The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, September 01, 1909, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE CITIZEN, tt'KDXKSDAY, SKPT. 1, 1000.
HOICE JjjKCELLANY
The Price of an Egg.
lilnnchc Iintos, who U a practical
fanner off the stage, tolls a funny
story apropos of two elderly neftrooH
whom she recently employed to take
charge of the extensive poultry uird
she hub established on her li!;,' (arm
near Osslnltig, N. Y.
These men, Noah Jackson ml Alox
ander Johnston, are lmportaTiona from
Dinwiddle county, Vn a region fa
mous for the cheapness and plentiful
ncss of Its eggs and poultry. Down
there eggs sell In summer at anywhere
from 8 cents to 12 cents per dozen
and rarely ever rise higher than 13
cents In the winter. When they were
told that Miss Hates' egg product com
mands n net price of (10 cents per
dozen the year around at New York
hotels and restaurants their sensations
were first those of astonishment, then
of Incredulity.
The other day she overheard a con
versation between the two men as
they washed and packed a case of eggs
for one of her prize customers. It
ran something like this:
"Miss Hates wouldn't tell us a lie.
on think. Noah?"
'I dunno. Mlstah Johnston, whether
.Miss Hates Is a truthful lady or not.
lull one thing I does know, and that
Is that any hen in the Tutted States
'!in afford to lay eggs for a cent
iplt ." New York World.
Constantinople Women and Veils.
hat does liberty mean to the Turks?
Many things -ehlelly the lifting off of
a groat weight of numbing fear. .Men
breathed freely, I'm' Hie lirst time In
thirty years they could talk. read, meet
their friends, associate with foreign
ers and tra el freely from place to
place "I have never lived till now,"
said a young Turk lo me. Anions the
Turkish women the general emancipa
tion produced its niosl extraordinary
effect, but it was short lived. They
threw off their veils; they came mil
from behind their close latticed win
dows into streets and public places;
I hey went to theaters and cafes and
drove side by side with men in open
carriages. The more ardent spirits
held an open meeting in Constantino
ple, at which the women who spoke
demanded that the century old shackles
be broken asunder. The thing was too
novel to last. After a week or two
remonstrances began. Carriages were
stopped and some of the women rough
ly handled by the crowd. They felt
instinctively that they had gone too
far. They drew back. The veils re
appearedperhaps not drawn quite so
closely as before. They were not al
ways very closely drawn before.
From "Turkey In devolution," by C.
It. Ruxton.
Norwegians Are Cautious.
A good story of motoring In Norway
Is going the rounds. In many parts
of this Land of the Midnight Sun mo
torcars are unknown nnd, thanks to
the mountains, are likely to remain so.
In the district in question a rumor
went forth that a car was coming, and
the authorities actually went to the
trouble of issuing notices, which were
posted about far and wide, warning all
nnd sundry that such was the case.
Not only were the people cautioned to
give the car a wide berth, but they
were told to remove their animals Into
safe quarters.
It so happened that the car was driv
en through a desolate land, much to
the amusement or wonder, one fan
cies, of its owner. All the people were
inside their houses, nnd all the cattle
had been driven into safe quarters for
the occasion. Indianapolis Star.
Painfully Polite.
Lieutenant ShacUloton In n speech In
reply to the toast of his health told an
interesting story of politeness in the
untrodden regions of the antarctic.
Ills party, he said, were always ex
tremely good humored and polite, and
one professor in particular attained a
degree of politeness unusual under
such trying circumstances. "Are you
busy. Mawson?" lie called out one
night to another member of the party
who was In the tent. "I am." said
Mawson. "Very busy?" said the pro
fessor. "Yes, very busy," "If you
are not too busy, Mawson, I am down
u crevasse." The professor was found
hanging down a erovnso by his four
lingers, a position which he could not
have occupied for any length of time.
Accounting For It.
Outgoing heads of the government
departments sometimes make a few
"personal" promotions upon the eve of
their departure, and a clerk In the de
partment of agriculture, believing that
Secretary Wilson would go the way of
the rest of the Itoosevelt cabinet, ven
tured to approach him with a little
plea for special recognition.
"I have been lu the department since
the time you wen- llrsi made secre
tary" the clerk began.
"I know it I know it." the secretary
said, waving lilm away. "Kvery one
knows I am a very patient and consid
erate innii!" Harper's Weekly.
The Witty Duke.
A Chicago heiress was relating some
of her experiences during the Lou
don season that has Jihi ended.
"And at a dinner in Belgrade
square," she said. "I sal next to the
Duke of Devonshire, lie 1, of course,
ii very great swell, lie lias I be milli
ner of the swells of Du Manlier, a
very bored manner, ami In a sleepy
.li"ivl he says willy things.
1 can scarcely believe,' I said to
i . duke, 'ih.it in your maiden speech
I hnii-e of commons you paused
ii.. i'. aft and v ,i win d heavily.'
(Hi I .,1 ; elf'! l M o ii ' ' ilil lie."
JJ
i i li'-nl'il I li
IHUMOR OTTHE HOOH
Too Good For Tl:is Sphere.
"When it comes to ideal iU.ue-tl"
women," said the pinti I young author.
"I lie heroine of my new novel li the
paragon."
"That's just the kind of heroine
we're looking for," replied the busy
publisher.
"Yes, sir, she Is a woman you don't
meet every day. In the tlrst place,
she never leans out of the back win
dows and criticises her neighbor.)'
Monday wash."
"She must be perfect."
"Nor does she hang over the back
fence gossiping by the hour while the
dinner scorches."
"I'd like to meet one like her."
"When now neighbors move In she
does not criticise their old furniture
and wonder If they have paid for their
new."
The busy publisher held up his hand.
"Slop! That would not be a woman."
"Not a woman V"
"No; that would be an angel."
No Cause For Alarm.
Mrs. Newpop-.Iolm, dear, do yon
think so much bread and molasses Is
good for the baby'
NVwpi.p-.Suro It Is. ltread is the
"staff of life," you know.
Mrs. N'ewpop Oh, I suppose the
i. read won't hull him. but so n
I. li l.o -vs-
Newpiip -i'.ul In-doesn't eat the iim
l.i' v--. my dear, lie leaves that on the
chairs and doorknobs. Chlca;.o News
Happy Combination.
It
lii.i
l ei ;
happened down oil the hi
each.
buy s-.it on a fence, swin
UIIIU
Reside him sal a girl pi
ilayni!
lie.
"I'll tell yon my name If you'll
yours," he said.
ti
me
"Well, what is If;
"I.einmy Klshew.
said the g
What Is y
:irl.
oursV
"(Mile Wright."
Then she dug her fairy t'-es Into tin
sand and walled. Lyre
Looking For a Buffiain.
No," said the frigid lu-nrtod maid.
"I cannot be .otir wife. My heart tuu".
hand are priceless."
"Thai being the case," rejoined lb
wise young man, "I'll leave my ad
dress." "What for?" she asked lu surprise.
"So you can send me word when
they are marked down," he explained.
Houston Post.
Easy to Answer.
"Say." queried the city chap, "can
you tell me how to make a slow horse
fast?"
"Sure I kin," replied the old farmer.
"Don't feed him."
And it was nearly six hours later be
fore the innocent c. c. saw the joke.
Atlanta Constitution.
Their Absent Friend.
Bessie You should hear Mame San
ders go on about Fred Mills. She says
she wouldn't have him for a husband
If there wasn't another man in the
world.
Bertha Yes; lie has proposed to
Maine's friend, Edith Moore. Boston
Transcript.
Her Quandary.
Her Mother (to bride elect) What,
frowning on your wedding day?
Bride Elect I'm in n quandary. If I
go to the altar smiling people will say
I'm simply crazy to get Charlie, and If
I look solemn they will say I already
regret the step. What shall I do? Tit
Bits. Two of His Strong Points.
The Young Man I don't take any
credit to myself for being able to spell
better than other people can. Spell
lug is n gift.
Miss Snappeigh You acquired your
modesty, I presume, by diligent appli
cation. Chicago Tribune.
The Surgeon's Charges.
"I hear you're dissatisfied with your
doctor's bill."
"Yes; 1 don't think he's entitled to
.."0 for that operation."
"Why not?"
"Because if he was he'd claim more."
-l'hiladelplila Ledger.
Grudging Praise.
"Did Ihe critics say anything favor
able about your performance of Ham
let?" "Yes," answered Mr. Storinlugton
Barnes. "They admitted that I had
selected a pretty good play." Wash
ington Star.
Sterile Ground.
Cholly Cawn't Imagine what's the
matlah with Ciussle. There seems to
be something preying on his mind.
Miss Sharpe Oh, whatever it is, let
It alone. It will probably die of starva
tion --Philadelphia Public Ledger.
Like Tendencies.
Friend -How Is your star spending
ills free time now?
Manager lie's fallen In love, and
he's just iiinoiilng around. Baltimore
American.
The Physical Culture Girl.
I ill cail tlu physical culture Klrl
Vnr i catmint fur iporo than one.
Slio known too iinicli of science, I fear.
Anil thlniu that filmuliln't bo ilono.
"Kuily to lioil unit curly to vise"
Is oiui uf lier uitchworils true.
She won't sit up l'lle nor keep n d.ito,
As kiiiiki oilier Kills will do.
She won't lot mo kiss her, worst of all
Klssi :uo inlcioliiiH, FUJ'B she,
Slio vr.'1'f holil Inutile. "II wt Initios them
S"n. 1 1-illy suiil that to mi
HI"- I n't llin ri.liy nf oltlim Union.
Mtlio.c'li i!m cinv lie n poarl.
if I ! - ..iii. fun I i - 1 1 v- must slum
it
I III
ei I
m t'i
1 1.
IEW M STORIES
Prudence of a French Diplomat.
An nni'tslug llltle advonlure hap
pened the other day to the new French
prime minister, M. Hrlaial. lie paid
nn official visit to a little- town in the
southeast of Trance whltli Is famous
for Its clocks and watches. The min
ister opened the bical exhibition, and
nftcr the specches""the local mayor pre
sented him with a magnificent chro
nometer made In the town.
"If your excellency will allow," he
said, "we will keep the watch for a
few days and regulate It."
M. Brin nd, who, though a Socialist,
has a sense of humor, comes from the
south of France himself and knows
that promises there are not always
kept. He knew, too. that a colleague
had the same watch given to him last
year, that it had been kept to bp
regulated and that It had not yet
reached Paris. So M. Briand, prime
minister of France, shook M. le Malrc
nillAND SHOOK HIM WARMLY 1IY THE
HAND.
warmly by the hand, told him that he
was a bit of a ciockinaker himself and
would enjoy putting the watcli in or
der and would think while he did so
of the kindness of the town which had
presented it to him. M. Briand has
discovered that the watch is an ex
cellent timekeeper. Paris Letter to
Washington Star.
A Type Often Met.
George Gould was talking in the
salon of the Kaiser Wilhclin II. of
the queer characters met on shipboard.
"There was never a ship yet," said
Mr. Gould, "that did not have one per
son aboard who boasted eternally of
the number of times he had crossed
the Atlantic. Now it is thirty-nine
times, now It is ninety-six times. Ev
ery ship carries Invariably this one
passenger who seems to have devoted
his whole life to making a record for
Atlantic crossings.
"I onco heard a Detroit girl poke a
little fun at a passenger of this type.
He said to her:
"'Do you know, this Is my flfty
soventli crossing?'
" 'Is it?' she said Indifferently. 'It's
my ninety-eighth.'
"'Iteally?' the man explained.
" 'Oh, yes, Indeed,' she answered,
yawning. 'It's an old story with me
crossing the Atlantic now. Why, ac
tually, I always recogulze more than
half the waves we meet.' "
Presence of Mind.
Mayor Stoy of Atlantic City 'was
praising the remarkable efficiency of
his corps of life guards.
"These men have presence of mind,"
he said, "the right kind of presence of
mind, not the wrong kind everybody
has that.
"I used to know," Mayor Stoy con
tinued, "an aged duck hunter that we
called Old Presence of Mind.
"We called him Old Presence of
Mind because he onco went ducking
lu a sneak box with a friend. The bay
roughened up, and the friend fell over
board. But as lie was sinking in the
icy water he managed to clutch with
his chilled hand the edge of the frail
little sneak box.
"Tile old duck hunter used lo coir
elude lids thrilling tale with the
words;
" 'And. gents, if 1 hadn't had the
presence of mind to unship an oar and
Viiiack him over the lingers I'd have
been drowned, as lie was." "
The Country Cousin.
Glenn H. Curtiss, discussing aviation
with a New York reporter, said, wltl
smiling impatience:
"Iteally, though, your questions show
a remarkable Ignorance of the princi
ples of flight. If you are going to re
port aeronautical things, why dnir:
you read up. aeronautics? Your ques
tions, as it is. denote an ignoraii"
(qual to the westerner's.
"Tills westerner on a visit to hi
rich Pittsburg cousin eamo down to
breakfast every morning with the same
genial question:
" 'How Is things?'
"One morning the lich cousin U
nerves being a llltle on edge, scowled
a black scowl at thN quesiioi. nun
said:
"'Why I he lib kens iln you nlwa.cn
nay "How Is IhlngsV" .IcthroV
".Ii'thro looked surprised and hurt.
" 'Bee-owe ' Ii . a eWered. 'I want le
1 in v li 'W '!
i ; Ih n'-i why.
feBEES
BEE CULTURE.
Hints to a Beginner How to Prevent
Swannlr.rj Making Queens.
In answer to "subscriber" In refer
ence to bees, I would say that if he
wishes to keep only a fow colonics
for home supply of honey, the prob
lem is not hard to poIvo, writes T. M.
Barton, but if he wishes to enter the
bee Industry oxtenslvoly for the
money In it, then ho must take good
bee Journals. He should get some
good standard books alio. The gen
tleman should consult beemen near
him and attend bee meetings when ho
can.
As to preventing his bees from
swarming, he may not do this entire
ly, but much may be done to discour
age tho swarming fever. I have a
neighbor a successful beoman who
says ho prevents swarming almost en
tirely by Having large brood-chambers.
Instead of 8 and 10 frames, lie ha3
1 ! frames in the brood-chamber.
Last spring my neighbors' been
swarmed frequently and they did so
over a wide extent of our State, but
mine did not swarm at all, so far as
I know, but I kept two supers on nil
brood-chambers thus giving plenty
of room. Want of iiinrn Is one strong
cause of swarming. There are other
causes which our friepil will find in
bee books.
There are two wavs lo make yo'ir
own queens. Take three or tour
frames of brood, selecting them 1'iom
different hives, with the bees o.i
them, and place In an empty hive anil
dose them up nicely, leaving but a
i'mnll outlet. These will usually iiiti'.i.'
themselves a queen, if the trainee con
tain eggs or uncapped urood. Care
must be taken not to lake an old
queen away from :.ny hivo with the
bees on the frames. Care must also
be taken that this new swarm or col
ony is not robbed by the hoes from
other colonies.
The other way to get a queen is to
put three or four frames In an empty
hive, as before, and take an old queen
from some strong hivo on one of tho
frames with the worker bees and
place In this new colony.
Observing tho same care as to rob
bers, etc., as in tho other case. The
hive from which the queen Is taken
will, at onco, construct queen colls,
nnd rear, perhaps a dozen queens, It
they are watched closely to keep the
first one out from killing all tho
others.
Now all this pre-supposo a good
deal of knowledge of bees before It
can be successfully done.
Bee-Keeping Notes.
If your colonies are very weak make
the entrance so small that nothing
larger than a bee can enter, to keep
robbers out.
Bees store pollen at the side of tho
brood nest, in the coolest part of the
hive. The honey always stored above
the brood, in the warmest part of the
hive.
The boo is almost helpless when
she issues from her cell, but In two
weeks is full grown, and able to do a
full day's work. Her first days are
put in about the hive learning house
keeping. When bee3 leave their own home,
each one fills her honey sack, bo as
to be provided for the journey.
There are few localities where fruit
and crops are not benefited by col
onies of bees.
A bright woman on a capital of $100
after the first year, earned from $500
to $000 annually by keeping bees.
The drone is a large stlngless bee,
with a tongue too short to gather
honey. As each queen mates but
once, consequently only one drone is
essential to ever swarm.
Tho supply of beeswax Is never
equal to the demand.
Bees will travel a long distance for
stores, but the wise man will sow
clover, alfalfa and buckwheat at
hand. Farmers' Home Journal.
Robber Bees.
It is where two colonies sitting
side by side are at full flight at the
same time that mixing of bees comes
about.
After setting out it sometimes hap
pens, especially if the weather is
very warm, that the first sot out will
commenco to rob or carry off the
stores of those set out last, which are
so busy with their cleansing flights
they they do not seem to notice the
robbers.
Robbing is not always confined to
such colonies, but all weak colonies,
whether wintered In tho cellar or
otherwise, are subejet to bo attacked
Industry of the Bee.
Tho bee Is famed for Industry, but
to show how much work the beo
really does a naturalist says that to
collect a pound of clover honoy the
bees must deprive (12,000 clovor blos
soms of their sweetness. To do this
the 02,000 flowers must be visited by
3,750,000 bees, or, In other words, to
collect his pound of honey one bee
must make 3,750,000 trips to and from
tho hive. As bees are known to lly
for miles lu their quest of suitable
fields of operation, It is clear that a
single ounco of honey leprosents mil
lions of miles of ua 1 1.
Thr Uusy Ilea.
Three hundred bllllo-i hens made
enough honoy his,, ye.-r to (HI a train
of cars long cnomth le.ich 'rom
New York in ll'iii ' -II,' low
ii -,ile i.i ' ' i I i i... i i ml,
, i. M I h .
En n nn nn -mi -nil . tig
I I
I One Hundred to One
- mi iiii mi -nn im -ufi
Ono hundred dollars. John looked
at tbo total w.th a tumult of satisfac
tion that rose to wonderful heights
after trfe long months of privation t.o
which he had subjected himself to ac
cumulate that magic sum.
Since the first day he went to work
the Idea of actually owning $100 had
been uppermost in his mind. He had
allowed no avenue of possible saving
to escape; long tramps to nnd from
business, scanty lunches, thin clothes
all had been borne cheerfully while
the meagre hank account had crept
dollar by dollar to the 100 mark.
John was the eldest son of poor par
ents. Desperately poor were they,
U... ...l.n. I . M..
Ulll lltlL iut;iu 11. III UUl'll IU glYU, .111.
arm Mrs. Atwood had given freely to
their children.
But now John felt independent of
homo charity. He meant to make a
stand for himself in tho world with
his little all. Among the boys In the
village ho was the most popular, and
the older folk had learned to listen
for the gay whistle of tho small, white
faced lad wlio trudged over tho weary
miles between his home nnd ills office
every morning scaicely before light.
It was an early spring day when
j the village doctor chanced to meet
! John on his way homo from work. The
I practised eyes of the physician noted
I the blue pallor ot the lad's face and
' the wan look about tho mouth. Hut
John waved asido his solcltatlons and
' declared binise'f well and happy, so
perfect was hi" inwird couli Hut
the doctor knew bett.-r, and so a day
or two after, when he was hastily
' summoned lo tin- boy's bedside, he
wns not surprised
1 That week lolm came down with
typhoid fever. A nurse was engaged,
and a long siege of sickness wrapped
the small home in gloom.
It was well into the summer before
: John was able to bo pronounced out
of danger. Tbo late July sun came
' in at the window over tho thin body
i of the little hoy as ho sat up In a
ragged chair, eoorod with a still more
ragged shawl
The nurse had left tho day before,
and the doctor only looked in now and
then to see how things were getting
on. But into John's life these two
beings had Introduced a terrible trag
edy. For their care of him his small
fortune had got to pay. Wo ono know
of Its existence but himself, but he
felt the Inevitable sacrifice that was
to be ills to make for his mother and
father and their little home.
That night John heard his parents
talking over the prospect of that debt
and planning to let go tho small equi
ty they had in their little homo glad
to do this now that their son's life
had been saved. And all that night
the battle of self-sacrilico waged hot
in John's boyish breast. The $100
laid up safely in the bank had been a
golden Inspiration to the lad, but he
knew long before morning dawned
that his duty lay straight before him
and he meant to accept it.
He got up feeling weak and ill. His
mother, humming about her toll, cross
ed over to his chair and bent down
to kiss the white face with a tender
solicitude that had never been found
wanting all during the years of her
son's life. And at the caressing touch
of those dear lips John suddenly threw
his arms about his mother's neck and
told her the story of his treasure and
what ho meant to do.
The light broke like sunshine over
that wan face and she wrapped John
in a glad embrace, telling him how
much it meant to both his parents for
him to meet this debt; It meant the
saving of their home. In which to
foster the little ones growing up, and
it meant, too, a burden of care lifted
from the poor, invalid father, whose
daily toll amounted to so little in tho
financial need,
All that day John heard his moth
er's happy song from tho kitchen. In
her great unselfish heart she never
thought but that her boy took pleasure
In meeting this debt with his savings,
and as John listened, the tears swelled
up In his eyes and rolled slowly down
his cheeks.
But a sound outside suddenly
caught his attention the shouts of
his playmates, who had assembled un
der his window, and were cheering at
sight of him. There were .o less than
60 boys In the group, who tossed up
their caps and called to him.
I John leaned over and waved his
j hand in token of greeting.
A silence lollowed. a silence that
surprised John not a little, for bis
friends were at all times noisily good
natured. And then he heard a step
on the stair. It was not his mother's
step, nor the tread of any of his small
sisters and brothers, for his cms bad
become iicrustomed to their footfall.
He watched the door with anticipa
tion as it slowly opened. Ono of tho
boys who had called to him from tho
street shuffled clumsily Into tho room
John smiled feebly ho was too near
to tears to trust himself to speak,
and the visitor was ill at ease, and
only grunted ,i word of response lo
John's smile, until again outside that
cheer arose fiom the boyish assem
bly.
Then It was that John's guest
marched boldly forward, and tossing
nn envelope Into John's lap told him
it was a little present from the Iiojk
With that lie rushed from tho loom
before John could speak, and' Willi
trembling lingers the sick boy in-e
open the envelope.
Inside woe l"u crisp new Uoii.it
bills.
Newsrsera of tile World.
Tiik'u i' l r ii fur Ihe v in M.
tin re '
ha'j'.t u
l-i r tor s:
OLLof
HONOR
Attention h called to the STUKNGTII
of Ihe
Wayne County
The FINANCIKK of New York
City lias published a BOLL t)I
1IONOK of the 11,470 Stale Hanks
and Tnif-t Companies of Tinted
States. In this list the WAYNK
COl'NTY SAVINGS HANK
Stands 38th in the United States.
Stands 10th in Pennsylvania.
Stands FIRST in Wayne County.
Capital. Surplus, $455,000.00
Total ASSETS, $2,733,000.00
UnnoMlnie, Ph.. Mnv 'jo Puis.,
TImp Table In Effect June 20th, 1909.
SCRANT0N DIVISION
I O "l 1
5 .
I ?. H
Stations
u.
M 3 3 8
U 31 to
I a -a I
A Slip M
--.IT S0
ulr.
irN.YAV.4-MHt..l.T
I UK, I Oil
.r.... 'iiiiciitH i,v,
" ...lluncnck....
" ..Starlight.... "
" 1'reHon Park "
' ..Wlnwood. .. "
" ..Poyntello.. "
" orsou
" Pleasant Mt "
" .. Unlondalo.. "
" .Forest city. "
" C rb'nilale Yd "
" Carbondalo. "
" White nrlclse "
" .Maynelo" Yd. "
" ....Jermyii "
" ..Archibald.. "
" .... Wlnton.... "
" ... Peokvllle... "
" ...OlypliaHt... "
" .. .Dickson.... "
" ....Throop..... "
" . Providence.. "
" ..Park PlocB..
Ill, 6 (Id:
II 01
14 51
a 15,
S3i'
2 15
a .v.
sin
327
n m
510
0 2.1
111 oil
12 I.".
hi 11I12 a)
C 40
6 DO
0 11
ft
HI -M
IS Hi1
10 0"
ia 05,
1151
9:i
1135
1 1 3-i
0 35l
n 3fi
ft BO
9 sol 1 1 no
9'i!n 2)1
3 43
DOfitnofl
w ss:
9 0411 Oil
8 MIO 5
B4SilO-fj
8 43,10 43
8 40ll0 40!
8 SBflO lift
4 10
7 05
4114
7 13
718
4 21!
4 2S
4 30
4 34
4 39
7 IX
7 25
7 29
7 34
7 87
8 3310 32
8 2S1()2,
4 42,
8 25 10 25
8 2210 22
8101019
815H015
4 451
7 40
4 481 7 43
4 51
7 4,
Lv... scrantoa ...At
4 55
k BA 111
T U
Additional trains leave Caroond&le tor Hart
tleld Yard at 6.W a. m. dally, and 6.38 p m (teny
except Sunday. Additional trains leato Uur.
field Yard tor Corbondata 6 8 a m dally andSM
p. m. dally except Sunday.
J. O. Andkmon, J. H. Weub,
Traffle Manager, Traveling Agea.
ts Bearer St. New York. Scrantoa.
AKUIV.Ui AM) DHIWHTVUH OF
TRAINS
Delaware & Hudson H. K.
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. rn.
Trains arrive at 9:55 a. m., 3:15
and 7:31 p. m.
Sundays at 10:15 a. m. and 6:50
p. in.
Erie R. R.
Trains leave at S:27 a. m. and
2:50 p. m.
Sundays at ":50 p. ni.
Trains arrive at 2:13 and S:02
p. m.
Sundays at 7:02 p. m.
Public Sale of Personal Property
Take notice that on Friday. Sept.
3rd, 1909, nt 11:30 o'clock a. m.,
the New York, Ontario and West
ern Railway Company will sell at
public sale for freight and storage
charges, 011 hand goods, wares,
and merchandise, consisting of six
bundles of one dozen chairs, con
signed to M. J. Connolly, at Its
freight station or depot in Clinton
township, Wayne County, Pennsyl
vania, known as tha Forest City
station of said company.
New York, Ontario and Western
Railway Company, By
JAMES E. IJURR,
Its Attorney.
(illwi!
Letters on Poorly Printed
Stationery Go Into the
A chi -. ImiUli'L- li-Hi-i In-ni v. n. iitli'ti
llon ami putH the 1 '1 )' ' 1 lien 1 i'V.in:int
frame ui iul;i, 1,1 1 I, m u .! 1 111 1 1 It.
We I i ' n T
l.'Uor.-.'ry.
1 V' nr.
! ill