The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, September 07, 1910, Image 5

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    ITIE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 110.
CENT A WORD COLUMN
IlIUDGE llLIliDKltS Dlds will be
received by the commissioners of
Wnyne county at their ofllco In
Honesdale for the construction of
bridges ns follows: Concrete bridge
at Stnrrucca, 32 feet, span, 14 feet,
roadway. Concrete bridge near
Starlight, 24 feet span, 14 feet road
way; Iron bridge over Lackawaxen
near Hawley, 150 feet span, 14 feet
roadway. Plans and specifications
at Commissioners offlce. All bids
must bo on file on or boforo 10 a.
m. Wednesday, Sept. 14, 1910.
Commissioners reserve the right to
reject any or all bids.
FOK SALE OK KENT A house on
Wood avenue. For particulars
Inquire of Mrs. M. J. Kelly, 1704
Wood avenue. 70elG
TltV a 15-ccnt hot lunch, served at
Hcumann's restaurant from 11.30
to 1.30 p. m.
WOMAN WANTED for kitchen. Good
wages. Hcumann's Restaurant.
roil SALE A Ford roadster; first
class. A. E. BRYANT. GSt2
WANTED A good licensed com
mercial hotel, 25 to 30 rooms.
Must bear Investigation. Send full
particulars by letter. Address Com
mercial, Gramercy Hotel, Asbury
Park, N. J. 3t eol.
WANTED Three good practical
painters. Inquire of J. Ed. Cook.
3t.
KOIt SALE Kelly & Stelnuian
brick factory building. Including en
gine, boiler and shafting. Inquire of
J. B. Robinson. 50tf.
BORDEN'S KALI j CONTRACT FOR
MILK. September 15th is fixed
as the date for opening the contract
books of Borden's Condensed Milk
Co. for Its winter supplies of milk.
It Is hoped that the dairyman will
respond promptly, so that If the
allotment for one plant Is not com
pletely filled, the deficiency can be
made up elsewhere, as is the usual
practice. In order to give the
dairymen ample time, the books will
remain open until September 22nd,
4 p. m., unless the allotment Is fill
ed before that date. BORDEN
CONDENSED MILK COMPANY.
71t 2eoi.
LOCAL MENTION.
C. L. Dunning has recently
purchased a 1911 Model E. M. F.
five-passenger touring car.
Work has been started on the
rathskellar In the basement of the
Allen house and it is hoped to have
It ready for the, fair., .
Judge A. T. Searle left Monday
for Montrose, where today he Is hear
ing an Important equity Bult Involv
ing the title to a large tract of tim
ber land In Susquehanna county. He
will be home Wednesday.
By the fall timetable on the
Erie Conductor Charlie Lord's train
will leave at 8.25, not 7.20, in the
morning. The last Erie train at
night will reach Honcsdale at 8.05
instead of C.45 as at present.
While William Shanley, with
three companions was engaged in
a game of chase and running In a
circle along the sloping wall, he ac
cidentally fell into the river and
would probably have been drowned
but for the prompt action of Walter
Shaffer, aged 13, who neipeu me un
fortunate boy from the water.
The Dyberry road contractors
still have 4500 feet to build and
must hump to finish by Nov. 1, but
the hardest part of the Job is over.
George Seaman, who is always op
timistic, said Monday that his firm
is ahead financially, though a bit
behind Its expectations in the
amount of road laid up to Sept. 1,
and that from this time on they
look for smoother sailing.
Thomas Murphy and Granville
Bodle, the two Tanners Falls men
who had smallpox, were released
from quarantine Sunday and Mon
day the house was fumigated by
Dr. H. B. Ely, county health offi
cer, and N. B. Spencer. Murphy
and Bodle both say they feel pret
ty well, and they are glad to be
out again. Bodle was not very Blck
at any time. Murphy had smallpox
very thoroughly.
Mrs. wyman W. Kimble, wife
of the agreeable borough council
man, presented her husband with a
bounding baby boy, nine pounds to
au ounce, Friday. Mr. Kimble is
shaking hands right and left and
distributing good cigars to all com
ers. Ho can now forget tho catas
trophe on tho roof, when the coun
cilman unintentionally knelt In some
fresh tar and was scarcely In a
frame of jnind to say his prayers,
thougmn a kneeling position.
A man from over in "Pennsyl
vany" camo to Hancock this week
and filled up on JJSuld fog producer.
While driving homo through tho
mist ho ytonked his horse Into the
road boforo ho had airly cleared a
passing team. Catching a front hug
against Uio folloo of the rear wheel
of the other vehicle ho spilled every
spoke of his wheel Into the road.
Returning to Hancock, ho fogged up
some mora and started out to In
ctltntn ii Riilt for dnmnces. whether
against hlmsolf or tho whiskey Isn't
clear. Some wen-disposed persons
put him to bed, whero ho stayed un
til tho fog lifted. Hancock Herald.
Olyphnnt Is to have her third1
opera house. j
Tho German band showed up In
Honesdnle Friday.
The InBt drum corps picnic will i
take place nt Bellevue park Satur-i
day Sept. 17.
The officers of this fair are ac
tively engaged In sundry wnys to
ninko the coming fnlr a booming
success.
There will bo a special train
from and to Carbondale, making nil '
tho stops, every day of fair except
the first day. it will get to Hones- j
dnle at 11 and start bnck at 7.
Tho "Kid" orchestra trained by
Robert M Dorln will play nt the
Lyric tonight, between the first and
second performances. They are clev
youngsters and will do well.
Friday night's meeting of the
Greater Honcsdale Board of Trade
will be for the members. Commit
tees will report and Tag day and
other Board schemes will be dis
cussed. The Knights of St. Paul of
Grace Episcopal church will meet
Thursdny nt 7.30 p. m. Interest-'
Ing plans for the new season are to
bo discussed and a full attendance is
desired.
George A. Allen of Mt. Pleasant,
charged by Jerome R. Allen with
assaulting Jerome and Jerome's .
wife, could not get 5200 bail and was 1
brought to Jail Monday night by !
Constable R. W. Mills to await the '
October term of court.
Horticultural Inspector W. H.
Bullock has sent State Zoologist H.
A. Surface of Harrlsburg another
specimen, making three, of the ap
ple maggot, which thus far has been
found only In sweet apples. "If it
is confined to sweet apples," writes
Dr. Surface, "we can very easily
treat it."
Some excitement arose on West
street Friday evening, when the
West street Quoit club accepted the
challenge of the Riverside club and
the two organizations clashed. The
boys from over the river took four
out of seven games. The worst is
yet to come, according to the West
street club, and they are positive
they can "put the hooks" Into tho
Rlverslders.
The first coal train since March
pulled into Honesdale this morning
with 26 cars, three of which were
left here. It Is not known whether
Honesdale Is to have a resumption of
coal trains and railroad men do not
discuss the possibility, but it is
thought possible that this division
of the Erie and D. & H. may be
gradually drawn upon to relieve the
main line of both roads.
Floyd Daniels and Miss Carrie
Symmons got a marriage license from
Prothonotary M. J. Hanlon Satur
day afternoon just as the storm was
hardest. They -waited for the rain
to let up a little and then went to
the home of Justice W. H. Ham and
were united. Mr. Daniels has been
employed by the Diamond Cut Glass
company. His bride is the daugh
ter of John and Alvesta Symmons.
Christy Mathewson, the famous
pitcher whom Honesdale always
means to call her own, has broken
down from overwork and will, It is
reported, go to a sanitarium to rest.
It is stated, though not authentically,
that Mathewson will bo fixed up this
month at Bill Muldoon's place, near
New York, where Senator Ellhu
Root and other prominent men have
been put In condition by John L.
Sullivan's old trainer.
From the farms and villages and
surrounding country, from the back
woods districts, from the hills, from
the valleys, from tho creek bottoms,
from the highlands and from the
plains, the people, dressed In their
holiday garb, bright faced, eager for
tho long looked for pleasures, will
flock to this fair and will crowd
about the pens, and the stalls and
tho booths, and the tables, to ad
mire their own and their neighbors'
products and possessions.
The annual Labor day golf
tournament at the golf club had a
large attendance. Eight players,
qualified to play for tho club champ
ionship and the cup. Tho first round
was played in the morning and the
second in the afternoon. In tho
morning round Birdsall beat Lord,
1 up. Foster won from Lemmltzer
by default. H. S. Salmon beat
Bently, G up and 5 to play. Searle
won from Whitney, 4 up and 2 to
play. In tho afternoon round II. S.
Salmon beat Foster, G up and 4 to
play. Searlo beat Birdsall, 1 up.
H. S. Salmon and Searlo will play
tho finals for tho club championship
Saturday. In tho afternoon coffee
and cake were served to the mem
bers. In tho evening a dauco was
held at the clubhouse.
George v. Slpplo of the town
of Fremont, N. Y., has purchased
tho upper ond of Pine Flat, known
as tho John Kellam property, from
tho Rcs brothers George P. of
Honesdale, William V. and Frank
E. of Manchester. Tho property is
In Manchester, opposlto Hanklns
station. Thoro aro 300 acres In the
lot; 200 Is woodland. Tho cleared
land with tho buildings Mr. Sipple
has sold to Louis Marold of Damas
cus. There Is a quantity of bass
wood, poplar and cucumber wood
which Mr. Slpplo makes into match
sticks. Thoro Is also a quantity of
chestnut for railroad ties, ash, oak
and soma plno hemlock on tho place.
The best prlco offered for this prop
erty nlno years ago was 900. Now
It has brought more than twice that
sum.
Martin Helsol, whose mind is
believed to be unbalanced, Is In Jnll
pending the determining of his sanity.
Sheriff Drnmnn and Detectlvo Spen
cer got him Saturday and locked him
up. Helsol, it Is said, has for some
time labored under the delusion that
n prominent Wnyne county manu
facturer owes him 111,000.
County School Supt. J. J.
Koehler Is cordlnlly In favor of the
agricultural course, not In High
school but In the seventh and
eighth grades, and has advocated It
In his report. He wants to have
practical farming taught In nil the
schools of Wayne county ono day
a week for the present, In place of
civics and algebra. He hopes, also,
to have more thnn ono dny a week
devoted to this study after the first
or experimental year, farming to
tako the place of algebra permanent
ly. Mr. Koehler Bald Labor day
that Wnyne Is cssentlnlly a farm
ing county and that a great many
boys and girls In this corner of the
state never go to High school, so ho
believes the farming course should
come In tho seventh and eighth
grades.
The wife of a well known busi
ness man in town went to the rail
road station Friday afternoon, Just
as the 2.40 Eric train pulled out,
nnd was locked In tho building by ac
cident, tho railroad employe who
turned the key evidently not seeing
her. She rattled all the doors and
raised all the windows, and finally
succeeded In attracting the attention
of Martin Caufield, who was crossing
tho station grounds and who camo
at once to' the window from which
the fair prisoner implored his assist
ance. Mr. Caufield hunted up tho
man who had the key and the busi
ness man's wife was liberated with
out delay. She says she did not en
Jpy her Imprisonment and that she
hopes and prays tho day will never
come when she will be locked In a
railroad station again.
MISS HARDENBERGH, teacher
of piano, theory and harmony.
Terms and particulars upon request.
Address 309, 14th street. 71t6
WANTED Canvassers to sell pet
ticoats. Liberal commission paid.
Economy Mfg. Co., Rockwood, N.
Y. G7t4
PERSONAL MENTION
Otto and Elsie Heumann are back
from Shohola.
Kirk Rose of Carbondale was In
town Sunday.
Mrs. Minnie Jeltz was a Scran
ton caller Sunday.
George Foster of Scranton pass
ed Sunday here.
Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Swingle fish
ed at Long pond Friday.
Mrs. Rex Nicholson Is visiting rel
atives in Carbondale.
Otto Weaver and Peter Karl at
tended the Wilkes-Barre fair.
Miss Hawker of Port Jervis, N.
Y., Is the guest of relatives here.
Miss Caroline Betz of New York
is the guest of Miss Etta Nielsen.
Mrs. Hattle Brown has returned
from Brooklyn and New York.
Richard Brock of Beach lake Is
with his daughter, Mrs. J. B. Robin
son. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Barclay of
Atco have been with Honesdale
friends.
Miss Pearl Murray passed Sun
day and Monday with Scranton rel
atives. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Katz of
New York are visiting Honesdale
relatives.
Leo Campbell and family of
Scranton are visiting Honesdale
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. John A. KImblo of
Towanda are spending a few days
in town.
O. L. Spettlguo and Joseph N,
Welch left for a week's outing at
Forest Lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Piatt of New
York are spending several weeks In
tho Maple city.
Mrs. Garfield Anderson has been
tho guest of Mrs. Harvey Welsh of
Fourteenth street.
Park Schoonover of Jersey City,
N. J., passed Labor day with Mrs.
S. M. Decker.
Neal Hlller, local cashier for tho
D. & H., Is spending his vacation
In Syracuse, N. Y.
Mrs. Eliza MUlhauser and son,
Arthur, of Now York, aro tho
guests of relatives.
Frank Bayly of Scranton spent
Sunday and Monday with his family
at East Honesdale.
Mrs. P. O. Knight of Wnterbury,
Conn., has been tho guest of Mr. and
Mrs, John F. Coleman.
Clarenco R, Calloway camo from
Now York Saturday to spend a fort
night's vacation at home.
Frank X. Soeto of Norwich, N.
Y., Is spending his vacation with his
parents on South Main street.
Sheriff and Mrs. M. Lee Braman
vnssed a day last week at tho Pleas
ant View house, Pleasant Mount.
C. K. Schoonovor's sprained back
is better and ho will bo able to go
back to his work In Maryland.
Mrs. Harvey Welsh has returned
from Scranton, whero sho was en
tertained by several friends.
Mrs. Fred Spencer and Mrs. Boll
of Dyberry havo recently been en
tertained by Honcsdalo friends.
Edgar Brown has returned to
Now York, nfter passing Labor day
with his parents at East Honesdalo
Attorney Chnrlcs A. McCnrty has
returned from a long trip over tho
Great Lakes nnd through southern
Canada.
Richard Potter, wife and daughter,
Elizabeth, of Pntchoguo are visiting
O. L. Spettlgue, Jr., on West list
street.
Charles Penwarden of Now York
came Labor day wlth his wife and
children, to visit Mrs. Penwnrden's
pnrents.
John J. Welch of Schenectady, N.
Y nnd Miss Evn O'Rouke of Hnn
cock, N. Y., have been the guests of
Honesdale friends.
Mrs. Nolson Brndlev nnd tlnntrli-
ter, Bessie, of Phoenix, Arizona, are 1
visiting their aunt, Miss Addle Jen-,
nings, nt Beach grove.
Arthur Oday of Messengervllle,
N. Y., Is the guest of his brother,
Prof. H. A- Odny. Arthur Is a
Junior at Syracuse university.
Ernest Wilson, n glass cutter In
Towandn, got here Saturday night.
Ho Is the guest of Mr. nnd Mrs.
Georgo Miller, who expect to enter
tain him for four or five days.
Joseph A. Bodle, Jr., and Frank
A. Jenkins left Sunday to spend
Labor day at Glen Eyre. By their
cargo, and as It was compulsory for
them to load It In the baggage car,
their friends were wondering wheth
er they hnve started In search of un
known lands.
Senator Miles C. Rowland, who
came to Honesdale Wednesday to
bury his brother, Orville L. Row
land, whose funeral took place Fri
day, returned Saturday to KImblcs.
Tho Senator has been occupied of
lnte In getting telephone extension
for Bnoba and other small Pike
county villages.
Harry G. Penwarden, having re
cently returned to Honesdale and
taken charge of the stitching de
partment of the Honesdale Shoo
company, has received his goods from
Marlon, O., and put them In one of
the Brown flats on West Eleventh
street. He now awaits his wife and
daughter, Emma Joyce, who are on
their way to Honesdale.
The two Huyck boys, who have
not yet finished the Methodist
steeple, went home Saturday for La
bor day. Their father, A. J. Huyck,
who Is a bit of a humorist, describ
ed their temporary location by say
ing his sons and heirs had deposited
themselves on the New York side of
the .Delaware for the holiday. Said
sons and heirs returned today to
their work in Honesdale.
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Hawken
and daughter, Lactea, of East street
returned today from Peckvlllo and
Plttston. Tho former place they
visited relatives and at the latter
they were entertained by Mr. and
Mrs. Walter A. Carey. Mr. Carey
while a resident of Honesdale was
employed by Mr. Hawken as foreman
In the Irving Cut Glass company, but
for the past two years he has been
In the grocery business in Plttston.
J. Sam Brown, generally conceded
to be one of Honesdale's most soci
able citizens, returned Saturday, ac
companied by Mrs. Brown and their
daughter, Virginia, from a stay of
10 days at Atlantic City. Mr. Brown
says the weather at New Jersey's
Coney Island was ideal, that 100,000
or more people Invariably go In
bathing on a suitable Sunday, that
tho Boardwalk is In good condition
and need not be regarded as a ter
ror by people with tender feet, and
that Atlantic City Is tho place for
a man to visit If he wants a pleas
urable and beneficial vacation at a
fair cost.
Editor Wagner of the Hancock
(N. Y.) Herald and Mrs. Wagner
have returned to the familiar scenes
across tho Delaware, after a short
vacation, part of which was passed
In Wayne county. They put in a
week or thereabouts at Hawley,
whero Mr. Wagner called on the
Hawley Times people, and from
Hawley the Hancock editor and his
wife made at least one excursion to
Honesdale, whero the former greeted
tho journalistic "cloth" of the
Wayne capital so far as he could
find them at homo. Tho editor of
Tho Citizen was out somewhere,
perlgrlnatlng about tho borough for
tho news of his neighbors, when Mr.
Wagner, with the nsslstanco of Au
gust Bregsteln, who met him In
HnncocJt, was looking for hlra. Ho
Is full of regrets at his failure to
moot tho man from Hancock, and ho
assures him that tho Herald Is nn
exceptionally entertaining nnd sen
sible couy paper.
SIUNH ALONG THE ROAD.
Legible Signboards ut Crossroads
Avert ailslmps.
Thero Is nothing now-n-days that
gladdens tho heart of road tourists
moro thnn good plain signboards at
tu6 crossroads. Supervisors who
malco It their business to keep theso
vnlunblo semaphores In good condi
tion placed along Important thor
oughares aro entitled to tho thanks
of every traveler who has to pass
through tho country.
In some parts of tho county overy
crossroad has ono or moro signs
showing whero each road leads, and
how far tho placo may bo, and tho
distanco given correctly.
It Is very perplexing to tho travel
er to got to tho Junction of two
ronds and And no friendly sign to
dlreit hlra on his way, and tho neg
lect to placo such signs Is an act
of negligence on tho part of tho
road officials.
For all tho local and county news
road The Citizen, Issued twice a
week at $1.50. It's worth It.
BETHANY.
Edna Lavo loft Tuesday for Now
York to resume her duties.
Margaret Manning Is visiting Isa
bella Lawrence In Scranton.
Fred Hauser Is In Philadelphia.
Henry A. Bennett left Tuesday
for Canada, stopping at Hamilton
nnd Princeton.
Wallaco Arthur, a former Bethany
boy, now of Mollne, 111., Is hero on a
visit.
Tho Woodmen gave a reception
Wednesdny evening to their wives.
Harold Hecker has been visiting
In Carbondale.
Mrs. Watt, Mrs. Harold Crocker
and children returned to Wllkes
Barre Wednesday.
Miss Ella Gamtncll Is spending
Stindny and Lnbor day at Hawley
with Miss Eva Harmes.
Blanche Starnes will leave this
week to visit Mrs. C. W. Solfarth In
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Miss Haywood returns to her home
In Brooklyn this week after spend
ing three weeks with Mrs. Lavlnla
Pethlck.
Mr. and Mrs. John Strongman
camo up from New York In their
nuto nnd will spend a few days here.
Mrs. Arnest Paynter and children
returned from visiting Mrs. Amos
Ruthledgo nt Galilee and are at the
Lavo home here.
Changes in Erie Train Service.
Trains 127 and 128 will make
last trip this season on Monday,
Sept. 5.
Effectlvo Tuesday, Sept. G, train
103 leaving Honesdale 8.25 a. m.,
and train 129 arriving Honesdale at
8.05 p. m., will be resumed, and will
carry tho Honesdale-New York par
lor car.
Tho remaining summer service
between West Hawley and Scranton
will be continued during the month
of September and until Saturday,
Oct. 1. 71t2.
PURE
Chemically assayed nnd H
Physiocologlcally tested 8
medicines are the only tj
kinds your Pharmacist p
should use In filling your ft
prescriptions.
We con furnish these H
necessary preparations H
If you bring your pre- j
scrlptlons to tj
PERCY L. COLE jj
Pharmacist
i 1 1 23 Main St. - Honesdale H
BOTH PHONES
nnd phone orders will receive prompt JJ
attention. it
:::n::::::::t:5::::::::j::::::j:::::::nnjn::
BASKETS FOR
1-2 Bushel Baskets Drop Handles 15c Each
1 Bushel " " 15c "
Other 1-2 Bushel and Bushel Baskets up to
55c Each.
A Special on Market Baskets at 3c Each or
2 for 5c.
0. M. SPETTIGUE,
'Come Back'
f - M - t
Having closed up our branch
store at Delhi, N. Y. we will close
our stock at
HALF PRICE AT OUR
. POPULAR STAND
Pull line of Men's, Gents' and Children's cloth
ing and Gents' Furnishings must go to make room
for our large fall stock.
Bregstein Bros., Leading Clothiers,
Honesdale, Pa.
Knll .Schedule on tho Eric.
Saturday train 95 will not run af
ter .Sept. 3.
Saturday train 91 will make reg
ular stops at Rldgewood, Mahwah
and Suffern after Sept. 3.
Train 708 will not run after Sept.
4.
Train 15 will not run west of Mid
dletown nfter Sept. 5.
Train 43 will not run after Sept. 5.
Train 27 will not run after Sept.
5.
Train 28 will not run after Sept.
5 from Honesdalo and Scranton to
Lncknwaxcn.
On Sept. G train 28 will operate
between Lackawaxen and New York
only and n parlor car will bo carried
from Lnckawaxen to Jersey City.
Train 44 will not run after Sept.
G.
Saturday train 99 will not run af
ter Sept. 10.
Train 10 will not run west of
Port Jervis after Sept. 11.
Effective Tuesday, Sept. 6, trains
29 and 30 will resume tho Hones-dale-Scranton
service and operate tho
New York-Honesdnle parlor car.
Effective Wednesday, Sept. 7, train
4G will resume passenger service be
tween Susquehanna and Port Jer
vis. On Scranton lino trains 101, 143,
105, 103, 104, 10G and 108 will be
discontinued after October 1, 1910.
R. H. WALLACE,
General Passenger Agent.
HKPORT OK THK CONDITION
OF THE
HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK
AT
IIONKSDAI.E. WAYNE C OUNTY. PA.
At the cloe of business. Sept. 1, 1910.
RESOt'RCES.
I-oans nnd Discounts 2J7.72I 21
Ovcrdraft.seeured and unsecured ! til
V, H. Honda to eciir- circulation. 55.000 00
Premiums on U. S. Honds 2.800 00
lionds. securities, etc.. . 1,310,132 44
Uanklnir-house. furniture and fix
tures 40,000 00
Due from National lianks (not
Reserve Acents) 3.Sli 9.
Due from State nnd Private Ranks
and Hankers. Trust Companies,
and Savlnt's lianks 211 8G
Duo from approved reserve
nsenis 131411 OS
Checksand othercash items.... 1,13115
Notes of other National Hanks.. 203 00
Fractional paper currency, nick
els and cents 293 U
Lawful Money Reserve In Hank.
Viz : Specie $t2.W3 00
Lesal tender notes 5,250 00- feS.213 00
Redemption fund with U. S.
Treasurer. (5 per cent, of circu
lation) 2.750 00
Total $1,871,123 3G
MAniMTlES.
Capital Stock paid In $ 150.000 00
surplus iimu uu.uuu uu
Undivided profits, less expenses
nnd taxes paid 73.S2S 36
National Hank notes outstnndlnz 50.100 oo
Due to other National Hanks 370 43
Individual deposits subject to
check 1,421.505 53
Demand certificates of
deposit 24,910 00
Certified checks 55 DO
Cashier's checks out-
standing 353 S7-$1,446.K4 52
Honds borrowed None
Notes and bills rediscounted None
Hills payable. Including certifi
cates of deposit for money bor
rowed Nono
Liabilities other than those above
stated None
Total 1.871.123 36
State of Pennsylvania, County of Wayne, ss.
I, E, K. Tokrey. Cashier of the above
named Hank, do solemnly swear that the
above statement is true to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
E. F. Torret. Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
3d day of Sept.. laio.
It. A. SMITH. N. P.
Correct attest:
II. Z. ltCSSEIX. 1
Lours. I. Dorflikgeb, VDlrectors.
II, T. Me.n-.neh. J 71wl
APPLE PICKING
Honesdale.
- t - M - f
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Sale