V ctnwXi fiuday, iihckhiikk o, 1010. NO . Directors Will Continue to Lead Christian Scientists. MRS. EDDY WAS NOT ACTIVE. Business of the Church For Many Years Had Been Out of Her Hands, Says Alfred Farlow, Press Representative. Boston, Dec. C The funeral of Mrs. Sfnry Baker G. Kddy, founder of the Christian Science church, will ho held Thursday morning nt 11 o'clock, ac cording to an announcement made to dny. Leaders In the Christian Science church said that no one would assulne the leadership held by Mrs. Eddy, but that her book, "Science and Health," would be the teacher and guide of tho church. Details of the funeral services will not be made public until Mrs. Eddy's only son, George V. Glover of Lead, S. D., nrrlvcs In Boston, lie Is now on his way, accompanied by two of his three children, Mnry and George. It Is reported that Judge Clifford I Smith, llrst reader of the Mother church. In Boston, will olllciato at the Inst rites at the Chestnut Hill man sion. This preliminary service per haps will be attended only by Mrs. Eddy's immediate relatives and mem bers of her household. Burial proba bly will be in Tilton, N. II., the girl boo' home of the founder of the Chris tian Science faith. The directors of the Mother church arranged with the passenger tralUc of ficials of the Boston and Maine rail road for a special train to convey the body and the mourning party to Til ton. N. II., provided Mrs. Eddy's son decides upon that village as the place of Interment. Concord, N. II., whero for several years Mrs. Eddy resided at Pleasant View, also has been spoken of as the last resting place. Mrs. Eddy died consistent In her be lief In the ndequacy of faith to tri umph over death. In the shadow of death she did not waver nor ask for aid outside the prayers of her pupils. From the official statement mnde by Alfred Farlow it is evident that hence forth tills church of over 2,000,000 souls is to be governed supremely by the board of directors of the Mother church here In Boston, Mr. Farlow said Sirs. Eddy had nev er been a member of the board of trustees and that, although her advice always had been potent, 6he had not taken a very active part la the admin istration of church affairs for a good many years. lie believed that such privacy would attend the burial at Mrs. Eddy that no newspaper report ers would be permitted to be present. BELIEVE LEWIS IB DEAD. Officials Exhuming Body Suspected t Be That of Trunk Murderer. Providence. It. I., Dee. 6. Bellevina that a man who died here on Nov. 9 was William H. Lewla, the waiter who is wanted for the murder of Al bert C. Caliier in New Tort, the health officer and the coroner of the tows of Foster, near here, have started to ex hume the body. With these officials wan a detective from New York, who has a photo graph of Lewis. The man went nnder the name ot William Ji. Lewis. Ha wiia killed by fulling from a wagon, the front wheel of whlck pained over him. Coroner Wlnterbottora of New Tork announced the result of the examina tion made by Professor Larkla of Co lumbia university and Ooroer's Phy slclna Lehaoe of the body foud In a trunk onc the property ot" William Lowli. According: to the report of tkese au thorities, the description f the body doe not fit that of Albert Oalller, ii artist, given by those who kaew him. AUTO WEECKED; ONI DYING. C. J. O'Hara Receives Fractured GkuM When Car Crashes Int Tr. Englewood, N. J., Dec C Charles J. O'Hara. president of the Northern Valley Paper compaay, Is said to be dying from a fractured skull, the re sult of an automobile accident oa Hook mountain, near Nyack. The chauffeur says the car skidded as ho turned out to allow another car to pass, and as It crashed sideways into a tree O'Hara and Thomas O'Nell, a policeman, the other occu pant, who were In the rear neat, were thrown out. The policeman received a severe cut that extended from the top of bis head to his nose. O'Hara inherited considerable money after his father's death. Some Nautical Fasts. A knot Is 0,090 feet lone. The dis tance from New York to Llvenol Is 3,004 nautical miles by the northern track and 3,130 by the southern track. The former course Is taken by veasela 'bound for New York, tho latter by vea Bcls bound for Llverjoo!. From Liver pool to New York the distances ere respectively 3,039 and 3,100 miles. In estimating records the points tak en on either side arc Sandy Hook and Daunt'H rock, Queenstown harbor. The first light sighUHl on the British coast hi the Bull, Cow and Clf, Ire land, and ou the American coast ci ther Nantucket or Fire island. $ JAMES A. PATTED, f Cotton Man Is Charged With Restraint of Trnds. New York, Dec. 0. James A. Patten, he cotton man; Eugene G, Scales, a :otton broker, of Dallas, Tex., and W'llliain P. Brown, a New Orleans "ot r.on dealer, were arraigned before Judge Hough In the United States cir cuit court on an Indictment found by (he federal grand jury Aug. 4 charging conspiracy to monopolize and restrain Interstate trade and commerce In vio lation of tho Sherman net. Colonel Bobert M. Thompson, a si lent partner in the cotton brokerage firm of S. II P. Pell & Co., and Frank B. llayne, a cotton dealer, of New Or leans also are named in the same in dictment, but they are out of town and will not be arraigned until next week. The accused men previously have been Indicted on practically the same charges. Tho defendants pleaded not guilty and have two weeks in which to take action. They were released on 55,000 ball each. STRANDED TWICE IN TWO DAYS Pilot's Ignorance of Shoals Piles Big Vessel on Sand Bar. Atlantic City, N. J., Dec. 0. Bun gling work on the part of the man at tho holm of the three masted schooner L. S. Q. Wishard has again piled the big vessel on the sand bars not four miles from where three government cruisers worked six hours the pre vious day in releasing her from the bands of the South Brigantine shoals. Tho Wishard, which was bound from Jones River, Va., to New York with a load of railroad ties, now is pounding heavily on the bars off Lit tle Egg narbor. Life guards who as sisted the crew of six men safely ashore say the vessel will be a total wreck. After government crews had pulled the schooner Into deep water ignor ance of the pilot of shoal positions again became apparent, for the Wish ard was sighted hugging close to the shore just before a raging snowstorm struck tho coast. Later a lull in the falling snow revealed the boat piled up on sand bars a half mile off Little Egg Hrbor. She was flying signals of distress. LINER LOST PROPELLER. Kaiser Wilhelm Is Moving Slewly, Wireless Message Reports. New York, Dec. 6. The North Ger man Lloyd liner Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse will not wake this port front Bremen before tomorrow afternoon. Cop tain Polack sent a Marconi wire lone from the ship Buying that she had carried away her port propeller in rough weather Sunday and that she wws loafing along at about 1C knots under her starboard engines. When the wireless message was sent the Kaiser was about 650 miles oast of Sundy Hook. The sea was then smooth and the air clear. The skipper's dispatch said no dam-1 age was done to the ship and that all hands were well. .'.I Invalids. i ;i uii- oilice boy came la the i old brnker looked over his glasses i n flown. "Young man," he said slowly, "why were you absent from your work yes terday afternoon?" "Went to see tho ball gnme," confess ed the lad, fumbling with his cap, "You did, eh" "Yes, sir. You said the only occasion I could take on afternoon off would be to visit tho sick." "And what has that to do with it?" "Well, sir, this was one of those oc casions. It was the sickest bunch of ball players that ever came down tho pike. We got whitewashed to the score of 17 to 0." Boston Post. Accomplished. First raseenger That 1 Conductor Punchem. ne Is one of, the most ex perienced men on the road. Second Passenger I knew It before you told me. First Pasenger How so? Sec ond Passenger Because be slams the door at the precise instant that he calls the station's name. Judge. One Better. First Suburbanite We've got a baby grand In our house. Second Ditto We can so yon one better. We've got a grand baby In ours. Baltimore Ar&sr-1r. 0. W. PEPPER FOR JTTSTiaEI Taft May Appoint Counsel For Pinchot to Supreme Court. Washington, Dec. 0. President Taft in considering George V. Pepper of Philadelphia for appointment to the 6upreiuo court. Mr. Pepper was crma scl for Glffoul Plnchot In the Bsllln-ger-Pinchot Investigation, The presi dent, It Is known, desires to fill one of tho supremo court vncancles by the appointment of n Pennsylvnnlan. Mr. Pepicr Is known as an excellent lawyer and Is tho author of nercral law text books. He Is forty-three years old. ROB IN PRISON'S SHADOW. Safe Containing $1,800 Is Blown Opsin In Auburn. Auburn, N. Y., Dec. 0. Cracksmen, after giving this section a wide berth for three mouths, returned and with in a stone's throw of Auburn prison blew open a safe In the wholesale and retail grocery of C. G. Meeker, ob taining $1,800 In cash. The place Is Inspected by police ev ery half hour, but not eveu the sound of the explosion was heard by the of ficer on the beat. The robbers es caped. Government Job For Journalist. Washington, Dec. C Announcement Is made of the appointment of P. T. Brahany rb executive secretary of the tariff board. Mr. Brahany is a mem ber of the Washington staff of the New York Tribune. He has been in cIofc connection with political and economic questions as a senator's sec retary and a AVashington correspond ent for twelve years. He will take up his now work Monday. What They Ate. Toblns Smollett wrote his "Humphrey Clinker" In 1771, tho last year of his life, giving therein a spirited account of the society and customs then pre vailing in London town. He exposed the Iniquities practiced by the purvey ors of provisions at that time. Oysters were "bloated" and "floated" then as now; veal was whitened by repeated bleedings of the live animal; greens wore boiled with brass half pence to improve the color; the wine in com mon use was a "pernicious sopldstica tion. balderdashed with cider, corn spirit and the Juice of sloes." and oth er revelations not suited to repetition In this polite nge Indicated Uiat al most every nrticle of diet was prof itably "treated" before It reached the ultimate consumer. That '"bleached" flour i6 no new commodity was also shown, while Smollett's added com ment furnishes excellent food for re flection: "The bread I eat In London is n deleterious paste, mixed up with chalk, alum and bone ashes, insipid to the taste and destructive to the constitu tion. The good people ore not Ig norant of this adulteration, but they prefer it to wholesome bread because It is whiter than the meal of corn." Washington Post Fires and Insurance The agent of a well known insur anco company stood on the fringe of the crowd watching the firemen retir ing from tue scene of a small blaze In an uptown ftathouse. "I'll do business tomorrow mprn ing," said ho grimly, "and most of It will be with women who have 'forgot ten' their Insurance has run out. There's nothing like a blaze on the block to set thoughts in the direction of insurance. Last week a woman was waiting for me when I opened my office. Her husband had given her money to take out Insurance weeks before, and she had spent It for n new hat The night before a fire had broken out on the second flat above theirs, and, believe me, that womnn must have suffered tortures until the fate of the house was settled. She paid the premium to small change, which 1 believe she took from a child's bank, rather than confess her neglect to her husband." New York World. The Poor. We nil love the poor. It would be entirely unnecessary, if not positively caddish, to say that we bate the poor. But there ore two kinds of poor the Individual poor and the collective poor. It is not the Individual poor that we love; it is the collective poor. It Is not the poor that we know and see. but the poor that we do not know and have neither time nor inclination to look at. We ore afraid if we see them we shall coaso to lore them. We never say, "God bless the Iceman, or the coal beaver, or the motorman." For them we And our execrations for not contributing to our comfort Just so and so and so. It Is with great fervor, however, that we can say, "God bless the poor." be cause the poor do not Interfere with our comfort to the slightest degree. Life. Far From Upright. Reilly nud Coran were "having It out." They had been deadly enemies for years, but nelthor bad offered to lay bands on the other up to now, both of them being somewhat afraid ot the Issue. Before they commenced It was stipu lated' that It was to be a fair "stand up" light, aud with that they started. Coran had it all his own way from the beginning, ne kept knocking Itcllly down and down again until that worthy was about sick of it. He turn ed to the bystandera and said. "Sure, an' wasn't it to be a fair, stand up fight r "It was." relumed an onlooker. "An' 'ow. thin, can ho be expectln' roe ter folght Mm fairly If be do bo knockin' me down all the time?" Lon don Ideals. TOP" 00 RET IS TO "WED. Athletic Son of Hood of (M Trwrt Announces Engagement. . New Hnven, Conn., Dec. 6. An nouncement Ik made of tae enage mont of Alnn Tyle Corey of New York, iK-ttcr know as "Pop" Corey, cnptnln of the Yale baseball team and quarterback of the eleven, to Miss Marguerite Johnston of Detroit. It Is undeivtood that the wedding will take place soon after the Yale contmeaco mcnt next June. "Pop" Corey is the holder of more "Y'b" than nny other student of Yale university. His father is William El lis Corey, head of the steel trust. Promoted. "They're beginning to put on airs." "Is that so?" "Yea; their washwoman Is now a laundress." Detroit Free Press. PntUnce la bitter, but Its fruit U weet. Rousseau. Are You Half Sick? Just sick enough to feel heavy heeled, lazy and listless, to have no appetite, to sleep badly ; just sick enough to feel rest less and nervous, and to have what you eat feel like lead in your stomach ; not sick enough to take to bed or call a doctor, hut just sick enough to not know what to do. Ninety-nine times out of one hundred these symptoms are all caused by the stom ach, bowels, liver and digestive organs. Now, all this can be remedied in one night by taking Smith's Pineapple and Butter nut Pills. Anyone suffering from chronic consti patirtn, biliousness, sick headache or liver complaint can tone up thu entire system, elevate the spirits and again make life really worth living by a single week's use of Smith's Pineapple and Butternut Pills. You will have a good appetite and sleep well. They are Nature's laxative, entirely different from anything you have ever taken before. Physicians use and recom mend. They form no habit. You should always keep them on hand. These little Vegetable Pills will ward off many ills. To Cure Constipation Biliousness and Sick Headache in a Night, use wmS I von. iPiflcArrLt BTiloUsrWVsI AND I inaiaeion fniiTTtnilllTl neooacneana P-o KOUIItnnuil Diseases or riLLJ I livermJBceli CO Pills in Glass Vial 25c All Dealers. SMITH'S BUCHU LITHIA KIDNEY PILLS For Sick Kidneys Bladder Diseases, Rheumatism, the one best remedy. Reliable, endorsed by leading physicians: safe, effectnal. Results lasting. On the market 15 years. Have cored thousands. 100 pills lu original glass package, CO cents. Trial botes, to pills, 15 cents. All druggists sell and recommend. Magnificently located residence and large grounds of W. F. SUYDAEV3 Splendid site for hospital or hotel. House steam heated. Elec trically wired. Large barn. Corner lot. 125xlC0. J. B. ROBINSON, Insurance and Real Estate. .Tadwin Building. ujutntttuttJjJtnjntJitntJtjtnttttntutnuj I WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS in your family you of course call H a reliable pnysician. Don't stop at that; have bis prescriptions put up at a reliable pharmacy, even it it is a little farther from your home than some other store. You can find no more reliable store than ours. It would be im possible for more care to be taken in the selection of drugs, etc., or in the compounding. Prescrip tions brought here, either night or day, will be promptly and accurately compounded by a competent registered pharmacist and the priceB will be most rea sonable. O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, Opp, D. & II. Station. IIo.nksdale. Pa. htvttat SPENCER The Jeweler would like to see you if you are in the market for JEWELRY, SILVER-: WARE, WATCHES- CLOCKS, DIAMONDS, AND NOVELTIES "Guaranteed article on old." COLD WAVE DUX. Low Temperature Predicted fr grotti er Prt of Wek. Washington, Dec. 6. Law tempera tures will prevail over the corns trj Mit nf the Kocky mountain! darln Uvo greater part of tae wrek, srerdlKr U the prediction of the weather bur. The disturbances over the Rack Moun tain rcsioti will advance eeBtwartl and is wpected to renca the Atlantic trtatea by Tuosdny. Followinu this there will be a marked chanj-o to colder weather taat will spread eastward and southward as far ris' the Riilf states. ESTABLISHED 1830 THE OLDEST BANK IN WAYNE COUNTY THE - ' HOIESBALE NATBOEAL BANK CAP5TAL, SURPLUS TOTAL ASSETS WE ARE AFTJRR YOU ! You have more or less banking business. Possibly it is witli us, siif-h being the case you know soruethingof our service, but if not a patron would it, not be well for you to become one ? OUR SAVINGS will help you start. It is calculated to serve all classes, tho old and the young, the rich and the poor, MEM, WOMEN AND CHILDREN ST RECEIVES DEPOSSTS OF $1.00 AND UP and allows three per cent, interest annually. Interest will be paid from the llret of any month on all deposits made on or before the 10th of the i no nt 1 1 provided tucli deposits remain three calendar months or longer. t t t f f 4- iIENUY Z. ltCRSELL I'HESIllK.NT. .VNDKKW THOMPSON V11K rBESIDKKT. ', GaaranUcd JSSr the Fool Exact Copy of Wrapper, rapjl ' Fr Infants and Children. B Always Bought AgetabtelVeparattonSirAs- t , -i M WSSm sirailailn-JiteRjodaidReguia jjeaiS ID.Q g V EaEguMmi Signature A$ HrfSi. l i It B II III tiij ft X Use Sffj tion.SouTStoJMch.Diarrhsa 8 R P ffc . M ESnffiJ Worms f onvukwas Jevmslr H fl f BE V H I Mm ncssandLossorSUEP. W I U I UIUI m -Ir j Thirty Years MSg I NEW YORK. J J HBaSt Guarantied unir r the rK"ft (.ASTORIA j IT GIVESJTHE BEST RESULTS, I LIGHT, ,4 TRADED 1 srThe SMITHSONIAN 1 CORRECT? sm ar k.j I TRUSS I HOLDS I I ' IMPOSITION. I AcbotiSkS Ctnrwtit ?ir 1 soiii) nv C. C. JADWIN IIOXESDAIiK, PA. Not AH Trawlm ChleJcen Thieves. The hawka har as bad a rcpu'n t!rm rb the erowa, and all hawks nro cr 'od "hen-hawtrs hy tboso who ara iCTiorant of what tfcor do Ilvo on, b it Ore majority of the bawtrs do not I -o on poultry by any mcntw. A Brent ramy- lire oa Ibwxs aryj mice form a a I rRT! Itwm fn tfadr Mil of faro 'he spnmrw hawlc is tho one t"t lc " blame for the hard nnmt r m in htg brethren, nnd It Is he who Wi the rtilckons' and hens. When I'O-'J prorsod for food other hawks rar 'y may oarry away a hen or chicken U t tbls Is tho extreme rather than t - average' n&nc. Maine Woods. $ 150.000.00 241,711.00 t 1,902,000.00 DEPARTMENT X t t EDWIN" F.TOUKKY CAsmm. ALBERT C. LIN DSA Y T AtH 1 NTl AMI'hlt T TMC CCNTAUn MPAMT, RCW rTT. H 1