THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, SEPT, 17, 1000. JELLS GIRLS HOW . i 10 ELUDE School in Chicago Teaches Them Way to Cut Fresh Employers and Floorwalkers GOOD WAY TO FREEZE A FLIRT Way to Treat Conductors and Eleva tor Men Words of Scorn for Those Who Advertise for "Bright Girls" How Shop Girls Should Dress. Chicago. How to protect the Inno cent working girl from the lure of man has appealed so strongly to Mrs. T. Vernette Morse that she Is con ducting a school In the McClurg Building. Twelve graduates are putting into practice the theories of Mrs. Morse regarding the best way for a small paid girl to handle her opulent em ployer. They haven't been at it long, however, so it Is too early to say whether the newly discovered branch cf education Is practical. Until the period has passed when divorce, breach of promise suits and marriages may reasonably be sup posed to have had time to gener.-te, statistics will be futile. In the mean time, horo is what those twelve girls have been taught and what others are striving to learn: How to treat a street car conduc tor. How to treat nr. elevator starter. How to act In the presence of a handsome floar walker. l-'ov to cut r.n employer socially without losing one's job. How to demean oneself toward a man so Isc'dr.g of understanding as to :dvertlbs for a "bright girl." Here pre the answers of Mrs. Morse In the foim In which she conveys them to her pupils: "A Klvl is not called on to speak to iv street car conductor at any time, unless it Is to call his attention to a mistake in change or to asl: him for a transfer. Either of these things enn be done in a few words and in a ladylike, dipnllleil way that will pre i hide any reply on the part of the conductor. " 'Good mornlnp' is all that a girl ever need ttay to an elevator starter. Only one other thins I almost for got to say that she also may say 'Good evening.' As for the elevator boy, the number ot her iloor is enough. Too many elevator boys as sume the airs of the navigators of battleships. "Our class in the treating of hand some floorwalkers Is our pride. The operation is delicate and not easily mastered. But by the raising or low ering of an eyelash a floorwalker may be frapped In his tracks, because he is afraid of being reported to his su periors. "There should be no accepting or giving of invitations between a girl and her employer. Only this hard and fast rule will prevent episodes which too often have blighted lives in the Loop. (The Loop is the name of the business district of Chicago.) All personalities and social considera tions should be eliminated. If a gen tleman must call on a lady, let him call at her home, and not at her place of business. "The shop girl's apparel should be simple, but artistic. An artistic gown is always a simple gown. It always Is good in line and harmonious in col or that sort of gown, however, that never will attract attention on the street. "But, after all, the point more than anything else to be considered is the fact of a young girl leaving her home for the first time to take up a busi ness career. If she understands, she will be safe; but few understand. First, she has to differentiate between the home and the business life. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, Superintendent of Schools, is a living example of what a girl can do if she starts out right. Properly, a girl should be just as safe down town as at home. "As for the oft-used term 'bright girl,' I don't know what It means. More than once I have seen advertise ments for 'bright young girls.' Do they mean bright mentally, mathe matically or in personal appearance? I have asked many persons who used the term and I have yet to receive a clear definition of 'bright girl."' HOOFS, INSTEAD OF FEET. Boston Medical Experts Expect Them for Humanity In a Thousand Years. Boston. Medical experts of this city predict that civilized man will hare hoofs, Instead of feet, In a thou sand more years. No less personages than Dr. David D. Scannell, surgeon and ex-Harvard athlete; Lewis F. Small, an orthopoedist, and Dr. L. It. G. Cranston and Dr. E. H. Bradford, both of the Harvard Medical School, see this probality. Dr, Cranston says the human foot has becomo a hind foot or hoof in use, if not in actual form. Dr, Small says the civilized races are slowly revert Ing to hoofs and that we must go to the Japanese to learn how to walk. Foot troubles are unknown among them. Girls Must Wear Bloomers. St. Louis, The Superintendent ol City Playgrounds has issued an order requiring girls under fourteen years of age to wear bloomers so that they BAD MEN! may have freer opportunity for oxer A puce looks os over 1 Guenther of Schoenburg, Frankly Confeses that Our Girls and Cities Beat the World. Now York. N. Y. Guenther, Prince of SchoenburG, Saxony, Is "doing" New York. Accompanied by his Good friend, Baron Hochwaechter, who has visited America several times, the Prince, a rosy-cheeked, well-set-up chap of twenty-two years, Is having the time of his life. They have been here only a few days, baring coma from a tour of Argentina and Brazil, but In spite of the weather the Prince has found time to see a great deal of New York life and to spend one day with the boardwalk promcnaders at Atlantic City. Prince Guenther is delighted with everything. Not only is he convinced that American girls are the most beautiful and fascinating ne has seen, but he Is equally positive that our railroads and cities offer the finest accommodations to travelers found anywhere on the globe. He said so to a reporter In the St. Regis. "I presume the first question you wish to ask is, 'What do you think of the American girl?' said the Prince in English mastered in the years ha spent In Loudon as a boy. "She is magnificent, the finest In the world, so far as my limited experience gives me the right to speak. You see I can !',!.. ' -.t-tyf, "fill ' '''',,". VVI u speak only of the German, English, South American and American girls. I have not yet nccn many women of France." "There is no dungcv of your being captured by n Vautll'ul American heiress this trip, Is there?" was asked. The Prince blushed becomingly. "Ach! No!" he declared. "I lam much too young to tlJ.ntt ot marry ing" "But if you co to Newport how are yo going to Kuurd up,:.Ii.t the traps sc by mothers with marriageable daughters?" "I do not thin): It likely that I shall be troubled. You see I have met many American g!rls in Dresden, which is almost, an American city, and have learned something of their arts of fascination. Perhaps I am what you call immune. Is it not?" The Prince switched the subject to New York as a city. "The first Impression of New York Is magnificent," lie said. "Coming up the bay it is most impressive, that line-of-sky. as you call it. Nowhere Is there such another city. Buenos 4 r-.slui . W jwof r sir? 7? Ayres is fine, Rio Janeiro Is beauti ful, the cities of Europe are fascinat ing, but New York Is truly great. It inspires awe. It is clean, too, quite as clean as Berlin, at least what I have seen of it. And the rush! Even in summer when they tell me it has died here, as you say, there is so much to see, so many theatres and roof gardens. The Prince listened while joys of Coney were outlined. He as particu larly interested in the "Loop the Loop." "Do you mean that visitors are per mitted to ride in this thing?" he ask ed. "I prefer the charge of a wild boar." The Prince's six feet of Teutonic good looks and his boyishness are sure to cause a stir." Before he leaves America the Prince Intends to tako the trans-continental trip. He is interested in for estry, of which he will make a special study for several years at the Univer sity of Munich, He Intends also to take a special scientific course at the University of Paris. For the two years prior to last September he was a lieutenant in the Emperor's own regiment at Potsdam. "RAT" SAVES HES LIFE. Deflects Course of Bullet When Hus band Fires at an Cio Woman. Columbus, Ohio. That much ridi culed hirsute adornment of women the rat was responsible for saving the life of Mrs. Anna Fairman. The wom an had troublo with her husband, who fired a rovolvor at her head. She went screaming to the street after tho husband escaped. An ambulance took Mrs. Fairman to a hospital, where the surgeons discovered that she had only a bad scalp wound. They do claro tho woman's life was saved by the "rat," which deflected the course Mr WAV PATRIOTISM THEIR AVORITE THEME Von Mosciiziskers Wrote Poems to Flag and Country, BREATHED SPIRIT OF LIBERT? Parents of Nominee For Supreme Court Justice Figured Prominently In Promoting the Cause of the Union In the Dark Days of the Rebellion. Admirers of Judge Robert von Moschzlskor, Republican candidate for associate justice of the supremo court, are directing their attention to the pa triotic writings of his parents, which breathed loyalty to the Union during the Civil War. Judge von Moschzlsker's father, Franz A. ron Moschzlskor, was a na tire of Poland and his mother was an American, Miss Clara Harrison, of Philadelphia. The elder Von Mosch zlskor was of distinguished lineage, on the paternal side of the old Polish no bility, and through his mother of the undent So::on, being a direct descend ant of tho Elector of Saxony, who sus tained Luther In his historic contest. He was a patriot and a scholar. Dur ing the uprising of ISIS he joined the forces under Kossuth, and in many battles fought for the cause of liberty. Ho was captured by tho Austrlans, but niter many exciting adventures es caped to England, whore he became professor ot German literature in Kings collets. London. Later he stud ied medicine, and alter graduation in Germany came to the United States and settled in Philadelphia, where he practiced his prolession. Both Dr. von Moschzlsker ami his wife were enthusiastic supporters of the cause r:f the Union in the Civil War. Dr. von Moschzlskcr went to Washington and submitted to con gress a memorial urging tho establish ment of ophthalmic hc&pltals and by other acts fully established his tho--ougli sympathy with the Union. Attor coming to the United States he never returned to Europe, but transferred his natural patriotism and dcvotlo.i ol country to the land of his adoption. He contributed to the newspapers anl periodicals many patriotic articles and poems. The intensity of his sympa thies with the Unionists may be judg ed by a poem entitled "The Seen and Unseen Armies," written by him upon the occasion of the great military re view at Washington. The Seen and Unssen Armies. It reads: With quickened breath and proud hur rah We greet our armies back today; Their bayonets, glistening in the sun, Not brighter than their victories won; Their blcod-stained flags, when now unfurled, Commanding homage from a world, Each m.in his country's boast and joy, From gene ; o drummer boy! And they, 1 eroes of the hour, What thou. . must In their breasts haw .vtir! The men . -se arms have dashed away The cloud that o'er their country lay, When here, in first and last review, They bid that country saved adieu! No monarch's praise these warriors crave; Their country's grateful love they have. Beneath those suits of war-worn blue What jdy must thrill each tense nerve through! Their loaders, viewing them with nride. Hall them as comrades, true and tried, While they, oxultinc, greet the form That led them here through fiery storm! On winged thought our souls aspire, Where purified by blood and fire, With downward glancing, spirit eyes, They seo that day so blest arise Around its Chief, in bright array, Tho army that has passed away! Its Chief not he who led the way Through night to victory's perfect day, But Ho, above whose martyr grave The whlte-hued flowers of Peace shall wave; Implanted by the loving hand Whose life-blood stains a stricken land! Upon the assassination of Abraham Lincoln and while the body of the mar tyred president lay in state in Phila delphia, Dr. von Mcschzisker wrote these lines; The State House Bell. Toll forth, old bell, With mourntul knell, his requiem swell Who lieth here Cold on his bier! Ton in each stroke Of fetters broke By action grand Ot this pale hand! Tho Nation greet. Tell blood so sweet, At country's feet, Was never poured By deed abhorred! Yet on this head, By fiends low laid On this dead face Our sad eyes tracer O'er martyr's crown By thorns pressed down The Victory won, With these closed eyes Foul slavery dies! Thou toll on, ol bell, With mournful knell; His requiem swell Who lieth hero Cold on his bier! Tell in each stroke Of fetters broke By action grand Or this pale hand! Judge von Moschzlsker's mother was bom in Philadelphia, where her fam ily for four generations resided. Many of her ancestors were seafaring peo ple. Her father and maternal grand father both were sea captains. Mrs. von Moschzlskor was a great reader and wrote extensively. A volume" of het verses Is among the cherishod possos sions of her son. Like her husband she employed her pen to impart tc northerners the patriotism which thrilled her. At tho battle of Chlcka manga Brigadier General Steadman, observing a regiment In lino of battle panic-stricken and about to retreat rode forward and, seizing its flag, cx claimed. "Go back, boys, but the flag can't go with you." This Incident prompted Mrs. von Moschzlsker tc write these lines: The Flag. Gallant Steadman! e'en more than the soldier art thou, Tho wreath of tho Poet encircles thy brow, Tho robes of the Prophet thv brave limbs enfold As springs from thy firm lips that cry, wise as gold. For onward, still onward, our prctid flag must go. Bearing joy to its friends and dospaii to the foe; With liberty, honor and light in its track, While life nerves a true arm It ne'er shall fall back! And years will but carry It on In their flight, Its stars, now o'erclouded, triumphant ly blight. While from ocean to ocean an nnthem will roll. Of praise from a nation's regenerate soul Oh, ye, who in manhood heaven dow ers with a sword. To draw In defense of your country and Lord, If patience, if faith, hope or courage e'er lag, "Go back. boys, go back, but not with you the flag!" Although both of his parents were poetic in temperament, Judge von Moschzlsker would never bo suspected of following the muses. All of his writings have been of the most practical sort of prose. While he may be said to have Inherited lit erary instincts from his parents, they run along different lines. He has con fined his efforts almost entirely to writings on the law. As was forcibly said by Alexander Simpson, Jr., In his speech placing him In nomination for the supreme bench, Judge von Moschzlskor Is "a writing judge." He has earned thi3 reputation while sitting in common pleas court No. 3. While many of his colleagues on tho bench have doomed it necessary to put but few of their opinions in writ ing, Judge von Moschzlsker has soon lit to burn the mlduight oil and ho has made an unprecedented record lor the number of opinions ho has placed on filo In tho Philadelphia courts. "When I say to you," remarked Mr. Simpson, in his convention address, "that of upwards of four hundred of these opinions, but five of them hav? had reversals In the higher courts of this commonwealth, you know whether or not Judge von Moschzlsker has measured up to the duty that has boon before him." RRO! MEETS Executive Talks of His Tour of tlis State. Philadelphia, Sept. 14. Governor Edwin S. Stuart, who has just returned from a tour of the state as guest of various "Old Home Week" celebrations, speaks in the most en thusiastic way of the evidences ot prosperity he saw upon every hand. The people of Pennsylvania, ho says, are happy and prosperous, and there are indications everywhere of the ben eficial results of the passage of tho tariff bill, which does so much to pro tect Pennsylvania's varied interests, agricultural and industrial and com mercial. The governor believes this will be a great Republican year and that the people of this commonwealth will ap preciate the work of the Republican representatives in congress in the en actment of tho tariff legislation. As a personal friend and admirer of Judge von Moschzlsker, whom he has known intimately for years, Governor Stuart was delighted to learn that the candidacy of the Philadelphia Jurist is receiving the enthusiastic support of the Influential men of the bench and bar, who are familiar with his splendid record upon tho common pleas bench. The Republican nominee for tho su preme court, Judge von Moschzlsker, Is best known to tho legal profession through the many opinions he has written upon a diversity of subjects and tho fact that these opinions have been sustained by the highest court in the state. "Every Pennsylvanlan shotld be proud of Judge von Moschzisker," re marked the governor a few days ago. "It gives me pleasure to speak of his worth as a man and his splendid rec ord as a jurist." Following the formal opening of tho state campaign at the Lehigh county Republican meeting at Dorneyvllle, where nominees for auditor general and state treasurer respectively, A. E. Sisson and J. A. Stober, both made stirring addresses, Chairman Andrews is planning a series of meetings nt tho Instance of Uio Republican count v chairmen in different parts of the state. The most Important gathering this month will be tho convention ot Uu State League of Republican Clubs, to be held In Altoona, Sopt. 22. 23 und 24. All of tho Republican candidates havo been Invited, along with Senators Pen roso and Oliver, Chairman Andrews and others. Great preparations havo been mado for the entertainment of tho delegates and other visitors, and a large attend anco is anticipated. 1 I Tlio Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which has been in uso for over 30 years, has foorno tho sijrnaturo of - - and has been mado under his pcr- l jCjzfllAr eounl supervision sinco its infancy. ury, t-cucsutt. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-good "are but Experiments that trillo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fevcrislmcss. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears tho The KM You Have Always Bought in Use For Over 30 Years. THS CCt4TUH COMPANY, TT MURRAY OTRCIT. NCWVORK CITY. V. li. HOLMES, 1'i:k-I!)Fi. A. T. SIJAIJLK, Vici: l'i:i;s. We want you to understand ttie reasons for the ABSOLUTE SECUKITY WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK HONE SD ALE, PA., HAS A CAPITAL OF - - - 8100,000.00 AND SUliPLUS AN1") PROFITS OF - 3f.fl.nu0.00 MAKIKLi ALTOGETHER - - iooiuuu.OO KVKUY DOLLAR of which must be lost before any depositor can lofoai'iilN'lSY It has conducted a growiiiK and Micce:-sful business for over U5 X'ears. eervino an increasing number of customers with Its cash iunds are protected by MODKKN STEEL VAULTS. All of these tl'incs, coupled with conservative management. Insured by the (.'AI5KITJ. l'KUMl.VAI, ATTKNTIOX constantly j-Iven the Itan'.v's alairtya notaliU able Hoard ot Directors :i.suips the natrons of that SUl'KK.MK SAFETY which Is the lirlme essential ot a cuod Hank. Total Assets, - - - $2,733,000.00 car DEPOSITS MAY be made by mail. -3 -DIRECTORS CIIAS.J. SMITH, 11. j.coxuKi:. W F. SL'YDAM. tV. li. HOLMES A. T. SKAIil.K. T. H. CI.AKK. Daily TEN CENTS SAVED every day will, in fifty years, grow to $9,504. TWENTY CENTS SAVED daily would in fifty years amount to $19,006. The way to accumulate money is to save small sums system atically and with regularity. At 3 per cent, compound interest money doubles itself in 23 years and 104 days. At G per cent, money doubles itself in 11 years and 327 days. If vou would save 50 cents a day, in 50 years you would have $47,520. If vou would save $1.00 a day, at the end of 50 years you would have $95,042. Begin NOW n Savings Account at the THREE PER CENT. INTEREST PAID Money loaned to all Wayne cqunteans furnish ing uooJ security. Xotes discounted. Hrst mortijaseon real estate taken. Safest and cheap est way to send money to foreign countries Is In drafts, to bo had at this bank. & e e HOUSEHOLD RANKS FKEK. Felephone Announcement This company is preparing to do extensive construction work in tho Honesdale Exchange District which will greatly improve tho service and enlargo the system Patronize the Independent Telephone Company which reduced telophono rates, anddo not contract for any other service without conferring with our Contract Department Tel. No. 300. CONSOLIDATED TELEPHONE CO. of PENNSYLVANIA. Poster Building. Signature of II. S. SALMON, Cashier YV. .1. WARD, Ass't Cashier tills Bank. fidelity and satisfaction. I'. 1'. KIMHLE II. S. SALMON Honesdale Dime Bank