niE CITIZEN, FUIDAY, SKITEMUKU 2, J 010. CENT A WORD gl)OI3IOIGIOK0!eiOK)IO)OIC FOR SALE OK HUNT A house on Wood avenue. For particulars Inquire of Mrs. M. J. Kelly, 1704 Wood avenue. 70elC LOST On road to Seolyvtllo, Beth any, Honesdalc, a chatelaine bng containing small sum of money, handkerchief and Erie ticket, Hones dale to West Hawley, dated Aug. 17th. Finder return to MRS. LEON BOSS, 4 Durland Block. 70tl TUY a 15-cent hot lunch, served nt Heumann's restaurant from 11.30 to 1.30 p. m. WOMAN WANTED for kitchen. Good wages. Heumann's Restaurant. FOR SALE A Ford roadster; first class. A. E. BRYANT. C9t2 WANTED A good licensed com mercial hotel, 25 to 30 rooms. Must bear Investigation. Send full particulars by letter. Address Com mercial, Gramercy Hotel, Asbury Park, N. J. 3t eol. FOR SALE High bred trotting and pacing horses, brood mares and colts. A number can show 2.30 or better. A chance to get a good horse worth the money. J. J. Jer myn, 119 Wyoming avenue, Scran ton, Pa. OltS WANTED Three good practical painters. Inquire of J. Ed. Cook. 3t. FOR SALE Kelly & Steinman brick factory building, including en gine, boiler and shafting. Inquire o J. B. Robinson. 50tf. LOCAL MENTION. Make your plans early to be nn exhibitor hi ns many departments n9 yon can, ami thus do your part toward making tho fair this year larger and better tlinn any exhibi tion of former years. The buildings and grounds were never In so fine condition. H is the nlni of the so ciety to make this fair one of the very best in this section, and that tills mny bo done we nsk for the help of every resident of the county. Conic with your family and join in the festivities of this annual reunion of the people of this county. There will bo something to please every one, from the youngest to tho oldest, and by helping to increase the ex hibits, and by swelling tho numbers In attendance, you can materially as sist in making this annual exhibition a splendid success. Menner & Co'a store will be closed Monday, Sept. 5th. Rev. G. S. Wendell will conduct public services and preach at the Dyberry Baptist church Sunday af ternoon next at 2.30 o'clock. Tho new piano in the house of Texas No. 4 hose company was tried out at the dance Wednesday night, when the Ladies' Improvement so ciety took charge of the entertain ing. Samuel Slater of Pike street, Carbondale, aged 40, died Tuesday. His wife and the following children survive: Philip, William, Irving and Jennie. The body will bo brought to Honesdale, where interment will be made Friday. At the First Baptist church ser vices will be held on Sunday next at 10.30 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. with preaching by the pastor. The com munion of the Lord's supper will be observed at the close of the morn ing worship. Sunday school at 11.45 a. m. Young People's meet ing will be held at C.30 p. m. A systematic plan for the rob bing of the Lehigh Valley road by Illegal sale of tickets has been un earthed by the company's detectives at Hoboken. The cluo that led to the unmasking of the men was dis covered by a boy who swept out one of the stations. The tickets he came across did not correspond with the series on sale and this fact was communicated to a detective. Af ter an investigation It was found that tho agents were in a plot to steal tickets and dispose of them. The summer term of Miss Keen's school closed Friday last for a week's vacation. In spolliug B class pupils who obtained tho great est number of headmarks were, Thelma Markey 8, Earlo Arnold 8, Marion Knorr 7, Nicholas Stapleton 7, Robert Cory 4. In tho C class, Russell W. Pohle and Robert Crist did well in reading nnd Carl F. Marsh In number work, while little Helen Marsh and Francis Sherwood made a fair beginning in reading. Those who did best this summer in penmanship were George B. Llght hiser. Nicholas Stapleton, Carl F. Marsh. Tho fall term will com menco Tuesday. Honesdalo is coming to tho front in tho matter of up-to-date im provements. Wayne's capital will soon be able to boast of a handsome modern hotel which will bo built by capitalists on historic Irving Cliff. The site of tho new hostelry 1b nn excellent ono, as It affords a sweeping view of tho town. It was named in honor of Washington Irv ing on tho occasion of that famous author's visit to Honesdalo In com pany with Philip Hone a good many years ago. Tho new hotel should prove a success and bo tho means of attracting many persons to the Maple City, which la ono of tho most de lightful places In tho state. Its natural beauty and healthful loca tion are not surpassed anywhere else In Pennsylvania. Scranton Truth. Attention, Veterans! Regular meeting of Captain Ham post on Friday evening, Sopt. 2. Prepara tions for nttcndlng tho National En campment at Atlantic City on Sep tember 19. Cyrenus Ball is D. & II. con ductor between Honcsdnlo nnd. Car bondale Just now, for Conductor Ward Is taking n little vacation. Mr. Ball Is greeted by Wayne and Lack awanna county friends dally on the short train over tho Mooslcs. Eddlo Huyck, tho clover steeple jack from Deposit, could not shin the Methodist steeplo today because of the forbidding wenther, hut ho and the other members of tho slate roofing concern put In their time to good ndvantage mixing gold leaf nnd getting ready to retouch the weather vane. Crosses," A. J. Huyck, tho veteran roofer, says are plain sail ing, hut the weather vanes are more touchy jobs to handle. In Athletic hall, South Scran ton, Fred Foster, Scrnnton's heavy weight champion wrestler, will meet Joe TIplady of Olyphant, who claims tho welterweight championship of tho county, tonight. The match is a 'handicap ono, Foster agreeing to throw tho Oljsphnnt man three times In thirty minutes. It Is for a side bet of 250 apiece. Foster finished his training Tuesday and is In fine trim for a hard tussle. TIplady Is also declared to be In tiptop shape. Services will be resumed in the Presbyterian church Sunday. The pastor will preach at 10.30 n. m. A service of unusual interest will bo held In tho evening at 7.30. This is Laborday Sunday. Addresses will he made by A. T. Searle, Homer Greene, Esq., and Thomas P. Lovely of Bos ton, an officer of tho Boot and Shoe makers' Labor union. Sonner's or chestra will assist with the music. A cordial invitation is given to all, particularly working men and women. Four young men more or less well known In the borough aim to pass Labor day and the day before in New York, going down in a buzz wagon. Ono fellow, an agreeable salesman In a retail store, promised to join the gasoline Journey to the metropolis and then at the eleventh hour renigged, his excuse being that the new suit in which he Invested the other day would bo ruined by the dust and so on that might be encountered between Honesdale and New York. The Boy Scout movement is still being agitated, though at present in a quiet way, by the Honesdale men and women Interested in tho organ ization of a band here. All that is needed, according to the man, a professional man, most Impressed by the feasibility of the idea, Is somebody to take hold of the move ment as an organizer. The right man, this informant stated, has not yet been found. In Scranton, Har risburg, Altoona and other Pennsyl vania cities the Scouts are in good shape, both numerically and fi nancially, and are accomplishing a practical work by Increasing the number of boys willing to cut out cigarettes, cheap novels, smutty talk and low associates as the es sential steps toward decent boyhood. It is expected that by cool wejither a suitable man will have been found nnd that then the training of the lads will be started in good earnest. A non-union glasscutter from tho Herbeck-Demer shops was jeer ed and hissed and called a scab by about 100 men as he crossed the Sixth street bridge Tuesday night Just before G o'clock. Policeman Canavan, who was sent for, cama In citizen's clothes and quieted the crowd. County Detective Spencer was also a peacemaker. Late that night, not far from the German Catholic church, tho same man, this time on his way from tho Lyric, where he had witnessed "Home Ties," was hissed and called a scab and addressed by other opprobrious1 names. George Wolfe, who was with hlni, reached for a gun and fired two shots In tho air. Police man Canavan, who had been follow ing the party of 30 or 40 men, now came up and dispersed tho erowd that was annoying tho two men. Afterward ho took Wolfo and his wife up Main street to Policeman DeGroat's post, and the latter es corted them to tho borough lino on their way home. Thoughtful men, alive to tho sharp problem of keeping tho young folks on tho farm from drifting to, the city and also wise to tho neces sity of teaching farming as a sci ence, hope tho agricultural course decided on by tho school board last year may speedily bo put In opera tion. Ono of them, a leading law yer of Wayno county, said Wednes day that Pennsylvania farmers could ralso apples as good as thoso raised by tho farmors of Oregon, tho best paid orchardlsts In tho world, If tho apple meu of tho Koystono stato had tho benefit of tho samo scientific applo training and know how to combat tho worms that chow tho fruit to pieces and cut tho crop In two by their depredations. Ho added that somo of tho youngsters think a farming course is designed to romodol them Into countrymen, but this unfortunate fallacy of tho Juveniles ho felt suro can bo over come just so Boon as the hoys and girls boo what a fascinating study it is to learn about soils and seeds and tho production of crops that ultimately feed the local population. The farming course has mado good in a number of cities thnt have tried It. Most level-headed parents with whom wo havo discussed Us practi cability confess they would like to seo it tried out In Honesdale. ... Regular September council meeting tonight. St. John's church lawn, has been plowed up by the men nt work under the direction of F. C. Lutes, the ex port landscapo gardener from Ohio. Much stone has been pulled up and' carted away. The Job of beautifying the grounds takes time, but It will bo thorough. Mr, and Mrs. Horaco Smith of Syracuse, N. Y., were made hoppy last week by tho arrival of a young traveling man who came to Join their family circle. Mr. and Mrs. Smith's family now consists of two boys. The former Is a son of Mr. nnd Mrs. E. T. Smith of Thirteenth street. There will he no general picnic on the golf links on Labor day but coffee will he served from 3 to 7.30 and In tho evening there will bo a Informal danco for the members. Tho annual cup tournnment will be played off during the day. It Is hop ed that as many members ns possibly can do so will nrrango to be present during tho day and evening. The young fellow from the hill who started the row on tho special train from Lake Lodore Sunday night, n row during which a window was broken and considerable com motion produced, was nrrested Wed nesday by Detective Spencer and n D. & H. gumshoe mnn detailed to work up the case. Mr. Spencer took the fellow before Justice Smith, to whom the prisoner said "I'm guilty and I want to settle for tho thing." Justice Smith, who says the accused youth Is far from a bad boy, fined him $1 and then remitted the flno. The creation of an nrniy of 40, 000 notaries public was authorized by the postofllce department in ac cordance with legislation enacted during the past session of Congress. All carriers of the rural delivery mall service are now required by tho department to execute vouchers for United States pensioners resid ing on their routes, for which ser vice they are to receive 25 cents for each voucher executed. The estab lishment of the rural free delivery service should do the work previous ly performed by the fourth-class postmasters. Three violations of the liquor tax law have recently been recorded by the courts in Sullivan county. State Commissioner of Excise Clem ents reports that he has received ?500 from Annie J. Purcell of Monti cello In payment of the bond in a suit brought against her for violat ing the liquor tax law by selling on Sunday. Suit has also been brought against Samuel O'Krom of Center vllle for the illegal selling of liquor on Sunday. It is also reported on good authority that a hotelkeeper of Parksville named Leinhardt has been fined for selling liquor to a man who was posted. Pay-as-you-enter cars will soon be spinning over the system of the Scranton Railway company. They were ordered several months anil de livery was promised for early fall. It has not been decided .on what lines they will be placed but tho probabilities aro they will bo on the lines where traffic is heaviest. Those style cars are being bought as an experiment. If they show good re sults, It is probable there will be a larger order sent in at once. The cars are built along the most com fortable lines. Passengers enter by the rear platform, paying fare as they enter. They leave by the front platform. This system has been in uso in the big cities some time and has been found successful in re lieving congestion. Honesdalo Is to have at least one more ball game before the season of 1910 goes out of business. Dis appointed by the Clinton, Conn., team he expected to get, Capt. Kup fer got busy Tuesday and that night telephoned Archbald for a game. Tho team from over tho mountains that played White Mills on Hopta soph day at Lake Lodore will get hore on the 9.25 Saturday morning, and tho game on tho silk mill grounds will bo called at 3 sharp. Manager Moono of tho visiting team is sanguine his boys can lick Hones dale. Ho says Archbald is a match or more for White Mills, tho team from whom Honesdalo took a series of five games during July and Au gust, and he will, ho says, he much disappointed If his tenm takes tho homo train defeated. "Willie" Doucher will pitch for Archbald. Ho Is a good twlrler, but so is Bennlo Hessllng and so is young Gregor. A fast game Is expected. R. M. Stocker is counsel for Chnuncey Tyler, tho young man from Masthopo In jail tho past six weeks for tho part ho Is alleged to havo taken in tho car-cracking and beer stealing at Hawley tho night of July 2. Mr. Stocker Is of tho opinion that tho four confessions Tylor has mado to Herman Harmes, Frank Kelly, N. B. Spencer and one other man that quizzed him before ho retained his present lawyer are all a little off and that the statement made In jail tho other day to Mr. Stocker is tho only confession nccordlng to Hoylo. In tho Harmes confession or rath or confessions, for Tylor mado two to tho Hawley lawyer Olllo Wright and Joo Kelly woro not In tho Job at all. Wright and Kelly aro rep resented by Mr. Harmes. Tyler's wlfo, a fairly prepossessing young woman, sticks by her husband steadfastly and visits him sometimes two or three times a day, hut neith er sbo nor any of tho friends of tho young man from Masthopo have been able to get anybody to go ball for him. Tyler's health In tho Jail Is pretty fair, Thero ard various ways by which I tho members of the Sknt club pro pose to get to Nowark, N. J., tho scene of tho Labor day tournnment. Some, It Is expected, will board Erlo trains at Honcsdnlo nnd go direct, but Jonns Katz, Leopold Blumcn thal nnd Leo Freeman havd thought out a dlfforent and more novel trip. They will shut up shop Saturday night at 10 and drive to Narrows burg and nt that point board the Eric main line mall train due in Narrowsburg at 2.50 and In New York at 7. Tho transfer from Now York to the Jersey side of tho Hud son will bo made via tho now North 1 river tunnel. The tournnment lasts two days and the program this year , Is particularly complete and sug gestlvo of solid enjoyment for the Skats. ( WANTED Canvassers to sell pet- 1 tlconts. Llhernl commission paid. 1 Economy Mfg. Co., Rockwood, N. j Y. C7t4 PERSONAL MENTION Miss Grace McNally of Scranton Is the guest of Honesdnle friends. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Dunning aro spending the week in Syracuse, N. 1 Y. Mrs. George Olsen and son, How-' ard, have returned to Brooklyn, N. Y- J John Wolfslagel of Equlnunkwns1 in town Wednesday on a business trip. , Mrs. P. H. Ilof was at Cherry, Ridge Wednesday, the guest of rel-' atlves. ! Mrs. Harvey Welch Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Westpfhal of' Scranton. j Hal Kimble has returned from a j six weeks' visit with friends in tho metropolis. - Miss Marie Seaman has returned . to Carbondale after several weeks' In Honesdale. Conductor Ward put on plain ' clothes Wednesday and went to the Wllkes-Barre fair. Angus Lawyer has returned to his duties in New York after spending his vacation here. Miss Annie Miles and Miss Mar jorle Howe of New York are visiting friends in Honesdale. H. C. Jackson of Damascus, Re publican legislative candidate, was in Honesdale Wednesday. Mrs. Ford and daughter, Loretta, of Fairmount, Va., spent Monday with Honesdale relatives. Jonas Katz went to Reading Wed nesday. He will go to Newark, N. J., with the Skat club Saturday. Mrs. Nicholas B. Spencer and two children got back today from Lake Ariel, where they went July 1 for the summer. Emmett Groner, rural carrier of No. 1, R. F. D., spent last week in Delaware, W. Va., celebrating Old Home week. Miss Pauline Penwarden has re turned to Carbondale, after a 10 days' visit at the home of her uncle, G. W. Penwarden. Mrs. T. Seymour and daughter, Gertrude, of Jersey City are visiting at the home of her brother, John D. Bryant, of East street. Dr. and Mrs. Tracy Clark and two sisters of Macon street, Brooklyn, N. Y., are visiting Frederick Farn ham of North Main street. Senator Miles C. Rowland of Pike county came Wednesday to attend the funeral of his brother, Orvllle L. Rowland, who will ho buried to morrow. Miss Bessie Decker of Beach lake is making a short visit with Hones dale relatives. She Is on her way to teach school at Holllstervllle and will stop off at Peckvllle. Reuben Lancaster of South Ster ling was In town Thursday on busi ness. Being well known to so many Honesdnle people kept him busy shaking hands while hore. Miss Louisa Miszler, the experi enced table girl at tho Wayno hotel, returns today from a short vacation, which sho has spent at various places not far from Honesdale. William Freund, who has been working in tho census department at Washington, relinquished his posi tion and Is at his homo prepara tory to entering Lafayette college. Miss Helen O'Nolll, who has been visiting at her homo hero for tho past two weeks, leaves Friday morn ing for Philadelphia, where sho will make a short visit with relatives. On September 7 Miss O'Neill enters tho Mt. St. Joseph convent, Sisters of Mercy, Hartford, Conn. Edward WIntermute, n former woll known resident of this city, and for tho past six years "ono of the ilnest," of Brooklyn, N. Y., is in town greeting his many friends and relatives, who hardly reallzo ho Is tho samo old "Ed." of yoro. Ho tips the scales at about 250 pounds, and has a "beat" In tho residential section of Brooklyn, In precinct 282, which, ho assures us, Is a model one; not much to do but walk the limits, swinging a stick and bow to tho ladles, although onco In a while ho has a "scrap" a llttlo to keep up ap pearance. Ho Is visiting his father, W. II. WIntermute, and sister, at 5 Holbrook street for a major portion of his ton days vacation. Ho will visit at Hawley and Honesdalo ore the tlmo limit expires. May his shadow never grow less and may ho round out bis 20 years In good style, and enjoy his pension to tho utmost, is tho wish of his friends. Port Jervis (N. Y.) Gazette;'' A DHN'IAL FROM MR. Kll'l As tho editor of tho Bradford Ar gus tins seen fit to mnko a personal attack on me ns a candidate for member of Congress, nnd has accus ed mo of statements I never made, I tnko this way to deny his false charges and have asked him to print my reply In the Argus. In tho first place I nover told him thnt I had left tho Democratic party, nor have I stated to Editor Parsons that I would not vote for any Demo crat. I havo always tried to sup port fit men. I havo always regard ed tho wishes of my follow citizens ns supremo. I have not pledged myself to the bosses or machine, nnd I would' rather stay at homo than go with the understanding that 1 must vote for any party measure without regard to how that meas ure would effect the people of the wholo district. What I did say to Mr. Parsons was thnt I would not support the candi dates at the Allentown convention. I havo no faith In party Juggling nor party prostitution, and In stato af fairs I Intend to support such men as have proved themselves honest In office and effective In working for the people. To my mind a good Democrat cannot support the Penrose machine, and If ho dislikes tho machine In tho opposite party, ho has no right to support one In his own party. In this connection I say as earnestly as I know how that I admire the glorious and splendid record of Wil liam H. Berry, who as state treas urer smashed the combination of graft and corruption in Harrlsburg and compelled tho political crooks to answer at the bar of Justice. I am sorry that tho Allentown convention did not rise to the op portunity on nominating Mr. Berry for governor. In all my political career I have been opposed by the Republican machine, and now It is strange to find a so-called Democrat ic paper using the ammunition of tho Republican machine and oppos ing me, without a doubt because I am not the kind of a Democrat that Cannon and Penrose would like to seo elected. This is my pledge to the people, Republicans and Democrats, If elect ed I will constantly support all measures that will benefit the peo ple of the district, I will oppose all measures that are detrimental to progresslveness, and I will oppose Cannon and all that Cannonism rep resents. I will regard the people of the district as the only bosses to whom I am responsible. If this is undem ocratic and disloyal, then I suppose I am guilty, but I am willing to rest my case in the hands of the peo ple. GEO. W. KIPP. P. S. I do not Intend in any way to cast a reflection on Mr. Grim personally. Towanda, Pa., Sept. 1, 1910. I EVER INCREASING. g A bank account is like a snowballroll it rgently Q t along and it will get larger (almost without your b noticing it) as the days go by. Like the snowball, X too, the hardest work is making the first deposit, giv- g ing it the first push, after which the initial impetus p gains as the ball runs down, the bank gaccount roils g t up We want to help you with your financial snow- g ball. X FARMERS and MECHANICS BANK. 4-fOOOO0OfM0OOf4OO0tOOOC00'H--f-f0OO--f-fOOO'H-t 'Come Back' Sale f - f - t - f Having closed up our branch store at Delhi, N. Y. we will close our stock at HALF PRICE AT OUR POPULAR STAND Full line of Men's, Gents' and Children's cloth ing and Gents' Furnishings must go to make room for our large fall stock. Bregstein Bros., Leading Clothiers, Honesdale, Pa. LIKE HAWLEY CASE CAR LOOTKI) FOR HKKR AS IT STOOD IN RAILROAD YARD LIEUT. JOHNSTON AND "LONG" KELLY, ERIi: COPS, AT WORK ON CASE PROMINENT YOUNO MEN .MAY RE THE CULPRITS. NARROWSBURG, Sept. l.--A carload of beer that stood on tho switch at Narrowsburg was broken into and a cask of beer taken out. Considerable speculation has been going on among the town people as to who the perpetrators of the theft wore, and thoso who claim to know say that several of the most prom inent young men In town aro Im plicated. It appears that the carload of beer was switched In nt Narrowsburg on the morning in question, consigned to George Vogt, Charles VonKlelst and C. G. Reers. During the day Vogt and VonKlelst had taken their beer out of the car and then sealed the door. Some time during the night tho seal was broken and the cask of beer removed, and It Is said that tho deed was done after eleven o'clock, which is the closing hour for all ho tels and saloons. Thero had been a dance In town that evening and the young men who are said to be implicated probably attended the dance and, desiring more liquid refreshments after the I closing hour, had helped themselves, j acting as their own bartender. ' The Erlo police department was ! notified and Officers Kelly and Johns- ton came up from Port Jervis and succeeded In apprehending the guilty parties, although as yet no arrests have been made and it Is probable the case has been settled quietly be cause of the prominence of the par ties concerned. Kelly and Johnston returned to Port Jervis. Marvin Bodle, superintendent of the collection department of tho Johnstown, N. Y., Gas company, Is spending his vacation at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Bodie. $490 VIA. ERIE R. R. TO CALIFORNIA AND The Southwest Aug. 26 to Sept. 8 and Sept. 30 to Oct. 14 TO NORTH PA CIFIC COAST SEPT. 14 To OCT. 14 NEAREST ERIE AGENT WILL FURNISH FULL INFORMATION - f - M - f