THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1913. ' PAGE FIVE Wants, For Sale, Etc. TELEPHONE your Want Adver tlsements for this l.tartment. Use cither phone. Call 157 on the j-seu ana iui on tne uonsoiiuaieu " Talic, aon't walkl" Aavcrtlsements and reading notices of all kinds placed In this column will be charged for at the rate of one cent per word for each separate Insertion, when sending us aavertisements to do primeu in this column, cash or stamps musi nc company tne oruer. r OA HD WANTED Gentleman Small - private family, vicinity or uepot, Washing, sewing. Address, Enquirer, Citizen office. Bltl PAPA'S Pants will soon lit Snookums, hut In tho meantlmo make his rnmnpra on Slncer Machine. Mclntvre sells them, EOc a week. C3ei: I OST Red cow with drop horns nnd part line uacit. .Alien ruiuy, hjhi mcrs, Pa., It. F. D. 63t2 Hl.W'TRn-TlirpB rnnms for Hcht house' keeping, centrally located. Mrs, Elizabeth Hattler, nurse, 212 Seventh St, r? nn SALT: TCpnner nroDertv. located r on East street. Will sell as a whole or in parcels, one lot is fcuxi&u reel wun xwo-siory oricK aweinns in kuuu uunui' flnn. Rompnt cellar with Richardson Boylngton hot water boiler. Barn also on premises. See Buy-U-A-IIome Realty company, jaawin ouiiuing, uonesumei MRS. RICHENBAKER will give a Tango party at Lyric Hall Friday evening, July wta D ICYCLES and all kinds of supplies and sundries at uranam waits- hardware store. oiti c on RENT Tod floor of Foster build r ing opposite Union station. Suitable lor louge rooms, ppiy ucurtse x'usiei GDtf. FOR SALE Modern ten-room house, all Improvements, Including heat and lighting. Located on west side of Main street, between 13th and 14th streets. Lot 75x159 feet. Beautifully situated, with large shade trees In front, attractive sur roundings and fine garden. Will sell at a Bargain, ror lmormauon inquiiu ui iiuy-u-A-iiome neauy vo., jauwin uuuu lng, Main street, Honcsdale, Pa. 57tf unwf.VT?T.nT.n rnT.T nnrn T7Hi bel strain sorrell broke single good roaasier very Kcmm aim ui iiue uwuoi tion, for sale. Address Jas. Cook, Hones dale, R. D. No. 2. WANTED Girl for general housework Apply 1111 Court street, Honesdale, 35eltf. COR RENT Seven rooms and a bath in tne uuei JJoage nouse, aowu eiuiim, rnnipr nf Phurph and Seventh streets af ter June 1st. Enquire of C. E. Dodge, .Honesaaie. p OR SALE Elegant building lot on Norm Main street, near u. x. uui lock's residence. Ask Buy-U-A-Home Realty company aDout it. TWELVE PAIRS OF WINDOW blinds 4 1-2 x 14 Inches, practically as good as new, for sale cheap. Address for particulars, j-.ock jjox m, nonesuaiu. I F YOTT nre looklnc for a 10 cer cent, Investment call at the office of the Buy-U-A-Home Realty company, Jadwin Duuaing. X HE biggest piano value for $250.00 you ever saw. uniy ifi.&u a weeK. aic- intyre. weut THROW A WAX your old Sprayer and crpt nnn of our Gould's Comnressed Air Sprayers. Saves your time and your temper, ana aoes ncixxji.ii worn, juw ray Co., Honesdale, Pa. D TROX for Potatoes Kills both the bugs ana the blight. Murray uo.. Honesaaie, fa.. WANTED 3 or 4 rooms with, modern conveniences, suitable for light housekeeping. In the resident section, ao dress K. Citizen office. E3tf. I F YOU ARE LOOKING FOR an Ideal place to build your home, consult the you inspectea wiuow rami ht nw is the TIME to ston files. 1' Screen doors and windows of all sizes at a good price, at G. Watts, dealer In .Hardware. WHY TIE YOURSELF any longer to a rent receipt? Own your home. See Buy-U-A-Homo Realty Company, Jadwin Duuaing, Main street, xiuuesuuie. FARMING IMPLEMENTS of all kinds. Special prices on mowing machines, Hay Rakes, Guards, Etc. Graham Watts. Mil. W HAT'S tho use of fret and worry over " senseless cares ana strife? use these adlets in n hurry, let them smooth your path of life. ONE DOLLAR will open an account at the Farmers and Mechanics Bank. Courteous treatment to all. 4Ctf MAKE YOUR MONEY WORK, then In older davs vou will not have to. no .ruriuei a uuu luwuaiua uciim uau ' uuuu uuiiuiLiun. uacu uiuy u. iuuiii.il. rlr1rpss F. Citizen office. Honesdale. Pa. 43U. rjrotecnon it you are nurt or sick. ALE BILLS, trespass notices on cloth, and nrlntinir of all kinds for he farmer is made a specialty at The ,'ltlzen printery. jrintr it to tno rarmers ana iue- 1 I 1 1 t- T 1 1 1 T ) .. ... 1 . ,4. 7111 draw Interest. 46tf OR SALE Lot 40xG0 feet near tho corner of Main and Fourth streets. n good business section. Can also bo MPII IIH IlliLL'll I1L rt-'HlUlIlCU. L.1ICL1U UUU s-orth $300 now on place. Consult Buy-U- -TTnmn nenltv Cnmnanv. Honesdale. Pa. BTcitf. tneso little nniets. ana tnoy are dusi- leep." ALE BILLS, trespass notices on cloth, and nrlntlnir of all kinds for le farmer is made a specialty at The itizen printery. Honesdale and Greater Honesdale Miss Maggie Weaver is the roucl possessor of a new Iteo auto- riniiE niirciiasea oi Hi. v. uummeii. i time Miss Weaver will become an . ,iHi.,nM Hawley Is going to try It once ore on Saturday, and we certainly lmlre their spirit of "never give This will be a good game and vers of base ball should turn out large numbers. The large barn and wagon house George W. T. Myers, of Highland it. wnn RrrnoK nv iiemninc nr. '5n fnnr1(iv nnrl hnrnprt in iha UUUU UUU U tuuo Ul uu;, UUD JUUU irtly unloaded was burned. Sev- ai wagons anu otner implements borer in the barn at the time was unned and unconscious for a e. H. S. Salmon is having a gar age erected at his home on North Main street. Born, a daughter, to Mr. and Mrs. George Mang, of Cherry Ridge, on Wednesday. Fifteen years ago Wednesday Admiral Dowey and General Merritt demanded tho surrender of Manila. A party consisting of six cars motored from Ariel to Honesdale on Tuesday and shopped among the stores. State Commissioner of Health Dixon is' out with a warning not to hurry and not to worry in hot weath er and to be careful about chilling the stomach. The base ball team of Hones dale went to Milford this (Thursday) to play the team of that place. They were taken there in several autos. Those who went from hero are W. B. Lesher, I. W. Sandercock, L. S. Par tridge, T. Y. Boyd and others. The Honesdale baso ball team, with a few exceptions, 'are journey ing to Milford to-day (Thursday) to try conclusions with the strong team of that place. If they continue to play the way they have been for the past month we predict defeat for the Piko county seaters. '- A deed made out In 1SS1 by John S. Osgood et ux., of Sterling, to J. Mortimer McLain also of Sterl ing, was recorded in the office of Register and Recorder W. B. Lesher on Tuesday. It conveyed a piece of land in Sterling township to Mr. Mc Lain for the consideration of ?52.50. W. T. Blackburn, coroner of Blair county, conducted an inquest to make a lawful record as to tho death of Engineer George K. Funk, of Har risburg, who was killed last Wed nesday when his first-class passenger train ran into another passenger train at Tyrone station, many pas sengers receiving minor injuries. The verdict was that the dead engineer had disregarded signals and was re sponsible for the accident. Robert Tryon Menner, a Hones dale man, has passed the test given by the Naval Examining Board at Washington, and is now a lieutenant commander of the United States navy. Lieutenant Menner was born in Honesdale in 1877, and is a son of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Menner. He was graduated from the Honesdale High school in 1893, later attended State College and Lafayette, and was appointed to Annapolis in 1S9C. He has served on a number of ships and at various foreign stations. Phlla. uelphla Record. -Sunday night two autos at Lake Huntington had a collision just above William Bennedum's place. One of tne cars Belonged to a New York party and stood In the middle of the road, while the party was makinK repairs. The other auto, driven by Clarence Cook, came over the hill and before it could stop, hit the oth er auto, damaging both considerably, tMtnougu it has been reported that one or the girls witli the New York party was so badly injured that she was not expected to live, we under stand that they were only slightly riruisea up. The following from nut. nf tmvn attended the funeral of James Sterling, of Browntown, held Tues day moraine;. Mr. and Mrs. .Tfis. Hannon, of Corning, N. Y.; Mary and Celia Hannon, of Oneonta, N. Y.; Mrs. George Kane and daughter, Mary, Mrs. Mary Drlscoll and Agnes Malloy, of Susquehanna. 'Mary McLauchlin. of Wnshlnptnn n n. James Sterling, Jr., of Chicago, III.; Mrs. M. A. Ward and Elizabeth Rud dy, of Miners Mills; Mrs. M. F. Carey, of Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Jas. C. Boyle, and Mary McKean of Wilkes-Barre. Charles O. Peters, of Boston. who claims to have rescued "Little Tom," the mascot cat of the battle ship Maine at the time of the ves sel's destruction, was a business caller and pleasure seeker In Hones dale this week. Mr. Peters told a Citizen representative that in all his travels over the world he failed to find a place like Honesdale for beauty and the hospitality of its people. Mr. Peters is anxious to interest Hones dale in a cotton mill that manufac tures shoo laces, insulation for wire. and other articles of a similar na ture. All Mr. Peters asks is ?G0, 000 for the business. Next town. Conflicting stories are beincr told about the arrest of Carl Gatzell, of No. 5, Carbondalo township, a dep uty game warden, on tho charge of carrying concealed weapons, who is said to have been found by the road side near his homo Monday morning, quite badly Injured. His arrest tho night before was caused by persons wno naci been arrested by tho game warden for illegal fishing. Ho was given a hearing before Justice of the Peace Robert Walker and held in bail for court. In dofault of tho bail, lie was committed. Justice Walker claims that Gatzell was injured by jumping from a street car In escap ing rrom constable Mulligan who was taking him to tho county Jail. It Is said that Gatzell was given a previous hearing before an alder man and released on tho samo charge. It was reported from oth er sources that the deputy had been waylaid and beaten. -Two o'clock Sunday morning Are broke out on the roof of the Park Hotel at Fremont Center and before anything could bo done to save it the building was completely destroyed, including everything In it except some clothing. The building, and also the farm which goes with It is the property of Philip Orth, of Callicoon. Mr, Knell rented the property and has run the hotel for a number of years nnd It bore tho rep utation of serving the best meals of any hotel in Western Sullivan, a reputation which was justly earned. For tho past three years bad luck has persistently followed Mr. and Mrs. Knell. Three years ago a son and daughter died from pneumonia. Last year their son, Clarence, was seri ously ill, and now the hotel burns down. It is not known what started the fire, as it was on the roof and also on a part of the house that they did not use very much, being over four bedrooms which were over the kitchen. ! In a recent storm 'which passed over Wayne county, a barn belonging i to F. L. Dexter and a house owned by H. R. Comfort were struck and slightly damaged by lightning. ! Ed. B. Conley will head the Scranton delegation to tho Buffalo encampment of the United Spanish I War Veterans, and he Is laying his I plans to make a runaway race to se , cure the 1D14 convention for Scran ' ton. He says that lie expects that the Scranton delegates to Buffalo will include about thirty Spanish war veterans and a number of prominent citizens who will go along as boom ers. He will be assisted in his fight on the floor of the convention by Col. David J. Davis, city solicitor, who Is a member of the Scranton camp. PERSONAL MENTION. Miss Monica Bracey Is visiting rel atives In Scranton. Austin Lyons was In Scranton on business on Tuesday. George C. Blake Is recovering af ter a few days' Illness. Postmaster M. B. Allen is in New York City on business. W. B. Lesher has returned from a visit with relatives at Sterling. Francis Dlmock, of New York City, is spending his vacation here. W. J. Barnes spent the first of the week attending to business at Beach Lake. Rev. (5. S. Wendell and son, Fel ter, are enjoying a two weeks' va-. cation. Miss Doretta O'Connell leaves next month for West Chester State Normal. Miss Belle Fryer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., is visiting Mrs. Leon Ross of East street. F. S. Merritt returned on Tues day from a week's visit in Boston and vicinity. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wright are the parents of a son, born on Tuesday morning. Supervisors George Erk and Ray mond Brown inspected the roads in Texas township Wednesday after noon. Monroe Weiss, of New York city, is spending his vacation with his sisters, the Misses Weiss, on Park street. Leo Buckley, formerly employed as a clerk in Weniger's grocery, is now working in the Gurney Elevator Works. Mrs. Horton Cross and daughter, Llla and William Wonnacott are visiting relatives at Crosses, Piko county. Mr. and Mrs. A. Repp and son Carl have returned to their home in Brooklyn after a fortnight's visit with friends here. Howard Fitch, son William and daughter, Mrs. Arthur Fasshauer, of Carbondale, were in Honesdale on legal business this week. Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Brown and family left Thursday for Elk Lake, where they will remain at their cot tage during the month of August. Mrs. John A. Gale, of Binghamton, N. Y., announces the engagement of her daughter, Sarah Blakeslee Gale, to Harold William Davis, of Scran ton. John Rickert left Tuesday morn ing for Baltimore, Md., to attend the annual convention of the Eagles which is being held In that city this week. Clyde Leftwich recently employed at his trade as a machinist in New ark, N. J., has returned to his old job with the Gurney Elevator shops here. Foreman of Plant Thomas Galla gher has a corps of workmen busilv engaged In the repair and recon struction of the Consolidated Tele phone company. Eben Keen, C. J. Kelley, P. J. Wler, H. H. Hlller, postoffice at taches, were taken to Beach Lake Wednesday evening by L. S. Par tridge in his Ford car. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Stone, who returned last week from Minnewas- ka, Ulster county, N. Y., will leave on Tuesday to -be tho guests of Walter Wood at Roland Park, Maryland. Arthur M. Bone, of Dunmore. Is spending a few days with his aunt, Mrs. E. B. Callaway. He will spend tne next two weeKS at tne home of W. L, Jackson, at Laurel Lake, near Tyler Hill. X3. A. Pennlman, former editor and part owner of Tho Citizen, is again able to be about again after having experienced a weakness of the heart which confined him to his bed for a few days. Misses Sndlo Snfittlpnp mwl Flnr. I enco Brvant left on Weilnpsrlnv for Carbondale to spend their vacations. miss spettigue will visit at the home of Mrs. Julius Spaeth while Misi Bryant will contlnuo on to Scranton to spend a few days before retumlne homo. Dr. and Mrs. A. F. Davis and chil dren, Grace, Annette and Wesley. are expected to arrive on Friday rrom at. Marys, Pa., to bo tho guests at the home of Mrs. Davis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Spotti guo on East street. They expect to remain until September 1. Chairman W. B. Lesher. of tho automobile committee of tho Hones dale Chautauqua, arranged to tako Miss Laura Fullmer, who is connect ed with tho Chautauqua Association, to White Mills and Hawley on Wed nesday afternoon for the purpose of advertising the coming event In those two towns. Tho five car loads which went down were taken by L. S. Par tridge, W. B. Lesher, A. W. Abrams, a. i' names ana a. m. Leine. Tho two towns were thoroughly billed and posted for the coming Chautau qua and Miss Fullmer co-operated with tho local committee in stirring up the Chautauqua spirit. The ad vertising car No. 2 of the Chautau qua Association will arrive here on Monday next and will bo in charge of Gibson Bradfleld. Programs, leaflets and banners will then be distributed. TTavlni? nn Tinnrl a amnll linn Silk Shirt Waists, Menner & Co. will offer them at attractive prices to closo out. 68w4 MILLIONAIRE TO BECOME FARMER To Enroll as Agricultural Stu dent in itie Fall. HIS FARM A SHOW PLAGE, Arc Lights Burning All Night Illumine the Many Tiled and Graveled Roads of Four Hundred Acre Tract Girard S. Parsons, the Owner, Will Raioe Fancy Live Stock. Although he was brought up in the lead mining business and was assistant manager of one of the largest lead com panies of the United States at a salary approximating that of u cabinet minis ter, with a $14,000 house rent free, Gi rard S. Pursons has resigned his offi cial duties with tho St Joseph (Mo.) Lead company, a $30,000,000 corpora tion, nnd will turn farmer. When Pursons' olllcial connection with Uhj lead company ceases be will go to his farm at Riverside, Mo., with his wife, who was Miss Flora Bow nmn, daughter of Dr. G. A. Bowman of 3C03 Delmar boulevard, St. Louis. Parsons is one of the live heirs to tho estate of C. B. Parsons, who first developed the lead belt of St. Francois county, Mo and left u fortune esti mated at between $5,000,000 and 50, 000,000. The greater part of this es tate is held in trust by the widow and will be distributed to tho heirs at her death. The farm to which Parsons will re move, while it has no more than 400 acres, probably Is the best developed in Bouthern Missouri. Virtually the en tire farm is lighted with large electric arc lights, the iower bolng brought from Herculaneum, a few miles south und the site of the St Jo company's smelting plant. Roads Lighted All Night. Tiled and graveled roads, built by the late millionaire miner, gridiron the es tate, and along all these roads are elec tric lights which burn the night through. Along tho Iron Mountain rail way tracks, which bound the estate on tho west, is a ten foot wall of solid masonry oie-half mile long. Tho fields of tho estate are In nn intensive state of cultivation, and there are large or chards of tlio best grafted fruits. Not having had much experience in agriculture, young Parsons will add to his meager knowledge by taking the winter course at Missouri State uni versitythat known as the "shorthorn course." Parsons was one of tho officials of the St Joseph Lead company, who were criticised for extravagances by Robert nolmcs of St Louis In his suit to have a receiver appointed for tho Doo Run Lead company, a $10,000,000 mining concern affiliated with tho St. Jo company. It wns when Parsons' salary as as sistant general manager was cut that he tendered his resignation and turned to bucolic pursuit Ho will contlnuo to do much motoring, but has disposed of his racing car, In which ho was ac customed to inako hair raising records on tho chart covered roadways of St Francois oounty. Will Raise Fancy Live Stock. rarsons will retain his position with the Mississippi River and Bonne Terre Railway company, of which ho has been treasurer for several years, no also will retain his stock in both tho St Joseph and Doo Run Lead com panies, each of which for years has paid a regular 0 per cent annual divi dend, aside from largo surpluses, out of which stock dividends are declared from tiino to time. In his new pursuit Parsons will do voto his attention particularly to the growing of fancy live stock, and in this will booomo a competitor of young Martin L. Clnrdy, Jr., son of tho gen eral solicitor of tho Missouri Pacific railway, who maintains an cxtensivo live stock nnd horso breeding estab lishracnt on tho outskirts of Farming, ton. tho county seat of St. Francois county. TURTLE BACK AFTER 46 YEARS Found With Edward Keeney's Initials and old Date on Shell. . Forty-tils years ago Edward Kecney, caretaker of Fulrview cemetery, near West Hartford, Conn., fouud a turtle nnd marked on Its shell "E. K 1807." Keeooy did not seo tho turtle again until a short timo ago, when Job Gib son found it 500 feet from tho spot where Keenoy had freed it nearly half a century ago. Kooaey put tho turtlo on exhibition in a 8toro window, together with a copy of a local paper of 1807 telling of his mapting it, which ho has pre served all theso years to prove that ho Is not a nature faker. Ho never had lost confldenco that tho turtle would oappear. Wear Watch on Inttep. Tho latest way of wearing n watch is on tho instep. A fashionable jewel er of London lately advertised tho now moda, with an Illustration show ing how tho watch Is fastened like a rosetto to tho shoe. Ho did not tell how bo consult tho watch. Tho pic ture showed tho J2 o'clock mark toward tho sMo of tho foot, so presumably you have to lift your foot up witi your hands or sit down cross legged when vou want to know the timo. Notice to Advertisers! Copy for tho Merchnnts News must be in the Citizen office no Inter than Friday afternoon of tills week to Insure publication. If you have not prepared your copy do ho at once nnd bring it to The itlzcn of fice. SOMETHING WORTH KNOWING. An act signed by the governor, May 23, 1907, to prevent and punish tho desecration of the flag of the United States, and of this state. Section 1 Bo it ordained by tho senate and house of representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylva nia, In general assembly met, and It is hereby enacted by the authority of tho same; That any person who In any manner, for exhibition or dis play, shall place or cause to be plac ed any word, figure, mark or picture, design, drawing or any advertise ment, of any nature, upon any flag, standard, color or ensign of the United States, or of this state, or shall expose or cause to be exposed to public view any such flag, stand ard, color or ensign upon which shall be printed,' painted or other wise p'aced, or to which shall be at tached, appended, affixed or annex ed, any word, figure, mark, picture, design or drawing, or any advertise ment, of any nature; or who shall expose to public view, manufacture, sell, expose for sale, give away, or have in possession for sale or to give away for use, for any purpose, any article or substance, being an art! cle of merchandise or a receptacle of merchandise, upon which shall have been printed, painted, attached, or otherwise placed a representation of any such flag, standard, color or ensign, to advertise, call attention to, decorate, mark or distinguish, for the purpose of sale, barter or trade, the article or substance on which so placed; or who shall publicly or pri vately mutilate, deface, defile or defy, trample upon, or cast contempt either by words or act upon, any such flag, standard, color or ensign, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and shall be punished by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not more than six months, or both, in the discretion of tho court. Section 2 The words flag, stand ard, color or ensign, as used in this act, shall include any flag, standard, color, ensign, or any picture or rep resentation of either thereof, make of any substance, or represented on any substance of any kind evidently purporting to be either of said flag, standard, color, or ensign of the United States of America or of this state, or a picture or a representa tion of either thereof, upon which shall be shown the colors, or any color, or any combination of colors, or either the stars or the stripes, or tne stars and the stripes, In any num ber of either thereof, or anything which the person seeing the same, without deliberation, may believe the same to represent the flag, colors, standard, orensign of the United States, or of this state. Section 3 This act shall not aD- ply to any act permitted by the statute of the United States of Amer ica, or by the United States army and navy regulations; nor in case where the government of the United States has granted the use of such flag, standard, color, or ensign as a trade mark; nor shall it be construed to apply to a newspaper, periodical, book, pamphlet, circular, certificate, diploma, warrant, or commission of appointment to office, ornamontal picture, or badges, or stationery for use in correspondence, on any of which shall be printed, or placed said flag, or representation thereof, disconnected from any advertise ment for the purpose of sale, bar ter, or trade; nor shall it apply to any patriotic or political demonstra tion or decorations. PAUFACK. S. C. Steele, wife and children, of Rochester, N. Y are visiting at B. F. Killam's. Frank Gilpin, wife and daughter, Isabel, of Hawley, spent Sunday at "The Williams Homestead." Eddie Dapper, of Blooming Grovo, was entertained by his friends hero a week ago. Two strange people, lady and gen tleman, passed through this place on Tuesday. Tho lady said she was walking across the United States and that the Gentleman linrl wnllrnrl frnm Dallas, Texas. Menner Sr. Pn. nro nfforlnr. tVin Int. est models in Corsets at the lowest marKet prices. Sizes to fit all forms. Good THERE IS ON DEPOSIT in the seven banks in Wayne county about SEVEN MILLION DOL LARS. There are 35;ooo people in the county. That means $200 each for every man, woman and child. Surely old Wayne is a prosperous place ! Do you dress like a prosperous man? It is not only your privilege but your duty. In fact you are entitled to a MODEL suit, one that will make you look like a model man, and you can get it, made to your order, made to your measure and made to the limit of your prosperity by LUKE LEVY The Model Opp. D. & H. Station Clothing Store Honesdale, Pa. "LUKE LEVY WANTS TO SEE YOU" THE BIGGEST NEWSPAPER VALUES. Daily "Record" nnd "Sunday .Rec ord" Indispensable to a Broad Outlook. You read this newspaper to keep In intimate touch with tho home news. Tho big city daily supple ments our work by giving you a broader outlook. "The Philadelphia Record" covers every day in the week a fleld entirely distinct from that In which wo serve you. Its thousands of corres pondents gather and sift tho world's news and make It into a condensed history of civilization day by day. You need that history in serial form to keep well-posted. "The Record's" market reports are the standard of buying and sell ing in all its territory. Its cartoon ist Is deservedly famous. Its Wash ington news comes from tho Inside. Its women's, household and fashion departments are authoritative. Its editorials are sincere and informa tive. It comes pretty close to being our ideal of what a city daily ought to be. "The Record," one cent, and "Tho Sunday Record," three cents (In cluding a big magazine section and a special section for boys and girls), are the biggest values we know of in the city newspaper fleld. It DO IT WITH ALL THY MIGHT. " Whatsoever thy hand flndeth to ! do, do It with thy might." Eccles- iastcs ix., 10. The above verse contains the se cret of success. A volume might be written about how to succeed in accomplishing re sults in any fleld of many's activity, and the directions therein given could be boiled down to the eleven words of the text for this little talk. In religion, in business and profes sional life, in society, in public af fairs, in politics, success is achieved by doing whatsoever is undertaken with all the might one possesses. Half-heartedness never turned a soul from error's way. Half-heartedness never gained the laurel wreath of success In any calling. The man or woman who desires to live a life worth living, must not only find something to do, but most also de termine to do it with all his or her might. The word "flndeth" implies look ing for or seeking. And the word "seeking" implies deliberation. There are some things a good many that are not worth doing at all; that had a good deal better bo left undone. But, as the old adage puts It, "Whatever is worth doing at all, is worth doing well." If we do a little well on ono day, new avenues for doing with our might will open for us as the days go by. In the lexicon of doing with our might, there is no such word as fail. There Is plenty that needs to be done with might. "Each in his day; j Each in his way; Plenty for all to do." Several thousand years have passed since Solomon "tho wisest man" wrote the words we have chosen to head this talk. They are no less true now than then. "The eternal years of God" belong to Truth. Tho words are a command and an exhor tation, not a mere declaration. They impose an obligation on the hand as well as on the heart. They enjoin work, not merely belief, and not work tomorrow or next week, but for to-day; and tomorrow and next week they will be just as binding as they are now. If we obey tho command, If we heed the exhortation, if we courage ously meet the obligations imposed upon us, the world will be better for our having lived. Let us therefore seek, find and do with all our might. East Stroudsburg Press and Jeffer sonian. Menner & Co. will sell very cheap remaining samples of Ladles' Jacket Suits for traveling and cool days. 4w Hot weather makes aching corns but why suffer? PEDOS CORN CURE will give instant relief. Notice to Advertisers ! Copy for tho Merchants News must bo In the Citizen office no later thnn Friday afternoon of this week to insuro publication. If you have not prepared your copy do so nt onco anil bring it to The Citizen of fice. Money