THE CITIZEN, FIUDAY, AUGUST 0, 1000. Pi 1 11 LAKEV1LLE. Newal McKane, of Hoadlcy, is visiting friends and relatives in this vicinity. David Wise is the guest of Mar cus Kllllam, of this place. Miss Maine Evan nnd Miss Eliza beth Jones returned to their homes at Scranton, after a month's vaca tion at the "Iteusamont." Mr. and Mrs. Mlnigan, of Brook lyn, are spending their vacation at A. Gobies'. Mary Schrader, of Leclgedale, spent a few days at A. Coble's re cently. The Lakevllle ball team played some of Scranton's college boys on Sunday. Score was 13 to 2 in the home team's favor. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wood ward, of Adella, spent Sunday re cently with Mr. and Airs. J. X. Stephens. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Murphy spent Sunday with Mrs. E. C. Mur phy of this place. H. F. Ilanoy is seriously ill at his home at this place. The last report is that ho Is a trifle better. Aug. 2, 11)09. BETHANY. Wednesday was a perfect day for an outdoor festa, and all who at tended .Mr. and Mrs. Charles Faatz's chicken-pie supper enjoyed it to the full extent. About sixty par took of the bountiful repast and enrichjjd the treasury over eighteen dollars. Henry Kent, of Carbondale, is visiting his sister, Mrs. Ed. Hacker. Rev. J. 13. Cody attended 1'omona Grange at Ariel this week. Miss Clara Halloo, accompanied by Wayne Crocker, of Wllkes-Barre, is spending her vacation at the homo of her sister, Mrs. Edgar Ross. Mrs. Judson B. Faatz is enter taining her sister, Mrs. Cott and husband, from Miners Mills. Mrs. John Strongman is spending several days in Xew York. The T. 1. C. girls arc looking for ward to ten days of great pleasure, camping at Beach Lake, and will leave on Wednesday. The club Is made up of the following girls: President, Blanche Starnes; vice president, Eva Ilarmes; secretary, Ella Gammull; treasurer, Edna Blake. Carolyn and Dolhi Cody, Marjorie llaiiBcr, Margaret Manning, Grace Miller. Edna I hceseman, of Flushing, will also bo one of the party. Miss Gilchrist will be the chaperon. Edgar Anderson, of Wilkes-Barre, is spending his vacation here. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley I'aynter and daughter, Isabelle, of Carbondale, are enjoying the cool breeze at the comfortable home of their mother, Mrs. Laura Miller. Two Mormon elders passed through here this week distributing tracts. "1 1 i n A A1 ia rinvmnn Tin vm nu are entertaining, Mrs. Harmes i brother and wife, Dr. and Mrs. C. i T. Winner and little son, of Boston, and Miss Grace Winner, of Pleasant ' Mount. Tho ball game Saturday after noon, between Seelyville and Beth any, resulted in favor of the visitors, the score being 15 to 12. Mrs. Richard Roberts and daugh ter, Lucy, of Old Forge, have been visiting friends here. Aug. 2, 1909. ALDEXVILLE. Mr. S. J. Stanton and family were guests at the home of Mr. F. H. Curtis, in Curtis Valley, Sun day. Some of Mr. G. II. Knapp's fam ily attended Sunday School in Cur tis Valley, last Sunday. One of Mr. W. O. Walker's hands was pierced by the tines of a fork falling from a hay mow, one day this week. Miss Louise and Emma Smith were callers in the villago on Tues day. Mr. Samuel Wright, of New York, is a guest at the home of John Derrick. Anna Fitze was a caller in the village on Monday. The Doughertles, of Jersey City, were visitors In this section last week. Osborne Snedeker, Stanley Rainey, Everett Rainey, Jud. Fltze and Glen Wllmarth attended a dance in Pleasant Mount on Saturday night. All report a good time. An ice cream social and danco will be held by the Aldenvillo base ball team Tuesday, August 10th. All are Invited to attend. MILAXVILLE. Mrs. Milton Skinner and Miss Lorena Skinner wero tho guests of Honesdale friends this week. Dr. E. A. Carpenter left for Bos ton, Mass., on Saturday last. Mrs. E. A. Carpenter spent Sun day in Binghamton with Mrs. Henry Lovoll. Mrs. Carpenter leaves early in the week for Chicago, whoro she will bo the guest of her friend, Mrs. Angora. Miss Bernadlne Oliver, of De posit, N. Y who has been visiting Mllanvllle friends, left Monday to VILLAGE, HAMLET, FARM. Doings in Rural Wayne. Interesting Items Picked Up by Our Staff of Wide-Awake Correspondents spend some time at Tyler Hill, with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Oliver. L. J. Hockor has his house filled with city people. Mr. Will Cornell, of New York, spent Sunday with his family at their bungalow. Mr. Herbert Magrudcr, of New York, arrived Saturday to spend his viif.ntlnn nl hiinir.ilmv. C. N. Tyler, of Cortland, K. Y spent Sundny in town. Mrs. Gillette and Miss May Gil lette, who have been enjoying sev eral weeks of country solitude, left Monday for Cortland, X. Y. Aug. 4, iooa. WAYMAKT. Death seems to have Invaded our community the past ten days. Six Crane's and is calling on acnualnt funerals in so short a period has ances at Uswlck. caused gloom to pervade our com-j Edwin Waterson, of Brooklyn, N. munlty and sadness to enshroud the Y., arrived on Wednesday of .last hearts of many sorrowful friends. The Epworth League of the M. E. church held an ice cream festival on the school house lawn Tuesday evening, Aug. 3. It was a success socially and financially. Rev. W. E. Davis and family will camp at Elk Lake during August. All of our teachers but two have secured schools for tho coming year. We have two excellent teachers whom we can safely recommend to those who have not yet found teach ers. There will be an examination held in the High school building, Satur day, Aug. 21, for pupils who wish to qualify for high school work. Pu pils from the adjoining districts may take this examination. It will bo held under Prof. Keohler's super vision. We urge all teachers who expect to take tho examination for permanent certillcate next June, to pursue a systematic course of homo work during tho whole year. Aug. 3, 11)03. WIUTE MILLS. Henry IHeeir met with the mis- fortune to fall out of a tree on Tues- day and receive a severe cut in the head. Dr. E. B. Gavitte was called I and dressed the wound. The secret of saving money is out, you must earn more than you : s-pend. George W. Kimble spent Sundnv in Ilawley with his brother. i M. J. Decker anil Wm. W. Hertel ! spent Sunday in Havlev. Mr. Thomas Gill loft for Harris- burg on Tuesday, to attend the Dem ocratic State Convention. Imon his return, ho is going to take a trip firnlllul tlio RfrMtrv nncnmnnnipd l.v Samuel Saunders of Berlin. liittinger & Ham spent Sunday among the Beach Lake farmers evidently to gain sonic information and knowledge of high grade live stock. Several young ladies from Scran- . ",lll,,B u"1,iml "uuerunu wi,'(:; , , , , M nor Bro,wn J,'tly had one or hi k,RB. "l"115', ,nJ,urcd b' contact ,, 1 I, n ln , 1, , !( F. .1. rn mm .i I,... u urn.- nine. Aug. 3, 190!). DHEHEH. ! Xewfoundland and vicinity has had and is still ha ing a very liberal share of the summer boarder patron- ( musical Saturday night, was a coin ago and tho stage coaches from plete success. The exercises were Cresco and Gouldsboro do a thriv-1 voted good by everyone and over Ing business in the passenger and forty dollars were cleared, baggage traffic. Sulky plows, a recent invention, Our public roads are awfully I are getting numerous around here, rough and dusty, but it doesn't C. M. Pethick and Thos. Fortinan seem to interfere with tho traveller. ! are the owners of a couple, and Haying and rye harvest is about done, and the farmer is making ready for oats harvest. The crop is short in straw but promises a fair yield in grain. Joseph Gowger, of Northampton county, Pa., is calling on friends in Dreher and Greentown. B. G. Cross, wife and son, B. F, Stout, wife and four children, all of I Moosic, Pa., are guests of Mary Cross. I Mrs. R. M. Swartz, of Scranton, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kerr. Miss Eleanor Thomas, of Phila delphia, is tho guest of A. C. Angel and family. Rose Angel and Mary Hause spent Sunday, August 1, In bcranton. The ten-ton steam road roller on the state road in Greentown, Pike county, was ditched near Miller's bridge on Saturday afternoon, and It required the services of several with Jack-screws for a couple of hours, to get the "big thing" on solid ground again F. D. Waltz has placed a concrete . porch floor In front of the New- foundland postofllco. For an nma teur In the work ho has done a very creditable job. Tho slate for the rnnf on tlin now i High school building has been ' sidetracked somewhere In transit, and as a consequenco tho roof work Is held up, 1 Mr. and Mrs. Solg have a now , baby girl added to their family, born August 1st Mr. and Mrs. Georgo Corroll aro also entertaining their first born, a daughter, born about July 28th. A foreign laborer In tho employ of G. H. Lancaster, of South Sterl ing, took one of Mr. Lancaster's horses from the stable sometime dur ing Saturday evening and rode it to Tobyhanna. The man was aome what the worse of strong drln'c and on reaching Tobyhanna ho tied up the horse near the road, and being overcome with alcohol aud sleep, he laid down nearby and slept. The horse was missing on Sunday morn ing and a party went in search of It. They came upon the would-bo thief still asleep, and no other evi dence was required to prove his guilt. He was brought to South Sterling and on Monday morning given a hearing before J. S. Smith, Esn-" and later taken u' constable J. B. Kranter to Honesdale for rest in the county Jail until the sitting ! ot tho Moxt Brand Jury. Another I llorsG belonging to Mr. Lancaster wns found dead in the stable on I Sunday morning from some un- I known cause. Aug. 2, 190!). USWICK AND LAKKVILLE. Miss Helen Crane, of Brooklyn, N. Y., arrived at Uswlc.k on Satur day to spend her vacation with her parents, Mr. nnd Mrs. S. R. Crane and family. Miss Eleanor Waterson, of Brook- ; lyn, arrived on Monday at S. R. week at the homo of C. W. Pen nell, at Uswick, and is visiting old acquaintances here for a couple of weeks. i .Mrs. Karran, ot Brooklyn, N. Y., formerly Miss Sadie Waterson, of Uswlck, and her husband, sailed for England last week Wednesday, the lattor's birthday, expecting to land on Monday. They expect to be gone about six weeks. Wedding bells at Uswick In the near future. Invitations have been sent out. Miss Tillie Lindan went to Phila delphia on Saturday for a visit with her parents, and other relatives there. Expects to be gone about two months. Charles Relneko nnd bride, from Xew York, are visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Relncke, at this place. Mr. T?nnlr nf Vmv Vnrlr ni'Hvol ut Mr. Renscher's on Friday to stay until Monday with his wife and daughter, who are boarding at that place. Arthur Crane and John Mains are putting n new roof on Mr. Sand- ur'H ual'n- -Vr- c- 15- Glosengor has finished Iwlng for Mr. Uonscher and is now 'Piping Mr. Kline. F-, u- Olmsted has finished hay- lor Mr- hwan aml ls now nel"- ins Mr. J. Schlcupner. "lss Jiarriet koiui starts to-day for tl,e seashore- for her health. She tako tlle Weilbrenner children, Madeline and Dorothy, to their homo ''on i'ai. ana will tnen join some friends at the seashore. Berries have been scarce this sea- son' All' :ind Mrs. James Carefoot, ave entertaining .Mrs. Edward Wood ward and two children from Dun- moro- Aug. .'!, lliOil. TYLHIt HILL. Showers arc frequent now. We nail a Dig rain Sunday night, Martin Jensen raised his barn yesterday. Charles Monnington has taken .1... a 1. .. n .. . . me agency ior uie urnim union Tea Company. Clarence Fortinan made a business trip to Lake Huntingdon on Satur- day. The open air entertainment and Thos. Griffith has ordered one for his fall plowing. Mary Fromer, of Damascus, was a recent guest of Sadie Welsh. Alma Canfield spent Sunday with Hattlo Slepp. Mr. Mlnch preached in the school i house Sunday night, to a large au dience. He will also preach on Thursday evening. There will be a business meeting of the First Baptist church of Da- mascus, at that place on Saturday afternoon. The Citizen should come to every home In this place. Aug. 3, 1909. NEW PRESIDENT OF COLOMBIA. Qonzalas Valencia Elected to Fill Out Term of General Reyes. Bogota, Aug. n. Gonzales Valencia was elected president of Uie republic of Colombia by the national congress to fill out tho unexpired term of Gen eral Rafael Reyes, resigned. This moans that he will occupy the post of chief executive for about ono year Gonoral Jorge Holquln, who has been acting president of tho republic, with drew his candidacy, leaving the con teat between Gonzales Valcticln niwl Marco Fidel Sunrez. Gonzales Valoncla waa vico president of Colombia in 1005, but ho resigned tlje oihco in March of that year. Re cent dispatches from Oolombin cml- lted him with being tho loader of the revolutionary movement that broke out at Bnrranqullla a month ago, following the departure from CotomOla for Eu rope of I'rcsldeut Rey. FACTS IN FEW LUES All beggars In Italy must be licensed. Rhubarb la grown extensively In China. The Maoris of New Zealand number 42,000. Budapest Is to have a now bacterio logical Institute. Over three-fourths of the people In England and Wales live in towns. A rich Laplander sometimes keeps 09 many ns 5,000 reindeer In his serv ice. The Japanese arc still busy recon structing ships captured In the war with Russia. Stockholm will be tho scene of the next Olympic games, which will be held there In 1012. There aro over thirty periodicals de voted to ghosts, visions and the super natural generally. There are now In England and France several establishments whore butterlllcs are bred. Russia's prisons are constructed to hold 110,000 prisoners. Over 180,000 are now lodged in them. Argentina has 3(1,000,000 acres under cultivation, three times tho area culti vated thirteen years ago. Two-thirds of tho native population of Uganda has been wiped out by the sleeping sickness In seven years. A little boy who fell Into a hike at Budapest managed to seize u swan, which brought him to shallow water. Bank Examiner Edward P. Moxoy says the great majority of bank em ployees in this country nro absolutely honest. Of all the European countries In only Austria and Great Britain ls it tho rule of tho road for all travelers to keep to the left. There wero 470 boiler explosions hi the United States last year, one less than the year before, but they cost 2S1 human lives. It is estimated that tho known sup ply of fertilizer in the shape of natural nitrates will be exhausted by the world's demands in less than twenty years. Crows of British submarines aro taught how to use a safety helmet and waterproof jacket designed to save them in case the submarine on which they aro engaged is sunk. The big trees of California aro the oldest living things in the world. Es timates made from cross sections of some of t lHe which have fallen show tht the mature trees are more than 4,000 years old. Almost all the towns In Siberia aro having arc lights for street use nnd In candescent lights for houses, and the larger proportion of the people In Si beria have never seen gas, which they regard as an lllunilnant of a past age. The be.rf.-nra in Spain have formed a trust and have agreed to try to keep all of the two cent lino pieces out of circulation by holding them whenever they secure any. The object of this combine Is to make people give a larger coin. The expedition organized by the American Museum of Natural History which has been exploring the Favum desert In northern Egypt seems to have located the place of origin of the elephant In the lertiary age. Re mains of the ancestr.il forms of ele phants, eallc l the mnerlthei-lum, were obtained. The SwcdMi state railways, by way of experiment, will take over the work ing for a year of the large Majeujnnkn peat deposits In north Sweden. Should the result be as satisfactory as Is ex pected It is understood that tho state railways Intend to go in for peat pro duction on a large scale in the north of Sweden. Professor Karl Lohmeyer of Konlgs berg, who died In Danzig at the ago of seventy-seven, was born without arms. A special permit was granted to allow his entry Into tho university service. Ills students opened and shut doors for him, but ho turned tho pages of books with his mouth and could sign his nanus tirmly with a pen held between his teeth. What Is said to bo the largest sign in tho world is the one which has been outlined on Yerba Buena island, in San Francisco bay. Trenches have been dug in the side of a hill and the bottom and sides covered with a heavy coating of lime, so that the words stand out In bold relief. Each letter Is forty-five feet high nnd the entire length of tho sign ls nearly 1,300 feet. Byron while making a journey round the hiko of Geneva was driven by bad weather to seek refuge at Ouchy at tho Hotel do l'Ancre. Then and there ho wrote "The Prisoner of Chillon" while the vision of the cnstle was still In mind. The hotel survives, though it ls now called the Hotel d'Augleterre, and on Its walls has just been placed a tablet in memory of the poet. Hans Hubert DIotzsch. a popular member of tho Berlin Lustsplelhaus company, does not devote all his time to tho etage. He ls a sculptor of no mean order, nccordlng to a recently published account. His bas-relief of Matkowsky, which Is now on exhibi tion, has created much favorable com ment, nnd a bronze replica which has been placed in tho Lesslng House hi mentioned ns n "conspicuous orna ment." Mrs. Stephen II. P. Pell, wife of a prominent New Yorker, whoso family has owned tho old Fort Tlconderag'o property on the Rhoro of Lake Cham plain for more than a century, has an nounced tho family's Intention to re utoro the old fort. Historical data and sketches from England and France have been accumulated, so that tho now structure may bo Identical with thcr old. Tho cost of tho work Is esti mated at $300,000, SPAIN SAYS CEISIS IS OVER. The Entire Country Is Officially Re ported as Tranquil. Madrid, Aug. 5. The government has issued an olllclal announcement saying, that the crisis In Spain Is now at nn end and that the country Is tran quil froui the bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean. Senor Solortego, n Republican sen ator, 1ms nrrlvcd here from Barcelona. He says that the revolutionists during the two days they wero masters of the city did not commit a single assassi nation or act of cruelty. The Inmates of the religious Institutions lied when the buildings were burned. Among the greatest losses at Barce- J lona nre the libraries of the Christian scnoois nun tne rseietitinu museum, containing together 70,000 volumes. The terrible repressive measures of the military authorities at Barcelona have loft a deep undercurrent of re sentment among tho masses, and fears still are entertained that the rebellion may Hare up again In a new form. JEFFRIES OFF TO EUROPE. j Says Everything Now Depends on Jack Johnson as to Fight. New York. Aug. .".-.lust before his departure for Europe today on the North German Lloyd liner George Washington. James J. Jeffries Issued a statement that everything now de pended on Jack Johnson ns far ns a fight between himself and the negro wns concerned. He did not seem to consider serious ly Johnson's posting i?.,0Oi) In Chicago this week and said that It was up to Johnson to meet "reasonable condl- ! tlous." Aside from a sojourn nt Carlsbad for his health and a reunion with his wife and mother In Germany. Jeffries said he had no tqiecial plans for his European trip. Girl H angs Herself After a Whipping. Unrrlsburg, Ont, Aug. 5. The thlr-teen-yoar-old daughter of G. J. Bralth waltc, hotel keeper of this place, hanged herself to n tree after she had received a whipping from her stei mother. LINCOLN PENNIES ISSUED. Philadelphia Mint Sends Out Coins Bearing Liberator's Head. Philadelphia, Aug. 3. The new "Lin coln" pennies, which the treasury de partment has caused to be designed and struck off in honor of the one hun dredth nnnlversary of the late presi dent's birth, were issued from the mint. The head of Lincoln which ap pears on the coin has been designed from a photograph showing the face relaxed and smiling, the nrtist having sought to reproduce particularly Lin coln's expression when talking to chil dren. Tho coin's designer Is Victor D. Brenner, a twenty-year-old Russian, Who came to this country as a boy, told matches In the street In Now York RUd studied art at night at Cooper Union. BANKER A SUICIDE ON LINER. Charles H. Brown of Buffalo Cute His Throat on Vaderland. Antwerp, Aug. .".Charles II. Brown, a banker of Buffalo, committed sui cide by cutting his throat on board the steamer Vaderland as tho vessel was Hearing Antwerp. Mr. Brown, who was suffering from melancholia, the i effects of a nervous breakdown, pre viously had made an unsrfccossful at ' tempt to kill himself by jumping Into the sea when the Vaderland was at 1 )over, i Throughout the voyage Mr. Brown's , strange actions were the subject of i comment by the saloon passengers, i among whom was former governor of i Xew York Benjamin B. Odell. DO NOF FAIL TO READ THE FOLLOWING ANNOUNCEMENT: It you desire to buy puro whiskey, look at tho end of the barrel before making your purchnse. There you will find tho date of inspection which is a sure guaranty as to age. AH straight whiskeys arc inspected by Government officials, and taxed according to proof. Blended nnd coin pound whiskeys nro made from straight whiskeys. PAUL E. McGRANAGHAN, Wholesale Dealer In WINES and LIQUORS, 557 Main St., Honesdale, Pa., has a large quantity of the best Straight Whiskeys for sale at his estab lishment. Also Blended Whiskeys, Foreign and Domestic Wines, and bottled Beer by the case or dozen. The Era of New Mixed Paints ! This year opens wicn a deluge of new mixed paints. A con dition brought about by our enterprising dealers to get some kind of a mixecf paint that would supplant CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS. Their compounds, being new and heavily advertised, may find a sale with tne unwary. THE ONLY PLACE IN HONESDALE AUTIIOUIZED TO HANDLE IsJADWIN'S PHARMACY. There are reasons for the pre-eminence of CHILTON PAINTS 1st No one can mix a better mixed paint. 2d The painters declare that it works easily and has won derful covering qualities. 3d Chilton stands back of it, and will agree to repaint, at his own expense, every surface painted with Chiltou Paint that proves defective. 4th Those who have used it aro perfectly satisfied with it, and recommend its use to others. SfRES AND SONS. Busts of Emperor Caracalla in for clgu museums look like David War field, the actor. . Chao Ping Chun, vice president of the Chinese ministry of Interior, has been ordered to retire, owing to his opium habits. Among the regular lodgers at the quarters of tho Y. M. O. A. In Wash higton ls Senator Lorlnier of Illinois. Mr. Lorlmer lived at tho association while a member of the house nnd an nounces that he will continue to make the association house his abode. Mr. N. H. Jackson of Greenwich, Tox., who was eighty-two years old July 4 and ls the most netlec mer chant In tho place, celebrated the tlfty nlnth anniversary of his wedding June 20 and has thirty-seven grandchildren and eighteen great-grandchildren. Mr. Whltelaw Reld, the American ambassador, ls living In Dorchester House, Park lane, Loudon, lu a style betlttlug the American ambassador at tho court of St. James, but it is cost ing him $150,000 a year at least, toward which a salary of $17,500 docs not help much. Hector Apolllualrc Is the name of n negro who was admitted to the bar lu Paris u few weeks ago. He Is a na tive of Guadeloupe, about thirty years old, tall and muscular and very black. Ho enjoys tho distinction of being the only oue of his race among the recog nized lawyers of Paris. Joseph Robinson, managing editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer nnd one of tho oldest newspaper men in point of continuous service In Pennsylvania, hns been elected honorary vice presi dent of the Pen and Pencil club, of which ho hns been n member for many years, no succeeds the late Alexan der K. McCluro In that position. Home Helps. The cushioned bnck of a Morris chair has been found valuable In tho sickroom to placo back of the Invalid In bed. To clean dusty carved furniture, dip a flue paint brush in paraffin oil and paint over tho carving with It. You will be surprised how bright and new this will make It look. To prevent, accident's with bottles containing poison buy a dozen tiny bells nnd every time a bottle of poison ls brought luto the house tie a bell to the neck. Even In the dark the bell will tluklo its warning. Tho dishwasher who would got through quickly invests In a soap shaker and a chain for cleaning pots and pans. She also has on hand over the sink a box of borax and a bottle of ammonia for cutting grease. Law Points. Th'.- mere filing and presentation of repeated motions which are thought to be for the purpose of vexation or delay is hold In Johnsou versus State (Ar.l, 112 S. W. l-lli; IS L. R. A. (N. S.). 010, not to constitute contempt of court. An agreement that Interest past due upon a promissory note bearing the maximum rate allowed by statute shall carry interest is held in Sauford versus I.uiulqulst (Neb.), 11S N. W., 120; IS L. R. A. (X. S.), 033, to bo valid and enforceable, although the right to stipulate for Interest upon interest at the time of tho loan or contract ls de- Prussic Acid. Prussia acid poisons every living thing, plants as well as animals. Breathing. For each respiration an adult Inhales on an average one pint of air. CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS