T1IK CITIZEN, WKDNKSDAY, JULY 27, 1010. AUTOGRAPHS OF F MS IE S mighty Phnroah 3,000 years before Then you pass down to the bank of the little, singing river to stand by the inscription of tho great and good Roman emperor, Marcus Aur- cllms, n road whoee foundations are still to be traced. You cross tho Iloman bridge, the approach to which is by steps instead of by nn Incline. Their llcconN U-ft on the Hocks in Tll '",ltle Btn"8 " after nil tho centuries, aitnougii tne noou last tho Holy l.nnd. yenr washed out the pier of tho If ever you pass through the sen- railroad bridge built only a fow port of Beyrouth, do not fall to take years ago. See the old Itoman nc- n trip to the autograph album of the qucduct now leading down the wa kings on the cliffs at Dog river. It ters of the river to a primitive is easily reached by train or car- Syrian Hour mill, passing thence to rlage. It Is especlnlly desirable that Irrigate the scanty crops of tho the traveller who has not been to peasants, where once it wntered a Egypt or who cannot hopo to see city! Babylon should go to this spot whore Where else on earth can you Hud so many or these kings have left so many fnmous names brought to thelr signatures upon the rocks. To gether? What a wonderful series of be sure you will not bo nblo to rend moving pictures these monuments the writing, for tho biting sea-wind suggest to the imagination! How has not dealt so kindly with tho many and how varied the races of proud records as the gentler nlrs of warriors and priests who have pass Egypt. Hut It Is n striking collec- ed this way. The skln-clnd savages tlon of names that are hero to be of the most primitive days, the Hit read, through the help of those pa- titos clad in the scarlet robes dyed tlent scholars who have been puz- by the shell-nsh from these waters; zllng out the records of the centuries, the Egyptlnns In blue tunics and The Dog river is not much of a scarlet; white-robed Assyrians with stream, but it has cut n pass through rigid locks and platted beards; the Lebanon mountains which the light-armed Greeks supple and military men of old found convenient graceful; mnlled Romans of mas- when passing from Egypt to the ivo tread with Iron armor edged Euphrates. Nobody knows who built with burnished bronze; Crusaders the ilrst road here, but It has been grim or sensual; the French of the rebuilt or repaired successively days of the third Napoleon in red- throughout the centuries by Baby- bordered uniforms and pompous lonlans, Egyptlnns, Greeks and Ro- caps. Wliat a strange mode they mans. make! iou go down .from tho sl- Purthermore, nobody knows who lence of the top of the cliff and sit was tho first king to dwell among by the tireless waves. "The captains these rocks. In the limestone caves and the kings depart," the twilight that honeycomb the bnnks of the begins to fall, the bells of the lean, Dog river there are the bones and blnck Syrian battle tinkle down the flints of men who lived before the slippery rocks where the world-vlc- days of Iron tools. Their petty kings tors carved their boastings. It is no doubt rushed down through this time to return through the planta pass to make war upon the Inhabl- tlons where the silkworms are feed- tants of the plains. As you zig-zag ins on mulberry leaves to the corn- up the side of the cliff over a trail forts of your modern Hotel. A LITTLE HISTORY ATTACH ED TO WAGNER'S OLD QLOVE. X Ever seo tho old glove which Ilonua Wagner wenrs on his big left lmnd? No? Well, here It Is. Mnny another would bo ashamed of It, but not tho only Honus. Wagner would not part with It for love or money. There is a history to tho glove. Wag ner himself has forgotten Just ? when ho got It, but ho thinks it SMALL PITCHING STAFFS CARRIED i1 Modern Managers Rely on Fewer but Dependable Twlrlers. I IDLENESS PROVES INJURIOUS. I r of rocks that would make the path that leads along the precipice at Campbell's Ledge seem like a boule varde, you can the more easily imagine the rude days of these pre W. F. G. Dunmore, Pa., July IS. THE STORY OF ROOSEYKLT. TMio epnnrl Inctnlrnnnt rf Alfrnrl historic kings than when you stand Henry Lewis's virile and compelling "Story of Roosevelt" appears In Huninn T.lfo fnr -Tnlv nnrl la nippt. The earliest autographic record , .iM, nn onnrmml.: Hnmnrwl hi- tho w j"" uuujy iu me uiiys ol .uusuh. i readlng public. Here are no less than three tablets "Mr. Roosevelt has just rounded the corner of his majority," writes cut by the obsequious slaves of Rameses II, the great warrior king Mr LewlS( ..and ceased t0 be a uoy. "bii'i. luuieis are wlth twenty-two years to his virile w Wl. WV UIU mUHUlJ I n-nrllt lll L'tntlftP L 1 r L-1 TA CT h o 11T1 Upon the Upper. .... i,opis nn thn thrpshnlcl of nf- r 1 If .. 1 ntnn r-. glyphics that record the glories of tne I)opuIar and asUs at 0nce the 1 iuo - coniidence 0f men. roads and one upon the There are still traces of the hlero brews some 3,000 years ago, but the slow centuries have rendered them Illegible. However, one can still make out the familiar figure of the great king who came along this road to triumph over the Hittltes at the decisive battle of Kadesh. Another tablet in which the tittle tattle of kings rather than a victory "With the campaign ho has out lined, what shall he said of his ad vantages? He has just cast his first vote. He is to go onward nnd upward until he touches the high est point of human greatness, and be WAONBH'8 OLOVE. wns back about 1002. Ilonus knows that Herman Long, onco tho greatest of nil shortstops, then playing with the Boston team, gave hlra tho glove. It Is n fact that Long always used a glove with a big hole In tho cen ter of it. He would buy a new glovo nnd nt onco cut It to pieces, leaving an open spot In tho center nbout twice tho slzo of a baseball. Long handed over one of his old gloves to Wagner. It suited him, and he has used it ever since. The glove now Is a worn out relic, but Hans hangs to it like grim death, no figures it would be the worst luck in tho world for him to lose it. Fnns have time and again watched Wagner take that glovo off his big left hand nnd throw It down toward third base. And they could alwnys seo the hole in it, for it is too big not to bo noticed. Time nnd ngatn it has been asked why Wagner doesn't ? buy a new glove. You ask Hans that question Foolish to Have Many Slab Art I its Whlls Most of Them Sit on the Bench Pilot In Big League Be ginning to Realize Folly of It. That long pitching strings arc no longer necessary and thnt four or five dependablo men aro worth two or three times that number of ordlnnry twlrlers is a fact Previously tho necessity of having seven men, each one ready at all times to tako his turn at box, was a point ' that was emphasized by manngsrs. v ahu uunng iuhi buusuu, iou, iuo uiujur I league manager who did not have at f i least six nvallablo men for the box figured that ho was heavily handicap ped In the figdt for tho coveted bunt lng. Things have changed, however. Tho wonderful work of tho Pittsburg pitchers Inst season nnd' the now very patent fact that four twlrlers prac tlcally did tho brunt of the work for tho Pirates have given managers and owners cause for believing that top mnny pitchers nro worth hardly as much as none at all, Last season, with Cnmnitz, Willis, Maddox and Lcltlcld performing In 1 their turn, tho Pirates were up in tho race throughout the entire season, nnd they finally drew away easily from nil other competitors nt the end. In pre' vious years it was tho pitching of Mordecal Brown, Pfeister, Overall and Rculbach that won for tho Cubs, I nnd every ono for years has realized that Christie Mathowson has been tho real mainstay of tho Giants. This i only goes to show the vnluo of ono and he will only say that he has $ , g00a pitcher to a team. With four no money to pay for one. But back of that tliere Is tho ono fact that remains nlways prom inentWagner Is Just as super- & stltious or sentimental as any other ball player, and ho has al ways felt that tho Herman Long glovo has brought him luck. Thnf s why he hangs on to 1L It Is worn to a frazzle. There Is nothing to It but the bare edges. The center is all worn away, nnd Wagner grabs those hard line drives really with tho baro hand. disttnculshod by signs of miblic con-! fldenco bestowed upon none other i SxSxS5x-$3s since the martyred hour of Lincoln. dependable boxmen tho ordinary mnn ager should be reasonably well satis fled, In 1000 the Red Sox had one of the biggest strings of pitchers in the coun try. They had Hall, Karger, Wood, Clcotte, Matthews, Arellanos, Pane, Wolter and Schlltzcr at the season's end, while previously thero were Ryan Chech, Steele and Morgan as members of tho pitching corps. And yet had Morgan pitched tho ball for Boston thnt he did for tho Athletics tyid Young had been retained, these two, with Arellanos and ono other reliable man to take his turn in the box, might onsl ly have beaten out both tho Athletics MZcTa ZrStltoZZTTriSl "niBACE FOR HARMSWORTH CUP ; nnd brought the pennant to great battle of Karkemish, which carried the early Assyrian empire to the summit of its power, he erected this monument to record the fact that he had passed along the road to victory, but he tells also with a sort of childish delight that he had what Is he better conditioned for British Mot0rboat Owner Will Send tne struggle man are inousunus whose years and ambitions are twin with his own? 'Assuming there be folk and I take It the woods are full of them The better part of tho pitching for Entries For International Contests. ! Connie Mnck's club was done by rour According to Commodore H. H. Mel- men. I'lnnu, uenuer. Krauso nnd aior vllle of the Motorbont Club of Amer- fan- nntl they are doing the same thing lea, who returned recently from Eng- j on any team would be worth double as CY YOUNG. Mathewion Praises Winner of Five Hundred Ball Games. QIIERIFF'S SALE OF VALUABLE O REAL ESTATE.-Hy virtue of process issued out of tho Court of Common Pleas of Wayno county, and Stato of Pennsylvania, nnd to mo directed and delivered, I havo levied on and will expose to public sale, at tua Court House In Honesdale, on THURSDAY, AUG. 11, 11)10, 2 P. M. All that certain lot or parcel of lnnd sltunte In the township of Scott, in the sold county of Wayne, bounded nnd described as follows, viz: On the south by the public high way leading from Scott Centre to Starrucca; on the east by lands of D. M. Smith, Gus Wnldler and Com odore Tarbox; on the north by lands of Christopher Karcher, W. S. Bur leigh and B. F. Tewksbury; and on tho west by lands of Lena Warren and lands of George Tarbox, includ ing a lano on the southerly side he tween tho public highway and lands of George Tarbox, lending from tho above premises to the creek, as now fenced In, containing one hundred nnd twenty-seven acres, more or less. Being same premises which William Curtis, by will dated June 12, 1888, devised to Lauren Curtis. And same which Lauren Curtis et ux. by deed granted to Sidney L. Spicer nnd Cervila A. Spicer. On said premises nre house, barn and other outbuildings. Seized and taken In execution as the property of Sidney L. Spicer and Cervila A. Spicer at the suit of Lauren Curtis. No. 110 March Term, 1910. Judgment $1135. Kimble, Attorney. TAKE NOTICE All bld3 and costs must be paid on day of sale or deeds will not be acknowledged. M. LEE BRAMAN. Sheriff. Honesdale, Pa., July 1G, 1910. Cincinnati, O., July 21. "Of all pitch ers, past and present, I admire Cy Young most," said Mathewson. "He Is tho best example I know of the clean living American athlete who is a model for tho youth of the country. Young has lived tho normal, natural out of door life. Never a teetotaler. he has been temperate In nil things. As a result ho finds himself with his pitching arm unimpaired nnd ills health perfect nt forty-two. "I enn pay the veteran no greater compliment than to say that I have set my heart on being n second Cy Young, pitching for New ork in lrco. I heartily congratulate tho Ohio fann er for winning 500 games in the big leagues, and my best wishes go with him In his dctermlnarlou to stay in tho big show until he is fifty years old." Roll of HONOR r. WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS Attention is called to tne STRENGTH of the Wayne County il W hn vonm tn rnnrai in Hipir own ' land, where ho has been making the . no .rlnn. nt ni,,n nr tnn m ventured on the sea in "one of the llves the Ro0SeVelt performance, be , final arrangSments for the coming In- ,wUIl on,y ono or tw0 of tllem ,n flrst s nips or tlie people of Arvad and had whnt ho has ueeIli do what he has ternational motorbont race for tho cInsg pitching condition. a Hnolse. done, to consider his native equip-1 Hnrrasworth cup, tae keenest interest Too many pitchers are a hlndrnnce three hundred yenrs later another ,,, nt immi nmi iimi nmi lumrt iiu fiiminvnri in- thn Hrltish motorbont i.,o,n,i c iw,i it ritt w Assyrian King, Assurnaxirpal, march- sh0nld not be time wasted nor labor 'owners In the coming race, and many and welter uau been ln shape to help nn n mn fr tlilp nun 1 i,. n4 .... . I ..... . .uu iu uuui, uut thrown away. He who asks victory of them aro coming over t attend it. iout Arellanos Inst season the pitching bna and left His autograph upon should divide his studies Into two. u It is almost definitely settled that I Bta(t 0f the Red Sox would not have um. .ui m ,i uito creriwi to ms He s,ould devote himself to the ono of tho English motorboats partlc- , h0en the weakest In tho American glory and the honor of the gods to oonquerors in their reasons of trl- IpaUng In the race will bo'the Maple ;oague. But the wlldness of Wood, the whom he is represented as offering ,,,.,. i, 0i,i,i ,wf himei.if tn'i.Mf mvnmi hv Mnckav Eilrar of tlo t,i. , n, ,, ,i, ,,,, (h, butruicLb and iiuauons. rirn(,iinrnfi fn tiintr ronnnR nf itrit tli Mntnrliont club. The remain- t men comes tne tablet of his son, ,irof wi,nn i.o nn,, toil whv thn Mnt two nf tho tliroo contestants nllow- (n.. i.n n,. in... biiaimaneer II, who passed along . ,i i, i ir,,t h 1 ni tn nnfinmi will vorv llkelv carry L, i i.i i. ii ii . i . , , . ' -i . . '1 li . uiu uuk ui iuu aiuiui ii".uv viuLr pishing for his team. Great Britain, and thero is n strong i Manager8 nna owners both aro be posslblllty that one of these will be n Kinnng t0 realize tho folly of keeping hydroplane. I five or six nblcbodled men upon tho Dr. Mnrtlu Smart of the British Mo- bench wh0 tho buIk of tho work ls torboat club, who offered n cup as a , ,eft tQ a couplo of goou mcn an(1 a Iot prize ln tho English elimination races, ,nf sccond Btrlngerg Traveling is ex nntlclpatcs being among the visiting lvCi aml saiaries t0(lay aro nt a motorbont cnthuslnsts to tho interna- , h)gU flgure t,,e work could tlonal race at Larehmont on Aug. -0. of flvo men tho BBV, . . , V . . i ibotl ,n traveling expenses, snlnry and 8 in your family you of course call H H a reliable physician. Don't stop 8 it at that; have his prescriptions H 8 put up at a reliable pharmacy, H even if it is a little farther from g il your home than some other store, g S You can find no more reliable g j store than ours. It would be im- g S possible for more care to be taken n H in the selection of drugs, etc., or g H in the compounding. Proserin- g tions brought here, either niKiit g ii or day, will be promptly and g g accurately compounded "by a ti g competent registered pharmacist and the prices will be most reasonable. The Citizen is getting every issue. this road ln SCO 11. C. to receive the homage of the king of Phoenicia The figure of the king ln royal robes Is clearly to be seen, with his beard and hair freshly dressed and twisted by the royal barbers before his royal portrait was cut. Most Interesting of all, perhaps nnd next in order of time is the tab let of Seuacherlb, who is 720 B. C. 'came down like the wolf on the fold" of Jerusalem, as Byron tells in his splendid poem. But It Is of himself ls ready for the Held." Human Life Publishing company, Poston. WILL FOLLOW ERIE ROAD. C'upt. Thomas S. Baldwin Picks This Routo To Luke Erie. Capt. Thomas S. Baldwin, who has entered the world's flying contest from Now York to St. Louis, said; I am surely going to be in tho his victorious iinar-nnt nr, ii,r.,.ii lllclit. You can call me tho Erie and not of the nlnirnp-Ktripknn nr.nv Kid' because I think that I will se and tho disastrous retreat that thn Meet me rouio oi uiu cnu juiuuuu tablet makes record. from New VorK city 10 uuniurK, in Yacht Club of Great Britain also ex- I general efficiency would be conslder- of Helbon, a village of Coele-Syria I8 wln bo eBBy Ba,llnB where the grapes still grow sweetly. "Guess my 'Red Devil' will be ablo ti, i. , . ..... . . to stand tho test. I am practicing The last of tho Assyrian Inscrip tions ls that of Esarhaddon, tho ono loyal son of Sennacherib. This rnon- every day. Of course, tho aviators have to bank on the weather conui ujui euu ui DUUUUCIieriD. MIHS mon- : fnvnrnri with eood arch came from the plains of tho t,on?; " W,r l e un X us to Euphrates over the rock-hewn road con!dlt,"Bi " .L, v n.It nlcla and Tyre, which .the politicians llr8t Ume wo try' of Egypt had invited to revolt. As if to show by grim, silent Irony his triumph, he has caused his likeness Effect of Clam Diet on Hens, upturn KtnilnntH down this way iu uo cui uy uio smo oi tnai or mo -,.- hen wondor nit whnt et- ancient Rameses. . nmtmctad dlot of dama Last of all Is anothor tablet erect- -o,, hava on hens, received addl ed by Rameses which tho French ,or thought wbon a general Duprex covered with plaster 0f aoveral nests revealed clam nnd yellow paint in 1801 to record (rittorn In place of the expected egg. on me siucco suriaco mo victory ot jew York World. rsapoieon iu ovor tno uruses ot .m. Lebanon who had porpctrated sucn 0ae Hundred Gates f i. i m a i i r,B.mui massacres oi mo uur- -e dty of Thebes had a hundred uans. uououess mo pumsnmem u - d jQ 80nd out at mcSx fllcted by tho French was deserved, m meQ and ao0 out it seems lino less man sucn- m aUi li000,000 men and lege iu piulo mu uuuio ui n j.arlot torn emperor ovor that cut by the 2'000 char,oU Tho Restless, owned by tho Chese- borough brothers of tho Motorbont i Another tablet ls thnt nrnr tnii hi- Y., which runs through a broad vnl-ifl ncrnunt of had weather. " J I . . ., ...,.! - the famous Nebuchadnezar, high up Iey Iree lro,n mounvauiuuH wum tui- on the cliff, inscribed, no doubt, when roni&. I believe In going through ho made his victorious campaign this valley I will be able to find sult- agalnst Egypt and Incidentally car- Mo landing places about 20 miles rled away the Jews captives to Baby- npart. From Dunkirk I will strike Ion. But the great conqueror con- 1'retty level country all the way to tents himself with nrniBimr thn winn Cleveland, and from there to St. A .1 ...1.1. pecw locouui uv, ab,e owner8 woulu be billing to party or ten or uu. tock gnu 8,ce on to tho compensa torboat rachig. nmong them being sev- dependable men who oral UUed English sportsmen. , . . . .. ,nmllnr .,,, There will be no postponement of j bW LONG TRIP IN LAUNCH. Club of America nnd expected to prove i Chicago Woman and 8on Travel 6,312 ono of tho thrco American defenders, has developed wonderful speed at Its tryouts, making thirty-eight miles. It ls claimed by its builders that It will reach forty-flvo miles. BASEBALL CHIRPS George Lnchnnce, tho old Boston first baseman, has been appointed an umplro ln tho Connecticut State league. Griffith, McGruw and Bresnahan are the hit and run managers, while Chance, Clarke and Lake are depend ing more on tho sacrifice hit. Doom and Dablon aro mixers. Any ball club that ls fast on tho bases will win unless their opponents do somo fine pitching and fielding. A loosely played gamo always gives a speedy team an advantage. Bob Emsllo has been umpiring steadily for twenty-five years. It was Charlie White of Spaldlng'B, then pres ident of tho Eastern leaguo, who gave him his first job as umpire. Miles In Great Cruise A remarkable river, ocean, canal and lnko motorbont Journey was concluded recently when tho Cntherlno M., a thirty-five foot cruising launch, carry lng Ralph M. Pearson and his mother, Mrs. Kate Pearson, camo Into dock in Chicago river. Mny 3, 1000, tho boat started from the spot at which sho docked and com pleted tho crulso down tho Mississippi to tho Atlantic, along tho Gulf coast, north along tho Atlantic coast, up the Hudson, through tho Erie canal, across Lakes Erie nud Huron, through the trait of Mackinac and uj Lnko Mich igan to the river 0,312 miles. Will Row For the Championship. Ernest Barry, tho English champion, Has left England for South Africa, whence he will travel to tho Zambezi, where on Aug. 18 ho will row Arnst for the world's sculling championship. Barry was in splendid shape when he left England and very confident of making a good raco for tho title. Ho la a fine oarsman and has created new records on tho Thames during his training for the forthcoming trial O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, Oip. D. & H. Station, Honesdale. 1'a. better The FINANCIER of New York Citv has published a ROLL Oi HO'NOR of the 11,470 State Banks and Trust Companies of United States. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAYINGS BANK Stands 38th in the United States Stands 10th in Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $455,000.00 Total ASSETS, $2,T33,000.00 Honesdale. Pa.. May 29. 190S. A. O. BLAKE AUCTIONEER & CATTLE DEALER You will make money by bavins me. Ikell 1'HONK 9-u Kfit ianV. 5. J I D. & H. CO. TiriE TABLE HONESDALE BRANCH A.M. .A.M. SUN .SUN W '(11' ii oo! 10 oo 1 20 i 08 P.M. 5 40 5 60 5 51 6 11 ti 17 U 2.1 (i i (i 32 ti 35 6'M 6 4 'i K ) G 50 P.M 2 15. 7 25! o 15 V.M 9 051 9 15i 9 19 9 3ti 9 42 9 43 9 51 9 57 10 00 io or 10 OK 10 11 10 15 A.M. A.M. A.M.; 10 00 10 00 12 30 4 40 5 30 P.M. ti 20 B ISO Ii 31 ti 52 H 5H 7 01 7 07 7 13 7 IB 7 20 7 21 7 27 7 31 P.M. 8 30 1 20 2 W P.M. 2 05 2 15 2 19 2 37 2 43 2 49 2 52 2 57 2 69 3 03 3 07 3 10 3 15 P.M. P.M. 4 30 fi 051 A.M. 2 15 7 10 7 55 A.M. P.M. Albany .... llliigluimtou .... ... Philadelphia.... Wllkes-Harre.. . ...scranton f,v Ar H 45 8 M 8 59 U IS 9 21 9 20, 9 32 9 37 9 39 9 41 9 47 9 60 9 55 A.M. Carboiulale ...Lincoln Avenue.. Whites Karview Caiman Lake l-oclore ... ... . Way mart Keene Steene Prompton Kortenla Seelyvllle Honesdale .... Ar Lv 2 00 12 40 3 53 A . M 10 20 9 37 7 311 7 32 1 P.M A.M. 8 03 7 51 7 50 7 33 7 25 7 19 7 1 7 12 7 09 7 05 7 01 ti 55 V.M A M... 10 50,... 8 45... 4 05! 3 15 P.M. 1 33 1 23 1 21 1 OI 12 5fi 12 51 12 49 12 43 12 40 12 3fi 12 32 12 29 12 25 P.M 15 ti 20 P.M. 6 40 5 30 5 24 5 08 5 01 5 SO I 54 4 48 4 45 4 41 4 37 4 31 4 :so; P.M ., P.. A.M. SUN (SUN 10 60! , 8 45. . 7 31, 7 32 2 25 P M. 1 33 10 05 I' M.,!' M. 12 17 12 07 12 03 11 41 11 37 11 31 11 29! 11 23 11 20 11 lti 11 12 11 09 11 05 8 29 8 17 8 13 ; si ; 47 7 41 7 39 7 32 7 30 7 28 7 22 7 19 7 15 A M..P M The Era of New Mixed Paints ! Tins vfl.iv nnoin with n. iloliitra of new mixed paints. A con dition brought about by our enterprising dealers to get some kind of a mixed paint that would supplant CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS. Their compounds, being new anu neavny uuvwiibeu, may find a sale with tlie unwary. S5SS? iorCHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS Is JADWIN'S PHARMACY. There are reasons for tho pro-miuence of CHILTON PAINTS 1st No ono can mix a better mixed paint. 2d The painters declare that it works easily and has won derful covering qualities. 3d Chilton stands back of it, aud will agree to repaint, at his owu exponse.ovory surface painted with Ohilton Paint that proves defective. 4th Those who have used it aro perfectly satisfied with it and recommend its uso to others.