THM ClTIHHiV, V;i:iXHSI)AY, MAKCII 2, J010. ALAS! FOR FAME OF FOREFATHERS John Hancock a Smuggler and a Defaulter; Postmaster Benj. Franklin Robbed the Mails SAM'L ADAMS A DAD MAN. TOO Historian Writes Book In Which He Sneers at the Heroes of the Revolu tlon Patriots of 76 are Knocked from Pedestal by 8tark. Boston, Mass. J.imoa Henrj Stark of Iloston has written a hook called "Tho Loyalists of Massachusetts and the Othor Sldo of tho American Revo lution", which rofcrs to Samuel Adams and John Hancock aB default its and thieves, and classes other Revolutionary heroes ub "ne'er do wells," "degenerates," and "looters and betrayers of public trusts." Tho book contains fiOO pases and the Btatomont that In Virginia the Kevoluntlonary movement of poor whlto trash, or "Crackers," led by Patrick Henry, was against the plant er aristocracy. It was only very de liberately, Mr. Stark says, that Wash ington Identified himself with the "dts unionlst" cause. As for Patrick Henry. Mr. Stark de clares that he was one of the most un reliable of men. Byron called him a forest-bornDemosthones, and Jeffer son, wondering over his career, ex claimed: "Where 'he got that towent of languago is inconceivable: I have frequently closed my eyei- while he spoke, and when he was done asked myself what he had snld without be ing nblo to recollect a Mini of it." Mr. Stark also recalls tue circum stance that Henry failed as a store keeper before he said: "Give me lib erty or give me death." Samuel Adams. Mr. Stark says, was anothor "ne'er do well." Ho quotes a letter of Adams to prove that he was a dofaultor, and as tax collector of Boston did not make proper returns of taxes, his bondsmen paying ?5,000. In telling of the Rostou massacre the book asserts that the patriots pour ed a "torrent of coarse and profane abuse upon the soldiers, nstonish.ng even In its echoes across the century," while it compares the Boston Tea Par ty with "the eo-called respectable mob which on the 11th day of August, 1S34, destroyed the Charlestown convent, and a year later nearly killed Garrison and made the Jail his only safe place of refuge. Had slavery triumphed, that mob would at thh day be tho object and subject of popular glorifica tion." Mr. Stark says John Hancock was the owner of the sloop Liberty, which was seized for smuggling, and even as serts that one-fourth of tho signers of the Declaration of Independence were bred to trade or to the command of ships. More than one of them, and adds, was branded with the epithet of "smuggler." As Treasurer of Harvard College, he declares Hancock received col lege funds amounting to upward of 15,200. Hancock, too, says Mr. Stark, proved to be a defaulter. i8 tells how "for twenty years the cor poration begged and entreated him to make restitution, and even threatened to prosecute him, and it was only after his death. In 1793, that his heirs made restitution tr.,ihe college." Joslah QulraV is quoted as saying it "would have been grateful to pass over in silence the extraordinary course he pursued In his official rela tion to Harvard College had truth and the fidelity of history permitted." Mr. Stark also submits ovldenco that Benjamin Franklin, when G7 years old, was dismissed from the of fice of Deputy Postmaster General of the Colonies because he stole letters from tho mall. He relates In detail how Franklin was tried in England and dismissed from the service. The referenco Is, of course, to the historic Incident of the so-called "Hutchinson letters." Mr. Stark was born In London, but came to this country when 9 years old. He Is the author of several books, resides In Dorchester, is President of the British Charitable Assoclat'on, Vice President of the Victorian Club, and a member of the New England Historical Gcnoaloglcal Society. IRDS ROB A MAIL BOX. Our Old Friend the English Sparrow In a New Role In Indiana. Xew Albany. Ind. A mall box on rural route No. 3, out of Greenville, has been robbed of several letters In tho past few days. When the letters first began to disappear It was thought soma person was getting them, but they were found unopened In a fenco corner nearby. Tho owner decided to watch tho box from a distance and was reward ed for his trouble. Ho saw English sparrows fly to the box and work their way through the slot for letters. In a few moments they reappeared with a letter and worked away until they got It out Then one of tho birds flew to the fence corner with It. Khls 216 Rats with "Bite-Proof Mitts. Greenwich, Conn. Arthur Craw, ford, foreman of K. C. Converse's home near Greenwich, killed 216 rata In half an hour. There la a rat plague at the henneries. Crawford corers hlB hands with "bite-proof gloves, pulls tho rats out of boles and brsaka their nocks. ! MOOSE C0RES II PARALYTIC England Has Just Deen the Scene of , an Extraordinary Case of ' Cure by Shock, ftondon. Thoro Is one woman In England who henceforth will vlow a house with Joy. She Is Mrs. Mary nn Sandford, a resident of Camden Town, who has been restored to nor ma) health by being frightened by a i i ' iko utter : g hern via vzed t Jr ' nine years. Medical experts, who had held her to be Incurable, pronounce this a most extraordinary Instnnce of t "cure by shock." Tho woman was stricken by paraly- ' sis in August, 1!01. Her light arm and log were rendered useless, the muscles I of her face nffected and tbt right side of her body lost all power of sonsa- I tlon and scemud to wither. A needle : accidentally run through the Index linger of the right hand caused no pain. A fnr nights ago a member of the household brought In n bottle from n pantry in which was u dead moure. Mrs. Snndford screamed whon she caught sit H of the object, and contin ued to cry out until assured that the mouse was dead. Throughout tho night she could not sleep, and on the following day she suddenly beenmo conscious of a tingling sensation down her right side. The following morning she awoke and found out. to her Joy ful surprise, that she could use her right hand as well as any one and could walk without assistance. I "M'ternino vnrso' he!' ''neis it I doos seom good to be able to walk 1 about freely and without any assist ance," said Mrs. Sandford. "I can hardly describe my sensations when the blood again began to circulate through my paralyzed body. I now en pick up n nv -vlth ease: a ' tlnvg ago I could not pick up a news paper with my left hand. I have al ways been afraid of mice, for fifteen years ago I was desperately frighten ed by a mouse which rr.n up my arm one night while I was sitting by tho Are reading, and crnwled down tho neck of my dress. Ever since that time the sight of a mouse brought on a feeling of terror, but now It seems that very terror has been providen tial." QDODDCODOOCOODOOOOOOCOOOC O FOOD USED IN ONE DAY IN 8 NEW YORK AND VICINITY. Milk, 2,050,320 quarts. Beef, 2,850 head. Mutton, 12,800 head. Hogs, 5,700 heads. Calves, 1,280 Head. Flour, 11,205 barrels. Eggs, 4,337,000. Apples, 4,720 barrels. CJCCCGCOCCOOCCCCCCCO GRAMOPHONE A DETECTIVE. Telephone Offenders Trapped by Use of Ingenious Device. Copenhagen. Denmark. --Exasperated telephone bubscrlbers who, unable to "get through" as quickly as they would like, indulge In harsh language towards the girl clerks, have been cleverly brought to book by the tele phone administration. At first it was found difficult to identify the offenders, so a gramo phone apparatus was installed at the central exchange. The moment a sub scriber began to use unseemly lan guage, the girl would have it record ed by the gramophone. Some of the worst offenders were summoned to the director's office, and when they denied their hasty remarks they were convicted by an exact repe tition in their own voice on the gram ophone. Telephone manners in Copen hagen have as a result greatly Im proved. TO TABULATE 300,000,000. Indian Civil Service to. Undertake Gigantic Census Task. Calcutta, India. An Indian census necessarily the biggest undertaking of Its kind on record Is to be taken In March, 1911. Three hundred mil lion people of varying races and creeds will bo enumerated and the re sults tabulated a task which would cause the Washington Bureau of Sta tistics to hesitate. Hut the Indian Civil Service has already proved itself equal to the task. It holds the world's record, not only for the scale of census opera tions, but for the speed with which results are issued. At the last census, India's 300,000,000 hud been counted between 7 a. m, and midnight on cen sus day, and the results were publish ed fifteen days later. Stock Slaying Wolf Killed at Last. Portland, Oro.-A wolf that was charged with having killed about fifty head of yearling calves in the past two years, besides sheop and other stock, near Princeton, haB been shot nnd tho successful hunter has been paid the ?U7 reward, made up by subscriptions of stockmen who suffer ed from the wolf's Inroads. The wolf got one of his foet In a coyote trap, tor loose the chain and made off Into tho hills with the trap still on his foot. After a chase of several miles he was overtaken and shot. Tho. wolf was thirty Inches tall and measured seven and a half feet from tip to tip. 500,000 Homeless Catj. Chicago, Thero are 500,000 home less cats in Chicago, according to Hugo Krause. superintendent of tho Antl-Cru<y Society. Since the ad vent of cement sidewalks and modern flat buildings, he says, cats are not nseded to catch rats and mice, and therefore he recommends that the sur plus felines bo destroyed by means of charcoal fumes. OOCOCOO 3COJ Time Clock Nest On Hen's Work Jersey Eggologlst Has Great Scheme to Show When 'Mm o U3Qi :: r.Aooc ipcdl The great oirg-oaUng public will al w.ijs be more or less interested Iti affairs appertaining to nud touchtn ; on hens nnd their product Kggologlsts all over the country nro taking ad vantage of this fact, now that ogij.? are apt to attain famine prices owing to the recalcitrant conduct of lions or lnylns nge. When these learned brothren at tempt to assail our Intelligence with the pronouncement that the time It. approaching when wc will classify eggs with frlendiihlp. wine and cheese, howuver, we bogln to sit up and gnsp. Prima facie, we are pronp to argue eggs nre not Improved b ajje, though we will admit tentatively tbat eggs are strengthened by ago. Must Be Stored Fresh. If you will permit us to qualify th premise, retort tile eggologlsta. we will persist that an old egg, If prop erly aged, Is a perfectly good egg. T other words, we can prove scion"!! cally that a three-year-old egg is of'er. better than a ten-day-old egg. When an egg Is born, run on ' eggogollsts. It is a sweet and tovh some thing to the human pal-e When an egg Is put In cold storan 'r enters Into a condition of Inertli. I goes neither backwnrd nor forw.m' It maintains its standard of quail' v Bo it In storage for one. two or V"ct years, an egg that is put in fresh comes out fresh. Use Dating Stamp. "Presto!" cry the eggologists. "We havo solved the whole blamed egg problem. Our researches have taught us that it is now only necessary to as sure the public that our cold storage eggs have gone into storage fresh. We can do that by a system of stamping." George Henry Smith, the Cedar Grove eggologist, suggests a very sim ple stamp, to wit: Born April 1. Taken out . Stored April 1. The "taken out" line may be left, blank, as who can tell when an egg X fncNT fee CCOKOjijC will come out of storage? That all de pends on tho state of the market. It may come out ten yenra hence. All we require Is nn assurance that it has not been out too long, for though a new-born egg has not decreased In quality while In storage, the moment It gets out of storage It becomes again a creature amenable In tempor al vicissitudes. Somo skeptic may scream out, "How In thundor are you going to get tho egg fanciers to clock an egg hon estly?" Simple, lad, simple. Just as easy as hitting tho ground after falling off a couple of Singer Buildings. Let Egg Stamp Itself. Build a patent egg-stamping nost When the egg comes Into the world it falls gently through a cushioned pipe, drops lightly as n feather on a time stamp nnd passes out through another cushioned slot Into a basket, at tho samo time ringing a boll, which summons a collector, it Is then only up to tho collector to got that egg Into Immediate storage unloss it Is roqulred for Irauiedlato consumption. In fact it would bo no great task to equip a composite nest with this dovlco. Forty hens could bo laying eggs from time to tlmo, each egg reaching its designated cushioned plpo and descending gently to the tlmo clock. Tho veriest dub of an inventor, Bay tho eggologists, can turn out one of theeo contrivances. Then let each State Legislature pass a law making it a misdemeanor, or felony if you will, for any egg raiser not to have his hennery equipped with a titnc stamping device. re f fltnwuK- i I CT I A,. 5 : WHY THE PUMPKIN WALKED. Skunk Had Forced Head In Hole and so Vegetable Moved. A pumpkin was seen to walk across the field by Mrs. Samuel II. Hlght, of Bkowhegan, Me., says tho Lowlston Journal. When Bhe saw It she thought tcr eyes wore deceiving her, but sho toon perceived that the pumpkin moved a little way, stopped and thon turned In another direction. Sho rratched this object for some tlmo and told one of her neighbors. Tho aiystery wbr solved, but the two wom en did not dure to go nearer to tho moving vegetable, but called a man, who knocked tho pumpkin over and round a pole cat. The skunk had crnwled under the pumpkin and stuck his head Into a hole and was unable to oxtrl :nte himself from It and had walked off as best ho could with the pump tin on his bnck. Anxious Travolllng. The lato William K. Ingersoll, the noted life Insurance mannger, was an authority on Insurance rates. "Mr. Ingersoll knew tho rates all over the world," said a Now York manager recently. "The Russian rates are very high. Mr. Ingersoll once explained lo me, with a story, why this was: " 'A traveller In Russia,' he said, 'noticed that tho train was all doco rated with fiass and banners, and at every station stood n company of sol diers and a band playing tho national anthom. Tho traveller nsked a brake man the reason of all this coremony. The brakeman, lowering his voice, re plied: I don't mind telling you. sir, but in the strictest confidence, be It understood, that a carriage in this train has been engaged for his Ma jesty. But his Majesty, as a matter of fact, won't set oft till this evening. Thus the plot hatched against him may take effect on this train, you see, ant' our gracious sovereign will bo saved." " 'The brakeman touched his cap and passed on. and the traveler, sud denly grown pale and nervous, stared from the window anxiously. " De troit Free Press. A Privateer of 1812. The oldest craft in service In the world, the two masted schooner Pol ly, famous as a privateer In tho War of 1812, has again changed owners, and J. H. Weldon, of DIghton, Mass., bought the Polly for $1,000 from Cap tain Walter C. Spencer, of Rock land. The Polly is still seaworthy. She has been partly rebuilt several times, but her frame contains many of the timbers laid down in her origi nal construction at Amesbury, Mass., in 1805. During the War of 1812 the Polly captured eleven prizes, several big British merchantmen nnd other smuller craft, only to be captured afterward herself by the frigate Phoe be. She was recaptured by the Yan kees. Washington Post. The Art of Overlooking. Nobody can live long in tho world and not admit that the words "Noth ing for nothing" contain a sad amount of truth. He Is of course a fool who does not count the cost so far as the future Is concerned: but scarcely less a fool Is he who does not overlook past costs. If we have any good or delightful things In this life, at all hazards let us not taint our enjoy ment by considering what we gave for It. Was It more than wo could af ford? Never mind; we have afforded It, have made our purchase. Let us take off the ticket witli the price and burn the receipt. There are Items In life's ledger which must bo over looked unless we would spend all our days In balancing closed accounts. Simple Cure for a Burn. Burns In the kitchen are so fre quent that it is fortunate that the kitchen, or, rather, the bin in the col lar, provides a quick and enslly ap plied cure for such injuries. When one has been scared by Are Immediately cut a white potato In two, scrape out the Inside, and make It very fine. Bind this scraping on the burn and the pain will quickly be mitigated. Should tho burn be very deep It may be necessary to make a second application. This Is an old-fashioned remedy, but one that has proved suc cessful In many severe burns. An Accident Described, A witness In a railroad case, asked to tell In his own way how the acci dent happonrd, said: "Woll, Ole nnd I wub walking down tho track, and I heard a whistle, and I got off the track, and the train went by, and I got back on tho track, and 1 didn't see Ole: but I walked aloug, nnd seen one of Ole's hat, and I walk ed on, and seon one of Olo's legs, and then I seen one of Ole's arms, and then another leg, and. then over one side Ole's hoad, and I says, 'My God! Something muster happened to Olol" -Toronto Saturday Night Ready Made. Real estate agent (measuring gen tleman for a flat)- You'ro a little large, I'm afraid, sir, for tho flat on East Two Hundred and Second stroot, but there Is one on the next block that would fit you nicely, I think. Puck. Prodigal, "That fellow seems to bo extrava gant." "Hopelessly. He spends his own money just as if It wore the gov ernment's." -Louisville Courier-Journal. Prickly Pear Paper. Paper from the prickly pear has al ready Keen manufactured in Port Elizabeth. South Africa. UNIVERSITY ON A NOVEL PLAN The Methodists Are Slowly Bulldlnt It at Washington. The'Amorlcan University at Wash lngton, D. C, Is beginning tho ereo tlon of buildings to cost $2,000,000 Tho Methodists hopo to crown thcli educational svstera with this post grnduato Institution. In two respects tho American Unl verslty will be unique, says the Edu catlonnl Rovlew, In that It will bo th only educational Institution in the United States which will confine Its instruction to post-graduate studlei nnd will not have any undergraduate schools attached to Its schemo of edu cation, and thnt the university wll! not enroll any students until ovorj building Ir erected and the total as sets, property and endowment amount to nt least $10,000,000. The building! now bolng constructed are for the law department, tho colleges of medicine technology, art and u great museum How Pat Was Impressed. "Was the sermon to-day to y'r lik ing, Pat?" Inquired tho priest. "Troth, y'r rlveronce, it was a grand sermon intlrely," said Pat with gen nine admiration. "What seemed to tako hold of yo?" the priest Inquired. "Woll, now as ye are for nskln' mo, begorra, I'll toll ye. What tuk hoult of me most was y'r riveronco's parso verance the way ye wlnt over tho same thing agin and agin and agin." Ladles' Home Journal. A PPLIOATION FOR LICENSE FOR n. YEAR 11)10: , The follonirg named person have Med their petitions for a liquor llten.-e. mid the Mime will lie presented to the Court of Quarter Sessions on Monday. March It. It'll). HOTKI.H. 'nii.mii l'nul Vavcrchauk. Jaime Mlldta. Cllnton-II.T. O'Neill. l-i.lier-ll. it. Smith, II. K. liobacker. Charles K. Wert. I -riy-Asa K. Kimble. Matthew V. Clemo. hum icy Christian Lehman. Martin Itenf ler, Aiiiimt II. Frank. (Jeorire Kolilman, V. .1. lltiRlie.". I'nlmer.t Peters, Kreil Kumfert. HoncKlnle Frank N. Lord. Jr.,T. F. I'lnn, John II. Weaver. Charles HcArdlt. Charles J. eiiver. Lake Flora M. Kchadt. Lehitfh-l. W. Uurncnn. .Manchester Win. F. C5. L'merlck, William A. i'.leek. Prank mid Martin Delireun. Mt. Pleasant 1. W. Iliiimcll, Wiu.T. linvis. Prc-toii-Mlehael Leitlnces, P. K. Madtcan. S. r. Sllshee, W..I. liealey. i-alem II. F, Nicholson. Ralph Foot. South Canaan Jotm Hentlmin. Ktarrueca John Woodinanee. Texnr Thomas (illl. Frederick Krunr. .Tanie- Monday. Mnry Meyer. Clmrle II. Murphy.Georce Meyer, John C. Smith. David A. t'oticr, J. Monroe Aimtlii. Wayimul-Walter J. Mitchell. RKSTAIRANTS. Caniian-James J. Iturnett, Truittc. Cll:.t.in-Juhn Oika. 11 i w lev-Mary Deltrer. Jacob Adams. Louis Gelsler. JtonefcUuie Christopher Lowe, Henry Iliierket. John II. lleuninuu, Fred O.Cellieri. A. F. Volet. lien). Loris.Jr., Albert K.Taeub ner. l-awiemeu. Weniirer. T. 1). O'Connell. llcrmun Meyer. W. It. Kuailknisht. Emmet Ilurlej, John Theobald. Texas-Chris. J. Hook. Jacob Back. Win Weber. WHOLESALH LIQUOR. Hawley-Patrlck Kearney. Honesdale-.Michael Cialvln. Paul McRrau achun. Leopold Fuurtli. Texas-rctm'a Central llrewine Co. HOTTLEKS. IlonestlaU-John Koeeer and Jas. Ashley. I'alinyra-I.uke 1. Richardson. frj'""-J.'-,w- M'cbels and F. A. Kcltnauer. V Illlam Iseiiueyer. , , M. J. IIANLAN, Clerk. Honesdale Pa. Feb. H. 191U H rtOl'UT PROCLAMATION.-Wliereas, J the Judge of the severnl Courts of the County of Wayne has Issued tils precept for holding n Court of Quarter Sessions, Oyer and Terminer, and (ieneral Jail Delivery In and for said County, at the Court Home, tc licu'ln on MONDAY .MARCH 14.1010. and to continue one week: And directing that a Oratid Jury for the Courts of Quarter Sessions and Oyer nnd Terminer be summoned to meet on Monday, March 7, 1U10. at 1! I. m. Notice Is therefore hereby L'iveti to the Coroner and Justices of the Peace, and Con stables of tlie County of Wayne, that they be then and thero In their proper persons, at said Court House, at 2 o'clock In the after noon of said 7th of March 1U10, with their records. Iniulsltiouo,eiamluatlons and other remembrances, to do those thlnjs which to their olllccs appertain to tie done, and those who are bound by recosnlzance or otherwise to prosecute the prisoners who are or shall be in Hie Jail of Wayne County, be then and thereto prosecute at'alnst them us b ball be Just. (liven under my hand, at Honestlale. this 17th day of Feb., and In the lXid year of the Independence of the I'ulted States M LKK 11HA.M AN. Sheriff. Sheriff's Olllce I Honesdale, Feb. 17. 1'JIO. Hwl THK I). II. SUMJIHK-IIOTKL AND HOARDING HOUSE IHIIECTOKY. The Delaware & Hudson Co. Is now collating information for the 1910 edition of "A Summer Para dise," the D. & H. summer-hotel and boarding-house directory that has done so much to advertise and do velop the 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. The information desired Is, as follows: Name of house; P. O. Address; Nnmo of JInnngor; Altitude; Nearest D. & II. n. R. sta tion; Distance from stntlon; how reached from station; Capacity of house; Terms por weok and per day; Date of opening and closing house; what modern improvements; Sports and other entortnlnmonts. This In formation should bo sent at once to Mr. A. A. Hoard, General Passenger Agent, Albany, N. Y. Illnnks may bo obtained from tho nearest ticket agent, it desired. No charge is mudo for a curd notice; a pictorial adver tisement will cost flC. 00 for a full page or ?7.60 a half-page. Our ho tel people should get busy at once and tako advantage of this. Don't make the mistake of thinking thai your house will bo represented be cause it was in last year, hut make sure that you recoivo the benefit of this offer by forwarding the needed information without delay. Owners of cottages to rent are also given tho same rates for pictorial advertise ments, hut, for a card notice, a mint mum charge of $3.09 will he made. JL'ROFKSSIONAIi CARDS. Allornevs-at-Low. H WILSON, . ATTOKKKY A COUNHELOK-AT-I.AW. .Olllce. Masonic building, second floor Honesdale, l'a. WM. II. LEE, V ATTORNEY Jb COUNSKLOR-AT-LAW. Olllce out poit olllce. All lccal business promptly .ittemled to. Honesdale, Pa, EC. MUM FORD, ATTORNEY A COUNSKLOIt-AT-l.AW Olllce Liberty Hall buildliiL'. opposite the Post Olllce. Honesdale. l'a. HOMER GREENE. ATTOUNEY A COtJNHEI.OK-AT-LAW. Olllce over Keif's store. Hone-dale l'a. 0L. ROWLAND, ATTOUNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAYT Olllce ver Post Olllce. Honesdale. Pa rtHARLES A. McCARTY, J ATTORNEY A COUN8ELOR-AT-LAW. Special and prompt uttention clven to the collection of claims. Olllce over Keif's weir store. Honesdale. l'a. 1' ,1 P. K1MHI.E, ATTORNEY A COUNf ELOK-AT-I.AW. Olllce over the nost olllce Honesdale, Pa. ME. SIMONS, . ATTORNEY A COUNSEI.OR-AT-I.AW, Olllce in the Court Houm-, Honesdale l'a. HERMAN HAHM1.S. ATTORNEY J! t in N.-ELOR-AT-LAW Patents and pension -nun il. Olllce In thn Schuerholz bulldlnt: lk'iie'il.ilr. l'a. F5TEU II. ILOFF.J ATTORNEY A OOl'NSKLOR-AT-I.AtV. Olllce Second lloor old Savings link liulldlm;. llonesilale. l'a. QEAULE &. SALMON, O ATTORNEYS A COPNfKI.OKS-AIM.AW. OIllcesElately occupied by Juilce Searlc. Dentists. TH. E. T. BROWN, U DENTIST. Ofllce First floor, old Savings Hank build ing, Honesdale. Pu. Dr. C. It. KKADY. Dctisi. Honesdale. Pa. Office Hoi'bs--8 ni. to v. m Any eveiimz by appointment. Citizens' phone. Xi llesideme. No. fcO-X Physicians. DR. II . U. SEARLES, HONESDALE, PA. Olllce and residence 101!) Court street telephones. Otllm Hours V:C0 to 4:00 and U 0U to 8:00. u. lu Livery. LIVERY. r red. U. Rickard lias re moved his livery establishment from comer Chuch ttreet to Whitney's Stone llarn. ALL CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. FIRST CLASS OUTFITS. 75yl JOSEPH N. WELCH ROT a Fire The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Office: Second floor Masonic Build ing, over C. C. Jadwin's ilruj store, Honesdale. If you don't insure vith us, we both lose. General insurance White Mills Pa. A. O. BLAKE, AUCTIONEER & CATTLE DEALEF You will make money by liavlic me. jiiBLLwio.NEn.0 Bethany, Pa. '1 1"! fllHim Hf " in i Mi III I fl Tooth Savers Wc bave the sort of tooth brushes that are made to thoroughly demise and save' tho teeth. They are the kind that clean teeth Iwlthoat eavlne Your mouth full uf brlttlre. We Irecommend those costlnr 23 cents or more, as we can ruarantee them and will re place, free, any that ibow defect sof, nianur (acturt wlthlu thre utntbs. O. T. CHAHBERS, PIIARflACIST, Opp.O.A It.SLtUn HONESDALU, PA HITTIMGER i