SUPPLEMENT TO The Citizen, HONKSDALE, FARMERS ID RURAL FREE DELIVERY This Atfmlrtbla Feature of tho Postal System N Is a Creation of the Ropubllcan Party and to a Groat Degree Explains Why the Country People Al ways Vote It Back In Power. The Republican principle that the boncflts of tho public service should, as fnr as possible, bo extended to all classes and all communities without discrimination, Is conspicuously ex emplified In tho rural free delivery system Instituted by tho Postofflce Department during tho administra tion of President MoKInloy. That system was established In recognition of tho plain fact that tho farmer, liv ing remoto from tho nearest post office, is entitled to tho free delivery 01 his mall equally with tho business man rcsldlnft in tho city, and tho success which has attended its op eration affords conclusive evidence of its wiisdotn and utility. Tho development of the rural free delivery service is ono of tho most rcninrkable achievements of tho Post ofTlco Department. Beginning In 1S97 ns an experiment with deliver ies on eighty-three routes, it has noon extended rapidly year by year, tho service on Juno 30,1 90S, covering 39,270 routes and providing freo de livery for more than 10,000,000 per sons. That Is to say, that in tho short space of eleven years, the free mail delivery system has boon ex tended to something like twenty per cent, of tho total population of tho United States. Could there be nny more striking testimony to the efficiency and practical business methods of Republican administra tion? Tho value of this service to tho farmers is almost Incalculable. It has not only relieved them of the discomfort of frequent journeys to dlstnnt postofilccs, but has placed them in close reach with market con ditions, thus enabling them to dis pose of their products to the best ad vantage, and done much to promote tho neighborhood and relievo farm life of the sense of Isolation which hns been ono of Its greatest hardships, Moreover, In scores of farming com munities tho rural free delivery ser vice hns given a powerful impetus to tho "good roads movement," with tho result that many thousands of miles of improved highway have been constructed. Those modern roads, affording tho farmer easier access to market, have Increased the value of his land, thus enabling him to build better buildings, better fences nnd purchase better implements. In every community to which tho rural freo delivery service has been extend ed tho farmer has profited by it. Ho Is more distinctly a business man than ever before nnd life Is far more nttractivo and loss laborious for him self and his family. Tho farmers know that tho rural free delivery service Is n creation of Republican policy. They are per fectly aware that it was devised by nnd in accordance with tho Republi can statesmanship which has provid ed cheap postage, encouraged the spread of education and enacted every measure of existing law to maintain the dignity am' advance tho intorests of agricultural industrv. No single branch of the public service appeals more strongly to the farmers of the country in bohnlf of continued Republican administration thnn this admirable feature of tho postal sys tem. BUCKMER BOLTS BRYAN Veteran Kentucky Democrat Criticises Nebraskan. CALLS HIM "JACK 0' LANTERN." Declares For Taft ns n Man Qunlincd by Training and Experience to Discharge the Duties of the Presi dency. General Simon Bolivar Buckner, of Kentucky, tho nominee of tho sound monov Democrats in 1S9C, having been asked by a sound money Democrat of Missouri for an expression of opinion on tho present political situation, says : Mr. Bryan's j.latfirm has manv planks wlin h I'Mireii nn ardent wish to hoc many things accom plished, hut it hwms impotent to miggc.U any policy which will tend iu iiiiiimuu i lie (ic-iroil ieults. - It KcoiiiM that in his whole polit- - mil career lie li.is been llittinK from place to place. Hashing in J every directum n sort of jack i' I lantern, nn u beacon light to nt- I tract to lus Mipport numerous p0. lltical baiiilf, wnii'lcriiiK through n wilderness nl error, each in pursuit of its own special will o' the wisp, J each stia mK turllier than the oth- 2 cr I nun the plain highway of J)cm- ocracx and having Iml one. pm-- 4 pose in common -i ho ovei throw of the existing oilier of society mid tho erection upon its ruins of n i Koeniinental falir ic which, if con- Mai. tcl must inevitalilv crumble men ihc mutually repellent lie- In n . I its own clHconlaiit ele- mens Icivinn behind onlv a nihj. J list. - chaos Ironi which it would X remote l'ctii i-iilt.tn ..I' ....... !:... i ... i -- - . ... 1.1111,1,11111 I,, evolo a KUie. mill btable govern incut. , 1 !..ltr.vn llini-n tj ntw.n. I. ,.r . ... - .... . ,-, . . . . . ft I nt it hi; pill I lulu ill ill nil the patties of our j lountry to save us from the perils that threaten the dent met ion of 4i our institutions. -fc S. Ji. IiUCKXKIt. t ORGANIZED LABORFOR TAFT All Tbat the Law Abiding Wage-Earner Asks For is a Square Deal, and He is Snre o! It From President Tail. Organized labor has declared itself for Taft and Sherman and for Impar tial enforcement of and loyal obe dience to law. "There Is no doubt that tho railroad employes of tho East will support Judgo Taft united ly," said Benjamin E. Chapln, ot New York, of tho Order of Railway Conductors. "They believe In him. Tho groat railroad brotherhoods are unalter ably opposed to Mr. Bryan's personal views on government ownership of railroads, and our men nro with Judge Taft in his opposition to that theory. "Wo believe, furthermore, that .Tudgo Taft was right In his Injunc tion record. Tho principles ho laid down in his decisions havo boon In corporated In tho constitution of tho Order of Locomotive Engineers and in tho constitutions of all tho other largo railroad train serving organi zations." Mr. Chapin who, with other well known and estlmablo leaders of union labor; F. F. Vlckery, also of tho Or der of Railway Conductors; J. S. Buckley, of tho Pennsylvania Em ployers' Association; A. F. Stack house, of tho Order of Railroad Con d.f'ors on tho Lackawanna Railroad, nnl .1. F. Conway, chairman of tho legislative board of the Order of Lo comotive Engineers, boarded Mr. Tnft's train and assured him of tho support of the organizations they rep resented, undoubtedly voiced the judgment ot skilled and intelligent union labor throughout the United States. The great mass of union labor is with Mr. Taft because its members recognize him as capable and impar tial in his administration of the law, because they feel that ho Is In genu ine sympathy with labor, and because they know that Mr. Taft means ex actly what ho says, and will do just what he says ho will do. All that law abiding, self respecting labor asks for is a square deal within the law and according to law, and that it is certain to get at the hands of Pres ident Taft. GRATITUDE OF RELIGIOUS SECTS TO TAFT John R. Mott, secretary of the In ternational Committee of the Young Men's Christian Association, a stanch Methodist and a worker who, by his energy and ability, has accomplished wonders for his association In many parts of the worlds praised highly to-day the aid which Judge Taft gave to religious organizations In the Philippines. He was aided greatly, ho said, by a letter of introduction which Taft, as Secretary of War, gave him when he went to the Philippines to raise money with which to help in constructing a Y. M. C. A. building in Manila. The committee furnished more than ? 100,000, while Manila citizens gave $42,000. "It is difficult to exaggerate," said Mr. Mott, "the Importance of the ser vice rendered by Judge Taft to tho Y. M. C. A. and to the cause of Chris tian missions in tho Far East. His fair-mindedness and his generous sympathy have won the hearts and minds of all persons, of all religions or no religion, who know what he has accomplished there. "Anyone who may, like myself, have questioned the wisdom of the United States continuing to occupy the Philippine Islands, would most certainly entertain an entirely dif ferent opinion were ho to visit these islands to-day and note tho changes which have been wrought as a direct result of American occupation and achievement. Within loss than ten years there has been built up stable government insular, provincial and municipal. A body of laws has been enacted which challenges favorable comparison with tho statutes of any country. Ladronlsm, the curse of the islands, has been suppressed, and peace, order and Justice prevail. Sanitary regulations have been In troduced and enforced to such an ex tent that Manila bids fair soon to be come themost healthful city in the tropics, notwithstanding Its unfav orable location. Millions of dollars havo boon invested in substantial ma terial improvements, especially in Manila. Improved postal aud tele graphic communication have been in troduced, and railway and govern ment read extension is in progress. As a result, of tho marvelous educa tional developments involving the ac tivities of nearly one thousand Amer ican toachors, wo are now educating fully 500,000 of tho youth of the isl ands, and even more remarkable than this has been the raising up and training of over 5000 Filipino teach ers. Tho Tagalogs, Visayans, Iloca nos and the many other tribes and peoples scattered throughout over 1G00 islands aro being unified and nro developing tho consciousness of community of raco and tho latent sense of nationality. Tho dominant impression made in tho mind of any one who has visited different Colonial possessions is that in tho Philippines tho altruistic motlvo has thus far had right of way, and that a work has been accomplished of which we need not bo ashamed. The Ideal em phasized by McKinley, Roosevelt, Root, Schurman, nnd especially Judgo Tnir, that our purpose in the Phil ippines is not to exploit them, but to develop, civilize, educato and train on unselfish linos, has been kept in mind nnd Is still tho great motive power." Tho American Navy outrode a ty phoon saft !y and thero Is no doubt that the Republican Ship of !Unto will for a third tlmo rldo out safely tho big wind of Brynnlsin. nrltlrh trado unionists protest against the possibility of Intornatlonrtl war. American trade unionists pro test ngaliibt n Doniocrntlc war upcm prosperity Prom Ciereorriph. Copyright, If 03, j Uadjnrood Underwood, N. T. HERE arc ir-c pictures ol two men. One or the other will, in a few days, be chosen President of the United States. He who aspires to that exalted place should have done much to show hi fitness for the sta tion he would occupy. By wisdom or by ability he should have demonstrated his right to that supreme and priceless honor. Consider these two pictured countenances I Compare them in the most minute particular, and, when you have thus considered and com pared them, take the life of each, man and set the two records side by side, as their faces are here befoic you, side by side. Scrutinize those two lics1 Measure the cne by the other, and then judge within.your heart not impulsively, not with partisan bias, but calmly, worthily, and as a patriotic citizen which of these two men is the worthier to be honored by your ote and to be crowned with the glory of the greatest gift in the possession of the citizens of this nation I Search first the life qf ill ism Jennings Bryan 1 It lies before you for your inspection. What has he done to demonstrate his fitness to occupy that great post to which he now, for the third time, aspires Has he in the whole course of his life ever done one solitary thing to benefit the nation of which he is a citizen, or to advance the civiliza tion and enlightenment of mankind? Search your .memory to its uttermost depths, and if you find that he has done one single thing, either by word or deed, that has proved of ever so little lasting benefit to the world, set that thing lown to his credit. Think I Is there one such single, solitary thing? Twelve years ago he advocated the free coinage of siher, urging it upon the nation with all the strrnuosity of his feverish and vehement nature. This idea he no longer adocatcs. But has he abandoned it? A little more than a year ago he advocated with equal impetuosity the government ownership of railways an ownership that would have en tailed upon the United States a national debt of more than five thousand million dollars. This idea, also, he no longer advocates. But, has he abandoned it? Twice he has adocatcd and twice he has ceased to advocate a dangerous and mistaken policy Vhat assurance ha you that he doe not a third time advocate a policy equally dangerous to the welfare of the nation And ii you elect him to the presidency, what I assurance have you that he will not attempt to put that dangerous policy into a disastrous effect? mis incompetency ana his inadequacy to till NEW YORK'S LEADING SURGEON, A STANCH Dr. Gcrster, Famous Hungarian, in Swinging to Tnft, Will Influence Thousands, of Countrymen Tnft Clubs Formed by lousiness Men. New York, Oct. Dr. A. G. Gerstcr, of 34 East Seventy-fifth street, New York, ono of the most noted sur geons in tho country, who has been a stanch Democrat, will vote for William H. Taft for President. His decision, which hitherto has been known only to the doctor's most in timate friends, undoubtedly will cause surprise among tho thousands in the city and throughout tho coun try who havo great respect and ad miration for the surgeon, but at the same time will influence many other Democrats to vote for the Republican nominee. Dr. Gerstcr, while refusing abso lutely to mingle in politics, has al Presidential Candidates Compared any ol the major opportunities that he covets are known to all the wot Id, It is notorious that his first nomination to the presidency came to turn not because of hi ability in public affairs, but only because he happened to make a happy phrase in an oratorical outburst, which swept him into a postion for which he had never before and has never since proved his fit ness. In the intervals between Tnmnsuccessful cam paigns he has sunk into comparative obscurity. Not one art in all that time gave any indication to the world that he was really awake to the needs of the hour. Consider all this! Are not all the facts here set down about him incontestably true? If they are not true, name one thing that has been ta.d amiss or that has been left uniaid, and let it stand to his credit. i If, however, t)ieie things org true, then how great is their significance! How great Is your rr sponsibibty if your xote should help to seal thii honest, erring, incompetrnt man in the presi dential chatr of this nation 1 Turn now to William Howard Taftl Lay his life before you as his picture lies before you here. His life is known to all men Consider ill Weigh it in the balance of your calmest and most candid judgment 1 Think, if you choose, only of those two notable and splendid performances that stand before the world to-day as monuments of his wisdom and i,u ability his civil governorship of the Hnhpp.nes, and his establishment, as Secretary of War, ol that vast governmental work now being done upon the Panama Canal Say nothing of I. is brilliant diplomatic suc cesses in the Philippines, l Rome, in Cuba, in Japan say nothing of Uum-, but dwell only cn those two monumental performances. ' Consider how ast mmt be the fundamental abilities of a man who, emirgmg a comparatively unknown citizen frum a relative cbsatnt), ws suddenly called upon, first, to reconcile a people jealous and suspicious of the Unitid Statts, aud to convert that people from passive enmity to truMing friendship, next, to build up for a poor and htlpless nation a government that should i on t re I but should not harass, and that should serve as a foundation for future self-government and advancement' into the aranks of the free and enlightened nations of the'earth t 'This was a great and momentous task for any man, however experienced, to undertake. It was undertaken by a circuit judge from Ohio. Did that circuit judge make good his undertaking? DEMOCRAT, 9 ways been a keen student of political affairs and candidates. Ho not only stands in the foremost rank of his profession as a surgeon and an au thor, but he has culture and is keen ly sympathetic with tho sufferings of the people in the poorer sections of tho city. Dosnite the insistent I calls upon him from wealthy patients : who aro willing to pay handsomely lor his services, ho insists upon de vHIng a largo part of each day to hospitals operating upon the poor who havo not money to pay for deli cate operations that alone can save their lives. There aro hundreds of his countrymen in tho city who speak gratefully of him as the saver of their lives and aro ready to do anything in return at his sliRhtest request. Dr. Gerstor, however, always has been content in tho thought of having re lieved them from suffering. Dr. Gerster's friends, who are HEARING THE END, Photo CopjNtM, 1903, ty MfETei Studio. Chtrt j His success stands to-day a monument to hit sagacity, his wisdom, and his foresight. Louder than any worJs the successful results of this great work speak to the world. For not only did he succeed in this, his first great under taking, but he is also t this moment the man most honored and best l.vctl by the people of me i niuppiuc Jttanas. His tetest achievement is the iMablishmcnl of the ttnal rone and tin orL-ain7&iun of the .work on the Panama Canal fur tu him, a Secretary of War, fell the ultimate rcrpon-.ib.lity for the execution of this ast project. Here was an engineering feat so tremendous that even de Lesscps, proclaimcdly the tr('tCl cngtnur m the world, with Prance and the people of Pratue behind him, laded to make even an adequate begmtnt g This ex-circuit judge, tins ey-gocrnor of the Ph'lif rincs, undertook the woik. To-tlay the grcM task moves tov.ard comple tion, with cn organization perfected by the man who shouldered the burden. Such arc the facts. Here lie the lives of these two men, side by side before you It is yours to judge between them, for one or the other of the n.n who have lived these lives must soon become President of the United States One has added splendid success to splendid success, establishing governments, conducting delicate diplumatic negotiations erecting gigantic engineering works fui the lasting benefit of all the nations of the earth 'Ihc other has coi.terted himulf with lectur ing before literary societies and editing a weekly newspaper. Think of all thi-' Lay it calmly and dispas sionately Itcforc uur inte-Uige-mcl Then ask ) ours el I in your huirt ot hearts to which of these two men you, as n good and patnutic citizen, should give your vote and thus help to elect hirn Piesident of tf.ei L'n'ted Mates We are row passm;; through a transitory ttate in our fortunes Within the next four years the Ship of State must be hi'ided itinid the rueks and ret is of t roubled k-g;slat ion with a sure and steady hand. Your vote, and the vote of tuth as you, will determint the riiemcnfous question at to which ol these twu men shall bt the not President ol the United State;. a decision nw movi rapidly approaching the hiialiiy of irremediable fact. Your vote, once east, can never be recalled Think well, there fore I Measure the future and all that it contains before you take that final step, the casting of your ballot, that will help decide whichl these two men shall be the next Presi I dent of this nation From Ltshe'i Weekly,- J TAFT familiar with his political views, say that ho has admired Judge Taft and has tho highest admiration for the candidate's ability and determina tion to do what is right at all cost. They think that admiration for Taft caused him to swing from the Demo cratic to tho Republican party. Dr. Gerstcr, who was born in Kas sa, Austria, fifty years ago, is a grad uate of the University of Vienna, and I was assistant surgeon in tho Austrian i army before he came to this country. ' Ho now is surgeon in the German i Hospital and tho Mount Sinai Hospital in this city. Ho is professor j of surgery in the New York Poly clinic ana has written several books, now quoted as authorities on surgery. His "Antiseptic Surgery" is consulted by every surgeon. Because of his services to the surgical science ho has been made a Knight of tho Order of St. Joseph. "TARIFF TAXES" ARE PAID BY THE RICH Burden of External Revenue, Under Protection, Falls Upon Consumers of Luxuries. LITTLE DUTY COLLECTED FROM WAGE EARNERS AND FARMERS Arthur J. Dodge Demonstrates From Records of the Treasury Depart ment That Ninety Per Cent, of tho Money Collected on Import is lcvied on Articles Not Classed as "Necessaries of Life." Tho so-called "tariff taxes" aro paid by tho rich. That is the conclu sion reached by Arthur J. Dodge, a well known writer on the tivriS. a an article discussing the various phases of the -subject, Mr. Dodgo demonstrates from tho records of tho Treasury Department that ninety ler cent, of all tariff du ties aro paid upon articles classed as luxuries consumed by tho rich, leav- , ing little, if any, of thesa duties to be paid by tho groat mass of peoplo who aro classed as tho wage earners ' and farmers. i This information Is particularly In teresting at this timo when Mr. Bryan and his followers aro assorting that "the poor aro oppressed by tho tariff taes," and "the masses are bowed down under tho weight of tariff taxes upon the necessaries ot life." If these duties arc really paid by tho American consumer and not by the foreign exporter, it is thus shown that the burden, if burden there is, rests wholly upon tho rich, The following table compiled from Government records is presented: Tariff Facts. Total value? of goods admitted freo of dutv ?451,n0O,00O Total values of dutiable imports 52" ,000,00(1 Total duties collected 257,000,000 Total duties collected on "lux uries" i 80,000,003 Total values of dutiable luxuries imported 132,003,000 Average rate of duty on all du tiable imports 47 per cent. Average rate of duty on ma terials ........... ........ ...20 per cent Average rate of duty on com pleted manufactures 49 per cent. Average rate of duty on "lux uries" GO per cent. Luxuries admitted free of dutv, valued at only 11,000,000 Values of all other articles ad mitted free of duty 443,003,000 In this list tho $80,000,000 of duties collected on what are officially classed as luxuries amounts only to about thirty per cent, of the whole; external revenue. But the writer shows that tho finer grades of many other imports should also be classed as luxuries, and that the tariff so recognizes them in putting a higher rato upon them than upon the lower grade of the same commodities. Such classes are fine linen, onyx and other valuable stones; fine ma chinery, etc., from which tho revenue increases the "luxury" budget to about $230,000,000 that is, ninety per cent, of the total external rev enue. Protection, Wages nnd Prosperity. After all, at the base of this sub ject of tariff duties levied upon ar ticles Imported, whether of luxuries, or necessities, there rest important principles which the working people, farmers and general consumers ot goods in the country should reflect upon, when considering where a vote may safely and wisely bo placed in tho Presidential election, and In the? election of members of Congress. While it may be important that tho rate of duty on "luxuries" shall bet higher than tho rato of duty on "nwessities," after all, it is a ques tion of wages for tho worklngmen, and prosperity of the industries in tho United States which produce tho articles which directly compete with, the imported goods, whether they bo "luxuries" or "necessities." Tho Bryan free-trade idea is to reduce? the duties on "necessities," no matter how much labor may bo expended upon such goods.