TEDS CrriZKW, FRIDAY, DBO. 17, SOME RULES SHE FRAMED "It seems to me," spoke up the girl who had on a real Irish lace Jabot, "that you have a peculiar way of en tertaining company! You've sat scrib bling at that desk ever since we came In!" "We're still here, you know," re minded the girl with the neck ruche that flaunted itself at the observer. "I was finishing my list of rules, with notes, for use of the girl who wishes to be a social success," explain ed the young woman at the desk. "When I've read them to you, you'll be glad you came. Listen! "Itulo 1. Never twlno a blue rib bon in your hair. "I did it, and I know. I had ap peared with black ribbons, pink rib bons, white ribbons, twisted' coquet Ishly through my coiffure, and noth ing happened, signifying that a blue ribbon would be fatal error. I thought the evening I wore the blue ribbon at dinner, when Jack McOUl gazed so long at me across the hotel dining room that at last I had mado an Im pression. "Ho had held aloof all summer. And when he asked mo to go for a row, I considered that I was certainly a win ner, becauso he 1b a lazy man, and novor takes exorcise I was proud and haughty as we walkod down the pier, and smiled sweetly on all tho other girls who had ever cut me out. Then when wo got out on the lake that man sat there In the gorgeous moon light with the fragrance of the er daisies and buttercups, I guess It was being wafted out from shore, and wasted two good hours telling me about the first girl he had ever loved ten years ago. "He said that blue ribbon reminded him of her. Note, please, he did not say that I reminded him It was the ribbon. He even told me the length of her eyelashes, and once I thought he was going to weep. He said I the blue ribbon brought it all back so vividly. "Rule 2. Never let your amiable desire to be pleasant betray you Into any undue Interest in elderly women of crotchety natures. "Mrs. Piper happened to be sit ting in that corner of the porch when I went to look at the sunset. I couldn't move the sunset, so I had to endure Mrs. Pipe. Incidentally, I picked up her ball of yarn and ad mired the Afghan in construction and made conversation, because I felt sor ry for her, she seemed so soured on life. "The next day I heard her say to some one: 'Humph! I guess I know why that Dowler girl was shining up to me so I'm not so dumb I've mot a nephew here! Ha! Ha!' I wouldn't have cared if tho nephew had been anything but the pale, spindly, under sized stupid that he was. "It really hurt my feelings to have my taste so impugned. "Rule 3. Always pick out men with sisters when you are choosing an as sortment The sister fills an impor tant niche. If you can make her like you, she has it in her power to invite you to d!nnervor to spend a week-end with her and, incidentally, with him and she can drop admiring remarks about you before her brother, thus re calling you to his attention if his memory lags. "It is convenient, too, to have her remark at the family breakfast table: 'Oh, here's a letter from Ethel Dowler she says so and so! The only dan ger is the possibility of angering the sister, for then the rule works the other way just as readily. She talks about you even more If she hates you po it Is a good investment to take her to the matinee occasionally and not be sparing with luncheon invita tions. "Rule 4. Never try to be nice to a discarded sweetheart. "What do you think I got for my pains In the case of Alfred Easterly? The affair was so long ago that I had almost forgotten him when he reap peared, and all I could do was to won der why I ever had been insane enough to fancy I liked him. "But when I remembered how. hard he had seemed to take my refusal I couldn't help but feel sorry for him, so I tried to be Just as nice as possi ble, to show him there were no hard feelings. The more I saw of him tho more aghast I was at the thought that once I might have married him. I really considered the time I devoted to him a personal sacrifice and then what was my reward? "I sat back of him on the suburban train and heard him say complacently to another man about like him that he guessed Ethel Dowler wished she had not been so hasty and could get him back, but it was too late all her try lng would do no good! "Rule, 5. Never go on the principle that the Summer men who ask for your town address and inquire If they may call on you will never think of it again. "The very nicest one at the lake allod at 11 o'clock this morning and, our maid being busy, I went to the -door with my head all tied up In a towel I was having a dry shampoo and cold cream on one side of my face. I had thought It must be a ped dler." "Why didn't you have presence of mind enough to tell him that your sister wasn't at homer' Inquired the girl with the Irish lace Jabot. "I'd like a copy of those rules," said the .girl with the ruche. "I'm go ing to tend them trouxd for Christmas cards. Ill add to them la the mes time." Notes and Comment Of Interest to Women Readers SHAMPOO SHIELD. Keeps Face Dry and Permits the Wearer to Breathe Freely. Just at present the shampoo shield designed by a New York man and shown in the Illustration Is quite fash ionable. It is much like the brim of hats now in vogue and will doubtless be popular with the ladles. It will also find favor with any other person who has ever gaBped and spluttered during tho process of a shampoo while the soapy water ran Into his or her eyes and make them smart. This shield Is of elliptical shape to fit the contour of the head. It is placed on the. head like a hat, with the difference that thero Is no crown and the hair comes through tho top. The sham pooer can rub the head of the sub ject vigorously while the latter may be as much at his ease as If he was merely having his head combed. The flare of the shield brim sends the water entirely clear of the face, which Is kept dry, except for a few drops that may trickle down Inside of the rim of the shield. This device will eliminate the annoying features of the shampoo to persons who are short of breath. ABOUT WOMEN. T The average wage of the 5 working woman Is $272.04 a X year. ? The United States had 1,000,- 1; 000 divorces In the past ten years. Two-thirds of these X were granted upon the demand 5 The women's federated clubs T of America claim C.000 branches, ? organized in forty-six States, J with an aggregate membership ? of 800,000 women. f, The lack of direct political 3 influence constitutes a power- ful reason why women's wages X have been kept at a minimum. Carroll D. Wright, ex-Com-mlssloner of Labor. In Australia, where women vote, the child of a poor widow ed mother, instead of being tak en from her and placed in an institution, Is boarded with its mother at the expense of the State. The number of boys in the jj high schools of the country in X 1905-6 was 305,308; of girls. T 417,384. Yet there are those who say "that the ballot for T women would but increase the Ignorant vote." According to an Ohio report X for 1901, 6,920 women in the ? three largest cities earned $4.83 $ a week, worked 57 1-2 hours T and paid $2.44 for 1,000 .persons 5 depending on them for support u Chance for Plain Girls. "It is a great mistake to suppose that beauty cuts a big figure In the employment of stenographers," said a business man of large experience; "the 'pretty typewriter' Is a stock phrase of the funny man and the com' Ic papers of the present day, just as the 'pretty governess' was In the 40s and the 'pretty milliner' In the 60s but as a matter of fact good looks are rather a detriment to a woman when applying for a position In an of fice than otherwise. No one Is likely to excel In more than one profession and since being pretty Is a profession In itself the general feeling Is that if a woman has succeeded in that she won't be good for much else. The chances are that her brain will be occupied with her pompadour and her highly polished nails to the exclusion of more Important things. Another reason why the pretty stenographer Is at a discount Is that most of the large business houses employ a wom an as head stenographer, and women are even more apt to look askance at a pretty fate than men are. They are In the secret They know how much or how little Is apt to be behind 1t So, all things considered, the girl with red hair and freckles stands a better chance then the beauty when It comes to seeking employment In a business office." Children's Bedroom. Whenever possible white enamel paint should be used for the appoint' ments of the children's bedroom. It shows the dust and allows of wash ing off with a damp cloth. Screens, K toilet tables, beds, furniture and racks cannot accumulate dirt If con Ununusly washed, sad the white e Ba rn el allows of perfect cleesliaeis. Is this respect. 1 SATURDAY NIGHT TALKS By REV. F. E. PAVISON Rutland, VL A MESSAGE FOR TO-DAY International Bible Lesson for Dec. 19, '09. We have nev er been fond of the company of the pessimist and the croaker, but we must confess that Buch men have their uses, and there are signs abroad which point to Uthe fact that America needs tho voice of a modern Paul, sounding through the palaces of tho rich, tho huts of tho poor, the sacred aisles of tho church, the courts of law, the marts of trade, and tho halls of pleasure For although this nation never Btood at such an altltudo of prosper ity as It does to-day, thoro are num berless foes to her perpetuity that need to bo watched and exterminated. What are some of our perils? Present Day Perils. Materialism Is the Moloch to which this age Is offering sacrifice. Sunday is becoming a social day in an unheard of measure to a past gen eration. We are gradually but certain ly opening the doors of traffic and amusement on Sunday, our railroads being the leaders In this regard. Drunkenness among women Is in creasing. The laxity of the marriage relation Is a nation-wide peril. There' is a large Infusion, of the gambling spirit In our commercial life. There Is a race to get rich at all haz ards. The increase in social extrava gance is noticeable everywhere. Nine-tenths of the law-breaking In America Is hatched in the saloon. The liquor counter Is the block on which hundreds of our beautiful American things are annually assassinated. Spirituality is freezing to death In the church. The gulf between the masses and the classes is growing wider, in the church and in the State. This Is a dark picture, but it is the consensus of opinion of the wisest thinkers in our land, men who see the perils, and are "lifting up warning voices everywhere. Does it foreshadow our doom as nation? God forbid. The fact that the peril is so widely recognized Is our safety. We have grappled with and settled many, great issues In this country, and what the fathers have done the sons can do. To be fore warned is to be forearmed. Criticism Easy. A person could go into a watch fac tory and from the standpoint of a complete watch find something to criticise in every direction. It takes time and skill and patience to make a watch. And it takes time and skill and Infinite patience to make what the world will acknowledge as a rep resentative man. Character is a thing of growth, not of bestowment Of course, there are people In tho church who ought not to be there But when a fisherman sweeps his net around, and then pulling it into his boat finds that he has a great haul of mackerel, he does not pitch tho whole lot overboard because he has taken a few lamper-eels and snapping turtles, No. He rows ashore, after he gets through fishing, and sorts his catch afterwards. So tho church in this world is set to catch men, not sort them. On the beach of eternity they will be sorted out by One who Is un erring in His Judgment. Church a Factory. Is not the criticism largely due to the fact that tho objector falls to re alize that no one church can be ex pected to reconstruct tho world. In this great mission there Is work for each denomination. It is like a great factory where many hands are em ployed. It is the business of tho Methodists, warm hearted and fiery, to stir the blaze. It is the business of the Congregatlonallsts, sturdy and logical, to hammer the rivets. It Is tho business of the Episcopalians, to whom the beauty of piety appeals, to make the exquisite case. It is the business of the Baptists, having strong predilections for water, to wash off tho works. So that, after awhile, this whole world disordered, run down, and out of gear, will become a perfect timepiece, ticking away the centuries of millennial joy. How inconsistent is that critlo who takes a single wheel or rivet or case of a watch and finds fault because It is not a perfect piece of mechanism. It Is all very well to criticise th church for its coldness and indiffer ence, and aloofness from the lives ol men, but I notice that when, scarlet fever puts its hot hands Into the horns nest, and the roses In the chlld'i cheeks turn Into the white lilies of death, no ono wants to put away th sacred dust without the consolatloni of the church, and the benedictions oi piety, No carping then! No soculai songs! No acrimonious criticism! Then we turn instinctively to the onlj organisation which stands polntini through the open portals, with, tin emblems or piety m her nanas bjmUM light of eternity in her eyes. IBBMfSBBBBBBBBffM it Made all the difference:. A Thought StrUck Mrs. Mid gen When She Returned Home. "Oh!" exclaimed Mrs. Mldgeo. She had been shopping aqd visiting, and had Just arrived home when a thought struck her. She clasped her hands together in dismay, and in her agita tion sat flat down on the cat. "What ever shall I do?" "I expect you will get over if said Mr. Mldgon, testily. He was waiting for his tea. "What is it?" I took my diary out with me in stead of that littlo price-book, and if haven't been and left It somewhere! Suppose somebody should get hold of it and read It?". 'Ha, ha!" laughed her husband. "That will bo fine sport How I should like to see them reading all tho rubbish you 'have written in it! What's the good of going back? You'll never get it" "Oh, I remember now!" suddennly cried Mrs. Mldgen. "It is my old one. So it doesn't matter at all. I feel quite relieved." "What was In It?" sold ho, feeling disappointed. I used to amuso mysolf by copying your love letters in it, and I Imitated your signature at the bottom of them. "What!" yelled Mldgen, Jumping to his feet and grabbing at his hair. "Do you want people to know what an idiot I was, and mako mo tho laughingstock of the parish just when I'm putting up for the vestry? Go and look for It, quick! And offer $10 reward for It!" And If it hadn't beon found in Mrs, Mldgen's bag at that very moment there is no telling what would havo happened to that household. The Sketch. An R. 8. V. P. Prayer. Willie had not been a very good boy that day, and In consequence of certain Inexcusable derllctlons ho had been sent to bed with the sun. After supper his father climbed the stairs to tho youngster's room, and throw, lng himself down on the bed along' side of the delinquent, began to talk to him. "Willie," he said, gravely, "did you say your prayers before you went to bed?" "Yesslr," said Willie. "And did you ask the Lord to make you a good boy?" asked the parent. "Yep," said Willie, "and I guess It'll work this time." "Good," said the father. "I'm glad to hear that" "Yes," said WUIlie, "but I don't think we'll know before to-morrow. You've got to give the Lord time, you know." "And what makes you think it will work this time, my son?" queried the anxious parent "Why, after the Amen I put in an R. S. V. P.," explained the boy. Harper's Weekly. The Judge's Loaded Inkpot., Few American lawyers go abroad without visiting the Old Hall at Lin coln's Inn, In London. There was a gathering of English legal lights In the Hall a week or two ago to listen to an address on "Tho Law of Drunk enness." The writer Is able to recall the alcoholic propensities of tho fa mous Judge Boyd, of the Irish Bench, who so often sat in the Old Hall. He kept a supply of his favorite "plzen" on the desk before him in an ink stand of peculiar make, and when he wanted a sip he took It through a quill pen, while counsel professed en tire Ignorance of the little manoeuvre. "Tell the Court truly," he oncb said to a witness, "were you drunk or sob er?" "Quite sober, My Lord?' replied the man, and his counsel added, with a look at the inkpot, "as sober as a Judge." A STARTLING HINT. Gerald Some things go by fits and starts. Geraldlne I don't want you to have a fit but' I wish you'd start Plck-Me-Up. A Fearsome Threat. From the classroom occupied by the roughest boys in the Sunday school came a great uproar. The secretary in the next room went in to investi gate. Complete silence followed the opening of the classroom door. "Have you got a teacher?" "No." "Do you want one?" "No." "TJien be quiet or youll get one." Resdlt, comparative peace. Man chester Guardian. "So Say We All of Us." "Alas!" confessed the pQnltent' man; "'In a moment of weakness I stole a cariiysd of brass fittings." "In a moment of weakness?" ex cjslmee the Judge, "Goodness, man! what would yofi have takes if you sad yielded la a Basest when ypu tclt itmir OLD-STYLE DOOR PLATES. Not the Fashion now to .Have Your Name on the Door Knob. "Door plates are going out of fash- Ion," said a man whose business It is to make plates of all kinds. "Twenty years ago every man of prominence had his name graven upon a plate and that plato affixed to bis front door, that all might know who dwelt within. The dally task of tho negro houseman was to rub the door plato until it shone. It took the place of the lares and ponates of the Romans, and was attended to just as carefully as were the ancient household gods. ""Everything is changed now, though I suppose the reason is that people don't have homes as they used to. They simply live in houses and apart ments, and move around so much that a door plate couldn't possibly en dure tho porlpatotio existence. A col lection of brass door plates screwed to the portal of a big apartment building would, I confess, look rather odd." Influence of Locality. In a communication to the French Academy of Sciences, L. Joubln re cently callod attention to a remarka ble effect aparontly produced by local ity of habitation upon tho susceptibil ity of animals to dtseaso. When mloe were Inoculated With certain germs, he found that the effects produced de pended, to a surprising degree, upon tho place of origin of tho mlco. Thoso that came from the locality where tho gorms were produced were more bub rptlble than those which were brought from a distance. This seemed to him to Indicate that in some way, geographical Influences might be more potent than physiological likeness in producing susceptibility to disease. 'PPSS. THE and when near SOMMER'S JEWELRY STORE call In and see the elegant line of Diamonds, Watches, Clocks and JeweIry,--also Haviland and Japanese China, Umbrellas, Brlck-a-brac and Novelties. Henry Snyder & Son. - 602 & 604 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. Pa. PAY HIGHEST MARKET PRICES FOR Poultry, Eggs, Butter, Lambs, Calves and Live Stock. Apples in Season A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE FARMER. Old Phone 588 B New Phone 1123 Telephone Announcement This company ib preparing to do extensive construction work in the Honesdale Exchange District which will greatly improve the service and enlarge tho system Patronize the Independent Telephone Company other service without conferring with our GMtritt DeparuiitRt Tel. No. 300. CQNSOUIATEI TUETOE M. if PtJ$YUfANA, Poster BwlMletg. RolS of HONOR "Attention is called to the 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 tho United States Stands 10th ,n Pennsylvania. StandslFIRSTIn Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $455,000.00 Total ASSETS, $2,733,000.00 Horiesdale. Fa., May 29 1908., 1 I Sommer's JEWELRY STORE IS GREAT HOLIDAY BAZAAR KRAFT & HONESDALE, PA. Represent Reliable Comrjanies ONLY CONGER INSURANCE