a barrel of tin.
Llpplncott's Magazine.
As to Preachers.
"I wonder why It Is so ninny preach
ers wear long faces."
"If you had to lire ou tho salaries
most of them get I guess you'd wear a
long face too." lilrralughatn AKC-Uer-ald.
Reliable Eloquence.
Th erator la still a hit.
Thla fact h surtly teaches.
Th country will b saved If It
Can b prMrvd In epeechas.
Washington Star.
HapslMS,
"Ixt yosr nslghbor as yourself."
"I &.
Thl why d yea havs such a
"I fctto ytf."-New York WM.
MISSOURI'S DEST COW.
frlnccss Carlotta Alone Could Supply
a Hotel with Milk.
Princess Carlotta, a Holsteln cow
In tho dairy herd of the Missouri Col
ic so of Agriculture gives more milk
thin any other cow In Missouri. In
the, last year she gavo 18,405 pounds
of milk, or 1,300 gallons. From this
727 pounds of butter woro made.
"This cow shows the advantage of
ising good stock In a dnlry," C. II.
licklos, professor of dairy husbandry
t the University of Missouri, said,
-it tho present price of milk in Co
'mbla, 7 1-2 cents a quart, Bhe would
ii-.tve brought her owner $690 for this
ronr. A cow with a record llko that
k worth about $1,500. Her feed cost
,'30, leaving a profit of $C10. This is
ure than 40 per cent. Income, look
up nt It as an Investment. Princess
,-triotta produced ns much milk as
Svi ordinary farm cows. The five
'ow probably would cost $200 to feed,
fha same advantage Is gained nu by
: at it's?, an efficient machine Instead of
m ordinary one. Tho upkeep Is great
jr. hut the results are worth It.
"A person's averngo daily consurap
(on of rallk Is one-third of a quart,
in this basis Princess Carlotta could
to supplied the milk for a hotel with
oventy-flve quests."
DENM&IUL ASKS ABOUT ANDHEE
Missionary R'eady to Lad Search Par
ty to. Reindeer Lake.
Prince Albert, Sask., Jan. C Cable
messages havo been received here by
Bishop Pascal from the Danish gov
ernment uskltig. Zurther details of the
traces of Professor Andree. the are
tic explorer, and- bis companions, dis
covered around Rrindoer lake.
Fnther Turguetlk. the missionary
Who brought the nows down from the
remote north nbout Indians seeing An
drea's balloon, has expressed his will
ingness to lead an expedition for the
purpose of Inquiring Into the reports.
He has no doubt thnt the explorers
are dead, although he- is not sure that
they were murdered by the natives.
He thinks that a roller expeditwu can
obtain Indisputable evidence of the
presence around Reindeer lake of An
dree's balloon.
I
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. I
Closing Stock Quotations.
Money on cull was 7 to S per cent; tlm
money nnd mercantile pauer unchanged
In rate. Closing prices of" stocks were:
AmaU Copper... SGT4 Norf. & West... 88;
Atchison 121i Northwestern ..1TS'4
B. &O 117!i Pen n. It. It... . 13S
Urooklyn It. T. . T854 IteaUiDK llj7V
Ches. & Ohio...'. iO Hock Island
C .CCSt St.L. St. Paul J55,
D. &H 1S2 Southern Pac.1331
Erie Southern Ky... Si5
Gen. Electric... UiD'fe South. Ity. pr..."3i:
111. Central H7 Sugar J22
Int-Met 13 Texas Pacific...
I.huIs. & Nash.. I5X Union Paclllc. .. 2004
Manhattan 137'i U. S. Steel; 87U
Missouri Pac... 71't U. S. Steel p..aaH
N. Y Central... 153 West. Union 76
Market Reports.
ntJTTEJt Firmer; receipts. 3,401 pack
ages; creamery, specials, 35o); uxtrua, 34o.;
thirds to firsts. ;aa33c; heldi seconds to
specials, 23a34c; state dairy, common to
tlnest, 2iia34c; process, llrsta to specials,
SOalUc.; western, factory, seoonds to-drsts,
24a2Sc. ; Imitation creamery. lUa2c.
ClIKESK Firm; receipts, 1.737 boxes;
state, new, full cream, sjwclal. ITHulSc. ;
September, fancy, 17c; Ootobar. best,
16V4C. ; winter made, beat. IGUo. ; ctmmon
to good, ISalSc. ; skims, full to Hpeclals.
SaHVic.
I2UUS Strung; receipts, 4, SIS cases:
state, Pennsylvania and nearby, hannery.
white,. 40a50c.; gathered, white. 3a45c:
henuery, brown nnd mbeed, fancy, 42a
4oc. ; gathered, brown, fair to prlum, 87u.
42c; western, extra firsts, 35c; firsts, 37a
3Sc. ; corids, 3i3Cc. ; refrigerator, spe
cial marks, fancy, 27aS7Hc.; firsts, :da.
2(c. ; seconds. 24MjaS,.ic. 1
DltESSBD POUL.TUY Steadier; tur-
Ueys, nearby, LMaStiC.; selected, western,
dry picked, 24c; scalded, 24c; fair ta
prime, yestern, 22a23c; brollarj. nearby,
fancy, jijuab. per pair, TSaSOc.; 3 lbs, to.
pair, pr lb., 24a30c. ; western, dry picked,
milk fed, 24a25c; cornj fed, 19a21c; scald
ed. lSalSc; roasting chickens, nearby, fan
cy, 20a2Cc. ; western, milk fed. fancy, 21s
I2c; corn fed, fancy, 17alSc; mixed
weight chickens, nearby, faacy. lSa22c.
western, milk fed, ISo.j dry picked, corn
fed. average best, 15c.
HAY AND STItAW Firm; timothy, por
hundred, S7Vica$I.Oi4; shipping, 83c.; clo
ver, mixed, feOaSuc. ; clover. SOaWc. ; Ions
rye straw, EJaDOa. oat ani wheat. G&c.:
half bales, 2a5u less.
CASTOR I A
Tot Infants and Children.
TfiB Kind. Yeu llaia Always Bought
Boars tha
Signature of
V. K. HOLMES, PiiESinKNT.
A. T. SEARLK, Vice Pues.
We want you to understand tho reasons for the-ABSOLUTE SISCUUITV
of thin Hank.
-a.i3ju-
WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK
HONESDALE, PA.,
HAS A CAPITAL OF ... ' $100,000.00
AND SURPLUS AND PROFITS OF - 394,000.00
MAKING ALTOGETHER - - 494,000.00
EVERY DOLLAR of which must bo lost before any depositor can lose a PENNY.
It hns conducted a growing and successful business for over 3S yeur, serving
an increasing number of customers with fldeelity and satisfaction.
Its cash funds aro protected by MODERN STEEL VAULTS.
All of these thines.eounled with mservatlve ruanacement, Insured
hy the CAHKKUL I'KKSOKAI. ATTKNTION constantly clven ".he
Total Assets, - - - '$2,886,000.00
DEPOSITS MAY
-DIRECTORS-
W, II. H01.UH9
A. T. BEA1M.II
T. Il.CLAUC.
CnA8.J.8MITH.
w v. suifpAk.
Can You Tell
What Ails This Man?
He has a good appetite, but no desire
for work or exercise. His sleep it trou
bled, he has pains In back and shoulders,
a coated tongue and a dark brown taste In
his mouth. Ho is dizzy when he arises
from stooping over. His bowels are Irreg
ular and often constipated. Do you know
what alls him? Did you ever feel that
way? The truth Is he Is bilious. His
bowels are clogged up. The bile and poi
sonous secretions of the stomach, not find
ing their natural outlet, are being absorbed
by the blood. He is being poisoned I
In all such cases take Smith's Pine
apple and Butternut Pills, which are an
Infallible remedy for biliousness and all
other forms of liver trouble. Their effects
aro quickly seen In a complete Changs of
spirits, regular daily movements of the
bowels, refreshing sleep and a rapid return
of healthy appetite and digestion. Physi
cians use and recommend. They form no
habit. You should always keep them oa
hand. These little Vegetable Pills will,
ward off many Ills.
To Cure Constipation
Biliousness and Sick
Headache in a Night, use
SMITHS
VOR.
ti HiiififtMio a t.oTi&it& Alton.
mfltAmC l.tiUipuineii
AND
indigestion.
nadcheana
BUTTERNUT;
Diseases or
ihft Stomach
PILLS
IfYerdndB&tpt
GO I'llls In Olnss Vint 25c-AU Dealers.
SMITH'S
BUCHU
LITHIA
KIDNEY
PILLS
For Sick Kidneys
Bltdder D!easrt, Itheomatltm,
the one belt rtnwdj. tollable,
endorsed to? leading phyilclana ;
safe, eSecIiutl. Kesnlta luting.
On the market IS jean. Hare
cared thousands, loo pUls In
original Elan packige, CO centa.
Trial tieMplUs,S5 cent8. All
drngglju Kll and recommend.
.ves
Glasses
O. G. WEAVER,
GRADUATE OPTICIAN,
WllXi Main Street.
Railway Hail Clerks Wanted.
The Government Pays Kail way Mall
Clerks $800 to ijSl.UOO, nnd other
employees up to 2,r00 anuuully.
Uncle Sam will hold spring exami
nations throughout the country for
Railway Mall Clerks. Custom House
Clerks, Stenographers, Bookkeepers,
Departmental Clerks and other Gov
ernment Positions. Thousands of
appointments will be made. Any man
or woman over 18, in City or Coun
try can get Instruction nnd free In
formation by writing at once to the
Hurenu of Instruction, G65. Hamlin
Building, Rochester. N. V. 103eoUy
AKIUVAIj AX1) PICPAUTimE OF
& Hudson it. it.
Trains leave at C:5& a. m., and
12:25 and 4:30 p. in.
Sundays at 11:05 a. in. and 7:16
p. m.
Trains arrive at 9-:55 a. m 3:lo
and 7:31 xi ra.
Sundays at 10:15- a. m. and 6:50
p. m.
Erio R. It.
Trains leave at 8:25 a. m. and
2:48 p. m.
Sundays at 2:48 p. m.
Trains arrive at 1:40 and 8:08
p. ru.
Saturdays, arrives at 3:45 and
leaves at 7:10.
Sundays at 7:02 p. ru.
II. S. SALMON, Cashieb
W. J. WMU), ASS'T CA6H1KR
DE MADE BY MAIL. "9
5y
t. P. KIMHLB
U. 8. BALMOS