The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, March 29, 1911, Image 4

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    TUjsi OITMKN, WEDNESDAY, 3IAKCH 20, 1011.
THE CITIZEN"
Henil-Wcckly Founded 11)08; Weekly Founded 1811.
PUBLISHED WEDNESDAYS AMD FltlnAYBUT TUB C1T17.KN PUULISIimQCO.
KniPTfd ns second-class mntter. nt tho pnstnlllce. Honesdale. Pa.
Yet wo question, In splto of the more rigid laws
enforced after each successive calamity has brought a
conscience-stricken community to a realization that
PEOPLE'S FORUM
K. H. JlAKDKNHHWill.
n. H. WITIIKIUIKE.
J. M.SJIEl.TZKH
l'KKSIDKNT
MANAC1ING EDITOR
ASSOCIATE KD1TOK
DIUECIOItB:
O. II. liORFLINflKn, Mi B. ALLKN, II. WILSON, K. B. IIABDEtlBKBOlI. W. W. WOOD
Our friends who favor us with contributions, and desire to
have the same returned, should in every case enclose statu)
for that purpose.
TKUMS:
ONK YEAH, - $1.50 THKKE MONTHS, - 38c.
8IX MONTHS, - .75 - ONE MONTH, - 130.
Remit by Express Money Order. Draft. Post Otllrc Order or Iteg
islcred letter. Address nil communications to lhc Citizen. No.
WU Main street, Honesdalc. Pn. '
All notices of shows, or other entertainments held lor the purpose
of ranking money or any items that contain advertising matter will
ni.. i.n . fi.in ..fi.uip i.ti nnvitirn iif roirnlar advertising
rates. Notice of entertainments for the benefit ot churches or for
charitable purposes where a fee is charged, will be published, nt half
rates. Curds of thanks, memorial poetry and resolutions of respect
will also be cliargeil lorai me raieoi u cem u uuru.
The policy of the The Citizen is to print the local
uctcs in an interesting manner, to summarise the news of the
world at large, to tight (or the right as this paper sees the
right, without fear or favor to the end that it may serve thebest
interests of its readers and the welfare of the county.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH HO, 1011.
TUB XHW YORK CALAMITY.
The pitying gn.o of the entire country Is turned
from time to time to that section of the country which
has been visited by an appalling disaster or has been
overtaken by a terrible calnmlty. Sometimes It Is
towards the East, witness the Windsor lire and the
burning of tho Slocum; sometimes it Is towards the
West, witness the San Francisco Earthquake; some
times it is towards the South, witness the Galveston
Flood; sometimes it Is towards the North, witness tho
Iroquois Fire; wherever and whenever the disaster
may have occurred there and then do the other more
fortunate sections of the country turn their sorrow
ful glances.
Quite recently the East has had a series of horri
ble accidents. First there was the Newark fire but a
few months ago with Its death list of forty odd wom
en and girls. Following close upon this came the ex
plosion of the Power House of the New York Central
Railroad with another long list of dead and Injured.
Hardly had the reverberations of this explosion died
away when the lower end of 'Manhattan was shaken
to its depths by the dynamite explosion at Communi
paw and this also carried in its train the loss of hu
man life.
To-day the gaze of the country is again turned
to the East where New York holds out to view the
worst factory fire that has ever been known with
the hardly believable death list of over one hundred
and forty men, women and children.
At 4:35 o'clock Saturday afternoon lire broke out
in the rear of tho eighth floor of the ten-story build
ing nt tho northwest corner of Washington Place
and Greene street. The source of this fire will prob
ably never be fully discovered. This lloor and the
two above it were occupied as the factory of the Tri
angle Waist Company.
On these three floors there worked some thous
and men, women and children making waists. By tho
time the first alarm was sounded the wholo inside
was a flaming hell while from the street naught could
be seen at first but a thin smoke trickling upwards
from the Windows. It was not a spectacular Are.
There was hardly enough smoke to blacken tho sky
directly above the roof of tho building and the city
closed up Its Saturday afternoon's work, drew its pay
and went home never dreaming of the awful disaster
that was happening In Its very midst.
Scores and scores were hemmed in the narrow
aisles formed by tho machines and tho discovery of
their skeltonized bodies still bending over their work
showed tho horrible quickness but the not less horrible
painfulness of their death.
.More than one hundred jumped from the windows
to certain death and still others crashed through the
life nets spread in vain to save them. Still others
were, literally roasted to death and the bodies were
piled seven stories high in the elevator shaft.
The horror of it is not lessened by tho fact that
many were just ready to go home and in a few minutes
more all would have stopped for the day. Tho pay
envelopes had been distributed and it was by these
that the identlllcation of many bodies was made.
Tho building was undoubtedly fireproof and it is
a curious fact that this very thing was responsible
in no slight degree for tho enormous loss of life; be
cause the flames having nothing on which to feed in
the walls and floors necessarily concentrated on all the
food they could find within. This food was the flimsy
linens, laces and rolls of silk that make up the spring
and summer shirtwaists. The result was a veritable
furnace, tho flames of which fought upwards, mush
roomed against the roof and then started back down
the walls. That is the explanation of tho Are Satur
day, and before a cloud of smoke leaked out to tell
the tale of the terrible calamity within, the flames had
swished through those three floors and killed and
killed and killed.
Now New York is endeavoring to llx the blame
for this terrible loss of human life. Tho District At
torney will undoubtedly probo; arrests will probably
be made; the Grand Jury will act, the investigation
will of course be thorough and complete.
There was, it seems, only one inside Are escape
for all. This led to a closed court. But the law of
New York does not require Are escapes on so-called
fire proof buildings that are loft buildings as this one
was.
It is also known that Just such a Are was pre
dicted and that In this very building an expert had
recommended the establishment of a Are drill quite re
cently. The Firo Department of Now York has been
demanding the placing of Are escapes on all sides of
factory buildings. Such a law will in all probability
be now enacted too late of course to save the lives
of those who perished Saturday but in time to have
Its beneficent effect on future disasters.
It Is easy to say that such and such a. thing ought
to be done In ordor to guard against a repltltlon of
this wicked loss of life. It Is also easy to say that a
very great and terrlblo blunder was. made by some
body and that this or that system Is to be blamed. All
ot these things aro said after every disaster of the
kind. They were said after tho burning of the Hotel
Windsor; they wore repeated after tho burning of tho
Slocum; they were reiterated after the burning of tho
Iroquois Theatre, and thoy will bo said and are being
said now, after tho burning of this factory which
shows on the outside barely enough evidence of black
ened walls to prove that tho Are really took place.
something must be done and a belated public opinion Edltor Tho citizen
has howled for tho punishment of one or two individ
uals, whether to-morrow or tho next day or next .week
or next month or next year anpther Slocum, another
Windsor or another Iroquois calamity will not take
place.
It is hard not to bo pessimistic after such calami
ties. Public opinion quickens and dies. Tho horror
of the thing vanishes raoro or less quickly. New laws
passed for tho pcoplo's protection are enforced for a
while and then gradually rolax as the memory of the
disaster out of which they grow becomes ever fainter,
until the same conditions come to exist again as woro
responsible for tho previous calamity.
New and more rigid laws woro passed regulating
the hotels after the Windsor burned; but will anyone
say that such another disaster cannot happen? Think
of the hotels you have been in SINCE the Windsor
Are and ask yourself if the most adequate protection
against Aro would have been yours had Aro broken
out? Wo venture to say It would not and that the
same loss of life would have taken place again be
cause tho MOST IllGID LAWS GOVERNING HOTELS
ARE NOT CONTINUALLY BEING ENACTED AND
ENFORCED.
New and more rigid laws regulating steamships
were nassed after the Slocum burned, but will anyone
say that such another disaster cannot happen? Recall
the boats on which you have traveled biwun. me &io
cum fire and ask yourself if the life preservers which
you would have clasped, had Are broken out, might
not have rotted away In your hands. We venture to
say that in some cases they would and the same loss of
life would have taken place again because the MOST
RIGID LAWS GOVERNING STEAM BOATS AKJii
NOT CONTINUALLY BEING ENACTED AND ENFORCED.
New and more rigid laws were passed regulating
the theatres after the Iroquois burned, but will anyone
say that such another disaster cannot happen? Bring
to mind the theatres you have entered biNUii. tne
iroauois Are and ask yourself If your chance at tne
exit doors would have been worth the toss of a coin
in the maddened rush for safety. We venture to say
it would not and that the same loss of life would have
taken place again because the MOST RIGID LAWS
GOVERNING THEATRES ARE NOT CONTINUALLY
BEING ENACTED AND ENFORCED.
Take the Newark Are, also a factory Are, scarcely
i r
three months ago. Did that nave any nouceauiu ui
fect on the laws governing Are escapes on factories in
New York? Not enough to act as a preventative in
last Saturday's Are.
What effect will this fire in New York nave on tne
laws of this state governing factories and Are escapes?
Will they be made more rigid? Will they be more
strictly enforced? We hope so. At nest, sucn calami
ties must come, we suppose, but their terriuie euecib
be lessened somewhat if the proper preventative
measures, as far as human skill and thought can make
them preventative, ARK CONTINUALLY ENACTED
AND ENFORCED.
Department then takes a sample for
nnalysls and also studies the entry
blank. A letter Is then written to I ,
each contestant, giving tho Judgo's
Bcoro and criticisms, the analysis i iye get a lot of fun out of this column.
EDITOR'S CORNER
We
PHILANTHROPY AS IS PHILANTHROPY.
iV millionaire of Scranton allowed his name to
. i . . t ne
be used by a stock company, a largo uumuui
small investors put their money in unit siuen. uum-
nnnv because of the reputation of that name. Now in
order to protect those small Investors who becamei In
vestors because of the magic name of that millionaire,
he has bought and cancelled a small fortune of the
bonds of that company. It must he aumutea uuit yuu
Is nn instance of an unusual, If not unprecedented, kind
of philanthropy, oven in an age when the genius, of
millionaires seems to have been turned from the mak
ing of money, though of course not until after they
ade sufficient unto their wants, to tne uiscovery
Tho value of a healthy tree moans
that tho oxygon It gives oft and
which one breathes is of a bettor
and purer quality than that given off
by a sickly tree, or one full of de
cayed and broken limbs.
Walk from nn open area Into ii
forest or a grovo of trees and soon
ono feels buoyant, breathes better
and' All the lungs. This is because
of tho fact that purer and cooler oxy
gen is being Inhaled than In the open.
By actual test It has been ascer
tained that the atmosphere about a
tree In summer time Is cooler by
twenty degrees than the surrounding
atmosphere. Tho giving off of mois
ture by tho leaves cools the air.
While on the other hand, a tree Is
warmer In winter by the same num
ber of degrees duo to the fact that
its branches equalize the temperature
about it.
While every tree possesses somo ot
these properties there Is an appre
ciable difference dependent upon
whether the tree Is In a healthy or
poor condition. Then again a tree
which is healthy Is in a better posi
tion to combat pests and disease than
Its neighbor which Is sickly and neg
lected. To sit or walk under a tree of
which care is taken, Is a greater de
light than to suffer the unslghtliness
and annoyance of caterpillars and
other pests, which make for their
harbor the trunks of diseased or
neglected trees.
A regard for the beauty and health
of trees means much to tho citizen
who seeks comfort and recreation
in their cooling shade at the end of
his day's work. It is equally impor
tant to the tired mother and child
who seek refuge in its shade from
the sweltering rooms of her home,
which no doubt Is treeless.
In this connection too much stress
cannot be laid upon the Importance
of being advised upon the selection
of trees and the manner of planting
them. Tho condition of our trees
to-day is due to tho very fact that
our forefathers' planted Indiscrimin
ately, and without regard for the
character of tree planted, or Its loca
tion. So that we how have trees
that are crowded, others unsulted
for the climate, and those that at
tract pests.
To remedy this condition and pre
serve the trees for tho comfort of
those who will come after us, neces
sitates the appointment of a shade
tree commission such as Is provided
for by the laws of this state. This
commission would engage or employ
a tree expert who would advise them
on the varieties of trees to be plant
ed and how to care for them. They
would also create ordinances pro
hibiting persons to prune, treat or
plant trees that stood on the streets
or in tho parks.
Any person desiring to plant, prune
or treat a street tree would first be
required to obtain a permit from the
commission and satisfy them that
lie understood how to treat a tree,
and If lie woro planting trees, that
he selected the proper variety. They
would also prohibit the planting on
streets, such trees as the Carolina
Poplar, the Lombardy Poplar, the
Box Elder, tho Occidental Plane Tree
or Sycamore, etc. In the event pests
ever attacked the trees In the town,
tho commission could light It to a
better advantage than the Individual
citizen. The appointment of such a
commission in Honesdalc would be
tho only solution towards the salva
tion of the beautiful trees we now
of tho lniHor nml HiiffrnciMnnn f mm 1 want vott to enltw it also. lrimarilu it is run.
HiIh nRiinrtiimnt rpunrrtliic nvprrnn t for pour amusement. If anything appears here
tins Department regarding overrun, v,hfch offeda you in anu way whaitoever, drop
method used In making, etc. us a postal or "phone us to that effect. An ape h
4. The butter becomes tho prop- '0171 Mil appear in the next issue of the paper
erty of this Department. The pro-. '1UnotJsh to hurt anvbvdy's feeling,.
ceeds aro used to help pay tho cost ,1H we u-antto do is to brighten one moment of
of package, express charges both - vour day; and if but one single item brings
ways, expense of the Judge. """e' ue s'"'u fcct u wn UTt"cn tn .
Award: A certiAcate will be I ,
nwnnioH tn nil nrim mVn i.nrt in thn Our pervorted and wholly unrea-
four contests of the year and have 1 sonablo Idea ot nothing to wait for
is a hnir cut when Bryan Is elected?
What Is your idea?
an average scoro pf 91 and no score
less than 'JO.
Will you take part this year? It
will cost you little; it may be worth
many dollars to you; It has been,
to others. Write todny ' to the
Dairy Husbandry Department of the deed, Mr. Bones, men have
Pennsylvania State College for tub hunc for less than this.
and entry blank, stating yoir post- 1
office and express station.
If wo should have a quiet game of
checkers with the owner of our
block would C. C. Jadwln? Yes, ln-
beea.
THE YEAH IN THE
CHURCH.
Simply because the door to our
sanctum slams hard enough to shake
1IAWLEY the building If you look at it at e
actly C p. m. Is John's Dorbad?
1 Dnn't wnrrv. centlemen. tho Fnrvlcw
, . , , . ' . Hospital will soon be finished.
The year has been one of unusual , 1
trial with tho church on account of
deaths and removals. We have lost' If an orphan cheelld should sud
six by death and as many more by denly appear in our midst and the
letter, while many of our young peo-, poor little thing didn't have any
pie, retaining membership with us, home to go to, would Fannie Haus
have secured situations nbroad, thus er? The quartette will now render
have m
, ,..i, ..i.iin,,.r,ir.ni inntiinds nf cettlne possess
01 new anu urisiua. , - Q car(J propor,y for a tree means
rid ot it again.
It Is to bo honed that the lesson taught uy tins
millionaire professor, so to speak, may be studied hard
a large number 01 millionaire
and earnestly
scholars.
by
THE HOSPlTAIi AT FARVIEW.
Our neighbors, tho Tribune-Republican and tho
Carbondalo Leader have pointed out that unless the
Legislature takes the present opportunity to appropri
ate funds for completing the work of construction ot
the state hospital for the criminal insane at Farview.
that hospital cannot bo opened for another two years.
That such a postponement would be a most re
gretable waste of time The Citizen does not hesitate
to afllrm. Tho structuro Is nearly compieteu uuu n.
needs but the appropriation of certain sums to finish
the work on tho sections now Incomplete, to furnish
and open such other sections as aro already completed
and Anally.' to start work on still other sections which
the erection of such an Institution will render neces
sary. If the Legislature will havo the good sense to
make such an appropriation now the hospital can be
opened sometime during the coming year. If the
Legislature neglects for any reason whatsoever to ap
propriate the necessary funds during tne ciose 01 u
present session the completion of tho hospital build
ings must be left to the kindly mercies of the next
Legislature.
Obviously there was a pressing need for the con
struction of such a hospital In the Arst place or the
money would never havo been appropriated to begin
It. Now that tho buildings aro partially flnlshed
there is still that practical need, and In addition,
there Is the ethical need of doing a thing up thorough
ly once It has been started.
We trust that the gratifying speed which has
marked the construction ot tho hospital so far may
not be marred by a two years' delay. Let the Legis
lators put aside for the moment their individual de
sires and work for tho welfare of the whole by sanc
tioning the expenditure of the money for the comple
tion and opening of the hospital at Farview. Let
them glance in tho direction Indicated by the Tribune
Republican, towards Ruttersville, where a hospital has
wn "in tho course- of construction for ten years and
Is not yet Anlshed, and Is now tho subject of graft
charges."
It is not right that tho good work thus far ac
complished should be botched by a period of inactiv
ity. Tho Legislature should see to it that the matter
Is taken up at once, the money appropriated and tho
Farview Hospital flnlshed. It rests with the present
body of men at Harrlsburg whether tho hospital shall
become an established fact and begin Its usefulness
as soon as completed, or whether the unfinished
buildings shall become In the next two years a sorles
of ruined monuments to tho ''shortsightedness of the
Legislators."
to protect It from horse bites, wagon
wheel bruises, etc., by placing a
proper tree guard about it, such as
will bo recommended by the Shado
Tree Commission.
All indications of dead limbs
should be removed, thus insuring the
tree freedom from posts and diseases.
The cut should bo made as close to
the trunk of the tree as possible, and
then painted over with a good lead
paint (to harmonize with the color of
the bark) to prevent decay, and in
cidentally nid the bark to heal over.
One has only to witness tho work
done In towns where shade treo coin
missions exist, to see the wonderful
transition of a tree from a mass of
entangled and dead wood, to ono of
rejuvenation, beauty and symmetry.
BERNARD M. RIFKIN.
depriving us of their
valued service.
But for all this, tho work has gone
successfully and nobly forward. Wo
have as Ano a band of 270 members
as can be found anywhere.
At the beginning of the year the
pastor's salary was Increased, putting
the charge in the $1,000 class. We
faced then a budget of necessary
expenses to run us through the
twelve months of $1500 In round
numbers. This has been fully met
with a surplus of about $40 in the
treasury.
The benevolent calls have been re
sponded to as never before In the
history of the church, our contribu
tions aggregating $360.
We use the full General Confer
ence order of service with the addi
tion of a few Items from the Wesley
Sunday service adopted by the
"Christmas Conference" of the Meth
odists in 1784, which has never been
abrogated by the action of any suc
ceeding General Conference. The
congregation joins in this service in
most hearty and thrilling manner.
The choir is thoroughly organized
and is composed of young people of
high character and of great fidelity.
The pastor meets them at every ser
vice for prayer in the League room
on tho north side of the vestibule of
the church, and thoy march from
this place to their loft In tho auditor
ium, singing an inspiring procession
al, the congregation arising and join
ing. Thereafter the service goes
rapidly but reverently forward with
out hitch or lapse and is always full
of Interest from beginning to close.
Result is we have a Ano and grow
ing congregation, doing tho Lord's
work in most delightful and success
ful way.
We celebrate most of the days of
the church calendar, as ordered to
do by the 'Methodist Discipline. We
have been observing the Lenten per
iod with services and sermons which
have proved wonderfully attractive
and helpful.
Already a movement is on foot for
rejuvenation this Spring of tho
church property with paint and pa
per, and everything will be put in at
tractive form for the new conference
year's work.
There Is a very flourishing Sunday
school connected with tho church,
having a membership of about 200.
It costs $100 annually to purchase
tho necessary supplies. This charge
was met last year, and In addition
quite a substantial sum was contrib
uted to the official board for the cur
rent expenses of the church.
Benjamin F. Ripley.
efficient and that touching little ballade entitled,
"Fireman, please save Fldo, 'causa
my husband's used to smoke!"
Ethel Not to-night, but mebbe
between some Thursday in Septem
ber. Jack . Tho only way to get
out of It Is to break a leg. No, H
doesn't make any difference whlck
leg.
Mrs. . You are quite right,
my dear madame. Divorce him at
once. Any newly-married husband
who thinks he can make his wife be
lieve the doctor ordered cloves for
his lumbago ought to be taught a.
severe lesson.
Editor The Citizen:
Tho following will no doubt bo of
Interest to our Pennsylvania readers:
Do you wish to havo a package of
your butter judged and comments
made on It by an expert butter
judge?
Do you wish to have your butter
analyzed for moisture and salt?
Do you wish the amount of over
run figured for you and comments
'made as to tho securing and con
trolling of overrun?
The Dairy Husbandry Department
of tho Pennsylvania State College
will do this for you. The contests
are for tho purpose of helping the
buttermakors; they are entirely edu
cational. Competition is becoming
more keen and tho consumer more
critical. There is, therefore, more
demand for educational work. Those
who have taken part In previous
contests want them continued.
Plan of tho Contest: 1. Upon re
ceipt or notice from a Pennsylvania
buttermaker that he wishes to take
part, we send him, express charges
paid, a Avo pound tub and entry
blank.
2. The buttermaker Alls out tho
blank, giving the Information called
for regarding tho making of tho but
ter and returns the tub of butter to
tho Dairy Husbandry Department,
State College, Pa., by express, col
lect. The butter should be express
ed to roach Stato College not later
than April 13, June 13, nnd August
13. Tho tubs should be well wrap
ped In paper, especially during warm
weather.
3. Upon receipt of the butter It Is
placed In a refrigerator, so as to bo
chilled uniformly. An expert but
ter judgo Is then secured. A com
petent and experienced man, usually
the United States Government ex
pert from tho New York market Is
employed. Tho Judge scores tho
butter and makes comments. The
There Is more Catarrh In this sec
tion of the country than all other
diseases put together, and until the
last few years was supposed to be
incurable. For a great many years
doctors pronounced It a local disease
and prescribed local remedies, and by
constantly failing to cure with local
treatment, pronounced It Incurable.
Science has proven catarrh to be a
constitutional disease and therefore
requires constitutional treatment,
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,
is the only constitutional euro on the
market. It is taken internally in
doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful
It acts directly on the blood and muc
ous surfaces of the system. Thoy
offer one hundred dollars for any case
It falls to cure. Send for circulars
and testimonials.
Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO.
Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Druggists, 76c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con
stipation.
YOUR EYES
The optical department of this store
is in charge of a thoroughly competent
optician with 15 years experience in the
optical business. Ask any of our pa
trons if they have not received tho best
results and are thoroughly satisfied.
Rowland
Jeweler and Optician
1127 Main Si.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
She Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature of
Hon. Nathan C. Schaeffer
Supt. of Public Instruction,
Harrlsburg, Pa.
Dear Sir:
By your favor of February 14th,
addressed to the Attorney General,
you ask to be advised whether the
election of School Directors will
hereafter be held In November anil
whether the Director whose term of
ofllce expires In June, 1911, will hold
over.
Tho February election has been
abolished, and the November elec
tion In the year 1911 Is tho election
appropriate to the election of School
Directors. The Act of Assembly ap
proved March 2, 1911, entitled
An Act to carry Into complete op
eration the amendments to sections 8
and 21 of Article IV, Sections 11
and 12 of Article V, Sections 2 and
3 of Article VIII, Section 1 of Arti
cle XII, and Sections 2 and 7 ot Ar
ticle XIV, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
adopted November second, ono thous
and nine hundred and nine, pre
venting any hiatus in the terms oi
ofllces affected thereby, fixing the
time when the terms of certain offi
ces shall hereafter begin validating
the official acts o certain .olflcers dur
ing their extended terms and donning
the term 'public officer' as used l
this Act," provides, in Section 1:
That all public officers hold
ing office at the date of the
approval of said amendments not
otherwise provided for, whose terme
of office expire at any time during
an odd numbered year, shall continue
to hold their offices until tho first
Monday of January In the next even
numbered year, and that all suck
officers whose terms oxpire In an
even numbered year shall continue
to hold their offices until tho first
Monday of January In the next even,
numbered year."
The tenh "public officer" Is de
fined in the Act to Include "all offi
cers elected by vote of tho people,
whether the ofllces that thoy fill wer
created by the Constitution or by
special or general Acts of Assembly."
This Act ot Assembly answers
your Inquiry, and you are therefore
advised that there will bo no vacancy
In the office of School Directors in
June, 1911.
Very truly yours,
WM. M. HARGEST,
Assist. Dep. Attorney General.
Death Of Jolui J. Crowley.
John J. Crowley died Monday
morning at four o'clock at the Hotel
Wayne, after a week's illness, from
heart trouble, aged thirty-nine years.
His body was shipped Monday after
noon to his homo at Deposit, N. Y.,
where Interment will bo made. He
Is survived by a wife and three small
children, Henry, Daniel and Leona,
nnd by his mother, Mrs. D. Crowley,
Deposit, N. Y., and three brothers,
viz., Thomas, Edward J. and Henry
D., all of Susquehanna, and by one
sister, Mrs. L. A. Hemingway, Bridge
port, Conn.
In Two IVHnuies
Eusy and Quickest Way to Break Up
n Cold.
If you want Instant relief from
cold In head or chest, or from acute
catarrh, try this:
Into a bowl of boiling hot wnter
pour a teaspoonful of HYOMEI,
(pronounce It High-o-mo) hold you
head over the bowl and cover bead
and bowl with towel. Then breathe
the pleasant, penetrating, antiseptic
vapor deep into the lungs, over th
sore, raw, tender membrane, and
most gratifying relief will como In
a few minutes.
Druggists everywhere will sell si
bottle of HYOMEI for 50 cents. Ask
for extra bottle Hyomol Inhalent.
Don't be stubborn. Don't bo pre
judiced. There is not a particle of
morphine, cocaine, or any injurious
or habit forming drug in HYOMEI.
Give it a trial at G. W. Pell's risk,
who guarantees It. It is made of
eucalyptus and other grand antisep
tics. It will chase away the misery
ot catarrh or any affliction of the
nose and throat in a few minutes.
You can get a trial sample treo by
writing Booth's Hyorael Co., Buffalo.
N. Y.