TUB CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1000. Interesting, if !Erno Funny, Any how. . Do you believe It Is bad luck to kill a cat? Do .you think .your hair will grow better IX you have It cut when the moon Js full? Do you dread sitting down at table with twelve others? If you put your night robo on wrong side out, do you think that a good occasion to wish? If you do, or If .you have any one of the thousand other superstitions that have ever been heard of, you are not alone in your belief. Pro fessor F. B. Dresslar, who has Just left the University of California for the University of Alabama, finished before he went away a series of ex periments In which he put such ques tions as these to 875 students in Callfornlal normal schools. These 875 made 3,225 confessions of be lief In different superstitions. Of the students questioned about 80 per cent, were girls, but Profes sor Dresslar says tne men oeneveu In superstitions just about as much as the women did. All kinds of superstitions were found by Professor Dresslar In his nvPsHtriitions. To find a four-leaf clover would bring good luck, wrote 28 out of 51 students. Forty-four out of 87 thought It would bring good luck to see the new moon over the right shoulder. There were 113 who had heard that It was bad luck to break a looking glass and 65 be lieved the idea to be true. A knife or any edged instrument given a friend would cut the friendship, said 05 out of 89, and 35 out of 77 were just as sure that picking up a pin would be followed by good luck. To open an umbrella in the house would bring bad luck, thought 27, but there were 61 others who were quite posi tive there was nothing in this at all. Dropping the dlshrag meant the coming of company said a great many. Half the students who had heard that a horseshoe would in sure good luck believed it to be true. That Friday was a baa day on which to start a journey and that thirteen was a very unlucky num ber, were more common supersti tions that received support from the students. For two friends to walk on opposite sides of a post was just as fatal to the friendship as ex changing knives, declared 42 out of 67. All sorts of funny superstitions were unearthed by the professor. One young maiden wrote: "If I put my nightgown on wrong by mis take and leave it so, the wish I make will come true." Another wrote that it was bad luck for two people to use the same towel without twisting it. "If you fall up stairs you will be sure to get a letter," was a third opinion. One thought it very bad luck to see a cross-eyed negro, while another thought It very bad indeed to be wedded in May. A number of ways of getting rid of warts were given, from telling one's aunt the number possessed, down to burying a dead cat in a black stocking. One way of get ting rid of the marks quite popu lar this one was to steal a piece of dlshrag and rub it on them. But the dlshrag positively had to be stolen. Gotten any other way, it would be no good. Professor Dresslar is soon to pub lish a book on the subject of superstition. A Word for the Railroads. The railways of this country aro earning, roundly, about J7.000.000 a day at this time, every day in the year. But not every penny of this is profit, as somo lawmakers have at times appeared to assume. It costs something to run and main tain a railway. Out of each dollar of railway receipts, 71 cents goes almost di rectly back Into circulation for la bor and the direct products of labor. Forty cents Is paid to the fuel, waste, oil and water; rails, ties, employes; 8 cents is required for cars, engines and like equipment take 18 cents more. Five cents of each dollar taken in Is re-expended In yards and tracks, shops, round houses and the like. When the rail way has ceased paying out fof its dollar It has little left. Some rail ways have none left. It Is a ques tion of location and management. But the maintenance of a safe margin between income and outgo would be not the greatest of the present problems for railway man agers, if they could be assured of a stable basis of purchasing power for a dollar. In the decade pre ceding and Including 1907, the price of fuel advanced 38 per cent. the cost of rails rose 47 per cent., the price of ties Increased 76 per cent., locomotives advanced one half, cars three-quarters, labor nearly one-third, over the average prices In 1907. In the meantime freight rates on 897 articles were Increased and o"n 876 were decreased, the net result being about 11 per cent, less of profit to the railroads. How then do the railways live, the skeptic sneers? Why don't they go into bankruptcy? They would, under these condi tions, but that a vastly growing bulk of traffic continues to support them. Increases In passenger and freight business continue to swell the already enormous figures on es tabllshed trunk lines. To have 300 passengers In one train from St Louis to Chicago costs not greatly more than it does to carry 150 In the same number of coaches, but the revenue is twice as much. A car of way freight loaded to ca- naclty will earn three times as much as one half full. Our recent cereal crops have been so enormous as to tax the Western railways' capacity. The same lines when the country was less thickly settled, were perforce content with "Law Notes." In the monthly Issue of the above named magazine for August, we find the following: In a divorce case recently In stituted in the Circuit Court of Bnltlmore the defendant's sworn answer contains tne ioiipwing: No. 4. Concerning paragraph No. 4 of plaintiff's bill, this defendant says that he denies that he has treated the plaintiff with great cruelty, harshly and brutally, or that he attempted to take her lire, but, on the contrary, says the plain tiff on numerous occasions, has threatened to take his life, and on several occasions carried her threats Into execution." The administration of Justice In Germany is characterized by a pompous accuracy that sometimes produces curious results. In a cer tain village there is an ordinance re quiring all ladders to have a special kind of top-piece. Not long since a burglar, who attempted to effect an entrance into a house by the use of a ladder which he found in the yard, fell from the ladder and broke a leg. On being haled into court he was meted out due and proper punishment, but, as the lad der was found not to be equipped wth the required top-piece, the own er was required to pay the burglar's hospital expenses and damages for the Jury. Mask. Masks aro still In use among savage nations to scare away demons. The Palolo. That remarkable worm of the Poly nesian islands, known as the palolo, seems to regulate Its periodical ap pearances for the purposes of repro duction by tho moon. The natives predict the annual nppcaranco of the palolo by observing tho lunar phases. Rotten Row. The name of "Uottcn row" In Hyde park, London, Is derived from "route du roi," or "king's drive." YOUR HARVEST Magnesium. When exposed to an open flame, magnesium In Its powdered metallic state will instantly combine with tho nrrirnn ft tin. nlr nllfl fnrm ntl Pt plosive Hash of intense white flame j Interest--Good Interest -for and change into a dense white smoke of oxide of magnesium. of the savings in our bank is the use of your money. Twice PROFESSIONAL, CARDS. Attorncya-at-Lnw. H WILSON, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, Ofilce, Masonic buildlnc, second floor Honesdtile. Pa. TtrM. II. LEE, T T ATT ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office aver nost office. All leenl business promptly attended to. Honesdale, Pa. EC. MUMFORD, . ATTORNEY A. COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office Liberty Hall buildlnir. opposite the Post Office, llonesdulu. I'll. OMER GHEENE, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office over Kelt's store. Honesdnlo Pa. H Montrose Mail Robber Caught. Montrose, the capltol of our nelghboring county, Susquehanna, has finally captured a postofflce robber. Deputy U. S. Marshall Hugh Evans and Postofflce Inspector W. A. Rose have been on his trail for some time. Despite their presence in the town the thefts continued. Decoy letters proved useless, and the method em ployed was soon discovered to be different from any the department had known. On Thursday last Samuel Lewis, porter at a Montrose hotel, was arrested, and the author! Mes declare the mystery is solved. It Is charged that when he went for the hotel mall he thrust his lean arm, slender wrist and long fingers through the postofflce box rented by the hotel and abstracted letters from adjacent boxes, taking a chance of finding money in them. he was sent to jail in default of bail. ! a year you reap the harvest There British isles. The British Isles. are 77.cs3.084 acres in the I on the dollars youhave plant- ied here during that time. The itanunoiis'wer; a series j There is no safer soil than a of documents recording the progress banb wIttl ample resources of Edward 1. through Scotland lu ' ' 1290, with the names of tho nobles and : an(j wise management; no others who did homage to him. ... .... jsurerer yield tnan tne mree The Polka. I noi.f wn nnv The polka was originally a Servian Hc -- i7- war dance. Ssivlnrf loniU rn ciirress. AT. SEAKLE, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office near Court House Ilonesdale. Pa. 0L. ROWLAND, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office over Post Office. Honesdnle. Pa. The Sweetest Town. The sweetest town In the world is Grasse. In the foothills back of Cannes, on the French IMvIcra. All through the year Grasse Is really one big bub bling cauldron, where aro distilled gal lons, barrels and hogsheads of perfumes. THE TOWN THAT V. The Wily Furniture Man Farmers' and Me chanics' Bank, Honesdale, Pa. The Wise Jinn's Almanac. They ain't no sense, es I kin see, In mortals, scch cs you an me. half of this vastly profitable busl-1 A-faultlug Nature's wise Intents, Matrimony. What is marriage? Marriage is an institution for the blind. Why do some people never marry? Because they do not believe in divorce. When a man thinks seriously of marriage, what happens? He remains single. Should a man marry a girl for her money? No. But he should not let her be an old maid simply because she is rich. When a girl refers to a "sad courtship" what does she mean? She means the man got away. Is an engagement as good as marriage? It is better. In selecting a husband, why does a girl prefer a fat man? Because a fat man finds It hard to stoop to anything low. When asking papa, how should a young man act? He should face papa manfully and never give him a chance at his back. When the minister says, "Do you take this woman for better or worse," what does he mean? The bridegroom's people con strue It one way, and the bride's family interpret it In another way, It Is very sad. When a man says he can manage his wife, what does he mean? He means ho can make her do any thing she wants to. When a child is smart and good, to whose family Is It due? To its mother's. When a child is bad and stupid, to whose family is it due? We refuse to answer. Is it possible for a married man to be a fool without knowing It? Not if his wife is alive, r CASTOR I A Tor Infanta and Children. Tin Kind You liava Always Bought ness. They also are carrying west ward thousands of tons of supplies which have grown from hundreds of tons within easy memory. And yet none of them aro able un der generally advancing scales of values and wages to make plutocrats of its stockholders. Unbaked framers of statutes, hot from tho hustings where they have scorched monopoly and hurled de fiance to its snarling lips, either are Ignorant of, or shut their eyes to, or calmly ignore facts such as these. The education of the people to recognition of the mutual and Inter commingled rights of a community and the railroads which serve it is one of the necessities of the hour. And The Times proposes to bear the part which becomes It In im parting the essential truths of the situation. There has been too much charlatanism and too little business sense in the dealings be tween the railroads and their con stituents. St. Louis Times. 8CRANTON BUSINESS COLIjKGE Court House Square, SOKANTON, PA. The Scranton Business College, H. D. Buck, proprietor, will begin its sixteenth year on Tuesday, Sept. 7th. Monday will be enrollment day. New teachers, new equip ment. Graduates meeting with splendid success almost everywhere. Write for literature. H. D. Buck, Principal. G3t8 An' lockin' horns with Providence. It ain't no use to grumble an' complain, It's jest as cheap an' easy to rejoice; When God sorts out the weather an' sends rain Why rain's my choice! James Whitcomb Riley. Bees. Bees wore unknown to the Indians, and thoy were brought over from Eng land only u few years after tho laud ing of the pilgrim fathers. It was more than two centuries after the first white invasion of New England, how ever, before modern beekeeping began. The industry of the present day dates from the Invention of the movable frame hive by Langstreth In 1852. EI SUMMER SUITS at HER & GO'S Stores Charles a. Mccarty, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Special and prompt attention given to the collection of claims. Office over Keif's new store, llonesduie. Pa. FP. KIMBLE, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office over the post office llonesduie. Pa. ME. SIMONS, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office in the Court House, Honesdale, Pa. ERMAN HARMEb, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. l'ntcnts mid iietislons secured. Office In the Schuerliolz ImlldlnK Honesdale. Pa. H PETER II. ILOFF, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office-Second floor old SavhiES Dank building. Honesdale. Pu. EM. SALMON, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office Next door to post office. Kornierl occupied by V. II. Dlinmlck. Honesdale. Pa Dentists. HERE is the furniture dealer who read A clothier's ad. and by it was led To snend for clothing the tclfsame I bill 1 That he got from the dry goods mer Womcn n Spain. i chanJt,3 The women of the lower classes In i whero it had teen placed when tho Spain do not make calls nor road butcher bought books and have no "parties" In the ' And paid with tho bill that he had got American em:e of the wind. They do When tho grocer with him had settle thelr household work ami go to church, j ment made nn.l that N all there Is of life to them. , With the money the honest workman Their lnishnwls are very jealous of them, and they grow old and weary kfore their time. paid. P. S.The local dealer who's up to snuff Will always advertise his stuff. I). & II. Output Not Reduced. While the anthracite shipments by the leading coal roads for the first quarter of the current calen dar year showed an increase to the extent of 1,203,719 tons, as com pared with 1908, the gain was more than offset by the falling off to the amount of 2,320,698 tons, in the second quarter; so that the half- year showed a decrease of 1,177,679 tons as compared with tho corres ponding half year In 1908. With the exception of the Dela ware and Hudson all of the coal companies have materially reduced their output. Strangely enough, the Delaware and Hudson road was one of the only two companies In the first quarter to show a decrease In shipments and the only one to show an increase in the second quarter. Sears the Couldn't Live on Wind. A pastor of a Methodist church in Westchester, O., who had re ceived only ?14 salary in twolvo weeks, during which time his wife was sick, and they both lived on butterless bread, with water tor a beverage, finally became desperate and told his congregation, from the pulpit, what he thought 'of them. In the course of his remarks he said: "Because of your treatment my wife's mind temporarily gave way, and she would now be an inmate of an asylum had I not made a study of medicine. In twelve weeks I received but ?14 from you on my salary, long overdue. You neg Iected me. You were all aware of my condition. You seemed to think 'that because I am a preacher I ill Mi i mm. w .'. v. i$W'V Menner & Co's Store. MISS NOKTTK AIMES, AS "MRS. WILLIAM GREEN, THE WIFE," IN THE BIG MUSICAL COMEDY SUCCESS, "DON'T TELL MY WIFE." STATEMENT OF THE FINANCES of Honesdale School District For year ending July 2, 1909, RECEIPTS. Balance on nana from last year ? S36.ll State appropriation .... 3,508.59 From Loans since last re port 60.149.04 Collector of taxes 14.034.66 Insurance 7,838.44 Balance of 1907 dupli cate 600.92 Mcintosh house 205.00 All other sources 433.48 $95,433.04 DISIlCnSEMENTS. Purchasing grounds, mov ing bldgs 1,085.03 Building 47,913.30 Renting and repairing . 75.14 Teachers' salaries 9,230.91 Attending Institute 150.00 Text books 390.15 School supplies 273.72 Fuel and contlncencies . 713.67 Collector's, Secy's and Tre"as. Salaries .... 442.95 Janitor 742.20 Debt and Interest paid 14,065.43 Insurance, carting, print ing, cleaning, telephone, gas and Incidentals . . 1,158.07 Balance in Treas.'s hands 19,192.47 E. T. BROWN, DENTIST. Ofllrp l'lrst floor, old Savlncs Hank build ing, Honesdale. Pa. I)r. C. 1!. 1JHADY, Dentist. Honesdale. Pa. Office Hours-8 n. in. to S p. in. Any evening by appointment. Citizens' phone. Itl I'.esldence. No. SC-X Physicians. DR. H. B. sEARLHs, HONESDALE, FA. Office and residence lull! Court street t eletiliones. Office Hours 2:00 to i:W and liOUto f:W). p. in OSEPH N. WELCH p The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Office: Second lloor Masonic Build ing, over C. C. Jadwin's drug store, Honesdale. For New Late Novelties IN- JEWELRY SILVERWARE WATCHES Try SPENCER, The Jeweler "Guaranteed articles only sold." If you don't insure with us, we both lose. HITTIHGER HAM General insurance White Mills Pa. $95,433.04 We, the undersigned auditors, hereby certify that we have this 16th day of July, 1909, examined the above account and statements, compared the same with the books of the treasurer and find them cor rect. T. M. FULLER, T. FRANK HAM, F. W. SCHUERHOLZ, F HUB FOB IE 1 One of the best equipped farms In Wayne county-situated about three miles from Honesdale, Everything Dp-To-Date.g years in hulk 165 Acres Over $5,000.00 has been ex lended witn ii thelnstllvct years In bulldlnss, tools and Improvements. of which 75 acres are cood hard wood timber. Will be sold reasonably. ..For further particulars en- A Bargain. quire of W. W. WOOD,"Cltlin offlof fHgnatnre could live on wind,"