the citizen, Wednesday, ootoder ao, ioob. Nature's Recompense fla a wa i ' "We learn of God's inllnlto lovo and power From the beauty and fragrance) of overy flower." I congratulated myself upon per euadlng them to take me in, for board ers were not In their line. That was ono reason I wished to stay, another no less Important was the proximity of their place to a virgin forest, for I had planned to pass the waking hours of my vacation with rest and study in nature's arboretum. There it was I'flrst saw tho "idiot," The apparition loomed up suddenly before mo. His heavy body moved gracefully no other word can better express the ease with which his clumsy feet picked their way over tho wild flower and brake. That was my first glimpse, although I had for some time been aware of his existence. A son and two daughters, home for their oummer vacation, often renewed with in my hoarlng the evidently never ending discussion of Influencing the mother to send him away. Evidently an old fellow wrapped up in the study of flowers and trees could have no in terest in their affairs. But the "idiot" I watched him make his way to the edge of tho for est, ever mindful of tho growing things about him, stopping to examine ' a flower or rest his hand caressingly on a tree, sometimes going out of his way to do so. At the edge of the forest ho hesitated, then plunged out Into the open. The light of a setting sun was full upon him. His wholo attitude was changed. His shoulders drooped, his head hung listlessly, his feet ploughed heavily through the grass, his clothes, faded and old, were outgrown. As ho nearcd the house he appeared even more dejected. A sorry spectacle! Ho entered a rear door and vanished from my sight My next view of him was a nearer one. I oat with my back comfortably sup ported by a tree trunk deeply Inter ested in my book. Something caused me to look up; almost at my feet he Btood watching me attentively. He was a young giant, and I had heard his brother and sisters sny It would be better were ho not at large. While I was neither young nor strong still I experienced no fear. His features were hideous, but the eyes were beau tiful, and I thought the only redeem ing thing about him until I heard his voice. That was low and musical as a woman's. "You see, you understand!" He broke the silence which was becom ing embarrassing. I realized he had been studying me, how long I did not know, but felt relieved that he had apparently come to a conclusion that pleased him. "They don't see me; she don't see. They see only this," passing his hand over his face and body, "but you see, you understand! I try to tell her, but she dont under stand." He shook his head .sadly. "But she says she will not send me away! I stay here all day when they are home." "You like It here?" I ventured. "Yes, I like it! You like It, too! You come every day and never pick the flowers. I couldn't let anybody pick the flowers! They understand! They what do they say to you?" He waited breathlessly for my an swer. "Among the flowers and trees I find rest that I have never known elsewhere. They give me an Inspira tion I cannot find among men " "Yes, yes, you understand! I try to tell her, but she sees only this." Again he indicated his hideous face and huge body. "I know I am not like them. I used to feel bad and come here and cry where she would not see me." "You dont feel badly any more, I hope." "No, not for myself, but she don't know, and I feel bad for her." He seemed quite unmindful of the tears that filled his eyes. "I bring her here sometimes so the flowers can tell her, but she only cries." He seemed lost in thought for a few minutes, thea continued: "111 show you th bueh some time. That year the blocsomi were all perfect but one. I wanted to break that one off, but I didn't I lei it stay. It spoiled the looks of the whole buah and I hated It I went to It every day and hated It Then I heard them oak her to send me away; I spoiled everything for them. I was so hideous and an idiot It made me mad aad I hated them. I came here and walked and walked till I was tired, thaa eat down and went to sleep. It was morning when I woke up and the firct thing I saw was that bush. Thea I felt better. I knew they didn't understand and I would stay away. I stay here all day. The next day when the bush blossomed every one wa perfect" His eyes were bright with excitement "1 told her and ih came with me to see It I told her I was happy here; the flow ers and breca made me forget and I was happy." "She m gted, I know." He looked away. The troubled ex pression cam to Ms face again. "8ha cries; aha iant understand." He tamed to walk away. "See," holding a brake aside to expose to my blurred vUdoa a clump of waxen In dian pipes, "Vhoet flowers." Hie face was radtaat and I realized the flow ers had helped him to target and among them he had found peace. LENA SPALDING. Victim's Wall. It's all right for a woman to save time, but xnoklnjc eherrv tries with th tones In "em Is a poor war to do It Detroit nee jcmml 8NEAKINQ SUSPICION CLINCHED. Tale of a Portly Personage with Wool ly Side Whiskers. "Uh-whllst yo' was gono," said Brother Smathers, .'elating the news to Brother Buckaloo, who had beon on a journey, "a gcn'loman 'peared on do scene yuh, wid de noration dat ho was a clarryvoyant and de seventh son o' suppln' I dunnah what and was gwlne to hold a secession in do lodge hall and show signs and won duhs for de modest sum o' two bits for folks and ten cents for betwixt sized child'en; po'tly pussonage, wid a striped vest and woolly side-whiskers, and 'bout de shade, ho was, of de opposite of a fish." "Wlsht I'd a ben dar," enviously remarked Brother Buckaloo. "Wlsht yo' had. sah; uh-kazo I likes sympathy. Well-uh, de side-whiskered gen'leman took de money at de do', and de house was plumb packed; and deu ho blowed out de light, and 'nounced In a grizzly voice for every body to set right ..till, uh-kaze for do fust spearmint he was uh-gwlne to whirl in and separate their souls fum delr bodies." "Mum-mum-muh Lawd, sah! Did ha do it?" "Not so's you' could notice It! We dess sot and sot, and waited and wait ed, and blme-bye a gamblin' man, dat wasn't skeered, begun to snawt; and den he lit a light, and behold de pun fessah was gonol He'd done separat ed us smaht growed folks fum our two bits apiece and de lnnycent child'en fum delr dimes, and was gone fum us. Dat's all dar was to It 'ceppln' it clinches de sneakin' s'plclon I's bad for lo dese many days, dat a nlggor wid side-whiskers dess natu'ally kalnt bo right!" RICH VIANDS. Mrs. Lyon I'm sorry to hear that Mr. Ben-Gall is ill. Mrs. Ben-Gall Oh. it's stomach trouble again. That party's of Eng lish millionaires came along; ho had too much rich food. Sandy's Delicate Hint. Sandy and his lass had been sitting together about half an hour In silence. "Maggie," he said, at length, "wasna I here on the Sawbath nlcht?" "Aye, Sandy, I daur say you were." "An" wasna 1 here on Monday nlcht?" "Aye, so ye were." "An' I was 1 ere on Tuesday nlcht an' Wednesday nlcht, an' Thursday nlcht. an' Friday nl:ht?" "Aye. I'm thinkln' that's so". "An' this is Saturday nlcht, an' I'm here again?" "Weel, what for, no? I'm sure ye're very welcome." Sandy (desperately) Maggie, wom an! D'e no begin to smell a rat? When the Bride-Elect Objected. A young man. who looked every Inch the bridegroom, stood in the ro tunda of a Chicago hotel the other day telling a friend of the manner of his proposal to his bride. She had known of his wild ways and fondly hoped to reform him through mar riage. "After I had popped the ques tion and she had accepted me," he said, "I at once began to talk about the wedding. 'We shall go away somewhere by ourselves, my dear,' I said; there will be no flourish, no cards, no ceremony' here she inter rupted me. and, with a dignified sweep of her arm, declared: 'Mr. , I shall certainly Insist upon a cere mony.' " Down te Brass Tacks. "It Is a wonderful story," says the publisher to the new author, whose manuscript has Just been accented, "but you have failed in one Important feature. You do not describe the way the heroine was dressed when the hero first met her. You'd better writ in a paragraph about her clothes, but try to avoid the conventional." The Ingenious author, knowing the sameness of costume descriptloas ta tho beet sellers, and also knowing how to make an appeal to the feminine heart wrote: "Held do floated toward him garbed in a (X dress, a ft SO hat with a $98.T6 mirnrflla over a $3T8 leee eeet" Pretecetoftal Advise. "I deelate," ears the hoaeerwtfe, 1 dont kxtoar wfaat we ore to do wfeea round steak casta as much as p screw hones. It Is cectraceeas." Tee, mam," agrees the marfcatiseit. "What's a body going to do if thla keeps oaf" 1 would advise yea, crura, that be ta the ease, to eat portethewee." His Company. WtUkoMr Tonne AstorbUt teat at aQ exehMdTe, la he? Watteea Way, I dont know. WfMaaas Oh, he Irnt Why, tkia morning I saw am ndtax la Lis aoobile with a BABeeaaaa, Of Interest to Women Present Unrest Among Women The Mating Instinct Between the Ages of 17 & 19 A Far Finer Set of Tactics Evolve "Young Ladies" in their Twenties Says The Delineator. I think thcro is little doubt that this world-old statute that the man alono shall woo has more to do with keep ing down the mental and moral tone of woman, with cultivating her igno ble talents for deceit and Intrigue, than any of the other forces which she finds arrayed against her, says The Delineator. It is not the soften ing influence of the matrimonial and maternal states that works so many miracles, but the abrupt removal of the necessity to practice a demoraliz ing self-control, to appear something that she is not to still much ugly an ger and resentment I have known many girls, plentifully endowed with good looks and charm, to confess that they have "lain awake nights schem ing how to get that man," only, in nine cases out of ten, to find him, lat er on, quite unworth the trouble. We are all familiar with the selfish ness, the shyness, the luck of real frankness, in what might be called the Threshold Girl anywhere be tween seventeen and nineteen. This Is nothing worse than the mating in stinct driving her blindly until she has learned to play her part with taste and tact. During that period Bhe gropes about in her still childish brain for those qualities that will enable her to hold at least her own in the great game, and she is the more be fuddled because of that curious tradi tion that a girl must seem other than she is. Of course, with only this old standard of feminity, and being still fluid and plastic, the poor things more often than not model themselves upon some favorite heroine of romance, and are only knocked Into shape by those indefatigable partners, Life and Tlmo. Some of our Western girls, it Is true, have a disposition to rush at a man with both arms outstretched ono sees it constantly -imong the sec ond class hordes traveling in Europe; and this, I infer, is the primitive im pulse of almost primitive tribes to get what they want In tho shortest pos sible time. But even these girls, when they are walking more thought fully in their twenties, when they aro "young ladles," evolve a far liner set of tactics; they lose the savagery of ndolcscence, and cultivate those quali ties which, when persisted In long enough, make them more than a match for any man. OPERATIC STAR WEDS AGAIN. Nordtca. Madam Lillian Nordica, the famous American songbird has astonished her profession by marrying again. She was recently wedded In Lon don to J. W. Young, a famous capi talist of New York and Paris. Her marriage will not interfere with her operatic career, as she has signed contracts which bind her to long tours for several years to come. A Thirtean-lnoh Waist Mile. Polaire, a popular singer of the Paris stage, hoc been painted and photographed ac the woman with the smallest waist in the world. She is E foot A Inches tall, and her waist Measures eacUy IS inches. For her height this is at least 7 Inches short of a moderate measure. A woman with a Sfr-laoh waiot is proud of it There are vastly fewer SO-tnch waists than walrts measuring It inches. But what advantage does UUc. Polaire en joy at jsreeent? Her Httle waist is distinctly rmffuihionahle. If she goes oct lased tight she is looked upon by her sisters cither as a crank or a Croak. Tba dtreetolre i;tyle has done away wfth the tight wotet far the time being, asd these is no immediate rea tarn tor Ms Trench woman with the to phime herself an it To Became Bytphtlke. K tfea pert of the tomlntae wartd wMem to aktidag to attain ByOphllbe pioeesnltoBS, wmOA adopt the Japanese BseCaed of gtds&ig thoaa tbey would serely be imared of Baeeees. The Wiothewi of the Mikado4 realm eoa slder a 6ut bride a dlagmee, and m tar wwlis feefan the weddiag tfeer deat oat dasQr to their abedlaat niMUftitiwi eYvee teaspoanjtale at rlee asd cete glasa at hot vwasr, and on the kriOal dar Che astiMoM aro led faith as 'ulna j aad rt raits aa heart could QHERIFF'B SALE OF VALUABLE k- ixrijiij cioiAjLiii-ujr virtue oi process issued out of tho Court of Common Pleas of Wayne county, and State of Pennsylvania, and to mo directed and delivered, I have levied on and will expose to public Bale, at the Court House In Honesdale, on FRIDAY, OCT. 22, 1909, at 2 p. m.. All of defendant's right, tltlo and Interest in the following described property, viz: All the following described piece of land, situate, lying and being in the township of Manchester, bound ed and described as follows, to wit: BEGINNING at a stake and stones corner, being the south-west corner of a lot of land sold by A. Bennett, to It. Schnldcr; thence south seventy-three and one-half degrees west fifty rods to a stake and stones cor ner; south sixteen and one-half de grees east ono hundred and fifty nine rods to a stake and stone cor ner; thence north seventy-three nnd one-half degrees east fifty rods to a stake and stones corner; and north sixteen and one-half degrees west one hundred and fifty-nine rods to the place of beginning, containing fifty acres, be the same moro or less. See Deed Book No. 97, at page 254. Upon the said premises are apple and other fruit trees and nearly all Improved land. Seized and taken in execution ao the property of James Van Order, at the suit of John Reynard. No. 9, June Term, 1908. Judgment, ?150. Lee, Attorney. ALSO. All of defendant's right, title and Interest in the following described property, viz: All the following described piece of land, situate, lying nnd being in the township of Damascus, bounded and described as follows: BEGIN NING at a beech in the north line of Lot No. 90 in the allottment of the Edwin Shields lands; thence by Lot No. 91 south twelve and one half degrees east ninety rods to a stake and stones corner; thence north seventy-seven and one-half degrees west ono hundred and six rods to a corner; thence north twelve nnd one half degrees west ninety rods to a corner; thence north seventy-seven and one-half degrees east one hundred and six rods to the place of beginning. CONTAINING sixty acres, be the same more or less. Upon the said premises is a frame house and barn, other out buildings, apple orchard and small fruits, and nearly all Improved land. Seized and taken In execution as the property of Samuel H. Skinner at the suit of John Reynard. Deed Book 93. mice fit. Nn. 3a. Mruv-li Term, 11)01). Judgment, S74C.58. Lee, Attorney. ALSO. All of defendants right, title and Interest in the following described property, viz: All those two certain lots or par cels of land, situate and being in the Palmyra Township, County of Wayne, and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows. The first thereof nEniNTN'lNrn -it- n point sixty feet from the northeast erly corner oi twenty-tourth and Twenty-eighth streets In a souther ly direction: thenrro nnrthorlv in o line parallel to Twenty-fourth street one nunarea ana twenty feet; thence south-easterly on a line parallel to Twenty-eighth street sixty feet; thence SOUth-WPSTPrlv nil n lino ntir. allel to Twenty-fourth street to the norm-eastern side of Twenty eighth street one hundred nnri twon ty feet; thence along said Twenty- eigntn street in a northwesterly di rection sixty feet to the place of be ginning. CONTAINING seven thousand two hundred (7200) square feet of land. Being known on the map or tne Pennsylvania Coal Com pany as lot fourteen (14) on Twen ty-elghth street in said Palmyra township. The second thereof BEGINNING at a noint on the enstfirlv slrlo nf Twenty-eighth street, one hundred and twenty feet from the south-east corner of Twenty-fourth and Twenty-eighth streets; thence easterly on a line parellel with said Twenty- f ....... 1 . . L . . . iuui in mreei one nunarea ana twen ty feet; thence southerly on a line parellel with said Twenty-eighth street sixty feet; thence westerly on a nne parallel with Twenty-fourth Street aforesaid one hnnrirpri nnrt twenty feet to the easterly line of Twenty-eighth street; thence north erly along the same sixty feet to the place of beginning. CONTAINING seven thousand two hundred square feet of land more or less. Being lu sumo two pieces or land convey ed to Edward Sample and Sarah, his wife, by John Curran and Mary, his wife, by deed dated August 13, 1904, and recorded in Wayne County Deed Book No. 92, page 575. On said premises is a small frame dwelling house. Seized and taken in execution as the property of Edward' Sample and Sarah A. Sample, at tho suit of George H. Cook. No. 245, May lerm, iwui. judgment, ?177. M. E. Simons and V. A. Decker, Attorneys. ALSO. All or defendant's right, title and interest in tho following described property, viz: All that lot of land situate in the village or White Mills, Texas town snip, wayne county, Pennsylvania, and bounded and described aa fol lows: BEGINNING In thA mlrlriln rf the public road leading from Hones- uuio iu nawiey at tne north-east corner of R. P. Smith's land; thehce along the middle of the said public road south fifty-nine nnd one-half degrees east thirty-ono and one-half feet! thenrn hv ntnar lnnrta rt Tt-q Ellison south thirty-six and three- iiuuiier uegrees west ninety reet to the berm bank of the old Delaware & Hudson Canal to a stake; thence aiong cam berm hank north fifty nine and one-half degrees west thlr ty-one and one-half fwfc tn n nnat' thence hv Innri nf P T cjmlth nnoth thirty-six and three-quarter degrees euai. ninety reet to tne place oi be ginning. The bearings of the lines are the angles the lines make with the true meridians. CONTAINING zai'j square feet. Be tho eamo moro or less. Being tho same land which Mtnnr Prnum of !! nnnvava to Alvln J. Brown by deed dated the ninth day of May, 1905, and re- coruea in wayno uounty, in Deed Book, No. 93, at pago 474. Seized and taken in execution as the property of Alvln J. Brown at the suit of Honesdale Realty Co. No. 19, March Term, 1909. Judgment, 50. Salmon, Attorney. ALSO. All of tho defendant's right, title and interest in tho following describ ed property, viz: All that certain lot, niece or par cel of land situated in the township of Manchester, county of Wayne, and State of Pennsylvania, bounded as follows: BEGINNING at a stake and stones corner in the line of Jacob Kellam on the southwest bank of the Little Equinunk Creek; thence south 14 degrees east 24 rods to stones cor ner; thence south 71 and one-half degrees west 28 rods to stones cor ner; thence north 51 degrees west 42 rods to stones corner; thence north 25 and one-half degrees west 22 rods to stones corner; on the south west bank of the creek; thence the several courses and distances along the creek on the southwest bank to the place of beginning. CONTAIN ING 12 and one-eighth acres more or less. Being the same piece of land J. T. Barnes and Peter S. Barnes sold to James Jones (under the name of James Reaves) and be ing the same land which E. M. Spencer, Esq., Sheriff of Wayne county sold to W. W. Westbn on the 28th day of April, 1876, as property of James Jones and recorded in Sheriff Deed Book No. 4, page 428, etc. Being the same lot sold to Wm. Tyler by deed February 1st, 1892, and recorded In the office for recording of deeds in and for Wayne county In Deed Book No. 71, page .66, etc. And being same land which Wm. Tyler conveyed to Mary Tyler oy aeea dated May 12th, 1902, and recorded in Wayne county in Deed Book No. 91, page 130, etc. Upon said land Is 2-story frame house and frame barn nnd nearly all improved land. Seized and taken In execution as the property of Mary E. Tyler at the suit of Elijah Teeple, assigned to W. G. Hawley. No. 219, March Term, luos. Judgment, J 144. Mumford. Attorney. Take Notice. All bids and costs must be paid on day of sale or deeds will not be acknowledged. M. LEE BRAMAN, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Honesdale, Sept. 23. 1909. "REGISTER'S NOTICE. XntiVn is XL hereby given that tho accountants Herein named Have settled their respective .'Wpnnnte In tin, ..111.... jr ,l.. !.... ..t irmn of Wayne County. l'., mid that the same will uc iiiufraira hi. mi-1 rpiiaiis i;ouri oi said county for continuation, at the Court House In Honesdale, on the fourth .Monday ot Out. next viz: First and final account of S. B. Scrgent, acting executor of the es tate of Mathew Clemo, Dyherry. First and final account of W. H. Bullock, executor of the estato of Mary Ballamy, Dyberry. First and partial account of Wil helmine Smith, executrix of the es tate of John H. Smith, Honesdale. First and nartial nernnnt nf Hf N. Robinson, executor of the estate Of Franklin H. Rohlnnnn. Tovna First and final account of Perry unpin, aaministrator or the estate o Catharine B. Gilnin. Stprllnr- First and final account of Charles W. Schrader, administrator of the estate or ocle Rust, Texas. First and partial account of A. B Hazlett and Jennie McDonnell, exe cutors of the estate of Sarah H. Haz lett, Lake. First and fin.il R. Haggerty, administratrix of the estate of Frederick Haggerty, Texas. First and final account of Mary A. Mitchell, administratrix of the estate of David S. Mitchell. Ttpritn First and partial account of May i. roster, now way ai. Davies, test mentary guardian of George O. Foster, a minor child of Clarence E. f oster, Honesdale. Final account of nennro n p tiss and George E. Moase, executors of he estate of Martin Prentiss, Mount Pleasant. E. W. Gammell, Reeister Itetrlster's Office. Ilonesdale. Sept.ffl. 1009 76t3 Tooth Savers We have the sort of tooth brushes that are made to thoroughly cleanse and save the teeth. They are the kind that clean teeth without leaving your mouth full of bristles. We recommend those costing 25 cents or more, as wo can guarantee them and will re place, free, any that show defects of manu facture within three months. O. T. CHAHBERS, PHARflACIST, Opp. I). A H. Station. HONESDALE, PA. We Want Your Jobwork You will want us to have it when you eee our samp lea and hear s OUR PRICES 3 a Call at tbi office When in need qf anything in the line of PRINTING ROLL of HONOR Attention is called to tne STRENGTH of the Wayne County The FINANCIER of New York City has published a ROLL Oi HONOR of the 11,470 State Banks and Trust Companies of United States. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK 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 Honesdale. Pa., May 29 1908., Time Card In Effect 8ept. 14th, 1B09. SCRANT0N DIVISION II 111 3 IO 0, O rt u P S 2 M a a S a K B o km p Stations UH Ml 7'JOlArN.Y. AMSt. Mr stsl. . n o.v l 00Ar, ,t uuooia i.vi 2 1U 215 t uui 4 OS 4 2 435 4 4E 506 6 17 6 SI 5 33 5 45 10 5012 4.-,' ...uancocK.... " " ..Starlight.... " " Trestoa Park " " ..Wltmood... " " ..Poyntello... " " Orson " Pleasant Mt " " ..Unlondale.. " " .Forest city. " " CTb'ndalo Yd " " .Carbondale. " " Wblto Ilrldca " " .Maytleia Yd. " " ....Jormjn " ..Archibald.. " " .... Wlnton.... " ...Peckvllls.- 2 3M 110 1)4 1 2 29 Vi 19 2 43 2 53 1U24 10 01 12 03 318 3 27 3 40 9.11 11 M 9 .15 1133 9 3tf 1130 11 20 3 431 9 23 3 35 t4 01 15 541 0 04 11 01 419 i'im set ICS 6 18 SIS 6J tu 2 183 1 (18 8 41 6 45 8 S6il0 ESl 8 48 10 48 4 2! 4 2i 8 43j 10 4S 8 40 0 49 4 SO 4 34 4 so! 8i 10 3 8 8210 3 " oirpbant.. " .Dickson.... " 8 2S110 23 4 421 815! W 2sJ " ....Throon " 4 45 rroviuonco.. .Park Place.. " 4 4S1 4 51 10 15 Lt... Bcrantoa ... Arl 4 51 Additional trains leare Caroondalo far Mar. field Yard at 6.50 a. m. dally, and 5.33 p m dally except Sunday. Additional trains leave May CeldTard tor Carbondale 6 38 a m dolly and 5 X p. m. dally except Sunday. 3. C. ANDimox, J. B. Wsui, Trafflo Manager, Traveling Agent, 58 Beaver St., New York, Scraaton, Fa 74 BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS A O RAND TOUR OF THE WORLD Portraits ol the Rulers of the World Six Months' trial Subscription to HUMAN LIFE ALL FOR GO CENTS. Our wonderful TOUK OF THE WOULD picture cards done in water colors will bring to your view scenes that cost thousands of dollars and months of actual travel to visit. These cards are made by a new French process wliich produces pic tures superior to the many cheap card pictures now on the market. Our KUIjERS OF THE AVOHLD picture cards arc printed in beauti ful colors, each card representing a separate country. The center of each card is given to an up-to-dato photograph of the Ruler or Presi dent of the country. Hcnenth each picture is a brief summing up of facts regarding tho country govern ment, area, population, .products, industries, etc. The two complete sets, "TOUR OF THE WORLD" and "RULERS OP THE WORLD" and a six. montlis subscription to HUMAN LIFE for UOc. Send us 30c. and we will send you the 74 cards without tlie maga zine. HUMAN LIFE PUBLISHING CO., 530 Atlantic Avenue, - Boston, Mass Bobbins Memorial, St. Hose Cemetery, Carbondale, Fa. Designed and built by MARTIN CAUFIELD