THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JIAKCH 15, 1011. INTERESTING SOCIAL AND PERSONAL ITEMS FOR SALE.. aro In a position to furnish reliable fertilizer at Interesting prices. Murray Co., Honesdale. Pa. 21tf. FOR SALE Eggs for setting sin gle comb White Orphlngtons, Kel lorstrass Strain, $2.60 per 15; White Pekin Ducks, $1.00 per 11. Chas. S. Burger, White Mills, Pa. 10t4 LIME-SULPHUR SOLUTION, Tyrox and soluable oil for spraying or chards, also big line of sprayers at Murray & Co., Honesdale, Pa. 21tf KOlt SALE Kelly & Stelnman brick factory building, Including en gine, boiler and shafting. Inquire of J. B. Robinson. BOtf. SAP PANS, BUCKETS AND SPOU'lS at prices lower than you are ac customed to pay. See Murray Co., Honesdale, Pa. 21tf $3,500 buys 439-acre farm about 30 acres clear, the rest In timber, good water, house and barn; situate near White Mills, Pa. Inquire of W. K. Hlttlnger, White Mills, Pa. 14tf. HARNESS, COLLARS, STRAPS, work and all kinds of horse goods an bo found In good variety at Murray Co., Honesdale, Pa. 21tf HONESDALE AND ENVIRONS. , County Detective N. B. Spencer Monday quarantined Clara, the sev-n-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Dapper, Cherry Ridge, for measles. Mrs. Paul Gardner, Scranton, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Heft, East Extension street last week. Don't forget the lecture at the High School Auditorium tonight! The Seelyvillo basket ball team will play the Carbondale High school basket ball team in Carbondale Sat urday evening. Jonas Katz, 610 Church street, celebrated his GGth birthday, Mon day. Thomas Farrelly and son, Eugene B., transacted business in town Monday. Rev. Father J. M. Smoulter, Jes sup, spent Monday in Honesdale. He is an executor for the will of the late Joseph Mulligan. Leon Katz, fell on the ice and broke his ankle four weeks ago. He was able Monday for the first time, to resume his position In Katz Bros, department store. List of advertised letters remain inir in Honesdale postofflce week ending March 13: Mrs. Bessie Field, Mr. Russell H. Harnitt, Manager Sleady, Jane Cottage. Benjamin H. DIttrlch was a busi ness caller In Stroudsburg last week. August Bregstein has returned from an extended business trip through the west. Miss Olive Lockwood, waymart, epent Monday in town. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rocht, Blooms liurg, are the guests of A. A. Oehert n West street. The Stage Hands' local union held a business meeting Friday evening. A jolly sleighride party went to Aldenville from Honesdale several mights ago. Those participating were: Misses Laura Cortright, Grace Erk, Edna Hawker, Ethel Hawker, Flossie Polly, Clara Eck, Cora Eck; Messrs. Howard Miller, William Maisey, Will Eck, Russell Starnes, Mr. Hopkins, Norman Taylor. They enjoyed luncheon at the Hotel Wayne. John Male, of Cherry Ridge, Pa., announces his candidacy for County Commissioner on the Republican ticket. 21tf Rev. Ferdinand Voa Krug, D. D., will preach in Presbyterian church, Bethany at 10:30, Rlleyvllle Presby terian church at 2:30 and Siko hurch at 7:30 on Sunday, March la. Charles P. Searle has been in bed lor the past week, suffering from rheumatism. Mrs. Charles Gray, who has been seriously 111, Is somewhat Improved. David Noyes, who had been con fned to the house from the effects f a paralytic stroke, was able to be ut for the first time Monday morn ing. George Beehn, poor master, Dreher township, is seriously ill with heart trouble. A wrestling match will take place at Maennerchor Hall, Thursday Bight, March 16. Dick Westgate and Miles Fitch, Carbondale, will try for falls. Boxing matches between Bennle Shilling and Mike Griffiths will help to enliven the evening's proceedings. Six "horse buyers" from Jersey came to town Monday and registered at Heumann's hotel. They are: Henry Zehrlskle, Saddle Run, N. J., Stover Shmart, Chas. E. May, C. D. Vanderlod, Wm. Winters, Ramsey, N. J., F. H. Storms, Saddle River, N. J. Mr. and Mrs,, Daniel Osborne of 1114 Court street were blessed with . boy Saturday. Mr. Osborne is Superintendent of the Maple City Glass Works at Hawley. FOR RENT. FOR RENT 7 rooms and bath, gas and furnace. GIG Church street. Inquire at house. FOR RENT A ten-room house with all modern Improvements, Includ ing electric lights, situated on River street. Inquire of Jacob Demer, G42 River street. FOR RENT The store occupied by Flagg's Clothing House, 803 Main street, Grambs' Building. The best location in Honesdale. Inquire at the store. lotf. MISCELLANEOUS. FOR THE LANDS SAKE, USE BROOKER'S FERTILIZERS! We BIG ASSORTMENT OF WAGONS now ready for your inspection at Murray & Co., Honesdale, Pa. 21tf Do you need some printing done? Come to us. If you need some en velopes "struck off" come to us. We use plenty of ink on our jobs. I WILL BE IN HONESDALE week of March 20. S. S. WINT. 21t2 The Spring tailored Ladies' Suits at Menner & Co.'s store are latest models. 19eoiG Mrs. Robert N. Torrey, and daugh ter, Miss Clara R., said for Bermuda, from New York, Wednesday morn ing on a two weeks' visit. Miss Fannie Monaghan, Carbon dale, spent Sunday with relatives in town. f e.i Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Thompson will leave New York for Bermuda, Porto Rico, Panama and other points of Interest on Saturday, via the wa ter route. They will ge gone sever al weeks. E. A. Case, Welcome Lake, was a Friday business caller in the Maple City. N. C. Howe, one of the oldest Justices of the Peace In Wayne coun ty, transacted business in Honesdale last Friday. F. H. Millard, Scranton, was a Friday b siness caller in the Maple City. Sheriff M. Lee Braman is home from a Western trip. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schwemley, Fourteenth street, spent the week end and Sunday with friends in Scranton. Mrs. John Fuller entertained at residence, 505 ParkhrdlrdlllddnTto cards, Saturday afternoon, at her residence, 505 Park street. "500" was" played". Prizes were won by Miss Grace Salmon, first; Miss Mary Foster, second; Miss Lucia Bristol, third. About thirty invited guests ere present, including Mrs. Ralph Martin and Mrs. Farrington Suydam, Hawley. Dainty refreshments were served. George Lipp, Carbondale, was a business caller Friday. Weston Parker passed Sunday at the home of his parents in Paterson, New Jersey. "The College Girl" will be the at traction at the Lyric Theatre next Monday and iuesday evenings. It si a musical comedy of college life, In two acts, the comedy Is very clever and with a string of high class vaude ville acts that makes it a big enter tainment. There is a plot, and It works out with good comedy and In terwoven into it Is a great amount of clever singing and dancing. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Gaffney and two sons, Brighton Beach, N. J., are visiting at the home of Mrs. Mary Donnelly, Erie street. J. W. Hause, Newfoundland, was a pleasant caller at THE CITIZEN office, Monday morning. J. Ernest Smith and J. Franklin Reifler took an auto trip to Scranton, Sunday. Mrs. Martin H. Heft, Sixteenth street, entertained at cards Thursday evening. Bernard M. Rifkln, tree expert, Wilkes-Barre, has been Invited " to speak before the Town Council at their special meeting Thursday even lng, March 1G. "Michael F. Fritz," Erie engine, is on the road again, after being laid up at the shop for repairs. A. C. Howe, Justice of the Peace, Is spending several days in town. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bushfield, Hancock, N. Y., visited relatives In Honesdale last week, Seven hundred dollars a share was recently offered for Wayne County Savings Bank stock, par value $100, and refused. Howard Jackson, Carbondale, spent Sunday with friends on Greene street. W. J. Davis Is spendinK week In Deposit, N. Y. L. A. Loomls spent the week-end and Sunday In Deposit, N. Y. Miss Agnes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Haggerty, Whites Valley, Is seriously 111 with dlththerla. Dr. Miller, Whites Valley, Dr. Kraft, Herrlck Centre, and Dr. P. B. Peter eon are in attendance. Miss Helen Burns sprained . her ankle quite severely last Thursday. Miss Etta G. Fuerth, a milliner In the employ of Katz Brothers, left for New York, Sunday morning. W. J. Katz left this (Tuesday) morning on a business trip to New York city. Hon. E. B. Hardenbergh is one of the latest residents of the Maple City to purchase an automobile. Mr. and Mrs. Abner Tyner, Equl nunk,' spent Saturday in Honesdale. Miss Catherine Hames and Miss Ara Bldwell, Hawley, spent Satur day with Honesdale friends. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clunc, Pres ton, spent Friday in town. A runaway took place Sunday af ternoon on Terrace street, when a horse belonging to Mr. Foster, driv en by John Rickart, took fright when the snap on the hold back broke. Mr. Rickert told his sister, Miss Sadie Rickert, who was with him in the rig, to jump out, which she did. Her ankle wbb broken in the fall. J. B. Hagadorn, Long Eddy, a former resident of the Maple City, transacted business in town Friday. C. C. Wood, Boyds Mills, wasliere on business Saturday. Clair Rice, Atco, was a Saturday Maple City business caller. Monday morning for the first time Lake Lodore ice was sold on the streets of the Maple City. Fred Coyne and James Mullen having charge of the delivery wagon. The street clock of the Farmers and Mechanics Bank is being repair ed by Rowland, the jeweler. The Midnight Sons has mailed a preliminary announcement for their dance to be held in the Lyric ball room on April 20. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schart, Haw ley, are spending a few days with their daughter, Mrs. A. A. Grambs. Judson Noble, Scranton, spent Sunday with friends here. Raymond Bodie returned to Scran ton last week after a three days' stay with his parents here. Mrs. P. F. Carroll, Carbondale, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. Rielly, on Main street.. Last Saturday Street Commission er Lawrence Weldner cut a three foot channel in the Lackawaxen River. He also piloted a lot of the ice, in 100-foot cakes over the dam. The water commencing to drop made him stop his ice-smashing cam paign. Augustus Thompson, Andover, Mass., spent Sunday with his parents here. Joe Katz left this morning for a few days' vacation in New York. George Nicholson, of Carbondale. called on Honesdale friends Sunday. Miss Anna Reed, Binghamton, N. Y., passed the week-end with her father, R. Duane Reed. John Simpson, Carbondale, was a Honesdale business caller Monday. Rev. Franzie, a student, is supply ing the pulpit of the Moravian church at Newfoundland, since the removal of Rev. A. E. Francke to Elizabeth, N. J., and will take charge of the congregation June 1. Miss Daisy Alberty, Carbondale, spent Sunday with her parents here. Lester Knapp, Passaic, N. J., passed Tuesday with Benj. H. DIt trlch. There are eight cases of measles on the "Flats." A. P. Thompson, Andover, Mass., spent the week-end and Sunday in Honesdale. Hon. E. B. Hardenbergh left Mon day morning on a business trip to New York city. William Olson left Monday on a business trip to the metropolis. The Texas Township Board of Su pervisors organized several nights ago by the election of these officers: President, Lawrence Weldner; sec retary, John Ordung; treasurer, Samuel Brown. WageB were set as follows: Seventeen cents an hour for working-men; forty cents an hour for teams. Four-and-one-half mills tax was levied for road pur poses. Valentine Weldner is path master and Chas. A. McCarty, Esq., solicitor for the Board. M'B. William T. Moore will give a 10 cent social in the interests of the Ladles' Improvement Associa tion, tomorrow afternoon at her residence on West street. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clune, Pres ton, spent Thursday and Friday in Honesdale. W. E. Panlels left Friday on a business trip to Port Jervls, N. Y S. S.' Wint spent Sunday at his home In Scranton. Captain John L. Huff spent the week-end and Sunday with friends in Scranton. Dr. C. R. Brady Is home from a brief stay In Atlantic City, N. J. Hawley High School Basket Ball team will play the Seelyvllle' team at Seelyvllle, on Wednesday evening, March 15. Case Family To Go AVcst. Within a few days Mr. and Mrs. J. Boyd Case and family, of Darte avenue, will leave for Glendlze, Mont., Where they expect to make their future home. Mr. Case has secured a tract of land consisting of 1G0 acres, and he intends to con duct a ranch. He has a daughter located in the northwestern state who has been very successful since locating there. Mr. Case, who Is a son of Wallace Case, Waymart, has been a conductor on the Delaware and Hudson road for the past twenty iive years and his many friends ex tend best wishes for his success In the West. Death of .Mis. Mary Elizabeth Ilcln. Mary Elizabeth, widow of the late Lewis Dein, died Sunday afternoon at 5:30 o'clock from a complication of diseases at her home in Maple Avenue, Seelyvllle. She was 76 years old, having been born at Eas ton July 25, 1835. She had been a great sufferer for the past nine years from heart trouble, but the lmmedi- ate cause of her death was an at-l tack of bronchitis, which set in four weeks ago. Her maiden name was Goodman. She was the oldest of eleven children of Hiram and Maria (Major) Goodman. On December 12, 1852, she was married to Lewis Dein, Honesdale, who for more than fifty years, conducted a meat market in the Maple city and died Novem ber 2G, 1904. She came here 70 years ago, and lived almost all her life either in Seelyvllle or Honesdale. She was the mother of seven chil dren, three of whom survive her. They are: Charles W. Dein, Hones dale, Mrs. Iimina H. Johnson and Mrs. Mary E., wife of H. E. Bas sett, all of Seelyvillo; two brothers, Frank Goodman, Rockford, 111., Charles Goodman, Pendleton, Ore., one sister, Mrs. Joseph Menner, Honesdale. Funeral services will be held in her late residence, Wednesday after noon at 2:30 o'clock, Rev. Will H. Hiller, pastor of tho Central Metho dist Episcopal church, of which church she was a devout member, and in whose aalrs she took a promi nent part, until prevented by failing health, officiating. Interment will be made in Glen Dyberry cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Dein lived to cele brate their golden wedding anniver sary, December 12, 1902. Scurcity Of Teachers. Dealing with the scarcity of teach ers and attempting to explain why there is such a condition the Phila delphia Evening Bulletin had this to say: "The Increase in schools private as well as public, and the extension of courses in the higher institutions, of course has increased the demand. It might be assumed that with this in crease in Institutions of learning and their annual product of well-equipped young men and women, tho pro fession of teaching would have its proportionate share of increase. But the fact is that pedagogy is not an altogether inviting profession to-day. The law, medicine, even the pulpit, do not lack for recruits. Science and the arts got their fair share. The profession of teaching, which is no less important, is neglected. "This fact is beginning to attract the attention of school administra tors, of the authorities of universi ties, colleges and other private schools, as well as those of the pub lic school system. The problem is a general one, and there seems to be a growing opinion that In at least one of Its causes it is common to public and to private schools alike and in vites an identical remedy. It Is gen erally agreed that the compensations of the profession are too small to successfully rival the offerings of other professions. College adminis tration is, perhaps, even a worse of fender than Is tho public school sys tem, which expects a man who has spent years in a special course of training as a teacher to serve a fur ther term of apprenticeship at wages less than those which are paid an un skilled laborer In the streets, is suf ficiently abturd. "The inevitable answer to this fact Is that the cost of school administra tion is continually Increasing. Ad ministrators of public schools, ,it seems reasonable that stand the ad ditional burden of Increased salaries. Administrators of colleges and pri vate schools declare that their en dowments and incomes barely pro vide for their fixed expenses now. Yet the teaching is the essential part of the system of education, and if there is annually being spent a vast ly increased amount for education in private as well as in public schools It seems reasonable that a fair pro portion of this increase might be appropriated for the teaching corps. Magnificent piles of architecture on many a campus are monuments to the generous loyalty of some alum nus, but some of the money thus ex Catarrh Goes So Does Soro Throat, Bronchitis, Croup and Asthma. You can easily tell by reading the symptoms below, whether you have catarrh or not: Offensive breath, frequent sneez ing, discharge from the nose, stop page of the nose, huBkiness of the voice, tickling in throat, droppings In throat, a cough, pain in chest, loss of strength, variable appetite, spasms of coughing, low spirited at times, raising of mucus, difficulty In breath lng, loss of vital force. G. W. Pell has a sensible remedy (money back If it falls) for catarrh, called HYOMEI (pronounced High' o-me) which is a vaporized air, so antiseptic, that when it is breathed over the Inflamed and germ-Infested membrane, it kills all germ life, gives relief In two minutes, and cures catarrh. Tho price, Including hard rubber pocket Inhaler, Is only $1.00. The inhaler will last a lifetime, so that should you need a second bottlo of HYOMEI, you can get It for 50 cents. pended might have been saved to ad vantage nnd used for the proper com pensation of the faculty which makes tho college or university what it is. Public funds are spent lavishly In the construction of school buildings and their elaborate equipment for overy fad or frill of modern educa tion, and yet the cry of economy Is raised whenever a plea Is made for better compensation tor the teaching force." Play at Theatre next week. BY "SALLY." .My dear young girls, you cannot be too careful of the young men who call at your house. Always make It a point to introduce them to your father and mother. They are always a better Judge of young men than you give them credit for. If they object to any of your gentlemen callers, take their advice, because they wouldn't object if they did not have good reasons. A girl who signs her letter F. W. writes: "Dear Sally A young man whom I like but do not love calls on me frequently and escorts me home from business. He is very attentive. Do you think ho Is in love with me and if he is what am I going to do?" Perhaps the young man merely admires you and doesn't lovo you at all. Girls often make that mistake. But if you fear making him unhappy do not allow him to see you so of NEW FOR - - AT - - MENNER & COMPANY STORES LATEST CUTS and STYLES in CLOTHS iillS llii Our long Traveling Pretty in Shades and enner & SPS?G NEWEST PRODUCTIONS SITG IN OUR COMPLETE STOCK The House Furnishing Department is Complete with the New Goods from the Manufacturer. The Floor Rugs in all sizes made can be had in the Best Designs and Colorings. Quality and Value Leads and Satisfies. Carpets more to be desired than in any year are bright, soft and harmon ious in blendings Window and Door Curtains and Portieres are all that heart and eye can wish, Design and Shading very ar tistic and captivating The Floor Coverings in Mattings and Linoleums are just the thing for the coming Spring and Summer use. Clean, healthful and cool. Shades in all grades and standard sizes on hand, made to order and best goods furnished. Room EV3ou8dingsg Plate Rails and Bead finish in many new styles and colors. Select your goods early and secure tho best before stocks are broken up in many patterns and styles. MENNER & 0, Stores, Keystone Block HONESDALE, PA. Evidently , wants to Diaz a Presi dent. Phlladelpha inquirer. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION, ESTATE OF EUQENK SWINOLK, Late of South Cuiiaun Township W ayne, Co. All persons Indebted to said estate ure notl tied tu make lmmcdlutu payment to the un dersigned ; nnd those having claims against the said estate are notified to presriit them duly attested for settlement. JKANNKTT SWINGLE, Executrix, South Canaan, To.. Feb. 27, 1911. ten. A girl who signs her letter S. M. T. writes: "Dear Sally For some time I have been keeping company with a young man and recently wo had a quarrel. He was very rude but now he wishes to apologize. What shall I do? Accept his apology but do not be friends with him any longer. Any man who' is rude to a lady is not a gentleman. SPRING and Walking Coats are Styles. Co. New Offerings. Special measurementa ,