THE OmZKK, FRIDAY, DEO. 24, 1000. MESSENGER.FROM SANTA CLAUS "I never did see Santa Claus, but I've seen his mesa'nger," said BUly, gravely. "His messenger!" gasped bis as tonished mother. "Why, Bill, who put that Idea Into your head?" "Didn't you ever see him, mam ma?" "See who?" "Santa Claus' mess'nger." "Of course not, child." "Well, I did," stoutly declared Billy. "I saw him down by the big gate yesterday. And he's gdln'Ho bring me a new sled." A ripple of laughter went round the family circle. Billy's mother rose and took him by the hand. "It Is time little boys were In bed," she said, and led him from the room. When the child was snugly tucked away between the sheets his moth er bent down and kissed him. "Good-night, darling," she whis pered. "To-morrow Is Christmas, and maybe if you are a real good boy Santa Claus will bring you some thing. But good little boys don't tell fibs, Billy remember that." Doris Lathrop sighed, even as she crooned a soft lullaby that sent Billy drifting away into the land of dreams. She was not happy, poor thing, and the universal merry making of tho Christmas season only intensified the deep desolation ' of her heart. How she had lived through the dragging years that had elapsed since her young husband had left to become a wanderer on the face of the earth, she scarcely knew. It was Just five years five years this Christmas eve since he had gone away. Billy, she remem bered was but three years old at that time now he was eight. It was a dark chapter in her young life, and the memory of it still made her blood run cold. A man had been slain a man named Duke, who had been her father's bitter enemy and persecutor for years. Circumstan tial evidence pointed to young Jack Lathrop as the perpetrator of the deed, and Jack had been foolish enough to run away like an ordi nary fugitive from justice, thus con victing himself in the eyes "of the world. He had never been caught, and had never communicated with his wife, who at last had gone home to her father's house, not knowing whether her husband was alive or dead. But there had been a sequel to the terrible tragedy. Less than a year ago her father had died. On his deathbed he had confessed that he was tho real slayer of his arch enemy, Duke; that in the madness of exasperation he had struck the blow that made him a homicide; that his son-in-law, Jack Lathrop, had been the only witness to his rash act, and that Jack noble, quixotic Jack to save his wife's father, had deliberately diverted suspicion to himself by disappearing from the community! Christmas dawned on snow-covered earth, but it brought no peace to Doris Lathrop's heart. She sat at the breakfast table with the other members of the family, silent and distrait. She did not even notice when Billy slipped down from the table and softly stole out of the room. "Where Is Billy?" some one sud denly asked. His mother started up and threw a startled glance around the room. The boy had disappeared. "I heard some one open the front door a minute ago," said her broth er. "The little rascal couldn't have gone outdoors this cold morning?" Doris stepped Into the hall. The front door was wide open. She hastened forward to look out, and who should she see but Billy coming up the walk, leading by the hand a tall, trampish-looking stranger with a bushy gray beard, and drag ging behind him a magnificent new sled! "Here he Is, mamma!" cried Bil ly, in great glee. "This Is the mess'nger from Santa Claus. See tho sled ho brought me. Now, mamma, I didn't fib, did I?" Doris fell back. In dismay, Billy and his new-found friend came up the steps and into the house. "I couldn't help It, ma'am," said the stranger, apologetically, as he took off his disreputable hat. "The child insisted on my coming to the house, and I I I just couldn't re sist" Doris gave a piercing scream. "Jack! Jack!" she cried out wildly. "I know that voice I know that voice!" She snatched tho long gray beard from tho man's face and dashed it to the floor. "Jack!" she faintly articulated, and fell swooning Into the strong arms of her husband. And at that moment the bells In the neighboring town broke forth in a clamor of joyous Christmas greetings. "THE PRINCE OP PEACE." Ills Wonderful Influence Continues And Widens Through the World. All tho old troublous questions of the origin and destination of the Galileo Carpenter have passed, notes a writer la Collier':). All the med iaeval worrlment In discriminating betweon human and divine has gone, all the puzzled inquiry into the mir aculous. No longer la mankind stirred over the non-essential. Theories of him fade away, dogmas of his nature lose their charm. His fluence continues and widens. Blow ly brightening the gleam that touched aim spreads (nrough the world. His spirit moves on tho face of civilization, and makes it kindlier -.every generation. The touch of his hand is on tho grtef strlcken. Nurse, physician, and nun are the messengers of his teach gentleness has conquered. His in ing. Tho vestal fires burned out, but never the fires of his spirit, which answer each other . from mountain-top to mountain-top across the continents. And deep in the heart of the people they make fam ily life sweeter and ease the bitter ness of failure and Ignorance and all life's Incompleteness. That wonder-working personality was never so potent as today so insistent and tenderly sure. Under a thousand forms, creeds and names, men servo him. And however far we go in the conquest of nature, identifying the north pole, climbing the Bky, prying open electrical forces, mapping out the subliminal, diminishing sin, dis ease, war, poverty, ignorance al ways in the advance will be that gracious figure of the Sinless One, who showed Love as the rule of life. One Perfect Man ardent and gen tle the race will never tire of him. A Soft Snap. "Hay all in?" asked Amzl Clover bud of Israel Pepperpod, as they drew rein In the road leading to the village. "All In," said Israel. "I reckon I'll finish up mine by sat'day. What are doln' now?" wot mucn o' nuthin'. Havln' a kind of a Boft snap of it. Ain't milk' In but nine cows now, an' I take It easy In bed' until 'most 5 o'clock mornln's. Fact is, I ain't got much to do this fall but dig ten or twelve acres o' pertaters and grub out six or oight acres o' my timber lana an git it ready to seed down in the spring an' git seventy-five cord o' wood agreed to deliver in town by Christ mas. Got to put up 'bout half a mile o' wire fence an' shingle my barn an' putter round at work o' that sort, but I got so much less than usual to do that I feel as If I was havin a kind of a soft snap of it." Puck. CHRISTMAS CAROL. The earth has grown old with its bur den of care, But at Christmas It always Is young, The heart of the Jewel burns lustrous and fair, And its soul full of music bursts forth on the air. When the song of the angels is sung. It is coming, Old Earth, It is coming to-night! On the snow-flakes which cover thy sod The feet of the Christ-child fall gentle and white, And the voice of the Christ-child tells out with delight That mankind are the children of God. On the sad and the lonely, the wretched and poor, The voice of the Christ-child shall fall; And to every blind wanderer open the door Of hope that he dared not to dream of before, With a sunshine of welcome for all. The feet of the humblest may walk In the field Where the feet of the holiest trod, This, then, is $he marvel to mortals revealed When the silvery trumpets of Christ mas have pealed, That mankind are the children of God. By Phillips Brooks. HOUSE FLY'S EVIL WAYS. Magnified Photographs of Pest In Action Startles Scientists and Health Students. Edward Hatch, of Lord & Taylor, and Chairman of the Committee on Water Pollution of tho Merchants' Association, of New York, started last Saturday his campaign for the coming season against the house fly by displaying to a group of physi cians, educators, health officers and settlement workers at No. 19 East Twenty-first street, that city, twelve minutes of moving picture films of flies as they normally are occupied. The Alms were made by means of mlcrophotography by a London firm. This was their first exhibition in this country. Flies were shown depositing eggs in the meat waiting for dinner. Al though only half a dozen or so layers engaged In this job, each deposited more than 100 eggs, as appeared when the film pictured the progress of hatching and the successive de velopments of birth, growth and ar rival at'mature age. How files carry Infection was il lustrated by views of them feasting on refuse and worse, cleaning their snouts and wiping their feet on the sugar to which they adjourned for dessert, and Inspecting at close range the nipple of a baby's feeding bottle. Can't Plaoe U. 8. Steal on Paris Bourse. Paris, Doc. 21. The syndicate form ed to secure the listing of United States Btoel securities on the bourso has been dissolved and the project abandoned. CASTOR I A 7ar lafcaU ami OMlirea. 1U m Yh Kin Alvqi iMtH NO STAR TO GUIDE. The Possibility that Escaped tho Women of Bethlehem. The child born In the stable of Bethlehem, "because there was no room for them In the Inn," was her aided by angels to the shepherds and by a star to the wise men; but no voice told the mothers of Bethlehem of the wonder which was happening in their town that night. Suppose some gentle woman had met Joseph and Mary on that Won derful Day, as they entered the town, and had said to them: "Our streets are full of homeless strangers. Come you and bide with me!" By that slm pie act of hospitality, her name would have been written high, high among the names of earth's happiest folk. "Blessed is she," we should have cried,- "to whose home the Christmas Joy first came!" But the women of the Judean town did not know to throw wide their doors and bring in the world's gratitude and love, says the Youth's Companion. So the Child was laid in a manager, and oblivion holds the names of all the women in Bethlehem who slept that night beneath the wings of wonder lngs angels. Had they but known! Year by year, for 19 centuries the story of the night at Bethlehem has been told and retold. To-day no household In Christendom, in town or village or In distant prairie can plead the Ignorance in which Bethlehem then lay. If the door Is shut on the Christ-child to-day, it Is not from lack of knowledge, but from chur lishness or indifference. The Christmas spirit speaks in many voices. The sprig of holly or the plum pudding, the tree laden with gifts or the cheer for the lonely these are all the world's way of say lng to the Mother and the Holy Child, "Abide with us!" Barred out alike from cottage and palace and inn in Palestine, the Hope of the World renews his appeal each Christmas-tide to our modern Chris tian world. By the very pathos of the first Christmas, the heart is softened and prepared to give him welcome. To-day there is no heralding angel or guiding star No ear may hear His coming, But In this world of sin, Where meek souls will receive Him still, The dear Christ enters in. Christmas Cheer. "Old man," wrote the Billvllle citi zen, "it was my intendln' to give you a fine present fer Christmas, but I come short this year by the sheriff levyfh' on my cotton an' the govern ment on my corn; so I kin only send you a gallon jug of the last named, which ain't much as my ambitions Is fer you; but I'll say this, old boy: There's enough in that jug to make you have the jolliest time o' yer life fer a day or two; ef you can't buy a circus ticket, there's a whole circus in six drams, an' a eternal movin' plctur' show in 20; so make the most of it!" Atlanta Constitution. For New Late Novelties -IN JEWELRY SILVERWARE WATCHES SPENCER, The Jeweler "Guaranteed articles only sold." ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAINS Delaware & Hudson R. R. Trains leave at 6:55 a. m., and 12:25 and 4:30 p. m. Sundays at 11:05 a. m. and 7:15 p. m. Trains arrive at 9:55 a. m., 3:1b and 7:31 p. m. Sundays at 10:15 a. m. and 6:50 p. m. Erie R. R. Trains leave at 8:25 a. m. and 2:48 p. m. Sundays at 2:48 p. m. TralnB arrive at 1:40 and 8:08 p. m. Saturdays, arrives at 3:45 and leaves at 7:10. Sundays at 7:02 p. m. ELECTION .OF DIRECTORS In compliance with an Act of As sembly and In accordance with Ar ticle 5 of the Constitution of the Wayne County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance Co., notice Is hereby given that the annual -meeting of the said company will be hold In the office of the company, in the Post office building,- Honesdale, Pa., on MONDAY, JAN. 3, 1010, at 10 a. m., for the transaction of general busi ness; and that an election will b held at the same place of meeting, between the hours of 1 and 4 p. m. of said day, for tho purposo of electing ten members of said com pany to serve as directors for the ensuing year. Every person Insur ed in the company Is a member thereof and entitled to one vote. H. 0. JACKSON, Prea't. FURRY A. CLARK, gee'jv Honeadale, Pa Dae, io, 1809. WAGES OU ftUSSIAN FARMS. Agricultural Laborer Receives Only 32 a Year and Subsistence. The extreme poverty and tho low standard of living of peasants from whom the agricultural laborers art recruited assure a low level 'of wages for agricultural labor. Tho average wages will appear almost Incredibly low from an American point of viow, notwithstanding the general com plaints of tho estate holders concern ing the unreasonable demands of the laborers. According to an official lnvestlga tlon, embracing the decade of 1S82 1891, the average annual wages for a malo agricultural worker In Russia were less than J32 and for a female worker less than $18. To this must be added the cost of subsistence, which is equally low, being on an average cost of employing a laborer for the entire year is equal to only $5 for the male and S40 for the ie malo. Tho wages for the summer sea--on of five months are almost equal to th annual wages, being $22 for the mile and $13 for the female laborer. "Rag Sale" In Rome. On Wednesdays In Rome I HVc as do many others, to go to the "rar sale." It is held by the Jews in thui particular quarter of the city. The.i people are not allowed to have shop but on this one day in the week tb are privileged to sell as much anil tu; many kinds of things as they can o.i the street. It Is a curious sight lu see lines stretched across the streets for the hanging up of trousers, blink ets, women's and children's cloth Inl and stuff of all sorts. Then there ai t tables and stands on which almov everything is sold. Sometimes ran old brocades and church embroider i are to be found among coarse im-impossible-looking fabrics. Indeed. i is not difficult to reduce one's If U" of credit considerably at the r sale." Detroit News-Tribune. CHRISTMAS GIFT. Can you find a more fitting or more use ful gift for wife or child than one of our Sav ings Pass Books? Along with this beautiful Household Bank from the HONESDALE DIME BANK HONESDALE, PA. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has homo tho signature- of jrytf ' - and has been ma do under his per- jCrTjr Sonal supervision since its infancy. vzT7r. '6CCUfrl Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience- 'against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA 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 subBtance. Its ago is Its guarantee It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the 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 Kind You to Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Yfears. .TEN HOUR DAY ON LEHIGH. Railroad and Its Engineers Agree as to Wages and Hours. New York, Dec. 2L The Lehigh Val ley Railroad company has made an agreement covering the wages and Conditions of work of its employees for ono year, beginning Jan. 1. The contract Just signed gives the men a v irking day of ten hours. Heretofore the working day on the Lehigh Valley has been twelvo hours, whereas the ten hour rule has pre vailed upon the other railroads In tin same torrltory, The reduction In hours Is the princi pal adjustment made In tho present agreemont. Questions In relation to the classification of the heavier en gines and other minor points also were adjusted. Fifteen Round Fight a Draw. New Haven, Conn., Dec. 21. Jeff Do herty and Bunny Ford fought a fifteen round draw before the Olympla Ath letic club here. Tho fight was a fierce one from the Btart. As to Public Nuisances. There would be no public nuisances It public nuisances never Increased the profits of Influential people. Chi cago Record-Herald. So It Does. "I wish you'd thread this needle, mother," said Martha in despair; "every time I get near its eyo with my thread, it blinks!" Overcapitalized. A thousand-dollar boy with a ten-thousand-dollar education Is overcapi talized. George Horace Lorlmor. It was Explicit. Teddy brought a brush and comb fo his mother, saying, "Mother, please Diit a pathway In my hair." Legal blanks at The Citizen office. Advertise in the Citizen. Signature of PrWtJsVf WfsWJOTfc IHtf V0sI 6flHh PBOFESSIONAXi CARDS. Attoraeya-at-Law H WILSON, . ATTORNEY COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office, , Masonic building, second floer Honesdale. Pa. TXTM. H. LEE, T V ATTORNEY COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office over post office. All legal business promptly attended to. Honesdale, Pa. In O. MUMFORD, U. ATTORNEY Jk COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office Liberty Hall building, opposite the Post Office, Honesdale, Pa. HOMER GREENE, ATTORNEY '& COUNSELOR-AT-LAW t Office over Keif's store. Honesdale Pa. AT. SEARLE. . ATTORNEY 4 COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office near Court House Honesdale. Pa. 0 L. ROWLAND, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-l, AW Office ver Post Office. Honesdale. Pa CHARLES A. McOARTY, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Special and prompt attention given to the collection of claims. Office over Kelt's new store, Honesdale, Pa. EP. KIMBLE, . ATTORNEY COUNSELOR-AT-LAW i Office over the cost office Honesdale, Pa. ME. SIMONS, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, Ofllco in the Court House, Honesdale. Pa. HERMAN HARMEb, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Patents and pensions secured. Office In the Schuerholz building Honesdale. Pa. PETER H. ILOFF, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office-Second floor old Savings Brik building. Honesdale. Pa. RM, SALMON, . ATTORNEY A COI NFELOR-AT-LAW Office Ni'Jt door lo ri 1 1 t Dire. Pormerl occupied bv W II. Din mult. Honesdale, Pa Dentists. DR. E. T. BROWN,, DENTIST. Office First floor, old Savings Banklbuild Itig. Honesdale. Pa. Dr. C. R. BRADY, Dkntist. Honesdale. Pa. Office Hocrs-8 a. m. to 6 p. in Any evening by appointment. Citizens' phone. 33 Residence. No. H5-X Physicians. TiR. H. B. SEARLES, 1) HONESDALE, PA. Office and restdence 1019 (Court Tstreet telenhones. Offlre Honrs 2'00 In 4:00 nnrl 6 00foB:00. D.ra. Livery, LIVERY. Fred. G. Rickard has re moved his livery establishment from corner Church street to Whitney's Stone Barn. ALL CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. FIRST CLASS OUTFITS. 75yl JOSEPH N. WELCH Fire insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance AgencyMn Wayne County. Office: Second floor Masonic Build ing, over C. C. Jadwin's drug store, Honesdale. If you don't insure with us, we both lose. General Insurance White Mills Pa. O. G. WEAVER, Graduate Optician, 1127 Main St.,' HONESDALp Tooth Savers We have the sort of tooth brushes that are made to thoroughly cleanse and save the leem. They are the kind that clean teeth wit h wlthoat IS cents or nd will re- eaviQK vour mourn iuu oi onaiiei. We recommend those costing 28 a more, as we can (ruarnntee them and l place, free, any that show'deffcti of mam O. T. CHAMBERS, PMARnACIST, epp.D. M, St.llga, HONtAL, H HITTIHGER HIM