THIS CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 15, 1001). THE CITIZEN PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY BY THE CITIZEN rOBLISHINO COMPANY. Knteredas Fecoiiit-clnss mutter, lit tbepost olllce. Ilonesctnlc. l'n. B. B. HAKDKXllKltOII. - lMtKritOKXT W. W. WOOD. - MAXAGKIl AND SKO'Y DIRKLTOHS: 0. n. DOKFMNOElt. M, II. AI.I.KN. HENRY WILSON. T. II. IIAUDKNIlERail. W. W. WOOD. SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 per year WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 15, 11)01). HEPL'DLilUAN NOMINATIONS. JUSTICE OK THE SL'PIiEME COURT . Judge Robert Yon Mosch.lskcr, or l'lilhidolphlii. AUDITOR GENEISAL, A. E. SISSON, j of Eric. STATE TKEASUUEU, , Jeremiah A. Stolid, of Lancaster. JUltY COMMISSIONER, W. II. litillock. Easy money Is the hardest to keep. The family tree sometimes hears pretty poor fruit. A .Missouri man has been put into jail for having married thirteen wives. He's not a criminal. lie's n lunatic. We all like to brag of our an cestors, hut sometimes forget to live so that our descendants can do the same tiling. Cooks get better wages than school teachers. Brain food don't have to he as well prepared as that that you put in your stomach. Why is it that ninety-nine times out of a hundred the friends who borrow from you are fellows you couldn't get a nickel from if you wanted to borrow yourself? A man who slips on a banana peeling, then arises and without waste of words or milled temper removes the peeling so that others may not slip on it, is a Christian. The beesting cure for rheumatism is again coming into prominence. We should imagine that u few well directed bee stings properly applied would do wonders in limbering up stiff muscles for the time being at least. Love, sunshine and common sense, thoroughly mixed in tho prop er proportion, beat all the patent medicines on the market as a cure all for the ills of mind and body and no alcohol is needed as a dis solvent or preservative. "Children cry for it." Decollette gowns are being worn just a trifle lower than formerly the sheath gown will be slit just a wee bit more and now conies the seatless and "nuthin', nuthin' " gowns. We men will soon have to turn Christian Scientists and just imagine we don't see anything. THE Jl'DGESHIP AND CONSTT Tl'TIONAIi AMENDMENTS. The appointment must necessarily be made under the existing law, and this provides that it shall con tinue to the first Monday of Janu ary, 1911, and that the election for the full term shall take place in November, 1911. A constitutional amendment has been proposed, and is to be voted on at tho election this year, providing (schedule, last paragraph), that judges of the several judicial districts, holding office when the amendment is adopted, whose terms may end in 3 911, shall continue in office until the first Monday of January, 1912. Should this amendment, if adopt ed, be held applicable to the pres ent appointment, it will leave a vacancy on tho llrat Monday of January, 1911, which must be tilled by appointment until the first Monday of January, 1912. That such will be its effect would seem probable, from the proposed amend ment, providing that elections for Judges of tho several judicial dis tricts shall be held in an odd num bered year, and this will require the election for the regular term to be held in November, 1911. Ocean Waters. A ton of water from the Atlantic ocean, when evaporated, will yield tight pounds of salt; a ton from the Paclflo, 79 pounds; and a ton from tho Dead Sea, 187 pounds. Great Speed of Pigeon. A speed of more than 2,300 yards k minute (or 71 miles has been at tained by a homing pigeon belonging to Mrs. R. Bwarbric! Roebuck, in the Northwest Lancashire Federation race from Stafford. London Standard. Democrats Will Acqnicsco in Repub lican Appointment to Judgeship. Tho Democratic members of the Wayne County Bar held n meeting on Friday last and decided not to present the name of any of its members of the Bar for the appoint ment to fill the vacancy caused by the death of lion. George S. Purdy. The following letter wns drawn up and placed in the hands of M. 13. Simons, chnlrmnn of the Republi can Committee. To M. E. Simons, Esq., Chairman of the Republican County Committee: Dear Sir: We, tho undersigned Democratic members of the Bar for tho 22d Judical District of Pennsyl vania, take this opportunity of lu formng you that we will not present the naino of any Democratic mem ber of our Ilnr for appointment tem porarily to the judgeship to fill the vacancy caused by the deatli of lion. George S. Purdy. Any member of our Bar whose name shall be presented to the Go ernor for appointment by the Republican members of our Bar, or a majority thereof, will bo satis factory to us; this action however, shall not be construed as influenc ing our individual preference in the nomination or election of a candi date for Judge as provided by law at a general election. (Signed.) W. II. Dlmmick, O. I,. Rowland, ('has. .McCarty, l- P. Kimble. R. M. Stocker, Herman Harmes, John Kuhbaeh, P. II.Hoff, Honesdale. Pa., Sept. 10, 1909. SOME NEW ACTS LAWS WORTH KNOWING. The anti-bad egg bill is No. 9. It is aimed at eggs of the cold stor age variety. Tho penalty for sell ing or offering to sell eggs unfit for use is a line of between 200 and ?1000, or imprisonment between three and nine months. In acts Nos. 10 and 11, bad soft drinks and impure lard are respec tively attacked. Any person who sells a non-alcoholic drink that is deleterous to health is liable to a fine of not less than $25, nor more than $100; a dealer who handles impure lard may be fined either 550 or ?100. If an Imitation lard is sold the can must contain tho words "imitation lard" or "lard substitute." Druggists arc not permitted to sell carbolic acid to a stranger or a minor if Act No. 20 is lived up to. The word "poison" must be marked on the bottle and tho apo thecary is directed to keep a register containing the names of all persons to whom he sells the acid. Act 22 gives a board of town ship commissioners the right to levy a tax for the establishment of a lire department. Before this tax is levied however the board must receive the consent of the electors at a popular election. Act 23 has to do witli tho care of burial grounds and authorizes a court to refuso a charter to any association which does not expend at least one-tenth of the amount arising from the sale of lots for tho care of graves and the grounds gen erally. A justice of the peace is prohibi ted, in Act 24, from binding a per son over to court on a surety of the peace charge unless it is clearly shown that the prosecutor is actu ally in danger of being hurt in body or estate. Law :i 1 amends tho tax exoner ation act so as to exempt hospitals, universities, colleges, seminaries, academies, associations and other institutions of learning only when the entire revenue derived by the same is applied to the support of the institution and for no other purpose. By Act 32 the census of a second class township may bo taken any time, not less than two years before the government's decennial census, upon petition of the owners of 25 per cent, of the assessed valuation. If the census shows a population large enough for a first class town ship the change is made through the courts. Act 34 makes it a misdemeanor on the part of a manager of a tele- grapah company or of the corpora tion itself to send a minor child to a house of assignation. The penalty is a fine of ?1000 or one year's im prisonment. Sale of impure milk is legalized against in act 37, while 38 Is di rected at adulterated ice cream. Deleterious flavoring matter in Ice cream makes "the dealer liable to a fine of $50. Act 46 gives a justice of the peace the authority to enter actions of as sumpsit for the recovery and collec tion of municipal claims by Hen. In Act 47 It is provided that the last of a decedent, to be effective against boda fide conveyances or mortgages of the real or personal estate of the decedent, must be offered for probate within three years before the date of tho death of the testator, or before the re cording of conveyance as on mort gage. The next act In the laws gives boroughs tho right to acquire by condemnation proceedings such real estate as may be necessary to erect garbage or incinerating plants. No. 50 amends the intestate laws so as to allow a widow the first $5,000 out of the estate before it is distributed according to the sche dule laid down In the act of 1833. In No. 51 the probation officer of a Juvenile court is allowed a salary not to exceed $100 per month, if the Judge of the court sees fit to approve the proposition. The new nnd greatly abbreviated form of deed of conveyance is pre scribed In No. 53. It is directed in act 56 that every township legally entitled to receive the 15 per cent, bonus be paid by the Commonwealth. This is for abolishing the work tax. ' Act 104 fixes the fees to be re ceived by constables as follows: For attendance on court and making returns thereto, $2.50; for serving notices of election upon township or borough officers, for cncli service, 15 cents. It is made a misdemeanor to make, utter, ciculate or transmit false statements affecting the solvency of a bank, accoidlng to act 121. The penalty is $5,000 and imprisonment at hard labor for five years. No. 159 is tho liveryman pro tective net. It mnkes it a misde meanor to keep a horse that is hired longer than the prescribed time or to drive him to a point be yond which tho oral contract called for. A fine of $100 or imprison ment for thirty dnys is the penalty attached to the now law. No. 175 designates the 12th day of October as a legal holiday, to be known as Columbus Day. Gypsies are made the subject of Act 247. It provides that It shall bo unlawful for any roving band of nomads to pitch its encampment or carry on its business or craft within the limits of the county without first taking out a license. The license Is $50 to bo paid to the county treas urer for the use of the county. Spitting in public places is pro hibited by Act 2 SO. It makes it a misdemeanor punshable by a line for any person to spit on a public walk, on the steps of a public build ing, or in any railroad or railway car. Tin Hifiti School Alimini Dinner. , The reunion of the Alumni was a j great suet ess and a most enjoyable j evening was spent by all. The ex erckos were very entertaining. Mr. J Stocker's talk wn? n treat; he creat-' ed quite a hit bv liis wit and humor. 1 Prof. Shaw's talk about the school) in the (Jo's was very interesting, j Miss Harriet Rockwell's reply to' the toast of The Alumnae" was very spicy and showed that her grasp of the subjc?c t wru- uii"sually strong:, making her leninrks very' appropriate, dev. John II. Atkin-' son with his fund of stories, helped wonderfully to make the occasion long to bo remembered. Homer , Greene's beautiful poem, "Back to I tho Old Home," read by Prof. Oday, was a crowning piece to the even ing's entertainment: "BACK TO THE OLD HOME." By Homer Greene. Back to the old homo; back to the place Where tho tender feet went stray ing, Where the maples bend in their old time grace. And the elms in the wind are sway ing Back to the old home; buck to the wnys You trod in the time.i that are old en; Where the moon-bright nUlus and the sun-kissed days Are hallow.ed with memories olden. Back from the long stieots; back from the roar Of tho city's ninu-built breakers; From the mountain mist and the sea-washed shore. And the sweep of the western acres. Here are the old days open for you, Welcome and love at the portal; Here are the old ' hearts; hei r aro the new. Friendship nnd youth are Immortal. Tho winter of 1907, Darling's Animal Circus was engaged to be one of the feature acts of the Barnuni & Bailey show at Madison Square Garden for four weeks. At the Wayne County Pair Oct. 4th, nth, fith and 7th. HOWS THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. ' P. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known P. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and fi nancially able to carry out any ob ligations made by his Arm. Waldlng, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken in ternally, acting directly upon the blood nfid mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials runt free. Prlco 75 cents er bottle. Sold by all Druggsts. Ah! but the old friends; aro they not here Time has cut deep in his flying. Some have gone from us for many a year, Some now in the graveyard are ly ' Ing. But we of the old guard, grizzled and worn Defending the gates of the city; We're finding the afterglow brignt as the morn, We do not want sighing or pity. For with us are young hearts tem pered and true, And the new blood runs red as the old did; And we look to the future as brave ly as yoy, Wherever jour tenia aie unfolded. Back to the old homo; back to the new; For though we may fall on tho morrow; Till tho long home opeii3 Its portals to you, God guard you, in joy and in sorrow. COLORED PHOTOS NOW POSSIBLE. J. B. Schriever, of Wyoming ave nue, Scranton, has on exhibition a photograph in natural colors made without the use of special lens. The object is a vase of variegated llowers and the photo shows every color, tine and shade of the bou quet and even discloses that the tin of tho roof on which the vase rested when photographed had been freshly painted in spots, the dull ness and brightness of the old and new paint, respectively, being read ily discernible. Tho plate was made in France, but the camera was a f" olio taken from stock. The technical description of the process is given by Mr. Schriever as follows: The reproduction of an object in sensitive silver salts whkh was made practical by Dagnue, was received with much wonder. Not less than this do we at the present time look anon the making of colored pictures with practically one operation to bo lully as wonderful. .Many attempts have been made by scientific men to solve this problem. Vuriovs processes,- which are at the pi c tent time in an experimental --.go, fail to come up to what tho ; or.eral public, and particularly ; i.iateur and professional workers ".ii.it. By means of the "Autocli rom'' plate and tho ordinary hand camera, to produce the most won derfully true reproductions of colors exacily they exist in nature, the bh os being reproduced as blue, the reds as red, the yellows as yellow, and all intermediate tints and shades rendered with perfect ac curacy. To accomplish this re M'lires no more trouble, nnd but i.c more chemists, 'than the ordi i.n ry finishing of a photographic negative. Tlie process whii li we herein de scribo in its most simplified manner of procedure embodies the use of but two solutions and three opera tions. The enmo".!. or the lens employed in making ordinary photographic j negatives can be tii-od. The better tiie lens, ho . ever, the shorter will bo the rei ulreil exposure. However, tho ordinary recti linear or annstimat lens gives i.n.-t excellent results. Tho single a 'ro-nr.tk- lens can be need, but the ox insure is consider ably increase d, and it is also diffi u.k to attn h a ray filter to the mo'inting of tho single lens, "Autochror-." plates differ from ordinary plate.' n- follows: interposed between the sensitive cos Mi:,? and t' e rI.isb is a thin layer of nwn-siir.icu microscopical starch Rini, dyed orange, led, green, and uo'.et, fiveac' without overlapping,, mi'- i.u.-.i-u in sin ii proportion tnat Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. Pride. Pride that dines on variety sups on contempt. Pride breakfasted with plenty, dined with poverty and supped With Infamy. Benjamin Franklin. Force of Example. Some men are so governed by ex ample that they can't even see a full moon without wanting to get full, too, Philadelphia Record. A Good Cauie for Gratlturfn. , tics should bo thankful to those that are. Tbey leave a lot of good Jobs for ua to fill. j the layer appears colorless when examined by transmitted light, and absorbs but a small percentage of the light received. The sensitive coating Is extreme ly thin and made of a special fine grained panchromatic emulsion. When such a plate Is exposed In the camera, the glass side toward the lens the light, beforo reaching the sensitive coating, passes through the colored starch grains, which act, Individually, ns mlniito screens, each one nbsorbing nil colors but Its own. A microscopical selection takes place and after development there Is found under each grain a corresponding black image (reduc ed silver) of a density proportionate to the amount of color received and transmitted by this particular grain. Were tho plates fixed at tills stage, the picture, when examined by transmitted light would show only tho colors complementary to those of tho original, since tho true col ors aro masked by tho black images they created benoatli the grains. But Alien the reduced silver is dis solved (In tho permanganate solu tion) the imago is reversed; the opaguo imago under each grain be comes translucent and transmits colored lights precisely of the samo hue as tho light transmitted by the grain when the pinto was exposed in the camera; in other words, the color is reconstructed just as It was decomposed during the exposure. A special yellow screen must bo fitted to the lens in order to equalize the action of the light and compen sate for tho predominant actinism of tho violet and blue rays, to which the panchromatic emulsion is most sensitive. Aside from this screen tho actual camera equipment Is the same as for making ordinary negatives. JUDGE PURDY'S WILL. Residence and fU(),00() in Property Left to Widow who is Executor. The will of Judge George S. Purdy was admitted to probate on Wednes day, Sept. Stli. Among tho princi pal bequests appears tho following: All his personal property in and around tho barn and lot, including animals and vehicles ol all kinds, all loose property on the premises; also all household goods in his resi dence; also $20,000 in property to be selected by his wife, Agnes. All the rest and remainder of his property he leaves in trust, tho use and income to his wife, coupled with certain conditions, and the re mainder as follows: To the First Presbyterian Society of Honesdale, $1,000. What then remains to bo divided equally among the nieces of tho de ceased, Edith, Faith, and Phyllis Wyatt and Druley Pooler, and nephew, George F. Purely, and the survivors of them, per stirpes. Judge Purdy appoints his wife executor and trustee of the funds and In case that she Is incapaclated in any way, E. C. Mumford to be executor and trustee of funds. The will was made the 24th day of February, 1909, and tho witnes ses were M. J. Ilanlan, E. W. Gam mell and George P. Ross. Says the Grouch. Woman can make or break a man. an' when it's leap year she gln'lly makes him first an' breaks him after ward. Los Angeles Express. CASTOR I A Por Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of 1IKN1IY '.. nrssKLr., rr.iil)KXT. . ANIHSKW THOMPSON VlCi: I'ltKSIDUNT. This Bank was Organized In December, I&36, and Nationalized in December, 1864. Since its organization it to its Stock 1,905,800.00 The Comptroller of the Currency has placed It on the HONOR ROLL, from the fact that Its Surplus Fund more than equals Its capital stock. What Class 9 are YOU in' The world has always been divided into two classes thoEe who have saved, thope who have spent the thrifty and the extravagant. It is the savers who have built the houses, the mills, the bridges, tho railroads, the ships and all the other great works which stand for man's advancement and happiness. The spenders are slaves to the eavers. It is the law of nature. Wo want you to be a saver to open an account in our Savings Department and be independent. One Dollar will Start an Account. This Bank will be pleased to receive all or a portion of YOUR banking business. Hudson-Fulton Celebration. Come to the Brooklyn Eaglo Of fice, 26 East Twenty-third street, opposlto Metropolitan Towor, Man hattan, or Second Floor, World Building, City Hall Square, Man hattan, for full Information about boarding houses and furnished rooms In Now York City during tho great Exposition. Get a free pro gramme of events. No chargo for the service, and a pleasure to help you. BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. Order your furalturo by mall and ect factory prices. Only $3.92 for this fine, brass-lrlnimcd Iron Bed la any size. Lacquered brass rods, orna ments nnd vases. Iieoutlfully enameled In every detail. Reverse rails to fit any kind of sprltiff. A bed of similar stylo and quality retails In stores for 5.50. Carefully packed, shipped for $3.92. Do you wish to save fully a third in buy ing your furniture? Send today for our Factory-Brlce Cat alogue. Sent free- on request. "Stlckley Brandt" furnlturo Is tho kind that servos you longest and best. BINGHAMTON, N. Y. o--t- i NEW GOODS FOR jAutumnl ler&Co's. Keystone Block Our New Fall Dress Goods and Novelty Trimmings, Latest Effects Our Long Corsets for the present season are all built for Modern Dress. In the Glove depart ment all the new shades can be found in the best quality goods. New House Furnish ings in the late designs of Rugs, Portieres Cur tains and Carpets. MENWER (So CO. Leading Stores KDWIN F.TOltUKY c.siiii:k. AI.l'.I-'l'T C', LINDSAY assistant cAsiuun has paid in Dividends holders, Mem