D T11I2 CITIZEN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1010. VALUABLE NEWS FROM :: :: Important Happenings and Personal Items Contrlb- utcd by THE CITIZEN'S Corps of Correspondents. a ntttmtttttBttlH ltU ALDENVILLE. Ball Team Will Go on it Tour Horses Stolen? H. E. Teachout of Des Moines, Ia Mrs. II. D. Morehouse, Mrs. G. Kelly and W. II. Teachout of New their sister, Mrs. D. Clemens, last ! week. Mr. nnd Mrs. W. D. Wntklns re turned to their homo here Saturday, and moved to Waymart Tuesday where Mr. Watklns has the prlnci palshlp of the High school. Miss M. Doyle of Brooklyn, N. Y., Is staying nt G. II. Knnpp's. Grace Wilmarth resigned her posi tion as postmistress recently. The Alerts of this place won their fourteenth victory by defeating Unlondnle nt Pleasant Mount Satur day last. The game was won on the hitting of Aldenvllle and the pitching of S'tarnes, he having nine strikeouts to his credit and Union dale only getting three hits from his delivery. Other features were the double plays by Starnes, F. Cun ningham and Grey. Score 1G to 4. Mr. Lozier was umpire. The Alerts intend to start Tuesday on a four days' trip to the northern part of the county, where they will piny Lake Como, Shehnwken, Hancock nnd Stnrrucca. One of W. L. Hopkins's tennis disappeared Sunday night and nt present it Is not known whether it is strayed or stolen. LAKE COMO. Austin Lyons and Daniel Cole man of Honesdale spent Wednesday and Thursday in town. Dr. Rosalia Underwood nnd sister spent Monday at Coxton lake. Mrs. Robert Murray and son, Ed ward, of Honesdale are spending n week nt Charles Knapp's. Walter Underwood of Bloomiield Is spending his vacation here. Rev. Emmll was in Scranton Sat urday. Thomas McDermott of Dinghanl ton, N. Y., is visiting his mother here. Mrs. L. E. Woolsey and children of Hancock are spending several days at H. A. Williams'. LOOKOUT. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hathaway and son, Leiand, and Mr. and Mrs. Nor man Tyler and son, Merlin, spent Sunday at John Hathaway's at Equi- lca. He leaves a heartbroken family nunk. to mourn his departure. Those sur- Laford Teeple spent Sunday with viving are his widow, five girls and friends at Galilee. two boys: Nettie and Sophia of Scran- Mrs. Potter and two granddaugh-, ton Mario of thls pmce, Philip of ters of Tanners Falls are visiting New York and Clara) A,Igusta and at Albert Glllow's. , Ellvs at home. His family have the Harris Hill is remodeling his 1 sympathy of the entire community, kitchen. Hiram Gaston is doing the i The Moravian minister from New work. foundland and Rev. H. T. Purkiss of Mrs. Warner Lester, who spent the thls ,,lnce officiated at the funeral, past week at the home of her son, Interiiient was in Ledgedale ceme Frank Lester, returned to her home terv in Seelyville Sunday. Mlss clara jjerwlg of New York Mr. and Mrs. Norman Tyler and, ls honle for a time. son are visuing ai jesse nawiawuy s. i About Sept. 1 they expect to start for Florida, where they will make their future home. uert uernarut oi urooKiyn, in. i., who spent the past two weeks at Mrs. A. Daney's, returned home Sunday. F. M. Lester Is erecting a silo. Miss Frances Edsall spent a few days last week at the home of her uncle. William Brannlng. In Lord-j vle- " , J Frank Bruce Is sick With typhoid feer. I Floyd Bruce made a business trip to Hancock Tuesday. The church lair Wednesday of last weeK was a complete success, i ne sum of $103.73 was cleared. USWICK & LAKEVILLE. A. Pflomm and baby and Miss Anna Vogel of New York, who have been sojourning at C. Sanders's the past two weeks, returned home Wed nesday. Mrs. Wlrth and daughter, Mrs. Frank Miller, Jr., of Newark, N. J and two children, Frank and Lavlra, arrived at C. Sanders's Aug. 13 to spend a few weeks. Mrs. Frank Miller, Sr., of Hawley, who has been spending a few days at C. Sanders's, returned this week. There was a party at Mrs. Oehler's Saturday afternoon and evening. Among those in attendance were Mrs. Seltzer and son and daughter and Mrs. Seltzer's sister and Miss Scliumaker and Mr. Schumaker and others. Mrs. George S. Purdy of Hones dale vlalted at Keith's Wednesday of last week and Friday Mrs. Purdy sent her auto to Uswlck and took Mrs. Purdy's sister-in-law, Miss C. D. Purdy of Chicago, 111., and the two Misses Keith, to her home in Hones dale. Tho former remains there for a week. Tho two latter returned home the samo evening. Christian Schrader of Rasor Hill, near Ledgedale, died from blood pois oning, caused by falling and breaking his arm a few weeks ago. The funer al was held Tuesday. Interment was in Ledgedale. He was a member of tho Lakevllle lodge, No. 1161, I. O. O. F. ot Lakevllle.'' Fred Relneke of Hawley was brought to Uswlck to the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Relneke, Sunday. He is quite sick again. NEIGHBORING TOWNS KtUtHH-f tHtttHtn tmHU j Miss Maud Locklln of Lakevllle ! was thrown out ot an auto Friday while enroute to Lake Ariel. In go ing over a sluice bridge one wheel rnn off nnd upset the auto. It U learned that one nrm was badly bruised, but that she can now use It. The bones In tho wrist of the ?r nr,,n ;f misplaced and 8il0 still cnrrles that arm in a sling, Charles Daniels of Lakevllle, who hns been sick all summer, Is still very blck. The fair at .Lakevllle Aug. 17 was well attended nnd was a great suc cess In every way. About $02 was the proceeds. There were some items of expense to be paid, and we have not yet learned the net proceeds. Mrs. Bertha Dopp and son, Charles, of Chicago, who have been spending nine or 10 days with the former's brother-in-law, John Keer, nnd fnm ily nt Arlington, returned as far as New York Monday, where they will visit two or three days nnd then re turn home. AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. The Citizen, which Is now ne knowlelged to bo the lending news paper in Wayne county, makes the following offer: We will send you Tho Citizen for 0,10 J'enr (lll Issues) for 91.50 ami give you one Hollars worth of Citi zen Coupons, which will be ncceptcd as cash by the lending merchants of llouesdnle. LAKEVILLE. Mrs. A. Evans and son, Harold, of Scranton are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Loveless. Oliver Locklln. we much regret to stnte. is conilned to his bed with ty- pliold fever. Drs. White of Ariel and Budd of Peckville are in attendance. A trained nurse Is caring for him. The Hildegard Rebekah lodge held their first annual fair Aug. 17. Every body hnd a grand time. Sincere thanks are extended those who kind- i iy assisted. The net proceeds , amounted to $50. The sad news lias reached this I place of the death of Christian Schrader of Ledgedale, which oc curred at Dr. Burns's private hospital in Scranton Aug. 19 from blood poisoning due to a broken arm which lie sustained by falling from an ap ple tree. Mr. Schrader had many friends in this vicinity. Ho was a member of the Odd Fellows and of the Patriotic Order of Sons of Amer Mr and MrSi A Gobie nre enter- talnlng guests from Jersey City Heights, N. J. j William Relneke of Brooklyn, N. V., was home last week. Robert Loveless is indisposed. Mr. and Mrs. W. Sheeley returned to their home nt Port Jervis, N. Y Sunday. Miss Lena Osborne is staying for a I time with Mrs. A. Coble. News was receive,i i,ero 0f the death of Stephen Short of 818 Rich- moIlt avonue( Scranton, who escaped a watery grave Nov. 4 at Locklin's ,ake hore whUe he and frlend( George Kinback, were fishing. It ls clallned the shock was so great : that he never enUreiy recovered. Ho Au ,7 at c ln the mornIne from a stroke of paralysis. Mrr Short was bom In New York state In 1S4 4 and went to Scranton four years later and had Bince lived there. He was a member of the grocery firm of Dlmllch & Short and also a member of the Odd Fellows. He ls survived by the following children: Cornelia Short and Mrs. H. A. Dlm llch; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Hart and Miss Sophia Westhouse, and two grandsons, Stephen and Carl. The funernl was held at his home Friday at 2.30. Interment was In Dun more cemetery. Frank Buckingham was the lucky one to win the quilt and Miss Louise Sowdenburg the china fruit or salad bowl, the prizes awarded at the Re bekah fair. Miss Hazel James is entertaining her couBln, Miss Rachel Shaffer of Gravity. Tho Lake View house lias a great many boarders. Miss Maude Locklln ls convalescing nicely. HAWLEY. Damming New Lake Burial of Mrs. Itnumun Fine String of Pick erel. Mr. Racker, the baker, has launch ed a very pretty new boat on the Paupack. The Paupack Water company have finished surveying about Wilson- ville and now have their gang at work up tho river, near Ledgedale. Norman Vandemart took 25 pick eral from the Paupack Saturday. Fred Relneke, who was taken to his home at Lakevllle Sunday in a critical condition, ls some better. W. T. Suydain, Sr., 1ms hnd bis j silk mill plant ro-roofed with tin. I Ills etone mansion Is now being re-, paired. I G. A. Kessler of Damascus has j been making a several days' visit j with his daughter In WlisonvlUe. I Mr. and Mrs. D. .T. Brnnnlng called j nt tho Woodslde cottage Sunday. s- "ortree or Ariel, wun two Stanley steamer automobiles, one t tun uy nm son rioyu, tne oiner uy 1 lils son Howell, made a tour of a section or the county Sunday. They i ode through Honesdale to Hawley and cnlled on relatives at Wllson vllle on the way home. They were accompanied by Mrs. Bortree's niece, Mrs. King, of Brooklyn, N. Y her husband and son. Mrs. King is n daughter of George Sidel, who was adopted nnd lived with the late Ja cob Sledler, who conducted a hard ware store In Hawley. George Sidel left here some 38 years ago. Miss Rachel Shaffer of Gravity called on Mrs. George Helchelbeck Tuesday. The Misses Burnett returned to the city Tuesday. While bis parents arc away on their vacation, Arthur Wnll will stay a week at Wcstbrook, Pike county. W. W. Cook, a distinguished cor poration lawyer of New York and a member of the Blooming Grove Hunting nnd Fishing club, who re cently purchased the Rollson estate, comprising GOO acres, at the Knob, Pike county, is having built n con crete dam 27 feet In height, which will make a good-sized lake. The lake will be stocked with fish and I will also be used to furnish power for any purpose to which the owner may see fit to apply It. Mrs. Edward Bauman, daughter of Henry Reafler, the Church street blacksmith, died at the home of her parents on Saturday, aged 27. Five years ago she was married to Ed ward Bauman, a glass cutter, who two ago followed William Gibbs to Stroudsburg, where he was working at his trade. The funeral was held at the Lutheran church Tuesday. Rev. Rudolph Lucas conducted the services. Interment was In Walnut Grove cemetery. She leaves no chil dren. Miss Cclla Langan has moved her millinery goods across the street to the Gus Frank building, where she is presenting a fine display STERLING. Grange Meeting Good One People That Visit nnd Are Visited. Granville Webster has a fine gov ernment position at Pittsburg, but is now home on a vacation. Joseph Fergerson Is now at Dr. R. B. Stevens' at Dunmore, where he has undergone a surgical opera tion. Sunday morning Rev. Mlksell preached at the West Sterling school house and expects to preach again In two weeks. Claud Bortree has purchased F. G. Swingle's farm for $2,600, possession to be given next spring. Mrs. Lizzie Hildebrant has return ed to Cortland, N. Y. She has been visiting her sister-in-law, Mrs. A. J. Cross. I. G. Williams has Just finished threshing over 500 bushels of oats for P. W. Gillen. Oats are a pretty good crop here. A. B. Williams is now attending the P. O. S. of A. state camp at Eas ton. Last week Rev. F. L. Hartford and A. C. Howe were delegates to Pomona Grange, No. 91, at Canaan. For over one year Grover Shear has faithfully carried the mall from Moscow to Ledgedale and on Aug. 19 he engaged a young driver to help him. Congratulations! Earl Rockwell, contractor, and George Ball, carpenter, have just completed two new porches at the high school building. John Schaef fer was the boss mason. Mrs. I. M. KIpp is now at a Scran ton hospital. Mrs. Catherine Van Campen of Throop ls tho guest of her sister, Mrs. R. B. Simons. S. N. Cross pleasantly spent last week at Atlantic City and Philadel phia. The Sterling Grange had a pic nic Saturday. Revs. Boyce and Webster were the speakers. George Gilpin gave a reading and the choir sang. The Sterling team and the Maple wood boys crossed bats, with the score of 28 to 8 in favor ot the homo team. Myrtle Cross is home on a vaca tion from a Scranton hospital, where she Is studying to be n trained nurse. Floyd Cross Is spending the week at Goose pond. AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. The Citizen, which is now ac knowledged to bo the lending news paper in Wayne county, makes the following ofTer: Wo will send you The Citizen for ono year (104 issues) for $1.50 and give you ono dollar's worth ot Citi zen Coupons, which will be accepted as cash by the leading mercliants of Honesdale. MILANVILLE. J. J. McCullough and Harmon Wed eral are enjoying the sea breezes for a fortnight. Mrs. E. A. Carpenter ls with her grandmother, Mrs. D. H. Beach, af ter a visit with her cousin, Mrs. Wil liam Crane, at Port Byran, N. J. Mrs. M. L. Skinner entertained Mrs. Martha Bedford ot Narrows burg, N. Y last week. Miss Agnes Drlscoll ot Brooklyn, N. Y will bo the guest ot Miss Edna Luscombo this week. Klngsley McCullough has returned to Blnghamton, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tyler and children, Martha hnd 'Ralph' of Cort- lnnd, N. arrived Sundny to, spend some time with Mr. nnd Mrs. G. H. I Tyler. Herbert inman ot Washington, u. C, Is spending ills vacation with his mother, airs. Abigail niman. Volney Skinner was In Port Jer- vis, N. Y., nnd Honesdale last week. Miss May Burcher of Port Jervls, N. Y., spent a pnrt of Inst week at Volney Skinner's. Paul lllman of Buffalo, N. Y Is spending n few days In town. Miss Minnie Gay, who has been visiting in Scrnnton nnd Union the past six weeks, is expected home this week. lt. It. Beegle, for nearly eight years manager of the creamery at Skinners FnllB, N. Y., has resigned to accept a position with the Erie. Both the railroad company and Wells Fargo Express compnny appreciate Mr. Beegle's business ability nnd have expressed It In a substantial way. A number from here nttended the Baptist association nt Damascus this week. Those who nttended the Sunday school picnic report a very good time. Rev. nnd Mrs. Walter Gallant of Pnterson, N. J., nre guests of Mrs. D. H. Beach. Rev. Gallant was for several years pastor of the Damascus church. Mrs. George Holdridge of Brook lyn, N. Y., ls visiting friends in town. Miss Helen Yerkes Is spending the week in Honesdale. UNION. last week's paper, there will be a berry pickers go in parties and momentarily tne announcement ot a clambake Wednesday. All are lnvlt- camp upon the ground. receivership for the property, the e(1 When a wagon load Is taken the showing for 1910 becomes the more Mrs Luke Mortrldge and son. fruit is measured and sent to town ' significant. Since that time the Walne'r. of Milanville are visiting rel- In charge of one of the party, who . property has undergone a consider atives In this place i can be relied upon to find a market ' able amount of improvement and de- Mr and"Mrs Alva Gifford visited for the same and return with the , velopraent. its cars and engines have of nL. nt i.nnfcnnt Sun-1 oroceeds. The berries at present been raised to a higher standard of (jaj ' William Stephen of New York Is 1 very sick at the home of his mother, I Mrs s. A. Stenhens. Dr. Corson of Rlleyvllle Is the attending physician. "NEWFOUNDLAND. An illustrated service on "Pil grim's Progress" will be given In the Moravian church Sunday evening i next nt 7.30 o'clock. , Mrs. Lelbert and son, Richard, of! Bethlehem are visiting Rev. and Mrs. I A. E. Francke. Dr. Decker has returned to Phila delphia. Quite a number of New York peo ple are boarding nt Hiawatha and Hopedale cottages. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lange and son, Russell, of Brooklyn, N. Y., were callers in town Saturday. Mrs. W. H. Rommell and little daughter, Jay, of Carlisle are visit ing the home ot Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Eberhardt. Malcolm Jones has returned from Valparaiso, Ind., where he has been attending college. Mrs. Theodore Harvey and her bnby daughter have returned to their home in Westfield, N. J. A. J. Connelly is on the sick list. Don't forget the Children's day ser vice at the Moravian church next Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. REUNION OF THE ELKS. High Old Times nt Bradford For Antiercd Brethren of Pennsylva nia. BRADFORD, Aug. 25. The first session of the fourth annual reunion of the Pennsylvania Elks' Reunion association was begun here Wednes day. I There Is a good-sized representa-1 Hon from Philadelphia, Harrlsburg and Scrnnton, with scattering dele gations from nearly all the cities. The western and central Pennsylva nia delegation is large. A green corn shoot, under the au spices of the Bradford Gun club, was , a feature. L. E. Mallory shot 261 straight targets without a miss. ( Charles F. Willard of the Curtlss i aviation forces made two very suc-i cessful flights ln a biplane In the presence of G.000 people, five miles below tho city. T nn , V. L wm MrnnWn,l ? mB?J?. John K. Tener, who promised May- Massachusetts summer resort. The Elk parade will be held Fri day afternoon. Mark P. Lull of Munders, Pa., a convention visitor, fell from a street car and fractured his skull. He died at his son's home. SCRANTON BUSINESS COLLEGE. The old reliable Bchool, the Scran ton Business College, Court House Square, Scranton, Pa., will begin Its seventeenth year on Tuesday, Sept. 6th. Monday, Labor Day, will be Enrollment Day. Write tor litera ture H. D. Buck, Principal. Fair Fan Tell mo, Charlie, what's the squeeze play? The Expert Oh, it would take too long to explain It here. I'll drop around this evening and show youl Exchange. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. !bi Kind You Hava Always BougM Bears the Signature of berries on a mountain. Indlgnnnt Natives Grnb nil Huckle-' berries to Keep Trust From , Getting 'Km. MIDDLETOWN, Aug. 25. A Montlcello corresnondent of tho Mid- dletown Arcus writes tliat. fearing that negotiations for the purchase 0f Buck mountain in Sullivan coun- ty by New York capitalists might result disastrously to their Interests should the deal be put through be- foro the berry season ends, a raid tho Erie should have been able to u,)on the huckleberry crop has been show a surplus for the year suillcient instituted by the Indignant natives In volume to have met full 4 per 0f that locality and thousands of cent, dividends on both clnsses of quarts are being picked and carried preferred stock and at the same time 0ff unly. Not only hnve the Inhab- leave a balance available for the Hants of that thinly populated sec- Junior issue, equal to 2. SO per cent, tlon lying In the vicinity of Buck'wn the 112, 378,900 now outstand- mountain been Incited to Immedl- Ing. Deducting the $737,087 charg- nte action by the widely circulated ed to Income for additions nnd bet- report, but tho countryside for miles terments during the year, It Is found around Is In n state of feverish ex-1 that there Is still left a balance or cltement. 1 surplus sufflclent to meet full 4 per This year's huckleberry yield on I cent, requirements of the preferred nuci mountain eclipses in quan- I stocks and have left a balance avall- titv. nn wnll as nualltv. anvthine able for the common equal to 2.23 eVer before known. While Buck mountain Is in Itself a natural curiosity, and will nrob- ni,iv niWavs remain ns such, regard-! caa 0f wn0 owns the land, the ' huckleberry bushes, which spread I ije a blanket over Its entire sur-! lace and arc loaded with ripe, blue 1 fruit just now, render it a truly I wonderful sight. At the summit of i ile mountain one may gaze over n ' territory of hundreds of acres un-j obstructed by any growth other than the huckleberry shrub. The berry pickers, who come from miles nround nnd number hundreds, work from daylight till dark with only an occasional interruption caus ed b.v a rattlesnake or deer, which seem to be about the only evidences I nf nnlmnl life in that localltv. The bring 10 cents per quart and a man or woman can pick from 50 to 75 quarts In a day of twelve hours. Hannah Conklln, living within a stones throw ot iiuck mountain, picks more berries than any other womnn In that locality. She has absolutely no fear of a rattlesnake and claims the wildest deer that roams Buck mountain will permit her t0 gtroke its glossy ulde Come to the fnlr early in the morning and stay ull (lay. Bring your lunch and enjoy nn outing. Meet your friends and neighbors. Every effort will be made to make the patrons of this fnlr happy nnd comfortable. Leave your daily hum drum life for ii day nt the fair. 113. Joseph ! Sibley. Republican nominee for con-, the Twentyeighth district.! announcing his withdrawal from the In a brief statement Sibley states that when be went Into the campaign his eyesight was troubling lilm, but since ttiat time lie had suffered a gen eral breakdown with tieart trouble. He also states that bis wife's health ls mor. For these reasons he says It ls impossible for him to undergo the rigors of another campaign. What ef fect his withdrawal will have on the audit of Sibley's campaign expenses account which was to have been made before Judge Crlswell of Franklin Aug. 20 Is a matter of speculation, but It Is believed the proceedings started by W. J. Breen of OH City, Demo cratic nominee for congress ln this district, will bo dropped. Sibley de feated Nelson H. Wheeler, present congressman, nt the June primaries by COO votes. In his sworn statement of expenses Incurred during the campaign Sibley stated that he Bpent $42,000, or $4.80 for every vote he received in the dis trict Mentioned aa a possible succes sor to Blbley are James P. Wbltla of kidnaping fame; Colonel W. N. Hill ings of OU City and Hon. Nelson P. Wheeler of Endeavor, Pa. I Candidate Who Spent $42,000 , j For Nomination Withdraws. ' Sharon, Pa . Aug business of thi: erie. Earnings Very Favorable mid OlHccrs Tnlk In Optimistic Tones. Earnings of the Erie Railroad company for the fiscal year ended June 30 last were the most favor- ever Previously published in the history of the company, so far as the gross is concernea, while the net ex- ceeded any previous year as far bac s laud, wnicn wns a most excep- tlonnl year. It Is significant that per cent, on the outstanding amount mentioned above. The showing by the company for the last ilscal period was even better than bad been expected, although it was n foregone conclusion that the Anal operating results for the 12 months would be the most gratifying that had come to light for a number of years pnst. "Other Income" of the company enjoyed the phenomenal Increase of about $1,000,000, or 33.44 per cent, as compared with the year previous, the Improvement hav ing been the rsult of nn unusually good year's earnings in the company's coal department. When consideration Is given to the fact that only a couple of years ago the company along and Wall was struggling street awaited efficiency, as well as new ones added, so that at the present time the road is in condition to operate effectively at all times. Quite in contrast with a few years ago the present ser vice of the road, as Its freight and passenger business is now handled promptly and considerable prestige is being gained for the property ln this respect. Attention is called to the fact that in January last, when snow blockades were prevalent throughout the country, both East and West, the Erie showed a gain of 22 per cent in car movement, while in February, when practically the same conditions prevailed, the increase was over IS per cent. This achievement, according to those In a position to speak with authority, was the result of the excellent condition of the company's engines and rolling stock as a whole, and the greater efficiency of operation. In the last few years the Erie has made many Improvements which will before long tend to greatly Increase the company's business. One of these, and perhaps the most import ant, was the completion of the open cut through Bergen hill, back of Jer- I sey City. Several other cutoffs which ! have been completed will eventually mean a great saving for the com pany nnd increased gross earnings It would seem, then, that a continu ance of the present policy of turning back surplus into rehabilitation of the property will ln the long run prove very beneficial. New York News Bureau. OUR SHAFT IS RISING. Memorial Monument to Pennsjivn nia Soldiers nt Gettysburg to Be Dedicated Sept. 27. GETTYSBURG, Aug. 25. The magnificent monument which the state of Pennsylvania is erecting as a . memorial to the soldiers of the commonwealth who fought In the bnttle which turned the tide of the Civil war Is rapidly nearing com pletion. It will be dedicnted Sept The memorial cost $150,000. It stands at the junction of Hancock and Pleasant avenues, a short dis tance to the left of the Bloody Angle. The design was made by W. L, Cattrell, a New York architect, In a compeume coiim. i u. the, monument is 100 feet square and the enclosed arch sixty feet i "- "u " ."tv the Goddess of Victory, twenty-one feet high, surmounts the great dome. From the ground to tho tip of this statue the height is 101 feet. The memorial ls of granite. There are bas-relief figures of Lincoln and Curtln, each eight feet tall, at the main entrance to the arch. One hundred bronze tablets are on the facade. They are six feet high and three feet wide and con tain the names of all the Pennsylva nia soldiers who participated in the battle. It ls estimated that these names aggregate about 22,000. A wide opening to admit a stair case 13 cut on tho face ot the foun dation. This leads to a wide es planade, which passes around the four columns on which the dame rests. This esplanade makes the memorial the greatest observatory of tho battlefield. Co. M, 17th Cavalry, was organ ized in Honesdale, under Col. Coe Durland, Among its men were J. B. Cook, Pete Cullom, William Jus tin, Earl Sherwood, George Van Wostrall, Ed. Belknap, John Keen, "Hub" Rounds and George Sampson.