WEATnEU FOItEOAST! KAIN. WEATITEn FOKECAST: 1112 . .. READ THE CITIZEN SAFE, SANE, SUHE. READ THE CIT;,$.,N i SAFE, SANE, ST . 69th YEAR. NO. 77 HONBSDALB, WAYNE CO., PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1911. PRICE o JENTS 1 to r L Judge Searle Has Stood The Test of AS A THAI Cttot CHECKER PLAY NG PALAT A HOME FOR STRONGMAN "Develops Caution and Foresight," Says Expert JiOOAIj TALICNT IS NOT VEHV STHONG; 1JOSTON THE GItEAT CIIEOKEH TOWN. " Checker playing is one of the very best trainings for the memory. It teaches a man caution and fore sight. It also brings into operation all the powers of calculation. I consider it 'better than mathematics for developing the powers of calcu lation." Such, in the opinion of George I Griswold, Factoryvllle, Pa., champ ion checker player of Northeastern Pennsylvania, are some of the bene fits to be derived from the playing of draughts. " Concerning the relative merits of chess and checkers," he said, " there has always been a dispute. Edgar Allan Poo stated, In some of his works, that he considered checkers the greater game. Benja min Franklin considered checkers superior to chess. " The greatest argument in favor of checkers is this: That although Plllsbury played them both he was never a top-notcher, I.e., he was nev er able to reacli the first class In checkers. Pretty good evidence that checkers Is nearly as good as chess! Plllsbury never could be anything but a second-rater in checkers. Advice For Tho Hcginncr. " The best thing for a beginner to do is to secure a good book on the game. I would name Lee's Guide. It can be secured through "The Draughts' World Publishing Company," Edinburgh, Scotland, for liny cents, in a paper edition. It Is an elementary work. " Then I would advise him to take one or two of tho popular mag azines, such as the Canadian Check er 'Player and The Draughtsman's World. " Then I would advise him to meet some player who was stronger than himself, and play with him regularly. " I would also advise him to take up regularly and systematically the study of problems. 1 believe the study of problems does more to de velop a man's cbecker playing abili ties than Anything else." Jlr. Gnswoid, wno is 'a man of 39 years of age says that he was led' into playing checkers by meeting, some fifteen or eighteen years ago, an expert from Buffalo by the name of Compton. " Four or five years ago,'' he said, " I met Plllsbury in Scranton and defeated him. I won two games and drew the third. Ho charged $1 to play three games. " I claim tho championship of Northeastern Pennsylvania. I play blindfolded. I have played twelve games simultaneously at Y. jr. C. A.'s. " There are perhaps twenty news papers publishing checker columns. One is edited by Newell Banks and is published In Detroit, Mich., Tho Pittsburg Dispatch publishes a very fine checker column edited by Hugh Henderson. I take that. " Tho San Francisco Post pub lishes a very fine column. Dr. Schaeffer, of New York city, pub lishes an excellent column in one of tbe Jersey City papers. The auto matic player at the Eden lluseo has been manipulated by Dr. Schaeffer. New York City boasts of a very fine checker club. So do Boston, Chi cago, Pittsburg and Detroit. " They're trying to form a na tional association at Pittsburg. The checker champion at present is Ne well Banks, of Detroit, but he has just been defeated for the champion ship of the -world by Alfred Jordan, of London, champion of England. He is touring the United States at the present time, and appearing In all the principal cities. " Hugh Henderson, a Scotchman, who rjinifi tn this pnuntrv fnnr vnnrs ago, has recently played a match In Boston with Dorio of Chicago for ?1,000 a side which Henderson won by tho score of 12 to 5. " The checker players aro now talking up a national tournament, same as they have In Scotland every year. They already 'have' f 1,000 raised for purses. The first prizo will be $500; the second $250, and so on. " This tournament will be held at Cedar Point, Ohio, and any player In the United States will be eligible by paying an entrance fee of ?10. Boston Tho Checker Hub. " The great checker center of tho United States, you know, is Boston. When Jordan was touring this coun try ho playing the members, 150 in all, of the Boston club, simultane ously, without losing a game. " I played him two games at the Scranton Y. M. C. A. last July. I lost one and drew tho other. We made up a pur so for him of ?25 for coming there. " The leading checker magazines are The Draughts' World, published In Glasgow, Scotland, at ?2 a year. Then In thl country there are two, of which Tho Canadian Checker Player Is the most popular. The Pocket Checker Magazine,, published In Chicago, and tho Checker World, published In Manchester, Now Hampshire, are good. "There are probably 300 volumes published devoted entirely to check ers. Th literature la very oxten slve. ProbalJP the greatest play- Bethany Residence to be One or hnestm State BEING nUILT BY C. T. AUTHUK OF BETHANY ACCORDING TO NEW OKIC ARCHITECT'S PIjANS. The palatial residence of John II. Strongman, Bethany, which is In course of construction, when com pleted, will be one of tho finest homes In this section of the State. The house Is located on the site or the Strongman homestead and com mands one of tho most picturesque mountain views In Wayne county. -Mr. Strongman was born In tho house that formerly stood upon the site of 'his new home and the hand some residence now in course of construction will be admired and en vied by everybody. Words cannot express how the new homo and sur roundings will appear when com pleted. A faint idea of the beauty and quietude of the place can be imagined by the reader sitting on the large 16-foot two-story porch of the dwelling, his eyes resting upon the two-acre flower garden, with a per gola In the center and a number of rainbow fountains playing in the sun's rays, the garage and barn prac tically hidden by shubbery planted by a landscape gardener and crushed stone roads gracefully circling around the pergola to the house and main road. ' Charles T. Arthur, contractor and builder, of Bethany, is erecting this handsome residenco under plans and specincauons ol n. s. Childs, New York city. The arrangement throughout is convenient and the rooms are so situated as to save much unnecessary -walking. All the rooms are well lighted and spacious. The first floor Is divided into seven rooms, three pantries, two closets and a maid's kitchen. A large re ception hall faces the main entrance to the house; a library, living room, dining room, parlors and kitchen constitute the first floor, A large double porch, 1G feet In width, sup ported with four IS foot colonial columns, 20 inches in diameter, capped with an Ionic design, graces the southeast entrance of the build ing. Handsome stone steps lead from the house to the private road way. Tho ground will be terraced from the landing to a concrete re taining wall, which will lio with an ornamental fence. F. J. Varcoe has been awarded the con tract to Diuia tne retaining wall. Tho second floor contains six bed rooms, closets, with private bath rooms and a hall extending through the building. There is a balcony facing tho west. A railing and pedestal at each eorner -will add to the beauty of the porch. Tho third floor has five bedrooms and as many closets, bathroom and hall. A nineteen-foot circumferential bay window, two stories high, faces the old town of Bethany. A railing and pedestal will grace the top of the window. The roof has a number of dormer windows, which light the third story and add to the beauty and attrac tiveness of the building. Tho cor nice decoration consists of lndentlal brackets trimmed with curve frieze. All windows, except those of the back part of the building, will be of ornamental plate glass. Tho flours will be of oak and highly polished. The finish will be In white enamel with mahogany doors. The building will be heated by steam, equipped with hot and cold water and lighted by electricity. A gasoline engine will generate elec tricity on the premises for tho lighting of the house, barn and gar age. Tho cellar Is concrete and plastered. Harry Itettew has chargo of the plumbing. The building proper Is 100 feet in length including porches and G5 feet wide. A pergola 80 feet long, 18 feet high and 20 feet wide built of con crete and wood, will occupy the cen ter of the flower garden east of the house. Tho pergola will be covered with vines and underneath in the circular center will be located a bench. Several fountains will be located at different places throughout the grounds, tho water for which will como from an artesian well on the premises. Landscape gardeners will arrive above the middle of October to plant the shubbery and lay out the flower beds. Tho arrangement is very at tractive. About 30 men are now employed In the building and upon the groundB. THE HON. ALONZO T. SEAULE, Candidate For President .IihIrc of Moyno County. "THE GIIUj AND THE TItASIP." "The Girl and the Tramp," a 'bright comedy, which is proving to be very successful, will be presented at the Lyric Friday evening. The play tells tho story of a man who Is driven rrom home through the arti fices of his enemy who flees to tie west whore he prospers. In the mean time the plotting man con tinues In his efforts to drive the fam ily ruin. He wishes to marry the wife who Is left alone. Flo Randall, a girl from the bowery, aided by Happy Jack, tho tramp, aids the abandoned woman in her ngntB against the plotter and In the end all ends happily. HEAL ESTATE DEALS. A. D. Heneforth, Salem township, to E. A. Hartford, Salem township Twelve and one-tenth acres of land in Salem township. Consideration, Samuel Anderson and wife. Yon kers, Westchester county, N. Y., to Alma N. Ahlquist. 218 Albemarle Koad, Brooklyn, N. Y. One hun dred and twenty-four acres of land in Manchester township. Consldera-I tion, ?500, and other valuable con siderations. Jared Mickel and wife, Salem township, to Alfred R. Mickel and wife, Peckvllle, Lackawanna county. Five acres and thirty-five perches of land in Salem township. Considera-i tion, ?l,uuu. William Melody to Elizabeth Melody, both of Cherry Ridge town ship. Two pieces of land in Cherry Ridge township. Containing 48 acres and SO perches and GO acres respectively. Consideration, SI. Gilbert F. Simmons and wife, Hiierman, to John T. Brownson, Syr acuse, N. Y., 94 and acres of land In Scott township. Consideration. Si and other valuable considera tions. "Jury Road Law Will Give Somebody a Fat Job" says M. E. Simons " I think the object of the Road Jury Law is to give some one In the larger cities a fat ofllce. It neither helps in efficiency nor lessens In cost. I think it is wholly unneces sary. Such Is the opinion of District At torney M. E. Simons on the new Road Jury View Act passed at the last session of tho Legislature, which does away with the appointment of a separate set of men for each pro posed thoroughfare, and In its stead provides for the appointment, at the! discretion of the court, of a per manent board, to consist of from three to nine men, whose tenure of otlice shall be dependent upon good behavior. " No board," continued Mr. SI mons, " has as yet been appointed in Wayne county. In Lackawanna county they appointed one. This Act will not affect any viewers at present under appointment. " Under the old system the sur veyor was entitled to' $5 a day and the other two viewers to $2 a day apiece. Each viewer was entitled to mileage at the rate of six cents a mile from his homo to the nearest point of view and return. I am quite positive that the compensation of the viewers to be appointed Is to bo fixed by the Court. Under the new law, three will be appointed on eacn viow. " In order to secure a road, thei modus operandi is as follows: You present a petition jo the Court set ting forth the necessity for tho road, and naming tho point at which the road begins and ends, and stating the exact distance the termini are from the nearest Intersecting road,! and asking for tho appointment of viewers. " The Court, if it approves of the petition, will then direct that the viewers examine the proposed road and report to the Court whether such a road is necessary or not. If necessary, they proceed and lay out the courses and distances, the line of tne roaa, and appraise tho damages if any, for the land taken. "The report will then be pre sented for confirmation nisi, and unless exceptions are filed, it will do approved absolutely at the next term of Court. In that case the Clerk of the Court will lssuo orders to the supervisors to open tho road. The county pays the cost of the road. There is no fixed nutriber ofl signers required, only sufficient to convince tho Court that tho view should be made. " Tho new law affects this method in no way save In the procedure ofl tne appointment of viewers. Thel viewers to be appointed by tho Court win nave a little more authority. They can convene at the county seat and call witnesses before them, If they see fit. and hear testimony for and against the road before making! Fitness HE IS THE RIGHT MAN IN THE RIGHT PLACE Why Not Keep Him There ? The Hon. Alonzo T. Searle has successfully filled the office of President Judge in this county during the past 2 years; he fully commands the confidence of both the people and the bar of his own county, and the high opinion formed of him in other counties in which he has held court signifies much. When a judge finds it necessary to call in a judge from another county, the sense of responsibility and of duty to litigants and attorneys naturally leads him to seek the best judge that can be obtained. And if the judge thus called in fails to command his confidence, and the confidence of the attorneys engaged, he is not likely to be called again. There is no better proof of the fitness of a judge than repeated calls to sit in other counties. Probably no judge in the State is more frequently called on to hold court in other counties than Judge Searle. Among the counties in which he has sat are some of the largest in the State outside of Philadelphia and Pittsburg, and in these no small number of important cases have been brought before him. The confidence in his legal attainments, ability, and judicial im ' partiality, inspired by his decisions, is best shown by the re peated calls for his services as judge. He has held court three weeks in Dauphin county; four weeks in Luzerne; four weeks in Susquehanna; and seven weeks in Lackawanna; in North ampton he has held a term of two weeks; and he has been called once to Pike, in which the business of the courts has dwindled almost to the vanishing point. In 2 years of judicial service, Judge Searle has made a rec ord, both in his own county and in every other in which he has sat. which has seldom if ever been surpassed. a singBe case which Judge Sea He has tried has ever appeaEedg a record exceSBed none and The people of Wayne will make no mistake in keeping him in the office which he has so ably and acceptably filled. SUMMARY OF JUDGE SEARLE'S CAREER. Alonzo T. Searle, Judge of the Courts of Wayne county, was appointed by Governor Stuart on September 15, 1909, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Judge George S. Purdy. He was appointed upon the petition signed by nearly all the Republican members of the Wayne County Bar and a majority of the county officials. This petition was accompanied by let ters from a large number of the representative men of the county. Upon his appointment he relinquished an extensive and remunerative law practice and resigned the position which he held as Assistant United States Attorney for the Middle Dis trict of Pennsylvania. Judge Alonzo T. Searle was born in New Marlboro, Mass., on September 13, 1856. His father was a minister. He was graduated from St. Johnsbury Academy, Vermont, in 1873 and from Amherst College in 1877. After teaching school for one year in Rutland, Vermont, and two years in Cheltenham Acad emy, near Philadelphia, he entered the law office of Hon. B. S. Bentley at Williamsport, Pa. Judge Bentley was the father-in-law of George S. Bentley of the firm of Waller and Bentley of Honesdale and upon the death of George S. Bentley and upon the recommendation of Judge Bentley came to Honesdale and entered the law office with George G. Waller. Upon his ad mission to the Wayne County Bar in 1882 he entered into a partnership with Mr. Waller which lasted until the death of the latter in 1888 since which time Judge Searle has conducted the business alone. For nearly thirty years Judge Searle has been a member of the Wayne Count' Bar and has been interested in nearly every important case which has come before the courts. In all his years of extensive practice his most humble client received as much consideration as those more prominent. The best years of his life have been spent in Wayne county and he has been so thoroughly identified with its interests and has mingled so closely with its people that he should be able to call nearly every man within fts boundaries his friend. Judge Searle has been a close and diligent student of the law and is thoroughly versed in and an able exponent of, its principles. If nominated, he will use every legitimate and honorable means for his election; if elected, he will enter upon his offi cial duties with no pledges, except to conduct the office honor ably, justly, fairly, without fear, favor or partiality and unin fluenced by any considerations save those. of law and justice. - -Hi , Advertise la TbV Citizen (Continued n rage Fire.) their report." Ramember this on Saturday. t