The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, January 07, 1910, Image 2

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    THIS CITIZKX, KIHDAY, JANUAKY 7, 1010.
w now copy
ERIGAN STYLES
ss for Comfort Driving Oul
the Pointed Toes and the
Spindle Heels of Old
JR INVASION MAKES WOE
Roller Skating Rinks Do Running
Business List of Popular Yankee
Adoptions Starts Alarm for the Safe
ty of Native Crafts.
Paris. France Is again plunged
Into woo because of the "American In
vasion," and the newspapers are Join
ing in n cry of "Wolf!" lest Krench
commerce be seriously hit because of
the growing favor of American goods
for common use among the people to
the neglect of native manufactures.
Figaro started the cry. possibly
with sensational intent. Statistics
came to its support in such volume
that other newspapers were forced to
take it up, and now it Is sounding
from one end of the country to the
other.
The first count In the indictment is
that the people arc taking to Ameri
can shoes. In the beginning the
broad too and common sense heel
were ridiculed, and native shoemakers
felt not the slightest fenr that their
narrow-toed, spindle-heeled creations
could be supplanted.
"Fancy these ugly creations in our
museums beside the dainty shapes
that have come down to us from Mario
Antoinette," they said.
That was the trouble. Styles in
shoes had not changed since the sup
posed perfection of model was found
a century and a quarter ago. All the
same the "ugly" footwear has become
so much the vogue that nil must wear
it who wish to be considered well
dressed. Almost weekly new shops
appear to handle only the American
article, and even the shoemakers who
turned their original scorn into argu
ment to prove that the American shoe
was not suited to the French foot, are
now hurrying to get into line with
advertisements that they are making
American shapes.
The fact is that conversion to the
new style has come because no French
wearer having once enjoyed the com
fort of an American shoe could bo in
duced to go back to the old footgear,
and when the movement got fairly go
ing there was no stopping it. Cer
tainly it has ceased to bo true Mat
an American is to be spotted in Paris
by his feet.
Roller skating is another American
invasion. It was not so difficult to in
troduce as shoes, being a diversion
that suited the French love of easy
and stimulating sport. American com
panies have opened four big rinks
this season and all are literally and
figuratively doing a rushing business.
It Is reported that Frank Hostnck.
who owned the Hippodrome, has tak
en the Pari3 Zoo In order to remodel
it on American lines.
American hotels are coming Into
view apart from the hostelries that
have always looked out for tourists,
and American patent medicines are
sold everywhere.
The newspapers print a long list -of
other forms of' invasion all truo
enough, but adding to the sum of
comfort and pleasure of the public at
large.
EATS 40 EGGS IN SIX MINUTES.
Auctioneer in Missouri Follows Feat
with a Hearty Meal.
Moberly, Mo. Judge Wooden, an
auctioneer of Moberly, went to Con
tralla, Mo., in response to a call from
a friend, who had made a wager of
$100 that Mr. Wooden could eat forty
eggs in ten minutes. Tho feat was ac
complished at noon in a Centralla ho
tel. Wooden eating tho forty eggs In
Just exactly six minutes. Wooden or
dered his eggs scrambled, nnd Just to
demonstrate he could do it, he crum
bled crackers In the last dozen ho
ate
Wooden doesn't approve of betting
in any form, and his friend had a diffi
cult task getting him to smash the
egg-eating record. After eating the
forty cggH Wooden went out to a
friend's for supper and ate as much as
two average men could eat.
MOTHER'S SACRIFICE.
Gives 288 Square Inches of Cuticle to
Save Her Child.
Baltimore. Md. Sacrificing herself
for her child, Mrs. Clarence Boyd this
afternoon submitted at the Franklin
Square Hospital to the removal of 288
Bquaro Inches of skin from her limbs
to bo grafted upon her fourteen-year-old
daughter Helen. Tho cuticle was
attached to scarred places on tho
child's body, caused by a flro two
months ago, in which the girl was
nearly burned to death.
25,000 SUPPORT HUSBANDS.
Carrie Chapman Catt Says Women
In New York Are Wage Earners.
New York, N. Y. "There are 25,
000 women in New York city who sup
port their husbands, and then tha
question is, 'Shnll the women vote!'"
said Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, be
fore tha Acorn Social Club.
"The cry Is often raised that the
.woman should stay at home and look
after her children and darn aoek.
This la so tooUA. What naa a worn
aa's recta gt to do wltV. darning
pooka P
BOTH 'VrRE SOLD.
An Instance Showing That Hospital
ity Is not Always Appreciated.
Southern hospitality Is proverbially
generous. In "The Old Dominion"
II Thomas Nelson Pago recounts
an Instance showing that this hospi
tality was not always appreciated. A
BiU'Ft asked the loan of a horse to
carry him to his next stopping-place,
a town which lay at a considerable
distance. The hoit accordingly lent
him his lurse, and sent along n negro
boy It was heforo the war to bring
the horse back.
After several days the boy was still
missing, and somo one was sent to
hunt him up. The messenger found
him at last. am. demanded why he
had not returned with the horse
" 'Cause dat gent'man done sell do
horse." was the reply.
"Well, why iHdn't you come back
and say so?"
"HI! Ho done sell me, too," said
the boy.
Calling the Deaf.
"To waken a deaf person who
wishes to be called at a certain tlmo
In the morning is about tho hardest
proposition a hotel clerk runs up
against" raid a member of that fra
tonity. "To ring the telephone is use
less because tho man can't hear.
Knocking, for the same reason, is
futile. Now and then a guest who
has lost his hearing suggests that he
leave his door open so wo can walk
right in and shake him, but even If
he does appear to be dead game there
are so many chances of somebody less
guileless than ourselves walking in
ahead of us that we can't consent to
that simple expedient.
"It seems to me the man who can
patent a device for waking tho deaf is
sure of fame and fortune, not to men
tion tthe gratitude of the brotherhood
of hotel clerks."
A Substitute.
Irish wll Is as excellent as It is pro
verbial. A writer in the Mariner's
Advocate tells the story of a ship doc
tor on an English liner wno notified
the death-watch steward, a Hibernian,
that a man had died in stateroom forty-five.
The usual instructions to
bury tho, body wero given. Some
hours later the doctor peeped into
the room and found that the body
j was still there.
Ho called the matter to the atten
j tlon of the Irishman, who replied:
"I thought you said room forty-six.
I wint in there and sen wan of thim
in a bunk. 'Are ye dead?' says I.
'No,' says he, 'but I'm pretty near
dead.' So I was getting ready to
bury him."
A Few Things Worth Knowing.
Cork will not rine if sunk twenty
feet below water.
The negro republic of Liberia has
twenty-two species of rubber trees.
Korea, with a population of 20,000,
000, consumes S40,000,000 cigarettes
yearly.
Sixty years ago the use of flint nnd
steel to produce a fire was not wholly
urknown.
Vegetarian experts assert that one
acre of land will comfortably support
four persons on a vegetable diet.
Original New England.
Tue original New England was on
the Pacific, and not on tho Atlantic
coast. When Sir Francis Drake land
ed on American shores in 1779, ho
took possession of the country for
Queen Elizabeth, calling it "Nova Al
bion," meaning New England. The
States of New Hampshire, Massachu
setts, Maine, Connecticut, Rhode Isl
and Vermont have, therefore, appro
priated the name which should ie
long to California.
Third Class Express.
One of tho most popular trains in
India is a tliiru-class express on tho
East Indian lino. First and secord
class passengers are not admitted to
It. Its success lies In the fact that it
Is strictly a thlrd-claHS express. The
train Is the pride of the general man
ager, and pays well. It Is alwpys
crammed full, though no passenrer
has a ticket for a Journey shorter than
200 miles.
A Queer Fish.
Tho mud-skipper is one of the queer
est fishes alive. It really is a fish and
lives in the water, but it can climb
out on to the shore and crawl. It likes
to clamber up on to roots of trees and
perch there. Another funny thing
about it Is that it breathes with its
tail! The Bkin there Is very thin, and
the fish breathes U rough it quite
easily.
Smokers Restricted.
Thero was a time not so long ngo
wlion oven men only smoked on suffer
ance and in banishment. In country
houses the smoking-room was too
often a small dark hole on tho sun
less side of tho house, to which tho
votary of tho weed betook himself as
to somo dreary retreat, divided be
tw en his cravings for a plpo and ills
desire to get into more cheerful sur
roundings. Today Indiscriminate
smoking prevails.
The Park.
Two small girls from the slums,
each with a tiny baby brother in hor
arms, stood poering through the iron
railings of a city park. Said one:
"Could we go in the park, tinl:?"
"Taln't no park," replied tha other,
contemptuously, 'Mat's grass."
Heavy Funeral Bill.
New York City pays a large funeral
bill. It coBts the city S2.o0 to bury
ach of the unclaimed bodies, that
pass through the morgue, and there
are about 9,40 of them in the course
ef a year.
TEXAS AN ORANGE STATE.
Claimed That Callfo-nla Han Three
. Freezes to One on tho Gulf. 0
icxas is a migniy uig siuto, nnti tier
people nre dotnf, all they can to pur
suade Northerners to so.'tlo where
thero Is room and to spare. Rccont
Texns newspapers report the nrrlval
nt Houston and Galveston cf thou
sands of homc-scckers. In Houston
such visitors are greeted with rosoi,
each homo seeker receiving one, the
product of tho homo gardens In mid
winter. It is claimed that hundreds
of these pro3pec'.lvo settlers had sold
their farms In tho North and stood
ready to buy In tho Lone Star State.
"They prefer working a tcn-acro
tract that will produce as much as
twice that acreage In the North, nnd
putting tho rest In their pockets."
Meanwhile attention Is called to the
growth of the orange Industry In the
Texas coast country from tho Sablno
to tho Rio Grande. It is claimed that
the California orange district has
three frosts and freezes to one in tho
Texas coast country, and that the
quality of tho Texas yield is tho best.
This Ever Happen to You?
"Hero, girl," called out tho man in
tho restaurant, sharply, glaring at tho
little waitress from over the top of
his menu, "aren't you going to t.-.ke
my order to-day? I've been waiting
hero for about ten minutes to give my
orders to somebody."
Tho girl hustled over to his table.
"What w.il you have?" she Inquired.
The man continued to look at tho
sheet of food quotations.
"Hum," he grunted, apologetically,
"I have not decided what I want yet."
"I'll bo back in Just a minute," said
tho girl. "You can bo plckin' out
what you want." And away she went.
Tho man scowled after her and then
went at tho Job of picking out eno gh
things for a meal. It was some no
mcnts before tho girl got back, but
the man didn't say anything. It's em
barrassing sometimes not to have your
order ready.
Fishing By Telephone.
Consul i.ouls Goldschmidt, of Nan
tes, France, makes the retort that a
use for the telephone in llshin& has
Just been Invented in Norway. A
microphone, the role of which consists
in amplifying submarine sounds, is
shut up In a thin, water-tight steel
box and kept in constant communica
tion by metallic wires with a tele
phonic receivir installed on the f'sh-
ing boat. It is stated that with this J
aparatus the fisherman is alwayr ,n
formed of tho approach of iish. More
over, it Is said that each kind of -ish
gives in the instrument a particular
sound. Thus the arrival of herring U
signalized by a sort of whistling; the
codfish announces its arrival in tho
neighoorhood by a sort of grunting.
Consular Report.
What He Needed.
Supt McLare.., of San Francisco's
system of public parks, was inspect
ing the work of restoring Union
Square to its former beauty, now
th..t the little St. Francis has been
removed.
"I'm for heavin this un out; it's a
bum little bush," remarked a garden
er with a brogue.
"Which one?" Inquired McLaren.
"You don't mean this beautiful little
Scotch heather? All it needs is more
wrter, and it will grow as tall as you
are."
'You're not very tall yourself, Mr.
McLaren."
"Not extraordinarily so."
' I say, Mr. McLaren," reflected tho
gardener, thoughtfully, "did you ever
try water yourself?"
The Ideal Listener.
An attentivo listener Is a Joy, but
an inattentive ono is a trial to the
soul. Listen with your eyes, your
whole face, your heart and your mind
and you will achieve a triumph. Look,
directly at tho person talking to you
and never allow your gaze to bo de
flected to other things which may be
happening about you, for this at onco
shows lack of genuine Interest in
what Is being said to you, and natural
ly gives offense.
Italian Villa Habit.
It is Impossible for tho Italians to
get away from their villa habit. In
Italy every little shanty you moot on
the roadside is villa something or
other, tho smaller the shanty the long
er the namo. Down in Grand street
you como across tho grandiose names
of Villa Penza, Villa Gordiolo, Villa
Marcaronl above tho measliest of
small places, where they dish you up
spaghotti for tho sum of ten cents
with a small glass of wlno for five.
Japanese Sleeve Dog.
"'ho Japanese spaniel, or sleevo
dog of Japan, is ont, or tho long-coated
varieties which is much admired.
Thoy have boon hard to acclimatize
nni many discouragements havo been
mot with In their introduction. Thoy
have large heads, with big dark eyes
set wldo apart and very full. Their
llt'lo tnils curl up over their backB
like feather dustors. Ono pound Is
tho true sleeve-dog weight.
Names of Provinces.
Names of Chinese provinces have
a personal Interpretation, tho samo as
Indian names. For example, tho Kan
sufc province signifies Bwoot-Sedate,
while Chlh LI translated, roads Direct'
Rule, and An-Hwel means Peace
Glory. Nat a Bark.
"Them you don't have any dog
watch on this tram" Inquired tha
anxious paaanjrr. ateordlna; to a
writer la Life. TfcU to a cat,
boat-
;oooocoDooooocoooooooo.g
6 NIGHT TALKS 8
8 By REV. F. E. DAVISON
$ Rutland, VI.
scccccxxx)cccccoccocxxx:c
KING INAUGURATED
International Bible Lesson for Jan. 9,
1010 (Matt. 3:13-17; Matt. 4:1-11).
The gospol of
Matthew was
written by a .low,
t o converted
Jews to prove
thnt Jesus Christ
was tho Jewish
Messiah. Tho au
thor, Matthew,
was a converted
custom house of
ficer, or tax gath
erer, who had
given up his bus
iness nt tho per
sonal invitation
of Christ, to become an Itinerant
preacher of the gospel He proclaimed,
'ul:y persuaded in his own mind that
nta Mastor wns what He claimed to
ie. the King of tho Jews. Hcnco,
lie gospol of Matthew Is full of refer
ences to the Old Testament, tho Jew-
ah scriptures, 65 passages being quot
ed from the prophecy and tho hopo of
,'irncl. The genealogy of Christ ho
Tares back to King David to Bhow
'hat he has the right to sit as David's
cn upon David's throne. Thus we
On (I tho word kingdom 56 times in
his gospel, tho phrase, "the kingdom
of heaven," 21 times, and nowhere
el?e in tho New Testament. Matthew,
all the way through sots forth
the fact that "This is Jesus, the king
of the Jews. We havo seen the her
ald of tho king In John the Baptist.
Notice now, the inauguration of tho
king.
Inaugural Ceremony.
Monarchs are inducted into office
by solemn ceremonies, and from the
moment when they are Invested with
the purple they break away from the
old life and nil things become new.
Baptism was an ordinance of God, In
troductory to the new dispensation,
and as such Jesus submitted to it. And
whllo, In His case, it was not an act
expressive of confession of sin, It was
His Investiture with tho awful dignity
of tho Messiah, a ceremony in which
tho opening heavens and the De
scending Spirit bore witness to tho
divine approval and consecration. For
tho people, baptism was the symbol
of their separation from sin and conse
cration to God; In His case it was the
symbol of separation from His hither
to private life and tho assumption of
his royalty as Messiah-King. John
had opened the door of the new king
dom. From the wilderness of Bin the
people had flocked Into It. Now from
the seclusion of thirty years of prepar
ation Jesus entered It as both King
and Priest. Hero is where Ho took
up His royal prerogatives. Here He
received the seal of His mission the
fullness of power by the Holy Spirit.
And hero tho proclamation is made in
reverberating thunder from tho open
mi heavens, "This is My Beloved Son,
In whom I am well pleased!"
The King Tested.
No sooner was the King inaugurat
ed than He was tested as to His king
ly qualities. It must bo shown to all
the ages that He reigned by divine
right, that Ho was holy, harmless, un
dented, separate from sinners. Or,
ns tho Scripture puts, "Then was
Jc3us led up of the spirit into the
wilderness to bo tempted of the devil."
Whatever else is Involved in those
words, it is pretty certain that dur
ing that forty days, two kingdoms met
In Inexorable warfare, nnd at its close
Christ stood forth the conqueror over
every posslblo temptation that can ap
peal to man.
Three-Fold Temptation.
Lyman Abbott sums up tho tempta
tions: Tho tomptatlon waB three-fold
and It took placo In regular progres
sion. Tho first appealed to tho body;
tho second to love of ndmlration; tho
third to love of power. The first was
to more bodily appetite; tho second
to a more honorable deslro for fame;
tho third to a noble nmbltlon pervert
ed. The first called for an act miracu
lous; tho second for one ostentatious
and presumptuous; the third for ono
blasphemously wicked. The first was
disguised as nn appeal to reason; tho
socond was speciously an appeal to
the Scriptures; the third was a bold and
naked revelation of Satan. Tho first
was the most deceptlvo; the second
tho most plausible; tho third tho most
audacious. In the first Satan tried to
mislead by hiding the sin; In the sec
ond, by sanctioning tho sin, because
of tho greater good to be accomplished
by it; in the third, to compensate for
sin by a promised reward.
The First Adam and the Second.
It Is interesting to trace in Christ's
temptation, a perfect nnology to the
temptation in tho Gardon of Eden.
There, as here, the appeal was made
to the lust of tho fiosh, tho lust of the
eyes, and the pride of life. The ap
peal was first to appetite. Eve saw
that the tree was good for food. The
appeal was next to tho aesthetic na
ture. She saw that It was pleasant to
the eyas. And thirdly, the appeal was
to spiritual prlda. She saw that the
tree waa to be desired to make one
wise. In tha Brat Instance the attack
succeeded; In tha second It failed.
The flrat Adant fall In a garden; the
second Adaw waa a victor In a wilder
new; Xtia. Ike flrat waa eonqnered
In a awrda a4 a4e It a wilder
ness; AAaa. tha mmobA, eo&quored In
a wl)raa, aA Made K a paradise.
Natural Monuments.
Although tho objects aro often only
h as would be called "sentimental,"
!"-r? are no stronger supporters of
r.ovemonta for tho protection of re
j rkable natural pheuomonn than net-
' He societies and individuals de
" i ll to scientific work. Prof. John
I Clnrko calls attention to the load
l: t Germany has taken In this mat
Thero a hundred motives Induce
i iTferonce for tho protection of
-vtural monuments." In the foros.s
Luneburg an old gnarled fir-tree la
ti-rded "for Its very nge and fast I
I'ing ugliness." Near Hamburg a
'oh of dwarf birch is protected as a
. re survivor of the postglacla flora.
' hlenwlg has set asldo a low knob
-owned with a huge glacial boulder,
'-rtnclcrburg cherishes a swamp
1 creln rare botany specimens are
in?id. and Marienwcrder a little lrtke
i Mie woods where rare water-birds
t. Professor Clarke remarks upon
o richness of our country In surh
r uments, and tho constant danger
.' a.elr extinction.
Life In An Oasis.
The opening of a railroad from a
o!nt near Luxor Into the Libyan ds
ort has rendered easy tho approach
o the oasis of Khargeh, which Is re
.rded as n typical example of these
oliited centers of life. For three
ra Just past Mr. H. J. L. Beadnpll
ia resided in this oasis, studying the
'mnomcna of springs, moving sands,
!ls, and so forth. The Libyan oases
ri deep depressions In a lofty pla
eiti. which has a maximum elevation
' nearly 2,000 feet, but the bottoms of
to oases are only from 100 to 300 feet
bove sea-level. They are underlain
y beds of sandstone which are the
jources of the water-supply. Artesian
.veils 400 feet deep form practically
Inexhaustible means of Irrigation, and
such deep wells of sandstone probably
has its sources in the Abyssinian high
lands. Hated to Take tho Money.
Frank I. Cobb, tho chlof editorial
writer of the New York World, was
on a vacation In the Malnes woods
once when Joseph Pulitzer sent Cobb
a cipher message.
Presently a country operator drove
in to the Cobb camp and handed Cobb
the message, which read something
tike this:
"Simplicity nggrandizoment
griffon gerald roderlck hop
scotch hamfat publicity."
"There's a dollar to collect for de
Mvering that message," said the opera
r -. "but I hate to take It. Someboiv
- 5 the line got It all balled up, and
- nln't no sense to it."
A Feast
for Five Hungry People
There's a full meal for five hungry people in every package of Beards,
ley's Shredded Codfish. .
A delicious meal you can have ready for the table in less time than it take
to make coffee.
A breakfast or luncheon feast that will cost you only 10 cents.
The finest kind of a meal any family ever had placed before them.
EEARDSLEYS
TRADE
The Choicest of Food
The whole world knows that fish is one
of the most nourishing and strengthening
foods in existence.
And, as we prepare it, it is also one of
the choicest
And one ol the easiest to coot.
We use none but cod oi superior
quality.
We get them from Northern waters.
The fish which feed here attain a super
lative flavor.
And of these select fish we pick only
the plumpest and fattest Kach fish is
examined three times.
THE PACKAGE WITH THE RED BAND
Llaed with wai.papir. N preratlva
whatever. tha par.il J iuttl .t.ll.
AWw paektd ! tla and flat.
The Era of New Mixed Paints !
This year open 3 with a deluge of now mixed paints. A con
dition brought about by our enterprising dealers to got some kind
of a mixed paint that would supplant CHILTON'S MIXED
PAINTS. Their compounds, being now and heavily advertised,
may find a sale with tlio unwary.
THU,ONIjY UliACE IN HONKSDAIjE
AUTiiomzun to handle
IsJADWIN'S PHARMACY.
There aro reasons for the pre-eminence of CHILTON PAINTS
1st No ono can mix a bettor mixed paint.
2d Tho painters declare that it works easily and has won
derful covoring qualities.
3d Chilton stands back of it, and will agree to ropaint,!at his
own oxpense.evory surface painted with Chilton Paint that
proves defective.
4th Those who have used it aro perfectly satisfied with it,
and recommend its uso to others.
CASTOR I A
Por Infants and Children.
Hie Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears tho
Signature
tmmmttmmmntutmmtt
MARTIN CAUFIELD
n
Designer and Man- g
ufacturer of &
11
I ARTISTIC I
I MEMORIALS 1
s
If Office and Works
1036 MAIN ST.
HONESDALE, PA.
a
UJJtMUtJJJ5JJJJJSJtUJtJtJlUj;j5tJtJtJ!J55ttt;
For .New Late Novelties
IN-
JEWELRY
SILVERWARE
WATCHES
SPENCER, The Jeweler
"Guaranteed articles only sold."
Then we take only the best part of each
Iish the sweetest, most delicate meat
We remove all the bones. Our wonder
Shredding Process makes the meat fine
and fluffy and dainty.
Thus Ueardsley's Shredded Codfish is
ready to cook the instant you open the
package.
Instead of Meat or Eggs
Just to let your family learn how good
it is, serve Bcardsley's Shredded CodJlsh
tomorrow.
Have it instead of meat or eggs. A
package, costing only 10 cents, will go
farther than two or three pounds of meat,
or a dozen eggs.
Once your folks get a taste ol this food,
they'll want you to have it oiten. There
are dozens ol delicious ways to prepare
it So no one ever tires of it
Free Book of Recipes
With the first package you buy, your
grocer will give you our book of tempting
new recipes.
There is other codfish in packages. But
Beardsley's is the only Shredded Codfish.
Our wonderful Shredding Trocess is
Satented. So please see that you get
eardsley's the package with the red
band. For that is the kind you will like.
J. W. Beardsley's Sons
474-478 Greenwich St., New-York
CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS