4 THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOnEB 20, 1000. THE CITIZEN PDBLIBIIED EVERY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY BT THE CITIZEN PUBLISHING COMPANY. Entered as serond-clnss mattpr, at the post ed ce. lloncsdale. l'a. JS. B. HAKDKNUEHOH. - - PRESIDENT W. W. WOOD. - - MANAGER AND SECY DIRECTORS ! D. B. BORFMNQER. M. 11. ALLEN. HENRY WILSON. E. B. 1IARDENBER01I. W. W. WOOD. SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 per year WEDNESDAY, OCTOUEK 20, 1000. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. JUSTICE OF THE SUPItEME COURT . Judge Robert Von Moschzlskcr, of Pliiladelphia. AUDITOR GENERAL, A. E. SISSON, of Erie. STATE TREASURER, , Jeremiah A. Stober, c of Lancaster. JURY COMMISSIONER, W. H. Bullock. The base ball season for 1909 is ended and the Pittsburgs are the world's champions. That peculiar element of character which sizzles like carbonic acid gas does when you pull the cork, and which makes a atald sober man go crazy over a base hit or a good stop of a liner, will now subside only to gather renewed force next season. It will bo a long time between drinks for the base kail fans until next April. One of the striking features about Peary's charge against Cook is that It is copyrighted by the Arctic club and you cannot print it unless you pay for so doing. It looks like a money making scheme especially as the secretary of the club announces that the charge is made at this early iate and before the geographical so cieties can pass on the evidence of both parties, for the reason that Peary may suffer financial loss in his lecture campaign which is apt to fall flat with the general public, as Dr. Cook Is now lecturing to largo audi ences. Peary and his Arctic club believe with the darky preacher whoso favorite text was "Whore the hen scratcheth there she expects to find a bug." WHAT IS A COMPLIMENTARY VOTE? Candidates on the Democratic state ticket particularly the candi date for judge of the Supreme Court are making appeals for com plimentary votes. What is a complimentary vote? Why, it is just the same as any other kind of a vote. It goes to the candidate, Is counted for him, and helps to elect him if he can get enough of them. It is the habit of candidates who have no hope of election otherwise to plead for complimentary votes, and the plea is that it can do no harm; that It Is only a compliment. It goes just as far as any other vote in the election, however. The complimentary vote is a trick to be avoided. Every citizen should rote in support of his principles. PEARY AND COOK. Tho storm center of tho Peary Cook controversy has shifted from the North Pole to Mount McKinley. Doctor Cook claims to have reached the summit of Mount McKinley ac companied by a guide named Bar rill. This claim was not disputed until lately, Barrlll having testified to tho fact and it is on record that in his home town he has related re peatedly very minutely all the details of the ascent. Some weeks ago short ly after the Peary accusation the New York Herald published a report that Barrlll had acknowledged that he had been offered $5,000 to make affidavit that Dr. Cook had not reached the summit of Mount Mc Kinley, but had declined the offer. Now a paper called the Globe, own ed by Capt. Bridgman, who is Peary's strongest advocate and intimate confidant, comes out with an affi davit which it is claimed was made by Barrlll, to the effect that Cook's story of the ascent, of Mount Mcr Kinley was a fake and he was a party to it. Not much credence can be'placed upon the oath of this man who for several years has claimed to have been with Cook when he made the ascent, who has made the statement that he has been offered $6,000 to deny what he has stated, and then comes out with an affidavit which makes him out a confessed perjurer at the very best. Dr. Cook has signified not only a willingness but a determination to head a party of explorers to ascend to the summit of Mount McKinley and . procure tho records be left there. Hope he Invites Peary to bo one of the party. The Blacks to move and win came true in the Ketchcl and Johnson prize fight last Saturday. Why shouldn't black Johnson win? It is animal against animal in these bru tal contests and Johnson is not as far removed from the Gorilla as Ketchcl. The next contest will be between the Gorilla and the Bear, as Jefferles, when stripped for bat tle, presents the appearance of a bear, his body being covered with a mass of hair which would excite the envy of a grizzly. SECOND DEGREE VERDICT. Blakeslee Will Now Have to Spend u Few Years In tho Penitentiary. The jury in the case of Amos C. Blakeslee, charged with the murder of Garrett S. Berry, a native of Da mascus township, this county, on the night of July 20, 1909, at 720 Adams avenue, Scranton, returned a verdict of murder of the second de gree. The verdict was reached about 7 o'clock Wednesday night, it Is said, and the jury filed Into court at 9:30 o'clock the next morning. Three minutes later the verdict was read. Blakeslee entered the court room about a minute before the jury came in and took his seat at his counsel's table. He appeared cheerful and stood the strain of the intervening minutes between his arrival and the announcement of the verdict, well, the only nervousness he betrayed being shown in the shaking of his hands. 4 The verdict was plainly a shock" to him, as there was a rumor in the court house that the verdict would be "guilty of manslaughter," but the supposed "leak" was wrong. When the verdict was announced Blakeslee wept quietly and mopped his face, which had turned very red, and rubbed his eyes with a handker chief. A couple of women, said to be rel atives of the convicted man, who sat In tho audience, when the verdict was read, were also overcome. A few minutes after he had heard his fate, he was taken back to the county jail. Attorney James J. Powell, who with Attorney E. W. Thayer, defend ed Blakeslee, was present when the verdict was read and immediately announced that he would move for a new trial. Attorney Tbayer arrived a couple of minutes after the jury had been discharged. It was said that Blakeslee had a narrow escape from the 'noose, for when the jury first balloted it was found that a number had voted for a first degree verdict. The crime of which Blakeslee was convicted, was committed in his wife's home. He had left his wife a couple of months before ana lived a few doors away from her. The victim, Berry, was a neighbor of the Blakeslees, and a frequent caller at their home, both before and after the separation. Blakeslee sat on tho porch of his boarding house on the night of the murder. He saw Berry walk past his wife's house, turn and go back. Ber ry sat on the porch with Mrs. Blakes lee for a few minutes and then went into the house. Mrs. Blakeslee peer ed up and down tho street and then followed Berry. Blakeslee went up to his room, put on his coat and hat, took a re volver that he had borrowed, went around in tho rear of the houses be tween the boarding house and his wife's home and planted himself at a window in an alleyway so that he could see his wife and Berry in Mrs. Blakeslee's dining room. He watch ed him until he saw enough to con vince him that It was time to Inter fere. He broke In a rear window and when his wife saw him she fled. Berry, who was a very large and powerful man, wrestled with Blakes lee, according to the latter's testi mony, and while they were tussling the revolver he held in his hand went off and Berry was shot just about the left eye. He died the next day In the State Hospital. GOT A LITTLE SATISFACTION. Editor, Unablo to Collect Bill for Pa per, Conld Afford to Affront tho Widow. To the editor of a little Maine newspaper there came tho other day an indignant elderly woman, who waved a bit of paper in the editorial face. "Lookeo here!" she said. "What does this mean a bill for the Citi zen to my husband that's been dead two years? Ye don't expect his wid ow to pay debts o his contracted long after he's dead?" "You say he has not been getting the paper?" said the editor, after long thought. "No, ye donderhead!" screamed the woman, "I tell ye he's been dead two years!" "Strango," mused the editor. "The postoffice department has not noti fied me of his failure to receive them. Quite sure you yourself haven't been enjoying the estimable educational values of a perusal of my sheet?" "That ain't the point," argued the widow. "You've been sending the noospaper and a bill to a man that's dead. It's your affair, not mine." "Well," said the editor finally, per ceiving that he must be a loser, "in future, madam, I will cause an extra copy to be printed on asbestos to in sure that your husband receives Mb Citizen regularly." "Paid in Full' starts in The Citizen next week. PERSONAL CANVASS FOR A JUDGESHIP. Tho Democratic candidate for Judge of tho Supreme Court, C. Laruo Munson, is swinging around the State soliciting votes to put him self on the bench of tho highest Judicial tribunal in the Common wealth. He is going Into tho coun ties, holding conferences with the politicians of his party, and Individ ually seeking voters. This Is something new. Tho peo ple of Pennsylvania have never be fore been diverted by so Interesting a spectacle as a candidate for the exalted place of Judge of tho Su preme Court whirling around in a personal canvass of the state. Searching back through all the years siuco the adoption of the present constitution the Democratic candi date himself would bo unable to find a precedent for it. The sentiment, made and ever maintained by the people which holds high judicial of fice above such methods, has always been respected heretofore by those who have been honored with a nom ination. The Democratic candidate seems to have a less exalted view of the place he seeks, and to think he can promote his cause by thrusting aside what has become an unwrit ten and should be an inviolable law. The duties of a judge of tho Supremo Court are of the most delicate and responsible character too delicate and responsible to be exposed to a compromising personal campaign for votes. The offlco has never been pulled down to that level, and no one has ever before thought he could pull himself up to the offlco by such methods. The Democratic candidato will not benefit by those methods now. The people of Pennsylvania have too high an appreciation of the proprie ties to look with either patience or favor upon a personal canvass by a candidate for Judge of the Supreme Court. SEIZED 1,000 GALLONS BOOZE. Rockland County Still in Hands of Government Officers. Henry B. Lawson, of Newburgh, deputy collector of internal revenue, seized 1,000 gallons of spirits at a still in Charlestown, Rockland coun ty, Saturday night. The still had for some time been under suspicion but the internal revenue agents found it extremely difficult to dis cover the offenders owing to the method which they employed in avoiding the revenue tax. , The still was registered, but only paid a tax for half its output. It was perplex ing, however, to ascertain when legitimate spirits were being taken from the still and when contraband. To solve this two special internal revenue agents one from North Carolina and another from Boston, Mass., were called into the case to assist Mr. Lawson. After watching the still for weeks the internal revenue men made their seizure when a wagon was loaded for tho second time. As the govern ment tax is $1.50 per gallon it will be readily apparent that the saving to the distiller by evading the tax was, on this load, $1,500. A SMILE AND A HELPING HAND. 'Tis the honest grip Of comradeship Makes a fellow take heart again; It's the word of cheer From a friend sincere Makes him feel life's not in vain. When the way is dark And the luckless barque Is drifting from safety's strand, Why, God bless the man And tho woman who then Hold to us a helping hand. When you're out of luck And you're out of pluck And the fight don't seem worth while What will give you heart To do your part? Why, a handclasp and a smile; So when all is black And we've lost the track In a world we can't understand, Then God bless the friend Who is there to lend A smile and a helping hand. Exchange. Scene from the "Isle of Spice," 91st ANNIVERSARY OF THE WAYNE COUNTY BIBLE SOCIETY Report of Rev. H. G. Harned, Superintendent, to the Wayne Coun ty Bible Society at tho 91st anniver sary held in Grace Episcopal church, October 13, 1909: Since the nineteenth anniversary of tho society, which was observed by a meeting held In the First Meth odist Episcopal church of Hones dale, Pa., on Wednesday evening, July 15, 1908, it has become more and more apparent that the Bible Society, as well as other missionary societies, has mission work to do in the United States, as well as in Foreign Countries, and the revival of homo mission work in all of the churches has increased the demands on the Bible Society as their helper. The immense influx of foreigners pouring into this country, whose trend of thought has been so differ ent from that which is expected of citizens of this country, and especi ally of those who have built up the religious and civil institutions of the United States, that the great statesmen, as well as great church men, have been led to say, "The Immigrant is America's greatest problem," and that "tho Bible is the only solution." The Bible societies are endeavor ing to meet tho demands upon them and they are succeeding as far as their funds will allow. County lines cannot divide mission work. This is especially true in Northeast ern Pennsylvania. Since the Northeast Department of the State Society was Instituted comprising six counties, Including Wayne county, in a little over two years, 13,300 volumes were dis tributed in this territory, valued at $5,387.34. ' 2,278 volumes of these were do nated and a large number of the others were sold at cost of making or less than cost. Many foreigners learn the English, especially the younger ones, and of course, the English books are most In demand, but of those 697 .vero Italian, 202 Polish, 111 Welsu, 87 Ruthenlan, 78 German, 34 Russian, 28 Hungarian,- 34 Romanian and various num bers in Spanish, Bohemian, Bulgar ian, Slovak, Japanese, Swedish, Greek, French, Latin, Arabic, etc. During the past year we have distributed 271 volumes to Wayne county people, whom we know to be such, but many come to us in our office and Bible store at 12G Wash ington Avenue, Scranton, whore we have more than a thousand dollars worth of Bibles constantly in stock, whom we do not know, and doubt less, many more sold to Wayne county customers. It is a good thing to have a place available where a large stock and great variety of Bibles can bo had conveniently. We aim to see to It that every one is supplied with a copy of God's Word, whether born in America, or any other land, even beginning at our "own nouseuoid our own people. And it is not difficult to believe that some of them may be or become, as bad as any of the toreigners, wno come to us, espec ially when we take into account our greater advantages in this country We supply every new mission among tho foreign people as soon as one is fairly organized, and keep in touch with the missionaries and help them supply all with Bibles, Many of those, who read foreign languages, come themselves and get their books. Wo give a large dis count on Oxford, International and American Standard Revised Bibles to churches and to Sunday schools and to Christian Workers, gener ally, and donate to those who are unable to pay for them. We have received contributions as follows: First Presbyterian Church, Hones dale, $10.00; from the M. E. churches in Wayne county: Honesdale $10: Ariel, $10, Carley Brook, $1, Beach Lake, $4, Bethany, $5, Damascus $2, Hamlinton, $4, Hawley, $3.40, Sterling, $1, South Canaan, $2, at the Lyric on Monday next Waymart, $3, Orson, $4.36, Lake vlllo, $1, United Evangelical church of Maplcwood, 49 cents. Contributions paid to tho Treas urer directly by others, not appear ing in this report, will bo accounted for by him. The Pennsylvania Bible Society Annual Report of May, 1909, gives large credit to tho work In our Northeast Department, making special mention of Wayne county so ciety and reports its history at some length, indicating that other parts of tho state are following our meth ods to their advantage. Many thanks to the officers of this society, to the pastors of churches, the Sunday School workers, tho press of tho county, and all who have helped us to make the success which has attracted so wido attention. Respectfully submitted, H. G. HARNED, Supt. HORSE, BUGGY, HARNESS GONE. Liberty Stableman Robbed of Valua ble Property. Chiefs of Police of different places have been notified by C. F. Crawford of Liberty, Sullivan county, that there has been stolen from the sta ble of Charles Syreen In Liberty a strawberry roan gelding, 1G hands high, weight about 1,225 pounds, paces part of the time, long black mane and tall, foretop short, scar on one forefoot outside quarter, hind shoe off, in good flesh when stolen, value about $150. Also black top buggy, red running gear, and light harness. A reward of $25 is offered for the recovery of tho property. "Billy, Tho Kid." "Billy, The Kid" plays a return engagement at the Lyric Theatre this (Wednesday) evening. There will be but one performance (night) and no matinee as advertised on the lithographs. A mistake in placing the order for printing was tho cause of announcing a matinee for this place. "Billy, The Kid" played at the Lyric last season to a large and well pleased audience and lovers of sen sational raelo-drama will welcome the return of this lively western play. Harvest Homo Services. The Harvest Home services will be held at tho Carley Brook church on Sunday morning, Oct. 24th, at 11 o'clock and at Glrdland at 2:30 p. m. Preaching at West Damascus at 7:30 p. m. The Third Quarterly conference will be held on Saturday evening, October 23rd, and the quarterly meeting on Sunday, Oct. 24th, at 11 o'clock a. m. In the church at Smith Hill. Rev. J. M. Coleman will con duct the services instead of Dr. M. D. Fuller. J. B. ZWEIZIG. Pastor of Carley Brook charge. Legal blanks at Tho Citizen office. BREGST FALL OPE Tho need of heavier garments is as ing you male- folks here. We know what a great store this is; know how well prepared we are to save you. That's why we Bay with all the confidence in the world, "Come Here." HIGH ART AND COLLEGIAN Suits and Overcoats aro ready In all the striking patterns for the present season. Styles for the young man styles for the older. All in all, it's a grand gathering of clothes you should wear 910 to 920. Hats If your price is 91.50, we'll show the Prominent; if you'll pay 92.00, Gold Bond is tho hat for you. Then comes tho Knox at 93.00. Variety a plenty. Furnishings There are a great many places to buy fixings, but there's always one Breestein Brothers, Entertainment Friday Evening. Tho entertainment which will bo given Friday ovenlng, Oct. 22, un der the auspices of the Honesdaio Public School teachers, will consist of music and a talk by Miss Alice , Gregory on "The English Lake, Dis trict," with illustrations. At tho conclusion of tho program Ice cream, cake and candy will bo on sale. The new building will be open for the Inspection of all those who deslro to see It. The proceeds are to aid in tho furnishing of the teachers' par lor. Tickets adults 25 cents; children 10 cents. 83tl. SINGING EVANGELISTS. The Rlnes Brothers, tho singing evangelists, will conduct services in tho Waymart M. E. church from October 18th to 31st. ALL ARK WELCOME. These sweet singers and inspiring talkers will Interest and help you. 83tf. LYRIC THEATRE BEHJ. H. MT1R1CH, - - - Lessee & Manaeer Wednesday EVENING ONE NIGHT ONLY Chas. H. Wuerz PRESKNTS The Season's Sensational Melodra matic Success BILLY The KID WITH NOLAN PANE A3 BILLY A true story of Life in tho Great Wild West. The Most Novel, Unique und Pictures que Show of Modern Times. Van and Sensation. A STIIONQ METROPOLITAN CAST. PRICES- 15-25-35 and 50cts. SEAT SALE opens nt tho box office at 0 a. m Wednesday, Oct. 20. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, a registered student at law in the office of Victor A. Deckeu, Esq., of tho Wayne county bar, will make application to the State Board of Law Examiners, to be examined on the 7th and 8th days of Dec, 1909, for ad mission to the bar of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, and to the bar of the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne Co. CHAS. S. IIOUCK. Honesdale, Pa., Oct. 9 1009. 82eoi5 A. O. BLAKE, AUCTIONEER. You will make money by buying me. IBELL PHONE 0-U Bethany, Pa. We want you here today ! Rathe1!' a pointed request but we'rr saying it by right of superior knowledge on the subject of FALL AND WINTER CLOTHING. insistent as we are about hurry best place. It's here. The Eclipse shirt, 91.00 to $2.00. Ever wear the Just Right Glove, 91.00 to 92.00 and the Corliss Coon collars? In quarter sizes, 2 for 25c. Underwear We feature the Australian natu ral wool underwear at 91.00 per garment; also Setsnug Union Suits for mon at 91.00 to 92.00 per suit. BROS. 8?5 MAIN STREET, Honasdalo, Pa,