THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, OCTOBEIt 22, 1000. WIF E SHIM SHOT Cincinnati Women Stirred by 2700 Cases in Three Months Appeal to President SHOULD BE EXECUTED ON SPOT If the Traitor to Hla Marriage Vowa Surrenders Quietly He Should Bo Jailed for a Long Term In a Fed oral Prison. Cincinnati. Six hundred earnest women of the Cincinnati Woman's Christian Temperance Union decided that a husband who deserts his wlfo should be punished precisely as Uncle Sam punishes a man who deserts tho army or navy. In a word, theso ladles vow that a wife deserter, who, being apprehend ed, tries to continue his flight, should be shot on the spot. If ho surrenders quietly he should be jailed, perhaps In Fort Leavenworth, for a long term. Tho 600 Cincinnati women, most of whom are married happily which la to say that the others are unmarried met In special session and voted unan imously to write to the President and ask him to put wife deserters under the same unttlve laws as army and navy deserters. And the Cincinnati women voted to ask their sisters of the women's clubs In New York and Chicago to sign tho letter to Presi dent Taft, too. Soma appalling figures wore pre sented to the meeting. It was report ed authoritatively that no fewer than 2,700 cases of wife desertion have been discovered In Cincinnati alone during three months. Any mathematician, indeed any spinster, will tell you that, counting a month as thirty days, and presum ing that tho 2,700 husbands disappear ed during the last ninety days, this is an average of thirty desertions a day. To go into fractions, one and one-sixth husbands havo taken to the timber during each hour of every day for ninety days. This plcturo of all Cincinnati man kind fleeing, presented as It was on the 23d, suggested writing on the sub ject to President Taft, a dovoted hus band and father. And the women here already are framing a letter to those of New York and Chicago ask ing them to join in a conference which will appoint a lobby to go to Congress and urge a law making the punish me.it of wife-deserters fit the crime. Newest Type of Coast Defense Guns Adopted by the U. S. Government. FINDS A NEW POLAR LAND. Whaler Bower Penetrates Region New to White Men. San Francisco. W. J. Bower, a well, known Arctic whaleman, has ar rived here from Point Barrow. Bow er had tho distinction of penetrating Prince Albert Land, where whlto men had never been seen before. With several others on the gaso lene schooner Olga he reached a point about 1,800 mllos east of Point Barrow. Thero they found a colony of natives different in type from Eski mos. They resemblo Indians In face and figure. Bower was bitten by one of the enormous spiders that abound in Prince Albert Land and lost the sight of an eye. Some of these spiders were six Inches long. They appeared when it began to thaw in the spring. FIND8 BURIED TOLTEC CITY. Prof. Mens Makes Archaelog!c(. Discovery In Mexico. Mexico City. An Important arch aeological discovery was announced here by Prof. Ramon Mena, who head ed a Government expedition to Otum ba, State of Mexico, which has uncov ered a hurled city of' great antiquity. A pyramid similar to that uncovered at San Juan de Teotihacan was ex posed. The pyramid 1b sixty feet high and 200 feet square at the base. The remains Indicate that the city was built and occupied in the time of the Toltecs. CHUCKS TOOK LANTERN8. Farmer Had Plaoed Lights In Garden to Frighten Animals. Wlnsted, Conn. Woodchucks, as ho believed, Btroyed his garden In tho night, so Henry Blum of Huckleberry Hill, in Avon, placed lanterns at each end of It In an effort to frighten the animals away. Daylight showed that tho supposed woodchucks, after using tho lanterns to select their plunder, had carried them awy with the vecvUbloc Blum Is now oa the lookout lor a wood chuck with a lasUtrs. DESERTERS DOG AIDS THIEF IN AUTO Picks Fowl from Roost and Carries Them to Machine Trained to Rob Henhouses. Clinton, N. J. Jersey Justice, whip In hand, is looking for an up-to-date chicken thief' wlio is riding about the country in an automobile and using a trained collie dog to rob the hen roosts. The plan of the thief is to visit the farmer first in the guise of a poultry purchaser for the holiday mar ket. He takes the colllo with him. In tho course of the negotiations for the poultry for delivery between No vember 15 and December 1, tho thief makes an excuse for visiting the hen house to see that the poultry Is kept properly. While the visitor Is making an Inspection the dog Is nosing around and becoming familiar wkh the sur roundings. Fancy prices are offered for tho poultry, and after a promise to pay promptly on delivery the deal Is closed. After giving a lecture on proper poultry raising the stranger drives away in his machine, and the happy farmer goes in to tell his wife of the splendid prices obtained. Afterward the automobllo poultry thief drives around to tho same place in tho night time. He sits in his automobile in the road. The trained dog goes to tho hen house, gains an entrance and one by ono carries tho chickens from the roosts to tho auto and delivers them to Its master. The dog knows Its business so well that It grips them by tho neck firmly enough to prevent their squawking and yet not hard enough to kill them. Turkeys, geese and ducks also receive Its attention. Jacob Herman and John Van Woert, two of the farmers who havo lost their poultry this way, wont to Monclalr to look for tho man. They say he gavo the name Sandy Farkerson, and said ho lived in Montclalr. No such man is known there. The farmers would llko to have a flve-mlnute Interview with him. To Miss Helen Van Woert belongs the credit of uncovering the game. She was aroused by the barking of a black-and-tan dog. Getting up she went to the window and saw a small automobile standing In the road in front of the house. Miss Van Woert also saw an animal of some sort run ning to and fro between the auto and the yard. The farmer was aroused. He used his night glasses and saw that it wns colllo. Seizing his gun ho started to open tho door to do a llt tlo shooting. The click of tho lock alarmed tho chicken thief. Ho whis tled for his dog and rushed away at top speed. With them went seven teen of tho farmer's chickens. MELONS RAISED ON A BOTTLE. Branch Vine Inserted In Sweetened Water Helps Growth. Bloomington, 111. Watermelons raised on a bottle have added now fame to tho Carroll county products. The process Is simple, consisting of cutting a runner or branch vine Imme diately back of the developing melon and inserting the cut end of the vino into a bottle of water sweetened with sugar. The water is quickly absorbed, re sulting In Increased slzo, rapid growth and greater sweetness. One melon raised this season after this treatment weighed eighty pounds. Carroll coun ty Is the watermelon contre of Illinois. Where the soil is adapted to melons the crop 1b the most profitable that can be grown. The season opens the middle of Au gust and is now about at an end. About 300 carloads havo been shipped out this season, ten solid trains of thirty cars each. About $30,000 has been paid to the growers for their fruit. One grower realized $3,000 from a forty-acre field. DESTROY INFIDEL'S MONUMENT8 They Contain 15,000 Words Denounc ing the Christian Religion. Kenosha, Wis. After standing for nearly fifty years, the monuments of Lewis Knapp, an infidel who died ten years ago, are to be removed from the Kenosha Cemetery. The denunci ation of the Christian religion con tained on the monuments is to be en tirely lost, as the agreement for the removal of the monuments with the relatives of Knapp is that they are to be broken up, and completely de stroyed. The inscriptions on the mooomonts are made up of more than fifteen thou sand words, and in them is a bitter attack on tho Christian religion and the priesthood. AEROPLANE A3 MOTOR CAR. 8antos-Oumont Expects to Use His on Ground or In Air. Paris. Bantos-Dumont at Saint Cyr reduced the record previously held by Curtlss for the shortness of the run of an aeroplane prior to tak ing wing from eighty to seventy yards. Three thousand persons witnessed the experiment Santos-Dumnnt says he expects in a few days to be able to use his aero plane as a motor car along the road, rising at will and descending again to resume running upon tho ground. He believes that he will further re duce the distance necessary to tra verse before rising to forty or fifty yards. Put Limit on Newsboys' Voices. St Louis. Police In the business district ordered to put tho "soft pedal" on newsboys' voices have adopted this rule: A "bewsie" must act shout "Uxtry!" load enough to be heard more than half a block It there la another newsboy at the next corner. E OF THE PLAINS Two Braids, a Famous Apache Chief, Finds He Is Not of Indian Blood NOW ASKS GOVERNMENT AID After Forty Years with the Red Men Thomas Strlngfield Applies to the Authorities to Be Restored to Citi zenship. Washington. Two Braids, chief of a tribe of Apache Indians, has made application to the government to be restored to citizenship, and this brings to light a strange story, for this Indian chief Is not an Indian at all. For nearly forty years Two Braids has been known as an Indian and has supposed himself to be an Indian, but he has Just learned of the fact that he Is really Thomas Strlngfield, whlto man, who was captured 44 years ago by a band of Apaches In a raid in Mc Mullen County, Tex. His father, mother and elder brother were killed in the raid, and his little sister was left for dead, with several ugly wounds from the Apaches' tomahawks. But tho little girl survived, was adopt ed and reared by an uncle and Is now living not many miles from the scene of the massacre. Her name Is Mrs. Ida Hatfield, and she and her brother have been reunited. wo Braids tells an interesting story of that part of his life which he remembers. Reared in an Indian camp, it was natural that he Bhould fall in love with a woman of his race, and about thirteen years ago he mar ried Bright Moon, daughter of an other Apache chief and niece of the notorious Geronimo. Two children were born of this union, a daughter, Nuckl Two Braids, who is now ten years old and has won fame for her horsemanship and rifle shooting, and Starlight, a bright little son now three. Two Braids first learned the true story of his life from an old warrior Chief Two Braids. named Death Face, one of the most treacherous of Apaches. About a year ago on his death-bed this Indian told Two Braids that he had not a drop of Indian blood in his vlens, and that he was a paleface and had been kidnapped by the Apaches 40 years ago in Texas. Death Face could not re member the name of the place, but he described the incident and the local ity. Two Braids took up tho trail, which he followed with dogged tenac ity for 12 months. When he had found tho spot and met old residents who remembered his parents he re ceived permission to leave Fort Sill reservation In Oklahoma, and, taking his daughter with him, he traveled back to the scene of his childhood days. He met his sister, and the battle-scarred uncouth warrior and the gentle paleface woman wept for Joy for their recognition was mutual and positive. Though living with the Apaches for 40 years, Two Braids swears he never took a human life and that he worried about the crimes his brothers com mitted on the raids to which he was a party. Twenty-three years ago, when a band of Apaches was rounded up and captured in western Texas after a long series of depredations In cluding murders, burning of farm property and pillage, Two Braids was in the band. They were taken to Ban Antonio and shipped from there to Florida and later to Fort Sill, OMa. Two Braids' hair is long, but not as black and not as coarse as an Indian's. His cheekbones are not high. With bis Bister he visited the graves of their parents, who were laid to rest at the mouth of San Jose creek and on tho banks of the River Nueces. Two Braids is raising a fund with which to erect a marble Bhaft to the memory of his parents and the subscription list has grown to several hundred dol lars. HAD TO WASH FEET OF BOSS. Domestic Also "Manicured" His Toes, but Got No Pay. Kansas City, Ma Because, she al leges, it was necessary in the perform ance of her. duties as housekeeper to dally wash her employer's feet and manicure his toe nails, for which she received no compensation, Hattle Rap pas instituted civil proceedings to re cover from N. Lope, her former em ployer, 3, which she declared wa due her in wages. s TRANGE ROMANO NEW HEAD OFJOTHIIfl COPS William F. Baker Appointed Commis sioner by Mayor McClellan to Suc ceed Gen. T. A. Bingham. New York. William F. Baker, who has been appointed police commis sioner to succeed Gen. Theodore A. Bingham, has had more experience In William F. Baker, office-holding than in police matters, though he has been connected with the force for a long while, and at tho time of his appointment was first dep uty commissioner. Ho was secretary to Bird Coler when the latter was civil service commissioner, and from that position was transferred to tho post of deputy police commissioner and put In charge of the borough of Brook lyn, then ho was transferred by Gen. Bingham and established at head quarters. The feeling in general Is that the appointment is political and that it means a renewal of friendship between Mayor McClellan and Mur phy, the Tammany chief, and har mony between McCarren and Mur phy. USING FEW DRUGS NOW. Hospital Ban on Ambulance Gongs Tubs, vs. Shower Bath. Washington. Fifteen years ago tho nverage expenditure for drugs per capita on cases in American hospitals was ?2.90; to-day it is 01 cents. This was the gist of a paper read to ih American Hospital Association by Dr. It. R. Rose, Superintendent of the Buffalo General Hospital. He told the physicians that the directors of hos pitals have learned the curative pow er of fresh air, light, water, mental and other drugless treatments. Dr. Ross also touched on the ambu lance evil. He pointed out that many cities have abolished the clanging of ambulance gongs and the sensational gallops after patients. He said that these practices of former years brought more patients to the hospi tals than the accidents to which the ambulances were summoned. The doctors have finally taken into account woman's vanity, and a long discussion of the relative merits of the tub and the shower bath In hospi tals was a victory for the tub bath champions, on the plea that women preferred the tub because it did not get their hair wet. NO CLOCKS IN CHURCHES. Methodist Preachers Decide That They Are Too Distracting. Cincinnati. The Methodist churches of Ohio will hereafter be conducted without clocks. This was one of the weighty mat ters decided by the conference at Jack son, Ohio. It was adopted upon tho recommendations of Bishop Thomas B. Neely, who said that he found clocks an attraction which continu ously disturbed his congregations and himself. "You will never know what 'quiet blessedness' is until you get rid of them," said the Bishop. "People con tinually turn around to see what time it is and you as ministers naturally follow their gaze and cut short your sermons." Then the resolution was read and adopted. "LICK" WIFE IF SHE FLIRTS. So Decides Judge Fake of Chicago In a Sample Case. Chicago. Frank O'Connor was walking down Michigan Boulevard with his wife. O'Connor was watch ing the automobiles go by and he avers his wife was watching tho men. He asserted that when a peculiarly dashing pedestrian passed she smiled on him and then said: "Isn't that a handsome man 7" He struck her and both were arrested. When arraigned before Judge Fake OVDonnor explained the cose. "A woman's eyes and words should be for her husband alone," quoth the Justice. "Discharged!" Smoking in Church. Dayton, Ohio. In order to stimu late interest in the afternoon meeting for men, the Rev. Thomas W. Cook, rector of St. Andrews Episcopal Church here, announces that he will permit smoking during service. In vltations have been sent broadcast oekiBg the men to attend the meet ings, bringing their smoking material along. Preachers Must Eschew the Weed. Kansas City, Mo. The North won. Missouri Methodist Conference nclopi ed a committee report suggesting tlia a law be passed prohibiting tho use of tobacco by any prospective mem ber of the conference unless he gav a pledge to disoontinus the .habit. .Neatly Put. Two Quakers were having an ar gument and one considered the other was speaking falsely. This is how he reproved hira: "Friend Thomas. I will not call thee by any bad name, but if the mayor were to ask me who was the greatest liar In tho town I would hasten to thee and say: 'Thomas, I think the mayor greatly deslreth to speak with thee.' " Giant at Head of Buffalo Police. At the last convention of the In ternational Association of Chiefs of Pollco. in Buffalo, the blggeBt man present was Michael Regan, the head of Buffalo's police department. Chief Regan could easily qualify for Now York's crossing guard's squad, as he stands six feet four inches in his stockings. He was elected vice-president of the association. As Observed. 1 "Golf is a good deal like the piano," observes the grouchy old sportsman. "It's generally played by people that don't know much about It." ONE OF THE MANY STYLES NEW AUTUMN SUIT For Ladies. Misses nnd Juniors, New Long Coats, Separate Jackets and Imported Cloaks, Menner & Co's Store. ACCOUNT P. H. S KELLY, GUAItDIAN OP Lewis Hansman, a person of weak mind of Texas Township, Wayne county, Pennsylvania. Notice is hereby given that the second and partial account of the guardian above named has been filed in the court of Common Pleas of Wayne county, and will be presented for approval on October 26, 1909, and will be confirmed absolutely on January 20, 1910, unless exceptions thereto are previously filed. M. J. HANLAN, Prothonotary. Sept. 26, 1909. W J Eves I Tested 1 I Glasses I fc. Fitted ACCOUNT P. H. SKELLY, QUARDIAN OF Doris Hansman, a person of weak mind of Texas Township, Wayne county, Pennsylvania. Notice is hereby given that the second and final account of the guardian above named has been filed in the court of Common Pleas of Wayne county, and will be present ed for approval on October 26, 1909, and will be confirmed absolutely on January 20, 1910, unless exceptions thereto are previously filed. M. J. HANLAN, Prothonotary. Sept 26, 1909. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Attorncva-ot-Lnvv. H WILSON, . ATTORNEY A COUKSELOR-AT-LAW. Office, Masonic building, second floor Honesdale. I'a. WM, H. LEE, ATTORNEY A COUNSEI.OR-AT-LAW. Office over post olllce. All legal business promptly attended to. Honesdale, Pa. - 4 EC. MUMFORD, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. T0,.nRwrLlbc,rty building, opposite the Post Olllce, Honesdale, Pa. HOMER GREENER-,- - - lf - f ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-T.AW. Office over Keif's store. Honesdale Pa. A T. SEARLE, . ..j XJl. ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-Tj AW. Office near Court House Honesdale. Pa. St 0L. ROWLAND, . ATTORNEY A COUN8ELOR-AT-LAW. Office ver Post Office. Honesdale, Pa. CHARLES A. McCARTY, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. SnnHnl ntid nrnrrmf. ntfnT,Hr, nhmt. ,n ,u collection of claims. Office over Hell's new store, Honesdale, Fa. FP. KIMBLE, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-T. A Office over tho Dost office Honesdale, Pa. ME. SIMONS, ATTnnwrv jr pnnwHPT nu. it.t. ito. Office iin the Court House, Honesdale, Pa. HERMAN HAKMESs, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, Patents and pensions secured. Office in the Schuerholz buildlne Honesdale. l'a.l PETER H. ILOFF, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Offlre-Second , floor old Savings lir'ak building. Honesdale. Pa. EM. SALMON, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office Next ilnor to post office. Formerl occupied bv W.H.IDImmlck. Hunesdale. Pa Dentists. DR. E. T. BROWN, DENTIST. , Offlce-Flrst floor, old Savings Bank build ing, Honesdale, Pa. Dr. C. It, MtADY. Dentist. Honesdale.lPa. Office Hours-8 a. in. to 5 p. m Any evening by appointment. Citizens' phone. : Residence, No. 86-X Physicians. DR. II. 15. SEARLES, HONESDALE, P.K .'AJWt Ofllre and residence 1019 Court Tstreet telephones. Office Hours 2:00 i to 4:00 and (! 00 to K:00. l. in. Livery. LI VERY.--Fred. G. Uickard has re moved his livery establishment from corner Church street to Whitney's Stone Barn. ALL CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.SHS FIRST CLASS OUTFITS. 75yl JOSEPH N. WELCH Fire Insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Office: Second floor Masonic&Build ing, over C. C. Jadwin's drugstore, Honesdale. For New LateJ Novelties -IN JEWELRY SILVERWARE WATCHES Try SPENCER, The Jeweler "Guaranteed articles only sold." If you don't insure with us, we bothllose. m General Insurance! White fMillsr Pa. EITHER & H I O. G. WEAVER, J Graduate Optician, 1127K Main St.,S.HONESDALE. ?