The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, December 28, 1910, Image 4

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    THIS CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, DEC. UH, JIMO.
THE CITIZEN
Scml-Weckly Founded 11)08; Weekly
bounded 181 I.
ITBUIIthn KVKRY WEDNESDAY AND miDAY I) V
Til It CITIZEN rUllt.lfilllNU COMl'ANY.
Kulort-d os second-duns matter, nt the post
oillce, Iloncsdale. l'n.
SUDSCIUPTION ?1.50
K, H. IIAKDKN'nEKOlI. - PRESIDENT
W. V. WOOD. MANAGER AND SKO'Y
J.M. SMEITZliR EDITOR
Dir.ECTOItB:
0. II. DORFUNCIKI!.
M.I1. ALI.HN.
K. II. IIAHDKNOKIinil,
UKKBY WILSON.
W. . WOOD.
WEDNESDAY, l)i:C. US, 11110.
IX CASH OF fine:
Ordinance No. 15. Flro Alarm
Signals, section 1. Tho steam gong
shall bo Bounded only at 12 M. noon
and in case of nn alarm ot lire. For
GENERAL ALARM, tho gong will
sound ONE LONG BLAST ;
for llro about TWELFTH STREET
BRIDGE-ono long nnd one short
blast at intervals of ten seconds
; for llro BETWEEN 12TII
STREET AND 7T1I STREET, ono
long and two short blasts at Inter
vals of ten seconds, ; for
fire BELOW 7TII, ono long nnd threo
short blasts at Intervals of ten sec
onds ; for flro OUT
SIDE OF BOROUGH LIMITS three
long blasts .
"You good people are Intolerable.
Descend from your ultrn-niornl atti
tude." The Mnniuls of SteveuUm
In "The Walls of Jericho."
"If you don't get married, and
raiso a largo family, I'll report you
to Teddy Roosevelt!" "The Wid
dcr's advice to Ethel Desmond, a
Southern Rose, in "Tho Ari.ona
Limited."
Gov. I'laisted In 1881 "Viewed With
Alarm" What Wo "View With
Complacency" In 11)10.
The inaugural address of Gover
nor Plaisted of Maine discusses old
subjects, but the manner in which
he treats some of them Is both ori
ginal and humorous. He anticipates
trouble from the "proposed gather
ing of militia of the States at the
National Capital on tho 4th day of
March next, and asks whether It is
possible that the American people
can contemplate it with indifference.
He calls attention to tho fact that
when caesar crossed the Rubicon
the Roman Republic fell, and calls
upon Mr. Garlleld to "place his veto
upon this proposed courtesy." He
deplores the loss of population in
Maine through emigration to the
West, says that "one of the most
.efllcent causes tending to drive citi
zens from tho state is the law of
imprisonment for debt," and de
mands its repeal. The process of
driving citizens out he describes as
follows: "Demands are cut up into
small amounts, ten or lifteen dollar
notes given, execution taken out up
on each, and the debtor is pursued,
harassed, and oppressed until he is
forced to leave the State to preserve
his personal liberty" certainly a
shortsighted policy for the creditor
to adopt. The Governor regrets the
absence of a usury law, and points
out that tho creditor's right to take
pay tends to "transfer tho property
of the many to the pockets of the
few," to "paralyze and blight all
productive industries," and, worst
of all, to bring savings-banks "to the
verge of ruin." The managers of
these institutions, ho admits, are
among tho best men In the State,
"and yet, in the management of
funds not their own, and under the
restraints of legislative supervision,
such was their passion for high rates
of interest, these men neglected their
first duty to the depositors, and
loaded the hanks with Investments
of such doubtful character that banks
holding six millions of deposits sus
pended payment." Ho Insists that
the United States bonds which ma
ture ought not to be refunded, but
paid (we presume In legal tender),
and protests against tho proposition
to rotiro and "burn" the legal- ten
der currency, "so that out of their
ashes may arise a like amount of
Interost-hearing bonds to furthor
tax the labor and industry of tho
country." He asks what bondholders
are "but a class of glided paupers
supported by the labor of tho coun
try," and, in a striking passage, re
minds the Maine Legislature that
"if one millionaire had eorne ovor in
the Mayflower he would havo blasted
tho prospocts of a continent."
VIVID IMAGINATION.
Woman Dies In ltrooklyn Hospital
As Result of Autosuggestion
Had a Slight Gold.
New York, December 23. Death
by auto-suggestion, In much tho samo
manner that Mnrk Twain made fa
mous In a serious description of tho
curious malady of morbid imagining
round commonly in tho Hawaiian
Islands, is roported from tho Kings
County Hospital, Brooklyn, In tho
caso of Daisy Kempton, 55 years old.
Tho woman had snow-white hair,
a vigorous body and wns healthful In
appearance. She had no known ail
ment although sho had been an In
mate of tho hospital for two and a
half years. She enterod tho hospital
complaining of several chronic forms
of illness. Yet the doctors who ex
amined hor found her to be perfect
ly sound. She persisted In declaring;
she suffered from ailments and came
to be an export In defining symptoms.
Specialists examined hor several
times because of the accurate descrip
tions of symptoms of different dis
eases she gave, but always with tho
result, thoy reported, that Daisy's
troubles wore " all In hor oye."
Her vanity for prettily be-rlbbon-ed
night robes was inordinate. Once
she was sent to the observation
ward for tho insane. But sho could
not even prove the possession of a
mental troublo that would warrant
hor being committed. She was at
worst merely eccentric.
For tho first Lime In hor long stay 1
nt tho hospital the woman dovolopod
a real malady last Sunday. Yet It
was a very slight ono moroly a cold,
and not a sorious cold nt that. Hut
sho brooded over It, magnified It Into
tho hollof sho was dying of pneu
monia. And to tho nmnzomont of
tho doctors nnd nursos, without any
real physlenl cause to warrant It, the
woman became really 111, her pulso
and breathing began to be labored,
and yostorday morning sho brcath
od her last. Tho hospital staff as
serts positively her death was duo
entirely to tho mental suggestion sho
gave herself that sho was fatally 111.
THE RURAL CONGKEGATION.
Religious Loyalty ami Sclf-Sncrlflco
Xot Etnt Yet!
Loyalty and self-sacrlllco for tho
church, Is not yet a thjng of Lho past.
Such a spirit Is still extant and was
recently evidenced in a rurnl congre
gation In Ducks county, according to
tho Doylcstown Intelligencer. There
was a debt approximating $8000 on
tho church cdlllce, nnd an effort was
made to wipe out the encAibrances,
with tho result that within a few
weeks tho debt was lifted and a neat
sum was left over for contingencies.
It Is a farming community, and every
one, with less than six exceptions, in
tho congregation loyally and with a
self-sacrlilco that was heroic, gave
willingly and gonorously to the
cause, 'l ho farmers gave of their sub
stance dug from the soil, the teach
ers from hard-earned salaries In tho
schools, the boys on the farm from
their little stores saved up for other
days. If we were to paraphrase tho
query put to Chicago. "What would
Christ do If Ho came to Bucks coun
t"?" with all reverence we could sny
we believe Ho would bless that con
gregation. For loyalty and self-sacrifice
In a rural congregation It is
questionable whether It has a coun
terpart. A congregation with such a
united people should bo a lever for
much good In its community.
CITIZEN CHUCKLESI
We can easily figure out tho origin
of the old saying, "The wicked walk
in slippery places," but wo ure rath
er inclined to believe that even a
good dominie would make a few re
marks appropriate to the occasion
were he to slip on a banana skin.
Father's Fate.
It's a custom alas! that we can't
drop,
Though to dodge wo may arrange;
Fate has decreed that mother shall
shop,
And father the goods exchange.
II II II
Her Consistency.
Strange that woman doth ' antifat
tako
And gives her weight a bump;
Then down to the store doth she hike
For pads to make her plump.
When kvtPro 'sweet.
He calls wlfey his precious darling,
She calls hubby her own dear Ben;
But soon as tho company leaves tho
house
They dig up the hatchet again.
II II II
Tho Ileal Xced,
"Bantam rooster out in Nebraska
drove a setting hen from her nest
and himself hatched out a fine brood
of chicks. Looks as If advocates of
woman's rights ought to get busy in
Nebraska." New York Herald.
T.nnUa mnro llko ns If snmo nntilrn
might he able to distinguish between
a bantam hen and a bantam rooster.
II II U
Good Enough to Kut.
The frequent announcement in our
"Cent A Word Column" of "Wanted
A girl to cook" Is eloquent recog
nition of our claim that the Hones
dale girls are good enough to eat.
Tho Day il'fter Xnms.
Sadly he sits In the lunch foundry,
Studying his ways and means;
Oh, what a drop from turkey and
lixln's
To prosaic pork and beans!
A Spelling Rule.
When "ei" nnd "ie" both spell "o"
How can we tell which It shall be?
Hero is a rule you may believe,
That never, never, will deceive,
And all such troubles will relievo;
A simpler rule you can t conceive.
It is not made of many pieces,
To puzzlo daughters, sons or nieces,
Yet with it all the troubles ceases:
After C an E apply:
"After other Iottors, I."
Thus a general in a sioge
Writes a letter to his liege
Or an army hold its Held
And will never, never yield.
While a warrior holds a shield
Or has strength his arm to wield.
Two exceptions we must note,
Which all scholars learn by rote;
Leisure is the first of these,
For tho second wo havo seize,
Now you know tho simple rule,
Learn It quick and off to school!
St. Nicholas.
Tho Telegraph Almanac.
The 1011 edition of tho Harris.
burg Telegraph Almanac and Central
Pennsylvania Year Book, tho "elbow
book" which won such fnvor when
It appeared for tho first tlmo last
year, has just boon received. Tho
almanac Is larger than before, and
It goes without saying that It is
more comploto and moro convenient,
It lias moro features and Is better In
every way.
The almanac Is larger than ovor,
its pages numbering 128 nnd tho
reading matter Is so arranged that
handy referonco is facilitated. Tho
inUexlnls complete. Tho features
include tnose which won recognition
last year as valuable and others
which were added in response to
suggestions from people all ovor this
section of tho state.
Just for instance, suppose you
wanted to know who was tho first
Govornor of Pennsylvania uudor tho
Constitution of 1873. Tho almanac
would tell you in a Jiffy. You can
got tho price of wheat In January
or tho high price for that grain in
1900.
-Havo Tho Citizen In your homo.
-t-f-H-f 4-f -f f -f f-f-f -f
. . rrm niyv ihum t
t niAHAUCK 0 LVLUMfl
The Democrats had a conference
Inst week In Washington, D. ('., nnd
it has leaked out that ono wing of
tho party wants to hit tho tariff right
l,,tW,ri?,ihwHyhSA npmncratlc Zui'Z
LM , ' t
maul. Another wing says: "Be care-
i fiii i, 7 V, t t on his latest success, "Tho
nhnn.1 n, 1 h?t It of and It kb-W PnS8lnB of 11,0 Thlrtl I,,loor 1nck'"
m C,? ( ,!n. L hl w'by Jerome K. Jerome, In which ho
then t he nooplo will get hot under , hM aIroaily appeared 200 times In
uiu cuniu mm ii ul un utixu in uiu
tltJ oJrn'- Sf or n'oo'consecu:
r nin n,nM ti,nrTtS'"V0 Performances in New York and
ii U ,;CI, "S ' lM 5: London alone. Its reception on tho
that tho tariff gun will bo dis
charged accidentally and premature
ly and some Innocent by-standing In
dustry Is going to bo hurt.
They claim that "Doc" Cook Is
getting in line for the Democratic
nomination for tho Presidency in i
1912. A man who can put ns beau
tiful a face on a Ho as "Doc" did
on that "North Polo" yarn certainly
would find himself at home telling
tho people that tho party which has
stood for freo labor, free trade and (
free silver would be tho best party
to entrust with the destinies of a
freo people. It requires a man vlth
an adjustable veracity to do a thing
like that and "Doc" Cook has tho
goods.
A pesslmentlc man Is usually ono,
who lives under a petticoat govern
ment at home, and reflects his sup
pressed feelings when away from
home.
You are- just beginning to have a
llttlo sense when you refuso to at
tend a midnight lunch consisting of
beer, dried beef, summer sausage and
cheese.
The average man comes very near
being an idiot in taking care of
himself. You see him wearing a fur
cap on his head while his shoes let
In snow and ice water. He wears
an overcoat on his back and nothing
but a thin shirt over his chest. He
Is terribly alarmed about freezing
his Angers, while his throat is ex
posed to blizzards, and he Is often
ailing or thinks he is. It's herb tea,
corn tea, Peter's pills, Paul's tonic,
Brown's Cordial, Smith's plaster or
poultices, until tho balance wheel In
the machine comes to a stop. Na
ture wants to keep going but she
can't. Some foolish fellows drink
whiskey nnd that clogs the valves; he
drinks beer and that clogs the wheel;
he pours down lemonade, ice water,
tea, coffee, and the Lord knows what
else, and then wonders why the flres
under the boiler do not burn. Now
If you would take an ox or a horse
or even a hog and put him through
that course of spirits he'd be dead in
a year. Yet man, the capstone of
creation, outrages the plainest and
simplest laws of health every day.
Did Adam smoke? Did Eve wear
patent health corsets? Did Solomon
chew, smoke and spit? Did the
children of Israel make for a beer
garden as soon as tney crossed the
Red Sea? Did Rebecca eat gum
drops and Ice cream and wash them
down with soda water? Adam was
tho first man, and was made perfect
from head to foot. How long would
ho have kept so after eating a mince
pie before going to bed? Suppose
he slept in a bed room with the win
dows down, door shut, and a dog
under the bed? Suppose Eve had
laced herself up In a corset, put on
tight shoes with high heels, sit up
all hours of the night eating trash
and playing bridge? Had our first
parents dono all these things, how
many of us would be hero to read
THE CITIZEN? When you como to
look at It squarely In the face, at tho
way mankind treats himself, we can
only wonder how any of us ever es
caped nnd are living to read this ar
ticle. Dear Reader, let us cut out
some of our foolishness this com
ing year.
SYRACUSE ALUMXl GATHERING.
Second Annual Banquet To Be Held
at St. Luke s Parish House,
Scrantou, December ISO.
The alumni of Syracuso University,
living In Northeastern Pennsylvania,
have received a circular letter In
forming them of tho annual banquet
of the Association to bo hold Decem
ber 30, in Scranton. Tho letter
reads as follows:
To Tho Syracuso Alumni of North
eastern Pennsylvania:
Greeting: Our second nnnual In
formal dinner and reunion will bo
held In the banquet hall of Saint
Luko s Parish House In Scranton,
Pennsylvania, on the evening of De
cember 30, 1910. Tho dinner will
ho served nt 0:30 o'clock, in order to
enable alumni living nt a dlstanco to
reach homo tho same ovenlng.
constitution for the Association
will bo submitted for ratification,
with tho recommendation that all
alumni present, together with thoso
who attended tho banquet last year,
bo enrolled ns charter members.
A goodly number of Syracuse
alumni livo in this vicinity, and
many of them are of tho opinion that
it is tlmo wo all became acquainted,
and, incidentally, reminded tho
young people hereabouts that Syra
cuso Unlvorslty has boon attracting
to its halls tho brightest student
minds from thoso parts for somo
tlmo past, and will continue to do so
In tho future. Wo owo this much to
our Alma Mater.
Your ofllcors havo provided a feast
for tho body and mind of ovory ono
of tho ono hundred or moro alumnus
nnd undorgradunteB living In North
eastern Pennsylvania, nnd for tho
husband and wifo who may wish to
onjoy tho ovenlng with us. Tho
cntoror has been instructed to fur
nish a substantial dinner, and at a
modornto prlco too.
Syracuso songs, cheers, colors nnd
spirit will ho tho order of tho even
ing, and plans nro under way to havo
a member of tho Unlvorslty faculty
bring us greetings and tho latest
words of cheer from our Alma Mater.
DAYTON ELLIS, '02.
Corresponding nnd Recording Seere
tary, Dunmoro, Pa.
AMUSEMENTS.
I-
Inn Robertson's Visit In a .Mystery
Hay.
Mr. Inn Robertson's visit to tho
ZnAay IS 28 ml
InAZ u'oo mosPnb?e
"torn now before the public either
T T i . .1 C . . I. .. t I
"i 1 ' 'V "lu
road being no less onthuslastlc
It Is seldom that tho personality
of nn actor Is so remarkably In hnr
mony with tho rolo ho is represent
ing as 13 that of Ian Robertson In
tho mysterious and Inspiring individ
uality of "tho Stranger" In "Tho
Passing of tho Third Floor Back."
lan Robertson docs not act the part
as others might hnve dono ho lives
It! Ho Is tho Pnsser-hy for tho
tlrno being. It Is that power of
conviction in all that ho does, added
to tho personal magnetism and gifts
denied many nnother actor, which
upuits tne piay no appears in to tne
level of a classic. Yet Mr. Jerome's
wonderful play Is neither melodrama
nor pure comedy. It could best be
described as a modern morality or
mystery play, like "Everyman," and,
through tho oloquent medium of
Ian Robertson, shows to nn extra
ordinary dogreo tho power of tho
stage and popularity of the actor.
There has often been a complaint
of tho comparatively few attempts
to treat tho middle classes with
becoming seriousness. Yet In "Tho
Passing of the Third Floor Back"
wo have a conspicuous instance to
the contrary of simple people of to
day being used as pawns on the
stage In the portrayal of real life.
To Inn Robertson, Actor and Preach
er (In "The Pussing of tho
Third Floor Hack.")
With hearts deep-stirred to nobler
aim and thought,
We saw thee pass In silence from
a sccno
Where patient love and simple faith
had wrought
To cleanse, and raise, and choor
with hope serene.
And thou has taught us In this touch
ing play
"Life is for service, not for sel
fishness," That we may sail around us every
day,
And know for our own selves, true
happiness.
By finding good In some dull sordid
heart,
By speaking hope to some dis
tracted soul,
Pointing the selfish to "the better
part,"
Tho slave of Fashion to a nobler
goal.
Long shall wo ponder on thy gentle
face
Tho sweet calm voice, tho words
of counsel given
And thank thee, "Stranger," for tho
tender grace
That raised us, for a moment,
near Heaven!
Ministrel Show Coining.
An occasional visit of a minstrel
show is a good thing for the theatre
goer. Wearied by a continuous
course of problem plays, lurid melo
dramas and musical comedies, the
stately presence and sparkling con
versation of the Interlocutor appeals
restfully to him, while the familiar
quips of tho end men are hailed as
old friends returning from a long
journey, and it is all very lovely.
This statement is especially true of
as good a minstrel show as John
W. Vogel's Big City Minstrels are
presenting, which comes to the Lyric
Friday, Dec. 30. This is a first-class
company.
Catarrh Will Go
Relief Comes in Two Minutes,
Complete Cure in Few
Weeks.
Don't go on hawking yourself sick
every morning; It's cruel, It's harm
ful and It's unnecessary.
If after breathing HYOME1, tho
wonder-worker, you aro not rid of
vile catarrh, you can have your
money bnek.
No stomach dosing just tako tho
little hard rubber pocket Inhaler that
comes with each outfit, and pour in
to It a few drops of HYO.MEI.
Brcatho It according to directions,
in two minutes it will relievo you of
that stuffed up feeling. Use It a
few minutes every day, and in a few
weeks you will be entirely freo' from
catarrh.
Breathing HYOMEI Is a very pleas
ant nnd certain way to cure catarrh.
Got an outfit to-day; It only costs
fl.OO; it's worth ? 1,000 to any ca
tarrh sufferer. For sale by drug
gists everywhere and by G. W. Pell
who guarantees it to cure catarrh,
croup, coughs, colds, soro throat and
bronchitis. After you ouco own a
Hyomol hard rubbor inhaler which
comes with tho outfit, you can buy
an extrn bottlo HYOMEI liquid from
G. W. Peil for only 50 conts; tho in
haler lasts a Ufa time.
ENdUSlI PLOn BLUE CHINA WARE
Diuitr wt, lort-flte pieces, oomprlilnKi
6 Dinner PliM 1 VecetibU Mh
5 Oupi 6 llultir l'UU.
6 Derrjr DWif. 1 Urge Berry Uowl
1 H-lnch ilout PUtter 0 burt
e Tea HUtei e &up I'litee
Guaranteed perfect and l repTeMntxl or
mane refunded without queitlon. Direct
from factory at ebrlnf, Ohio, to you at
coat price, 15.00.
Beautifully decorated old wreath deiltn.
Decoratlona will always hold color and will
not wear oil. SEND MONEY OltUKH.
THE ritENCM CHINA CO..
ti Weit Droadway, New York City
Reference Dunn or Drmdttreet'i or any
bank in Sebrimi, Ohio.
tin rnllnt) nn
COLD WEATHER "DOX'TS.
Humane Society of Tioga County Ap
peals fo Horsemen "Advlco
Good As Gold in near Old
Wayne."
Twenty cold weather "don'ts" for
drivers nnd owners of horses are
presented for genornl attontlon.
Thoy are taken from tho Wollshoro
Agltntor and nro as follows:
"Don't use cold bits in cold woath
or. Your horao'B tongue is tondor
nnd his mouth la formed of dollcnte
glands nnd tlssuos.
"Don't clip your horse when the
mercury Is nt tho freezing point.
"Don't fail to blanket your horse
when ho stnnds in the cold.
'Don't forget that nasal catarrh,
diphtheria, bronchitis and other Ills
often result from exposure and the
chill which follows suddenly checked
perspiration.
"Don't fnll to keep your horse's
shoes sharp when the streets are
slippery.
"Don't put your horse's feet In un
skilled hands. Good feet nrc spoil
ed by bad shoeing.
"Don't keep your horso In an over
heated stable, then stand him for
hourB In a freezing atmosphere, and
wonder why ho becomes paralyzed.
"Don't fall to water your horse
tho first thing In tho morning, but
not with Ice water.
"Don't load your horse too heav
ily when the streets nnd roads are
blocked with snow.
"Don't force him to hack a heavy
load ovor a heavy snow bank. A
shovel, with a little energy, will
mako It easier for your horse and
your conscience.
"Don't try to convince your horse
that ho Is on skates when his feet
strike the slippery asphalt. Go
slow, my son.
"Don't fall to oil your wagon
axles. There is a heap of humanity
in wagon greaso.
"Don't fail to properly shelter
your stock from the cold, and exer
cise them when tho weather Is good.
"Don't fall to have your horse's
teeth examined. Of what use is food
if your horso can't eat it?
"Don't dock your horse's tail. He
needs it In winter as well as In sum
mer, and it was put there by a Mas
ter Hand.
"Don't overcheck your horse. Na
ture's curves are always graceful.
I ESTABLISHED 1890
THE OLDEST BANK IN WAYNE COUNTY
-THE
HONESDALE (RATIONAL
CAPITAL, $ 150,000.00
SURPLUS 241,711.00
TOTAL ASSETS 1,902,000.00
WE ARE AFTRR YOU !
You have moro or less hanking business. Pnssiblv iT
is with us, such being the caso you know something of om
service, but if not a patron would it not be well for you to
become ono ?
OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
will help you start. It is calculated to serve all clashes, the
old and the young, the rich and the poor,
i MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN
t 3T RECEIVES DEPOSITS OF $1.00 A55D UP
T and allows three per cent, intenst annually. Interest will be paid (p-ir
X the first of any month on all deposits made on or before the 10th of the
month provided such deposits remain three'calendar months or Umgi-r
HENRY '.. KUSSKLI.
rllKSWENT.
ANDREW THOMPSON
VICE I'liESIDEXT.
THE
II'' an h flltfl sc. lr om swift ax
1 i w ni!"""
V7lrt JOr.N '.'OuLL'i t-'lC C!T" MINblf.e'-S
"Don't forgot that there Is moro
profit In coaxing a horso than In
kicking him. Try gentleness nnd
see how It grows on you.
"Don't wult till your horso Is
dead, or nearly so, before you send
for a doctor or an ambulance.
"Don't kill your horso trying to
get him out of a hole before you
send Tor the derrick.
"Don't send anonymous com
plaints. 'A Lover of Animals,'
'Frlond of Humanity,' nnd other fa
miliar writers, belle their titles whon
thoy fall to send their address. Bo
mnnly and don't hesitate to appear
when you are needed for tho bucc ces
tui Investigation or prosecution of a
case. Don't, by your seeming cow
ardlce, consign your complaint to tho
waste basket."
A complaint was recently made ol
a brutal driver In tho northern part
of this county who cruelly beat hla
horso over the head with a neck
yoke; but the complainant refused
to testify against tho man for fear
he would revengo himself In some
way. All such cases should bo
brought speedily to Justice.
HUGH YOUNG,
Pres't Humane Society of Tioga
County, Wellsboro, Pa.
-A good play at Lyric tomorrow.
We want all the news.
REWARE OF OINTMENTS FOR CA
TARRH THAT CONTAIN MER
CURY, as mercury will surely destroy tho
sense of smell and completely de
range the whole system when enter
ing It through tho mucous surfaces,
except on prescriptions from reput
able physicians, as the damage they
will do is ten fold to tho good you
can possibly derive from them Hall's
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., contains no
mercury, and :s taken internally,
acting dirootly upon tho blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. In
buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure
you get the genuine. It Is taken In
ternally and made In Toledo, Ohio,
by F. J. Cheney &. Co. Testimonials
freo.
Sold by Druggists. Price 75c. per
bottle.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con
stipation. 4-
EDWIN K.TOUIlfrA
CAS1I1H!
ALRKKT O. LINPSA
Attl'TANTCASlIiJB
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