TOE CITIZEN", WEDNESDAY, JANUAIIY 11, 1011. FASHION HAS BECOME AN ART. Should Be Taught at the Beaux Art, Spanish Author Thinks. An observant Spaniard In Paris, Bcnor Gomez Carlllo, has written a book on women's clothes, the ma terials, colors and styles they select and tho shape of their hats. So great a hold has the subject taken upon him that he has conceived an Idea which may appeal to many women. He suggests that as fashion has be come an art a chair of feminine ele gance should be established at the Ecolos des Beaux Arts. It Is not enough for women to be seen in the latest modes at the Grand Prix, at flower fetes, at art exhibitions and at first nights at tho theatres. TLey , are certainly observed at these func tions, but they do not exactly reign supreme. What this Spanish student of wom en's ways would like is a fashion fair, an exhibition devoted entirely to chif fons, In a large hall where fashion able women could go and frankly study one another's latest gowns and hats, coiffures and figures. It is said that many fashlonablo dressmakers In Paris are charmed with Senor Carrillo's Ideas and would bo glad to further them If possible. Be Cheerful and Avoid Cholera. A cheerful disposition is held by some doctors to be the best protec tion against cholera. When this dis ease first visited Paris In 1832 a no tice was issued advising tho Inhabi tants "to avoid as far as possible all occasions of melancholy and all pain ful emotions and to seek plenty of dis tractions and amusements. Those with a bright and happy temperament are not likely to be stricken down." This advice was largely followed and even when cholera was claiming over a thousand weekly victims the theatres and cafes were thronged. The epidemic was In somo quarters treated as a huge Joke and plays and songs wero written around it. Roche forte, the father of the brilliant Jour nalist of to-day, wroto a play, "Lo Cholera Morbus," which proved a big success, and another production on the same lines, "Parismalade," also had a long run. London Chronicle. Aged Hunter Saved by His Dog. Ebenezer Ramsey, 82 years old, killed three bears near his home in Long Valley on the line between El Dorado and Placer counties recently, but escaped possible death from ono of them by the Interference of his dog. Ramsey's dog treed a large bear and her two cubs, and Ramsey, with an ancient single shot rifle went to in vestigate. Seeing tho bears, he shot all there, but the mother bear was not killed, and on falling to the ground she took after Ramsey before he could reload his rifle. His dog, however, pounced upon the infuriated animal and kept it busy un til Ramsey secured an ax. with which he killed the brute. Ho says it was the most exciting hunt he ever had. San Francisco Chronicle. SQUAW'S LONG VIGIL. Watched Three Days Without Pood or Water Over Dead Brave. To remain for three days and two nights on tho desert keeping weird vigil beside her dead was the pathetic lot of Ulalla Boniface, whose bravo was accidentally killed by the dis charge of a shotgun. The accident oc curred far out on the desert. Miners, attracted by the Bquaw's walling, found her standing beside the body, her two small children asleep near by. A long' rido was made to the near est telephone point and Coroner C. D. Van Wie notified. The long, rough ride over the mountains and desert occupied three days and nights. At some stages it required three hours to cover a mile, so Bteep were the grades or bo deep the desert Bands. Long before he arrived in eight of the corpse the squaw's walling as she chanted tho dirges of the Piute were heard. In the gray of the morning the Coroner reached the body. The sight of the woman standing erect at the foot of her dead brave, her black hair flying in the breeze, presented a dolorous picture, heightened by the chant of the dirge. The squaw had broken all the brave's crockery against a tree, had flattened out his spoons and forks and other utensils on the rocks and had staked the two horses near the hody, preparing to slay them over his grave. During the long vigil the wom an had taken nourishment of no kind and would only eat after the body had been burled in the ground. San Ber nardino correspondence Los Angeles Times. Ancient Pearls. As long ago as the thirteenth -tury a Chinese named Ye-jlng-dlscovered a method of inducln:, formation of pearls in tho Ch River mussels. The mussels j gently opened and small pellets . ually of clay, inserted. Tho English Treadmill. The custom of using couvlc f rt treadmllis is still practical r some English prisons. Tho spci' s about thirty steps a minute, ai.d ,f a man misses a step a cross u.r. strikes the calves of his legs. At one thousand fathoms bn o,v tho level of the ocean there if a u;il frm temperature Just above fieoz Ing point. t There are silver ingots In the Dank of England which have Iain there for more than 200 years THE LAND OF PUZZLEDOM. No. 1178. Charade. I. Best of companions my first is found. Go where you will tho earth around; To my second no such praise can fall. There's no ono can say ho likes It at nil. Too much of my first, and my whole you'll be, A useless man you will often see. II. From one and two a mighty sound In contact with tho last Is found; My first alono Is a word of power; My third Is useful every hour. Who comes to my whole has reached great glory. Ills work shall live in song and story. III. My first tho poor printer regrets, not tho boy; My second expresses a mild kind of Joy. My whole as collector wins surely his way, For the old adage says those who dance must him pay. Youth's Companion. No. 1179. Transposition. Young Thomas O'Donncl McNally Played hooky to ONE In the alley. When his father was through With tho old razor TWO foung Tom was the ONE of the valley. No. 1180. Anagram. A young fellow from one of tho up state towns had been to New York for a week's visit and upon his return home had many tales to tell of the wonderful sights of the big city. When excited -he was inclined to stammer and in referring to his visit to one of the sections of the metropolis that had particularly interested him exclaimed, "W-what gaiety there!" No. 1181. Enigma. They stalk about the sandy hills Or wade .through watery bogs, Presenting long and pressing bills To startled snakes and frogs. They lift, like Atlas In his day; They stand on steamer docks To hoist and bear uponthelr way Great bales and ponderous blocks. Close to the chimney nook they clung. Those friends of early days That reached out sturdy arms and swung The kettles o'er the blaze. No. 1182. Dinner Rebus. 3 -1 OOOO 7 OOOO Things seeu on the New Year's table. No. 1183. Fractional Enigma. To one-fourth of rush add Just as much hush, One-third of a bat and one-third of a mat. Then one-fifth of clock and one-fourth of rock, With one-fourth of rule and as much of mule. The whole Is a man on discovery bent, Who started out with royal consent. No. 1184. Homonym. " ! No other eyes Can match her eyes' dark splendor!" He gazed upon her pictured face And spoke In accents tender. Within th farmhouBe dairy stood This maid of rank and fashion. "How she exclaimed In tones of equal passion. No. 1185. Beheadings. Behead keen edged and leave a mu sical instrument Behead n popular card game and leave an exclamation. Behead animal flesh and leave to de vour. Behead a quick motion of the eyelid and leave a writing fluid. No. 1186 Diamond. My first is a consonant. My second is a limb of tho human body. My third is tho rich part of the milk. My fourth Is n grown boy. My fifth Is a letter. Key to Puzzledom. No. 1100. Beheadlncs and Curtail- Ings; B-oar-d, p-ape-r, s-lioe-s, c-and-y. No. 1170. Charade: Air. row. nlain aeroplane. No. 1171. Transnositlonsr March. charm; hated, death; pears, spear; stale, tales. No. 1172. Hidden Countries? Rlnm. Denmark. Cuba, finrmnnv. NnrtraT. Madagascar, Canada, Arabia, Japan, ureemanu, uuina, Philippines, Spain. o. 1173. puzzle Picture: Santa Clau3. No. 117-1. nomonvm; Ann drivnr. Ann Drew, Andrew, and drew. No, 1175, Cry ntocram: Bv phnnMnn- tho spacing of tho inscription you find "Ueniua is akin to madness." No. 1170. Charade: Saw, buzz; buzz- saw. No. 1177. Hidden Dalrv PrvliW. Egg, cream, butter, milk. PIGEON FLIES WITH TRAIN. Bird Has Been Making Regular Trips Along Arkansas Railway. Tho pigeon that for a month or more had been running with the Iron Mountain crews between Malvern and Arkadelphla, extended its runs to make tho trip from Walco to Gurdon, a distance of thirty-four miles. A brakeman who made the trip over tho division one week reported at the Union Station that the pigeon made the down trip with his train, Joining the crew at Walco and leaving them at Gurdon, which was the furth est point south It had been known to go previously. For four or five weeks this pigeon had been flying along with the Iron Mountain trains. Some of the train men regarded it as a hoodoo and feared that Its presence portended some disaster to them, but no acci dent happened to a crew whllo tho bird was ulong. Others look upon the pigeon as a pet and are always glad to have it Join them on a trip. The trainmen say that the bird al most always flies Just ahead of the engine about on a level with the headlight On the last trip Engineer Golloher', who was In the cab, tried to overtake it, but it was no use the pigeon always stayed Just ahead. On this trip when the train stopped at Arkadelphla for water the bird flew out to one side and rested In a treo until tho fireman rang his bell for the start, when It resumed lt3 place Just In front of tho headlight, flying at a suitable speed to remain about the same distance ahead, whether tho train was going slow or fast Champion In Ploughing Contests. Twenty-six prizes In twenty-seven years in ploughing at the annual matches of the Wheatland and llg Rock ploughing associations is the re markable record of William Fair weather, who recently was given the gold medal and championship held out to ploughers in the post-graduate class. In four years Falrweather took three of the same class of prizes. In a period of twenty-seven years there was only one year in which he had nothing to show for his effort, and of all the other prizes won by him only one was of less value than sec ond. In one Instance only he was given third. Of the firsts and seconds the majority are of the first order. This ploughman gives most of the credit for his unusual success to his father, who he says taught him the first lessons in correct soil tilling. He was required to carry a chain and weed cutter so that the trash of his lands was properly covered. Chicago Tribune. Girl Helps Fight Fire! An interesting and unusual incident took place at the Hurstplerpolnt Vol unteer Fire Brigado's annual competi tion, held on the recreation ground the presentation of a sliver rose vaso by the brigade to Miss D. Laurence Smith, in recognition of the valuable assistance she gave the fire brigado with whom she worked twelve hours continuously at a farm fire at Black stone. Capt. Pearsey, in command of the brigade, asked Mrs. Borrer, whp dis tributed the prizes after the competi tion, to make the presentation on be half of himself and his men. Miss Laurence-Smith acknowledged tho gift in a few words, and hearty cheers were given. Lady's Pictorial. Where Moll Pitcher Was Born. The historic "Old Brig," the house in Marblehead where Moll Pitcher was born, has been bought as a sum mer home by a veteran railroad con ductor. It is comforting to learn that the old house will not be modernized to the extent of destroying its picturesque appearance. There are sixteen rooms, eight on each floor, very low studded but very large. The house stands on a steep hill and commands a beautiful view of the north shore and Massachusetts Bay. Boston Herald. Increase In Coal Briquets. Only fifty years ago the dust of coal was considered to be entirely useless, but since then a great change has taken place and at present In Rhen ish Westphalia the Ruhr coal district alone produces 3,000,000 tons of bri quets each year. Up to the present time coal tar pitch has been used for making coal briquets, and its produc tion in the past ten years has in creased about 100 per cent. Consular Reports. New York's Changes. New York city has had more changes in its architecture, in the same length of time, than any other of the large cities of the world. Nearly all of the European cities have hun dreds of buildings that have been standing for centuries, while New York has not a score more than a hundred years old. A Fishing Hint. A stingy angler was fishing on a Scottish loch on a pouring wet day. He had been consoling himself from his flask and forgetting his gillie. Presently ho asked the gillie if there was a dry place in the boat on which to strlko a match. "You might try my throat" said tho gillie. "It's dry enough." Fishing Gazette. Why the Juggler Interested Him. "So you enjoyed the circus?" asked his friend. "Yes, I was particularly interested in the Juggler," he replied. "Ill bet that man could get any number of bundles from a bus to the train, with out dropping one of them." London Globe. THE WILY THREE. Mark Twain Tells How They Knowed the Road and Dressed for It. Mark Twain was a firm believer In the national movement for good roads, and had many a tale to tell about the Incredibly bad roads of some sections. A Hartford man recalled the other day this experience of the famous humorist's: "I once had thirty miles" so Mark Twain began "to go by stage in Mis sissippi. Tho roads were terrible, for it was early spring. The passengers consisted of five men and three wom en three large, well developed wom en, swathed In shawls and veils, who kept to themselves, talking in low tones on the rear seat "Well, we hadn't gone a mile be fore the stage got stuck two feet deep in the black mud. Down Jumped every man of us, and for ten minutes we tugged and Jerked and pulled till we got the stage out of the hole. "We had hardly got our breath back when the stage got stuck again, and again we had to strain our very hearts out to release her. "In covering fifteen miles we got stuck eight times, and In going tho whole thirty we lifted that old stage out of tho mud seventeen times by actual count. "Wo five male passengers were wet, tired and filthy when we reached our destination, and so you can Imagine our feelings when we saw the three women passengers remove, as they dismounted, their veils, their shawls nnd their skirts, and, lo and behold they were three big, hearty, robust men. "As we stared at them with bulging and ferocious eyes, one of them said: " 'Thanks for your labor, gents. Vo knowed this road and prepared for it Will you licker?" "Washington Star. How to Develop Manchuria. Manchuria needs railways, capital and far-sighted managing ability to organize these things, and who may prophesy the development of this country? Will it fill up with the over flow of Chinese from the Southern provinces and gradually develop tho social and economic customs of the thickly settled districts of South China, or will it absorb Western ideas and have a portion of its people pro duce food for local consumption and for export, while another portion de velop the mines, man tho railways and prepare the surplus products for exports? It is a long way from South China to Manchuria, and the travel is not easy, nor is the northern lati tude agreeable to the man accustom ed to the heat of the South, Surely Manchuria is the ideal exepriment ground of all Asia for tho testing of Western methods of economic pro gress on Eastern people. If tho "so of Western agricultural machinery, mining and lumbering methods and transportation methods fail, here they will certainly fail In other Eastern regions. Edward C. Parker, in the American Review of Reviews. Dyeing Cloth by Electricity. Among the tasks imposed in recent years upon that busy servant of man, electricity, is the acting as an assist ant in the operation of dyeing. When cloth soaked in aniline, sul phate Is placed between two metal plates connected with the oposite ends of the dynamo and the electric cur rent is passed through it the sulphate Is converted into aniline black. By al ternating the strength of the solution and of the current shades varying from green to pure black can be ob tained. In the case of indigo, the cloth is impregnated with a paste of ind'go blue and caustic alkali. The electric cu-rent converts th6 insoluble indigo blue, by reduction of oxygen, into in digo white, which is soluble, and on being exposed to the air becomes oxid ized once more and turns blue, thus thoroughly dyeing tho cloth with that color. Harper's Weekly. A New Iron Industry. A recent report issued by the de partment of mines, Canada, draws at tention to the possibilities of estab lishing a local iron industry on the coast of British Columbia. At present tho cost of transportation of manufac tured iron from Great Britain and elsewhere is very heavy, and for some time past the question of local pro duction has been oftn discussed. Tho report referred to states that although the quantity of ore in sight can not be set down, good material, consisting largely of magnetites, is certainly available. The estimated cost of pro ducing a ton of iron is given as $16. and tho approximate cost at present of Eglinton No. 1 delivered at the works, Victoria, as $24 to $28 a ton. No Soft Bed for Him. There Is an immensely rich met: New York who never slept on a or eiderdown, goose feathers, u ha'r or excelsior. When a boy slept on a pallet of straw. Whr young man his bed was an old-,: lonrd shuck mattress in the ma', of which he as'slsted to the er cf sorting the shucks. In the ar (l.S61-'6B) he was glad to sleeti the ground. Later, as a civil " nt -r, he repoBed on a puncheon: rnw. rolling In wealth, goes to rwry night on a trundle bed wi W bought from his aged "n't mr.mmy." This affair is not n fourteen Inches high, and Is enr' up with half-inch hemp. Them no mattress, and of course thcr "o springs. A rag quilt covers 1 . 't cs. another covers his body a vjb. His health is superb. voik Press, COURT PROCLAMATION. Whereas, the Judge of tho several Courts of tho County or Wayne has Issued his precept for holding a Court of Quarter Sessions, Oyer and Terminer, and General Jail Delivery In ntul for said County, at the Court House, to egm on MONDAY. JAN. IG. 1911. ana to continue two weeks ; And directing that a Ornnd .Tllrv fnr thn Courts of Quarter Sessions and Oyer and Terminer he summoned to meet nn Mnnrtnv. Jun. 9,1911, at 2 p.m. ioucc is mereiorc nercDy given lo mo Coroner and Justices ot the Peace, nnd Con stables or tno County or Wayne, that tliey be then and there In their proper persons, at said Court House, at 2 o'clock In the ntter noonof said Otli day of Jan. 1911. with their records, lunulsltlons.oxamiimtlons ami other remembrances, to do those things which to their oillccs appertain to be done, and those who are bound by recognizance or otherwise to prosecute the prisoners who arc or shall belli the Jail of Wayne County, bo then and there to prosecute against them as ehull be Just. Given under my hand, at llonesdale, this 15th day of Dec. 1910, and in the 131th year of the Independence ot the United States M. LEE lHlAMAX. Sheriff. Sheriff's Olllee 1 llonesdale. Deo. 15. 1910. f 101w4 T RIAL LIS T Wayne Common Pleas, Jan. Term, 1911. Week beginning Jan. 1C, 1911. 1. Olszefski v. Taylor. 2. Hawker v. Poppenhelmer. 3. Keltz v. County of Wayne. 4. Barnes v. Miller. 5. Gray v. Herbeck-Demer Co. 0. Whitney v. Ridgway. -. Gromwell v. Cortrlght & Son. S. Fives v. Auto Transportation Company. 9. Cole v. Cole; adm'x. M. J. HANLAN, Prothonotary. APPRAISEMENTS. Notice is giv en that appraisement of $300 to the widows of the following nam ed decedents have been filed in the Orphans' Court of Wayne county, and will be presented for approval on Monday, January 1G, 1911, viz: $300 to widow of Chas. J. Weav er, Honesdale, personal property. $300 to widow of II. B. Searles, llonesdale, personal property. $300 to widow of Thomas Neville, Sterling, personal property. $300 to widow of Nicholas Smith, real. $300 to widow of O. L. Rowland, llonesdale, personal. $300 to widow of James L. Taylor, Lebanon, personal. M. J. HANLAN, Clerk. REGISTER'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the accountants herein named have settled their respective accounts In the ollico or the Kegister of Wills ui n uj ne uuniy, i n., uuu wmi. me same will be presented tit the Orphans' Court of said pnmitv fnr nnnllrinnHnii n Hin I n rf llmicn In llonesdale, on the third Monday of Jan. next viz: 1. First and final account of Isa bel E. Calkin, administratrix of the estate of Roy O. Calkin, Damascus. 2. First and final account of Otis A. Reynolds, administrator of Sidney v. iteynoius, llonesdale. 3. First and final account nf AT. n Abbey and Manaton R. Abbey, execu tors oi tne estate oi uaipn a, Abbey, Salem. 4. First and final fierniint nf 7 A Wonnacott and Ira Dryer, executors oi tne estate ot David Wonnacott Promnton. 5. First and final account of Mary Dassell, administratrix of tho estate oi wniiam uasseil, Honesdale. 6. First and final account of Jas Buchanan, administrator of W. M Buchanan, Preston. 7. First and final account of May uene nuason, executrix or the estate ot wniiam ti. Prosser, Damascus. 8. First and final nwnnni nf ai len W. Brown, administrator of the estate ot A. w. Brown, Starrucca. 9. Second and final account of H C. Hand, deceased, by H. S. Hand administrator C. T. A. D. B. N. trus tee of the estate of William Doughty deceased, for Anna at. Rlrlrori 10. First and final account of Alsun V. Tyler, executor of the estate of R. Alice Vail, Damascus. Register's office, Honesdale, Dec 21, 1910. E. W. GAMMELL. Register. SHERIFF'S SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE.-By virtue of process loauuu out oi tne uourt or common Pleas of Wayne county, and State of Pennsylvania, and to me directed and delivered. I Imvo wied nn nnt will expose to public sale, at the uourt House in Honesdale, on FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 1011, 2 P. M. All those two parcels of land, sit uate in Mount Pleasant township Wayne county, Pennsylvania. The first: Beeinnlner nt tho cnntVi. easterly corner of lot of land in the iiussussiun oi xnomas jueagner, Jr. at a nnlnt In thn mlflrlln nf ooM nn,i running thence by the said Meagher "iiiu norm eigniy-iour uegrees west two hundred twenty-eight rods to a corner; thence south six degrees west seventy rods to a corner; thence soutn eignty-iour degrees east two hundred twenty-eight rods to the middle of said road; thence along the middle of said road to place of beginning, containing 100 acres more or less. Excepting and reserving from above described lot about two and one-fourth acres as reserved in deed aateu Aug. 5, 1904, from C. F Wright et al. to Marian R. Huga boom, also excepting 285 perches of land which Marian R. Hugaboom et al. by deed dated Sept. 2, 1904. re corded in Wayne county in Deed hook d, page 24, granted to Morris Meagher. Tho second lot: Beginning at the southwest corner in center of the Belmont nnd Oquaga Turnpike road, and the south line of land of James Dalplien; thence north eighty-two degrees east ono hundred forty-nine and five-tenths rods to the middle of west branch of Lackawaxen creek; thence Southward alnner rnntnp nf said creek sixty-flve and twn-tenth rods to corner of land of Oscar Bates; thence south eighty-two de grees West by said linn nf TlntPH tn a corner in the center of said turn- piKe roaa; thence north along said Turnpike road sixty-five and two tenths mrlfl tn nlnpn nf hatrlnnlniv containing 60 acres, more or less. Being same lot which Oscar Bates sold to Marian R. Hugaboom on land cuuiruci uuiea NOV. e, 1801, ThB first Int In Imlmnrnirnn1 anil Yia second lot is Improved with a frame house and barn, and a portion of land Is cultivated. Seized nnd taken in execution as tho property of Marian Hugaboom and II. C. Noble, M. D at the suit of Wayne County Savings Bank. No. 11, March Term, 1908. Judgment, $400. Kimble, Attorney. ALSO All that certain piece or parcel of land, situate in the township of Scott, county of Wayne, and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a pine stump on the bank of the west branch of tho Dela ware River and running south seven three degrees east twenty rods to a to a stake; thence south seventy- three degrees east twentyrods to a stake on the river road; thence south one and one-half degrees east fifty- two rods to a stake in the creek road; thence1 south twenty-five de grees west thirty-four rods to a stones corner; thence south seventy- three and one-half degrees west fourteen rods to a stake; thence south eighty-three and one-half de grees west twelve rods; thence south seventy-five degrees west, fourteen rods to. a stake; thence south seven teen degrees west fifty rods to a hemlock tree; thenco south eighty- seven degrees east thirty rods to a stones corner; thence north seventy degrees east forty rods to a stones corner; thence north fourteen and three-fourth degrees west forty-six rods to a stones by tho creek; thence north sixty-one degrees east fifty-one rods down tho creek to a stake; thence north sixteen degrees east twenty-nine rods to a stake down the creek; thence north two degrees east forty-six rods to a stake; thence north fifty-six degrees east eight rods to a stake; thence north twenty-five and three-fourth degrees east ten rods to a stake; thence north forty-three degrees west, sixteen rods to a stake; thence south eighty degrees west, thirty-five rods to a stake and thence north eighty-five degrees west twenty rods to the place of beginning; containing forty-six acres of land more or less. Being the same land that Marvin Wheeler conveyed to Rebecca G. More by deed recorded in D. B. No. 41, page 398. Also part of Lot No. 10 upon which Rebecca More now lives, containing 106 acres, excepting one-half acres fenced for burying ground and about one-half acres sold D. L. Demoney. Said lot being situ ate in Buckingham township. Also excepting ten acres sold to the Ball's Eddy Chemical Company. The land Intended to be conveyed being same which is described in deed from Wm. H. Stone, adm'r of Rebecca G. More to Clair E. More, D. B. 85, page 94. Upon said land is a frame house, two barns and over one hundred acres of the land is im proved. Seized and taken in execution as the property of Clair E. More, at the suit of Leander Howard assigned to C. V. More to the use of Edwin N. i'lumenfelt. No. 95, October Term, 1910. Judgment, $945. Kimble, Attorney. TAKE NOTICE All bids and costs must be paid on day of sale or deeds will not be acknowledged. M. LEE BRAMAN, Sheriff. Honesdale, Pa., Dec. 1C, 1910. IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF WAYNE COUNTY, STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. NO. TERM, 1910. In re petition of Louis W. Healy Tor satisfaction of mortgage A petition of the above number and term has been presented to said Court praying that a mortgage given by James M. Porter and Wil liam Shouse to Charles Pemberton Fox dated Oct. 28, 1840, for the payment of $5500.00, recorded in Wayne County in Mortgage Book 4, page 40, and against certain lands in the Counties of Pike and Wayne as described In said mortgage, be satis fled of record because It is legally presumed to have been paid. All persons interested are notified to appear in said Court Monday, Janu ary 16, 1911, at 9 o'clock a. m. and show cause why said mortgage shall not bo satisfied of record and the lien thereof discharged. M. LEE BRAMAN, Sheriff. Laurence H. Watres, Attorney. 602 Connell Building, Scranton, Pa. 99eoi4 IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF WAYNE COUNTY, STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. NO. TERM, 1910. In re petition of Louis W. Healy for satisfaction of mortgage. A petition of the above number and term has been presented to said Court praying that a mortgage given by John Shouse, Henry W. Shouse, and Francis T. Shouse to William Shouse dated December 2, 1854, for the payment of $15,000.00, recorded in Wayne County in Mort gage Book 5, page 215, etc., and against certain lands In the Coun ties of Pike and Wayne as described in said mortgage, be satisfied of rec ord because it is legally presumed to have been paid. All persons in terested are notified to appear in said Court Monday, January 16, 1911, at 9 o'clock a. m. and show cause why said mortgage shall not be satisfied of record and tho lien thereof discharged. M. LEE BRAMAN, Sheriff. Laurence II. Watres, Attorney. 602 Connell Building, Scranton, Pa. 99eol4 M. LEE BRAMAN EVERYTHING IN LIVERY Buss for Every Train and Town Calls. Horses always for sale Boarding and Accomodations for Farmers Prompt and polite attention at all times. ALLEN HOUSE BARK 4
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers