rilK CITIZEN. WKIWK8DAY, FKH. 3, 1010. THE CITIZEN rOBUSUKD KVEBT WEDNESDAY AKD FRIDAY BT THK CTTIZKN rUBUSIIINQ COMPANY. VftitereU as second-class matter, at tho post offlcc. Honesdnlc. l'a. SUBSCRIPTION I1.G0 K. B. HAHDKNHKHUII, - - 1'UKSIDENT W. W. WOOD. - MANAGER AND SKC'Y DIRECTORS: 0. It. DORrLINOKK. M. B. AI.IKN. HENRY WILBON. K. P. HARDKNIIICROII. W. W. WOOD. WKDNKSDAY, FICH. 2, 1010 If parents would smile more, their babies would cry less. A Massachusetts shipbuilding company has secured the contract to build two battleships, of the drcadnnugbt type, for tlio Argen tine ncpublic. at the aggregate cost of $23,000,000. The competition for this award was opon to the whole world and though Europoan builders had the advantage of cheaper labor, If that Is an advantage, and untaxed raw materials, the American con corn was able to secure the work. The superior skill and Intelligence of our mechanics and the higher standard of our machinery, compen sates for the differences In wages, according to the estimates of these successful bidders. Nobody has anything on this country if self-reliance and courage Is asserted. There is no quicker way to take the life, growth and energy out of a town than for Its citizens to be con stantly holding up the dark side of the picture to the gaze of tho in quirer. The word if. keeps every body In doubt, and doubt keeps every man from going forward with tho improvements he would other wise make. There Is nothing llko confidence to make a success of any thing and if you haven't got any of it, don't communicate the fact to your neighbor, much less to a strang er and if the bent of your mind is to continually go against every Interest of the town In which you live, for tho sake of the town get out of It and go to some place that Is already lifeless and has no Interests at stake, where you like the old lady's root beer, if you don't do any good you won't do any hurt. In our common schools, acadam oa pniioiTPR nnd universities, each have their course of study, and text books for the same; and as a student masters each "branch, the text books are laid aside and he graduates to a higher. But in the Sabbath school It is different. We have our text book for the whole course, and that course should be for life. In the Bible there are truths which the merest child can understand and depths of thought which the most learned cannot fathom, it may be called the railway guide on the road to heaven, and the Sabbath school lunch counters along tho way at which we may refresh ourselves. One of the grandest sights for mortal eyes Is a whole family from the tot tering grandparents down to the pratteling child, all In school and studying the samo lesson, and ihat lesson for eternity. A person should never be too old, too rich or too wise to cease being a Sabbath school student. People who havo received as sessment notices are struggling hard to control their feelings which have been stirred up to a point where mey nro apt. 10 give expression ot their opinion in language moro em phatic than polite of the man or men who have Increased the occupa tion tax of every map in this bor ough J 00 per cent. This nleans that tho worklngman this year must pay Just twice as much ns he did last year Tho occupation tax of the property holder Is also Increased 100 per cent, and consequently his total tax is increased some. Tho worklngman has just causo to com- s a direct tax on his only source of ncome; It is taking away anothor dice of tho loaf which ho has labor 'd six days to earn. It Is become learer every day that there is a ctnjusBuusa in mo use or mo peo )los money both In town nnd county 14 1 L 11 . ii iiul iiiiimri. win mriirA tnv tlon so hurdensomo that only tho euiiuy will nn nn n tn rnmniii in bis Section anil hn rnmfnrnliln mesa a mnn riv fnrhiDtrv Intmrlftitinn r his ability to savo has his garn- rs full enough to withstand a slego f adversity, nnd still contlnuo to ay trlbuto to this constantly ln roaBlng demand for moro tax raon y, ho cannot exist comfortably In is community. This paper ndvo- ted the formation ot a Civic Club to which every taxpayer In Hones-! dalo would bo eliglblo nnd where men from every path of llfo could meet monthly nnd discuss questions of Importance to tho welfare of tho borough. If mpn versed In flnnnco, men drilled In systematic business llfo men of experience, together with7 our merchants nnd working man would take up questions In volving the expenditure of money raised by taxation, they would reach a decision which would be a guide to thoso who havo tho spending of tholr money with tho result that taxes would bo reduc ed or else they would got better re sults from tho expenditures of their money. I1ALANUK. llley ftre Bcen tllc lncru!lso l'u" 00 , ', ..i .'prevented.." The man on tho "tight rope, hoof, ..A re(l(,y wQ. ot (lcslroynB them the circus or the amusement park, ' j8 uy spreading near their haunts tills us with wonder. On the slender grain soaked in a solution ot strych cord ho walks, advancing or retreat-, ing, lying down and rising again, un der tho ennvns or over tho water as 1 the case may bo. It may make us! dizzy to look out of a high window, or peer over onto the street from the . r . ... ,,r,.u,, Inrt-nr roof top. He. with nothing arger than foothold for a bird, feols on- tirely nt home. Truly, It is a derful display of nerve nnd steadl ness and self-control, Hut there Is something In his hand, J though nothing very wonderful, how ever necessary It may be. There Is a long rod, to which he holds as a child might cling to his father's hnnd. Yet it is well called a balancing pole. It makes' the precarious task possible. With Its play, Its thrust, its rise and dip, It is like an nnchor to a tossing boat, or like a rope In the grasp of a struggling swlmme?. We may not have tested It, nor ex perienced its use, yet we know it to bo n real help. Rope walking takes nerve; still moro, It takes balance. Inventive minds are still at work on some means of locomotion where by a car can travel upon a single rail. In this age of the world, it is reckless to say that the thing Is Im possible. Whether It be commer cially feasible or not, the Instrument depended upon Is the gyroscope. iWlth wheels revolving with Incredible velocity 3,000 turns n minute on each side of the center of gravity, it is a fact that balance is preserved. The top' is the simple illustration of the principle. A college profes sor cannot make a top stand up straight on the sharp pointed end, but a live year old youngster can If ho spins it. The motion does it; the activity gives it balance. Sometimes It Is necessary to send out a special train, when pressing business or a case of life or death cannot wait upon tho regular sched ule. The railroad official orders a clear track and soon all is ready. Perhaps ono man only is to make the trip. Even so, he is not asked to take a place in the engine, nor is a single car added to the engine, but a train or several cars Is made up. For maintaining the unusual speed, the engine needs to be balanced by the weight, the "pull" or the train behind. Safely lies not in lightness, but in having something to draw, lest tho swiftly moving locomotive be hurled from the rails. Human nature needs to be bal anced. The mentally defectlvo are conspicuous for fixed Ideas, obses sions, exaggerated notions on some particular subject. Danger lies In brooding too entirely upon one thing, no matter how good. Poverty of life lies in making the range of in terests narrow. Life cannot bo made too abundant, which Is to say that it cannot be too well balanced. Let tho child collect postnge stamps and ho has a healthy resource, oven if ho later discards his collection. Let the business man know art or sport, actlvoly, and ho has an offset to great dangers. Let the advocate of causes know history nnd human nature, und he will not become n narrow fanatic. Knowing something about many tilings, or rathor being interested in many things, balances n mnn bo that he is not tied to ono little center of grav ity. Hobbles, oven, aro not to bo de spised, If thoy nro playfellows nnd not tyrants. Most of all, doing some thing that Is worth while, over and above tho dny's brend nnd butter work, is llko the balancing weight which the train hauls. Balance, poise, activity, Intorest possessing these a man is sought not shunned, for he is then a force of an Inspiring sort. CONUEUNINO THE SPAKROW. Tho Agricultural Department at Washington has just issued a bul letln for condemnation of tho Eng llsh sparrow, from which wo quote the following: "Tho English sparrow Is tho pir ate of the air, Just as tho rat is tho freebooter of tho earth, nnd ought to be exterminated. "Ho studiously hunta and cats In sects which nro benoflclal to plant llfo, whllo ho passes over most of thoso which nro harmful. Tho only good things ho docs Is to cat tho seeds, of weeds and prevont their spread. "Ho Is murderous. He huntB tho nesting places and destroys eggs and young bluebirds, house wrens, trco swallows and barn Rwallows. The robin, tho cat-bird and tho mocking bird ho nttacks and drives out of parks and shado trees. Ho nas no song, hut ho drives out tho song birds and brings only nolso In re turn. Whenever sparrows roost around your house, destroy their nests. If they roost at night on your eaves trough, drive them awny with a long pole. Uy destroying nests wherever nia. This method is practice i with success In California." 111(211 SCHOOli NOTKS. Friday afternoon and evening will lie ono big day for the Maple City, On Monday the entire Lyric theatre WttS Sold OUt With tllC CXCCptlon of vlBUng Carl)ondalo and Dunmore, will be won-irovniy entertained nnd will ho car- cd for us follows: The commlttco on tenchers and their friends Is Misses O .... nn.l rtllitl .trim t 1 1 1 nfiril fill ' m .... ' ,, The Seniors of the school will be served in the fourth grade. The Juniors In llrst grade. The Sophs, in the second grade, and tho Freshmen In tho Primary Department. In tho evening the visitors and a few of tho Honesdale students will occupy the balcony. The lower floor was sold to the public. The stage will seat one hundred students from each school, making a total of 300 people, besides the nine con testants, Prof. Oday and .Miss Clark The students will be composed of singers and will be seated on a half circle bleacher. The boxes will be used as follows: Box A will seat the three English teachers of each school. Superintendents Hoban of Dunmore, Gilmartin of Carbondale and Koehler of Honesdale; Box B will seat Mr. and Mrs. Homer Greene of Honesdale; Prof, and Mrs. Dayton Ellis of Dunmore, and Prof, nnd Mrs. T. J. Loftus of Carbondale. The other two boxes will be at the disposal of the Dunmoro and Car bondale aggregations. oo The mid-year examinations of the High school will be held as follows: Thursday a. m., geology; Thursday p. m., algebra; Friday a. m., physio logy; Monday a. m., Grecian History. oo The painters and workmen are putting the finishing touches on the basement of the school in order that It may.be in use for Friday. oo The bleachers that are used on the stage Friday evening, will be moved to the gymnnslum of the school to enlarge the seating capacity. oo The new term of school opens on February 8th; all children who will be slx-years of age on or before May 1st, may enter. NEW ARMORY FOR COMPANY E. The annual Inspections- were the order last week. Monday night of last week Companies A and F were inspected. Tuesdny the field staff, band and hospital corps and Co. A Engineers. Lieutenant Colonel Langeffet of tho United States En gineers, Inspected Captain Dun nlng's command nnd found It was In excellent shape. Captain Tag gart, the state Inspector, and Lieut. Stayers, United States army, inspect ed Campanies A and F. They found thoso In good shape. Lieutenant Stayers complimented the company commanders on their showing. Thursday night Company E of Hones dale, was inspected and although Its quarters are no good, it passed tho Inspection in lino shape. Company E is to hnvo a now armory. Tho matter has been referred by the state armory hoard and tho Third brigade committee, consisting of General Dougherty nnd Col. L. A. Watres, to pass on sites, so Company E, which has been up against the hardest propositions, is assured of a home In tho near future. AFTER OLEO MANUFACTURERS. Penrose and Grangers Wunt Moro Protection to Dairy Interests. Washington, Jan. 27. Sonntor Penrose to-dny Introduced n bill to nmend tho oleomargarine law In ac cordance with recommendations made by Associations of Dairymen nnd Grangers. Tho measure Imposes up on manufacturers of oleomargarlno a special tax of $C00 a year. Tho tax to bo paid by wholesale dealers In uncolored oleomargarine is fixed at $200 and tho tax assessed against retailers In similar product is fixed at $0. It continues tho tax of ten cents a pound upon all colored oleo and pro vides that whenever any Ingredient Is placed In tho compound whlcn gives It a yellowish shado that it shall bo held to bo colored oleo and subject to tho tax of ten cents a pound. This, It Is believed, would cover tho caso now pending In tho courts against Representative W, A. Mox loy, an oleo manufacturer of Chicago, whoso butterlno Is colored by palm oil, ono of Its Ingredients. Uncolored oloo Is to bs taxed one-quarter of n cent a pound. Foreign olco tn addition to tho tariff duty is to pay a lax of fifteen cents n pound, nnd Is limited to one, two and five-pound packages, domes tic olco must bo put up only In ono, two atid five-pound packages, but such packages may be packed In cases containing ten, twenty, thirty nnd fifty pounds. Dofrnudlng tho government In tho matter of manufacture or payment of tho tax Is punishment by confisca tion of material and property In ad dition to imprisonment and fine. 1 unl8hmont for violation of the act runs 03 high as $5000 line ana two years' imprisonment. A section is added to the measure which prohibits tho compromising of any case nnd requires that nil cases shall bo brought to trial and adjudi cated by the courts. OBITUARY. 0 0 0 K Mrs. Denn Cook, widow of Frederick J. Cook, died nt Aldon- ,ville on Sundny, January 30th, aged 1 years. Services will bo held In the German Lutheran church at Al- denvllle at 1 p. m. on Wednesday. Burial will be made In the Aldenvllle cemetery. I U It C II 13 H Lena, wife of Judbon Hurdler, of Scranton, died Jan. 2S, 1 1)10, aged nearly 40 years. Deceased was n daughter of Isaac Lovelnp, of Damascus. She Is sur vived by her husband, a son, Donald, aged U years; sister, Laura, and brother, Homer. Interment in the family plot in Damascus. T O W N S E N D Hiram Town send, an old soldier, died nt Kellam, Pa., Jan. 24, 1910. He had been very lame nnd feeble for some time. Sunday morning he was as well as usual but In the evening on retiring he complained of pain, and rapidly grew worse and died Monday evening. Mr. Townsend hnd resided in Kellam about twenty years nnd vas eighty-five years of nge. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Lumnn Hinckley, of Lookout, and a brother, .Inmes Townsend, liv ing at Bovlna Center, N. Y. The funeral services were held on Wed nesday at the home, Itcv. W. S. Emplcton officiating, and burial in the cemetery near Hankins. HOUSES NEAKIiY DKOWNEI). A Former Iluwley Mini Hnd Plenty of Trouble. Last Friday night, nbout six o'clock, while Arthur Lapolt was driving a team belonging to D. B. Wickham, on his return from Wil lowemoc with Dr. Poindexter, his horses broke through the snow and slush in one of the large drifts on Young's Hill, and only for the con tinuous efforts of Mr. Lapolt one horse would have been drowned. Word was telephoned Mr. Wickham and he, with about fifteen men, went to the rescue. They managed to loosen one horse and free him from the drift, but the other one they were unable to get out so oaslly. It was not until eleven o'clock that the men with their untiring efforts succeeded in freeing him from the snow and water, and then the horse was so nearly exhausted they had to draw him home on a sleigh. Both horses were all right the next day and showed no ill effects from being in the water. YES, IT IS POSSIBLE- For the Honesdale Busket Bull Team to lie Defeated by Iluwley. The Honesdalo High school Jour neyed to Hawley on Friday last to play a game of basket ball. Al though the Honesdalo boys were beaten, they outplayed Hawley In every departure of the game. Tills was the first game played In the High school hall nnd consequently n largo crowd turned out to witness tho gnme. Next Saturday Hones dalo will go to Carbondale whore they will play the High school team of that place. Honesdale. Hawley. Brown Forward Voglor Mclntyre Forward . . Swltzer Jacobs Centor Gilpin Hlller Guard ....Swingle Freund Guard . . .Rowland Goals, Honesdale, Brown 4, Jacobs 4, Hlller 3, Freund 1; Hnw loy, V.oglor C, Swltzor 1, Gilpin 6; fouls, Honesdalo 7; Hawley 1. SUM ETIIINf J KNEW. Tho search of noted surgeons for an unnesthotlc with no detrimental offect on tho hoart or other vital organs nppnrently has been rewarded nt last. The result of investigations hero and abroad, which have Just been mado public bore, show that electricity Is tar superior to any of the drugs now used to produce anal gesia. Tho discovery Is expected by prom lnont surgeons to revolutionize mod ern surgery. Electricity as an anaes thetic has no bad effects on the heart. It produces a form ot Insen sibility by ncting on tho nerve cen ters of tho brnln, called "electric sleop." When tho circuit Is opened tho iniluenco ot tho nnaethetlc is Im mediately lost and tho patient be comes conscious without feollng nuy of tho after effects common to ether and chloroform. At tho Philadelphia General Hos pital tho city will shortly procuro tho necessary apparatus and will conduct a series of exhaustlvo Investigations. Dr. Mlhran Krikor Kassab'lan, direc tor of tho Roentgen Kay laboratory at tho Philadelphia hospital, Is now engaged in this work, together with Dr. Solomon Sollscoben. A TKHimiLE MIXUP. Iioh Angeles Society Women Buy Chlldrrti to Avoid Confinement. Los Angeles, Jan. 28. Many fathers here are to-day looking Into the eyes of their children to see If they possess any resemblance to their parents, following tho' start ling testimony of Mrs. C. E. Smith that sho had provided homes for more than three hundred babies in Los Angeles and that until now none of the "supposed" fathers had been any tho wiser. Mrs. Smith, who wns forced to tell of her "corporation" after fur nishing Mrs. W. W. Wilson with four children, which tho lntter tried to palm off several days ago as quadruplets born to her, said this was n favorite means adopted by women whoso husbands wanted chil dren, to cscapo the care and pain Incident to confinement. Tho four homeless babies adopt ed by Mrs. Wilson wore brought in to court and tho real mothers of the infants were summoned nnd identi fied tho tota. As a result of the statement made by Mrs. Smith, tho police are In vestigating the conduct of such ma tornity hospitals aH that operated by Mrs. Smith and the matter will bo placed before the grand Jury for consideration. TWENTY-FIVE YEAR SENTENCE. Black Hnnd Lender is Shown no Mercy by Brooklyn Judge. New York, Jan. 28. Raofaole Pl sano, leader of the Black Hand So ciety In Brooklyn, was to-day sen tenced to twenty-five years In Sing Sing for attempted murder. "The full limit of punishment Is not severe enough in your case," said County Judge Fawcett. "Life sentence should be Inflicted for Black Hand offenses such as the character of your crime. You have been convicted of aiding and abet ting Pasquale Albano in nn attempt to murder Gluslppe Cacace. "You and Albano are Internation al criminals and your conviction is of tho greatest Importance. It will have a far-reaching effect for good among thoso of your class who re sort to the Infamous practices of the Black Hand, which frequently In volve murder. ' "Through your sentence I serve notice to the members of tho Black Hand who are convicted in this court that full limit of punishment will be imposed In each case." Pisano was a member of the gang which enticed Cacace to a house on Conover street on November 2d and nttempted to kill him for refusing their demand for ?100. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED by local applications, as they can not reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only ono way to cure deafness, and that Is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness Is caus ed by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or im perfect hearing, and when It Is en tirely closed, Deafness Is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition ot the mucous surfaces. Wo will give One Hundred Dol lars for any case of Deafness (caus ed by catarrh) that cannot be cured tyy Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. .1. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7fic. Take Hall's Family Pills, for con stipation. -Advertlfl tn tho Citizen. HENKY Z. ltUSSELL, PRKblDENT. ANDUKW THOMPSON VICE PRKSIDKNT. HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK. This Bunk wns Organized In December, I&36, and Nationalized In December, ISG4. Since its organization it has paid in Dividends to its Stock holders, $1,905,000.00 The Comptroller t1 the Currency has placed It on the HONOR ROLL, from the fact that Its Surplus Fund more than equals Its cnpltul stock. What Class are YOU in The world has always bcen divided Into two classes those who have saved, those who havo spent tho thrifty nnd tho extravagant. It is the saver who havo built the houses, the mills, the bridges, the railroads, tho shh.s and all the other great works which stand for man s advancement and happiness, Tho spendors aro slaves to the savers. 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. Children and Infant's coats to closo out at less than cost. Menner & Co. Ladles' long winter coats at Tory low prices at Monncr & Coa Btoro. flLEItK'S NOTICE IN HANKItUPTOY U In the District Court of tho United States for the MlddloDlstrlct of Pennsylvan ia, h'dwln D. Prentice. Wayne County. Pa., n bankrupt under tho Act of (tongress of July 1,1 Me), havlnp, applied for a full dls clmrcefrom all debts provable agnlust his estate under said Act, notice is hereby trlveu to nil known creditors and other persons In Interest, to appear before the said Court at Knratiton, In said District on the 15tli day ot HKI1KUAKY, nt 10 o'clock In the forenoon, to shqw chusu. If any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioner should not be Granted, KDWAHD It. W. SKAHl.K. ita Clerk. Remnant INVENTORY JUST FINISHED ! We have placed all REMNANTS on our counters at ex tremely low prices. Don't fail to come and get some of the bargains. Tailored Suits and Coats It's never too late to buy a Tailor Made Suit or Coat, at half its original value. Gents' FURNISHINGS One rfazen 90c Muslin Night Shirts at 6pC 39c Twenty dozsn 50c Percale Shirts, all sizes, at KATZ BROS. KDWIN K. TO It KEY CAblllKIt. ALBERT C. LINDSAY ASSISTANT CASHIER