THIS CIT1ZI.A, WKDNKSllAl, NV. HI, 1IH0. UNCL13 SAM ON MILK, Worried Mothers Told How to Pro tect Helpless Little Stomachs. Fearing that the babies of the na tion were golnE to bo doprlved of pasteurized nilllt, Undo Sam has come to their rescue with a timely Uttle pamphlet on "The Caro of Milk aud Its Use In the Home." In It ho tells worried mothers all over the country how to pastoilrlze milk at home. Ho says: Milk Is most conveniently pasteur ized In tho bottles In which It Is de livered. To do this use a small pall with a perforated falso bottom. An Inverted pie tin with a few holes punched In It will answer this pur pose. This will ralso tho bottles from the bottom of tho pail, thuB allowing a freo circulation of water and preventing bumping of the bot tles. Punch a hole through the cap of one of the bottles and insert a thermometer. The ordinary floating typo of thermometer Is likely to be inaccurate, and if possible a good thermometer with tho scale etched on the glass should be used: Set the bottles of milk In the pall and All with water nearly to the level of the milk. Put the pall on the stove or over a gas flame and heat it until the thermometer In the milk shows not less than 150 degrees nor more than 155 degrees Fahrenheit. The bottles should then be removed from the water and allowed to stand from twenty to thirty minutes. The temperature will fall slowly, but may be held more uniformly by cov ering the bottles with a towel. The punctuated cap should be replaced with a new one, or the bottle should be covered with an Inverted cup. After the milk has been heated as directed it should be cooled as quickly and as much as possible by setting In water. To avoid danger of breaking the bottle by too sud den change of temperature, this wa ter should be warm at first. Re place the warm water slowly with cold water. After cooling, milk should in nil cases be kept at the lowest available temperature. This method may be employed to retard the souring of milk or cream for ordinary use3. It should be re membered, however, that pasteuriza tion does not destroy all bacteria in milk, and after pasteurization it should be kept cold and in a clean ly manner and used as soon as pos sible. Cream does not rise as rap Idly os separate as completely in pasteurized milk as In raw milk. It may be surprising to some housekeepers to learn that milk Is in danger not only from flies, with their 1,250.000 bacteria apiece, but also from the atmosphere of the or dinary house. Fresh air, It seems, Is not so good for milk as for bab ies. It Is very sensitive stuff, this lactic fluid, and everything that comes near it makes an impression on it bacteria from the air, germ laden dust, odors of other foods and the death dealing fly. Organisms which get Into milk multiply very rapidly while It Is warm; hence the need of keeping it In the refrigera tor as much as possible and putting upon the table for family use the amount required for that meal only. Milk left over from the table should never be poured back into the bot tle with the purer portion, but kept in a separate covered receptacle. The bottom of the refrigerator is the best place for milk, because cold air settles rapidly and the bottom of tho refrigerator Is there fore the coldest. The refrigerator should bo wash ed and scalded every week, and the ice compartment and outlet for wa ter formed by the melting Ice kept free from dirt. Tho bottles, too, must be kept clean and never used for anything except milk. The deal er Is obliged to scald them each time he uses them, but he does not scrub them, Uncle Sam says, and a filthy bottle may not be cleaned suf ficiently to avoid all danger to the next consumer. All utensils with which milk comes in contact should be washed in pure water, never in water which has, been used for other dishes, and should have their own private d'sh towel if they are to be wiped a all. The baby's bottle, of course, should be scalded every time It is used, aud tho nipple should be kept absolute ly clean A bottle with corners which collect germs and are hard to clean, or a long rubber tube be tween bottle and nipple should not bo tolerated. Tho modern dairyman scrubs his cows, the up-to-date dealer keeps everything spotlessly clean, and If the American housekeeper and bot tle washer does as Uncle Sam tells them the babies of the land will be in no danger of taking impure milk into their helpless little stomachs. Tho pamphlet Is published by the United States Department of Agri culture, and will be sent free to any one who applies for It. It Is listed as Farmers' Bulletin 113. Prodigals. Fortunate are they who have the happy knack of profiting not only by their own past mistakes, but also by the bitter experience of others. Verily they are the comparative few. In splto of tho abundant proofs of tho inevitable outcomo of vice und folly, heedless, unthinking youth and often heedless ago as well goes on in tho very uneven tenor of Its way, with nothing in view but pres ent enjoyment, and no caro or thought for Mio future. Tho thought is suggested by a number of Instances mentioned In tho daily press during tho past fow nontlr and they are but samples of tho vast unrecorded loglons of bllf.litrd lives and wasted fortunos, of fooli h men who, after apdHdlnu tv !r all on hypocritical and syco I.l.-rtlr fair-weather "friend," ond- c l r, ijfiii iP, in obscurity and de- ri vicn. v'e can's help pitying t ,ioor prodigals whose chief f ,,ii.,i:is is their lack of sense t i lit their failure to real- t'.c- friends of their pros- I 1 1 c t r "' I r i j; me, in may rabea, drawn f . 1 i-l.eer seir-lnterest and i nt !y sure to desert them in r m need. . r i vriUlgdl isn't always, or even w. !y, a radically bad man. On fir.trary, ho is generally a kind, warm-hearted, good-natured follow. I Not seldom ho has in him tho very best material, but It has never boon , developed by propor training or dl- lUUUUil 1 IUUIIU1J 11 VJ HMO 1111U II U ouo to put him on tho right rond and give him tho right start. Suijr flclal and shallow-minded people gen erally rofeard as fortunato tho child born with n sliver spoon In Ub mouth." but really unless such a -.t.ll.t l.nn ............ II. fl.... X : : " : ,. :, i scarcely bo a greater mlsfortuno for It than to bo born Into a condition or stato of life which precludes the necessity of exertion or personal ef fort tho only menus posslblo for tho formntlon of chnracter and the attainment of truo and vigorous manhood. ProdlgalB, llko human nature gen erally, are much the same In all times and places; and tho Prodigal Son of tho Gospels Is a true type of tho prodigal of every ago, whllo his respectable elder brother Is a fnlr specimen of tho opposite class. This trnnr vnnnir fnnl rvf n ,.,111 ,-' ed "to see the world " "to rob 11 fr " 1 by day nB hy niht "ow many ali as soVanV oth &Lci 'f fore and since his time. Ho saw It and was speedily disillusioned. Im- pulslve and Impetuous ambitious perhaps, full of animal spirits, weary of his dull, commonplace surround-, ings, of the ordinary, humdrum, routine life of his father's house, I ). . . , . r .1. I . . i. Mi !ntn I li n Vile S'tuchTtuS; agseh1srtpentrah.s ... V.0.!1 ,.f wicuuB ;uut ma hibuub, uui uisiHIc(,0 ,,, tht ,,f -,, money s friends. Wo can picture tho depth and strength of their attachment so long as the mon ey lasted. But when that went they went too, with the usual result that the erstwhile princely patron became a drudge and a beggar. Tho same thing Is occurring under our own eyes every day in the year. The prodigals of the present generation, like thoso of preceding ones, will not take warning from the fate of their famous prototype. To tell the truth, we have more liking for the prodigal than we have for his respectable elder brother. And In this we are in line with tho prodigal's own father. It Is worthy of note that parents mothers es pecially seem to have a particularly warm spot in their hearts for the black sheep of the family. It Isn't the badness in the prodigal that at tracts, but the good native material that has gone wrong and been abus ed. Nor is It the really good quail ties of the respectable elder brother that makes us like him less. It is his mean little ways. Probably he hadn't any very strikingly good traits but was one of the negatives or neu trals, observant of the convention alities, attached, or at least resigned, to his surroundings, with no desire to get away from them. His sulk iness at the cordial reception given his prodigal brother is conclusive proof that there was something fun damentally mean about him. It is a pity that there can't be something on the order of an orphan asylum, or a training school, for the poor prodigals; but as this plan Is Impracticable, the next best thing Is for those who have any influence over such to realize that the prodi gal Is not essentially bad or irro formable, and try to devise suitable ways and means to reach his heart and bring out the good that Is hid den beneath the surface. Baltimore Sun. QUAY'S PAItltOX SOLD. Old Family Bird Loses Its Home for Peculiur Itensons. Pittsburg, Pa., Nov. 11. An old parrot which had been In the family of the late Senator Quay of Penn sylvania, at his Beaver home, has Just been sold for a curious reason. Before Lewis Davidson of Beaver wooed and won Miss Mae Quay, a daughter of the senator, her sisters had taught the bird to say "Good bye, Lou," followed by smack sounds like kissing. The bird was a good talker and as Miss Quay would sing out "Good-bye, Lou!" as her lover was leaving nights, the parrot would mimic her. This was all right, even If the neighbors did hear It, for a time, but a year or more after the mar riage of Miss Quay and Mr. David son they separated. After that the parrot constantly harped on "Good bye, Lou! Smack smack." The neighbors heard it, of course, and for a time tho street in front of tho Quay home became quite a boule vard, all because of tho curious per sons who wished to hear tho parrot. Finally tho bird became so hateful to Mrs. Davidson that she went to sell It. The other members of the family objected, as tho bird had been a favorlto of tho senator. Finally Mrs. Davidson prevailed and the bird was sold. What tho Preacher Gets in New York Tho Christian Herald says: Largo wedding fees aro rare, even In Now York. Fees of ?50 and flOO aro considered lnrgo. Tho ?1,000 fee, when It makes Its appearance, usu ally goes to tho rector of a wealthy congregation who enjoys a salary of $10,000 or 113,000 a year. Larger fees aro sometimes given. Tho man of wealth, actuated by a high regard for his pastor and friend, occasionally gives his check for S2.000 or $3,000 under tho gulso of a wedding foe. Ho wishes to help tho minister, nnd knows tho money would not be ac cepted undor any other circumstan ces, huch gifts, It Is neodloss to say, aro extromoly raro.- Now York has a few clergymen whoso marriage ices averago $1,200 a year. Tho pastor of a largo Presbyterian church on Broadway has estimated that his fees amount annually to $1, 000. These are top-notch figures. The fee received by an American fnlnfutf.r fnr nfflpln rln a of ike i.,w4 dine of one of hia wAnithv i,rihin. i era in Paris a few years aeo is said! to have covered the expenses of his four months' vacation on the Conti nent. Such fees, however, are extra ordinary. Tbey are beyond the wild est dreams of the average pastor, who may be able to recall one fee of $60 in his entire ministry. SUUSCIUBE FOR THE CITIZEN. .IikIko Trexler Tells What Guises Crime Judge Trexler, Allentown, In a re cent nddroRS In that city spoke upon "Tho Prevalent t'nusus nnd Preven tion of Crime." Among other things ho said: "Criminal mon are men who com mit crimes, who transgress either human or dlvlno lnw. Tho whole "orld renins that upen tho question of criminality tho world has much to learn. Men of affairs realize that our entire criminal system Is wrong. That It Is bettor than In tho years and ages gone by Is, however, known nnd acknowledged. "Who arc the criminals?" That requires some thought. A criminal Is n man who Is not properly aware of his contract with society. Ho has not learned the lesson of obedience. We must all admit that we aro all criminals In the eyes of tho law of man? How many men who smoke have not violated tho antl-splttlng uiimiltu ui lliu uuy, I1UI SO UIUC1I among people to rebel against con stituted authority. Concerning Sun day laws a prevalence of criminality might be brought homo to a good many church people. ,lu" " '"TV" 1""", "DVJ1IUU ;iiuow iu uuieuiLy, uuu fhy; lVJlTa strong enough to resist temptation. portion of criminals can be traced to an hereditary taint, and very often men thus mentally and morally defi cient arc not criminals but lunatics. "Environment Is admitted by all the greatest cause of criminality. Take a child from tho best of par ents, and place him In a family sur rounded by evil influences and you will find an evil man as the result, but take a child and place it in a good family and the chances are im mensely In favor of a good man. "My heart bleeds for tho meagre chance often afforded for children to grow up and become useful and law abiding men and women. It Is often a miracle how they attain manhood and womanhood with their morals not more seriously shattered and Im paired. There Is nothing so seri ous as the evil influences of home life. "According to the report of a com mittee on the matter, one-third of thoso confined to jails had drinking parents, and fifty-one per cent, had either a father or mother who used drink. The death of a parent before the child Is sixteen years of age, and the unpleasant home surroundings due to a step-parent, are quite prom inent causes of criminality in the child. There have been quite a num ber of such cases in Lehigh county, where the step-mother wanted the child removed to some institution. One-third of the delinquent children were found to use cigarettes. In my experience ninety per cent, of the boys brought before me said they used cigarettes. The experience of Judge Lindsay and my own has been that there Is some direct connection between the cigarette and criminal. Two-thirds of the criminals of this country have used liquor, and three fifths of them had never learned a trade. More than one-half of them went to work before they were four teen years of age, before the charac ter had been formed well enough to withstand temptations. One-fourth of tho criminals had street trades. New York state has jusc passed a law that no child shall be employed as a telegraph messenger after ten o'clock at night. Telegraph boys have often been producd as witnesses in cases against houses of ill repute. "Our criminal system is faulty. If you concede that environment Is such a problematic cause of criminality then the criminal Is not entirely at fault as a criminal. If environment Is such an evil then society owes It that that should be remedied as much as possible. In the prevention of crime first attack environment. Some one has said that In order to educate a boy, you must begin with his grand father. The difference of parents Is remarkable. Many parents would rather continue their wayward chil dren in the mills so as to enjoy their wages, than have tho children con fined In somo institution for reform." THIS HILL KOA1). The old road, the hill road, the road that used to go Through brier and bloom nnd gleam and gloom among tho wood ed ways, Oh, now that wo might follow It as once wo did, you know! Tho old road, the homo road, the road of happy days. Tho old road, the long road, the road among tho hills, Tho hills of old enchantments and the hollow lands of dreams. Again it calls with memories of days that nothing stills, Aud down tho years, as down a lano, its homo light winks and gleams Again wo smell Its dust, tho rain dis tils Into porfumo; Again tho night with linger tip of llrc-ily twinkling gold Points us tho path to follow homo through deops of dowy bloom, And on tho bough tho whlppoorwlll calling as of old. Tho old road, tho lost road, tho road whore, heart and hand Simplicity nnd Innocence of child hood used to piny, Till o'or tho hills ambitions camo, loud riding through tho land, And bade us mount and follow them forever and a duy. The old road, the hill road, the road we galloped down, The road we left of sweet content for one of care and toll, The road we fain would And again, and tlose two playmates brown Barefooted happiness and, health, tan ned children of the soil. Again I hear them in the wind a-call ing me to come; From fern and flower they nod their beads ur nit a hand or face: Aud In the twilight there they dance unto the crlcKota thrum, While friendly volcoa sar good night within a rose-awoat spacf. tho old old road, tho hill road, the road that you arid 1 Aro fain to find nnd roam again be neath God's azure dome; The road Into tho old time hills whero wo at Inst would He, ! Score within our mother's arms and I snfo again at homo. i Madison Cawoln, In Now York ; Sun. I BIRD SEASON IN NORTHWEST. Prairie Chicken and Grouse Have Flourished In Absence of Rain. I "This extended drought has been good for one thing, wo certainly will havo n largo crop of pralrlo chickens and grouse," said a St. Paul sports man who had Just returned from a trip west. It Is reported from other sources ' that chickens are plentiful this year, and when the season opens there will bo good shooting. In former years heavy rains In tho breeding season havo tended to drown out the nests of tho prairie chicken and last year tbero wero very fow brought back by the hunters. This year promises to bo better. In tho meantime tho ducks aro hav ing a hard timo of It, Reports show that the usual ha-nts of these and othor aquatic birds, the small sloughs and ponds of South Dakota and Min nesota, have dried up to such an ex tent that tho ducks are going north. Many huntsmen from tho South sent their dogs and trainers North to break them for the opening of the season. One party with eighteen dogs passed through St Paul from a hunting club In Georgia. They were on their way to a place north of Win nipeg, and will return to the States In time to get the good shooting. St Paul Despatch. Triumphs of the Lord Chamberlain The Hon. Bobby Spencer that was, becomes now Earl Spencer, succeed ing his sincerely lamented half-brother, whose death recently occurred. No vacancy In the Commons results of course, for the new Earl became a peer four years ago, with the title of Lord Althorp. As Lord Chamberlain he has un doubtedly been a great success, the only failure In the department under him since his accession to office being the mlscarrlnge of tho royal wreaths for the Duke of Devonshire's funeral. All the tailors laud and magnify his name, for, himself a past master of the art of dress, he has reduced to writing and drawing all that there Is to be said of court costume, a matter upon which the wisest formerly some times had doubts. Sktoh. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. His Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho Signature of Rupture Quickly Cured No Charge if You Don't Get Relief Not a single cent comes out of your pocket If a trial of the Cluthe Truss which automatically gives Massage Treatment doesn't result In Immense relief. We don't want a cent of your money unless this Truss does you a world of good. The Cluthe Truss with Its Automatic Massage Treatment Is entirely unlike any other truss ever made. There Is no belt, no leg straps, no springs, no harness of any kind what ever Nothing at all uncomfortable. Your Rupture Can't Come Out. You'll feel a whole lot stronger the min ute you put this Truss on. Your rupture will never aguln come out. No matter how you lift and strain, the Cluthe Truss will hold your rupture se curely and comfortably In place You'll never suffer another moment's discom fort. Think of that you who now have to put your rupture back perhaps many times a day you who now wear trusses that cause you constant torture. Automatic Manage Treatment. The Cluthe Truss automatically gives a wonderfully beneficial massage treat ment It has Automatic Holding Pads. They are self - regulating self - adjusting to every movement you make. That Is why It is utterly Impossible to force these pads out of position. There Is always proper support for your rupture. And these Automatic Holding Pads au tomatically massage the weakened mus cles at the rupture opening until they are strong and sound. This massaging does for these muscles what exercise does for the arms or legs. That Is how the Cluthe Truss cures even ufler everything else has failed to do any good whatever. Cures In Short Time When you wear a Cluthe Truss you can do any work that you could do If you weren't ruptured. And, unlesB yours Is a terribly bad case, the Cluthe Truss with Its Automatic Mas sage Treatment will soon cure you com pletely. The Cluthe Truss has cured some of the worst cases In history. D. & h. CO. TIHE TABLE A.M. SUN A.M. SUN .M A.M. l'.M, 10 (XI 10 00 liTS .... Allmny .... lUuuhumtoii U' ou 10 ool 'i 15! 8 M ... Philadelphia.... ... Wtlkee-llarro. .. .....Scrmium 1 iiO 2 OH It 4 40 i at 'i UN 7 10 7 66 s m P.M. A.M p.m P.M. .M. I.V H 05 6 20 630 6 SI if H 2 V . .Curbonilal 0 S 8 51 ...Lincoln ., vuii. ...... Karvlew (.'Mitum .... Luke Lodore ... . Way mart Ktene hteeiio- I'rompton ...... Fortenla ttolyville Iluaotditte 6 11 8 : 12 U M 10 Oil 10 IK S 6 37 2 a ti I , 6 :ni 7 04 1 48 2 to 2 67 g m 7 AT 7 lit 7 16 6 :t t i n .it 0 DO 3 IX. 8 07 10 ON 7 7 l'.U A.M. P.M. I'.M A.M Ar An Everyday Bible. "Tho Woman's National Dally" says that a Blblo printed In modern langnnge, with obsoloto words nnd phrases, which tend to confuse tho toxt, eliminated, will bo published not later thnn next May under tho aus pices of the Prlncoton Theological Bemlnary, Wo aro told that "It Is not to be a completely rotsed Bible, but Is to bo crouched In everydny lan guage." ThlsToks very foolish to us, and wo have no doubt that It will be very foolish when It Is printed. A good deal will depend on what sort of "ovorydayunguago" Is used. For ex ample, will David bo made to say, Instead of "I said In my haste, all men are liars," "When I got a movo on mo I lined It out that all men aro liars"? Instead of saying "It Is well with the child," shall wo bo told, In the "everyday language" of Prince ton, "tho child Is bully"? Why Is it that the great loarned men of tho seminaries nnd colleges and univer sities will Insist upon making sacred things common? An Old Breconshlre Church. Patrlshow Church, which has just been reopened after restoration. Is a most Interesting edifice to architects, archeologlsts nnd lovers of folk lore. It stands In n very remote and inac cessible situation among the Black mountains of Breconshlre, far away from the ordinary tourist It pos sesses a Saxon or rather British font, three stone altars, a curious lit tle western chapel and a rood screen of remarkable beauty. In the adjoin ing churchyard there Is a preaching cross, and out of the stem of an an cient yew grow a mountain ash and a holly tree, symbolizing the Trinity. According to local legend, this-unique little structure was erected by a "for eigner," who had been cured of lepro sy through the waters of a neighbor ing well, and left a "hatful of gold" to build a church by way of thank offering. London Dally News. Protecting the Birds. Nowhere are birds better protected than in Germany. It is not only a subject of law there, but of education also, for children are taught In tho schools the usefulness of birds in pro tecting trees, plants, crops and gar dens. Bird-houses, and even blrd-re-flectorles, are seen In every park. On tho other hand, tho enemies of useful birds, such as kits, buzzards, hawks, magpies, kestrels and Jays, are re morselessly killed under the encour agement of local governments, which offer rewards for their destruction. One consequence Is that tho harvest fields and gardens of Germany suffer relatively llttlo damage from noxious Insects. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION, ESTATE OF L JOHN II. VAHCOK, Late of Damascus. Pa. eranted to Alonzo T. Pearle, Kxecutor. All persons Indebted to said estate are noti fied to make Immediate payment to the un dersigned ; and thoe linvln? claims against the said estate are notilled to present them duly attested for settlement. Alonzo T. Searle, Executor. Honesdale, Pa., Nov. 10 1910. Cured men and women 50, 60 and 70 years old people who had been ruptured 20 to B0 years people who had worn doz ens of other trusses In vain. Our Expense if It Fail. Please do not doubt these statements See the proof In our free book It Is your duty to send for. Remember that you can try the Cluthe Truss at our risk. Let It prove all we say. If It falls to hold your rupture every minute of tho day, It won't cost you a penny. Free Book Telli. We have written a book which sums up all that wo have learned about Rup ture In forty years of day-after-day ex perience In the successful treatment of over 2SO.00 cases. This book explains why elastic, spring and leg-strap trusses or appliances can never cure. It explains about operations. It exposes tho fraud behind some of the advertised "methods." It puts you on guard against throwing money away. And It tells all about the Cluthe Truss with Automatic Massage Treatment. It tells the experience of many former sufferers. And we give you (with their permission) the names nnd addresses of over 3,500 people who have received In stant relief at our hands most of them entirely cured some of them you prob ably know. Your name on a postal or on the cou pon below brings you this helpful book Send today don't put It off when you read this book you will know how you can get immediate relief without rlskinG any more money. When writing, please give our Box number, as below. FREE COUPON Box 71 CLUTHE INSTITUTE (For Rupture Exclusively.) 125 Eit 23rd St.. New York City Send me your Free Book on The Cure of Rupture. Name , , Street Town HONESDALE BRANCH Ar Avenue.. Lv! l'.M. A.M SI'.. A.M. UN SUN 2 00 10 SO 10 50 1-' 40 8 45 8 44 353 7 3i75 T7i T5 A.M l'.M 10 20 4 05 7 15 2 25 I'.M. 37 3 16 6 20 1 35 10 05 A.M. l'.M. P.M. l'.M. FTm". gwi 35 5 40 :.;::; ITn s 7 64 125 630 1207 8 17 TW 121 24 1203 3 I jti 1 03 S 08 II 44 -.54 7 ?5 12 56 J 01 11 37 1 17 7 III 13 51 6 66 11 31 7 41 7 17 12 til i 54 11 2D T 7 12 12 43 4 48 11 23 7 32 7 08 IS 40 4 15 11 20 7 30 T 05 SB 141 II W 7 7 01 12 32 4 h 11 U 7 W jtjijS :::::: JSjl A.M. F.M. V.M. V.V.Y. A.M. I'.M. t PKOFIiSSJOXAJ CAltDS. Alio ncvs-nl-Lnw. H WILSON . ATTOH.NEV A rotrNSKI.OK-AT-I.AW. oiHii' atllsiriit to Post unite In Dlmmlck olllre, 1 lours. iU'O, l'n. ryu h. i.ee, T I ATTORNEY A COUNBEI,OIt-AT-l,AW. (illlre fiver ixHt oillie. All local business promptly attended to. Honesdale, l'a. Tj C. MUMKOltD, JLj. ATTOIINKY A COL'N8E1.01l-AT-t,AW Ulllce Liberty Iloll building, opposite the l'ost Ulllct'. lloupsdnle. 1'n. H OMKR GKKKNK. ATTOIINKY A COUNBE1.0H-AT-LAW. Ulllce over Keif's store. Honesdale l'n. nHAKLKS A. McCAKTY, J ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR- IT-LAW. Special nnd prompt nttcntlon given to the collection ot claims. Ulllce over Hell's .new store. Honesdale, l'a. n P. KIMBI E, J.1 . ATTORNEY A COt'NflEI.OR-AT-LAW, Olllce over the cost ofllce Honesdale. l'a. ME. SIMONS, . ATTORNEY A COUN8ELOR-AT-LAW, Office in the Court House, Ilonefidnle Pa. PETEK II. ILOFF, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-I.AVI'. Olllre Second floor old Savlnes 13rik bulldlne. Honesdale. l'a. QEAKLE & SALMON, D ATTORNEYS A COUNPEI.ORS-AT-LAW, Oftlccs latelv occupied by Judse Searle CHESTER A. GAIIRATT,!: ATTORNEY A COUNbELOR-AT-I.AW. Olllce adjacent to Post Ofllce, Honesdale, PaJ Dentists. DR. E. T. BROWN, 'DENTIST. Olllce Flr?t floor, old Savlnes Bank build ing, Honesdale, Pa. Dr. C. R. BRADY. Dkntipt. ilotiesdale.'.Pa. Office Hoijrs-8 m. to p. m Any eveninc bv appointment. Citizens' phone. 33. Residence. No. 8tX' Livery, LIVERY. bred. G. Richard has re moved his livery establishment from corner Church street to Whitney's Stone Barn ALL CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. FIRST CLASS OUTFITS. 75yl E-LET US PRINT YOUR BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, STATE MENTS, NOTE HEADS, ENVEL OPES, CIRCULARS, ETC., TC. C. We wish to secure a good correspondent in every town in Wayne county. Don't be afraid to write this office for paper and stamped envelops. MARTIN CAUFIELD Designer and Man ufacturer of ARTISTIC MEMORIALS Office and Works 1036 WAIN ST. HONESDALE, PA, ti a:::u::a:Knaa::a::m:::a::::::js JOSEPH N. WELCH 3KSB m Fire Insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Oflico: Second iloor Masonic Build ing, over C. 0. Jndwin'a drug store, Honesdale. H. LEE BRAMAN EVERYTHINGIN LIVERY Buss for Every Train and Tovn Calls. Horses always for saW Boarding and Accomodations for Farmers Prompt and polite attention at all times. AX.LEW HOUSE BARI?