THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JUIjY 28, 1000. CENT A WORD COLUMN ! FOR SALE One of the nnest dwellings on ono of the finest streets in Honesdale. All modern Improve ments, furnace, hot and cold water, bath room, etc. If you want a swell home go and look at It. It's grand only J3100. DORIX. HOARD WANTED Olllce man, neat and orderly, desires board and lodging with private family. Address XT., Citizen office. FOR HUNT Room suitable for office or shop. Jno. F. Roe, 1200 Main street. 59tl I OFFER two modern dwellings on Church street at Irresistible prices. DORIX. FOR SALE Main street corner property, 100x1 CO, Improved. Jno. F. Roe, 1200 Main street. 59tl FOR SALE Roll top desk and office chair. Jno. F. Roe', 1200 Main street. 50tl If you want to sell your town property just go to a ' Citizen's phone and ask for 70.1. I'll be at the other end all days and at all hours. Give mo your address and I'll call on you. DORIN. FOR HAIiK Lady's bicycle, Ivcr JoluiHon make; good order, cheap. Inquire Citizen olllce. twtf. WANTED 5 day laborers at the Fish Hatchery, Pleasant Alt., Pn., Apply to X. R. Puller. fiGti A HOUSE on East Extension street to rent. Inquire Hotel Wayne. G7t3 FOR HALE Hon te and nine acres of land In Promption. Terms to suit buyer. F. P. Kimble, Honesdale, Pa. 57t2 B RAMAN has some splendid na tive and western horses for sale, all in excellent condition at Allen House barn. 25tf. SPECIAL attention given to chil dren at Charlesworth's Studio. 2S FOR SALE Ray house, on East Extension street. Large lot with sixty feet front. M. E. Simons. 3Seoltf. LOCAL AND VICINITY Conductor AI. AI. Pepper of the Erie, was struck on the leg by a drawhead at AI. Q. tower on Wed nesday. He came to Port .Tervis and was treated at the hospital. Allss Delia Fowley was found drowned in White Lake, Thursday morning last. She had given her address as 210 West GSth street. New York. It is supposed to be a case of suicide. Scranton is apprehensive of an other catastrophe. The barbers of that city threaten to strike, if they are not allowed to iuit at 10 o'clock on Saturday nights. Buy yourselves a "razzor" and let them strike. An Italian laborer slipped while unloading stone from an Erie car at Aliddletown Summit on Wednes day and struck his head against a cross-beam. He received a scalp wound which was treated at the Port Jervis hospital. The board of directors of the Erie Railroad lias passed a resolu tion restoring the salaries of offi cers and employes reduced some time ago. The conditions of the company are so satisfactory that it was stated that the restoration will date from July 1. An unknown man, while walking across a trestle over Spring Brook on the Laurel Line, near Aloosic, was run down at 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon and died six hours later at the Aloses Taylor hospital, hav ing sustained a fractured skull, as well as other minor injuries. Harry Steinberg, a young man of Jewish extraction, was arrested last week at Alontlcello, N. Y., for steal ing jewelry, etc., from residents of Mountalndale, but principally from young ladles, with whom he was very popular. He plead guilty and Is now awaiting an interview with the grand jury. Armed with a lumberman's ax, E. N. Tollman, sixty years old, a Heart Lake, Susquehanna county farmer, went on a rampage Thurs day while insane. He chopped his way into a neighbor's house, but finding the family away, returned to his own home, bent on mischief. His two grown sons disarmed him after a struggle and strapped him to a couch, until a constablo came and took him to Hillside Home. The Courier-Journal says: A meeting of the Deposit Board of Trade was held in the village hall Monday evening for the purposo of considering ways and means of keeping the Outing plant in Deposit. A Scranton firm had made an offer of ?20,000 for the plant through their local attorney, C. E. Scott, and if they succeeded In securing it, would operate the plant In that city. We understand that Judge Ray decided that it would bo wise not to sell the plant for less than three-fourths of the appraised valuo, and if the recelyers could not get that ho instructed them to sell it at public auction. Two cows of G. C. Valentine, near Deposit, N .Y., recently died of rabies. At least that is the verdict of Cornell University. A fall of rock killed Peter Prus zlnskl, a miner in the old slope of Susquehanna Coal company at Glen Lyon. He was 3S years of age and married. Anna Calnaroonus, a little child, of Scranton, was on Sunday struck and killed by a passenger train while on her way to church, accom panied by an older sister. Frank Jackett, aged 13, was drowned at Sackett's Lake, near Alontlcello, Thursday afternoon. He dived into .leep water, and, be ing unable to swim, met death. While turning on an electric light In the hotel of Alike Ferrett, Hick ory street, Old Forge, Friday night, John Pasere, of Old Forge, met death by electrocution. He furnish ed a circuit for the electricity by standing on the Iron rail in front of the bar as he turned the switch. The body found last Friday, on the bank of the Lackawannn, near Depot street, Scranton, has been Identified as that of Herbert D. Marshall, of 033 Alooste street. He was an Insurance agent. It Is thought that while at his ordinary business he was stricken with heart failure. Allss Emma Viola I. owls, daugh ter of James A. Lewis, of Plttston, died on Friday at the sum mer home of her grandparents, Air. and Airs. J. D. Kirby, in Way mnrt, Wayne county. For several years Allss Lewis had been in ill health, and for the past two months her condition had been gradually growing more serious. In giving orders for the discharge of Simon Perash from jail Friday at Wilkes-Barre, Judge Fuller said some Justices of the Peace should read up the law a little and they would not make so many blunders. Justice of the Peace Samuel S. Glngell committed Perash to jail In default of bail for debt. Judge Fuller said the statute under which the prisoner had been committed had been abolished half a century ago. The court suggested that an example should be made of such Justices of the Peace as Glngell and that ho should be prosecuted. Who 11ns Lost a Roy? The body of the unknown young man, killed by the cars Saturday morning near Rummerfleld was Tuesday consigned to a grave in the Potter's field in Riverside cemetery. Every effort was made by Coroner Johnson, Chief Miller and Alurphy & Alaryott to identify the body and locate the young man's friends, with out success. Towanda Reporter Journal. Fifty Elks Injured. Thursday last, near Pottsville, Pa., after a wild dash down a steep grade a special trolley car carrying half a hundred Elks, turned turtle at the foot of a hill. Scarcely one of the passengers escaped without injury, and live wore seriously hurt. They were: Thomas B. Golden, Pottsville, leg crushed, later amputated, cut about head. George W. Bower, Easton, frac tured collarbone, back injured. Bargo Weldman, Pottsville, should er broken, scalp torn. James Earnest, Easton, head cut, back and legs Injured. Irwin Paul, Bangor, head cut and pelvis fractured. The crowded car had started down a long steep grade on the Tumbling Run branch of the Eastern Pennsyl vania railroad, when the motorman discovered that the airbrakes would not work. The hand brake was powerless to control the heavy car, and it dashed on to the bottom where it left the track and turned turtle. Just About Now. The bees are in the meadow And the swallows In the sky; The cattle In the shadow Watch the river running by. The wheat is hardly stirring; The heavy ox team lags; The dragon fly is whirring Through the yellow blossomed flags. And down beside the river Where the trees lean o'er the pool, Where the shadows reach and quiver; A boy has come to school. His teachers are the swallows, And the river, and the trees. His lessons are the shallows, And the flowers, and the bees. He knows not he Is learning, He thinks nor writes a word, But in the soul discerning A loving spring Is stirred. In after years oh, weary years! The river's lesson he Will try to speak to heedless ears In faltering minstrelsy. John Boyle O'Reilly. CASTOR I A Por Infants and Children. The Kind You Havo Always Bought Bears the Signature of INTERNATIONAL NEWSPAPER BIBLE STUDY CLUB. Answer One Written Question Each Week For Fifty-Two Weeks and Win a Prize. THE PRIZES. First Series A gold medal to each of the first five contestants. Second Serlss A silver medal to each of the next five contestants. Third Series A Teacher's Bible, price $5.50, to each of the next five contestants. Fourth Series The book "The Heart of Christianity," price $1.50, to each of the next thirty-five contestants. Fifth Series A developed mind, an expanded Imagination, a richer exper ience and a more profound knowledgo o1 the Bible and of life, to all who take this course whether winning any other prize or not. Each medal will be suitably engrav ed, giving the name of the winner, and for what It Is awarded, and In like manner each Bible and book will bo Inscribed. All who can write, and have Ideas, are urged to take up these studies re gardless of the degree of tholr educa tion, as the papers are not valued from an educational or literary standpoint, but from the point of view of the cog incy of their reasoned Ideas. Aug. 1st, 1909. (Copyright, 1009, by Krv. T. S. I.lnscort. D.D.) Close of Paul's Atlsslonary Journoy. Acts xvlll:l-22. Golden Text In the world yo shall have tribulation; bo of good cheon I haw overeomo the world. John xvl:33. Verso 1 What rcmarkahlo thing had immediately pieceded Paul's start for Corinth? There Is no record of a vision or any special Divine Instruction, for Paul going to Corinth; but Is a good man as much guided by God when he Is not conscious of It, as when he Is, and why? (This question must be answered In writing by members of the club.) Verses 2-3 What was the attrac tion between Aqulla and Paul? How do you account for It that there is an affinity between men of the same trade? Have labor men a perfect right to band themselves together, for mu tual protection, against the undue de mands of capital? Has capital a moral right to pro tect Itself against labor? Have business men a right to pro tect themselves against undue compe tition? Paul worked at his trade as a tent maker for a living, is there any sug gestion in this that modern preachers should do a similar thing? A large proportion of the member ship of the present day Christian church, have the latent ability to preach; ought not this ability to bo de veloped, thus giving to every local church several preachers, and the work being divided between them, would be better done than at present, and each preacher make his own liv ing? Verse 4 Is it the duty and privi lege of every adult Christian to be engaged at least every Sunday, in some specific spiritual work? Why did Paul, In the beginning, in Corinth, confine his work to the Sab bath day and to the Jews? Verses 5-fi What effect did the visit of Silas and Timothy have upon Paul? If a good man is ever so much in earnest, may the visit of another earnest man intensify his spirit? When a man does his very best in preaching, and fails to make converts, is ho entitled to as much credit as If he had great success? Did Paul blame himself for his fail ure, and that the Jews resisted and blasphemed; and ought a man of God always take a similar position In like circumstances? Verse 7 Has it ever been in tho past, and is it to-day, sometimes nec essary for a good man to leave the church and start a meeting of his own? Verse 8 Is belief in Jesus an in tellectual effect, or is it spiritual and supernatural? Verses 0-11 What method did God take in this instance to talk to Paul? Why is it that so few Christians have any experience of any special message from God? Do Christians speak as much as they ought for Christ to-day, and is there any fear of being hurt by speak ing for him? Verses 12-17 Can any man ex pect, even in these days, to be un flinchingly faithful to God, and not make some people angry? How do you estimate tho character of this man Galllo, and what is there In him worthy of imitation? Verses 18-22 Sum up tho effects of. Paul's efforts as revealed In this lesson. Lesson for Sunday, Aug. 8th, 1909. Paul's Instructions to the Thessalon lans. I Thess. v: 12-24 Also. "Stars of the summer night," Thou art divinely fair, But as sure as we walk for a quiet talk There's something that's sure our pleas ure to balk The mosquitoes are also there. Philadelphia Bulletin. On the Move. "Tho housefly must go!" said one scientist. "There Is no comfort In that asser tion," answered tho other. "The house fly's roving disposition Is precisely what causes tho damage." Illustrated Tllta IN HIS TIME DAVE SHAVED 360,000 Now When Tired Rests, No Mat ter How Many Customers Are Waiting for Him OLDEST BARBER MAKES COMMENTS Men's Faces, He Says, Are Losing Strong Masculinity that Formerly Marked Them oays barberlng Is not a Trade, Is a Profession. Cleveland. Ohio. Right opposite the Cuyahoga Kails Hotel is Dave Berkhelmer's barber shop, whoso pro prietor works when he feuis like It and at no other time. An evening or ho ago, at an hour when business usually gets brisk, he turned tho lights low, carried a chair out to the sidewalk, and. seating himself, lighted a pipe and was puffing away contentedly when he had a call. It was Jake Bon ron. who came In from tho farm with a bunch of hair on his face, the crop of a full week, '.n his buttonhole was a flower and ho wore a palo bluo neck tie, for It was tho night ho always set apart for his girl: "Guess I'll try ono of your shaven pop," ho remarked, hesitating at the doorstep. "Not this ovenlng, you won't," ob served Dave. "What's tho reason 1 won't? Ain't this a regular barber shop, and aln t you a regular barber, and ain't vou gotta shave anybody that's got the price? And If that's all that's wrong of you, I kin show I've got that all right." "My boy," said Dave, "I want to work when I want to and not when other people want me to. I'll tell you something. I started In this businasd when I was thirteen years old. I'm seventy-three now. That makes sixty years at the strop. I'm the oldest barber in the United States. And all this time I've been working, thinking I had to. Well, I've just decided that I don't have to and I ain't going to. Good night." Has Dave retired? Not a bit of it. That's merely his declaration of independence. Actual ly he's working harder than ever. "But," ho says, "I've saved a bit of money, and I'm beholden to no man. And from now on I'm going to work till 1 get tired, and when I get tired I'm going to lay off if the whole shop's full of people. "Yes. you bet I've shaved some men In my day. I llgure that I've worked on about G.C00 faces and heads a year on an average for sixty years. That makes It run upward 360,000 for my sixty years, don't It? "Has the human face undergone any changes? Well. I should say It has And not for the better, eitue., It seoms to me. You don't see any rugged, strong faces any more, like you used to. "Men's faces used to be hard and big, and the hair on the top of the head was as thick as it was on the chin and jaws. Men are getting to b more like women. Their faces are big enough sometimes, but they're soft and kind of flabby that old hardness Isn't there any more. Tho hair's all on the face and not on the head. "There has been a change In the cheek bones. Most young fellows now adays seem to have kind of high cheek bones. They don't look no more like their grandads than a cat does like a tiger. "I've figured that we can blame the hats for the bald heads. Men didn't used to be so careful about covering their heads up with air-tight straw and the like of that in the hot sum mer. They used to wear hats that let plenty of air in, and that's what their hair needs mor'n anything else. Halr'll never come out if you keep it clean and give it plenty of air." There's no unsteadiness about Dave for all his sixty years at the strop, One of his favorite jokes Is to get a man that he can not hold a pin In his hand, arm stretched horizontally, for ten minutes. It sounds easy, but did you ever try it? Few men can do it. Dave can. Dave smokes a good deal. Also he drinks two beers a day. "My own Idea about this drink busi ness," he says, "is that the more you say to a man that he mustn't take it, tho harder he'll go after it. Now I was going to say that I'd drink all my life, but never had been drunk but 1 was once. "Let's see it was after Lincoln's second election the time he was at Hudson. I went over there with a lot of other fellows to see Lincoln go through. And I recollect we took a bottle along. Yes, I was pretty well corned up that time. I had the bottle when Lincoln came In. " 'How're ye, Abe,' I yells, waving both hands, one holding the bottle, too. "Ho waved back, laughed and said something, I don't know what, though I've studied over It lota of times. I wish I'd heard H, for I bet you a cookie It was something good. He used to get off some pretty rich things. "Barberlng isn't a trade It's a pro fession. I learned my trade in Ger many, and I can do surgery. Why, 1 can bleed a man with the best of doctors. And I know all the diseases of tho face and what's good for them. How many barbers do nowadays? But they ought to." The Mexican National Exposition Is to bo held in Fuebla In the spring ot YOUR HARVEST of the savings in our bank is Interest--Good Interest--for the use of your money. Twice a year you reap the harvest on the dollars you have plant ed here during that time. There is no safer soil than a bank, with ample resources and wise management; no surerer yield than the three per cent. Interest we pay. Saving leads to success. Farmers' and Me chanics' Bank, Honesdale, Pa. If you don't insure with us, we both lose. Insurance White Mills Pa. TNTHE DISTIilCT COUltT OK THE X UNITED STATES FOR THE MID DLE DISTRICT OK PENNSYLVANIA Xn. lli.7 In Ilimkrtiiitcv. In tho matter of KDW1N I). l'JtENTK'K. jjauKrupt. The ttmlcrsltfned, Trustee of 12. 1), Prentice, bankrupt, by order of the llanknipt Court. willM'llat public sale at the Court House in llone.Mlale horousrh. Pa., on 1-rldav tho IWthilay of .Inly, It'll!), at two o'clock, P. -M the ro owinir i eser oeil rea elate: All that certain lot. parcel or piece of land situated ill the iioioiiKh or Mtamtcca, ( 'utility of Wayne and State ot Pennsylvania, hound ed ami desciilK'd asfollows-CO.MMKXCING lit. !l imlllt til the t-i.lltnr nf Mm mililti. )i l"hu'!i v in front of the store known as The 1'iiricll store building, fifty feet distant from the cen- toroi me oxtiiwn ereeK ; inence aloii the center of the highway south sixty-live de grees wet nfty leet to the center of the Cox town creek : thence north forty-two degrees west down the center of said creek tlfty-two feet to a corner in the center of said creek: thence north seventy degrees east eighty feet to a corner forty one feet distant from the n ace ot heglnlng: theneu south twenty de dgrees east forty-one feet to the center nt said highway the place of beginning. CONTAIN ING tnoreorless.on which there is one story frame store building known as "The l'anell store. ' lielng same land which K. C. .Mum ford et al. granted and conveyed to K, I OniiOInn h-ili.i.il ,l.i,,.il l.'.ihvmt vv l-. 111(17 , ... corded in Wayne, county in Deed Jlook'No, 97. nage 51 etc. AI.SU. all that certain piece or parcel of latin situated in me norougn oi .Mnrrucea county ot Wayne, state or rennsylvanla hounded and described as follows : liKOIN' NIN(i 111 the center of the highway leading from .StaiTiicca to I.anesboroand in the lineof W. W. Mumfurd; thence north thirty-three and one-fort h degrees west along the center of said highway Ilfty feet to a corner: thence north sixty-three ami one-half degrees east along lands of J. C. Hart'son fifteen rods to corner and lineof J. T, Hyatt: thence south 25 and one-half degrees east along said Hyatt line Ilfty feet to a corner and line of . W. Mtunford : thence south sixty-three and one-half degrees west along said Mum ford's line fourteen rods and tltteen links to the place of beginning. CONTAINING forty perches of land more or less, on which there Is a two store frame house and other Im provements. It being the same piece of land deeded by J. C. llateson et ux. to the trustees of the First Baptist church ot Starrucca and recorded In the otlice for recording deeds In the county of Wnyne, Deed Book No.tfi), page 391. And belug the same land which the trustees or the First Baptist church of star mm conyoved to K. I). Prentice hy deed dat ed Fcbruary29, 1908. and recorded In Wayne county In Deed Book No. 9H, page 246 etc. Sale of this real estnto will be made free and clear of all Incumbcrances and loins. Tl'.K.MS OK SALK, CASH. W. W. MUMFOKD. Mumford. Atty. Trustee. Starrucca Pa.. July 3. 1909. TN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 1 OF WAYNE COUNTY Katie Dean v. Samuel Dean. No. 107 March Term 1909. Libel In Divorce. To SAMUKL DKAN: You are hereby re quired to appear In tho said Court on the second Monday of August next, to answer the complaint to the judge of said court by Katie Dean, your wife. In tho cause uhove stated, or In defuult thereof a decree of di vorce as prayed for In said complaint muy bo made agufiist you In your absence. . M.LKKBBAMAN. Simons, Att'y. Wherlff. Honesilnle. Pa. Juno 29. 1909. Mwl ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OP TRAINS Delaware & Hudson R. R. Trains leave at 6:55 a. m., and 12:25 and 4:30 p. m. Sundays at 11:05 a. m. and 7:15 p. m. Trains arrive at 9:55 a. m., 3:15 and 7:31 p. m. Sundays at 10:15 a. m. and 6:60 p. m. HITHER k Hi General Erlo R. R. Trains leave at 8:27 a. m. and 2:50 p. m. Sundays at 2:50 p. m. Trains arrive at 2:13 and 8:02 p. m. Sundays at 7:02 p. m. ROLL of HONOR Attention is called to the STRENGTH of the Wayne County The FINANCIER of New York City has published a ROLL Oh HONOR of the 11,470 State Hanks mid Trust Companies of United States. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS HANK Stands 38th in the United States. Stands I Oth in Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $455,000.00 Total ASSETS, $2,733,000.00 Honesdale. Pa., May 20 1008., VTOTICE OK INCORPORATION. No jLl tice is hereby riven that nn nnnli- catlon will he made to tho Governor of the State of Pennsylvania, upon Friday, Aueust ti, 1909. by Geo. H. Lancaster. .Mary B. Lan- i-usiur. uscar r.. Lancaster ami c. Kverett Lancaster, under the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania entitled. " .i i no nn mi uie incorporation ami regulation of certain corporations." approved Aliril 29. lHTl 'ntltl tllil Hlltmtitiipntij riinrntfi for the charter of an intended corporation to he called "The Geo. H. Lancaster Company." the character and object of which Is "the manufacturing and selling of building ma terial and anything in connection therewith and to conduct a general wood manufacturing and turning business." and for these purpos es to have, possess and enjoy all the rights. ueiii-nis uuu privileges oi sani acroi Asenio ly and Its supplements. A. T. SEA RLE. , Solicitor. Honesdale Pa. July 9, 1909. oiieoLJ C.M.Betz. Havins purchased the interest of T. Ii. Mcdlanri, of Carbondale, in the harness business of lJctz & Medlnml of that city, the business will be conducted in the future by O. M. Hot, alone, who will also con tinue bis store in Honesdale ns here tofore. In order to reduce stock, reductions in prices will be inndo on all jtooil'- Siiri;lns may bo found in both stores. Mr. Edward Fasshauer, who has been in tho Honesdale store about ten yeurs as clerk, will bnve full charge of tho Carbondale f.tore.' C. M. BETZ Manufacturer of Custom Harness Honesdale, Pa., April 1(1, 1000. Notice. Pursuant to Act of Assem bly, a meeting of the Stockholders of the Wayne County Savings Hank will be held at the ollice of the bank on Thurs day, July 22, 1900, from one to two o'clock p. m., to vote for or against the proposition to again renew and extend the charter, corporate rights and fran chises of said bank for the term of twenty years, from February 17, 1910. Hy order of the Bard of birectors. H. S Salmon Cashier. 32eoll4 Ponies and Carts GIVEN A.WA.-X" Beautiful Shetland Ponies, handsome Carts, solid Gold Wutches, Diamond Hlncs and other valuable presents clven away. To Boys and dlrls who win our PONEY AND CART CONTEST Open to all Poys and Girls. Costs nothlntr to enter. Get enrolled at once. Hundreds ot dollars worth ot prizes and cash besides. EVERY CONTESTANT IS PAID CASH whether he wins a crand prize or not. Write us today for full particulars before It Is too late. k J -k HUMAN LIFE PUBLISHING CO., 528 Atlantic Avenue, Boston, Mass.