The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, January 26, 1910, Image 3

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    SnOI CITHMN, WKDNK8DAY, JAN. 20, 1010.
JEWS
FLOCKING
INI HOLY LAND
i
Constitutions! Regime in Turkey
Causes Influx from Russia,
Persia and Elsewhere
JERUSALEM IS IN THEIR HANDS
Colonies Spread Through Plain of Es
draolon and Mod earn Method of
Agriculture Greatly ,lncreai Pro
duction of Paying Crops.
London. Letters from .Jerusalem
gay that tho proclamation of tho Con
stitution In Turkey has thrown open
tho doors of Palestine to to incom
ing of Jews from all parU ,of the
world. In Jerusalem alono four-fifths
f tho population of 100,000 now be
long to the Jewish faith, wlills t Jaf
fa, Tiberias, Safed, and Haifa Jews
are reckoned by tens of thousands.
Almost tho whole extensive plain
of Esdraelon has been bought up by
them. Their prosperous colonies
spread from Dan to Boersheba, nrd
even further soutli to the outskirts o.'
Egypt. Thousands aro escaping from
Persia to find shelter and protection
In the Holy Land, while overy sh p
from Odessa carries hundreds of them.
The valley of tho Jordan, once the
property of tho ex-Sultan Abdul Ham
Id, 1b being eagerly sought after by
Jewish capitalists and syndicates of
Zionists, whose agents, distributed r.'l
over tho land, aro buying up rich prc;
erties of Mohammedan ofiendc s
whoso Incomes Blnco tbo revoiut? n
are considerably lessoned.
The Holy City is essentially a Jew
ish town. Banking, as well as trade
and commerce, Is monopolized by
Jews. The Government has found it
necessary to organize a company of
Jewish gendarmes. Hundreds of thou
sands of pounds aro sent annually
from Europe and America to enable
the colonists to build homes, hospi
tals, school;, and Invalid home3. Over
100 Jewish schools already exist in
Jerusalem alone and synagogues are
going up everywhere.
The value of land has risen four
fold. The Ignorant and poverty
stricken fellaheen are being ousted
from their homes and villages by the
teharp European Jewish settler, whoso
modern agricultural Implements and
methods have made the land produce
harvests never before dreamed of by
the natives. The Anglo-Palestine
Company, a Zionist banking and com
mercial enterprise, Is pushing the
cause of Israel with great determina
tion. The racial excluslveness of tho
Jews and their clannish proclivities
are arousing the opposition of the Ot
tomans and the Turkish constitutional
regime has In this question one of tho
greatest problems that a new and
patriotic Government ever faced.
PASSING OF ROTOKINO BILLY.
Famous Decoy Sheep of Auckland
Dies a Violent Death.
Auckland, New Zealand. There is
sadness here because of the death of
Rotokino Billy, the famous decoy
sheep of the Union Steamship Com
pany, which shared with Pilot Tom,
the white whispering grampus which
guides vessels through Cook's Strait,
between the North and South Islands,
the protection of the Government
Pilot Tom -was not to be shot under
a penalty of $500, and It was prohibit
ed to convert Rotokino Billy Into
mutton under any circumstances.
For tho last ten years tho sheep
had been one of the crew of the
Vnion Steamship Company's llnsr
Wanaka, between New. Zealand and
Australia. Billy's duty was to act as
a decoy in leading sheep on and off
the steamer. Ho was never known
to make a mistake, and his salnt-liko
expression ns he led his unforunate
brethren to their doom was much
appreciated by American tourists on
the Wanaka.
On the lnst passage of tho ship from
Wellington to Auckland Rotokino Bil
ly was knocked into ono of the coal
bunkers by a heavy sea and broke his
neck, to the Intense grief of the crew.
Knowing Decalog Frees Him.
Lancaster, Pa. It has been a pe
culiar fancy of Mayor McCosky to ask
prisoners to repeat the Ten Command
ments, but he never, until the other
day, found a man who could stand the
test. Among his subjects was James
Duffy, a resident of Philadelphia, who
had been picked up for taking a
snooze In a public hallway. James
proved equal to the emergency, and,
after establishing a record on which
men in many professions and trades
had failed, he was given his liberty.
Ad. for Wife Brings Many Replies.
Oconto, Wis. Letters from women
flowed In on John Barney, a farmer,
who advertised for a wife, offering to
take her to town to see moving pic
ture shows once every week, and to
allow her all the physlclal culture
training and piano playing sho might
wish. He received thtrty-slx letters
In two days.
Allentown, Pa. James Wilson, who
Is serving a thirty-year sentence for
the murder of John P. Ebert of this
city, whom he shot for money to get
married with, has written to the
warden, saying he is happy and noth
lng worries blm; that he Is "glad ha
has no wife, because they are no
good."
'Highest Known Temperature.
Sir Andrew Noblo has reached tho
.highest point of temperature in ter
restrial .thermometry, says Harper's
Magazine. Ho has Accomplished this
,by exploding cordite iin closed vessels
wlth a .resulting prcaiuo of GO tons to
the squaw inch, nnd . temperature or
no less than 5,200 degrees C. Sir
William .toookes saw iliat ono Inci
dental .result of this experiment
should have been tho formation of
diamond that is, if his icalculatlons
were correct. On working over tho
residues of Hit' explosion chamber ho
has recently (extracted from them
small crystals diat seem to .bo verit
able diamonds. 'We sec, then, that if
men cannot control the conditions
Uiat malLe for larpe diamonds, they,
at least, understand .them. It Is. Jn all
likelihood, a matter of a comparative
ly short time when tlie diamond will
have been conquered as absolutely as
ruby.
With this final temperature of 2,500
degrees C. we have reached the limit
looking back we see that every step
in temperature he has so far taken
has led him Just so far along the path
to universal conquest the absolute
conquest which he is destined ulti
mately to make. But in this phase
of temperature alone he still has far
to go. Wo have had evidence from
many sources that even in tho sun,
which is by no means the hottest of
I lie heavenly bodies, and which yet
possesses temperatures that transcend
anything wo know on earth, the very
elements of matter He there disin
tegrated into simpler forms. Such
temperatures are the distant Alplno
heights ever and ever so far higher
than the Hlght ascent to which we
Jtae so tendiously arrived.
Gum Going In Maine.
Doleful reports come from the
Maine wooda The spruce gum Indus
try is on the decline, and the prices
for tho sticky delight are on the rlso.
Gum that would not hnve brought
more than 50 or CO cents a plund a
few years ago, gum of a gritty, acrid,
Ill-flavored sort, now sells for ?1 and
?1.25 a pound at Bangor and other
gum centres. A few years ago the
best gum that was ever chewed, fresh
from the wind-swept gum trees of tho
north, sold at 75 cents a pound, and
was chewed by the fairest In tho land.
Bits of Maine were in everybody's
mouth, so to speak, Maine spruce
gum ranked alongside of James G.
Blaine and Thomas B. Reed In mak
ing Uio state famous. What Reed did
for the House, spruce gum did for the
common people It regulated tho Jaw
movement. People sank their teeth
into Maine spruce gum and ennobling
thoughts camo perforce. It would be
impossible to say ho wmuch of the
nation's valor has found its origin in
the effort to separate working parts
of the system from Maine gum. But
it is all oyer, and tho gum Is becom
ing as scarce as great men In Maine.
Boston Advertiser.
Tale of an Animal Trainer.
' Animal trainers of tho old days led
adventurous lives. In 1600 all London
was talking of a man named Benkes,
porvnnt to tho Earl of Efisex, who had
taught his horse to count and perform
a number of feats, Including mourning
to the top of St. Paul's Cathedral
while "a number of asses," as the his
torian puts it, "brayed below." Sir
Walter Raleigh, in his history, says of
Bankes that he "would have shamed
all of the enchanters of the world; tor
whatsoever was most famous among
them could never master or instruct
any beast as he did his) horso." When
Bankes took his horse to Rome both
were burnt for witchcraft.
Introducing Hall Caine.
In ono of Hall Caine's visits to this
country a banquet was given in his
honor in a certain city and Thomas
Nelson Page was Invited to Introduce
the guest of the evening. Just beforo
tho toast began Mr. Page's rlghthand
neighbor passed his menu around the
table with tho request that Caine
should lead the usual "autographing"
with his signature. "Good Idea," said
Page; "I'll send my menu card along
too. I've got to introduce Hall Caine
in a few minutes and I want to be
able to say that I havo read something
he has written.
New York's Y. M. C. A.
Greater (Now York is tho greatest
Y. M. C. A. center in the world. It
has moro than 40 organizations and
20,000 members; It has 400 secretaries
and employes, and 2,800 of Its mem
bers aro officeholders and committee
men. Its largest building, the Twenty
third street branch, cost $i.6ou.Oi.i J
has 3,000 members. Branch associa
tions aro located In all parts oi ...o
city, and are extending Into The
Bronx and out Into tho parks ot
Brooklyn.
Survivor of Battle.
Tho only known survivor of tho
naval battle of Navarino, which took
place In 1827, is still living near
Rhyde, namely, John Stalner, who
has just passed his hundredth birth
day. Stalner was midshipman's stow
ard on board the Talbot.
A quaint superstition Is provalent in
many English vlllagos. When a wo
man Is going to be married every ef
fort Is made to prevent her from see
ing her wedding ring before the cere
mony, as it is considered that a sight
ot It except at the altar is bound to
bring bad luck.
SOOTH FEAREND OF WORLD
Salvation Army Lender :8ays Destruc
tion by Flra Is not Improbable
In 4he Near Future.
London. Jen. Booth of tho Salva
tion Army has taken upon his shoul
ders the mantle of those sad prophets
who from time to time have predicted
tho Imminent dissolution of the world
because of Its wickedness. Address
ing a meeting, lie said:
"We have a world setting God Al
mighty at nnught and rushing forward
reckless of His wishes and threaten
Ings nB to their fateu Notwithstanding
all that has been done In years gone
by, men and women still pursue their
wickedness to-day In all the nations
of the earth.
"Not only one nation, but all na
tions, seem banded together as ono
great people of rebellion, transgres
sion, nnd wickedness until some think
I bellove with a considerable degree
of probability that we may be ap
proaching rapidly the end of all
things, with similar results but far
surpassing In magnitude anvtlilne that
has gone before; that all things may
bo wound up, but that instead of there
being a deluge of water sweoplng tho
world and its inhabitants there will
be destruction by fire."
OOOOOOOOOOCOODODODOCOCOOO'l
d Philosophy and Views 8
of Mrs. T. P. O'Connor, q
. p
New York, N. Y. I would o
rather bo a successful woman O
than an unsuccessful lady. H
As soon as the women of Eng- Q
land get the ballot they will o
Q amend the laws, and the divorce H
j t. " I..,, uc uuu ui uieu Air hl
points of attack.
O There are women interested
$ in suffrage who put three lumps
p of sugar, in their tea and wear
Q satin gowns.
X Ion. will 1. . 41. I a . VT
Tho modem' woman breaks
conventions whenever they get 5
in het" way or impede her pro- p
gress. O
Women are more earnest O
about getting the ballot In Eng-
land than here. They need it O
more. X
b The ameliorating thing about p
X getting old is that you take an
O Interest in so many other people O
and so little in yourself. g
OCOCOCOCOCOCCCOOCCCOCOCOCO
LUNACY AND MATRIMONY.
The Latter Apparently an Antidote
for the Former In France.
Paris. Some interesting statistics
have Just been published In Paris re
garding marriage nnd - lunacy In
France. Why there should bo any re
levancy the French authorities do not
say.
It appears that there aro In Franca
29 cases of lunacy per 10,000 bachelors
and 32 per 10,000 spinsters, while the
rate Is only 7 per 10,000 married men
and 10 per-10,000 married women. For
widowers the rate is 17 and for wid
ows 18 per 10,000.
These figures should not be taken
as a standard for other European
countries. In Switzerland, for In
stance, the rate of lunacy Is much
lower. There aro only 9 lunatics
among 10,000 Swiss bachelors and
only 7 among 10,000 married men,
with 13 per 10,000 widowers and 31
per 10,000 divorced men.
Cases of suicide in France aro far
more numerous among bachelors than
among married men, and the propor
tion is double among widowers and
divorced men.
"EARTH SOLID AT FIRST."
Professor Davis, of Harvard, Disputes
Theory That It was Molten Mass.
Boston. Professor William Morris
Davis, of Harvard, took issue in n lec
ture at tho Lowell Institute, with the
theory that the earth was a molten
mass at first.
"In tho beginning, the outside of
the earth was a solid crust," ho said.
"This crust had a great attracting
power, and drew to It many small
bodies.
"Tho constantly Increasing pressure
of these bodies caused the centre of
the earth to become molton, although
at first It was solid, like the earth's
crust, Tho formntlon of rocks In tho
Grand Canyon proves this."
SHOTS BRING AID TO HIM.
Prospector's Leg Broken, Use of Hla
Rifle Summons Rescuers.
Redding, Cal. Having broken a
leg, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, prospector,
was six hours crawling to his cabin,
300 yards away.
Unablo for llo days to move about
enough to get hlinBelf food ho lay on
the floor in a half-conscious condition.
Driven almost out of his mind by
pain and hunger he Anally succeeded
in dragging hlmBolf to his rifle and
fired several shots, which attracted
the attention ot Homo section men on
the railroad near by and brought them
to him.
INDIAN IMPORT8 BEAR8' N08E8.
Fraud Unearthed When He Brings In
Twenty-three In One Lot.
Calais, Me. Joseph Lacoot, a Pas
samaquoddy Indian, who from time
to time has been bringing in bears'
noses and paws and collecting the 5
bounty, has been sent to the Machlas
jail for ninety days. His last lot of
twenty-three noses waB his undoing.
A detective discovered that Joe did
bis hunting in a fur dealer's place in
St Stephens, N, B., buying the noses
and claws and smuggling them across
the Una.
Markln gthe Santa Fa Trait.
Tho famous old Santa Fe trail Is to
be marked so that its location will
not bo forgotten. Tho school children
of Kansas woro asked to contribute a
penny each to socure suitable markers
for this pioneer highway of progress,
and 369.1G6 responded. With this
fund tho trail will be outlined In an
enduring manner from Kansas City to
Santa Fo, 800 miles as the caravans
made it, tho time consumed for tho
round trip being 110 days. It Is be
lieved the trail datos back to 1540,
when a Spanish advonturer led an
expedition from Mexico as far north
as Kansas. But it was not until tho
beginning of the last century that, tho
American trader and pioneer utilized
the long trail that stretched out into
the wilderness of tho new El Dorado.
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Where Elephants are Stolen.
To steal an elephant would seem to
bo wellnlgh impossible. But the Brit
ish Consul reports that it is a com
mon practice in Slam. There the huge
quadrupeds are omployed In the toak
forests and frequently disappear. Ono
British flnm last year bewailed tho loss
of a dozen and reported that a3 many
more were stolen from their contrac
tors. Another firm lost nine, only
three of which were recovered. As
the average value of tho elephants 13
about $1,000 a head, the consul natur
ally enlarges on the seriousness of tte
matter. What is annoying about It Is
that tho officials are Indifferent and if
one of the missing creatures is recov
ered at' all it Is only by means of a
search party organized for the purpose.
Plnlcss Chinese.
A member of tho Chinese legation,
clad In splendid pale hued silks, stood
before the Casino at Newport.
"Pins," ho said, "cause untl.'y
habits. Wo have no pins In ChUa.
The right way to fasten things Is wi'h
buttons and buttonholes, or with loops
and frogs. To fasten things with
pins is to make use of an untidy
makeshift. To employ pins Is to be
come lazy and slovenly.
"We have no pins In China. Cer
tain foreign manufacturers shipped
millions of 'them to us in the past,
but wo sent them back. Wo had no
use for them. We were too neat.."
Providence Journal.
Foreign Educational Schools.
A few yers ago the foreign mission
ary schools were practically the only
Institutions in Foo-Chow offering fa
cilities for tho acquisition of Western
learning. There are now at least 30
native schools fashioned after the for
eign model. Foo-Chow is a city of
600,000 inhabitants and these schools
embrace about 2,000 students. Posits
placarded all over tho city advertise
the opening of various modern
schools, which are springing up In
every nook and corner of the place.
Scarcely a week passes without the
announcement of the opening of a now
school.
American Goods in China.
Noticeable among tho foreign arti
cles In the shops at Shosi, China, ac
cording to a British representative,
were German and American clocks
and watches; British, French and Ger
man medicines, provisions and wines;
British and German cutlery, and ev
erywhere the widely advertised British
and American cigarets.
Serfdom In Hungary.
In some parts of Hungary serfdom
of the old Russian type still prevails.
Tho peasant Is obliged to work fifty
days each year for his landlord with
out pay, the time to be cuosen by the
latter, who Is almost sure to choose
the season when the poor man can
least afford to work for nothing. This
system led to an Insurectlon in lb'JS.
From the Cotton Machine.
Eli Whitney's cotton gin was re
sponsible for the Immense strides
taken by King Cottin.yet It has been
asserted that this machine was but
the practical application of an Idea
that found birth in the brain of tho
widow of General Nathaniel Greene of
revolutionary fame.
Increasing Use of Glass.
A noticeable Increase In tho imports
of glass at Nabasakl, Japau, Is report
ed by the British consul. It Is duo, he
says to the growing use by the Jap
anese of window glass for tho houses.
Most of It is fourth quality and Bel
glum is the chief source oi supply.
Paving Roads With Straw.
The experiment cf paving tho roads
with straw has been tried with suc
cess by the farmers of Western Amer
ica. Every autumn tho roads are
covered with dUBt, which, after tho
heavy rains, becomes thick mud, mak
ing travel hard for man and beast.
After straw had been laid on tho
main thoroughfares to a depth ot a
foot or more traveling became easy.
Wedding Superstitions.
The Canadian Pacitic Railway Com
pany is boasting that is has accom
plished the feat of landing British
malls in Hongkong In 29 days from
tho dispatch from London, or nearly
a week less than the previous' records.
Corpus Chrlstl Procession.
In Orotava, Tenerlffo, tho Corpus
Christj procession passes jver floral
carpets with which the streets on the
route are covered during the festival.
Beautiful tapestry designs ore imitated
with fresh blossoms.
TIIK MIDDLE AGED MAN.
Why Ho Thinks It Is IthonmatUm
That Bothers Hltn and Not Gout.
"Can anybody tall ma," said the
middle aged man, "the difforonce
between rheumatism and gout?
Now, not being very well vorsod in
medical science, knowiag very little
In fact about osteology or therapeu
tics or anatomy, materia mcdlca or
pharmacopoea, I wouldn't undortako,
mysolf, offhand to say; but In a gen
eral way I would say that gout Is
an ailment that attacks tho rich and
rheumatism tho poor; and, being
not what you would call a rich man,
I Buppose what I've got is rheuma
tism. "I have read In novels and seen
pictures of portly gentlemen of mid
dle age or rather more who sat in
great easy chairs and with ono foot
all swathed up in bandages stretched
out in front of them supported on a
foot rest. This Is the old gontleman,
living in a fine old manor house or
in a splendid mansion In town, who
is described in tho novel as being
testy and choleric choleric, as I un
derstand it, meaning not that ho has
cholera or anything of that sort but
an uneven temper; and this old gen
tleman with foot thus done up in
bandages and supported on a foot
rest has gout.
"But several of my symptoms arc
different. I don't live In an old
manor house, nor in a mansion in
town; and howover disposed I might
bo to be testy and choleric, I have
to keep my temper, and I don't
swath my foot in bandages and re
cline It on a foot rest. I havo to
keep more or less on the move.
"So I suppose that In the absence
of the familiar gout symptoms we
might safely diagnose my case as
one of just plain rheumatism; but
I guess my rheumatism hurts me
about as much as the gout of our
testy and choleric old friend hurts
him."
Ono Tlook Authors.
Robert Burton, the author of "The
Anatomy of Melancholy," may claim
this honor: His book has stood the
test of" time as few books have. Pro
fessor Salntsbury writes that "all fit
readers of English literature have
loved him." Lamb praises "tho fan
tastic great old man" and, indeed,
borrowed from him many a choice
phrase. Among other remarkable
"ono book authors" may bo mention
ed Sir Thomas Malory, whose fa
mous collection of Arthurian ro
mances Is one of the Imperishable
treasures of the English tongue;
Richard Hooker, whoso "Laws of Ec
clesiastical Polity" is still a stand
ard book on the constitution of the
Church of England, and Gilbert,
White, whose immortal "Natural
History of Selbourne" Is still read
with pleasure and profit.
Business Philosophy.
Play is work that you don't have
to do.
Never hide a traveling man whoso
waistcoat Is more Insistent than his
personality.
Don't rise so high in your calling
that you see only one side of your
fellows.
It's true that a marble statue has
no faults, but then it has no
friends, either.
There are plenty of doors labelled
"Pull," but tho majority, after all,
bear the legend "Push."
There are self-made men In this
world who ought to be suffering
from remorse. Warwick James
Price In Llppincott's.
Canadians in This Country.
In tho United States, according to
the census, aro 819.2G4 Canadians 10
years of age and over. Forty per cent
of these aro engaged in manufacturing,
30 per cent lu persoual service, betwoeu
17 and IS per cent in trado and trans
portation, about the same percentage
In agriculture, and somewhat over 4
per cent in professions. The percent
age in tho professions is approxi
mately the saran as that of the native
born white population In tho United
States. Tho largo numbers, as com
pared with the number left behind
following tho same occupations throw
light on conditions in Canada for ex
ample, tho number of expatiated Cana
dian teachors and college professors,
lawyers and clergymen.
Disinfecting Churches.
The Alcado of Madrid, who, at least
In sanitary matters. Is decidedly pro
gressive, has issued an oruer for the
disinfection of churches. This order,
which is based on a report from the
director of the municipal laboratory,
prescribes that all the churchea ot the
Spanish capital are to be swept out
dally with sawdust moistened with a
solution of copper sulphate. All tho
fittings and furniture of tho churches,
chaira. bauahesi, caneff onnl holy
water fonts, etc., are to bo disinfected
every day.
For Surveying Great Depths.
A new Instrument for surveying
deep-bore holes contains a compass,
plummet, small cameras and electric
light, the whole connected with a
small adjustable clock, so that the
light may be turned on for a given
period after the apparatus has been
lowered Into the hole. It has been
used in survoylng a number ot holes
In South Africa and has proved satis
factory. Both dip and deviation ore
recorded by means of photographs of
the positions of both a plumb-bob and
a magnetic needle ot any desired pllnt
in the bore bole. The photographs are
taken by means of twf small electric
lamps lighted by a time contact
PKOFBSSIONAIj CARDS.
Attarneya-at-Law.
H WILSON,
. ATTORN XT A COUHSKLOR-AT-LAW.
Office, Mjsotile building, lecond floor
llonesdale, l'a.,
WM. H. LEE,
ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW.
Office over post office. All legal business
promptly attended to. Honcsdale. l'a.
E
Lli. ATTntivrv a rnitMavr.nu.iT.i
T,01.nf.r'lb.c,rtJ, n.BlJ bulldln-r, opposite the
Tost Ulllce, lioiiRSdale, l'a,
HOMER GREENE.
ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW.
Olllce over Keif's store. Honcsdale1 l'a.
0
L. ROWLAND,
ATTORNEY i COUNBELOR-AT-LAW.
Office rcr Post Olllce. llonesdale. Pa
CHARLES A. McCAItTY,
ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW.
Special and prompt attention given to the
collection of claims. Office over Keif's inew
store. Honcsdale. Pa.
T7"l V. KIMBLE,
JL' . ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW j
Olllce over the Host office llonesdale. Pa.
M
E. SIMONS,
. ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW.
Ollice in the Court House, llonesdale,
Pa.
HERMAN HARMES,
ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW.
Patents and pensions secured. Office In tho
bchuerholz building Honcsdale. l'a.
PETER II. ILOFF,:
ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW.
Office-Second floor old Savings link
building. Honcsdale. l'a.
EM. SALMON,
ATTORNEY A C OUNKELOR-AT-LAW
Office Xf it drnr 111 I i H r.fl'n- Vnrmorl
occupied bvW H.:i)linii.i(k. llonesdale. Pa
Dentists.
DR. E. T. BROWN,
DENTIST.
Ofll re First floor, old Savings I'.nnk'tmllrt.
lng, llonesdale, l'a.
Dr. C. It. I1KADY. Dentist. floncsdale.Pa.
Office Hours-8 a. m. to 6 p. m
Any evening by appointment.
Citizens' phone. 33 Itcsldence. No. SG-X
Physicians.
DR. II. B. SEARLES,
IIONESDALE, TA.
Office and residence 1019 Court street
telenhones. Ollicw Hours 2:00 to 4:00 and
(! no toMiO. ti.tn.
Livery.
LIVERY. 1 red. U. Kickard has re
moved his livery establishment from
corner Chuch street to Whitney's Stone
Barn.
ALL CALLS
PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
FIRST CLASS OUTFITS. 75yl
JOSEPH N. WELCH
The OLDEST Fire Insurance
Agency in Wayne County.
Oflice: 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,
1127& Main St., HONESDAIJi.
Tooth
Savers
We have the sort ot tooth brushes that are
made to thoroughly cleanse and save the
teeth.
They aro the kind that clean teeth without
eavlng vour mouth lull ot bristles.
Ve recommend those costing 25 cents or
more, as vr can guarantee them and will re
place, free, any that show defects of manu
facture within tbren months.
O. T. CHAHBERS,
PIIARHACIST,
Opp.D.A H.StatUn HONESDALB, PA.
nil
HAM