THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 100D. NEW TAXDEBATED Aldrich Tells Why He Is For Corporation Amendment. TO BEAT INCOME TAX MEASURE Hood of Telegrams to Senators Ask ing Them to Oppose President Taft's Plan but 52 Are Said to Favor It. WashtiiKtoii, .Tunc 30. Senator Aid rich of Rhode Island, chairman of the committee on nuance and sponsor for the corporation tax amendment to the pondlnp tariff bill, announced in the senate that he favored sucli a tax for the purpose .of defeating the income tax amendments of Senators Halley and Cummins. Hotly pressed by Senator Halley, Mr. Aldrich declined to tell the senate whether he sunnested the corporation tax idea to President Tnft or whether I ho president suggested it to him. Kqually pressed by Senator Clny of Georgia, Mr. Aldrich said ho would not take up and reduce the schedules proposed by the pending tariff bill if an income or corporation tax amendment was passed. "I will say very frankly," replied Senator Aldrich, "that I will vote for a corporation tax to defeat an Income tax and that I expect the corporation tax during the next two years will meet the deficit of ?GO,000,000 this year and the deficit of $45,000,000, which I have estimated for next year. At the end of two years, I think, the tax will be materially modified, if not repealed. I have said that the levying of an In come tax in a time of peace would tend to destroy the protective system of taxation." Mr. Aldrich formally called up the Bailey Income tax amendment ns the peudlng provision under the senate agreement and offered as an amend-1 ment the corporation tax provision re-j ported by the ilnance committee. Mr. Aldrich declared that with nddi-; tlonal revenue to be provided by the 1 corporation tax be would be greatly i surprised If there Is any deficit next j year. The deficit for the present year, 1 he added, would be about ?00,000,000, j not so great as formerly estimated. Again, ho declared that if the tariff bill becomes a law in its present form , It wiild next year produce an Income j of $350,000 000. Mr. Flint, who ns a member of the . finance committee Is to have charge of the corporation tax provision, then ' explained the provisions of the amend ment. He said the finance commit tee had considered not only a corpora tion, but also an income tax law as supplementary to the tariff, and had decided it would be unwise to pass such an income tax bill as introduced by Senators Bailey and Cummins. ' lll'.Y liilll. uu uiu, iiLiiiiiuuuuu mi; muu f -. I I. . . . 1 -. . . 1 . .. I anu ine.v um uul wish uy niiiKuijj, u 1.1.- A. A 1 ..... .. 1 A I 1 A 1 .- . . Il l a. ! . 1 . .... !.!...- some. "When the president suggested the corporation tax," said Mr. Flint, "the committee agreed to it and is here prepared to support it." Senator Dixon declared that there would be many failures to reach the corporations with the proposed tax. "Still," he said, "because the presl- dent of the United States and the lead-1 er of the Republican party has asked , jfor it, I shall vote for the corporation tas amendment." Its chief virtue, he suid, was its publicity features. j A flood of telegrams is pouring In upon senators in opposition to the cor- j poration tnx amendment. ' Most of the telegrams come from persons Interested in building and loan , associations, but practically every j character of corporate operations Is , represented. Most of the senators re i celved from twelve to fifty telegrams, and some at least n hundred. Chairman Aldrich says that n can vas of the senate shows that iifty-two Republicans will vote for the corpora tion tax amendment. PUGILIST GETS FIFTEEN YEARS Jack Blackburn, Negro Lightweight, Pleads Guilty to Murder, Philadelphia, June 30. Jack Black burn, the colored lightweight pugilist, charged with the murder of Alonzo Folk, another colored man, pleaded guilty aud was sentenced to fifteen years' imprisonment. Polk's wife and Maud Dlllson, a white woman who lived with Black burn, were haviug nn altercation when the two men arrived home in a cab. Polk interfered and Blackburn drew a revolver aud fired several shots, kill ing Polk and hitting Mrs. Polk In tho back. She recovered. To Purchase Plus IX.'s Homestead. Rome, June 30. Archbishop Farley of New York has decided to raise a fund to purchase the homestead of Pope Pius IX. at Sanlgalllo, which will bo transformed into a shrine, in which relics of that pontiff will be placed. Two Boys Killed by Lightning. Birmingham, Ala., June 30. Maffett Parker and Nell Latman, aged eleven and twelve, were killed by lightning snder a large tree. Their favorite dog was also killed b.y the current. WISE SAILS FOR PAEIS. Goes to Take Deposition! of Witnesses In Panama Libel Case. New York, June 30. Sailing from this city for Paris today was United States District Attorney Henry A. Wise, who Is bound for the French capital on a quest connected with the suit for libel against the New York World and the Indianapolis News in which the federal government Is in terested. The going abroad of the government prosecutor for this district follows the obtaining of nn order in the United States district court by the publisher of the World for the examination of certain witnesses residing in Paris. Mr. Wise will take depositions of his HENRY A. WISE, own, and the counsel for the defendant will be present at the examination of his witnesses. torney received an order from the United States circuit court a month ago to go to Paris. The proceedings against the World and the Indianapolis News were be gun in Washington on Jan. 18, when subpoenas for witnesses were Issued. Indictments were found there on Feb. 17 and in this city on March 4. The complainants in the prosecution nrn fnrtiini' T'rnslilnnt- IlnnspvpU. PrpsI ,w Toft ,Ronnt,,r tw .t i Afnrnn. c,mrlc8 P'. Tilft , DoUglas Robinson and ,Ymi.mi Cronlwol, ,vho nssort I that the World and the News libeled them by declaring that there were dis honest proceedings in the sale of the rights of the old French Panama com pany to the United States government. STILL IN JAII BRANDENBURG Writer Held For Kidnaping After Ac- j quittal on Other Charge. j New York. June 30. Although I , Bi-oughton Brandenburg was acquitted , of the charge of having sold to the ! ' New York Times nn article by Grover Cleveland which the district attorney ', contended was not genuine, but was , Brandenburg's own Invention nud composition, the writer Is still in Jail. ' Discharged from custody when the jury returned a verdict of not guilty, I he walked out into the hall of the 1 courtroom, where Minnie Leonard ' Brandenburg, his second wife, was 1 waiting for him. Ho kissed her, nnd before she had taken her arms from , i about his neck he was rearrested by j Detective Lieutenants Fitzslmhions and Flood. , This arrest was on a warrant sent ' from St; Louis, where Brandenburg has been indicted for kldnnplng his ' stepson, Sheppard Cabana, Jr., who is j seven years old. I Detective FItzslmmons arraigned j Brandenburg before Magistrate Cor-1 uell In the Tombs court, making aill ' davit that a request had been made for . t Brandenburg's extradition to Missouri. I FItzslmmons asked that heavy bail bo ' imposed. 1 "What is the penalty for kidnaping In Missouri?", asked Magistrate Cor-! nejj "Life imprisonment," nnswered the ' Iptpptlvp. Bosnlle the nrotests of i Brandenburg's counsel, mltted to the Tombs. he was com- MRS. TUCKER GETS DIVORCE. Daughter of Mrs. John A, Logan Re sumes Maiden Name. Chlcogo, June 30. Mary Elizabeth Tucker, who was Dolly Logan, dnugh j tor of General John A. Logan, obtain I ed a divorce from Colonel William F. Tucker, U. S. A., retired, on grounds of desertion. Alimony was settled prl i vately. Colonel Tucker did not con test. Mrs, Tucker was permitted to resume her maiden name. Tho only witnesses . were Mrs. Tucker nnd her mother, widow of General John A. Logan. Both testi fied that the parties to tho suit were married in 1877 and that Colonel Tucker deserted his wife in 1000. $30,000 DAMAGE BY A MATCH. Pipe Smoker Sets Naphtha on Fire and Five Buildings Are Burned, Gloversvllle, N. Y., June 30. Some one threw a match Into the Cayadutta creek after lighting his pipe as he crossed a bridge hero and thereby caused a property loss of 30,000. The waters of the creek were covered with naphtha from a leather dressing plant, and when the lighted match struck the explosive the creek became a sheet of flame. Five buildings and largo plies of lumber were destroyed, and electric light and power wires were burned. Sixty-one Cholera Cases In One Day, St. Petersburg, Juno 30. In twenty four hours sixty-one pasos of cholora were removed to hospitals, and there were thirty deaths. SUFFRACETTEWAR Militant Women March on British Parliament. MORE THAN 100 ARE ARRESTED Premier Asquith Refuses to Receive Delegation and Mrs. Pank hurst Slaps the Face of Inspector Jarvis. London, June 30. The thirteenth vnlu attempt of the militant suffra gettes to obtain access to Premier As quith by deputation resulted In excit ing scenes in Parliament square and the arrest of 112 women. Those put in Jail included Mrs. Pank hurst, Mrs. Solomon, the Hon. Mrs. Ilaverfleld, daughter of Lord Ablnger; Miss Margesson, daughter of Lady Margcssonj Miss Maud Joachim, niece of the violinist; Mrs. Mnnsell, wife of Colonel Mnnsell and granddaughter of Lord Wimborne; Mrs. Frank Corbett, sister of a member of parliament; Mrs. Rose Massey, wife of Colonel Massey, and Miss Nellignu, who is seventy-nine years old. The expectation that a more deter mined attempt than ever was to be made to forcu Premier Asqulth's hand attracted nn enormous crowd to the parliament buildings. Probably 50,000 persons gathered at the scene. Within the cordon of police were members of both houses of parliament and scores of distinguished persons. Among these were Lord and Lady Granard, Lord Morloy, Lord Wolverhampton and Lord Althrop. Great excitement was caused among the crowd by the movements of the equestrian suffragette, Miss Vera Howe, who In riding habit and derby hat rode backward and forward, car rying messages between the different deputations, until she was arrested. Next appeared the deputation under command of Mrs. Pankhurst, and it was received by the crowd with wild cheers. Escorted by the police, the deputation arrived at the St. Stephen's entrance to parliament, where It was met by Chief Inspector Scantlebury, who handed Mrs. Pankhurst a letter from the premier regretting his in ability to receive the deputation. Angrily throwing the letter on the ground, Mrs. Pankhurst exclaimed, "I i stand on my riguts ns tne King's sub ject to enter the house of commons," and she endeavored to force an en trance. The police tried to induce the wo men to disperse quietly and then be gan to take the members of the depu tation by the arms to lend them away. To the surprise of the spectators, who were massed around the entrance, Mrs. Pankhurst slapped Inspector Jnrvls in tiie face, knocking his cap in the mud. There were cries of "Shame!" and several of the spectators told the suf fragette leader that she had no provo cation to do such n tiling. A moment later another member of the deputation, Mrs. Saul Solomon, knocked 'off the Inspector's cap a sec ond time, while others made deter mined attempts to rush the cordon of police. Eventually the entire deputa tion was placed under arrest. By this time a second deputation had loft Caxton hall, accompanied by some hundreds of suffragettes and oth ers, and nn attempt was made to reach the house of commons through tiie underground passage leading from Westminster bridge. This, too, was unsuccessful, but for two hours the whole district was in a state of uproar, the police dispersing the crowds and arresting women by "lv umuwB ui many of the government buildings were smashed with stones wrapped in pn- lIL1, Throughout the demonstrations the police behaved with tho utmost for bearance, but the suffragettes in many cases forced them to some amount of rough handling. There was much screaming and in some cases fainting, and many women had to be taken to the hospitals in a state of collapse. CHURCH UPHOLDS TOBACCO. Efforts to Have Its Use Banned Presbyterians Fail, by New York. June 30. An unsuccess- fUl effort was made to put tobacco on the list of harmful Indulgences by tho temperance committee at the Brooklyn presbytery. Its use was classed as an "associate habit" tending to encourage the use of liquor. Tho stated clerk, T. C. McClelland, offered an amendment "that we also place our ban on tea, coffee, ice cream soda and chewing gum as associate habits." Thereupon ensued a discussion on the harmfulncss of tobacco, and on a voto being taken the antltobacco party was defeated. SIX HILLED B7 A BOMB. Wealthy Spaniard's Home Wrecked While Party Is at Dinner. Madrid, June 30. Six persons were killed and four desperately Injured by a bomb which was thrown through a window In the home of a rich land owner at Navla while a large party was at dinner. Tho for of tho explosion was ter rific, and the room was completely 'wrecked. It is bollevcd that the act was one of solltlcal revenge. PUT THE TORCH TO UNIVERSITIES Millionaire Crane, Who Began Life Without Chance to Study, Decries Higher Education THEY DEMORALIZE OUR YOUTH Make Them Despise Labor "Every One of These Institutions is a Fraud and Imposition on the Public" Are a Positive Curse. 3CXDOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 8 FOUR YEARS' PLAYGROUND u O SAYS PRESIDENT WILSON. H o "Men go to college now for Q association and sentiment. It u is a four years' playground." H This is what President Wood- O row Wilson, of Princeton Unl- verslty, said to Princeton alum- o nl in Louisville. President Wll- P son spoke of the American co'l- Q lego under the present system P of education and said that with- O in a decade It will have been 5 determined whether It shall o , n (a BUU1U Ul 1U11. COCCOCCGCCOOCCOOOOOOO Chicago. Richard T. Crane, multi millionaire, like Robert Louis Steven son, author, believes moro .men are spoiled than made by college educa tions. The multi-millionaire, who spent his early life chiefly In labor, "having little time for study," feels much more strongly on the subject than the famous graduate of the Uni versity of Edlnburg, for he favors put ting the torch to the universities sup ported wholly or partly by the various States. The occasion for this latest expres sion of the views of Mr. Crane, who made his millions in building eleva tors, is that members of the Legisla ture asked his advice on the question of increasing the appropriation for the University of Illinois. The university was organized in 18C7. This year's ap propriation was $2,300,000. For fifteen years the appropriations have aver aged $2,000,000. Before that they were not so large. The university, situated at Urbana, has 4.C00 students who pay from $50 to $110 a year for tuition, and has a library of 100,000 volumes. Mr. Crane, in his letter to the legislators, says: "I have given a great deal of thought and study to the subject of higher education, and have conducted several systematic investigations with regard to this and many other institu tions engaged in advanced lines of education. In fact, as far as I know, I am the only one who has ever taken up this subject In a businesslike way, and the conclusion I have reached is that practically every one of these in stitutions is a fraud and an imposition on the public. "In trying some years ago to find out tho utility of an academic educa tion for young men who havo to earn their own living, inquiries were made not only of graduates from the col lego and universities, but also of those who had engaged these graduates in a business way, and the result as shown was anything but creditable to the university. "I am prepared oven to go much further than this, for I maintain that instead of being a benefit, such insti tutions as this are a positive crrso and are doing a vast amount of harm by demoralizing the youth of this country. "Instead of appropriating funds for such Institutions it would be a good deal bettor for the State to put a torch to them and burn them down to go out of the 'higher education' business, and permit tho boys to go back to their homes and assist in sup porting their families instead of caus ing them a heavy expense." Mr. Crane is now seventy-seven years of age. In 1903 he married, as his second wife, Miss Emily Hutchin son, who was then under thirty, and settled $1,000,000 on her in lieu of dower. His company has a profit sharing system under which more than $200,000 is distributed each year among its employees. LAZY MAN IN BED TEN YEARS. Mumcra Not Sick, But Refuses to Get Up Lives at County Farm. Jerseyville, 111. The laziest man In the world lives In this village. His name is John Mumcra, and he has been In bed ten years because he is unwilling to comply with the rules of the Jersey County Farm, which say that every one living there shall rise at 5 a. m. Mumcra Is not sick. He eats regu larly and is in perfect health. "I am ready to hold up my hand and owear that he has kept his word," said Superintendent Mourning of the County Farm. "John has been In bed ten years, and he says he will stay there the remainder of his life. "He Just lies there and looks at the ceiling, or rolls over once In a while and takes a nan. When he talks It le all about how foolish a man Is to get up every morning when he knows he'll have to go back to bed again at night." Coughs Up a Tack. Chardon, Ohio. Elton Parker, year old son of Mr. and Mrs. W, J, Parker, coughed up a carpet tack that had Iain Imbedded near his lungs for 5 ocooc three years. mm Tlio Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which has boon in uso for over 30 years, has horno tho signature of and has hcon made under his pcr- jCjOT,?jPa, Bonal supervision slnco its infancy. u&T7r. t-CUCAMZ Allow no ono to docoivo you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-good "aro hut; Experiments that trlflo with and endanger tho health o Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless suhstituto for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys "Worm and allays Fcvcrishucss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TMtCINTAUIt OOMMHV. TT MURRAY STHKET. HCW YORK CITY. H. C. HAND. President. W. B. HOLMES, Vice Pkes. We want you to understand the reasons for the ABSOLUTE SECURITY of -U3"JE3- WAYNE COUNTY HONE SD HAS A CAPITAL OF - - - $100,000.00 AND SUEPLUS AKD PROFITS OF - 355,000.00 MAKING ALTOGETHER X - i55.000.00 EVERY DOLLAR of which must be lost It has conducted a growing and successful business for over 35 years, an increasing number ol customers with its casn luncis are protected by JiUDh.KJN bThr.ii vaults. All of these duties, coupled with conservative management. Insured by the CAliKKl'I, I'KitSONAI. ATTENTION constantly given the Hank's affairs bya notably able Hoard of Directors assures the patrons of that SUPKrtMK SAl-'KTY which Is the prime essential of a euod Hank. Total Assets, m- DEPOSITS MAY BE MADK BY MAIL. "3 DIRECTORS-! II. C. HANI1. A. T. SKA 1:1.12. CHAS..T. SMITH. II. J.L'ONUKIt. V SUYDAM. 1'. 15. (Jl.Alf l Ten Cents Daily TEN. CENTS SAVED every day will, in fifty years, grow to $9,504. TWENTY CENTS SAVED daily would in fifty years amount to $19,006. , The' way to accumulate money isjto save small sums system atically.and with regularity. At 3 per cent, compound interest money doubles itself in 23 years and 1(14 days. At 0 per cent, money doubles itself in 11 years and 32" days. If vou would save 50 cents a"day, in 50 years you would have $47,520. If vou would save'lH.OO a day, 4t the end of50 years7you would have $95,042. ' Begin NOW a Savings 'Account at the THREE .PER CENT. INTEREST PAID. Money loaned to all Wayne fcounteans furnish ing sood security. Notes discounted, llrst mortgage on real estate taken.. Safest and cheap est way to send money to forflgn countries Is by drafts, to be had at this bank. e e HOUSEHOLD BANKS FREE. Telephone Announcement This company is preparing tolb extensive construction work in the Honesdale Exchange District which will greatly improve the servi(and enlarge the system Patronize the Independent Telephone Company which reduced telephone rates, anddo not contract for any other service without conferring with our Contract Department Tel. No. 300. CONSOLIDATED TELEPHONE CO. of PENNSYLVANIA. Foster Building. CITIZEN PRIlSnf COUNTS First. Last and All Signature of H. S. SALMON, Cashier W. J. WARD, Ass't Cashier this Bank. . SAVINGS BANK ALE, PA., .1 before Wny depositor can losealJ JiJNJNY serving lidelity and satislaction. $2,733oo.oo W. IJ. H01.ME3I 1 KI.M151.K II. S. SALMON Honesdale Dime Bank the