1 w Yotir Business Standing In Your Town Is Judged By tho Way You Patronize tho Local Papers. If you Want tu Kc$ rndo at Homo Put Attractive in Your Homo Paper. I im 71th YEAR. NO. 24 HONE SD ALE, WAYNE CO., PA., FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1913. PRICE 2gENTS THE CITIZENS EASTER PROGRAMS IN HONESDALE CHURCHES I BAY OP ASCENSION OP CHRIST TO 1113 MARKED BY SONGS OP PRAISE. Special Singing in All the Churches Cantatas in Two Churches in the Evening of That Day. Easter with all its joys, falls this year on March 23. It is the sunrise of the golden age, the inspiration of all human 'hope, the seal of man's salvation. It is the life germ of the Christian year, which is an epitome of the church's history. The word " Easter " is derived by somo from Eastra or Ostra, the name of a pagan goddess whoso festival about tho time of the spring equinox, accord ing to others it comes from the Sax on "Urstan," to rise. This day is celebrated in all Christian churches throughout tho land. The churches of Honesdalo have prepared special services for that day, at which there will bo special singing and music. Tho 'fol lowing programs will be rendered in tho different churches of our city: Central Methodist Episcopal 10:30 A. M. Service. Organ and Violin Prelude ..Selected Mrs. Spencer, Edward Caufleld. Hymn 718 Praise God Choir and Congregation Apostles Creed. Anthem "In the End of the Sah bath' McFarlino Choir Soloist, Miss Mary E. Jones. Prayer. Solo "Christ the Lord is Risen" . Lansing Mrs. James Miller. Responsive Reading Pastor and Congregation Offertory. Quartette and Chorus "The Risen Lord" Ficher Miss Bryant, Mrs. Bullock, Messrs. Dibble and Cooper... Scripture .Lesson., -; Hymn 160. v -'- - . j ' ; J Sermon "Tho Conhuoror,'-.K i : . 'j'tiff .wfJiByl.;.JViUi3tJHJer.i Hymn 159. " ; 'i Benediction. Postlude. 7:30 P. M. Service. Organ 'and Violin Prelude. Mrs. Spencer and Leon Katz. Hymn 158. Anthem "O Day of Love Eternal" Bartlett Choir Soloists, C. J. Dibble, Mrs. James 'Miller. Scripture Lesson. Solo "Easter Sunshine Breaks Again" Mietzko Miss Flossie Bryant. Offertory. Male Chorus Parks Glee Club. Hymn 1G5. Sermon "Alive In Christ" Rev. "Will H. 'Hiller Solo, "Pity O Saviour" (Composed 1G72) Stradella Joseph Rubin. Hymn 748. Benediction. Postlude. Easter nt Grace Episcopal Church. Grace church choir augmented by some of our best local talent and Mrs. J. M. Rosier, soprano, of Al bany, and Miss Marguerite Kelley, mezzo-soprano, or Scranton, will len der tho following Easter program: 0:30 A. M. Service. Prelude, Caprice Kinder Male Chorus, "Hail, Glorious Morn" Dow Processional, The Golden, Glowing Morning. Kyrio and Gloria Tibl Marks Anthem "They Havo Taken Away My Lord" Harrington (Mrs. James Miller, Mrs. jonn Archer and Chorus. Hymn. "Welcome, Happy Morning." Offeitory, Soprano Solo, I Know That My Redeemer Livetu, irom "The Messiah Hendel Miss Marguerite Kelloy. Communion Hymn. Gloria in Excelsls Chant Hymn, Angels Roll tho Rock Away. Postlude, Alia Marcla Hubs 10:30 A. M. Service Prelude, Adagio from C Minor Sonata Guilmant Male Chorus, Glorious 'Day . . . .'Dow Processional, The Golden Morning. Christ Our Passover Schilling Glorias Garret Te Deum in E flat Baumbach Jubilate in F Garret Soprano .Solo, Awake, Triumphant Morn Schnockor Mrs. J. M. Rosier. Hymn, Come Ye Faithful. Gloria Tibl Marks Tenor Solo, Hall, Glorious Morn. Golbel Mr. "Robert Lees. Hymn, Christ tho Lord la Risen To day. Offertory, Baritone Solo, Come, Seo the Place Where Jesus Lay... Bartlott Mr. Joseph Rubin. Doxology. Communion Hymn. Gloria in Excelsls Chant Hymn, Tho Strife 1s O'er. Postlude. Triumphal March . . . , Brewer Mr. Leon Katz. Violinist Miss Mabel road, Organist and choir directress. Easter Carol Service of tho Sunday School. The High school orchestra will play the accompaniments 7:30 ser vice. Processional, "Come, Ye Faithful." Carol, The Easter Dawn. E. L. Bufflnton. Carol, Easter Sunlight . W. N. Eayrs Carol, Easter Chimes P. F. Campiglio Anthem by tho Junior Choir, with solo by Miss Dorothy Howell. Recessional, The Day of Resurrec tion. St. John's Lutheran. Easter services will be held as fol lows: Matin service at seven o'clock In tho morning with processional and vested choir. Sermon, " The Resurrection." Service will close with tho recessional. At ten o'clock there will be prep aratory service in tho church parlor and at 10:30 regular Gorman ser vice. Tho subject of the sermon will be "Die Aufstohung." The vested choir will also render special music at this service Tho Lord's Suppor will also bo celebrated. There will be no sermon in the evening. At 7:30 a cantata, entitled " Easter .Message " will bo rendered by tho full vested choir. Tho music for this was arranged by Edmund M. Lorenz. The following is tho program: Introduction Chorus "Rldo on in Majesty" Soprano Solo Mrs. Hallet "Alas and Did My Savior Bleed" Mixed Quartette, "Our Hope Lies Dead," By Mrs. 'Hallet, Mrs. Kohl, Mrs. Miller, Misses Emma Cook, Phllipino Klein and Hattie Walter. Mixed Quartette, "Your Lord Shall Rise," by Fred Truman, Royal 'Relchenbacher, Charles Rolchen- ' tiacher, Addison Hallet, John Car mlchael. Chorus, "The Lord Is Risen Indeed." Duet "I Know That My Redeemer Lives," Miss Anna Rippel and R'oval Relchenbacher. ltU Spl-MisS1 Phllipine'meln. Soprano solo Miss Kmma uook. Duet "we, too, snail Rise," 'reu Truman and Royal Relchenbacher. Tenor Solo Royal Relchenbacher. Bass Solo 'Fred Truman. Mezzo Soprano Solo Mrs. C. C. Miller. "Our Advocate With God.' Chorus "Thanks Be To God." Bass Solo John Carmichael Tho newly confirmed class will re ceive their first communion at tho Easter morning service. Si. Mary Magdalene Church. Eastor morning service will be gin with mass at 7 o'clock, at which the children will sing. The mem bers of the German Catholic club and Knichts of St. George will at tend In a body and receive holy com munion. The second mass win do celebrated at 8:30 a. m., at which mass the children will also sing. At the 10:30 mass, the program will be as follows: Processional Orchestra Vidi Aquam Old Chant Kyrle Elelson Generalli G. Gloria in Excelsls 'Deo Generalli G. Veni Creator Millard Sermon. Credo Generalli G Offertory Mrs. Rlchtmeyer, Messrs. Katz and Freeman. Sanctus Generalli Benedictus ; Generalli Agnus Dot Generalli Postludo Orchestra Solos will bo rendered by Messrs. Sonner, Demor, Theobald, and Delt zer, and Misses Reese, Theobald, Mc Kcnna, Rose and Huck. Outside of tho regular choir, Mrs. C. H. Rockwell, Messrs. Sigmund Katz and Jeffrey Freeman will as sist at this mass. Mrs. L. B. Rlchtmyer, Organist. Evening Service, 7:30 P. M. Processional "Strike the Cymbol" Puccini Venl Creator Millard Sermon "The Resurrection as View ed in History." O Cor Amoris Lamblllotte Obllgato Mrs. C. H. Rockwell O Salutaris Trio and Chorus... Rossini Tantum Emo. Double Quartette and Chorus Mercadante Laudato Domlnum Hayden Oblicato by Mrs. C. H. Rockwell and Chorus. Holy God. Postludo. St. John's Roman Catholic. Easter service as follows: High mass at 8 a. m. Boys' choir will sine. HiKh mass at 10:30 a. m. Regu ar choir will sing the follow ing: vidi Aciuam. Kyrle Emerson's Mass In C Gloria. Credo Rosewlg Mass in G Sanctus. Benedictus ...Emerson's Mass in C Agnus Del. Offertory, "Strike the Cymbal." Itecesslonal, March from Athalla. A sermon by tho rector at each mass, In the evening at 7:30 there will be a snecial hymn sorvlco and a ser mon. Solos will bo rendered by Miss Catherine Plnerty and Mr. James Monaghan. EASTER CANNOT GOME ON ANY FIXED DATE ACTIVITY AT THE ELEVATOR PLANT JLUN SHOP FINISHED NEW EN GINE ROOM AN ADDITION FIRE STARTED IN CORE OVEN. TIME IS GOVERNED BY THE POSITION OP MOON SYSTEM BEGAN 400 YEARS B. C. CHARLES LOMElt BUYS IIAAVLEY MOUNT PLEASANT . , GLASS CUTTLNCJ SHOP. " MAN A SUICIDE.. Charles Lozler; of Aldenville, who for tho last eight years has been, identified with the Clinton Cut Glass company, has purchased tho Bril liant Cut Glass equipment and will Incorporate as soon as a charter Is obtained ,from tho State Charles Webb, of Dyberry, has been having considerable trouble lately with chicken thieves. The latest attack made on his hen house was last Monday night when a couple of thieves tdok away several of his flock. Other persons haye been miss ing chickens lately and it would servo the thieves right If somo night they stopped into a nice little trap. Tho Presbyterian pipe organ has been overhauled this week and it will be In good condition for the mu sic on Easter Sunday. Honcsdnlo Binio Bank. "Deposit With Us" reads tho ad vertisements of the Honesdalo Dime Bank, and wo personally believe that It is a very good place to deposit your money If you want It to work for you day and night earning three per cent, interest for you all the while. In looking about for a bank to receive your money, you want to find a safe bank a convenient bank an accommodating bank. They want you to consider their bank along those lines. Satisfy yourself of the soundness and reliability of their institution then go there and open an account. Do It to-day. You will never regret It. They have a recording homo safe that will start you saving and keep you at it. Many of a big fortune has had Its incep tion In little savings. Call at tho bank and got acquainted with Its officers, start a savings account and take one of tho little banks with you to make your account grow. Grief Over Wife's Condition Unbal anced Clnrk E. Spencer's Mind Funeral Friday. Clark E. Spencer, an old resident of Mount Pleasant, committed sui cide Tuesday evening at his home there by shooting himself In the head with a 22-callbre revolver. He lived about an hour and a half. Mr. Spencer has been tho victim of melancholia for the past fe'w weeks. This state of mind was oc casioned, the neighbors think, by tho fact that his wife was committed to an asylum about a month ago, having been adjudged insane. This is supposed to have unbalanced his mind, and caused him to take his own life in this way. It was about nine o'clock In the evening that this occurred. A coroner's jury was em paneled and decided that death was due by his own hand. He is sur vived by four children, two sons, Ar thur and Robert, at home; two daughters, Anna, a teacher in the Hawley schools, and Blanche,' a teacher in Pitts township. Mr. Spencer was 69 years, 4 months and 4 days old. The funer al will bo held from his late home In Mount Pleasant Friday morning at 11 o'clock. Rev. Hunter will offi ciate. Interment will take place in tho Pleasant Mount cemotory. Brnss Foundry Acquisition to Mnin Foundry Grounds Being Graded Switch Extended Filling In tho Old Guard Lock. The large main shop of the Gur ney Electric Elevator factory is com pleted. The finishing touches wore mado by the painters to-day. Tho body of the shop is a light tinted green, while the basq of the walls for about four feet above tho floor lino Is dark green. Overhead is grey, while the wire partitions sep arating the main shop from the stock room is painted black. Since the original plans for the' plant were drawn there have been a few changes and alterations mado in tho construction and arrangement of tho building proper. Instead of having the dry kiln on tho west side of the plant, near the boiler room, It has been transferred to a part of the main structure, which was ori ginally intended for tho pattern storage room. An addition has been placed over tho original pattern storage room which will bo used for that purpose, the dry kiln being lo cated on the first floor underneath same. The new engine room will have a foundation 10 feet square of solid concrete. The depth will be 12 to 14 feet. A brass foundry is a new addition to the foundry proper. It will oc cupy a space ,10x17 feet and will be located in tho northeastern section of the main foundry. ' Fire was first started In tlie core oven. Monday, attemobnr.. A'tcoocre.te.; floor will be laid near tnis oyen nnu immediately underneath tho core gallery. Superintendent of Construction Peter Herbric has a large corp of laborers busy filling in the old guar.d lock of tho Delaware and Hud son canal for an extension of the rail road switch on tho Gurney tract of land. An addition of 200 feet of track will be laid, which will reach from the southern end of the boiler house to tho old berm bank of tho canal, bordering tho 'Lackawaxen riv er near the site of tho old canal tow bridge. The bank through which a cut was made as an entrance by rail into the factory, is beins Kraded and tho dirt taken to the old lock where It Is dumped. DEATH CLAIMS VEGETARIAN MRS. ELLA GILON, MANUFAC- ' TURER OP "VEGETABLE" CANDY, PASSES AWAY. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Charles N. Stearns, of Scranton, to Mary Frances Starnes and Adah Farley, of Lake, land In Salem; f 1. Rebecca L. Enslin, of South Ca naan, to Arthur B. Evans, of Scran ton, land in South Canaan; $950. Edgar W. Corey et ux of Lake, to Eliza Jane Quintin, of Philadel phia, land In Lake township; $1200. Clark DuMond et ux of Bucking ham, to Thomas McGrath, of same, land in Buckingham township; $110. TO THE PUBLIC: An Advertisement. HREE Easter seasons we have been serving the pub lic and it has been our aim 'from the beginning to please our patrons, give them the highest standard of quality, and maintain that long lost art in the re pair of Jewelry and Watches, namely, Promptness. May our relationship with our present custom long remain mutually beneficial, and may we earnestly deslro to demonstrate to new pa trons that we strive to uphold one quality tho very best. A happy Easter to you and you and you. ROWLAND Jeweler and Optician of HoncsdIe. Deceased Was a Genius Mado Many Beautiful Articles From Seeds, Shells and Fish Gills. Mrs. Ella Gllon, manufacturer of "vegetable" candy, died at her homo hero Monday, aged 72 years. Mrs. Gllon, who has been a resident of Honesdalo only four years, came to this place from New York City with ner uusnana, tno iaio uoiouui .cu ward Gllon. who died about a year and a half ago. Since his death Mrs. Gilon expressed to her menus mai she must do sometning tor a living and consequently made vegetable candy. When asked one tlmo how she made tho canay wnicn was iniinhl nftoT- frnm nil narts of tho TTnltort Htntna. MrH. Gllon stated that was something she would never re veal. She said that sue naa no spec ial recipe, but that she "carried tnem oil in hoi- Vionrl " Swp.nt nntatoe.8. beans, carrots, parsnips and Irish po tatoes were useu in tno manuiuciuiu of her unique candy. She received considerable notoriety, naving receiv ed letters from all parts, of the United States. Mrs. Gllon re ceived a dollar per pound for her product. She was a genius. Besides making candy out of vegetables she made necklaces, odorless and scent ed from apple seeds, ollvo and plum pits, muskmellon seeds, allspice, .lnvna nml rltrnn Reeds. Beautiful Easter lilies, fleurdells and tulips were made from ifish gills. During her short stay in Hones dale Mrs. Gilon made a number of friends. She was a member of tho Central Methodist Episcopal church and also of the Ladles' Circle of Cap tain James Ham Post. Mrs. Gllon was twice married. Her maiden name was Ella Van Drlesen. She was a sister of tho late A. D, Van Drlesen of this place. Three sisters survlvo, also one brother. The funeral was held on Thursday afternoon at 2:15 in tho Methodist church. Rev- W. II. Hlller offlclat lng. If It Were Not, It Might Bo Placed Like Christmas, On a Certain Date of Each Year. By Garret P. Scrviss. (From New York American.) Tho great Christian festival of Easter, marking the anniversary of the resurrection of Christ, falls this year within one day of its earliest possible date. It comes on Sunday, March 23. Last year It fell on Sun day, April 7. Some years it occurs several weeks later. All other anniversaries except Easter, and tho holy days associated with It, fall on a flxed day of each year, and people who are not familiar with what Is called tho ecclesiastical calendar are often greatly puzzled to account for the wandering of this great festival, whose extreme dates may bo as much as five weeks apart. A lato Easter has more flowers and more sunshine; an early one, like that of the present year, sometimes feels the last chill of the departed Winter. Tho primary reason for tho vari able dato of Eastor is the fact that it is the only great festival in Chris tian countries that depends directly upon tho monthly motion of tho moon. At the same time, it is affect ed by tho yearly motion of the sun, since Its dato Is governed by the ver nal equinox, which is the point In tho year when the sun crosses the equa tor from the southern into the north ern hemisphere. Easter Conies on Sunday Following First Full Moon. But the year and the month are not commensurable lengths of time that .is . to say, there Is not.-an, eyen number of lunar months In; .a year.. A lunar month. Is not the same, as calendar. month but It represents the time Ittsm .tmo'f uu'pon tq the next, whlcfi Is, on the" average, "about 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes. A year, which Is measured by the apparent motion of the sun, is on the average 305 VL days Now this cannot bo di vided by the period of a lunar month without a remainder. In conse quence, a full moon may occur at any tlmo In the course of an ordinary month. 'But tho rule for finding tho dato of Easter is that it must fall upon the Sunday immediately following tho first full moon, which occurs on or after March 21, which is tho regular date of the equinox. Last year tho first full moon fol lowing the equinox happened on April 1, which was a Monday. The next following Sunday, April 7, was then, according to the rule, Easter Day. This'year the full moon of tho equinox, or the paschal moon as it Is called In the church calendar, falls on March 22, which is a Sat urday, and the next day, the twenty third, being Sunday, becomes Easfer Day. System of Determining Easter Mado 100 Years B. O. Inasmuch as Christmas Day, which Is celebrated as the anniversary of the birth of Christ, comes at a fixed dato every year, December 25, it would appear much simpler to keep Easter also as near a 'fixed date as possible. It could not be absolutely flxed because of the settled custom of celebrating it on a Sunday, but, as the astronomer Clavius pointed out centuries ago, a reasonable de gree of regularity could be Introduc ed by making Easter the first Sunday after the equinox without regard to the phase of tho moon. If that rule wero adopted the date of Easter would still bo a movable one, but its wanderings would be kept within a week of a fixed date. Tho existing system of determining the dato of Easter Is based upon a discovery made more than four hun dred years before Christ by tho Greek astronomer Meton. He found that 235 lunar months are almost exactly equal In total length to 19 years of 365 days each, There Is a difference of only about two hours In tho course of the 19 years. This period is called the Metonic Cycle, and its division Into years gives riso to the "Golden Numbers," which in dicate the' place of any year In the cycle. At tho beginning of the cycle, which, as used In tho ecclesiastical calendar, Is reckoned from January 1, of tho year 1, B. C, a new moon happened to fall on January 1. Every 19 years since then there has been a new moon at the beginning of January, but during the intermedi ate years of tho cycle the first new moon of tho year occurs at different dates In January, which are always tho same for years occupying tho samo place In the cycle. This place is called tho Golden Number, and by its aid, through a somewhat compli cated system of computation, tho date of tho paschal moon can be cal culated any number of years la advance. "William Varcoe 1b visiting rela tives in Hoadleys,