THE CITIZKN, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1000. THE CITIZEN rUBLIBHED EVERY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY BY TUB CITIZEN PUBLISHING COMPANY. Entered as second-class matter, at the post olllce. Honesdnlc. la. B. B. HARDENBEHGII. - - PRESIDENT W. W. WOOD. - - MANAGER AND SKC'Y directorb: o. n. dorflinoer. m. n. ailen, HBHBY WILSON. E. B. IIARDENBERG1I. W. W. WOOD. SUBSCRIPTION - ?1.60 per year WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1000. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT . Judge Robert Von Moschzlsker, of Philadelphia. AUDITOR GENEllAU, A. E. SISSON, of Eric. STATE THEASURER, Jeremiah A. Stober, of Lancaster. JURY COMMISSIONER, W. H. Bullock. Plying machines will not need state roads, consequently the road builders and the appropriation lobbyists are strongly opposed to the Idea that they ever will be a success. The Bankers Convention at Chi cago were very earnest In opposing the establishing of Postal Savings Banks but they offered no convinc ing argument to support their op position. Pennsylvania is not so badly man aged after all. It is absolutely free of debt, according to State Treasur er Sheatz, and its splendid financial condition should forever silence those who delight in hurling invec tives and sneering at the old Key stone State. The only state which requires teaching of agriculture in public schools is Oklahoma. The school course includes agriculture, horticul ture, stock raising, llower culture, fertilizers, dairying, drainage, irri gation and grazing. Neighboring states have smllar laws under con sideration. Brother Lyman, of the Tunkhan nock Republican and Now Age, thinks that it is much more difllcult to discover the discoverer of the North Pole then it is to discover the man who got there first. Broth er Lyman, you are correct; take your books and go to the head of your class. If you lived at the North Pole it would be unnecessary to wind your watch. You are always at 12 o'clock and can't move in any di rection without going South. All times of day meet at the polo, as the meeting place of all meridans. A man sitting with the invisible mathematical point right under him would be in all twenty-four hours at once, or a twenty-four-hour watch placed on the Polo could be made to point to the correct time in every part of the world. The word "Pole," as applied to the North or South Pole, is from the Greek word meaning pivot, hinges or axis and has no connection whatever with the pole that is derived from a teutonic root. HORATIO ALLEN MEMORIAL. The new park which has been so generously given to our borough by Mrs. Andrew Thompson, we hope will be christened Thompson Park, in honor of the donor, and we sug gest that a movement be inaugurat ed at once to place in this park a memorial to the memory of Horatio Allen and one that will suitably "commemorate the fact that within a short distance of this spot was where Horatio Allen started tho first railroad locomotive, which was the beginning of the great railroad sys tem of our country. The railroad men of America from President to the humblest workingman will con tribute their quota to this worthy object. Let Honesdale appoint a committee and begin this move ment. Thousands of dollars await the appeal of a proper committee for this purpose. Immensely Rich Girl if Will is Not Found. Relatives of the late Francis H. Leggett, wholesale grocer of New York City, began a search on Thurs day last for the will of the dead millionaire, whose estate is valued at $15,000,000, and unless such a document can be found his 12 -year-old daughter, Frances, will be the richest girl in the world. She is the heir-at-law, her mother, who was formerly Mrs. William Sturges, widow of a Chicago banker, only coming in for a dower share if the will is not found. Leggett was buried last Tuesday. It Took Effect Sept. 1st. Among the new laws passed last winter which took effect September 1st Is the following: ''No person shall admit a child actually or ap parently under tho age of sixteen to a moving picture performance un less such child Is accompanied by its parents or guardian." This will furnish an additional excuse for tho parents or guardian to go. Census Supervisor of this District. J. Andrew Wilt, of Bradford county, was appointed Census Sup ervisor of this district, which com prises Bradford, Susquehanna, Wyo ming and Wayne counties. The ap pointment was made by the Presi dent on the recommendation of Congressman Pratt. Captain Wilt, It will be remem bered, was a candidate for the nom ination of congressman from this district on the Republican ticket, but was beaten In the race by Con gressman Pratt of Susquehanna county, and no doubt his loyal and effective support of his successful competitor was not forgotten by him when he came to the considera tion of the claims of the candidates from the counties composing the district. Mr. Wilt is in every way qualified for the ofllce and will perform his duties with credit to himself and satisfaction to all concerned. NEW SUPERVISOR LAW. The act of 1909 relating to the election and duties of road super-, visors makes several important changes. They will be elected at the February election, shall meet to organize the first Monday in March. Must be sworn and 111c their oath with the township Auditors, shall organize by electing one of their number chairman, shall ap'polnt a treasurer and secretary, who may or may not be the same person, and may or may not be a member of the board. Tho secretary shall perform all the duties heretofore performed by the town clerk which office is abolished. The supervisors shall flx his compensation but the combined salary shall not exceed two per cent, of tho money paid out by the treasurer. The board shall levy a road tax not to exceed ten mills on the valuation. Provided the court on petition may order a furth er levy of ten mills. All road tax shall be paid In cash, but any town ship by a majority vote at the Feb ruary election may adopt tho work system. Townships collecting the tax In cash shall receive from the state 50 per cent, of the cash tax, but not more than $20 a mile for each mile of road in tho township. The supervisors must make sworn statements to the State Highway Department. The board must di vide their township into road dis tricts of not less than 5 miles each and they may employ a road master for each district who shall sec that the work Is properly done under plans and specifications furnished by the supervisors, oversee the men working and keep their time, and work himself if required and re port once a month. They may be required to give bonds, and are at all times subject to removal. The supervisors shall fix the wages per hour. Supervisors may let contracts for keeping In repair road and they may oversee and work tho road themselves. The' township collector shall col- flect the taxes and on all paid be fore June 1st there shall bo an abatement of 5 per cent, between June 1 and Oct. 1 even and after Nov. 1 five per cent, added. Sworn reports must be made to the State before April 1st each year on blanks provided. LOCAL OPTION FIGHT. Anti-Saloon League Reorganized its forces I'rior to Campaign. Superintendent Nicholson, of the Pennsylvania Anti-Saloon league, has completed nlans for the strength ening ,of the league, and declares mat with the beginning of October, the Pennsylvania league will be one of the strongest organized leagues in the whole country. Dr. C. W. Carroll, now of the Pittsburg dis trict, will come to Harrisbure to ha at the head of the agitational de partment as assistant superlntend net, while the Keystone Citizen wilL be issued as a weekly after that date with Rev. H. to. Chalfant, of Swlssvale, as editor. By thus de partmentizlng the work Mr. Nichol son will devote his time to superin tending the movement, making a speciality or organizing the counties for the local option flsrht. Rev. F. A. Gaupp, of the Dubois aistnct, having resigned, that dis trict has been broken un. and two new districts have been created. One nas headquarters at Williamsport, with Rev. W. H. Chase, formerly the assistant at the stato nfflnp. no district superintendent. The other has headquarters at Altoona. The district superintendent has been se lected, but announcement of his name is not to be made until Oc tober. Mr. Nicholson has secured the Rfr- vlces of Ex-Governor Hanly of In diana, ror a tour of the state in the interest of the leaeue and thn 1 option campaign, which is already unaer way. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. Tfis Kind You Haw Always Bought Bears the Signature of Yncant Position Much Sought For. The position of Assistant District Attorney of tho U. S. Court made vacant by the promotion of Judge Searlo to the Bench, is a bone of contention by a number of aspiring lawyers. Scranton has In the field Ralph W. Rymer, C. H. Van Wormer and Milton W. Lowry. Bradford county has Mlal E. Lilley of To- wanda, who vacated this position to take his seat In Congress. Luzerne county has Abe Salsburg. A Wayne county man, should be tho appointee and we have a number of able men such as Hon. Homer Greene, Wm. H. Lee, E. C. Mumford, Henry Wil son, M. E. Simons, and others, who would fill the position ably and honorably. HARHIMAN'S WILL. Leaves Everything to Ills Wife, Mary W. Harriman. New York, Sept. 1G. Harriman left all his property to his wife. The will gives no directions as to the property, simply saying It Is be queathed to Mrs .Harriman, for ever. She was appointed executrix. The will was filed at Goshen this afternoon, but was made public here. The document, which is ex tremely brief, was dated June 8, 1903, and reads: "I give, devise, and bequeath all my property, real and personal of every kind and nature, to my wife, Mary W. Harriman, to be hers ab solutely and forever. And I do hereby nominate and appoint the said Mary W. Harriman to be exe cutrix of this will." Charles Peabody, President Mut ual Life Insurance Company, and C. C. Tegethoff, Harriman's secre tary, signed as witnesses. Dividends Show Prosperity's Re instatement. If the proof of the pudding Is in the eating, tho proof of industrial prosperity is in the dividends earned and paid stockholders. Last Thurs day the directors of the Westing house Air Brake company gave Its stockholders indubitable proof of Increasing prosperity by declaring the regular quarterly dividend of 2 Ms per cent, and an extra dividend of 1 H per cent., making 4 per cent. in all, or ?2 a share. This is the first extra dividend declared on the stock for more than a year, and it means an additional $210,000 cash for distribution among stockholders. The total dividend amounts to ?G0,- 000, which will be disbursed on October Dth. Tho stock jumped $5 a share to 512." bid on the an nouncement. During tho past four weeks the rallrods have found employment for more than 100,000 cars which have oeen standing idle for nearly two years. Nearly all these cars require more or less repairs, with an overhauling of brake apparatus, which has brought business to the company. In addition to this, ord ers for cars and locomotives during July and August exceeded 50,000 pieces of new rolling stock, every piece of which total requires brake apparatus, of which the Pittsburg company will receive the lion's share. In spite of the unusually largo number of new railroad cars recent ly ordered by railroads, new busi ness that has been coming out con tinues to astonish railroad men. During the past week S.000 new cars were ordered from our building companies for western roads that have been holding back orders dur ing the past summer. Of this num ber a large portion has gone to tho American Car & Foundry company and the remainder allotted has been given to tho Standard Steel Car company of Pittsburg. There are 2,000 cars decided upon which have not been awarded definitely to any building company as yet. How tho Salvation Army Got Its Name. The adoption of the name "Sal vation Army" came about in a curi ously unpremedlated way, writes Commander Eva Booth in the Sep tember Van Norden Magazine. Miss Booth describes the life work of her Isdtinguished father, who visits America this fall. As the head of the new movement Mr. Booth had gathered around him men who were as one with him and acted as his secretaries. One day he was walk ing up and down his study, dlctat ing, when he used these words: "The Christian mission is a vol unteer army." He paused in his dictation and looked thoughtfully over the should er of his secretary (now Corneals Stephen M. Weber presents "The Monday evening next, Sept. 27, 19 draw a full house, Plan to take it . !:. .;:"H,.- , i r. i ,if:W: :::. ... . : ' ' ' . ' ' " sloner Rallton, the pioneer of our work In America) at the written line, took up the pen, scored out the word "volunteer" and wrote above It "salvation," and went on dictating. This was tho first time the word was used, and it made such an impresson that It began In sensibly to be thought of as an ap propriate name for .the mission; It grew upon the imagination of men; they liked it; liked It so well that they finally adopted it. History of Uncle Sam's Great Seal. Gaillard Hunt, chief of the divis ion of manuscript, has just complet ed a historical sketch of the great seal of the United States, the sketch telling of the various stages of de velopment through which the seal went before the one now in use was finally adopted. When the Continental Congress made the obverse of the great seal the national arms it Intended that the device should pass into com mon use among the people, as the flag had done, and, like the flag, the arms at first met with general ap proval which soon gave place to an acceptance of it as an emblem of the power and- sovereignty of the United States which placed It above criticism. Not all the fathers of the repub lic, however, were pleased with the selection of the eagle as the national emblem. When the badge of the order of the Society of the Cincin nati was made in France in 1724 it was objected to by some because the displayed eagle resembled a tur key. "For my part," Wrote Benjamin Franklin, January 26, 1784, to his daughter, "I wish the bald eagle had not been chosen as the representa tive of our country. He Is a bird of bad moral character; he does not get his living honestly. You may have seen him perched on some dead tree, where, too lazy to fish for himself, he watches the labor of the fishing hawk, and when that diligent bird has at length taken a fish and is bearing it to his nest for the Support of his mate and young ones, the bald eagle pursues him and takes it from him. With all this injustice he Is never in good cast; but, like those among men who live by sharping and robbing, ho is generally poor, and very often lousy. Besides ho Is a rank cow ard. Tho little kingbird, not big ger than a sparrow, attacks him boldly and drives him out of the district." Exchange. FOOD SUPPLY And Not Turin" the Coming Ques tion. J. J. Hill, the prominent railroad manager and ono of the best in formed men in America, in address ing the American Bankers' associa tion at Chicago last week, said: "Wo have almost reached a point where, owing to increased popula tion without increased production per acre, our home feed supply will be insufllclent for our own needs; within ton years, possibly less, we are likely to become a wheat-importing nation; the percentage of the population engaged in agricul ture and tho wheat product per acre are both falling" at the same time the cost of living is raised everywhere by this relative scarcity of bread, by artificial increase in the price of all manufactured articles, and by a habit of extravagance which has enlarged tho view of both rich and poor of what has to be con sidered the necessaries of life. "These plain facts should disturb and arouse not only the economic student but the men who are most intimately related to the wealth of the nation and most concerned that it shall not suffer loss or decreases." He declared that never yet has enhanced cost of living, when due to agricultural decline and inability to supply national needs, failed to end in national disaster. Mr. Hill said the farm is our main reliance and that every other activ ity depends on that. He asserted, however, that the majority of peo ple fail to realize practically the de clining status of agriculture in the country. "They are misled by the statistics of farm values and pro ducts, mounting annually by great leaps, into thinking that this abso lute Increase implies a relative ad vance of this industry as compared with others," said he. "Exactly the opposite is the case. I refer not merely to the quality and results of our tillage, but to the setting of the human tide away from the cultivated field and toward the factory gate or the city slum. This Climax" at tho Lyric Theatre on 09. This Is a great play and should in. Is something whose consequences for evil are as certain as If the aggre gate dep6slts in all the banks of this country were decreasing by a fixed percentage every ten years, while their loans wero Increasing by another percentage just as stable. You would know what catastrophe that assured by and by. "It means the same thing, In kind and consequences, when tho agricultural population, tho pro ducers and depositors In the great national treasury of wealth, is de clining year by year. Bankers Don't Llko President Taft's Plan. Tho annual convention of the American Bankers' association was marked by a spirited campaign against President Taft's plan for postal savings banks, and a move ment has been started to get Con gress to let national banks establish savings departments on a 10 per cent, reserve basis for such de posits. - The proposal Is gaining support on the theory that It will meet the arguments advanced by those who contend that rural communities large enough to support only one deposit bank ought also to be pro vided with saving shank facilities. Enough has developed to show that the American Bankers' associa tion, 10,000 strong, will do all in its power to fight the postal savings bank Idea and that the big banks will arrange for an Important de monstration at Washington If the proposal is insisted upon. Some of the delegates have expressed them selves freely to Speaker Cannon on this subject. SUNDAY SCHOOL WORKERS. Forty-Fifth Annual Convention to bo Held in Harrisburg. Unless all signs fall the coming State Convention of the Pennsylva nia State Sabbath School Association to be held In Harrisburg, October 13, 14 and 15, will far exceed in numbers, interest and enthusiasm, all former meetings of the Associa tion. The past year has been one of intense activity along Sunday school lines in every county throughout the State. Statistics recently gathered show marvelous growths in Teacher Training, Home Department Work and Organized Adult Bible Classes. Tho magazine writer who said that Sunday school work is on the de cline certainly did not get his In formation from Pennsylvania. The program prepared for the PROF. DARLING, who will huve on exhibition his famous Dog and Pony Circus at tho AVnyno County Fair to be held here on October 4, 5, O, and 7. HENRY Z. RUSSELL. TRESIDEXT. ANDREW THOMPSON VICE PRESIDENT. HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK. This Bank was Organized In December, 1836, and Nationalized in December, 1864. Since its organization it has paid in Dividends to its Stock holders, $I,905,800.00 The Comptroller of the Currency has placed It on the HONOR ROLL, from the fact that Its Snrplus Fund, more than equals Its capital stock. What Class 0 are YOU in! The world has always been divided into two classes thoee who have saved, those who have spent the thrifty and the extravagant. It is the savers who have built the houses, the mills, the bridges, the railroads, the ships and all the other great works which etand for man's advancement and happiness. The spenders are slaves to the savers. It is the law of nature. We 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. State convention is a strong ono, and contains the names of Governor Edwin S. Stuart, Bishop James Henry Darlington, Hon. John Wanamaker, Mr. H. J. Heinz, W. C. Pearce, Chicago; Rev. David James Burrell, D. D., New York; Mrs. Mary Foster Bryner, Chicago; Dr. Joseph Clark (Timothy Standby), Columbus; Mrs. Zlllah Foster Stev ens, Alton, 111.; Mrs. E. C. Foster, Detroit, and Rev. Floyd Tomklns, of Philadelphia. Tho special features of the con vention will be a half day sessions for Elementary Grade workers; a Teacher Training Conference, a Home Department Conference and a parade of O. A. B. C. men. Class delegations will come from many sections of the State to participate 5,000 men will bo In line, with bands and banners. NEW GOODS FOR Autumn Keystone Block Our New Fall Dress Goods and Novelty Trimmings, Latest Effects Our Long Corsets for the present season are all buift 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. MENNER&CO. Leading Stores EDWIN F.TORREY CA8HIER. ALBERT C. LINDSAY ASSISTANT CABHIER Henner & Co's.