THE CITI1.KN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1012. 2 AGE T OW A FFTIH AROSE By EVAN CAMERON elation, 1911. spars, men n tiny name, tncn n . . t .. i. .. 1 it . ng conllngratlon. And the worst of quarrels nre those between IIS. .1 ri tilnnni-ira Ttntifsl Cttttnenn mul families to the far west ami en land owned by the government, had been schoolmates and owned u iin ii r cmn ' ii f i r" i & n-nu Tin so long as they remained In the for their boundaries had been sur ,i . i ji i 1 1 . i I irostifis unnn ih mhpr tirnm. Therefore their affection for other grew stronger, nnd the faml- Frank Underwood, the oldest liter of the one and oldest boh v uiuer two friends each entered a plde by Hide. Simpson's land more larcely covered with tlm- hnn Ilndprwond's imil this fnnt ... .1 nml ivn lirninrfoM run ninnc. their property, and it became at apparent that the timber would n o inr new a r ennn nn tine learned Underwood became in- tnri tr life ImitiwlnPf lliwi. inrncln IIII'II 111 II WIMlll IIM II f '1111 III III lnvl in nnvnr lit-iiif nn tlm 1 tm eeu i ue uvo properuea. his friend's property and found derod to be his own land. Hp sted, and Underwood declared tiin .n..i-ii ii ... intending to begin the next morn- nlt l ..-.1 .... l. 1 ... iy tue railroad wnn ties as soon every tree he cut beyond a cer point would be robbery. Then T I .1 I .4 1. 1 t Ith which to fell timber, and he me uav was ( vor lnsipnn or to ii. rpna flint fnllrwl onnli nthai Vn". coming home to supper, their ro und found their dead bodies, the trouble threw a gloom over both ies. It was esneelalir denlorabh- (If l lUUL IHflf lillHL uu uu lilUJO tio si'in in inn rnuniv sour inr n d out that neither his father nor was this nil that was mistaken iimiifir ill ii ii ii I 4 I in Tiiir been burled when the railroad to nning me line several miles away the property of cither and p u nwn nmnnr nnn i night when Eliza Simpson was Ing at home she was awakened hmmii ni iiti'h npinii nnvon mm runks of trees. The sound seem i her to come from the direction e uounuary line, tsiie sat up in ind listened. The ax men were kuii iuk wiiu eucu oincr, striving to strike more rapidly, got up and went into her moth- . - rf she had succeeded In doing so ound had ceased. uuui iu iiwuki'ii hit. imr nv rno next morning when she had told she had been dreaming. Never- ... .. I . . . . 1 . . I 1 .I... 1 . . 1 the axes distinctly, the sounds ig from a point between the sons' und the Underwoods' dwell- When she told her lover about declared that If any such sounds existed he would have heard more readily than his fiancee, the Underwood house was nearer no on wlilr-li the timber bordered the Simpsons'. Eliza, who was IZ IO III MUl OilU iiuu iltuitl, him a sharp reply, and he left anger :a Simpson heard again the is of axes on the boundary line. the double murder of the heads o two families the conditions had embarrassing, and the day after 's having heard the mysterious ion again Mrs. Simpson went to Underwood and told of the oc- ...... 1 Tt.l I iivu .u..-, l miLTwuou oau ueen a strain ever since tho catas- e and upon Mrs. Slmpson'n visit her self control completely, de ig that she believed Simpson had ered her husband, who acted slm- families of the men who had each other now camo to open ire. Tlio match between Eliza 'rank was broken off, and no ono Clmncnna a Trm tr nn TT..1A The members of the younger ntlon were becoming men and n, and tho generation after them Ited the quarrel, As the famtllw piled the feud spread. A clergy- preaching on the matter to the generation, declared that he b- 1 the two murderers had contln heir quarrel as spirits, and Baton naae uiPir axes auaiuie in order usier meir yuurrei io moriui. UCCESS FARM;" "FAILURE FARM" DO you see tlio two fnrtnsi Tlicy nrc both good farm?, or ought to bo, na nro most, of those in this country. THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEM IS NOT IN THE LAND, BUT IN THE MEN THAT OWN THEM. One of these men is nn up to date chap who HEADS TIIK PAPERS, especially the farm notes, takes agricultural journals and applies scientific methods. The other works just as hard, but will not have a new'spnpor in the house and could not get a new idea if it were bored into his head with an X ray. THE UP TO DATE FARMER GETS TWO OR THREE TIMES THE YIELD OF HIS NEIGHBOR AND WITH BUT LITTLF MORE LABOR OR EXPENSE. ITo uses fertilizer, crop rotation and intelligence. Ho economizes every rod of his land ; makes it all count. lie practices soil con servation, lie gives back to the soil as much as or a little more than he takes from it. He knows tho latest experiments made by the agricultural department, the agri cultural colleges and experiment stations. TJo reads the newspa pers. SEXD in YOUR SUB SCRIPTION TODAY. Crippling a Menace. "Does Darley go with us on tho hunt? "Oh. yes; you can't hold him buck." "But you know what he's likely to do?" "Sure. He'd shoot a cow, or a dog. or a guide, or anything else that got In the way. Hut we've flxed up a scheme for making him harmless." "What's that?" "We're going to let him go ahead, but not far enough to turn around. Then the lirst time he shoots, rillln ger. who is a ventriloquist, will throw his voice Into the woods and groan horribly. Then we'll jump on Darley, take his gun away from him, tie him to a tree and tlnish'up our hunting." "Hut what will he say when he tluds It's all n sell?" "Well, the very least he can say will be, 'Thank heaven!' "-Cleveland I'laln Dealer. Mothergosllngs. Jack anil Jill went up the hill. Low gear they did apply. If they had been In your machine They'd a-mado It on tho high. Sins a sons or sixpence, Pocket full of cash iert In trousers on a chair. The which was very rash. Wine saw him do It. And when she heard him snoro Sho helped herself to thirty cents There wasn't any more. DIckory, dlckory, dock, I purchased some Wall Btreet stock. But now 1 am broke, My watch Is In soak, Dicker and dicker and hock. New York Globe. Of the First Water. Senator Hrown apropos of the mari tal misadventures of a young multimil lionaire said at a dinner in Washing ton: "The trouble is thut too many of our idle rich young men think that among their many rights is included the right to do wrong. "They are, in truth, ns foolish in this respect as the maidservant who said: " 'I've got a place among the top notchers for sure this time. They're baug up aristocrats 1 live with now.' " 'What do you mean by bang up aristocrats?' a friend asked. " 'Oh,' she replied. '1 meau places where they have three kinds of wine and the ladles smoke and the men swear.' "New York Tribune. At Sixes and Sevens. An atom met a molecule, And things began to hum; A microbe howled and tried to rule A spry bacterium. An animalcule up nnd fought A micrococcus gay, And when the germ the monad caught There was the deuce to pay. A devil knocked a specter cold By some demoniac means. A phantom kicked a goblin bold Itlglit Into smithereens. And you may well believe me whea I hero declare with might Of lobster I'll ne'er eat again At twelve o'clock at night! Nathan M. Levy In New York Bun. The Red Hand. Tho red hand In heraldry ia the dis tinctive badge of baronets. India. There Is no Indian nation, nnd the nations of Indln differ not only in in terests, history and tradition, but they differ In regard to race feeling, und there nre strong hatred and Jealousy between parts of India still. There is nothing that keeps the peace in India but British rule. A Mystery In A Freight Car By ADOLPH SNYDER t'tryrleht by American Tress Asso ciation, 1311. I am n brakemaii on a freight train. Ono day during the winter season, when we had come to a slop, I was walking alongside the train nnd saw n thin smoke coming out from under one of the enrs. Thinking It to come from a hot box, I stooped to examine the truck, but tho running gear was ns cool as n cucumber. Then, looking up, I noticed a small tin pipe protrud ing from the bottom of the car, through which smoke was coming In little puffs. "Well, I'll bo Jlnged!" I said to my Aelf. "Hero's n freight car, sealed with lead, 'that hasn't been opened since It started three days ago, and n steam engine In it. Am I in my right mind, or have I tumbled off the brake wheel, where I was sitting a spell ago." I stooped a trifle lower and craned my neck in a little further in order to get a better view. jTherc was the pipe, evidently a part of a leader from a gutter belonging to the roof of n house. It extended n few inches downward, then turned with nn elbow, j the second part extending about a foot rearward. As I looked the puffs continued ns regular as those coming from a locomotive making n steady gait. What to do I didn't know. I was afraid to notify tho conductor for fear I'd find out thnt I'd had a stroke nnd saw things that didn't exist. Some thing occurred just then thnt made me think I'd surely gone daft. I heard a girl's giggle. There wasn't any connection between a steam engine and n girl shut up in a box car, especially a scaled box car, but there was a good deal to excite curiosity. I stopped worrying about myself nnd began to wonder what there was Inside thnt can- I stood off, looked at It and walked all around It. A freight trnln is made up of differ ent kinds of cars, and this car was es pecially different from the others. It looked ns though it might have been a caboose turned into a box. The thing most noticeable about It was a door at ono end. Why I hndn't noticed this before 1 don't know unless It was be cause the end was only about two feet from the end of nnothcr car. I saw that there was or had been a lock on the door. There wasn't any knob, but a nail had been put through the screw hole of tho steel piece on which the knob had been fixed. I climbed up ou the coupling nnd tried to turn the nail to open the door. I didn't succeed. I listened, but every thing was still. But 1 didn't forget that giggle, and pretty soon I knocked. In a few moments I heard whispers with in. Then all of n sudden the door was pulled open, and there stood a boy and a girl. Besides these, I got u view of the car. There was a carpet on it, tho worse for wear; in one corner was a mattress with bedclothing; in the cen ter was a pine tnble, nnd at oue side was a cook stove. And I noticed that the stovepipe was run down Instead of up or horizontal and passed through a hole in the floor." "Please don't give us away," said the girl, going for me with n pair of blue eyen not many could resist. "You'd better let mo come in," I an swered. "If the conductor or any of tho train hands should come nlong there'd be no need of giving you away." I went Inside and shut the door after me. Then I asked, "Will you be good enough to tell mo what this means?" "We're a bride and groom," said the young feller, who couldn't have been over seventeen years old. "On our wedding trip," tho girl added. "A bride and groom on your wedding1 trip!" I exclaimed. "How did you git In here?" "I'll tell you all about it," said tho boy. "We're not only on our wedding trip, but we're a runawny couple." "Are you sure you're not n pair of escaped lunntlcs?" The girl laughed; the fellow looked kind of (jueer and talked on. "We were engaged, but neither her dnd nor mine would let us git mar ried till we were older. I had n clerk ship In a railroad freight house, and I managed to git hold of this car, and one night when you men were making up this train I give the engineer a signal to hook up against It, and the next time he backed up against n car this was in the train. I'd fixed the door and put In the brldnl furniture." "The bridal furniture!" I said, look ing around. "So this is a bridal cham ber, is it?" "Well, It's all we got," he answered. "What have you had to eat?" I asked. "Bread, bacon, eggs and n few other things. There's our stove. We get a good enough draft when the train's moving." "And when it Isn't moving you fan the fire?" "Just so." Hearing some one coming, I put my finger to my Hps, nnd when tho sound had passed I went out and shut the door. That was tho most original wedding trip I ever saw or heard of, nnd I wouldn't have given the chil dren nway for a farm. I couldn't mako up my mind whether they were really on a honeymoon journey or playing they were married, as chil dren do. When we got to the end of the run they disappeared, and I never found out what had become of them. Cruel. "Well, I've got my winter's supply of coal In nnyhow." "Is It paid for?" "Say. why do you always Insist on bringing up something disagreeable when a fellow Is trying to bo optlmls-tier-Chicago Itecord-IIerald. Periods. Thcro nro periods of stone and Iron; Hut, say, now, don't you think Decauso of all the sturr that's printed This . Is one of Ink? Llpplncott's Magazine. Weird Sport. "This new automobile shriek of yours works well?" "1 should say so," said the boy chauffeur. "It'll scare n pedestrian so that he will Jump clear from the curl stone right In front of the mnchlne."--Wnshlugton Star. Suffrage. Mnry had a little goat. She thought no one would apot It, But when she sought the right to vote The legislature got It. Chicago Dally News. Another Trust. "Toil say I'm n liar, sir?" "You claim that I'm a thief, sir?" Wei IV" "Let's go Into partnership. Ton get the money nnd I will pay the taxes." Toledo Blade. A Big Undertaking. If airships fall In pcaco or war. With no restraint when down they go, Wo must devise some method for Upholstering the enrth below. Washington Star. Says the Deacon. "They say poverty Is a blessln' In disguise, but when I sees him comln' I nraya dat I won't be blessed out o' bouse an' home." Atlanta Constitu tion. A Revised Version. An old crab softly slid' away Along the ocean's tideways. "Bo sure you're right." I heard him say, "And then well, then go sideways!" Browning's Magazine. GET "UR MONEY BACK. If This Medicine Docs Not Satisfac torily Benefit You. Practising physicians making a spe cialty of stomach troubles are really responsible for the formula from which Itcxall Dyspepsia Tablets nro made. Wo have simply profited by the experience of experts. Our experience with Bexall Dyspep sia Tablets leads us to believe them to be an excellent remedy for the re lief of acute indigestion nnd chronic dyspepsia. Their Ingredients nro sooth ing nnd healing to the inflamed mem branes of tho stomach. They are rich in pepsin, one of the greatest digestive aids known to medicine. The relief they afford Is almost immediate. Their use with persistency and regu larity for a short time helps to bring about a cessation of the pains caused by stomach disorders. Bexall Djspepsla Tablets aid to in sure healthy appetite, aid digestion, and promote nutrition. As evidenco of our sincere fnlth in Bexall Dys pepsia Tablets, we nsk you to try them at our risk. If they do not give you entire satisfaction, wo will return you tho money you paid us for them, without question or formal ity. They come lu three sizes, prices 2.r cents, CO cents, nnd $1.00. Be member, you can obtain them only at our store The Uexall Store. A. M. LEIXE. CHSGHESTER S PILLS Tv I 111 IIAail.l llltA.M). i nr.o na other liny or roar v llroccl-l. A5kfM'IIM'lV.M.TEnP IllAJHINK ItltlMI I'll.l.H, for US yen v known as Test, Safest. Alwiys KellaMs OtOt'VDIUFiQISTSR'ERVWHERr OVER 66 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Thade Marks Designs Copvtiichts 4 c. Anrnnn Bftnnlnir n iikplrh nnd description mar ti!(l(lv narnrlniii (tiir (it.nilitii free wlietlipr an tiiTcntlnn la protinhlr p.'iientnhln. Communion. ttniimtrtctlyromidoiitlul. HAI1DB0QK onl'atei aint free. Oldest auencr for aucurinsr Dutents. aieuia l'nlenta taken tiiruunli Munn & Co. recvlra tvteUil notice, rrllliout charge, la tho Scientific JltitericatL A hnndiomelr lllnatrMM wr-f klr. Irtrnt elr culatlun nf nny arltimluo Journal. Terms. 13 a ynnrt four montha, It, tioldbyiill neiradeulcrs. MUNN &Co.36,0rMdw4'' New York llrauca Office. 63 V SU Waibtcgtun, I). U. A Woman Waivis The Home Paper MAKE HER HAPPY BY TAKING IT THE YEAR. ROUND A l.rinitifl ami, your irrucirUt for i i lil.o!ii'.-r'j l)lamoniTTlrniilVS I'lIU In 1U J n,l (iuIJ mmlllAVJ l)ics Eei,eJ Ith lllue Ribbon. V .1 BLAKE CATTLE DEALER YOU WILL MAKE MONEY BY HAVING ME Bell Phone 9-U BETHANY, PA. Our Success In tho printing business Is due to the fact thnt wo glvo a customer what ho wants and when ho wants It. oittzun punusmNa co ltnncsdnlc, Pa. ACCOUNT of ALHRKTG.MITClIKIiL OUAIWIAN OF DKUS1U.A YOUNG, Notice Is hereby elvcnthnt the third and final account of the etmnllnn nhovn named will he presented to the Court of Common I len of Wnyne Co. for Confreiimtlon nisi. Ihlrtl Monday of January nnd will he con firmed absolutely by said Court (sec retf.) on Ihursdiiy, March 11. 1012, unless execu tions are previously filled. M. . IIAM.AN, Honculnlc, Dec. 21. 1911. l'rothonctary. Al'PItAISKMUXTS Notice Is giv en that appraisement of J300 to tho widows of the following nam ed decedents have been filed In the Orphans' Court of Wayno county, and will be presented for approval on Monday, Jan. 15, 1912 viz: James Fives, Jr., Mt. Pleasant: Personal. William J. Arrigan, Mt. Pleasant township: Personal. M. J. HANLAN, Clerk. Honesdale, Dec. 27, 1911. NOTICE OF AUMINISTKATION, ESTATK OK COIITLAND UHOOKS, Late of South Canaan Township, Wayno county. All persons Indebted to said estate are notified to mako immediate pay ment to the undersigned; and those having claims against the said estate are notified to present thorn duly at tested for settlement. J. G. BKONSON, Administrator South Canaan. Dec. 5, 1911. 9Sw4 WAVXE COMMON PLEAS: THIAL LIST. JANUAKY TKUM, 1012. Itamblo vs. Ponn'a Coal Co. Hawley Glass Co. vs. Erie It. R. Co. Smith vs. Brown. Alney &. Sencer vs. Keen. Tiffany vs. Sands. Tollep vs. Chapick. Klausnor vs. De Breun. Walentynowicz vs. Allen et al. Selleck vs. Do Breun. Town vs. Cortright et al. Omstead vs. Wayno Co. Farmers' Firo Ins. Co. Samo vs. Consolidated Mutual Fire Ins. Co. HIttingor vs. Erie R. R. Co. Wood, adm'r vs. Stewart et al. Martin L. Hall Co. vs. Crosley & McGlnnis. Conley vs. McKenna. Menner vs. Borough of Honesdale. M. J. HANLAN, Prot'y. Honesdale, Dec. 18, 1911. pOUHT PKOCLA.MATION.-Wliereas, J the Judge of the several Courts of the County of Wayne has Issued his precept frir hrtlilliw- ft fV,i,r nn.i.t... ..!...... antlleniiiner. and General Jail Delivery In iiuu iui auiu squinny, ui me Louri iiouse. to hejiu on .MONDAY. JAN. 10. 191'J. and to continue one week : And dlrectlns that a Grand Jury for the Courts of Ouarter Sessions .mil llmr nini Terminer he summoned to meet on Monday. Jan. !), l'J12, at 2 p. m. Notice is uiereiore Hereby crlven to the Coroner and Justices of the Peace, and Con stables of the County of Wayne, that they he then and there In their proper persons, at said Court House, at 2 o'clock lu the after noon ni ald nth d iy of Jan., 1911. with their records, inauisltions.e.'tamlnatloiis andother remembrances, to do those thlnirs which to their olllces appertain to be done, and those who nre bound by recognizance or otherwise to prosecute the prisoners who are or shall he In the Jail of Wayne County, be then and thereto orosecute ntrnlnst .them ahnii ha Just. Given under my hand, at Honesdale, this 20th day of Dec. 1911, and In the 133th year of the. Independence of the United States M. LKE IiHAMAN. Sheriff. Sheriff's Otllce 1 Honesdale Dec. 2U 1911. l2w I N THE COURT OF COMMON 1 PLEASE OF WAYNE COUNTY. No. 137 October Term, 1911. In re-petltion of Vore B. Stone, F. J. Stone and W. E. Perham, exe cutors of H. K. Stone, for satisfaction of mortgage. A petition of tho above number and term has been presented to said Court praying that a mortgage, giv en by Warren L. Case and Marian H. Caso to George W. Rockwell, May Stanton Baldwin and Peter Palln, executors of tho last will and testament of L. N. Stanton, dated January 27, 1887, for tho payment of Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars, recorded In Mortgage Book No. 12. page 55, against certain lands situ ated in tho Township of Damascus, and described In said mortcaire. which mortgage was assigned on the 24th day of July. 1S90, to May Stan ton Baldwin, recorded In Mortgage Book No. 13, page 20G, bo satisfied of record because It Is legal y presumed to have been paid. All persons In terested aro notined to appear in said Court, Monday. January IB. 1912, at 2 o'clock p. m., and show D. & M. CO. TIHE TABLE A.M. SUN A O AUCTIONEER ',-, V..I. A.M. I'.M. SUN 10 00 4 30 10 00 8 05 2 15 llllll 12 30 2 J5"215 7 10 IIUU 4 40 1.4 200 HOP Z JO 1 19 7 65 A M llllll P.M. '.. A.M. His:::::: 6 20 TI a H 55 6 30 2 15 8 55 SSI 6 31 2 19 8 59 IN B 52 2 37 9 IS B 21 6 5S 2 43 9 24 ,8 32 IIUU 7 07 2 52 9 32 9 37 7 13 2 57 9 37 B 39 7 IB 2 59 9 39 B 43 7 20 3 01 9 43 J 7 24 3 07 9 47 9 61) 7 27 3 10 9 60 B 65 7 31 3 15 9 55 A.M. llllll IA7, P.M. aTm". H 30 ... Albany lllnubaniton - ie oo io oo Philadelphia . 3 1ft 4 oy Wllkes-llarre. . ...Scranton.... P.M. I.v 5 10 s ml .. .v nrbomlale .Lincoln Avenue.. Whites Karvlew Cunann . . Uike Isidore .. . Wayinart Keene Steene .... I'rompton .... Korteula ....Seelyvllle ... Honesdale .... b 61 (i 11 ti 1 6 26 : 6 M t! 3B 6 41 H Hi Ar For Results Advertize cause why said mortgage shall not be satisfied of record and the lien there of discharged, M. LEE BRAMAN. SherlfT. M. E. Simons, Attorney, Honcdale, Pa., 100w4 REGISTER'S NOTICE. Notice ii hereby given that the accountant! herein named have settled their respectlrt accounts In thcolllccof the lleelslernf Willi of Wayne County. l'n nnd that the same will bu presented at the Orphans' Court of said county for continuation, nt the Court House In Honesdale, on the third Monday of Jnnuary next viz: First and final account of Charlet W, Schrader, administrator of thu estate of Fred L. Schrader, Jersey City, Now Jersey. First nnd final account of M. K. Simons, administrator of tho esUU of Annlo McGulro, Now Jersey. Second and partial account of Charles A. Masters, acting executor of tho estate of Barzllla Shaffec Lake. First and final account of John D Brennan and John Rcllly, executor of tho estate of James Dalton, MourU Pleasant. First and final account of Frnnlc J. Meyers, executor of the estate of Theodore Gehror, Honesdale. First and partial account of John Tompkins, executor of tho estate of Reuben W. Redmond, Buckingham. First and partial account of W. L. Harvey, administrator of the estaU of Frederick DIerolf, Lohlgh. First and final account of A. B. Stevens, M. D., executor of the ea tato of Darius Proper, Lake. Second and final account of Mary R. Jaycox. executrix of tho estate of Andrew C. Jaycox, Buckingham. First and final account of L. C Mumford, administrator of William C. Campbell, Starrucca. First and final account of A. T. Searlo, executor of the estate of John H. Varcoe, Damascus. First and final account of Charle A. McCarty, executor of the estat of Margaret Wade, late of the town ship of Texas. First and final account of Joh Burns and Lizzie Malay, executors of tho estate of J. B. Fitzslmmona, Canaan. First and final account of Mary A. Weaver, administratrix of th estate of C. J. Weaver, Honesdale. First and final account of Jerom A. Kane, executor of the estate of Hugh Kane, Preston. First and final account of Carl T. Prosh. executor of the estate of Kungunda Wick, Texas. E. W. GAMMELL. Register. Registers Office, Honesdale, Dec. 21. 1911. ORPHANS- COURT SALE Or VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. By virtue of an order of the Or phans' Court of Wayne county, Pa., tho undersigned, administratrix of Anna M. Stinnard, late of Palmyra, deceased, will sell at public outcry at tho court house in Honesdale, on FRIDAY, JAN. IU, 10 112, 1! P. M tho following property, viz: All those certain lots, pieces or parcels of land situated in the town ship of Palmyra, county of Wayne and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows, to wit: The first of said lots beginning In the Northern line of Hoel Comptoni at a post and stones corner In tho road leading from Bethany and Dingman's choice turnpiko to ths Saw Mill on Swamp Brook known ai Brink's Mill; thence by land of Hoel Compton and Isaac Swavel, north sixty-nine and one-half de grees West ono hundred and thirty eight rods to a stones corner; thenc by land of Jesse Collum and other north sixty-seven degrees East thirty-four rods to a stones corner and north four degrees East one hundred and three and one-half rods to a post and stones corner; thence by other lands of Russel F. Lord and T. H. R. Tracy, south seventy degrees East ninety-four rods to a post and stonei corner, south twenty degrees West twenty-two rods to a post and stones corner and south twenty de grees east one hundred and one rods to the middle of the aforesaid road; and thenco along said road south fifty-five degrees west thirty rods to the place of beginning. Comprising Lot No. 22 In the nllotment of th lands of Swamp Brook, belonging formerly to said Lord and Tracy and containing eighty-five acres and fifty-nine perches be the samo more or. less. Tho other said lot of land begin ning at a heap of stones, being th northeastern corner of lands convey ed to Jermlma Jane Stinnard, run ning thence by tho same South slxt and one-half degrees west one hun dred nnd ten rods to a post and stones corner; thenco by lands lat of Jesse Collum, north sixteen and one-half degrees west, twenty-seven and three quarter rods to a post corner, north sixty-eight and one half degrees east one hundred and twenty and three-quarter rods to a stones corner; and thence by th Lord and Tracy lands south four de grees west thirty and three-quarter rods to the place of beginning. Con taining twenty acres more or less. Together with Improvement thereon. ANNA M. GOLDSMITH. Admx. of estate of Anna M. Stin nard, late of Palmyra. Searlo & Salmon, Attys. HONESDALE BRANCH P.M. I'.M, A.M, I'.M, SUN A.M. SUN. 2 00 12 40 4 09 10 601 8 45 10 50 tf 00 7 14 7 3h ll'.M. 2 55i 7 25 '.' 13 ti 30 7 14 7 SI U. 10 0 B 12 A..M B 35 8 45 12 55 12 05 Ar A.M P.M. I'.M. P.M. P.M. 8 05 7 54 1 35 1 25 5 50 5 40 It 25 11 11 7 60 1 21 5 34 11 10 10 Ml 7 3.1 1 03 5 IN 7 25 12 6 11 11 451 7 17 12 49 12 4.1 12 40 12 30 12 32 12 29 12 25 5 Ml 10 37 10 32 7 1 4 5M 4 55 7 09 7 05 10 29 10 25 10 21 10 It 10 13 4 51 7 0 4 47 4 44 6 58 6 55 4 4ty Lv A.M. I'.M, P.M. A.M. P.U. in The Citizen