THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1913. PAGE SEVEN WILSON'S VIEWS GIVEN JOjIATION Inaugural Address of the New President. DEFINES PEOPLE'S DUTY. First Obligation of Law Is to Keep So ciety Sound by Sanitary and Puro Feed Statutes and Measures Deter mining Conditions of Labor Task , Not Merely One of Politics. Washington, Mnrch 4. The Inaugural address of President Woodrow Wilson is as follows: There hns been a change of govern ment. It began two years ago, when the house of representatives became Democratic by a decisive majority. It has now been completed. The senate about to assemble will also be Demo cratic. The offices of president and vice president have been put into the hands of Democrats. What does the change mean? That is the question that is uppermost in our minds today. That Is the question I am going to try to answer, in order, If I may, to Inter pret the occasion. It means much more than tho mere success of a party. The success of a party means little except when the nation is using that party for a large and definite purpose. No one can mis take the purpose for which the nation now seeks to use the Democratic party. It seeks to use it to Interpret a change In Its own plans and point of view. Some old things with which we had grown familiar and which had begun to creep Into the very habit of our thought and of our lives have altered their aspect as we have latterly looked critically upon them with fresh, awak ened eyes; have dropped their disguises and shown themselves nlien and sin ister. Some now things as we look frankly upon tlii'm. willing to compre hend their real character, have come to assume the aspect of things long be lieved In and familiar, stuff of our own convictions. We have been refreshed by a new insight Into our own life. Our Model Government. We see that in many things life Is very great. It is incomparably great in its material aspects, in Its body of I' wealth, in the diversity and sweep of its energy, in the industries which have been conceived and built up by tho genius of individual meu and tho lim itless enterprise of groups of men. It Is great also, very great, In its moral force. Nowhere else in the world have noble men and women exhibited In more striking forms the beauty and tho energy of sympathy and helpful ness and counsel in their efforts to rec tify wrong, alleviate suffering and set the weak in the way of strength and hope. We have built up, moreover, a great system of government which has stood through a long age as in many respects a model for those who seek to set liberty upon foundations that will endure against fortuitous change, against storm and accident Our life contains every great thing and contains it in rich abundance. But the evil has come with the good, and much One gold has been corroded. With riches has come Inexcusable waste. We have squandered a great part of what we might have used and have not stopped to conserve the ex ceeding bounty of nature without which our genius for enterprise would have been worthless and impotent, scorning to be careful, shamefully prodigal as well as admirably efficient We have been proud of our industrial achievements, but we have not hith erto stopped thoughtfully enough to I count the human cost, the cost of lives snuffed out, of energies overtaxed and broken, the fearful physical and spir itual cost to the men and women and I children upon whom the dead weight and burden of it all has fallen pitiless ly the years through. Tho groans and agony of it all had not yet reached our ears, the solemn, moving under tone of our life, coming up out of the mines and factories and out of every Iiome where the struggle bad its intl note and familiar seat With the great government went many deep se cret things which we too long delayed ko look into and scrutinize with can- ild, fearless eyes. Tho great govern- dent we loved has too often been aade use of for private and selfish purposes, nnd those who used It bad forgotten the people. Duty of Americans Outlined. At last a vision has been vouchsafed lis of our life as a whole. We see the liad with the good, the debased and lecadent with the sound and vital. BVlth this vision we approach new af- lairs. Our duty Is to cleanse, to re- lonslder, to restore, to correct the evil Without impairing the good, to purify Ind humanize every process of our 3mmon life without weakening or tmtlmentalizlng It There has been imethlng crude and heartless and un- .'cling In our baste to succeed and be k-eat. Our thought has been, "Let ev- roan look out for himself; let ev- ry generation look out for itself," Ihlle wo reared giant machinery which ade It impossible that any but those bo stood at the levers of control hould hove a cbanco to look out for lemselves. Wo had not forgotten our orals. Wfl remembered well enough at we bad set up a policy which was eant to serve the humblest as well as o most powerful, with an eye single the standards of Justice and fair y, and remembered Jt with pride. But we were very heedless and In 11 hurry to be great We have come now to the sober sec ond thought The scales of heedless ness have fallen from .our eyes. Wo havo mado up our minds to square ev ery process of our national life again with tho standards we so proudly set up at tho beginning and have always carried at our hearts. Our work is a work of restoration. Things to Be Accomplished. We have itemized with some degree of particularity the things that ought to be altered, nnd here are some of the chief items: A tariff which cuts us off from our proper part in the commerce of the world, violates the Just princi ples of taxation nnd makes the govern ment a facile instrument In the hands of private interests; a banking and cur rency system based upon the necessity of the government to sell Its bonds fifty years ago nnd perfectly adapted to con centrating cash and restricting credits; nn industrial system which, tuite It on all its sides, financial as well ns ad ministrative, holds capital In leading strings, restricts the liberties and lim its the opportunities -of labor and ex ploits without renewing or conserving the natural resources of the country; a body of agricultural activities never yet given the efficiency of great busi ness undertakings or served as It should be through the instrumentality of science taken directly to the farm or afforded the facilities of credit best suited to its practical needs; water courses undeveloped, waste places un reclaimed, forests untended, fast dis appearing without plan or prospect of renewal, unregarded waste heaps at every mine. We havo studied as per haps no other nation has the most ef fective means of production, but wo have not studied cost or economy as we should either as organizers of in dustry, ns statesmen or as individuals. Society's Duty to Itself. Nor have wo studied "and perfected the means by which government may be put at the service of humanity In safeguarding the health of the nation, the health of Its men and its women and its children, us well as their rights in the struggle for existence. This Is no sentimental duty. The Arm basis of government is justice, not pity These are matters of justice. There can bo no equality or opportunity, the first (essential of justice in the body politic, if men and women and children be not shielded In their lives, their very vitality, from the consequences of great Industrial and social processes which they cannot alter, control or singly cope with. Society must see to it that it does not Itself crush or weaken or damage its own constituent parts. The first duty of law is to keep sound the society it serves. Sanitary laws, pure food laws and laws determining con ditions of labor which individuals arc powerless to determine for themselves are intimate parts of the very busi ness of justice and legal efficiency. These are some of the things we ought to do and not leave the others undone, the old fashioned, never to be neglected, fundamental safeguarding of property and of individual right. This is the high enterprise of the new day: To lift everything that concerns our life as a nation to the light that shines from the hearth Ore of every man's conscience and vision of the right. It Is inconceivable we should do this ns partisans; It is Inconceivable we should do it In Ignorance of the facts as they are or in blind haste. We shall restore, not destroy. We shall deal with our economic system as it is and as it may be modified, not as It might be if we had a clean sheet of paper to write upon, and step by step we shall make it what It should be in the spirit of those who question their own wisdom and seek counsel and knowledge, not shallow self satisfac tion or the excitement of excursions whither they cannot tell. Justice, and only justice, shall always be our motto. Task Not Merely One of Politics. And yet it will be no cool process of mere science. Tho nation has been deeply stirred stirred by a solemn pas sion, stirred by tho knowledge of wrong, of Ideals lost, of government too often debauched and made an in strument of evil. The feelings with which we face this new age of right and opportunity sweep across our heartstrings like somo air out of God's own presence, where justice and mercy are reconciled and the judge nnd the brother are one. Wo know our task to be no mere task of politics, but a task which shall search us through and through, whether wo be able to under stand our time and tho need of our people, whether wo be indeed their spokesmen nnd interpreters, whether we have tho pure heart to comprehend and the rectified will to choose our high courso of action. This is not a day of triumph; It Is a day of dedication. Hero muster not tho forces of party, but the forces of humanity. Men's hearts wait upon us; men's lives hang In tho balance; men's hopes call upon us to say what we will do. Who shall live up to the great trust? Who dares fall to try? I sum mon all honest men, all patriotic, all forward looking men, to my side. God helping me, I will not fall them if tbey will but counsel and sustain me. The Drama of London's Fog. There is a whole world of drama bound up in the chronicles of London's fog. This misty and mysterious vis itant, far older than Gog or Magog, which used to visit tho watches of tho night when tho metropolis barely lifted Itself out of the surrounding marshes, has a fund of comedy as well as trag edy. Countless murders have been committed under its sheltering cloak, men and women havo been waylaid, children have been torn from their mothers and wives from their hus- TuJnn Rtrnnrt. MBRAR.Y NOTICE. The following new books have been received at the Honesdnle Preo Library Affairs of Dishonor, Do Morgan. Awakening of Helena 'Richie, Mar garet Deland. Barrier, Tho, Ilex 'Bench. Beloved Vagabond, Tho, William Mlchelson. In the Bishop's Carriage, Miriam iMichelson. Blonnerhassett, Charles F. Pidgin. Brass Bowl, Tho, Lowls Josoph Vance. Brewster's Millions, McCutcheon. Call of tho Blood, The, Robert Hlch ens. Carrots, Molesworth. Cash Intrigue, The, George R. Ches tor. Castaway, The, Rives. Certain Rich Man, A, William Allen Whlto. The Chaperon, C. N. & A. M. Wil liamson. A Chance Acquaintance, William Dean Howells. Tho Chippendales, Robert Grant. The Choir Invisiblo, James Lane Al len. The Christian, Hall Caine. Tho City of Delight, Elizabeth Mil ler. The Circuit Rider, Edward Eggles ton. Clansman, The, Thomas Dixon, Jr. Conquest of Canaan, The, J3ooth Tarkington. David Dalfour, Robert Louis Steven son. Darrel of the Blessed Isles. I. Ba- cheller. Day's Works, The, Rudyard Kipling. Diana of the Crossways, George Meredith. Doctor, The, Ralph Connor. Drl and I, Irving Bacheller. Eternal City, The, Eternal City, The, Hall Caine. Pair God, The, Lewis Wallace. Felix. Robert Hichens. Fortune Hunter, The, Lewis Joseph Vance. Gambler, The, Catherine Cecil Thurston. Garden of Allah, The, Robert Hich ens. Gentleman from Indiana, The, Booth Tarkington. Get Rich Quick, Walllngford, George Chester. Goose Girl, The, Harold McGrath. Graustark, George Barr McCutch eon. Half a Rogue, Harold McGrath. Hans 'Brlnker, Mary Mapes Dodge. To Have and To Hold, Mary Johns ton. Hearts Courageous, Hallie Ermlnla Rives. Hich Hand. The. Jaccius Putrelle. The Honorable Peter Stirling, P. S. ' Ford. House of the Whispering Pines, The, Anna K. Green. In the Palace of the King, F. M. Crawford. The Inner Man, Anonymous. Jane Cable, George Barr McCutch eon. Janice Meredith, Paul Leicester Ford. John Maiyvel, Thomas Nelson Page. Jungle, The, Upton Sinclair. Klnknid's Battery, George W. Cable. Lady of Quality, A, Francis Hodg son iBurnett. Lady Rose's Daughter, Mrs. Humph rey Ward. Louis Rand, Mary Johnston. Ltn McLean, Owen Lister. Lion and the Mouse, The, Klein &. Hornblow. Little Brown Jugat Kildare, The, Meredith Nicholson. Little Minister, The, J. M. Barrle. Luck of Roaring Camp, The, Bret Harte. Madame X, Blssen R. McConaughy. Main at Arms, The, Robert W. Chambers. Margin Lower Ten, The, Mary R. Rinehart. Man from Glengarry, The, Ralph Connor. Man of the 'Hour, The, Octave Thanet. Man Higher Up, The, Henry Russell Miller. Man on tho 'Box, Tho Harold Mc Grath. Masquerader, The, Katberine Cecil Thurston. Millionaire 'Baby, The, Anna Kather- Ine Green. Mississippi Bubble, The, Emerson Houth. Mister Creve's Career, Winston Churchill. Music Master, Tho, Charles Klein. Old Chester Tales, Margaret Deland. Peter, P. Hopklnson Smith. Prince of India, The, Lew Wallace. Prisoner of Zenda, Anthony Hope. Plupy, H. A. Shute. Port of Missing, Tho, M. Nicholson. Prima Donna, The, -P. Marlon Craw ford. Raffles, E. W. Horning'. Prodigal Son, Tho, Paul Caine. Right of Way, The, Gilbert Parker. Rupert of Hentzan, Anthony Hope. Saint Ives, Robert Lewis Stevenson. Scarlet Pimpernel, The, Baroness Orczy. Seats of tho Mighty, Tho, Gilbert Parker. Septimus, William J. Locke. Shepherd of the Hills, The, H. B. Wright. Return of Sherlock Holmes, The, A. Conan Doylo. Shorty McCabe, Sowell Ford. Shuttle, The, Prances Hodgson Burnett. Soldiers of Fortune, The, R. H. Davis. Spoilers, The, Rex Beach. Squaw Men, The, Royle & ' Faver sham. Silver Horde, The, Rex Beach. Under Dog, The, F. Hopklnson Smith. Virginian, The, Owen Wizter. Wayfares, The, Mary Stewart Cut ting. When a Man Marries, Mary R. Rine hart. Wings of the Morning, The, Lewis Tracy. White Magic, David Graham Phillips. Young Walllngford, Geo. Randolph Chester. CHICHESTER S PILLS WLrs THE MAKO.NI UKAND.f X Pills la Ked tad Uld fcoiM, tnled vita Bin J a uir. Mar or Tnr v -DIAMOND IIKANO PILLS. '(12 run knon u Beit. 8Iet. Alwi Rllitl Ribbon. VX WARNING Since its introduction into the United States, the sales of Parisian Sage have been phenomenal. This success has led to many imitations. Look out for them, get the genuine". See that the girl with the Auburn hair is on every package. Parisian Sage is the quickest act ing and most efficient hair tonic in the world. It is made to conform to Dr. San gerbond's (of Paris) proven theory that dandruff, falling hair, baldness and scalp Itch are caused by germs. Parisian Sage kills these dandruff germs and removes all trace of dand ruff In two weeks, or money back; It stops falling hair and Itching scalp and prevents baldness. And remember that baldness Is caused by dandruff germs, those lit tle hard working, persistent devils that day and night do nothing but dig into the roots of the hair and destroy its vitality. 'Parisian Sage Is a daintily per fumed half dressing; not sticky or greasy, and any woman who desires luxuriant and bewitching hair can I get it in two weeks by using Paris-1 lan Sage. 50 cents a large bottle at Pell's and druggists everywhere. I Mch. 7 & 14. APPLICATION FOR LICENSES FOR THE YEAR 1913: The following named persons have filed their petitions for a license and the same will be "presented to Court of Quarter Sessions on Monday, March 10, 1913: HOTELS. Canaan James Gildea. Clinton Henry T. O'Neill. Dreher H. D. Smith, O. E. Simons. Dyberry Asa K. Kimble, Horace H. Hoyle. Hawley Caroline Lehman, A. H. Frank, George Kohlman, Angela Hughes, Ambrose Altemus, Jacob Doetsch, Joseph A. Basehon. Honesdale Frank N. Lord, Jacob F. Bauman, John H. Weaver, Charles McArdle, Paul E. McGranaghan, Mary A. Weaver. Lake Clement B. Marsh. Lehigh C. W. Garagan, John Calla han and W. E. Callahan. Manchester William P. C. Emerlck, W. A. Bleck, Prank DeBreun and Martin DeBreun. Mt. Pleasant John Riley, Stephen W. Monahan. Preston Anthony Yeager, Edward J. Carey, W. J. Healey. Salem-Otito Dolmetsch, Ralph Foote. South Canaan John Bentham. Starrucca C. H. Smith. Texas Thomas Gill, Frederick Kfanz, James Mundy, F. W. Bun nell, Charles H. Murphy,- Augusta Meyer, John C. Smith, Frank T. Bishop, Emmett A. Hurley. Waymart Walter J. Mitchell. RESTAURANTS. Canaan Daniel E. Gray, Trustee. Clinton John Opeka. Hawley Gus Deitzer, Jacob Adams, Louis Gelsler. Honesdale Christopher Lowe, Henry Beurket, John H. Heumann, Fred O. Gelbert, P. W. Mlchels and Charles C. McDonald, Benl. Loris, Jr., A. R. Taeubner, L. C. Weniger, T. D. O'Connell, Herman Meyer, W. B. Roadknight, Chas. P. Sllsby, John Theobald and Jos. H. Schlessler. Texas Christopher J. Hook, Jacob Beck. WHOLESALE. Hawley 'Patrick H. Kearney. Honesdale Michael Galvin, Paul E. Fives. Texas The Pennsylvania Central Brewing Co. WAREHOUSE LICENSE. Clinton The Fell Brewing Co. BOTTLERS. Honesdale John Roegner. Palmyra Luke P. Richardson. Texas Julius W. Kolz, Wm. Nle- meyer. W. J. BARNES, Clerk. Feb. 20, 1913. A PPRAISEMENTS Notice Is glv- jJl 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, March 10, 1913 viz: Fred E. Lawyer, Honesdale: Per sonal. Charles H. Mills, Lake: Personal. Byron L. Evans, Texas: Personal. Harry Stalker, Buckingham: Per sonal. Appraisement to tho minor chll dren of Lorenzo Roberts, Bucking ham; Personal. W. J. BARNES, Clerk. E vf niTrpATiio vnrnrnn I'J 'Platntn nf 'EDWARD STAPLES, Late of Township of Lehigh. All persons Indebted to said es tate are notified to make Immediate payment to the undersigned; and thoso having claims against the said estate are notified to present them duly attested, for settlement. ETNA B. STAPLES, Executrix. Sterling, Pa., Feb. 3, 1913. VrOTIOE, OF ADMINISTRATION, 1 ESTATE OF THOMAS GEMZA. Late of Salem, deceased. All persons indebted to said estate are notified to make Immediate pay ment to the Undersigned; and those having claims against said estate are notified to present them, duly attest ed, for settlement. ANNA GEMZA, Admrx. Ariel, Pa., March 6, 1913. 19w6 Searle & Salmon, Attys. Honesdale, Pa. SEELYVILXiE PROPERTY FOK SALE. The Pnllev lioiise. consisting of seven ropmBj ispHng water In house wua one acre or iana, located on Bethany r?s,d, to for sale. Chicken house. .12x48' feet and store house 1Px'2 feet arid fruit of all klndB is bn7 the premises. Price, $1,300, See Buy-U-A'Home, Realty Co., Jad win vBuildln. -Bring your dlfilcultJob work to i o COURT PROCLAMATION. Whereas, the Jndge of the several Courts of the County of Wayne has Issued his precept for holding a Court of Quarter Sessions, Oyer and Terminer, and General Jail Delivery in and for said County, nt the Court House, te becln on MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1S13. to continue one week: And directing that a Grand Jury for the Courts of Quarter Sessions nnd Oyer and Terminer be summoned to meet on Monday, Mnrch 3. 1913. at 2 p. m. Notice is therefore hereby riven to the Coroner nnd Justices of the Peace, and Con Btnbles of the County of Wayne, that they be then and there in their proper persons, nt said Court House, nt 2 o'clock in the after noon of said 3d day of Mnrch, 1913. with their records, inqulsitlons.exnmlnntions andother remembrances, to do those things which to their ofllccs nppcrtnin to be done, nnd those who nre bound by recognizance or otherwise to prosecute the prisoners who are or shall be in the Jnil of Wayne County, be then and there to prosecute ncatnst them as shnll be Just. Given under my hand, nt Honesdnle, this 13th day of Feb.. 1913, nnd In the 13fith year of the Independence of the United States FHANK C. KIMBLE. Sheriff. Sheriff's Onice 1 Honesdale. Feb. 13. 1913. J 14w4 NOTICE OF SPECIAIi BILL. Notice is hereby given that dur ing the regular session of the Gen eral Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to be held in the year one thousand nine hundred and thirteen, there will be Introduced a bill entitled "An act to amend an act approved the eighth day of May one thousand nine hundred and one, entitled 'An act to incorporate the Mllanville Bridge Company, In Wayne County, Pennsylvania.' " The object of said amendment is to change the annual date of meet ing from the first Monday of Janu ary to the second 'Monday of Janu ary. In each year. MILTON L. SKINNER, President. Chas. E. Beach, Sec'y. Feb. 7, 1913. 13eol4 lie Exceptional Bargains in Wayne County Fan RecentiBy Listed with BUY-U-A-HOME REALTY HONESDALE, PA. A fine dairy farm of 116 acres, 2 1-2 miles from Honesdale, convenient to Borden's milk station; also cream ery; 8-room house, good buildings, orchard, plenty of water. Will sell with or without stock of 15 cows, horses and farm Implements. A 1 farm consisting of 155 acres, 25 tlmberland, 40 cleared, located in Berlin township near Mast Hope road. Place has been recently Im proved, the owner having spent sev eral hundred dollars upon It. All machinery, including gasolene en gine and farming utensils are new and of the very latest. Modern Im provements are In tho house, Includ ing hot and cold water. The build ing has ten rooms. There are two portable wardrobes In the house for clothing and a large meat closet in the cellar. New chicken house 14x 110 feet, concrete floor; 300 chick ens and Incubator of 300 capacity; main barn 36x54 feet; horse barn, 18x24; cow 'barn 36 feet long; barn with basement. Good apple orchard; good spring water. Ideal place for dairy farm. An exceptional bargain. Situated in Berlin township there is a farm consisting of 108 acres, 18 of which is cleared land and 25 acres first growth timber. There Is an excellent orchard, good spring water and buildings. Upon prem ises Is a seven-room house, barn 30x40 with concrete basement and numerous outbuildings. Stock In cluded. Good dairy farm 218 acres water ed by brook and never-failing springs, located In Stalker, Wayne county, one and a half miles from creamery and on Erie railroad. Young orchard, pear, .plum and cherry trees, sugar bush; 30 acres timber, somo of which are pine and hemlock. Over 2,000 feet of cement floor on premises. Barn 40x44 feet, Any of the above properties can be purchased at reasonable prices. Terms made easy to all purchasers. For prices and further description apply to office of Buy-U-A-Home Realty Co. Honesdale., Pa. Jadwin Building Both Phones D. & M. CO. TIHE TABLE HONESDALE BRANCH In Effect Sept. 29, 1912. A.M. P.M SUN SUN 8 80 IB 00 10 30 2 15 8 18 7 10 "'.'." 1 03 8 00 P.M. A.M. 5 40 8 45 6 60 B 65 ,. s al 6 05 8 12 6 11 8 18 8 17 8 24 6 23 8 29 , 6 28 8 32 6 32 B 37 835 8 39 6 39 8 43 8 43 8 47 MM 8 60 8 60 8 65 ...... A.M. A.M. P.M, 10 00 4 30, 6 15 , 10 00 i Binebamton . A.M. 12 30 . Philadelphia. 4 45 6 35 12 30 1 18 7 00 7 60 .Wilkes-liarre. ....Scran ton.... P.M, P.M. A.M. Lv 825 6 35 6 39 2 05 2 16 2 18 8 60 Carbondale ..Lincoln Avenue.. Whites , Qulcley ...... .Karvlew , Canaan ....... ...XjJkeLodore.,., ... . Waymart , Keen.. ........Steene,....,,, , Prompton,,,.,. 8 00 8 04 8 17 8 23 8 29 8 34 V 37 6 51 2 31 0 67 7 03 2 37 2 43 2 49 2 62 2 67 2 59 7 7 12 7 18 8 42 7 21 9 44 7 25 7 28 3 03 8 48 8 62 865 18 00 8 07 7 82 3 10 1 16 ...... Seslyvlllfl.,. , ..... UonesMtt-...,, 7 86 p.uJp.m REGISTER'S NOIIOE. Notice is hereby given that tho accountants herein named hnve settled their respective accounts in the odlce of tho Keclster of Wills of Wayne County, l'a.. and that the same will be presented nt the Orphans' Court of said county for confirmation, nt the Court Houbo in Honesdale, on the third Monday ot Mnrch next viz: First and partial account of Chas. A. Emery and Augusta K. Kuhbach, executors of the estate of John Kuh bach, H6nesdale. First and final account of W. M. Norton, executor of the estate of Mary R. Thomas, Waymart. First and partial account of Friend A. Swingle, surviving execu tor of the estate of Emory Swingle, Lake. First and final account of . Albert T. Mitchell, administrator of the es tate of Ellas Mitchell, Callicoon, Tulltvan county, N. Y. First and final account of John H. Barnes, administrator of the es tate of William J. Barnes, Mount Pleasant township. First and final account of Maudo M. Katz, administratrix of the es tate of William Katz, Honesdale. First and final account of Ed ward O. Kerr, executor of the estate of Mary Kerr, Hawley. W. B. LESHER, Recorder. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Estate of GEORGE HAYNES, Late of Preston, deceased. All persons Indebted to said estate are notified to make Immediate pay ment to the undersigned; and those having claims against said estate are notified to present them, duly attest ed, for settlement. MARGARET HAYNES, W. H. DAVIS, Executors. Lakewood, Pa., Jan. 14, 1913. 12wC. COMPANY patent steel stanchion; hog and hen house, granary.' House 24x28 feet Is in good condition. Easy payment with part payment down. Five houses, two barns, excelsior mill, granary, cattle, farming Imple ments, gasolene engine located at Equlnunk overlooking the Delaware river. Buildings In good shape. Home of owner Is 20x24 feet with a two-story addition 12x18 feet and summer kitchen 12x30 feet. Water in house, equipped with all modern appointments, acetylene gas and elec tricity, steam heat, etc. One of best country homes In Wayne county. Will sell stock II purchaser desires. There Is also a developed water pow er on the premises. An exceptional bargain. Seven acres of land are In cluded. Fine summer homo located on the Honesdale, Dyberry, Damascus and RUeyville roads, R. D. route, near school and church. House contains several rooms and has a porch eight feet wide and 65 feet long. The building is heated by Bteam, ceilings 9 feet high, with running water in the house. Seventy-five acres of good tillable soil, practically level and all cleared. Three apple or chards. $3,000 spent on house last year. Good bargain for quick buyer. Fine farm located at Glrdland con taining 134 acres, good tract of tim ber valued at $1,000, 90 acres im proved. Twelve-room house, the cel lar being flagged. Barn 36x50 with 9 foot basement and an annex 18x26 feet, three stories high. Upper story is sealed, granary and wood house. Place well watered. Star route nearby. 100,000 feet of hem lock lumber joins above property. Tract consists of 96 acres. Trout brook mile In length flows through this tract. Bargain for somebody. P.M. A.M , HUN SUN Albany . 11 001 v oo 7 45 8 12 P.M. 12 65 12 05 10 Co 8 U Ar P.M. P.M. 11 26 11 14 8 27 8 17 8 IS 8 00 "i 64 7 47 7 41 7 38 7 82 7 80 ib 7 18 7 16 11 10 10 69 10 63 10 45 10 38 1 37 10 32 18 tm II K It 21 IS ill P.M. P.M. A.M. 2 00 11 00 12 40 8 45 4 09 7 45 8 12 "'!!! A.M P.M 9 35 2 65 7 25 8 45 2 13 6 30 A.M. P.M. P.M. 8 05 1 35 6 80 7 64 1 25 6 40 7 60 1 21 6 34 7 39 1 09 6 24 783 103 6 18 7 25 12 56 6 11 7 19 12 61 6 06 7 17 12 40 6 04 i- iu 35 i i :::::: I 8 66 13 28 j S SOLD BV DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE