PAGE 4 BECAUSE of a good BECAUSE of its Large Capital and Earned Surplus, $550,147.5 BECAUSE of its total assets of nearly $3,000,000. BECAUSE of its good management. A. T. W. B. HOLMES W. F. SUYDAM We CHRISTMAS IN CIVIL WAR TIME. A Veteran Tells About the Box That Came From Home. "EEING- all the people buying Christmas things now," said a reteran of the civil war, "makes me think of some Christmas expert ences of my own, first of the time when I used to hang up my stockings by the fireplace, stlckln? forks through them and then Jamming the forks Into a crack nnder the mantelpiece, where Santa Claus could get at tbein handily when be came down tho chimney, and then of a time when we were more grown up and Santa Claus cnino to us In the army. "The regiment I nerved In put In a good part of Us time in states on the southern Atlantic seaboard, In Soutb Carolina, Georgia and Florida, where with water transportation to us we could be got at rather more easily than troops not so far away, but at Interior points, and so, while you couldn't have things shipped to you thero us you could to this- town or the other In times of peace, you could get things there pretty well, and the patron for whom our company was named when It was first recruited used to see to It that at Christmas time there was delivered to us a big box filled with things from friends at borne. "We no longer bore his name in the army for from tho mlnuto wo were mustered into the United States serv ice we had become simply Company So-and-so, of such aud such a num bered regiment, of such and sucb state volunteers, but we never forgot our frleud at ion-e, and surely bo never forgot us, and at Christmas time he used to see that our company got that box. "Well, in advance be would announce in the homo papers that on such nnd sucb a date a box would be sent to the company and if friends or relatives ot members of tho company would bring In tho gifts they wished to send they would be carefully packed nnd duly shipped. And then the people used to bring In the things, and, though some how 1 never thought of it then, I have thought ofien since with what loving care und tenderness must those Christ inus gifts have been prepured, those things sent from home to their soldiers In the Held! "When everything was all in our friend would have tbe things securely and safely packed, and then he'd hike the box down to New York, nnd there the quartermaster's department would WAYNE The Leading Financial Institution of Wayne County. SEARLE, Vice President F. A. are here to receive deposits and loan money. We are certain we can use you business. We ask for yours NOW. put it down to us. So Santa Clans wasn't coming to us with his pack on bis back, down the chimney, but in o box in the bold of a steamer. 'When we got our first Christmas box we were on an island down thi coast there, drilling some and doing guard and picket duty, but largely en gaged in building corduroy roads through swamps by day. and by night in hauling by hand, with a whole regi ment on the ropes, heavy mortars and guns over these roads, and nlso, under the same friendly cover of darkness. in bulldiug masked .fcatteries In which the said guns and mortars were mount ed, all this in tho course of besieging n fort occupied by Confederate soldiers on another Island. "It was plenty of hard work, and not much play nnd most of the freluht that came to us, besides tho usual coin missary supplies, was guus and mor tars and powder and shot nnd shell nnd the various materials of war, but one day there came ashore on a lighter from a transport anchored off, along with barrels of pork and kegs of pow der, that Christmas box from homo for us soldiers. "We kauled it up from tho beach and set It down carefully, right sido up, at tho end of tho company street, and I doubt if any fireplaco on a Christmas morning was evor a greater magnet of attraction to children than that box was to the men of Company X. To n man they gathered nround it to see what Santa had brought them from home. "It was n big box, a big dry goods packing box, big enough to hold some thing for everybody, and carefully we opened it, and with the lid off it seemed full of Innumerable treasures, so full to the last inch of spaco was it packed. "The orderly sergeant of the com pany made tbe distribution. He raised bis band and reached over and picked np a package that lay at tbe center of the box and lifted it and read the name on it and passed it into the out stretched band of the man to whom it belonged. "Then ho went on more rapidly, pick ing up tbe things nnd reading off the names and passing them over, pack ages of all sorts and shapes and sizes, all eagerly received. Some men stay ed to see everything given out, and some went to their tents to see what the folks had sent them or to read tho letters thai had come with tbe gifts. Ana so the things in tho box got low er and lower, whilo still there wero some men who hnd as yet got nothing and who now were moro and more anxious. And how Joyfully relieved when at last something came up for them I "But there were a few, a very few, who lingered in vain, who among all these gifts got nothing, and plainly disappointed were some of these, while others took it Jauntily perhaps they had no one to send them, these but SUPFIiEMENT NO. 2; TIIE CITIZEN, ABSOLUTE COUNTY HONESDALE, PA. Record for Forty Years, 1 I "h3DUCsB E Bi DIRECTORS : P. KIMBLE T. SEARLE J. W. A Christmas 'bells ?cal Jerry church the air a - mingle re's JX witn. tnese tn blls , score. JPnc f fare ' meeting i there's the knelP f 2-df Christmas fleeting as the clocksV rike o'er and o'eri ,-shrilly, eshrieking fife's not; .stiTJi he makes attempt y but illy :3Vsounds of guns Ti . There's Z the scmeak of Mollies dollv. and sqUawk of Dollie's polly, laughtefVjally from thisjuippy little I i yiour.i 'Byt above -ladepjyittle girls than all setter. ' (of mother about out as she calls ( we're itchin'j "Come to I dinner I" throug h the door. 1 still nl' bore it bravely, and bo sure that those who got shared what they could sharo witb those who had noth ing in the box. "What came in the Christmas box? Well, not much bric-a-brac, not many fancy candlesticks nor cardcases nor fancy purses nor that sort qf thing, 1 but mostly useful articles, though among these there wero watches and pocketknlves, nnd so on, but there were home Unit stockings and sowing kits and suspenders and shoes and books, not forgetting Ulblesrnnd Testa ments, and tpbacco and pipes nnd ci gars, 'all sorts of useful things and man letters and pictures. "And from whom did nil tlieso things ome? From wives and from children FRIDAY, DEO. 8, 1011. SECURITY ! SAVINGS OFFICERS : 9 I Kb m nblll Will VHSIIiyi W. J. WARD, Assistant Cashier T. B. CLARK H. S. SALMON FARLEY Tree Talk, 1 sleign 'A witlT utxzlCF bells set"1 tingleThile) in at syncopated the sound Johnnie!? trumpet Philip's drum and J that outside, and the screams all Christmas noises, and boys is oka thatj I toys isi more" good in istoreA 'Tis t h e sbund ' pitchin' things! in the kitchen' (she knows and from sisters nnd sweethearts and mothers, nnd it wuc that that made them all so dear. And,' bless tbeir dear hearts, they did not forget they did not at all forget tho things to eat. "Tho box seemed full of roasted chickens and cookies and Jellies nnd sausages and scaled up cans of butter and grand cakes and all manner of good tblugs to eat. True, we had pork enough, and we had plenty of bnrdtack, but hero was something that savored of Christmas. "Now when' I seo everybody buy ing Christmas things and tho children and everybody .happy it makes me smllo and, I confess, choke up a little as I recall that Christmas in the army." f haoow V r to drcwrW 9 3 roarX BANKiH H. J. CONGER C. J. SMITH well. We are always after new A CHRISTMAS PRAYER. Lord, for the lonely heart I pray apart. Now for the son of sorrow Whom thli tomorrow Itejolceth not, O Lord, Hear my weak word. For lives too bitter to be borne. For tho tempted and the torn. For the prisoner in the cell. For tho shame Hp doth not tell. For the haggard suicide, Peace, peace, this Chrlstmastldel .Into the desert, trod J3y tho long sick, O God; Into tho patient gloom Of that small room Where lies the child of pain Of all neglected most, be fain To enter, healing and remain. Now at the. fall of day 1 bow and pray. For those who cannot sleep A watch I keep. Oh, let tho starving brain , Be fed und fed again. At thy behest The tortured nerves find rest. I see the vacant chair. Father of souls, prepare My poor thought's feeble power 'To plead this hour. For tho empty, aching home, Where he silent footsteps come. Where tho unseen face looks on, Where the handclasp Is not felt. Where the dearest eyes are gone, Where tho portrait on the wall Stirs and struggles as to speak. Where tho light breath from the hah Calls tho color to tho cheek, Whoro he voice breaks In the hymn When ihe sunset burnetii dim, Where the late large tear will Etart. Frozen by tho broken heart; Where the lesson Is to learn How to live, to grieve, to yearn. How to bear and how to bow. Oh, the Christmas that is fled, Lord of living and of dead. Comfort thoul Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. Christmas Once a Year. Those Christmas bells as sweetly chime As on the day when first they rung So merrily In olden tlmo And far and wide their musle flung. Shaking the tall gray Ivied tower With all their deep, melodious power. They still proclaim to ev'ry ear, "Old Christmas conies but once a year! Then he came singing through the woods And plucked the holly bright and green. Fulled hero and there the Ivy buds; Was sometimes hidden, sometimes seen, Halt burled "neath the mistletoe. His long beard hung with flakes of snow, And still he ever caroled clear, "Old Christmas comes but once a year) What though upon his hoary head Has fallen many a winter's snow. His wreath Is still as green and red As 'twas a thousand years ago. Again we're happy all day long. We smile and listen to the song. Its burden still remote or near, "Old Christmas comes but once a yearf Joaquin Miller. Among the Wise Sayings. If Christmas came more than once a year, say four times, the sbcritl also would call around about that of ten. Yes? GETTING MISTLETOE FROM OKLAHO How the Kissing Plant Is ered and Marketed. Tjf-fcOUBTLESS many peoplo purchasing their Yuletide rations have often won w rnrH c-diiiH iiih liniiiHnsf. hutiiii holidnv season in tho cities and parasitic growth to thrive, says Among many of tho peoplo i 11 . - L . . 1. M TT 3 sourl who havo never taken the Idea provalls that mistletoe is iminii fiiiiv ui rnrn ini nrvn h. n diligent search, and then on oak place. capital of tbe new state of lima during tho winter time and, walk out to Wheeler park, wb situated In the southwest part . ,,. i i i .. i i . t his attention will bo drawn strange appearance which thol present at that season of the I when tho leaves are off and tbe, toe thrives on every branch. In the summer time, when the are on tbe trees, tho mistletoe bo seen unless it is specially for, and then it appears to be alii part of tbe natural foliage of tlfl upon which it is growing. Contrary to general belief, mil is rarely found on oak trees Oklahoma is nearly always foil swamp or water elms, which ail erally seen growing in lowlanil along river banks. Here it thrlvl uriantly. There is but one species tl found In Oklahoma out of tbe 41 species known to exist, most of I are found in tropical countries a parasitic tn nature. In Oklahoma two or three we fore Christmas the annual mi harvest Is gathered generally b who don't mind tho dangerot risky Job of climbing into all s trees after it and brought to where it is packed in barrels ant and shipped to the northern clti towns, where, along witb the hoi evergreen. It finds a placo in happy homes which have not fol the good old custom of decoral honor of the glad ChristmastideJ