The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, January 14, 1910, Image 3

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    THH CITIZEN, FMDAY, JANUAllY 14, 1010.
A OAMj VOl MORE APPLICANTS.
A call for moro applicants for
places as ccnsiiB enumerators haB
been Issued by Burpcrvlsor of census
J. Andrew Wilt, of Towandn, Pa. Ho
urges all persons In his district de
siring to servo, to obtain their appli
cation forms at onco and to file them
with him boforo Jnnuary 25th, when
ho must stop considering new appli
cations In order to prepare for tho
"test" of tho provlous applicants on
February 5. After this ho will ex
nmlno and rate tho papers until
about February 22, when ho will
forward his list of designations as
enumerators, with their "test" pa
pers, to Census Director Uurand,
who will carefully go over and rerato
tho papers of tho successful candi
dates before giving his consent to the
lssuo of commissions to them by tho
supervisor. By the middle or latter
part of March all the enumerators
will have been commissioned, and In
receipt of detailed Instructions con
cerning their work.
To quiet any qualms relative to tho
test'- of the qualifications of appli
cants, to be made February 5, tho
supervisor has obtained some infor
mation from the Census Director
concerning the "test" of Twelfth Cen
sus enumerators. It has been olfl
cially stated that the 1910 'test" will
be very similar to the one in tho
preceding census and will consist
in requiring applicants to fill sample
schedules from printed narratives
concerning census facts. As the
rural enumerators are to carry both
the population and agricultural
schedule, they will be "tested" witli
samples of both, but the city enu
merators, who carry the population
schedule alone, will only be requir
ed to prove their ability by lining a
sample of that schedule.
The "test" population schedule
narrative in 1900 was, in part, as
follows.
"The enumerator of the forty-fifth
enumeration district of the ninth su
pervisor's district of the State of
Pennsylvania, in the village of Port
Royal, Londonderry Township,
Schuylkill County, begins his enu
meration June 1, 1900, at No. 201
Burton street.
"This house Is occupied by a single
family, consisting of Patrick O'Leary,
his wife, Margaret, and his son,
Tames.
"Patrick came to this country from
Ireland (where he was born of Irish
parents) In May of 1870, when ho
was just 22 years old. Three years
after his arrival he was married to
an Irish girl who had come over from
his native village a year before. As
soon as possible he became natural
ized. He can read and write and
speak English, and owns a good
house, free of incumbrance, which
he has bought from his earnings as
a teamster, In which occupation he
has had steady work during the past
year.
"Margaret, his wife, is also of Irish
parentage, and was born in January,
and Is nearly four years younger than
her husband. She has had two
children, only one of whom Is living.
She can read and speak English, but
has to make her 'mark' for her sig
nature. "James was born in Harrisburg,
February, 1875. He has a good com
mon school education, works at any
sort of day labor, and secured nine
months' steady work during the past
year. He is not married.
"In tho next house, 203 Burton
street, the enumerator found an Eng
lish woman by the name of Mrs. Jane
Parker, a widow, occupying a rented
house with her single daughter, Vir
ginia, and her married daughter,
Nellie E., and the husband of the
latter, Albert Johnson.
34 years ago, has a good education,
"Mrs. Parker came to this country
34 years ago, has a good education,
is a dressmaker by trade, and has
constant employment. She was 50
years old last April, and Is of Scot
tish birth on her mother's side. She
has had four children, "three of
whom are living aud one of whom
ha j died.
"Virginia is of English parentage,
has been through the local schools
and has been a saleswoman for eight
months of the past year; she was
born in Philadelphia in March, 1877.
'Nellie E. was 2 8 years old last
January, and has but recently mar
ried. Sho was born In Baltimore,
reads, writes, and speaks English.
"Albert Johnson, the husband of
Nellie, was born in New York City, of
Welsh parents, November, 18C5. He
Is In the grocery business and keeps
his own books and accounts."
It seems comparatively simple, ac
cording to tho supervisor, to draw
out of tho above statement the re
quired details for the population
schedule and to enter them under
the proper column divisions relating
to location, name, relationship, per
sonal description, nativity, citizen
ship, occupation, education, etc.
About all Buch a "test" can do is
to evidence tho legibility of an ap
plicant's handwriting and his ability
to determine where to write in tho
sample schedule the factSj clearly
stated In tho narrative.
Tho agricultural schedule narrative
for 1909 was very similar, except
that the facts stated relato to farms
and farming operations.
Before tho "test" February 5th,
tho supervisor will send each appli
cant a list of Instructions concern
ing filling in tho "test" schedules,
which will still further simplify the
subject and insure tho passing of tho
test by those who possess only an or
dinary common-school education and
practical common sense.
Closing out sale of Slado-up Win
ter Goods at Menner & Co. during
January to clean up before inventory
ing. 2eol4
Rcninrknhlo Cnvo Dlscovcrd.
Two gold prospectors recently dirt
covered In tho Snnta Susanna Moun
tains, about fifty miles from Los
Angeles, Cal., tho largest and most
remarknblo cnvo In Western Am
erica. While looking Tor Indications
of gold they found an opening which
thoy entered. , The opening led to a
great cavern, consisting of many pas.
Mngcs, some of theni wide, but most
ot thum narrow and lofty. Tl j pns
xuges lead Into great halls, some an
aero in extent, studded with stalag
mites and stalactites in some cases
so thickly that It Is .llflicult to get
ihrough. Tho walls of one of these
.lalls are covered with rude drawings.
Homo almost obliterated, but others
still clear. Tho drawings represent
incidents of tho eliu-e, showing In
dians on foot pursuing bear, deer auj
other animals.
Anvil us u Tombstone.
On tho death of a blacksmith nam.
wl Moehla of Bellevli.le, 111., in the
United States, a tombstone was or
ectod to his memory In tho very ap
propriate form of a model anvil.
Mot-hie wns a village blacksmith, and
tor over thirty years he had tolled at
the same anvil, which had been
given him by tho old blacksmith to
whom he was apprenticed at Pilot
Knob. He became greatly attached
to the old anvil, nnd mnnv ttnips x
! pressed a wish that ho should not l9
I separated from.lt In death, but that
It should bo his monument. In ac
cordant with his wish the old anvil
I Was COatCd With emilnnl. Innnnil with
a large horseshoe, and set in a base
of solid granite. The old tombstone
is one of tho sights of the cemetery.
London Tit-Bits.
P'gs TiiIIh as Barometers.
i Tho secrot of "Uncle Billy" War
; lug's ability to forecast tho weather
l.us leaked out. Recently ho has
been able with an exactitude not
equalled by the best barometers to
tell his neighbors twenty-four and
sometimes thirty-six hours ahead
what weather to expect. His pre
dictions have been of great benelit
to farmers. Now it is learned that he
gets his tips from his two pigs. In
dry weather the tails of the pigs
have one curl, in wet weather two
curls, and just before a rain their
tails bang limp.
Power of Lights.
A comparison has recently been
made of the power of tho lights in
French lighthouses at various periods
la the last 35 years. In 1874, whon
only oil lights were used, tho high
est power was equal to 54,000 cand
les. In 18S2. when the electric
light was Introduced, the power rose
to a maximum of 820,000 candles.
SUite then frequent Improvements
have been made in tho electric lights
until at present the most powerful
lighthouses project an illumination
nearly equal to 3,000,000 candles.
Lincoln on Law Observance.
There Is even now something of
ill omen among us; I mean tho dis
regard of law. There, then, id ona
point at which danger may bo ex
pected. The question seems: How
shall we fortify against it? The an
swer Is simple. Let every American,
every lover of liberty, every well
wisher to his posterity, swear by tho
blood of the Revolution never to vio
late in the least particular the law
ot his country and never to tolerate
their violalon by others. Abraham
Lincoln.
Independence Day Elsewhere.
Independence Day In Brazil Is
September 7; that of Mexico Is Sept
ember 1C; that of Uruguay it May
25; that of Chill Is September IS;
that of Columbia Is July 20; thu.t of
Haiti is January 1, and that of Cuba
Is February 24 tho anuiveisary of
the beginning of the final struggle
for independence.
Novel Means of Singing Muss.
A novel method of saying mass
has been adopted by the cure of La
Martro, In the Department of the
Var, France, owing to tho fact that
he has neither precentor nor chorist
ers in his church. He has fitted up
a phonograph in the chancel, which
not only makes the customary re
sponses, but also sings tho canticles.
Death From Bullet Swallowing.
It wns stated at an Inquest on a
peasant in a Servian village that tho
mnn died from swallowing too many
bullets, which he was accustomed to
take, in common with all the peas
ants in that district, wheuever ho'
felt 111.
Maid Crowing Rich.
Tho head maid of tho Queen dow.
ager of Italy makes a thousand
pounds a year from tho sale of her
mistress' cast-off clothes, which aro
given to hor as a perquisite. The
purchasers are, for tho most part,
Ainerlcnn tourists.
Roaches for Currants in Cake.
A Chinese shopkeopor in London
charged with Helling a cake contain
ing cockroaches instead of currants
and centipedes Instead of candled
peel explained 'that tho delicacy was
sold in mistake; It was really a med
icine compounded for his own use.
$1100 for n Union Jack.
Tho union Jack which ilew from
NelBon's flagship, the Victory, at the
battle of Trafalgar and which cov
ered his remains on tho journey
homo to England, was sold recently
by auction In London for JOPJP,
Troes Not OMcrlr.cd.
Brazilian cocoanut palms llvo from
600 to 700 years, and tho Arab
assert thnt tho date palm frequently
reaches tho age of 200 to 300 yenra,
says tho Dundee Advertiser. Wallan'a
oak nenr Paisley, Scotland', 1h known
to be over 700 yenrs old and there
aro olght ollvo trees on tho Mount
of Olives, near Jerusalem which are
known to hnve been flourishing Jit
1099. The views at Fountains Abbey,
Yorkshire, wete old trees when In
1132 the abbey was built, and a
redwood In Mariposa (Irovo. Callfor
nla, is a manifold centenarian. Bao
ball trees of Africa have bo. a com
puted to bo over 5,000 years old,
and tho deciduous cypress at Chap
ultepcc is considered to be cf a still
greater age. Humholt said :hat tho
Dracaena Draco at Orotava, on Tene
rlffo, wns ono of tho oldest Inhabit
ants of the earth.
Too Exalted n Pnrcnt.
Tho great Wellington was always
precise about religious observances
One Saturday evening a lady, one of
his guests at Strathfleldsaye, Welling
ton's country seat, apologized for no:
forming ono of tho party to church
tho following morning.
She was a Roman Catholic and
thero was not a Catholic church with
in a dlsance ot 20 or 30 miles.
"That," said His Grace, "need be
no difficulty. My carriage aud horses
are at your disposal. Breakfast shall
be ready a little before daybreak
and the thing can easily be done."
Tho second Duke of Wellington,
In telling the story of tho author of
"Society In the Country House,"
adds, "And she had to go."
"Imagine," he exclaimed, "the Im
possibility of living up to such a
father!" Saturday Evening Post.
Lightning's Peculiar Pranks.
Tho peculiar pranks played by a
bolt of lightning on an oal. tree at
tracted hundreds of people recently
to WIssahlckon avenue, near Lincoln
Lake, says the Philadelphia Record.
The tree which was fully 125 feet
tall waB struck during an electrical
storm recently and was split down
a distance of 75 feet, the halves fall
ing in opposite directions. Fifty
feet of the upper part was stripped
of bark, and a most peculiar thing
was that the roots were torn com
pletely out of the ground nnd hurled
a considerable distance, while a cir
cle of bark four feet high was left
standing.
Feathered Songsters in Church.
A novel service has just been cele.
brated In Trinity Methodist Church.
Toronto, In which birds and blossoms
played a conspicuous part. Tho al
tar was filled with sprays of fruit
blossoms and carnations, roses, and
other flowers, while suspended from
the gallery were seven cages, each
containing the favorite songster from
some member's home, lent for the
occasion. When the members of the
congregation entered they were greet
ed by a chorus from these birds.
Exchange.
Been Dry 4,000 Years.
By means of a steel-lined Irriga
tion canal engineers are preparing
to give water to a district In Egypt
near Assuan which has been dry and
parched for 3,000 or 4,000 years.
The soil Is saline, and for this reason
It Is necessary to wash tho ground
tor from three to four weeks before
any crops can bo grown upon It.
When first wet the ground swells and
rises about six Inches .afterward sub
siding from one foot to two feet.
Kissing Room Required.
It Is proposed by tho master of
the Grand Central Station in New
York that it would be advisable for
tho railway companies In their new
plans to procure a kissing room and
rcqulro all osculation to bo perform,
ed there, so that tho concourse, door
ways, platforms and gates be not
congested by those who linger for
the last goodby.
The Bishop's 4J oh.
Bishop Potter was staying with a
friend in a country house. On Sun
day morning as ho passed througn
tho library ho found a small boy
curled up in a big chair deeply Inter,
estcd In a book. "Aro you going to
church, Tom?" he asked. "No," he
replied. "Why, 1 am," the Bishop
said. "Huh!" tho boy returned.
"That's your job."
From Army Ollleer to Butcher.
Aladar Stolincki, an aristocratic
lieutenant of a Hungarian hussar
regiment, has resigned his commiss
ion to become an apprentice to a
pork butcher In Budapest. Ho says
ho cannot llvo on his pay $400 a
year and that he considers a man
of Intelligence and energy can do
well In Uio pork trade.
Cause of Blood Poisonlnj;.
Experiments conducted by a Ger
man surgeon prove that blood pois
oning may easily result from allow
ing conversation around an opera
tion. He found thnt tho mlnuto
drops of saliva expelled In the act
of speaking contained ou an aver
ago 4,373 bacteria many of which
are disease producors.
Poet's Relative n Judge.
The great-grandson of Robert
Burns, the poot, has recently been
acting as Judgo ot tho Police Court
of Louisville. His namo Is J. Mar
shall Chatterson and for ma-- yeara
bo has been an attorney in Louisville.
Helpful
Beauty Hints
Dark Rings Under the Eyes Some
Hints On Dieting Benzoin On the
Face for Oily Shin For T?cmovat
of Scars from Pimples To Black,
en Eye-Lashes Develop the Bust.
Thero Is always some Internal catiH"
for the black circles under tho eyes.
The tendency is sometimes hereditary,
but dark lines are tymally due to some
congestion of tho volnB of the part,
and nro rarely, If evor, found except
ing under ono or moro of the follow
Inp circumstances:
When the subject Is anaemic nnd
there is an impairment of tho chem'
cal constitution of tho blood, or when
tho system I'b being drnined, as It
wc.-.i!d in prolonged study, lack of
shep or dissipation of any descrip
tion. The external treatment is some
Hires effective temporarily, but can
not bo permanent while the cnuso ex
tola. Batho frequently with cold water
and use friction. A Httlo turpentine
liniment or weak ammonia, ono part
of diluted nmmonia to four of wnter
may be rubbed Into tho skin daily
(once), but great care must bo taken
t! at It docs not reach the eyo proper.
Dieting as a Fad.
There Is no denying that most of
us eat too much; equally true Is it
hat dieting often becomes a fad and
not too healthful one.
Just now It seems as If dieting wore
the lntest touch of smartness. Half
tho people you meet have cut off
"this" or aro eating "that" In the in
terest of health, complexion or figure.
If dieting is under the advice of a
doctor well and good; even so the
rest of the world might be spared
eulogies nnd advice on special lines
of eating. It Is borcsome to hear and
may be dangerous to adopt.
Go on dieting if you must; cut off
from your dally menu meats, entrees,
desserts nnd other dainties your pa
late craves, make yourself a nuisance
to hostesses and meal orderers; hut
do It on the advice of a reliable phy
sician, not because of the enthusiasms
of dieting friends whose course may
be fatal for you.
Benzoin on the Face.
Tincture of benzoin is an astringent
ten drops of which in a basin of cold
water will make the complexion white
and firm. It may bo used where thero
is a tendency to enlarged pores or ex
cessive olllness of the skin, but when
the complexion Is delicate it Is very
apt to be too strong. You enn easily
tell whether it agrees with your com
plexion or not after using It once or
twice. If It stings at all or makes the
skin look blotchy It should not be
used. If it agrees with your skin it
may bo used every day, if you like,
without harm. It has no effect on tho
eyebrows and lashes, but will make
the eyes burn, and you should be care
ful to keep tho eyes shut when wash
ing with It
A Skin Food.
The following is the recipe for an
excellent skin food:
Orange-Flower Cream.
Oil of sweet almonds . . 4 ounces.
White wax 6 drams.
Spermaceti 6 drams.
Borax 2 drams.
Glycerine 1 1-2 ounces.
Orange-flower water ... 2 ounces.
Oil of neroli 15 drops.
Oil of blgarade (orange
skin) 15 drops.
Oil of petit grain 15 drops.
Melt the first threo Ingredients, add
the glycerine to the orange-llower wa
ter and dissolve the borax In Uio mix
ture; then pour It slowly into the
blended fats, stirring continuously.
Scars from Pimples.
If scars have entirely healed and
skin is perfectly healthy, tho pieces
should gradually bo absorbed. The
frlitlon by massage either by hand or
electricity and of the face scrubbing
brush will, by Increasing tho circula
tion build up tho cuticle. Below Is tho
formula of a pomade which rub upon
each scar with gentle friction. But
do not us this pomade if there is the
slightest eruption on faco. This ha
been successful in effacing light scara,
but will not remove deep ones:
Lanollne, 2 drams; ointment ot
blnlodldo of mercury, 1 dram.
To Blacken the Lashes.
The Chinese eyelnsh stain will
blackon your eyelashes, and If you 'ap
ply It carofully with a tiny brush your
lids will not become black. Hero is
the recipe:
Gum arable 1 dram.
Indian ink 1-2 dram.
Rosewater 4 ounces.
Powdor tho Ink nnd gum aud tritu
rate small quantities of tho powoor
with the rosowater until you got a
uniform black liquid In a powder, and
thon add tho romninder of tho rose
water. Be enreful that tho mixture does not
touch the eye.
To Develop the Bust.
Lanollne 1 ounco.
Cocoa butter 1 ounco.
Sweet almond oil 1 ounco.
Put In small bowl sot In hot water
until melted. Bent together and cool.
Each night, after laying hot cloths on
biibt, rub It in by massaging gently
aud thoroughly in n circular direction
for fifteen minutes.
Deep breathing exercises will de
velop the bust and broaden tho chest
jgfcort jgfcnrumtf
For
Theme:
GOD'S FATHERHOOD.
BY REV. DR. ELBERT RUSSELL.
Ttxt: Luke 11:2: "And He said
into them, when ye pray, say, our
athcr."
h 4
Fundamental In all our religion Is
tho concoptlon of God. Moro or less
.latently all that wo do In the way
r ivorshlp or Borvlco springs from
l.at wo bollevo God to be, and what
o bellovo He wishes us to do nnd
-. It Is Important for us very fre
. :ity for the keeping of our rell
"j truly to go back to this fundn-
ital eloment In our religion. I
; our conception of God determines
' religion in so far as It Is a con-
c ut thing. If wo bellevo that God
.i despot we shall crlngo, and fawn
n "re Him. If we bollevo He is a
ous God wo shall walk softly and
appear too prosperous In His
. . ence, lest in jealousy He smite us.
r wo believe Ho Is an absent or an
rassivo God, who neither knows
or cares how wo feel towards Him or
"trd Him, then we shall go on our
uy as if God did not exist, and
po our course of action wUh ref
ence to our own desires, and we
nil not reckon with God. Wo shall
. with Job's friend, "Is not God In
height of Heaves? What doth
il know?" There Is a story from
East of a certain Parsee who was
forming his devotlonB at tho altar
if fire, and there drew near a Jew
nd a Christian. Tho Jew, moved
vith Jealousy that men should wor
hip the creature Instead of the Cre
itor, said: "Do you worship fire?"
'No," said the Paraeo, "we do not, wo
inly worship the Great Spirit that
manifests Himself in the flame."
"What do you call that spirit?" ask
ed the Jew. "We call him Ormuz.
What do you name tho Infinite One?"
"Wo call Him Jehovah," said tho Jew.
"God of Gods and Lord of Lords, the
Great God and terrible." The Parseo
mswered, "Your name Is a great one,
out It Is awful." Then turning to the
Christian, he asked: "How do you
name the Great One?" and the Chris
tian said: "We call Him Abba, Fath
er," and the Parsee answered, "Your
name Is the greatest of all, but who
gave you authority to call tho Infinite,
Father?"
Now, It Is Jesus, who teaches us
that. "Father," robbed of Its human
Infirmities, of its evil, of Its limita
tions, Is the name llkest to God. If
we would comprehend what Is the
character of God and His attltudo to
ward us we should coma before Him
with tho word "Father" upon our Hps.
It is worth while for us to take the
conception, this revelation of Jesus of
God, and see what kind of religion is
consistent with It; how we, as chll
dien of our Father, should worship
Him and behave ourselves before Him
and tnlk to Him. Jesus has not left
ua entirely to draw our own Infer
ences. He told us to call Him Father.
I know that theologians dispute over
tho question, whether It Is right to
Eroak of the fatherhood of God to all
men, but certainly wo shall bo true to
Jesus If we talk of the fatherllness of
God. And we shall find that Jesua
!vs something to say about God's ref
lation to tho universe, to this world
,f which humanity is so small a part.
Tin Pharisees believed In a distant
God, God on His throno afar off In
tho seventh heaven, a majestic sov
ereign, removed from tho common
things of tho world. Thoy believed
'ho world was carried on through tho
mediation of angels. They believed
hiH God onco fur all had given His
will for men's conduct In the law, that
on some far off day men would stimd
to Him and bo examined as to
ether they had kept the law and
! t only by some special providence
-v miracle did God tako a direct hand
i he control of His universe. That
vus not tho teaching ot Jesus. To
:rim tho world wns tho Father's house.
fJo-l needs no angel to toll Him what
:s going on in tho world. Ho knows
-Mir needs before wo ask and when wo
pray wo do not have to Invoke some
'n -el to carry the petition, but simply
iy In sincerity: "Our Father." How
i hat changes the concoptlon of ro
"g'on and our rolntlon to God; how It
f!U the world with tho presence of
i ho Dlvlno! Far bo It from me to
leny tho possibility, or oven tho con
"ii ions recurrence of tho things we
ctll miraculous, but to anyone who
Vows tho teaching of Jesus tho intra
le loses Its unique character for our
eVglous thinking and life. I bellovo
hat Jesus turned tho water into wine
it was exceptional activity of '.he
D Ino power , but I bellovo that when
tho vine blossoms In the spring and
iptures Its fruit In tho fall, it Is Just
as much tho activity of God as whon
losus performed the miraclo at Cana.
When Jesus teaches us to think of
God as Father, Ho culls attention,
llrct. to the likeness between our spir
its and the Spirit of Obd, as thero Is
n likeness between father and son In
muiiro; and secondly, to tho love that
God, His Father, feels townrd men.
Wo are made "In tho Imago of God,"
whatover that may mean, and we cer
tainly bear a spiritual likeness to God.
Love aud reason and power ot will
In .8, though finite and small, mean
th" same In us that they do in God.
PROFESSIONAL. CAItDS.
Attorneys-nt-Low.
H WILSON,
ATTOHKET A COUNHKI.nil.AT.t.lir.
Office. Masonic buildinc. second floor
Iloncsdaic, l'o.
WM. II. LEE,
ATTOKNKY A COUNHEI.On-AT-LAW.
Oflke over post olllcc. All Ircnl luminal
promptly attended to. llonesdalc. r'n,"lncsa
Ijl C. MUMFORD,
ll. ATTOUNEV A COL'NfrKt.Oll.AT-t.AW.,
i.P'.'te1"'.' H.MJ opposite the
Post Olllce. Jloiiefdulc. l'u.
HOMER GREENE.
ATTOKNKY A COUNFKJ.OIt-AT-l AW.
Olllro over Itclf's More. Honoclale 'a,
0L. ROWLAND,
ATTOUNEY A COfNHKI.OK-AT-LAWj
Ofllce ver Post Otllce. llonesdalc. Pa
pHARLES A. McCARTY.Sr'
J ATTOKNKY A COUNSKKOK-AT-I.AW.
Special and prompt attention Given to the
collection otclnimv Olllce over Keif's mew
store, llonesdale. l'a.
T P. K1MBI E,
ATTOKNKY A COtTNKEI,OK-AT-I,AW,
Olllce over the Dost olllro llonesdalc. Pn.
ME. SIMONS,
. ATTOKNKY A COttNt-KI.OIl-AT-r.AW .
Office in the Court llnntp Ummerlnlu
Pa.
HERMAN IIARMEh,
ATTOKNKY A COlNtELOK-AT-LAW.
Patents nnd pensions secured. Otllce In tho
Sclmcriolz bulldliu: llonesdale. Pa.
PETER II. ILOFF,"
ATTOKNKY A COt'NSEI.OK-AT-I.AW.
qtllce-Second floor old Savings Jink
buildlns:. llonesdalc. Pa :
KM. SALMON,
ATTOKNKY A I 11 Nf-EI OR-AT-LAW
Office Nixtdcoiici i H illie. Ioirrfrl
occupied bvV B.lMiuii id,, llcrietdulc. Pa
Dentl&ts.
DR. E. T. BROWN,
DENTIST.
Office First floor, old Savings Hank.bulld
Inc. llonesdale, l'a.
Dr. C. It. BRADY. Dentist, llonesdale. Pa.Ei
Offick Rours-8 a. m. to 5 p. m
Any evenine by appointment.
Citizens' phone. 33 Residence. No. 86-X
Physicians.
DR. H. B. SEARLES,
IIONKSDALK, PA.f
Otllce nnd residence 1019 iCourt 'street
telephones. Otlke Hours 2.00 to 4:10, and
(iOflfns':!). u.ru
Livery.
LIVERY. r red. G. Rickard has re
moved his livery establishment from
corner Chu.-ch street to Whitney's Stone
Barn.
ALL CALLS
PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
FIRST CLASS OUTFITS. 75yl
JOSEPH N. WELCH
Fire
Insurance
The OLDEST Fire Insurance
Agency in Wayne County.
Office: Second floor Masonic Build
ing, over C. C. Jadwin's drug store,
llonesdale.
If you don't insure with
us, we both lose.
General
insurance
White Mills pa,
O. G. WEAVER,
Graduate Optician,
1127JS Main St., HONESDALK
Tooth
Savers
We have the sort ot tooth brushes that aro
made to thoroughly cleanse und earo the
teeth.
They are the kind that clean terth without
eavlne your mouth full of bristles.
We recommend those costlne 25 cents or
more, as we can euurantee them and will re
place, free, any that show defects of manu
facture within three months.
O. T. CHAHBERS,
PHARflACIST,
Opp.D.A H.SUtUa HONESDALll, PA.
HITT1ER
HAM