THE CITIZEN, TUESDlV, APRIL 15, 1913. PAdE FIVE CENT-A-AVOIU) COLUMN. Advertisements and rendlnc notices of oil Kinds placed in this column will be charged tor at Che rate ot one cent per word tor each separate Insertion. When sending us adver tisements to be printed in this column, cash or stamps must accompany the order. FOR SALE. FOR SALE ON ACCOUNT OF family breaking up housekeeping, they offer their high grade, upright piano, nearly new, for less than half cost. Address A. E. F., Honesdale Citizen. 31tl FOR SALE, EGGS ROSE COMB Brown Leghorn: Columbian wyan- dottes, 76c per setting. Also one Wyandotte rooster. Arch Illno, Orson, Pa. 30t4. FOR SALE: A LOT OF YOUNG pigs, part O. I. C, also 3 thorough bred from registered stock, two sows, and one boar. 'Phono or write. Wm. Everly, Lakevllle, Pa. 29t4 SPRAY YOUR FRUIT TREES NOW -r -1 1 1 T C,.1 Willi 1 U ill U 11 ill 111UUU Tnnrtn liv Barium Pro- ,l,,t Hn Qnrnntnn Pn RnlH hv Mnrrav company. Jtionesaaie. zsio MISCELLANEOUS. I1I1HII1. HU.1I1LU1 V LIlUlllUillKt hUO 4&U.U, mull 1LJ iiuirj, uu b w umi iv 1 T- 1 O -i " f .1 9H o An mtm Hill H.1BVBI1L11 BLlbbLS. 27t4. house work. Apply Heumann ho- 1 OHnlO balls, parties, bazaars, fairs, etc. for cut class factory, size 32x57 eet; two stories; water anu gasouuo 11 installed, readv to start. Penn'a S.. and N. Y. II. R. facilities near oinrv. will rout. rhfmn. (;an nave i r i it a o Af riflrnss nimrlfis E. Brand. Ralston. a, II U S K li UJ K I'K IIS iVI'l' llj A X1U XOU Will SOU II 11UUU U1U UtiWOyaiJClO . 1 1 L TTT Diace uuaer your carumn, wu . i f t O 1 mien rnr a main. ioei ll LOCAL MEWS Mrs. William Camber, of Beth- j -1 j i .1 i i i 'ortnnortnv wnoro Ann wriH finmiTTpn the Emergency hospital, sne was niHriiiir lruiii u. iiuuiumu uim dud' Infiri hv .i fall in her horns on Tues- iv of last week. -E. A. Pennlman, the veteran tttJ VKU V Cell O Ul UKTJ J 11UUJ r U : ii. rrl nix! nH Ml IIIU UlLlZtill. UlltJ Ul LL1U U11KUI- t exchanges to reach our table. )rest City News. -There will be a flag raising with TTiiiiiiiiv M'.iiiiin. 11111111MILH i tii:n t: i:- n, in Damascus township, on Frl v. Attornev M. J. Hanlan. of . . in i .1.. t 1 1 eaker. Miss Sadie Welsh, teacher. On account of a number of peo being unable to attend the en- 1 1 J .I j. 11 TTl T. . -rtt 1 1 11 1 1 1 1- T M TWl !l QVPIl 1 II I' 11 W III III-. I ated this (Tuesday) evening, Apr. , at 7:30 o'clock in the High school ditorlum. Admission 10 cents. reserved seats. -The White Mills firemen gave 11 uuuutti uaii at tv uuuuiou a iiuii turday evening and a large gath ng was present. Music was fur- im chowder, ice cream and coffee s served. Several from Honesdale re in attendance. -Tnrn 1 Viol n In A tvmvnn linirn haAn rted in the Wayne county courts s week. One by Mary E. Sheva- . 1 1 UK! I1L1I L. ILUiLIIIHL llrll 11 II h lli II 11 . J. Shevaller. She charges the ter with wilful and malicious do tion since Oct. 1, 1898. The otit is by Mary Elizabeth Cory, libel t, against her husband, Fred S. case Is cruel and barbarous ltment. endancerlnc her life and sring indignities so that she was ? a 1 i. The trout fishing season will 4. -1 . m.. .1 1 A 1 1 f r close July 15. There will be bet sport this year than for many m 1 imi iiiiiiiiuinniiiiiKi 11 11 iir.i . department has been in the hab- f cfnnlrlnfr lio trmit ornnTTia onnll n wiin millions 01 small iry, uui yi the season opened some of the ams siocKea me most nau very trout. An investigation reveal- that the troublo was due to king with too young trout. They e not prepared to resist the at- of the larger nsh and were de- red as food, and their weakness made them a prey to swift cur- s in the streams. This defect has 1 overcome for this year, and the king process is expected to pro 3 a largo Held. -A. L. Schell, Dr. F. L. Moyer J. Harry Spencer, of Willlams- , lonimr oiucura ui uiu ueiuuci onal Protective Association, who i convicted of conspiracy to do d and were sentenced to elgh- months in the penitentiary, t to prison recently. Efforts in the state superior and supremo o Sheriff Tomlinson and went to The application to the Supreme L IOr wrilo ul uuucuo uuiJua refused. The court decided 4 s-v (ah nna tf napcAnd linrla'n nr. nr i :i i i . wimi wuiu cuu v il: Lt:u re mat act was nassea, were not in n a innr 1 n wr rniiiiv 11111 il'iiihh punishment by allowing the t unrestricted discretion as to minimum senience, wuuro mo j below which the court could go In passing a merciful sen- 1. There were no church services In the Presbyterian church Sunday on account of the Illness of Dr. VV. II. Swift. Towanda, that hustling Brad ford county town, has secured a new Industry In the form of a largo hos iery' establishment. The public school entertainment in the auditorium last Friday even ing was well attended and the in teresting program reflected much credit on teachers and pupils alike. Music was furnished by the iHigh school orchestra. Mr. Cox, the Salvation Army representative of Scranton, will be In Honesdale all this week collecting papers, magazines, books, old clothes, etc., and will make calls around town with a wagon. If you have any of these articles to give have them ready for him. An adjourned session of the last quarterly conference of the Central Methodist Episcopal church will bo held this (Monday) evening at 8 o'clock in the Methodist parsonage. At this time the business of the year will be settled and reports " given. Organization pi the olllcial board will also be held. ' Before this week will have fin ished Honesdale may know who its new postmaster will be. The ap pointment is looked forward to with unusual Interest. There are several candidates in the field and despite this President Wilson may give the ofilce to some party who has not pe titioned the public for it. As an offset to the great dam ago by Spring floods, the absence of floating ice or of ice gorges on prac tically all of the great streams of the country over the greater portion of their courses Is certainly a compen sating factor not to be ignored. Had there been this usual element added to the enormous flow of water, the destruction would have been a great deal more thorough, as well as more extensive. Through Judge Smith, attorney for the Osterhout estate, says the Sullivan County Democrat, Jacob Osterhout sold the Comstock farm near Maplewood last week to Eugene Blllingham. There are 150 acres in the farm and while under the cir cumstances the price is considered adequate, it is also considered to be a cheap farm for the purchaser. Mr. Blllingham expects to establish a fruit farm and raise squabs. The Hawley Times says that Ferdinand J. Crockenberg, of Scran ton, formerly proprietor of the Eddy hotel at Hawley, has leased the Lackawanna hotel, on Crystal street, East Stroudsburg, from George W. Febel, owner and proprietor, for the term of Ave years. He took posses sion yesterday, April 14. Mr. Crock enberg has purchased all the furni ture and fixtures in the hotel and contemplates making a number of Improvements about the place. Two laborers tearing down a stone wall in Goshen found a pack ago containing $1,000 worth of jew elry. There were gold watches, stick pins, hat pins, breast pins, rings and other articles. The matter was re ported to the Goshen police, and on one of the pieces was found engraved the name, "Eva Keyes," and inquiry disclosed that a woman of that name had for several years been an inmate of the Interpines Sanitarium, and is now confined in the Poughkeepsie State iHospltal. The Kimble & Decker Silk com pany has sold its mill at Middletown, N. Y., to the Middletown Self-Locking Burr Manufacturing company. Possession will be given about June 1. The Kimble & Decker company decided some time ago to abandon the Middletown building and move the machinery to Moscow, where they have a new mill, and will take advantage of the lull In the silk bus iness caused by the strike to make the transfer. The Middletown mill will be kept in operation until It completes the work for Which it has immediate demand. General orders will shortly bo Issued from national headquarters announcing that Battery B, Pitts burgh, and Battery C, Phoenixville, will not encamp with brigade organi zations, but will encamp from July 21 to 20 with United States army ar tillery at Tobyhanna in the Pocono mountains. The orders will desig nate tho encampments of brigade or ganizations as follows: First brigade, Mt. Gretna, July 19 to '2C. Second brigade, Erie, July 5 to 12. Third brigade, Selinsville, July 5 to 12. Fourth brigade, Selinsgrove, July 19 to 2G. Company E, of Honesdale, will encamp at Selinsgrove with the Thirteenth regiment. Governor Tener is giving his support to the Boy Scout movement. The Scout Bulletin of last week says: " Ten Governors of tho United States are behind the scout movement and are doing everything in their power to help it. They like its principles and the manner In which it suites fun for the boys. Those men are Governors Eugene Foss of Massa chusetts, John K, Tener of Pennsyl vania, Ben W. Hooper of Tennessee, O. A. Eberhart of Minnesota, Lock Craig of North Carolina, Luther E. Hall of Louisiana, Woodbrldge N. Ferris of Michigan, Tasker L. Od- dlo of Nevada, William Horace Mann of Virginia, and William C. McDon ald of New Mexico." The English critic, William Sharp in giving to the world tho drama, " The House of Usna," has given one of the most wonderful poetic conceptions of the age. The drama was written under that dell cate and beautiful .side of his nature, Fiona Macleod. This drama was the principal interpretation by Mrs. Salo Frledewald at the High school audi' torlum Saturday afternoon. The drama brings out the thought that "There is no evil wrought in the world that the wind does not bring back and lay at the feet of him who wrought It." The great king of Ire land, In pursuit of beautiful Dehra, a daughter of Scotland, kills the sons of the House of Usna and thereupon the desire of his heart falls at his feet. Mrs. Frledowald also read Interestingly of the prose works of William Sharp. They were "The Anointed Man" and "Wells of Peace." The next- reading will be " The War God," by Isreal Zangwill on Saturday afternoon, April 26, Maplo City Camp of Modern Woodmen will give an entertainment .supper in their rooms, in Freedom hall on Friday evening of this week. Additional help is oelng taken on at the Crystal Cut Glass works, Fourteenth street. This Is the youngest of Honesdale's many glass Industries and is one of the busiest. There are now nearly 30 hands em ployed. A piece of land containing about thlrty-flve acres was sold at Orphans' Court sale at the court house Thursday afternoon by La vlna Evans, administratrix of tho es tate of her husband. Attorney M. E. Simons conducted the sale and tho property was bid in by Francis Cra go, for the widow, for $700. There was a mortgage of $G0O against tho property. Rev. W. H. iHIller preached two excellent sermons on Sunday, they being the last before conference con venes on the lGth of this month. Mr. Hlller has just closed a successful pastorate of nine years of the Hones dale church. He goes to conference with the approbation of Honesdale's citizens that he has accomplished an efficient and most satisfactory work in our midst. Samuel Hartshorn, a young man employed on a branch line of tho Erie and Wyoming Valley running from a washery near Clemo to No. 18, Is In a serious condition as a re sult of slight wreck. A freight car containing culm was derailed and Hartshorn was crushed beneath the car, It being somo time before he could be extracated. His head was badly squeezed and it will be some time before he will be able to re sume his work. Judge Davies of New York de cided against the Town of Bethel, Sullivan county, sometime ago in the motion to havo the trial of the auto truck suit for damages changed from New York county to Sullivan county. Supervisor Townsend Immediately in structed his attorneys, Judge Smith and George L. Cooke, to appeal the case, which they did and the Appel late Division handed down a decision last week, which is final, in favor of the Town of Bethel and ordering the case for trial in Sullivan county. The sporting element of Hones dale were treated to a real wrestling bout at the Rink last Thursday evening when Miles Fitch, of 'Hones dale, met Young Muldoon, of Ply mouth. The latter had the advan tage of weight. Muldoon scored the first fall in 10 minutes and 55 sec onds; Fitch the second in 23 min utes. In the third Muldoon was dis qualified for using foul tactics. Wm. Dalles was referee. Muldoon chal lenged Fitch to a finish bout and an effort is being made by Manager Spencer of the Rink to get these two men together for a match on April 25th. A six-round sparring exhibi tion was held after the wrestling. Items llljy3 Dr. H. B. Ely was attending to business in Carbondale Saturday. Miss Grace Wilder was a Scranton caller on Saturday. She returned on Monday. Miss Marcia Barnes returned Sat urday after a short visit with Scran ton relatives. Mrs. Dennison, of Hawley, has been the guest of Mrs. W. H. Bishop the past few days. B. Howard Bentley returned to day from New York City where he spent a few days. Reuben Brown returned to Ann Arbor Law School in Michigan oh Monday, after spending the 'Easter vacation at his home here. Attorney and Mrs. Frank P. Kim ble and daughter, Miss Constance, returned Friday from Atlantic City, where they went three weeks ago. Mrs. Frank J. Varcoe entertained a few friends last Saturday after noon at her home on Dyberry Place In honor of her sister, Miss Amy E Clark of Paltz, N. Y. iDr. A. C. Volgt, of Hawley, at tended the dinner given by Dr. Lam bert of Port Jervls to the Orange County Medical Association the lat ter part of last week. Mrs. John A. Gale and daughter, Miss Blakeslee Gale, left for Now York city on Monday morning, where they will spend a week before re turning to their home in Bingham ton, N. Y. Mrs. Judson Yerkes and Mrs. Isaac Tibbitts delightfully entertained a number of friends at cards Saturday afternoon in honor of Mrs. John Gale and daughter, Miss Blakeslee, of BInghamton, N. Y. Dr. and Mrs. W. T. Butler and son, Clarence, havo arrived homo from Atlantic City, where they have been the past few months. Fred Butler, of that city, Is spending a few days here with his parents. Mrs. T. E. Callaway returned Monday from a three weeks' visit with Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Schuller, Upper Montclair, N. J. C. R. Calla way spent Sunday at that place and returned with his mother. Clifton- Robinson, who for the past few years has been In tho fam ily of James F. Robinson of River street, was taken to New York City Saturday where he will re-enter a home for colored children. Horace T. Menner and William Blrdsall returned Saturday night from their Southern trip, which In cluded the Panama, Cuba, and Southern States.' Both gentlemen were greatly benefitted by tho Jour ney. Rev. Samuel Tolley returned homo last Friday from attending the Methodist church conference in New York City. Before coming to the Maple City after adjournment of the conference Mr. Tolley visited his son George on Long Island. Mrs. Frank S. Merrltt. of North Main street, was taken seriously ill with acuto indigestion while down town Thursday afternoon. She was hastened to her home in E. W. Gam moll's car and has since been criti cally ill. Her condition to-day, we are glad to report, is very much improved, Mr, and Mrs. J. A. Brown leave to day for Now York City. Mrs. II. A. Oday is spending ten days with her parents in Cortland, N. Y. Norman Decker, bookkeeper for Lee Braman, went to Moses Taylor hospital Sunday evening, suffering from an attack of appendicitis. J. Pope, of Mt. Pleasant, has been drawn as a juror to serve on the United States district court which will convene in Harrisburg in May. Mr. Hobbleman, of Whito Mills, fell at his homo Saturday and frac tured his left arm at the shouldor. Dr. E. B. Gavltte, assisted by Dr. F. W. Powell, reduced tho fracture. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Thompson expect to leave Honesdale on Thurs day of this week for New York City where they will sail on tho Royal Mall Steamship Arcadian for Bermuda and Azores or Western Islands, a Portuguese archipelago in the middle Atlantic. They will stop at Bermuda for about eight hours, after which the Journey will be con tinued to Azores. They are sched uled to arrive April 28 at Punta Del gada, where they will remain eight days. Returning, they will sail on the White Star steamship, "Cretic," which calls at this port on Its way from Naples, Italy, to Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson expect to land In Boston either the 13th or 14th of May. The Citizen and Its many readers wish Mr. and Mrs. Thompson bon voyage. BUYING FROM OUT-OF-TOWN. Did you ever see an animal in a circus that looked quite as clean, quite as big and quite as ferocious as it did on the posters? Do you expect that any article in a Chicago or Buf falo catalogue is going to look as perfect as the Illustration? If the quality is not as high as you thought It would be, is the price as low as you expected? Here's a point er for those who are doing their buying so extensively from such cat alogs. It has been told to us that quite a large trade has grown up in Wayne county. Yes, and somo right here at home, too. MITCHELL PALMER FOR DEMOCRATIC GOVERNOR. Harrisburg, April 14. Local Dem ocratic politicians expressed them selves as greatly pleased with tho shake-up in the local Federal offices and predicted that it would greatly strengthen their party organization for the Gubernatorial contest of next year. Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer, who Is prominently mentioned as a candidate for Governor, is expected to havo tho disposal of the offices, though his supremacy in State affairs is being combatted by the "Old Guard" element of the party. MANY AFFECTED BY CONTAGIOUS COUGH. Residents of Honesdale are con siderably worried over a contagious cough which seems to be afflicting old and young alike. Physicians have been consulted, but have been unable to diagnose tho ailment with any Jlegree of 'certainty. The cough is similar to whooping cough without tho whoop. It is not accompanied by colds and Is deop seated, af flicting the lungs. That it is contag ious is evidenced by the rapid spread it has made through the community. CONCERNING POSTMASTERSIIIPS A total of 544 postmasterships are to be distributed to Pennsylvania Democrats under the administration of President Wilson. The salaries range from $1,000 to $8,000 per year, the aggregate being $983, GOO, says-a Washington dispatch. Being GO and 70 commissions have expired and through failure of the Senate to confirm the appointments, these will be filled within a few weeks by Dem ocrats. There are many postmas ters, however, whose commissions have between two and three years to run. ROYAL Baking Powder is the greatest of modern time helps to perfect cake and biscuit making. Makes home baking pleasant and profitable. It renders the food more digestible and guarantees it safe from alum and all adulterants. rAIiMER INTRODUCES CURRENCY BILL. Washington, D. C, April 14. New currency reform bills have been in troduced in the House by Represen tatives Prouty, of Iowa; Nelson, of Wisconsin, and Palmer of Pennsyl vania. Representative Palmer's bill and one Introduced last week by Senator Hoke Smith, would give banks the right to loan money upon real estate mortgages and conveyances. A gen eral banking bill also has been in troduced by Representative Levy, of New York. MISSISSIPPI FLOOD FALLING. South of Helena, Ark., However, Con ditions Are Threatening. Memphis, Tenn., April 14. Spreading rapidly over the lowlands of eastern Arkansas from gaps torn in the leveo last week, tho Mississippi flood fast Is abating Its onslaught on tho embank ments along Its central reaches. So materially had conditions improved that word was sent to a half dozen camps to shift their forces to points south of Helena, Ark. There a desper ate fight will bo necessary. Along tho White river front the situation already Is acute, and a stretch of tho dike oppo site Friars Point, Miss., shows signs of weakness. North of Memphis and to within a few miles of Ilelenn tho river contln bes to recede. At Memphis the stngo was 43.0 feet, n fall of a fifth of 0 foot in twelve hours RESTORE SIGIIT WITH SHEEP'S GLANDS. David Uberroth, of Fountain Hill, South Bethlehem, sat near a window in the Wills Eye hospital, Philadel phia, and with one good eye and an other that is rapidly healing looked at daylight and the snow and tho ob jects that ho saw on the street below. Uberroth, blind for many months, is enjoying the return of his sight, a restoration not due to a surgical op eration, nor to any method that caus ed the remotest pain. Dust develop ed, from the juice of the thyroid glands, taken from the throat ot a sheep, produced this marvelous result "BOUGHT AND PAID FOR." The big scene in George Broad- hurst's social drama, "Bought and Paid For," which will be the attrac tion at the Lyric Monday, April 21, has one of the most tremendous and staggering climaxes in modern drama. It is powerful because It is brutally and realistically true, and because it reaches into the intimate experience of thousands of men and women. Robert Stafford, a powerful and domineering financier, has married Virginia Blake, a telephone girl. After their marriage, Stafford begins coming home drunk at almost regu lar Intervals, and forcing upon his wife drunken attention. Virginia has borne it as long as she could. On this particular night he is unusually offensive. After tho other members of the' party family have departed, ho begins to make love abnoxiously. She pleads with him, tries to appeal to his manhood; escapes several times from his embraces. But he is persistent. Ho follows her about the room. At length he goes to the door and orders champagne brought to the apartment with two glasses. He tries to get his wife to drink with him, but she refuses. He becomes angry and lets forth an ugly stream of words, again he tries to catch her and force his disgusting kisses upon her. She throws him off, and tells him he is robbing her of her self-respect. He becomes ugly and insult ing. He tells her ho has bought and CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature paid for her; that she was nothing until he came and lifted her out of her poverty. He says he has given her everything and that now sho spurns his affections; he declares ho has a legal right to her, and by, sheer brute force he holds her in his arms and kisses her. Sho tears away from him and rushes Into her room locking the door. Inflamed by his drunken passion, he snatches the heavy brass fire-tongs and crying in blind frenzy that he has a right to her, ho crashes In the heavy wooden panel of her door and forces his way Into her room. Thejscene Is one of great strength and daring which for over a year, has held great houses breathless. IF YOU Want a Servant Girl ADVERTISE. Unique Name Can You rronounco Nnmo of World's Most Famous CATARRH Remedy? HIgh-o-me that's the proper way to pronounce HYOMEI, the sure breathing remedy that has rid tens of thousands of people of vile and disgusting Catarrh. Booth's HYOMEI is made of Aus tralian eucalyptus combined with thymol and some llsterian antisep-, tics and is freo from cocaine or any harmful drug. Booth's HYOMEI is guaranteed to end tho misery of Catarrh or money back. It is simply splendid for Croup, Coughs or Colds. Complete outfit, including hard rubber Inhaler, $1.00. .Extra bottles of HYOMEI, if later needed, 60 cents at Pell's, the druggist, and druggists everywhere. Just breathe it no stomach dosing. The Scranton Life Insurance Co. W. W, WOOD, Manager for Wayne Go. Energetic Representatives Wanted in Every Town and Hamlet Good Pay to Active Men or Women. Liberal policies with guaranteed results. If you want insur ance, drop me a card, giving nge, and wo will send you a proposi tion that will show you how to get rid of tho burden of worry and care. W. W. WOOD, noncsdale, Pn. LYRIC HHmHHHHHHHnmn THEATRE 01 L April WILLIAM A. BRADY, Ltd., Presents Play Everybody is Talking About the mm E o 3 o to o 54 9 1 n H t OAST INCLUDES CIIAKLES MILIiWARD MAR.I nAKDI GEORGE A. WRIOnT JOSEPH DRAKE CLYDE CRAWFOIJD JULIE IIERNE BEAT SALE SATURDAY. MAIL ORDERS NOW. PRICES: Orchestra $1.B0; Dress Circle $1.00; Balcony, ilrst two rows, $1.00; next two rows 75c last fgur rows 50c; Gallery 85c BOH