The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, January 14, 1910, Image 4

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    niE citizkn, fiuday,. January u, ioio.
THE CITIZEN
rCBUtnKD XTKRT WKDWBDAT AM) FRIDAY BT
T1IK CITIZEH rUBLUHINa COMTANT.
fcnteredas sooond-clniss mnttcr. at the post
office, llonesdale. l'a.
SUBSCRIPTION 150
K, B. HAHDKN11KHGII, l'MMIDKNT
W. W. WOOD. - - MANAGEK AND SKC'Y
DiBKcions:
o. n. DoaruNOER. m. b.ali.ks.
BSHBT WILBON. K. B. HAnDRSBKRail.
W. W. WOOD.
FIUDAY, JANUARY 14, 1010.
A really important man generally
lots some one else tell you all about
it.
If you cannot mako others laugh,
it will help some If you can laugh
yourself.
Nothing short ot a surgical opera
tion can bring out the best there la
in soino people.
It's all right to look upon tho vino
when it Is red provided you have suf
ficient will power to let it go at that.
A purposeless man is the fellow
who has " no ase to grind." It is a
blessing that he ennnot propagate
his specie.
Do strikes cause higher prices of
food or does the high price of food
cause strikes. The debating clubs
all over ortr country could spend
winter nights on this subject with
profit.
Tho Fiftu Avenue Presbyterian
church of Manhattan offers a Brum
magem English minister twice tho
salary any Presbyterian church in
all England can afford to pay. Ho
will come. Hundreds of American
Presbyterian ministers who are not
getting 512.000 a year, yearn for a
prohibitive duty In the divinity sched
ule. Home! What, a hallowed name.
How full of enchantment and how
dear to every heart. How it touches
every fibre of the soul and strikes
every cord of the human heart with
its angelic fingers. Nothing but
death can break the spell. What
tender associates are linked with
home. What pleasing images and
deen emotions it awakens. It calls
upon the fondest memories of life
and opens in our nature the purest,
deepest, richest, flow of consecrated
thought and feeling. Home, home,
there is no place like home. Home
of our childhood, How affection clings
and hovers round thee with her
seraph wings.
The worst habit that boys can fall
Into Is that of loafing around on the
streets at night. It is then they cast
their lot in slippery places when at
any moment they are likely to fall
from grace. All good and noble les
sons taught them by their mother
are there counteracted and nullified
They learn nothing that Is good
Lut everything bad. The boys who
spend their evenings in the sacred
precincts of home with good books
for their companions are the futuro
hope of the republic. They will fill
our legislative and congressional
halls and sit in judgment upon men
and measures, while tho boys who
run tho streets will fill the peniten
tiaries, almshouses, and lunatic asy
lums. Parents who aro responsible
for these broken laws of decency will
have broken hearts and bowed down
heads in the awakening years that
will Inevitably follow.
Charles W. Morse, who went pro
testing to Atlanta, Sunday to begin
his fifteen-year term In tho federal
prison, Is one of tho most pathetic
figures in tho public eye at present
To havo such ability as Mr. Morse
has demonstrated and yet fall to
grasp the great fact that honesty and
squaro dealing are the only possible
methods whereby any man can hopo
to win lasting success, Is a tragedy,
ranking with tho saddost. Mr. Morse
should expect no leniency because of
his having handled millions. Ho de
serves his sentence, but as ho dons
his prison garb, has his head shaved,
and becomes ono of society's out
casts, we find nothing to exult over.
A man whom God obviously Intended
to bo great, has brought himself
down on a level with the smallest and
meanest of men.
Tho fato of Mr. Morso has caused
some deep thought among other men
of great wealth. We wish tho lesson
might also sink its way into the
minds and hearts of the lesser
thieves tho men with mortgages,
the men who take unfair advantage
at every opportunity, and to whom
their fellows aro but objects to proy
upon. Mr. Morse's crimes havo a
dignity of their own In comparison
with thoso of these- llttlo men, but
tho same lesson is necessary.
Olve your wlfo a vacation, uho
needs one. Llttlo cares aro harder
to bear than greater responsibilities
and she has many more cares than
her husband and sometimes as great
responsibilities, When your work
is dono you can lock It up in your
office and put tho key in your pocket.
But she novor locks her work up till
sleep comes and turns tho key upon
it. A woman's work is novor dono.
And modern llfo has increased and
intensified it. Cares have multiplied
faBter than conveniences. Llfo is
moro complex, Its demands aro great
er and more numerous, society moro
exacting. Who needs a vacation If
she does not? And she cannot get
it at homo. The moro qulot and rest
ful tho homo is to you tho moro ovl
dence that it is a caro if not a burden
to her. A housekeeper can no more
take a vacation in her home than a
merchant in his counting room.
Even though her absence occasions
inconvenience give her an occasional
vacation.
liAitmsituiu; i,ktti;k.
January 11, 1910.
Capitol Hill was shocked yesterday
by the news of tho sudden death of
Hon. J. A. Stober, State Treasurer
elect, who was found dead In bed at
his home In Lancaster. Mr. Stober
had not been feeling well during the
past few weeks, but his indisposition
was so slight that the regular ser
vices of a physician were not deemed
necessary. The cause of death was
heart disease. Mr. Stober was near
ly seventy years of age and had spent
practically all his life In Lancaster
county, where he was very popular.
He had served for many years as a
Justice of the Peace, as a member of
the Republican County Committee,
had been a member of the House,
and recently finished a term In the
Senate. Last fall ho was elected
State Treasurer over Geo. W. Klpp,
and was looking forward with pleas
urable anticipation to three years'
service in the State Treasury.
Naturally, the question of succes
sion was very much discussed, and
no one seemed able to determine
definitely who would be State Treas
urer after the first Monday of May
next, when the term of the present
Incumbent expires. Mr. Sheatz holds
that he is commissioned for two
years, or until his successor shall be
duly qualified, and that his legal suc
cessor cannot qualify because of his
death prior to May 1, 1910. Tho
Governor can appoint only when a
vacancy occurs and unless Mr. Sheatz
gives up tho olllce in May, there may
be no vacancy. Should Mr. Sheatz
succeed in staying one year beyond
tho term for which he was elected,
he may stay several more, for tho
new Constitutional Amendments pro
vide for no election for State Treas
urer between 1909 and 1912. The
Treasurer-elect was supposed to,
serve three years and his successor
was to be chosen in 1912, and every
four years thereafter, at a general
election. No provision was made.
under either the old law or tho new,
for a special election for this office.
To allow Mr. Sheatz to serve out
Mr, Stober's term would be directly
in opposition to the provision of the
Constitution, before amendment was
made, as well as afterward, which
makes the State Treasurer ineligible
to succeed himself. There is no spec
ial haste in the matter, as Mr.
Sheatz's term does not expire until
May, and by that time some way out
of the difficulty may be found, but at
the present time there's a good bit
of guessing going ou.
Governor Stuart appointed H. A.
Davis, Esq., of Philadelphia, to suc
ceed Judgo Von Moschzlsker, who
took his place with tho Supreme
Court judges last week. The death
of Judge Martin Dell, of Blair coun
ty, makes another vacancy to fill.
Tho Governor exercises unusual care
in his selections for tho Bench and
his appointments always give satis
faction. Hnrrlsburg Is enjoying something
rather unusual good sleighing.
Thero Is a splendid foundation of Ice
which the wagons do not seem to dis
turb though thero is comparatively
little snow.
Arguments were heard yesterday
by the Supreme Court In Philadel
phia, In bohalf of ex-Auditor General
Snyder and ex-Superintendent of
Public Grounds and Buildings, J. M.
Shumnker. .It will probably be some
tlmo before any decision is handed
down. Meanwhile tho defendants
aro out on ball. " Tho attorneys for
the defense hopo to securo a now
trial. Next week tho trial of Joseph
M. Huston, the Capitol architect,
will be begun In tho Dauphin County
Court.
Foroster PInchot has probably con
cluded by this tlmo that ho Is not us
big a mun as Undo Bill. Pinchot's
ability was not questioned, but his
lack of loyalty and fldollty to tho
administration put him out of com
mission. Tho administration could
have done nothing less,
N. E. HAUSE,
Why Currants Aro Nutritious.
The reason why currants aro so
remarkably nutritious Is that they
consist, to a very largo degree, of
saccharine in Its most easHy digest!.
Die form that of grape sugar. Tho
piquaut ilavor of the, currant, which
adds so much to Its pleasantness as a
food, is derived from the valuable
percentage of tartaric acid which the
berry contains. Potash is also pre
sent in tho form of cream of tarter
and la undoubtedly nf rilntln vnlna
Ladles' Pictorial.
HIGH COST OF L1VINO,
Alexandra McDonald, tho oil mil
lionaire, who Is confined to his homo
by fcoblo health,, mado sorao declara
tions on the high cost of living that
will causq ,somo talk nnd, qhallengo
attention,' coming as they do from
ono of tho original Standard Oil
Magnates, Mr. McDonald, who is
Bovcnty-slx years old, sees no Incen
tive In work that produces nothing
for tho futuro, and declares that
thero must bo a readjustment some
where. In speaking on tho subject,
ho snld:
"It is becoming Impossible) for the
wage worker to make both ends
moot. I do not recall when tho cost
of living wob so high. Wages have
not kept paco with the prices. Wo
will have to havo a readjustment
Bomowhere.
It Is not good that tho mass of our
people should bo forced to live a
hand to mouth existence. Thero Is
no Incentive In work that produces
nothing for tho future. The saving
ability of our people must not bo
curtailed.
I cannot see how the clerk who
must pay the high present prices can
support a family and save at tho
same time. The results of such a
condition cannot bo anything but
bad. It discourages marriages,
among other things, and those who
have means aro living too extrava
gantly. Tho automobile, for Instance, un
fortunately has become n sign of fi
nancial standing. The result is that
it is now often required as much for
show as for use.
This is an ago for much business.
We find rich American girls buying
titles. I say that nine-tenths of such
marriages are purely commercial.
It Is deplorable.
I have two grand-daughters (the
Misses Stallo). Should any one ask
for the hand of ono of these girls
aniL-jnentlon money nt the same
time, I would order him to clear
out."
ELECTRICITY NOW OBTAINED
FROM THE SUN.
The Strouasuurg Record published
quite a lengthy article last week.
Wo copy a portion of tho article as
follows:
A Record man had a pleasant chat
with John S. Schoonover, tho well
known Stroudsburg gentleman, on
Monday afternoon, during which he
told of the wonderful invention by
which electrical energy Is taken di
rect from the sun's rays and stored
up for use for lighting purposes.
The inventor is George H. Cove and
the company pushing his invention
is known as the Sun Securities Co.
Mr. Schoonover is the district rep
resentative of the company and so
well known that anything from him
on the subject will naturally have
weight in the public generally. The
gentleman is enthusiastic on the sub
ject and believes the invention great
est in history and will revolutionize
the business.
By means of the new mechanism
known as a thermo solar battery
enough current Is produced In 10
hours sunlight to supply 30 tung
sten lamps for three days. The ap
paratus consists of a frame of violet
glass, like a large window, below
which a number of metalic plugs aro
set in an insulating material. One
end of each plug is constantly expos
ed to the sun, while the other is
shaded and cool, and the rays per
mitted to pass by the violet glass set
up a reaction In tho special alloy
used, causing a constant How of cur
rent to tho storage batteries.
Tho apparatus is placed on the
roof of a building and the current
secured nnd stored is conducted by
wires to the lamp. It Is claimed for
the new mechanism that one suffi
ciently large to furnish sufficient
current to light say a 15-room house
can bo installed for $100 and will re
quire no repairs for 10 years. Be
sides there aro great possibilities of
securing heat and power from the
same source, which if it proves true,
will mean much to everyone taking
advantage of it.
Tho thermo solar battery Is not yet
ready for the market, money being
necessary to properly push it. This,
Is being raised by tho sale of stock,
tho par value of which is ?10 per
share. Men In the electrical business
who know whereof they speak, do
not hesitate to state that the claims
of the inventor aro conservative, to
say the least, and that tho mechanism
is feasible In every rospect and should
provo a wondorful success, in which
event, the inevstors will reap the
harvest.
Mr. Schoonover learned of tho in
vention by tho merest accident aud
later went to Now York to investi
gate. Ho found Mr. Cove, tho in
ventor, nt work on a generator nt
US Maiden Lane, N. Y. While in
tho factory, lighted by tungsten
lamps, tho electricity for which was
secured from the sun's rays, Mr.
Schoonover had an opportunity of
looking Into and making a careful
examination of tho wholo arrange
ment, nnd while ho doesn't stand
sponsor for it, or gunranteo it, ho
was convinced that tho inventor
could do all ho claimed to and a llttlo
more. Mr. Schoonover satisfied him
self that thero were no outsldo agen
cies, other than the battery which
absorbed tho Bun'B rays. Tho great
possibilities of tho invention, Mr.
Schoonover believes, will bo govern
ed only by tho possibilities of tho
storage batteries.
A FIRST-CLASS THIRD-CHOICE
MAYOR.
Human Life for January has n
story of a recent mayoralty contest
In a booming Colorado town which
was, without doubt, ono of tho most
unique elections ever hold In this
country, and was backed by pictures
que features, that would havo delight-
cd the romancor scoking local color
In tho "wild and woolly."
In Colorado, you know, tho women
may voto as well as the mon, and It
Is most Interesting to noto tho part
they played in this election,
Tho town hau votc4 to adopt tho
commission form of government, and
tho mayoralty contest was conducted
by tho preferential system of voting,
imported from Australia, which had
tho surprising effect of sweeping to
victory a mnyor who was not tho
people's first choice, or evon their
second, but who camo out ahead be
cause ho was their third choice.
THE D. & II. HUMMER-HOTEL AND
BOARDING HOUSE DIRECTORY.
The Delaware & Hudson Co. is
now collating information for tho
1910 edition of "A Summer Para
dise," the D. & II. summer-hotel and
boarding-house directory that has
dona so much to advertise nnd de
velop tho resorts in this section. It
offers opportunity for every summer
hotel or boarding house proprietor
to advertise his place by representa
tion in this book. Tho Information
desired is, ns follows: Name of house;
P. O. Address; Naino of Manager;
Altitude; Nearest D. & H. R. R. sta
tion; Distance from station; how
reached from station; Capacity of
house; Terms per week and per day;
Dato of opening and closing house;
what modern Improvements; Sports
and other entertainments. This In
formation should be sent at once to
Mr. A. A. Heard, General Pnssengcr
Agent. Albany, N. Y. Blanks may
bo obtained from tho nearest ticket
agent, If desired. No charge Is made
for n card notice; a pictorial adver
tisement will cost ? 15.00 for a full
page or ?7.50 a half-page. Our ho
tel people should get busy at once
and take advantage of this. Don't
make the mistake of thinking that
your house will bo represented be
cause It was In last year, but make
sure that you receive the benefit of
this offer by forwarding tho needed
information without delay. Owners
of cottages to rent are also given the
same rates for pictorial advertise
ments, but, for a card notice, a mini
mum charge of ?3.00 will be made.
AN AWFUL EXPERIENCE WITH
AN OSTRICH EGG.
Great Notch, N. J., Jan. 9. For
the first time in the history of poul
try culture in this countryside an os
trich egg has been incubated in Us
very midst. Historians must ascribe
the feat to Newt Notter, breeder of
the whlrlblrd. Unlike the case of the
whirlblrd, Mr. Notter did not pre-
medltatodly incubate the ostrich egg.
In the presence of seven deacons he
swore to-night that he would never
incubate another struthionold bird's
egg, not If it hatched forth a golden
ibis that breathed diamonds through
Its bill and laid 200-carat emeralds.
"What that ostrich egg was sent
to me from Texas by my cousin, Wil
bur Swabb," said Mr. Notter to-night,
"he didn't say a word in his letter
about there being any disposition
toward hatching on the part of that
egg. As there were 'Merry Christ
msaes' and fancy writings all over
the shell I took it for to be a present
in tho bric-a-brac line.
"My wife Sally didn't much ad
mire tho pictures and writings on
that egg, so she took it down to Miss
Evelyn Easel, tho Great Notch artist
lady, and asked her to paint some
high clas3 scenery on it. 'Paint on
something cozy an' homelike,' says
Sally, and while she waits Miss Easel
paints on that egg a picture of our
living room, with the big open fire
place blazing with logs. It's tho
most lifelike painting I ever saw dono
on a egg, for when Sally got It home
she found that her fingers was burn
ed from holding that egg by the open
fireplace.
"My father-in-law, Ned Gristle,
took tho egg from Sally and dropped
It quick, yelling that his fingers is
most burnt off of him. No, It didn't
break and by using a pair of tongs
and a shovel I got it up on the mar
ble mantelpiece in tho parlor.
"My father-in-law wanted mo to
chuck tho egg down tho well, saying
it wasn't natural, but as we had to
drink that well water I wouldn't
hear of no such suggestions. Then
I liked the look o' the thing as an
ornament, and believed that after a
day or so the heat would go out of
Miss Easul's painting.
"But It didn't, by ding! Fact is,
it kept getting hotter and hotter un
til it had tho slab of that mantel
piece heated so you couldn't lay your
finger on It. I got It down Just in
time, lowering it into a bucket of wa
ter to cool ltt off. That egg hadn't
been in that water olght minutes be
fore it begin to boll. I took it out
in tho backyard then, where it was
freezing cold, but In less than an hour
that water had all boiled off and tho
bucket caught firo. Looking closo
at that egg tho Humes seemed to leap
out of that firo Miss Easol painted.
"I went down to Miss Easel and
told her about It, whereat she smiles
all over like sho d been asked to
marry a couplo of kings. Sho says
to mo, chuckling and giggling, "That
only shows, Newt Notter, that I am
a great artist.' Then sho named
some Greek artist that had painted a
pump so natural It flooded a wholo
country and drowned about a mil
lion people. I told her then kinder
sharp that I wasn't going to let the
painting on that egg burn up Great
Notch whether It mado her reputa
tion or not.
" 'Don't you worry,' sho Bald then,
'that egg'll hatch before it burns
much more.'
"How kin that egg hatch?' I
snapped at her. 'My cousin, Wilbur
Swabb, wroto on it that It was laid
threo years ago.' Then 1 went back
homo boiling mad. . When I got I
found my father-in-law piling up tho
Icq around that egg.
" 'Whnt nro vml rinlnc von nlil I
chump." I says to htm. 'That lco is
molting fast as you pllo It up.'
" 'I'm building an igloo round this
thero Infernal egg,' ho snaps back at
mo. 'If I can Jest got tho roof on
this Igloo I'll freeze that thero paint
ing to death.' Well, ho got his Igloo
bul't round that egg all right, but
stead ot freezing up that egg It hatch
ed It out; hatched it out Into a three-year-old
ostrich.
"First thing my father-in-law
knows tho head of that ostrich burst
up through tho roof of tho Igloo.
Then one of that bird's feet come
through, kicking out as old Ned
Grlstlo was bending over. It kick
ed him clear over tho chicken house,
and if ho htuln-'t fell on our hired
girl, who was carrying a basket of
eggs out of tho hennery, It would
havo broke his neck. I made a grab
for that bird, too, but missed him
as ho let go both legs. I come to in
George Ruddle's hothouse, with him
standing over mo swearing I'd broke
?100 worth of glnss. That bird goes
Into my blacksmith shop and kicks
he anvil clear across four acres of
pasturo. Then It goes down to the
wood lot and begins kicking trees out
by the roots.
"Finally It gets tired kicking and
tnkes to running, beating out three
automobiles along the Prompton
Turnpike. It run clear to Pompton.
where the powder works Is. Jim
Wheatly is driving a load of dyna
mite along the turnpike when ho sees
that bird coming. He jest has time
to unhitch his horse and gallop across
lots before that tarnation ostrich up
and lams his left foot ngalnst that
powder wagon. Threo feathers o'
that bird come down In Cedar Grove,
but that's all. I wouldn't take an
other ostrich egg into my home for a
million dollars."
"How do you reckon," asked one of
the seven deacons who swore Newt
Notter to his antl-ostrlch-hatchlng-oath,
"that that Igloo old Ned Gristle
builds hatched out that bird?'
"That ain't hard to colkerlate,"
responded Mr. Notter. "I reckon
there ain't no other way o' hatching
out cold storage eggs."
EKVISION AND APPEALS.
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to
the provisions of tho Act of Assem
bly, entitled "An Act to provide for
tho ordinary expenses of the govern
ment, payment of the Interest of tho
state debt, receiving proposals for
tho sale of public works and for
other purposes," approved tho 27th
day of July, 1842, that the assessors
of the several townships ana boro
ughs of Wayne county havo made
their returns of their assessments
for the year 1910, and that the fol
lowing is a statement of the aggre
gate values and assessments made
by said assessors of the several sub
jects of taxation enumerated in the
11th section of said Act of July 27,
1842, nnd in the several Acts sup
plementary thereto, and of the whole
amount of county taxes as assessed
in said townships and boroughs.
MONEY
CO TAX. AT INT.
DI8TRICT
Hprlln
IScttiuny
llucklnslmui
Canniui
Cherry llldcu
Clinton
Damascus
Drtlier
Dyberry
Huwlcy
IlonesdaU-
l.ako
I-t'l:mon
Lelilu-li
.Manchester
Mt. l'lcusant
Oregon
l'almyra
I'aupack
l'roMon
Prompton
Salem.
Scott
South Canaan
Starrucca
Sterling
Texns
Wayinart
5 369,
43.
sr.',
155,
224,
XA
916,
1!W,
24,
Wl
2,'-U0,
5iy,
217,
fl.477.5rt
$ is,a;i
9,151)
ai.;rni
11.300
34.2M1
4.S.CU7
11.500
lHl.IKi
1.XSU.7U
2J7'
tHS.Ni!
3.421.0!):
S.tMi.?.'
7!i;W
1.1.17 TJ I
L'0.b2!l
KJ.7S15
2UU,lH)
51.212
34.7U8
4.71U
lli.TIti
15.S11 I
2.172 ;
3, Nili '
4,001
SI. Ill
2I..W
4, fK)
25,(11 10
31.1:17
1.1,521
15I..V-2
17.7!5 1
8,W.'.2U
2.U7!)Ji(l
1,213.(1!
H71.S2
1.301.04!
218.3201
i;d.;i
h73.2S,
524.1U
isri.UK
774.78
1.UUMH)
4!R),225
'.tti.UiO
1.5UX'!
17,fcl
107 .iW7
INi.Ki,
l,10ti,4IJI
1X1.200
713.52,
1.015.32,
431.M7I
744.73
4,125.81
732.1)!
Notice is also given pursuant to
Act of Assembly aforesaid, that the
following days nnd dates appointed
for tho appeals from the assessments
for tho several boroughs and town
ships, havo also been appointed by
tho Commissioners of said county for
finally determining whether any of
tho valuations of the assessors havo
been made below a just rato accord-1
ing to tho meaning nnd intention of
said act.
Tho Commissioners' of Wayne
county, sitting as a Hoard of Revis
ion, have appointed tho following
dnys and dates respectively for hear
ing final appeals from tho trl-ennlal
assessment of 1910 at tho Commis
sioners' olllce, llonesdale. Pa., be
ginning at 8 a. m., Monday, January
31st and closing at 2:30 p. in., Sat
urday, I'"eb. 5th:
Monday, Jan. 31. llonesdale,
Oregon, Lebanon.
Tuesday, Feb. 1. Uerlln, Damas
cus, Manchester, Uucklngham, Scott,
Starrucca.
Wednesday, Feb. 2. Preston, Mt.
Pleasant, Clinton, Paupack, South
Canaan.
Thursday, Feb. 3. Lehigh, Dre
hor, Sterling, Salem, Lako, Cherry
Illdgo.
Friday, Feb. 4. Hawley, Palmyra,
Prompton, Cnnnan, Waymnrt,
Saturday, Feb. 5. Texas, Dybor
ry, IJothany.
Persons having a grlovanco should
try to adjust It with tho assessor be
foro tho appeals; if thla cannot bo
dono, and it Is not convenient to at
tond the appeal, write tho grievance
and mall It to the Commissioners'
ofllco and It will receivo attention.
County levy for 1910 Is 4 mills and
one-half mill for support of non
resident paupers.
J. E. MANDEVILLE.
J. K. HORNDECK.
T. C. MADDEN,
County Commissioners.
Attest: George P. Rosa, Clerk.
Honeedale, Pa.
BAD BILIOUS
ATTACK r
There Is nothing that will more com
pletely knock out a man, or woman cither,
and entirely Incapacitate them for work or
pleasure, than a bad attack of biliousness.
You get up with a headache which Increases
if you ttoop, over. You ate diizy when
you stand up straight again. Your tongue
is coated and your mouth tastes bad. You
are irritablo and out of sorts. That's
biliousness.
r If you want to get right again remove
(the cause. Your bowels arc clogged. The
natural sewers of the body fail to cany off
the poisonous matter. The bile is being
absorbed by tho blood, and your whole
body U crying out against the imposition.
,Take three Smith's Pineapple and llutter
nut Pills at once. Don't wait till you go to
bed. Then take two more when you retire.
.It is astonishing to see how quickly they
(will relieve. They restore the liver and
stomach to normal activity and purify the
blood, rhysicisns use and recommend.
IThey form no habit. You should always
.keep these little Vegetable Pills on hand.
IThey watd off many ills.
To Cure Constipation
Biliousness and Sick
Headache in a Night, use
SMITHS
PINEAPPLE
AND
U (digestion
eaoattieand
KCull
fBUTTERNUTl
Diseases or
the Stomach
PIUS
CO fills In Olu.t Vlnl SHr. All Dealers.
SMITH'S
For Sick Kidneys
TiliuMer tliseax-s, Ithenmatlam,
the one lt rme'lr. KcllaMe,
cmlorsctl by leading physicians:
i.iff", pITeetmt. r.onlls lasting.
On tlie market in yearn. Have
cu-pd thoniati'K lio pills In
orf tfnal glaw pirkajte. 60 cunts.
Trial hows, CO fills, Clients. All
drnzizUta 81! crd reromniMirt.
BUCHU
LSTHBA
KIDNEY
PILLS
The Great Number of Lady
Shoppers at Our Store last
Saturday showed the Inter
est taken in HONESDALE
MADE MUSLIN UNDER
WEAR. This Great White
Sale Still Continues.
GOWNS
Muslin, high nnd Y nock yoke of clus
ter tucks nil sizes; Snlu
I'rlco -17c. Muslin Gowns,
lilsh neck, tucked yoko nnd
trimmed with embroidery
Insertion, fl()c. value ;siuo
price (tOo. Cambric Gowius,
ovi neck, embroidery or
lnce trimmed, $1.25 volua;
Sulu price 89 cents.
Skirt, Draw
ers, Corset Cov
ers and Com
binntlous all at
marked down
prices.
JANUARY CLEARANCE
Ladies' Suits, Coats and Furs
To accomplish thU Bah we havo cut
prices jm-t in half.
$20. Coats at $10.00
$15. Coats at $ 7.50
$10. Coats at $ 5.00
Special Silk Scarf Sale
Saturday, January, 15
Only the best Washable
Silk Scarf In full width and
2 yards long at G9c. each.
Katz Bros.
FOU 8A.LK CHEAP A Bet of
hand-mado light bobs. KRE1TNER
BROS., Honesdalo. 2t2.