THK OITIZKN, "WEDNESDAY, DBC, 8, 190. PROCLAMATION ON THE AMENDMENTS It Will bo Issued by Governor Stuart Within Few Days. The ratification by the voters of the State ot nine ot the proposed constitutional amendments and the schedule which Is to carry them In to effect wlirbe formally proclaimed by Governor Stuart within a few days. Under the constitution the Governor Is charged with proclaim ing results of certain elections, and Attorney General Todd has outlined a form In which the results of the election on the proposed amend ments will be announced. The proc lamation Is now being prepared at the office of Secretary of the Com monwealth McAfee and will set forth each amendment as outlined on the ballot and give the vote for and against each one. It will also announce that the amendments will become effective according to the schedule, as well as noting the fact that the seventh amendment was de feated. This will be the first procla mation of the kind Issued since 1901, when three amendments were ratified. According to the ballot tho voters were called upon to vote for ten amendments and a schedule which provided for the carrying into ef fect of the amendments. Summed up, the various amendments revis ed certain portions of tho state con stitution, and had for their purpose the abolition of the February elec tions, and provided that the general or state elections shall be held In November in tho even-numbered years and the municipal elections In the odd-numbered years. Amend ment seven provided that election officers shall be elected bl-cnnlally but gave to the legislature the right to determine whether the election officers should be appointed. Virtually all of the amendments are based upon the same thing, and as outlined by the political leaders mean nothing more than the aboli tion of the February election and the arrangement of the election of officers to conform with that prop osition. The term of election officers will be two years, that of assessors, con stables, school directors, council men, supervisors and of all city and county officers will be four years, ana that of justices of the peace, aldermen, and magistrates will be six years. County officers elected In 1907 and 1909 will each serve four years, but those elected 1 nl908 will serve only three years. The February (municipal) election will be held in 1910, as heretofore, but all election officers, chosen at that election will serve until the first Monday in December, 1911. All officers chosen at the Febru ary election, 1910, to officers the term of which Is now four years or the term of which is made four years by the proposed amendments, shall serve until the first Monday in December, 1913. All Justices of the peace; alder men and magistrates elected in February, 1910, shall serve until the first Monday in December, 1915, and therefore the terms of all city, ward, borough, township and elec tion officers 'Shall begin on the first Monday of December in odd-numbered years. All city, ward, borough and town ship officers holding office when the proposed amendments are adopted and whose terms end in 1911 shall continue In oftce until the first Mon day In December, 1911. State officers, congressman and members of the general assembly will be elected at the general elec tion in November of the even num bered years and all other officers will be elected at the municipal elec tion in November of the odd-numbered years. This provision, how ever, has no reference to elections of judges of the courts, who may be elected In any year, nor to special elections to fill vacancies. At the general election In 1910 the ballot will be headed by candi dates for Governor, Lieutenant Gov ernor and Secretary of Internal Af fairs; In 1912 by the presidential electors, tho state treasurer and the auditor general. All other officers county, city, borough, ward and townships will be elected In the odd-numbered years. Odd-numbered senatorial districts will elect senators in the year of tho presidential elections, and even numbered senatorial districts will elect senators in the year of tho gubernatorial elections. Pyucrry Rainfall for November. 1909, 8 days, and trace six days, 1.G7 Inches. Compared with last year, six days and trace 7 days, only three-fourths of oue Inch, Is least record for this month for 39 years; and the most was 7.1 inches In 1886; average 2.95 Inches. Snow this year three days with trace two days 5.5 inches. Last year four days, and trace four days made six Inches. 1886 most snow in Novem ber, 34 Inches. Average for 62 yrs. is 6.4 inches. Note. If the hall and sleet storm on the 24th and 26th, had been all snow it should have measured 14 Inches, near like the snow storm on Nov. 16th and 16th, 1906, which measured 17 inches, November Temperature High est this year, 1st, 78 degrees which Is highest record for 42 years. Low est was 7th, 15 degrees, last year 16th, two degrees, and lowest record 26th, 1880, six below tero. Dally range varied from four decree on the 18tb, to 46 degrees oa the 1st; average 21.8. Warweet day eatfee 2d, mean. 66 degrees, and coldest day on the 25th, mean 22.5 dogs. Mean for month 40.8 degrees, last year 35.5. Warmest November, 1902, mean, 43, and coldest 1873, mean 26.4. Average, 42 years 35.4 degrees. Twelve days were clear, eight fair and ten cloudy; average 51 per cent, of sunshine, (last year 38); prevailing wind, northwest. U. S. dally weather maps reported first zero weather at Battleford, C. N. on the 12th, 14 below; and' same place 20 below 20th and 22d, prob ably lower 21st, that day no map. At Chatham ten below 13th, On our side, lowest 17 below In' Colo rado on the 16th. First part of this-month on warm days we saw hundreds of .dandelion flowers, and a few other hardy kinds In pasture fields, while pansy and a few other flowers were blooming in some of our yards. THEO. DAY. Dyberry, Pa., Dec. 1, 1909. WOItK FOU CONGRESS. Defects In Pore Pood Law to bo Remedied at Next Session. During the present Congress one ot the questions to be thrashed out will undoubtedly be the revision- of the pure food laws to meet the de mands of the general body ot con sumers for still further improve ments in the methods m vogue in many food factories. One of the points overlooked in the original act was the treatment of peaches and apricots In canning plants. It is the practice of many canneries to immerse peaches in a boiling solution of caustic soda and allow the fruit to stew in this chemi cal until the skins of the fruit are eaten loose. The fruit ts then put through several washings until the skins are washed away. This pro cess is about a cent and a half or two cents a can cheaper than peel ing by knife. Those who are call ing attention to this chemical treat ment say that the use of the lye Is not the worst feature of the pro cess, but contend that in order to use this cheap peeling process it is necessary to use green and unripe trult for canning. Ripe fruit will not stand the lye-process but be comes discolored and disintegrated In the caustic soda. The little flavor which the unripe peaches have is killed by the lye treatment so that the result is a woody, tasteless, canned peach which depends for flavor on the syrup which is added in the canning process. The way to tell a lye-peeled peach Is to wash away the syrup and then taste the fruit. If It Is tasteless and pulpy the chances are It is a lye- peeled peach. In the several washings to which the peach is subjected after It is peeled by lye, most of the chemical Is undoubtedly washed away but it any of it' is left tho consumer gets it with his fruit. Congress did not mention this subject in the pure food laws, con sequently the canners who "use this method are not compelled to state the fact on their labels. The pres ent agitation has for Its purpose the enactment of a measure to remedy this defect. It this movement proves success ful every canner will have to state on his label if the peaches he used were pecleu by caustic soda or any other chemical. That of course will put the question right up to the con sumer. If they would as soon eat fruit which has been soaked in lye they can do so. Many of course will prefer to have their fruit handled In the good old-fashioned kitchen way, by knlfe-peellng, which also means much for the quality of can ned fruit by keeping Intact the ori ginal fruit flavor. The last two years have seen a great advance in the methods used in various canneries and with the new law a still further advance in the direction of wholesome produc tion will be assured. When the processes employed In canneries are known to be perfectly wholesome, there will be a greater use of can ned fruits and the final result will be profitable for all concerned, In cluding the farmer who will get a greater market for his product. INTERESTING TESTIMONY. Why Erlo Bought Pennsylvania Ooal Company. Testimony in a recent govern ment coal suit made public here re cently, described how tho Erie rail road, In buying the Pennsylvania Coal Company, had In view not the formation of an anthracite trust, but tho saving of itself from insol vency. The testimony was by.Eben B. Thomas, president of the Lehigh Valley Railroad. The government's accusation in regard to the Erie's purchase of the Pennsylvania company was that It was part of an "illegal combination." Mr. Thomas, in his testimony, flat ly contradicted this view. After saying that he was president of the Erie at the time, he continued: "The purchase was made on my initiative The company had done business in connection with the Erie road for more than forty years. It leased to the Erie road a branch be tween Hawley and Lackawaxen, which the Erie used to transport the coal, first when It was brought to Hawley by plane, and afterward when tho Pennsylvania Coal com pany built the Erie and Wyoming Valley to that point, to connect with them and distribute their ton nage The Pennsylvania Coal com pany always wanted a larger divis ion of the rate than I was willing to allow them. Like all sellers, they did net tBwk the? et emeHgh. I titopgfct tfer.it tee -arafe. I tee It was a valuable piece of property. I know the loss ot Its tonnage to tho Erlo railroad meant ruin. "They bought tho roadbed of the old Delaware and Hudson canal, which has been abandoned. They bad formed a .now company, pro posing to extend their Erie and Wyoming road, In which the Erie owned 49' per cent., to the Hudson river. I opposed the building of that road by all the means I could command before the railroad com missioners, but they got their certi ficate. I followed It to the courts and was defeated. I did not eipect to prevent the building of another road. I cared nothing about wheth er they built ono road or a hundred, if I had the tonnage. "I wanted time for negotiation, ana after a very long time, nearly two years, I succeeded in inducing J. Pierpont Morgan & Co., the vot ing trustee, to purchase that proper ty for the account of the Erie rail road. "They did so, and that Is the one thing that made the Erie property a solvent property, and It Is their salvation to-day. Without It, they would have been In bad shape, and I look back to no act in my fifteen years' experience on that road with which I am better satisfied, and in which I feel that I did better work for them than In that purchase. It has been a remunerative commer cial enterprise. "I took special pains to disclose to no other man in the anthracite re gion what I was doing, nor in the anthracite business, for fear that they would want to get In on that. I was working to protect and to hold to the road the tonnage that It had always enjoyed. So far from there being any combination in that, there never was the slightest sus picion of it. None of the officers of the Lehigh Valley had anything to do with It, and I doubt the pos sibility of their having any knowl edge of it. There was no combina tion, there was no consolidation, there was no agreement; it was as clean, straightforward a transaction as ever took place In the transpor tation business of this or any other country, out of which I made not one single penny." Mr. Thomas also told how Mark Hanna, who was piloting the Re publican National campaign In 1900, visited J. Pierpont Morgan and beg ged that the anthracite operators accede to the miners' demands, as a labor fight would Jeopardise the hope of a Republican victory at the polls, and how the appeal was successful. A GREAT SHOW. Really, Tills is a Powerful Play, "St. Elmo." "St. Elmo," the story your grand mother read when she was a girl, the story your mother read with equal avidity, and the same story you read yourself and your daugh ter, (If you have one) Is "Just crazy about" has been dramatized by Willard Holcomb, who secured ex clusive rights from Mrs. Augusta J. Evans Wilson shortly before her death; and the first successful stage version, as well as the only au thorized one, under direction of Vaughan Glaser will appear at the Lyric on Friday, Dec. 10th. "St. Elmo" was first produced un der personal direction of Mr. Hol comb at the Academy of Music, Richmond, Va., the former home of Mrs. Wilson, and was so successful that the producing rights were se cured by Mr. Glaser, who will not only make it the feature of his re pertory In the cities where he Is personally popular as a stock star. This production is under the per sonal direction of Messrs. Glaser and Holcomb, who aim to make "St. Elmo" a standard attraction, like "The Old Homestead." The scenery has been painted from the original models while the furniture and cos tuming of the quaint period "Befo' the wah" are exactly the same In all cases. The company has been selected with a view to giving the best possible ensemble performance with no star save "St. Elmo." In reality, it is a life-sized illustrated edition of the story you have al ways admired, condensed and adapted for dramatic effect. BEATRICE WORTH aa "EDNA EARLE" In ST. ELMO At the Lyric Theatre next Friday Evening. CASTOR I A li Kki Yh Vnt 11mm imtt WWW WWWm WWi wH ww vwwiiv vnwn Bears the BEAVER COLONY IN JERSEY. Have Flooded Valnablo Load and Can Do Nothing Because Penal ties for Killing are Severe. When the New Jersey Legislature a few years ago passed a law for bidding tho taking ot beaver in the State under the penalty ot $100 fine for each beaver and possibly Jail, it was subjected to ridicule, for then the beavers had all been' taken. Since then the beaver has been re turning to the state from some where, particularly to Sussex coun ty, where several colonies have es tablished themselves. Some of these have Increased so that the colony on Lubber Run In Bryan township contains forty of the busy dam builders. There aro smaller colonies on tho streams near Blair, one not far from Two Bridges, and another at an ancient home of these animals, Beaver Lake. At all of these places they have chopped down trees and built their dams across the streams. The big colony on Lubber Run Is becoming a serious problem to the dwellers in Its vicinity. Tho beavers have thrown a dam across the run at a point where the adjoining land Is level with the banks of the stream. This has turned the modest little creek Into a lake that has flooded several acres of the fine bottom land on the farm of John Hovel, to his material damage. The beaver dam Is so solidly woven and fortified In construction that it has defied all of Farmer Hovey's efforts to make a break In It so the water In the lake It has backed up over his farm might be drained. Tho penalty for trapping the colony and getting them out of tho way of doing further, damage In their efforts to re-establish their race In New Jersey would amount to almost as much as the value of his farm, and it might also land him in jail, so that Is out of the ques tion. Farmer Hovey has applied to the New Jersey Fish and Game Com mission for authority to do some thing that will relieve tho situation. If that body has no power to aid htm and the beavers continue to take possession of his land he will try what a suit for damages against the State will do for him. At the present time the beavers are busy building their winter huts around the lake they have made and evidently purpose becoming perman ent settlers. BIG FLAGSTONES. From Piko County for Thomas F. Ryan's New York Sidewalk. Mill Rift, Pa., Dec. 4. On an or der from the contractor who Is to lay them in the sidewalk in front of Thomas F. Ryan's residence In New York a shipment of the largest blue stone flags ever used in a pavement is being quarried near this place. Three of tho stones are now ready. They are 22 feet long, 10 feet long; 20 feet long, 10 feet wide, and 20 feet long, 12 feet wide, all being 10 Inches thick. The others of the order will be of cor responding large size. The largest flag stone put down in a New York pavement before this Is the stone used in front of one of the Vanderbilt residences. It was quar ried In this vicinity twenty-five years ago, and measured 19 by 9 feet and was 9 Inches thick. A single flag stone 24 by 12 feet and 12 inches thick was shipped to Cleveland, O., last weok from a quarry near here, on the Sullivan county side of the Delaware. The Delaware valley and abutting hills, on both sides of the river from Mill Rift to Deposit, 100 miles, are ono immense, blue stone quarry, but the rapid growth of the cement in dustry throughout the country is seriously affecting the output of flagging stone from this great de posit. A Shakespearian Romance. Who were the lovers? Romeo and Juliet. What was their courtship like? A midsummer night's dream. What was her answer to his pro posal? As you like it. Of whom did Romeo buy the ring? The merchant of Venice. What time of the month were they married? Twelfth night. Who were the ushers? Two gen tlemen of Verona. Who were the best man and maid ot honor? Anthony and Cleo patra. Who gave the reception? Merry wives of Windsor. In what kind ot a place did they live? Hamlet. What caused their first quarrel? Much ado about nothing. What was her disposition like? The tempest. What did they give each other when quarrelling? Measure for measure. What did their courtship prove to be? Love's labor lost. What did their home life resem ble? A comedy of errors. What did their friends say? "All's well that end's well." Average of Fatal Accident. In connection with the present ac tivity with regard to the reduction ot fatalities In coal mine It is of Inter est to compare the following Average ot fatal accidents a thousand em ployees: Anthracite miners, Penn sylvania, .;; mlaceHaseeus steel and Iron workers, PenaaylTaala, 4.S0; nut and belt work era, Peswylvanla, 6.40; railway employees, United REPORT OP THE CONDITION OP THE. WAYNE CQUNTYSAV1KGS BANK BOsTUDALS, WAIHK CO., PA., at the close ot business, Nov. 6,190. RESOURCES Reserve fund I Cash, specie and notes, H8.M0 SO I.e?al securities ti.OOO 00 Due from approved re serve accnts 118311 61-212,182 11 Nickels, cents and fractional cur rency. 143 61 Checks and cash Items 2.UWA& Due fromllanksand Trust Co's.not reserve agents 15,093 03 Hills discounted not due, $331,115 62 Bills discounted, time loans with collateral... 14,039 0 Loans on calUwlth col lateral i.wv 104,623 75 Loans on call upon one name. 4,550 00 Loans on call upon two or more names 63,726 75 Loans secured by bond and mortrace...., 21.300 577,353 02 Investment securities owned ex clusive of reserve bonds, vis : Stocks. Bonds, etc. 1.M5.872 21 - Mortgages and judg ments oi recora.... a,ffia 77 z,043.ki ss Office Building and Lot 27.000 00 Other Keal Kstatc 6,000 00 Furniture and Fixtures 2,000 00 Overdrafts 217 00 Miscellaneous Assets..... 400 00 $2,886,340 93 LIABILITIES Capital Stock, paid in f 100.000 00 Surplus Fund 310,000 00 Undivided Profits, less expenses and taxes paid 84,143 35 Deposits subject to check $100,912 81 Time certificates of de posit ,. 3,238 78 Saving Fund Deposit. 2,190,XZI lfi Cashier's check outst'g 271 29-2,3554246 N Due to Commonwealth 'Aj.uw vu Due to banks and Trust Cos. not re serve agents 11,891 54 Dividends unpaid gu 00 $2,886,340 93 State of Pennsylvania, County of wayne. ss: I, H. Scott Salmon, Cashier of the above named Company, do solemnly swear that the above statement Is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. (Signed) H. S. SALMON. Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to.before me this 13th day ot Nov. 1909. (Signed) ROBERT A. SMITH, N, P. Notarial Seal Correct Attest: W. B. Holmes, ) F. P. Kimui.k, V Directors. 11. J. Conger, J $4.50 Fancy Rocker for $3.15 because we make them. Only $3.15 For this handsome and comfortable fancy Rocker In Golden Quartered Oak and Mahogany finish. Large size, s&aped wood seat, easy arms, shaped banister back.- A C rat-class fancy Rocker In every detail. Retails for (4.50 and above. Buying direct from us elimi nates the dealers and jobbers profit. Write TODAY for our latest catalogue. Free. BIHGHAMTON, N. Y. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, a registered student at law in the office of Victor A. Decker, Esq., of the Wayne county bar, will make application to the State Board of Law Examiners, to be examined on the 7th and 8th days of Dec, 1909, for ad mission to the bar of the supreme Court of Pennsylvania, and to the bar of the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne Co. CHAS. S. HOUCK. Honfisdale, Pa., Oct. 9 1909. 2eo:3 For New Late Novelties IN JEWELRY SILVERWARE WATCHES SPENCER, The Jeweler "Guaranteed articles only sold." ARIUVAIj AND departure of TRAINS Delaware & Hudson R. It. Trains leave at 6:65 a. m., and 12:25 and 4:30 p. m. Sundays at 11:05 a. m. and 7:15 p. m. Trains arrive at 9:65 a. m., 3:1& and 7:31 p. m. Sundays at 10:16 a. m. and 6:60 p. m. Erie R. R. Trains leave at 8:26 a. m. and 2:48 p. a. Sundays at 2:48 p. m. Trains arrive at 1:40 and 8:68 p. sa. Saturdays, arrives at 8:46 amf leaves at 7:10. &u4&ys at T:2 p. m. AirertlM ta k CHIcw. PttOFBBSIONAXi CARDS. Attsraevs-at-Law. H WILSON, . ATTORNEY A COUNBKLOB-AT-LAW. .Office. Masonic bonding, second Doer Ilonesdale, Pa. w M. H. LEE, ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW. Ollloe over Dost office. All lecal business promptly attended to, Ilonesdale, Pa, EG. MUMFORD, . ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW, Office Liberty Hall building, opposite the Post Office, Ilonesdale, Pa. HOMER GREENE, ATTORNEY A COUN8ELOR-AT-LAW. Office over Kelt's store. Ilonesdale Pa. AT. SEARLE. . ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW. Office near Court Houso Ilonesdale. Pa. 0L. ROWLAND, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAWJ Office vcr Post Office. Ilonesdale, Pa Charles a. Mccarty, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Special and prompt attention given to the collection ot claims. Office over Kelt's naw store. Honesdale, Pa, EP. KIMBLE, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAWi Office over tho Dost office Ilonesdale, Pa. ME. SIMONS, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, Office in the Court House, Ilonesdale. Pa. HERMAN HARMEb, ATTORNEY A COUNBELOR-AT-LAW, Patents itnd pensions secured. Office In the Scbucrbolz bulldlne Ilonesdale. Pa. PETER H. ILOFF, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office-Second floor old Savings Brnk bulldlne. Ilonesdale. Pa. p M. SALMON, XL. ATTORNEY A COVNS-ELOR-AT-LAW Office-Next door to 1 est tfTUe. Formerl occupied bv V II, Dlninilck. Ilonesdale. Pa Dentists. DR. E. T. BROWN,. DENTIST. Office First floor, old Savings l$anlbulld. Inc. Ilonesdale, Pa. Dr. C. K. BRADY. Dentist. Honesdale,Pa. J Office IIobrs-8 a. m. to 5 p. m Any evenine by appointment. Citizens' phone. 33 Residence. No. P6-X Phvslclans. DR. H. B. SEARLES, HONESDALE, FA. Office and residence 1019 Court Tstreet telephones. Office Hours 20 to 4:00 and nooton:00.p.rn Livery. LIVERY. Fred. G. Rickard has re moved his livery establishment from corner Church street to Whitney's Stone Barn. ALL CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. FIRST CLASS OUTFITS. 75yl JOSEPH N. WELCH Fire Insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Office: Second floor Masonic Build ing, over C. C. Jadwin's drug store, Honesdale. If you don't insure with us, we both lose. General Insurance White Mills Pa. g O. G.'WEAVER, Graduate Optician, 1127 H Main St., HONESDALE. Tooth Savers We have the sort of tooth brushes that are made to thoroughly cleanse and save t teeth. They are the kind that clean teeth wttbeat eaviog vour mouth rail ot bristles. We recommend those oottlnc S6 osata eff store, as we can guarantee them and wn re place, tree, any that anew detects ot mnu factor within three stoatnt. O. T. CHAHBER5, PHARHACIST, a H. StetUa, WNWAU8, PA, HITT1EE