PAGE TWO THE CITIZEN, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1913. WAYNE COUNTY ! I BEATS THE WEST m Soon." Editor of The Citizen: IN your valued paper of March 14 th thero appeared an ar ticle under this head, "The Last Great Land Opening to Take Place in Montana I do not know what prompt ed the writing of this article unless the author is the owner of some rail way stopk, and thought if he got a whole lot of people here at a given time to draw on some land scheme, the lucky ones would come again, and of course thero would bo a double haul. Well, we must all boost our own business. It made good reading, too; and that is why you printed it I suppose business again. Tho transcontinental roads are the only ones that ever made any money out of land drawings. It is the old spirit of( gamble that pre vad.es the human breast that makes us all gamblers, all want to take a chance. Some of us even say we want a "gambler's chance." Some play any game that comes along, the old Louisiana lottery, for Instance, which ran until the Government put a stop to it. Those same people who played the lottery took up the game again with the Indian lands, made a gambling feature of it, and the whole country seemed to fall for It. I have been 35 years in tho west this month, have seen sovoral draw ings, have seen people killed for reservation land when there were thousands of acres right off tho res ervation Just as good. A Little Gnmo of Tho Railroads. Take the drawing of tho Flathead reservation, three years ago. The government required a man in the state of Maine, or any other eastern state, to come here to file on this land, and then told him to go back homo and wait until thoy shook his name in a "goose" from some old dis carded Keno game that the gov ernment had put out of use because It was a gambling device and if he was lucky and his name got out soon enough, he was called back from his Eastern home and allow.ed to file on the land. See the point? Another haul for the railroad. There were certain conditions under which he could take up this land, too, if he was lucky enough in the drawing. Hundreds of people with whom I talked told me they either knew be fore they left homo that they could not take up a piece of land under the requirements, or found it out af ter they got hero, as Missoula was designated as tho place to come to find out. These people when ques tioned as to why they did it, under the circumstances, said they Just wanted to take a chance once and see if they were lucky. Now it is Just as easy to stay at home and send your namo in to tho land office here, or in Washington, D. C, tell tho official you are eligible to take up a homestead, and then if you are lucky you can make your preparations, close up your business and within a certain time come on and settle in your new homo. You can see the land on tho Flathead res servatlon Just as well from tho dome of the capitol at Harrlsburg or down In your own front yard as you can see It from Missoula,, for this land is twenty miles away and on the other side of a mountain.. Tho Truth About Montana Homesteads. But the real meat of this land nut: There are millions of acres of land in Montana open to settlement now no drawing; all that Is necessary is to have your homestead rights. If you do not know what these are I will tell you. You must be a citizen of the United States, 21 years old, man or woman, black or white. You can come hero and got a home cheap er than you could by a drawing. It would bo well to correspond with some one familiar with this land and find out Just where the kind of land is that you want. If you are coming out get a guide from that locality, when you want to settle. Thero are plenty of old settlers who will only charge you ?125 or ?150, and you will find the money well spent both as a time saver and for horso hire. This guide you will find on the square, and he can give you more Information while out with him than you would learn in a year by your self. If you aro sure you will lo cate, put your money in the bank nearest to tho land you aro planning i.ei mm araw tne actual expen ses until you find something that suns you. u you fail there, then try some other place. You can find all this out before putting down tfny actual monoy, and when you find your land you can have It without taking any chances. Wnjno Land and Markets Best in tho World. The land in Wayne county where I visited last year Is good enough for anybody. All that is necessary is to study the conditions, learn what the land Is best adapted for and what the market is calling for. Wayne county has tho best niarket In tho world, and no three thousand-mile haul to dispose of the produce, either. Would You Llko a La Grande Fruit Farm? Head This, and Think! Last fall on my return home from tho East I made a trip to the Pacific coast, passed through tho great fruit belts of Washington, around Yakama and Walla Walla, and back through Oregon and Idaho. At La Grande, Oregon, I went through the Grand 'Itund valley, a piece of land perfect ly flat, 2G miles long and 18 miles wide. The soil is a volcanic ash, the moat fertile on earth. This Is one of the oldest settled places in Oregon. 1 siooa one aay wnero irom every direction I could look on orchards. Rows and rows of apple trees passed into the dim haze of the distance unbroken. This whole valley was one grand orchard, and yet, tho fruit lay under the trees ungathered beautiful apples, large and red and smooth and free from Infection or insects. The cause? No market. That condition would never happen In Wayne, not if every available foot of ground in the wholo country was planted to apples. Thero was a rea son for this stagnation of the apple market here, and as these fellows are a Wise set I doubt its happening again. Who Should Get Homes in tho West. There are, no doubt, a thousand people in your midst who could take advantage of the homestead laws and get a Montana home and better their condition. To the wage earner I ap peal, you who have to get up and go at the clang of a bell or the toot of a whistle, whose ears aro trained 10 catch tho foreman's step. You slaves of the twentieth century civi lization, you who have never been your own boss, or done your own thinking, to you whom the Declara tion of Independence has no real meaning, I say, Come out west and get a home, a real homo of your own. It may be lonesome at first. Your children may have to ride horseback to school, your wife may have to take tho same conveyance, to make an af ternoon call on a neighbor or to go to church, yet tho bloom of health on their faces, and the fearless expression of their eyes will well e pay you, even though your children are not allowed the privilege of mingling with the crowds in tho busy marts of the world. They will not be shy like hlrlings. Should a stranger come to your gate and ask who owns the land, they will look him straight in the eye, not brazen, but still un abashed, and say "My Dad." Neighbors Getting Close. Safety in Montana. The country is settling up. Neigh bors are getting closer. Thero are people living within ono mile of each other in Montana now. Still, you do not have to lock your granary door at night, or your house door, either. You do not have to send a bodyguard with your wife and daughter if they have to make a long trip either in the day time or at night. Bright Prospects for Montana Surveyors. " The last grand opening to take place in Montana soon!" Why, all the land in Montana will not be sur veyed for ten years to come. Mon tana is the third largest state in the Union wlh a population of 375,053 in 1910, a little more than half that of Rhode Island, with an area as large as Rhode Island, Delaware, Connecti cut, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maryland, West Virginia, and South Carolina combined. The state is rich enough to provide for tho millions of people who inhabit those states. Tho fastest train crossing tho state, coming into the eastern boundary at 3:00 p. m. does not leave it until 7:00 p. m. tho following day, and will travel 780 miles. For 25 years three transcon tinental roads, the Union Pacific, the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern sold tickets to tourists and home seekers In a vain attempt to fill up the state of Washington. During all that tlmo and until the Chicago, Milwaukee and Puget Sound came in the state stop-over privileges could not be obtained. The railroads wanted to settle the long haul first. Pullman Tourists Can't Give Much Information. You need not bo afraid that the land will be all gobbled up in Mon tana this year. Dut, you are Retting (older each -year and if you ever in- tena to come west, now is tho time. Find out where this vacant land Is. Don't ask some ono who has crossed the state in a Pullman car. You can see by the figures he was part of the time in a berth asleep, of if awake it was too dark for him to see any thing. Then again, the roadbed fol lows the streams to get the grade, so the tourist sees a long stretch of mountains and timber. When he has crossed tho State ho will prob- auiy asi: wnere tne hundreds of thousands of Buffalo found grass and pasture before the white man came. This grew on the great plains of tho west you read about in your youth. Tho Indians did not cut off grass, nor cut down trees and plant alfalfa for these Buffalo to winter on. Then after the Buffalo there were millions of sheep, and hundreds of thousands of horses and cattle that ranged over tho state. These had to be fed, and the feed grew on these same plains. These wild ranges are now being surveyed Into IGO-acre parcels to bo given away to boni fide citizens of this The state is a hunter's paradise. Who Should Remain East. Who Should Go West. Conditions aro good in tho. East, and if you aro satisfied to be a wage earner the factories aro there. We make no shoes, no fabrics, no machinery here. Wo produce the raw materials. Every year sees thous ands more people added to our Bide, but overy timo we get a recruit it calls for ono more in tho East to make' up the stuff he wants. We want some of all the necessities of life, and nearly all of the luxuries. As long as somo of you stay in tho East to use our beef, wheat, pork, etc., and work up our wools and hides, wo will be satisfied. We don't want all of you to come, as I said before, but wo could use a lot of you to fill up this big, rich State. Once here you will soon adopt tho cow-boys song as your own "Let me live in old Montana where there's lots of room and air, Cotton-woods and pino trees, Bitter Root and Prlckley Pear." A. M. STEVENS. SCALE SPRAYING DEMONSTRATIONS TO END. Tho demonstrations for spraying dormant trees for San Jose scale, Blister Mite, Peach-Leaf Curl, and other pests that would be reached during this dormant season will come to a close in the Northeastern por tion of Pennsylvania this week. The earlier demonstrations were arrang ed for the Southern or lower portions of tho State, and were given before the buds burst. Those which are now scheduled and announced are in that portion of the State where the spring is slow in advancing, and the dormant spraying can yet be done successfully. These demonstrations have been unusually "successful, having been attended by over 30,000 persons, who are intensely interested. By this means State Zoologist H. A. Sur face has succeeded in carrying to the horticultural citizens of this Com monwealth the very latest and the best information upon the first essen tial steps in securing good fruit. Thousands of persons have seen the work done, and after understanding the methods they have returned to their own premises to undertake It in the same manner and insure such good results this year as in years past where this work has been thor oughly and properly done. Tho next public demonstrations by the Division of Zoology of the State Department of Agriculture will be for tho Codling Moth and other pests and plant diseases, just after the blos soms fall. It must be remembered that the expert demonstrator will be present rain or shine, and the public meeting will be held at one o'clock on tho afternoon of the date an nounced. Tho schedule for the last week of demonstrations on dormant trees is as follows: Carbon county Monday, April 7, S. W. Gangwer, Rockport. Elk county Monday, April 7, Jos. Lanzel, Mt. Marys. Fayette county Monday, April 7, Geo. L. Denny, East Millsboro. Forest county Wednesday, April 9, Miss Mary M. Mays, Hottelville. McKean county Monday, April 7. R. J. Gates, Mt. Alton. Pike county Thursday, April 10, W. F. Simons, Greentown. Wayno county Tuesday, April 8, F. W. Osgood, Ariel. RAILWAYS SCORE VICTORY. Washington, April ::. The Inter state Commerce Commission on Mon day handed down a decision which' is a notable victory for tho railroads on Transcontinental rates to the Pa cific. Advanced rates which were suspended some tlmo ago have been allowed by the commission. Commissioner Clements, in the in terests of shipper and carrier, pro vailed upon the carriers to meet with the shippers in informal conference at the close of tho hearings in an en deavor to amicably adjust at least a part of their differences. As a result of these conferences, first between the parties themselves and later with Commissioner Cle ments, most of the disputed items were in that way adjusted satisfac torily to tho shippers, who withdrew their protests. This decision con demns certain of the proposed ad vances, and tho few remaining ones are permitted to become effective. It is to bo hoped that the manner in which this Inquiry was conducted may serve as a valued precedent In the procedure of the Commission. THE PHILADELPHIA RECORD is promoting an attractive and valu able book proposition for six consec utive coupons clipped from the Daily and Sunday Record, and a small cash payment. It will send to any one a copy of the New Modern English Dic tionary, as follows: Tho $4.00 volume, of full limp leather, flexible, stamped in gold on back and sides, printed on Bible pa per, with red edges and corners rounded, beautiful, strong and dur able, for G coupons and $1.20, Includ ing postage Besides the general contents, thero are maps and over 600 subler.ts heaiitlfullv llliiRtrntflil uvyuj IU UUUI JIUH UlllIUUB OL IU1H 1 , - , great Republic. What kind of land Y three-color plates, numerous sub- do you want some timber and somo open or somo of the rich bottom land? flat? or hilly? with, or with out rocks? Would you llko It un derlain with coal, with a top soil of one to 1.05 per cent, lime, with one tenth of one per cent, nitrogen, where you can raise the biggest wheat crops grown in the world, or any other kind of grain for that mat ter, with a rich sub-soil of clay so the moisture can not leak out; or, would you like tho other extreme, a decomposed granite, warm earth where fruits of all kinds grow at their best? Now is the time to de cide, and Montana is tho place to doclde on. If scenic beauty is de sired, there Is the Yellowstone and Glacier Parks, If you nre a hunter and aspire to big game, the Rocky mountains bavo an abundance of bear, deer, elk and mountain sheep rooming through them. If you aro a scatter-gun artist tbore is the jects by monotones, 16 pages of edu catlonal charts and the latest United States Census. The $3.00 book, precisely the same as the $4.00 book except In the style of binding, which is in half- leather, with olive edges and squara, corners, will be mailed for the six coupons and $1.03, including post- ago. Tho $2.00 book, In plain cloth binding, stamped in gold and black, which has tho same paper and lllus tratlons, but with the color plates and charts omitted, will be sent for six coupons and 70 cents, Tho Record is to be commended In its promotion of the offer, presenting every one with a valuable adjunct to their educational opportunities at a minimum of cost Those desiring these books should send coupons and remittance direct to The Philadelphia Record, Diction ary Department, 910 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. MASTER'S SALE of Vnlunblo Heavily Timbered REAL ESTATE In Partition. Tho undersigned, a Master ap pointed by tho Court of Common Pleas of Susquehanna county to mako sale of tho real estate In par tition proceedings botween William Main et al. plaintiffs, and Robert H. Rose et al., defendants, will expose to public sale and venduo at the Court House In Montrose, Pa., on Thursday, tho 15th day of May, 1013 at two o'clock p. m., tne following described real estate: FIRST PIECE: Comprising 284 1-4 acres, more or less. This pleco is covered with heavy timber chiefly hemlock, original growth and also a portion of tho wa ters and ground thereunder of "Sil ver Lake," one of the most beautiful fresh water lakes in northeastern Pennsylvania, and shoro lino thereof about three-quarters of a mile, mak ing a very attractive spot for cot tagers, Ashing and boating; in the center of the hill country of Penn sylvania about 1800 feet above sea level. SECOND PIECE Comprising 805 3-4 acres more or less. This piece consists almost entirely of very heavy virgin hemlock Inter spersed with .some plno and hard wood; ono of the most valuable tim ber tracts of Its size in the state of Pennsylvania. Within easy reach of railroad and shipping facilities, being within ten miles of D., L. & W. R. R. and L. V. R. R. Any further information desired concerning either tract' will be fur nished by the Master, together with map of the tract. JOHN S. COURTRIGHT, Master. Montrose, Susq'a Co., Pa. A. B. SMITH, Attorney. Montrose, Pa. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION, Estate of W. Francis Decker, D. D., or William Francis Decker, Jr., Deceased. All persons indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate pay ment to tho undersigned; and those having claims against said estato are notified to present them, duly attest ed, for settlement. LAURA M. DECKER, Admin'x. Newfoundland, Wayno county, Pa. Or to her attorney, Furman,Shoppard Phillips, 707 Betz Bldg., Philadelphia. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Estate of MARIA P. KESLER, Late of Honesdale. All persons Indebted to said es tate are notified to make immediate payment to the undersigned; and those having claims against the said estato are notified to present them duly attested, for settlement. FRANK E. SHERWOOD, MILLARD F. SHERWOOD, ALONZO T. SEARLE, Executors. Honesdale, Pa., March 24, 1913. ATTRACTIVE COTTAGES modern appointments. newly papered and painted lo cated on Seventh, Sixth and Court Streets. Property on 7th St. 3ox82 feet, -Property on 7th St. 3ox82 n n i.. I.IIIIIUI HIIHIUriU Gntl, nnrl rniii. cti-oota OCvCf. fnAf SlXth Street, Six-Room House, . $2,200 Inquire of Buy-U-A-Home Realty Co. Honesdale, Pa. J ad win Bldg. Both Phones THE DELAWARE AND HUDSON COMPANY Saratoga Springs and Suffering Men &. 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ON THESE LINES WE HAVE SUCCEEDED u C '31 a x UJ z. rs Soundness of Principle c 0) E a 0) H Ho o 3 J3 HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK Honesdale, Pa. 3 Interest on all Saving Accounts. CA CO o e t MB P s o c 3'' a w Safety of Investment lr m o o 3 O 3 EE & 3 ft) (O 3 3 We Should Like to Have Your Banking Business. OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS FROM 7:80 TO 830. OFFICERS : HENRY Z. RUSSELL, President, LEWIS A. HOWELL, Cashier, ANDREW THOMPSON, Vice-President, ALBERT C. LINDSAY, Asst. Cashier.