T1IH CITIZKX, , i 0 1 .011 IK, 1J0. AGE-TINTED WINDOW PIES CURE BUND Philadelphia Oculists Claim Amazing Virtue for Lenses of Amethyst Glns3 AID THE IJIGIIT WORKERS Old Windows Give a Supply Curo the Loss of Sight Opttclnns Offer to Put New Fanes In Old Houses Free of Cost to Owners. Philadelphia. A discovery of grunt value to those whose siRht has been Impaired by working under artificial light has been rtiado in this city. It was learned that Amethyst-tinted lenses made from window pane glasd taken from houses in Walnut strcot would cure blindness caused by work in? on bright metals and under nrtlfl cit.I light This gless is simply ordinary win dow panes that have been In use 'for more than seventy-five yeais. In that time it ins been turned an amethyst tint by the direct, rays of the sun. Philade'phla eye specialists arc op timistic in their contentions for the glass, which is termed by tte oculists nnu opticians "the Philadelphia glass." Some of the most wtdoly known phy sicians in the city are v.slug it in their dally practice and say that it has proved wonderfully effective, and that the eye disorders that It will relieve and cure are many. Although the first nnnounte:uent of the good results from the use of this glass wa3 only made about six months ago, it has re ceived widespread attention and Phila delphia physicians who were among the first to give it a trying out have received letters from other doctors in all parts of the globe asking for sam ples of the glass with which to ex periment. Houses in Walnut street that were erected In the early part of the last century are being examined closely by enterprising opticians. Many a staid Philadelphia family who have lived in the same house for several genera tions have been surprised recently by offers to put new glass in their win dows free of cost. Upon close exami nation It was learned the window panes that the seemingly charitable persons wanted to replace had the precious amethyst tint. Among the Philadelphia oculists that have been workiug with the amethyst tinted lenses is Dr. L. Web ster Fox. i rofessor of opthamology in the Medi o-Culrurgical College", and an oculist of '.vide repute. Dr. Fox has been nb'e to cure many case s of temporary loss of sight and bad y strained eyes when the amethyst tim was corporated with correcting lenses. He has been particularly suc ce. sful In the case of printers, type wr'ters, students and newspaper men, rll of whom are required to apply the eyes closely under artiticial illumlnn-Ho-j. After wearing the violet glass the patient as a rule refuses to go back to the colorless glass, wearing the other indefinitely. The glass has been prescribed with great relief to those whose eyes are exposed in an X-ray laboratory. PHOTOGRAPH HEART BEAT. X-Ray Snap Shots Made Possible by New Invention. London. Photographs of a beating heart have been made possible by an invention enabling Xray snap shots to be taken. The long exposure hi'herto the gre-itest difficulty in radio-graphic work is now unneces sary as the ,-Hiinlc screen" (as the new invention is called) reduces the exposure to a twentieth of what it would otherwise be. A three-seconds exposure, instead of a minute, will he used In ordinary work, while instantaneous snapshots are easily oMalnnu'o with powerful modern X-ray apparatus. Blurred photographs, due to patients moving, or even breathing during the long ex posure formerly necessary are thus n thing of the past. WATCHDOGS ON PAYROLL. Savage Canines Serve Navy as Shore and Dock Guards. London. Official watchdogs aro now on the payroll of the British Navy. These canine guards are sta tioned at the various shore establish r.nts and dockyards, where they are old off to range Oovernment proper ty during the dark hours and prevent any unauthorized parson from tres passing. The dogs avo of a special mixed breed, combining tho points of collie, Airedale and retriever, and are bred by Major ftlchardson, who devotes his life to breeding and training dogs for police, detective and ambulance work. Keen scent, alertness and savagery are the prominent characteristics of the navy dogs. ARSON TO PROMOTE TRADE. Russian Timber Merchant to Die for Burning Peasants' Houses. Kursk, Russia. A tlrabor merchant named Levkin and two peasants of this province have been condemned to death by tho military court for arson, committed merely to make a market for Levlsln's building Umber. Testimony Introduced showed that Levkin's terms were $1 for every peas: nt ? house fired and that the two peasan' had applied the torch to ton bouses filled with stooping peasants. Mia . .jL lit. Mr-. James Crtarticr Plays Piano And Hr Neighbor Tollow. sprfngfleld, Ohio. Mrs. Jnmea (Vainer of this city has solved tho prrhiom of Increasing tho country's eg.i supply. Sho has discovered that one of tho best things to induce lions to lay eggs is a liberal supply of In sti umontal music. It is a little hard on the neighbors who do not hnvo flocks ot chiokons, but they aro willing to put up with it for the time being in tho interest of the science of egg ology. Mrs. Cruamor's arms nre ach ing and the ends of Jier fingers are callous from playing upon the piano hour after hour. Sho finds consolation, howevor. In the fact that between each tuno she can hear one or more hens cacMing and announcing that her pay for the music is a fresh egg. News of the discovery hns spread far and wide,' and from sunrise to sunset pianos are playing and hens are cackling. Tho cold storage egg has como to be re gaided as n, thing ot the past in that section of Springfield. Mrs. Creamer has a nice flock of hens. The trouble was they were not good egg producers until she resorted to the piano recital as an Inducement. She had tried putting red pepper and mustprd in their food, honing to de lude them into the belief summer had arrived and it was the duty of each hen to lay at least one egg each day. Thfy failed to respond. She noticed, howevor. that the two or three liens which were laying always flow up on the window-sill when she played tho pi"no and that shortly after she stop ped they went off and laid. That caused licr to try an experiment. She left the window wide open and played for hours. The result was that she got six eggs more the first day. eight tho next and fourteen the third day. ODDO0000D0O00D0DO03OO0OOOO O f Under Five Fest You Can't O 8 Be a "Hello" Girl. U Washington. SI, e is not a (j telephone girl if she is under U live feet. The companies em- q ploy only girls who can reach O O to the top of their switchboards (j Q and a reasonable distance side' O wise. Conditions existing in tele' O phone exchanges throughout the O country aro set forth In the re- O port recently sent to the Senate O dealing dealing with tho inves O tigation made by the Bureau of U Labor The height ,s often deter cj mined without the applicant's o U knowledge by a young woman Q O who engages the former in con- ( O versation while she compares Q U trie level or tue other s eyes wun o U her own. Q n Wages for telephone girls vary from a highest monthly O average of $3G.3G in New York " City to ?22.40 in Nashville, cj Tenn. y Killclent service is possible O up to 225 calls an hour for each 8 sin. r occccccccococcccccccccccc TOO MANY DOCTORS. Pritchctt, of Carnegie Foundation, Blames Low-Grade Schools. Chicago. "The United States sup ports too many physicians. While Eu rope maintains the proporHon of ono physiciau to every 1,500 inhabitants, the United States has a physician for every 568. This overproduction is due to our too numerous low grade medical schools and to the laxity of our laws governing them," declared Henry S. Pritchett, of Now York, president ot the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad vancement of Teaching, in an address before the council on medical educa tion of the American Medical Associa tion. "We have In this country," he con tinued, "about 150 medical schools, or more thnn are to be found in the whole of Europe. We have twice as many physicians per 100,000 of popu lation as Kngland, four times as many ns Germany. Our low-grnde medical schools sanctioned by our lax laws are largely rotponslble." RELICS OF "BLACK CITY." Russian Expedition Finds Library In Central Asia. St. Petersburg. Tho Russian ex pedition into ''antral Asia, dispatched two years aijo, under Captain Kozloff, has just returned atier spending sev eral months in the "Black City," tho former capital of .Mongolia, known on the map as Chorechoro. This town flour'shed from the elev enth to the fourteenth contury and tho expedition discovered in one of its ruined 'cloisters n library of a thousand printed and four hundred manuscript volumes, written In Chin ese, Mongolian, Mnnchu, Tibetan, Arabic and two languages whose iden tity has not been discovered so far. AUTOS FOR COWPUNCHERS. .. Modern Metns of Locomotion to Sup plant Ponies on Texas Ranches. Chicago --Cowboys mounted on ponies will -oon be supplanted by auto mobiles, so far as the larger cattlo ranches in Texas nre concerned, ac cording to nn announcement made by the representatives of a Texas ranch owners' organization. He said that automobiles were to constructed now that their use over the ranges was practicable. Already two hundred machines ave been ordered shipped from Chica go and New York to various Texas points. THt t. "f,UY HA-HA OURE. 1 Irfoa All r.;jht--Tfoulle Is to Get tho PrMorlpthSti Filled. " . It Is all very well for a German doc tor to preacrjbo hearty laughter ns a remedy for itervous dlsotwaa, but per haps ho will also be good enough to toll us wfcero wo afe to get the Ingre dients for Lis prescription. One cannot wen sit down and laugh "till the tears run down tho cheeks" nt nothing at nil, howevor anxious to cii'e n severe attack ot neuralgia. When one comes to think of it. says the Lady's Pictorial, few things mnko one laugh to this exteht, und what is one person's meat whoro similarity Is concerned may prove so poisonous to another ns to plungo him to tho very depths ot degression. Thcc arc people who will doublo up with Merriment when they seo so, -io one fall down a flight ot stops, and afterword doscrlbo it as "tho fun nier thing they evor satt," but most nervous patients probably would not lauh at all if In ordor to effect n cure, an attenpt were made to excite their hilarity by .rhr.owlng relatives and terrains down stnlrs. Nerve special ist who ndopt the laughter curo will hnvp eltler t. practice clowning or keep trn'ed fool.i to set their patients "in a roar." Art Y-v a Klo'nophlts? The round while missile was well a!" ul. rd with a laugh the profes-f-o" di g tre'cold snow out of his ear. "1 riu a I'.ionopohilo and so are you," he said. ."In fact, wo are all kiono phHes, while some of us aro Mono maniacs. "A kionophilo is a. snow-lover," ho explained, "one whoso heart warms at the sight of the fresh white snow, ono who loves the snow as Beethoven loved music. Yes; we are all kiono philes. "A kionornaniac lbves tho mow to madness. A snowfall makes uim tem porarily insane. You have seen such people adults or children everybody has. Bcsido himself, the kionornaniac bounds from the house, leaps yelling into n great drift, rolls about madly, kicks and ilounders in the deep snow with shrieks of joy. "There is about snow soire"'lng in toxicating. Some of us it intoxices only to kionophllism; oMiers it drives Into stark raving Monomania. In the last state, people'- rolling in the cold white snow, nnve slv t themseVes pneumonia, and they have also se verely injured their friends broken their ribs, am so forth, banging them about in the dri.ts.' Talking on the 'Phone. ' "Only about one person in every ten knows how to properly use the telephone," said a district manager of one of the Philadelphia companies. "Yes, sir. I'll stard by my guns on that assertion; and I think I can prove my point. Nine out of every ten persons talk entirely too loud over the telephone. They ' actually shout and make so much noise that they drown out all semblance of clearness. Then they can't hear, and the first thing you know there is a complaint about poor connection and faulty service. Tho correct way to talk over the telephone, Is to talk as you do in ordinary con versation, or even a trifle lower. Peo ple can't seem to realize that the telephone will carry a whisper even. No, they must talk lough enough to be heard from Tenth and Chestnut streets to Germantown, if those bo the counected points. Just try it your self. Try the low, well modulated voice, and seo if you do not get in finitely better service out of your tele phone In the future." Faith, ths Light of the Soul. Faith is truly a light In the soul, but it Is a light which only shines upon duties, and not upon results or events. It tells us what is now to bo done, but It does not tell us what is to follow, and accordingly it guides us but a single step at a time, and when we take that step under the guidance of faith, we advance directly Into a land of surrounding shadows and d irkness. Like tho patriarch Abraham, we go, not knowing whither we go, but only that God I" with us. In man's darkness, wo nevertheless walk and live in God's light. A way of living blessed and glorious, however mysteri ous it may bo to human vision. English and American Gallon. Tho English gallon is ten pounds of water at a temperature of CO degrees Fahrenheit. Tho American gallon weighs only 8.33 pounds. Tho differ ence thorefore Is 1.07 pounds. Tho Atnorican gallon is equivalent to 3.78G liters. Tough, Indeed I "It's mighty tough," says tho Phi losopher of Folly, "to have a bunch of fellows throw rocks nt you, and then to have the owner of tho quarry come Und get you pinched for receiving atol ten goods." A Man's Birthday. We do not know whonce a man comes lor whither ho goes; yot wo choose his birth or death day to cele brate his recurring .contury. We should choose IiIb day of achievement. London Saturday Rovlew. Only Road to Success, Remember that you cannot be car ried to success in n carriage with the hinges oiled, the backs padded, and tho soats cushioned; you must trulgo on foot along the dusty highway. The hansom cab was the Invention of Joseph Aloyst i i p -.som, an emin ent English architect, who flourished ubout 75 years ago. Ho Invented what ho called tho patent safety nb about 1S"3 and died in 1883, ' TWO ENGLISH BATHTUBS One In tht Kltehth Floor, the Other Kept .In a Cloiet. There is n certain bathtub Jsnown more or loss to tho history of humor ,bk:h was so nicely adjusted to the Bath that Shuts Up In Closet, needs of Its owner that lie had on!? to touch a button and It came rolling out to the middlo of his room. Sjiich convenience may not actually hav hern achieved by the plumbers and decorators who struggle so hard to supply comfort for those who can pay for it, but the existence of this trained tub was necessary to the point of the story, which wound up with tho sudden entry of the tub ""v taining tho wifo of the owner, who waH Just demonstrating its wonders to a stranger. Tho story has an ele ment of improbability in the supposi tion that a tub with such intelligence would have presented its owner's wife to the gaze of his visitors even for the sake of exhibiting its own qualities No such feats ought to be expected from the kind of bathtubs shown in the picture. They aro humbler ad juncts of the homo and intended to fill a useful purpose. They are meant for the homes of English workingmeu, to economize Space. The sunken bath in the Fami'v kit hen is intended for small houses of the kind built now in the London suburbs for workiugnien. It has been found most useful in two familv hcuses and saves space needed for a bathroom. It is not nearly so danger onnly as it looks here. The cover, which in the picture is up, completely hides the tub when it Is not in use, so there Is mucli less chance in reality than there seems to be from the picture for the cook to Sunken Bath In Kitchen Floor, fall in while she is preparing dinner. Nor would there be any likelihood ot sparks from the stove falling on the skin of the careless bather, since the fuel is gas. The desirnbillty of taking a bath In the kitchen is of course merely a matter of personal taste. More desirable and also intended for tho bedrooms of houses built for workingmen is the other bathtub. That shuts up in such fashion as to require very little space. It is attach ed to a spring which raises it ns soon as it is emptied of a certain weight of water, so there is no danger of Its suddenly shutting up with the bather inside of it. When not in uso it is caught at tho top, and when the door of the closet in which It stands is closed the tub remains in an upright position. The wator and waste pipe are attached to the bottom end of the tub on which it stands in the closot. Once the door is closed the tub Is as much out of the way as if It were in a mom re served exclusively for It. Availability. A nobleman was once showing a friend a rare collection ot precious stones which he had gathered at a great expenso nnd enormous amount of labor. "And yot," he said, "thoy yield mo no Income." His friend replied, "Come with me. and I will show you two stones which cost mo but five pounds each, yot thov yield mo a considerable Income" He took the owner of the gems to "iU grist-mill nnd pointed to two 'i millstones, which were alwnys I' iv grinding out grist. Success M.gi zlne. When He Came Home. Ono of tho neighbors who was vis iting the home of little Ounnlck, aged three, said, "Dunnlck, I want you to go along home with me, nnd how long will yon stay?" Dunnlck put up four fnt llttlo fingers, saying, "I will stay theso many days and come home on my thumb." The Delineator for Au gust. Left Over. Barbara, aged four, had nlways been allowed to make small cakes out of the scraps of dough left from tho morning's baking, so one morning after being sent to gather eggs, she came running In with a very tiny one nnd exclaimed, "Oh, mammal see this llttlo egg, It must be that's all the dough the hen had left." Delineator If P 'vit ,vifi sn'ovi t. rii i , "kRI ru't yw-fatfli in Truth. Hnr faith lb 'truth fever in num bers." The great tyj of numbers rolls tig noisily and Imposingly, but flatten on the shore, and slides back Into the mud of obllrton. Rut a true opinion Is the ocean iUelf, calm in its rest, eternal In Its power. Piatt Unobservant Ma'n Dramatists. MMCulino draroatUU, aro old-fash-lored enough to mat. a their women "cutty." It shows a lack or obser vation to maRc tr feminine character In a modern piny behave In the man ner of tho enteen-elghtles. London Sketch. 8preads Use of Ctictrlclty. Because of the degree of oxcollonco nnd efficiency Attained In the con struction of gasoline engines the uso of Isolated electric plants Is extend ing. Marks End of Honeymoon. The honeymoon is mostly over when the couple quit buying their meals In hotels and tae bride tries to provido them at home. N?w York Press. t:m:::::n;::::iiKj::Mm::::t:::: I MARTIN CAU FIELD 1 Designer and Man ufacturer of ARTISTIC MEMORIALS Office and Works 1036 MAIN ST. 8 HONPSbAIfi. PA I: Si s'SPENCER, Tlie Jeweler JJ ... ..... .......... 'A' HUlttiititiiltiiUiilitKiXittiiiittittitli'i'.. "Guaranteed ni-ticlcs only sold." WITH A SURPLUS EARNED IN FOUR YEARS Arc You One of the 3,553 Depositors Doing business at the H0NR5DALE DIME BANK? If not, the opportunity awaitsjyou to open an ac count now. Start the idle money you have at your home to earn ing interest. If you have a small bank, bring or send it to us at once. Put your idle money at work. If you wish to make a loan on your farm or house or to borrow some money call at the Dime Bank. Business and Savings Accounts Solicited. Wayne County money for Wayne Counteans. D. & M. CO. TIHE TABLE A.M.,A M 81' N Sl'.N . . " A M.,A..M.,P..M. " ! in nn, J ."ji Albany llliurlittmton .... I'liiludelpblu,... WIlkesnnrre.T.. ...Scrnnton iv ixr :::::: :::::: m w w n ouj 2 i5j ; : ; ; ; : v 55 h aoj s'i& . 1 'JO! 7 'J5 4 40 1 'JO 7 10. 2UM S 15 1 5 30 a 08 7 55 p.m. a.m.I:: : : : : p.m. p.m. a.m.! i.v s in !in.v"'''!i r. n an! s 4.11 t'arhondale 5 50 !l 15 li TO 15i H 55 . 5 511 1'J n :H 2 li H W . till u;ii; fift 2:i7 u i . fi 17 !M2 ! (i 58 ' fl 21. KB IMS I 7 04 2 4H ! 2ii . (i 2fi II 51 7 07 2 521 M li :t! 57 7 13 2 67 ! IIT'. (i 35 ID U) 7 lt 2 SI, ! 39 li XI) 10 04 ! 7 20 :i Ul 9 4:1, li 43l 10 OS 7 21 a 07 !M7 . li 4111 10 11 1 7 27 310 '.I 50i. li oo! IU 13 ! 7 31 3 15 0 5.V. Lincoln Avenue.. .... Whites .. .Purview . . . Cumian . Lake Lodore ... . . Wiiymart . ... Ketne Steenn . . l'roiupton ... Koj tenia . . .SVelyvlllc .. Honesdale .... i'.M.jA.M.j:::::.jp.M. i. M.jA.M.lAr The Era of New Mixed Paints ! Tins year opoiio witn a deluge of now mixed paints. A con dition brought about by our enterprising dealers to get some kind of a mixed paint that would supplant CHILTON'S MIXED AINTS. Their compounds, may find n sale with tho unwary TIIK ONLY PIjACK IN HONKSDAMS AUTHOltlZEl) TO HANDLE Is JADWIN'S PHARMACY. There aro reasons for the pro-eminonco of CHILTON PAINTS 1st No one can mix a bettor mixed paint. 2d Tho paintora declare that it works easily and has won derful covering qualities. 3d Chilton stands back of it, and will agreo to repaint, at bib own oxpetise, every surface painted with Chilton Paint that proves defective. 4th Thoso who have, used it are perfectly satisfied with it, and recommend its use to others. AitiuVAh and dkpautuki: of HIttK TWAINS. Trains leave at 8r26 a. m. and 2:48 p. in. Sundays at 2:48 p. m. Trains arrive nt 1:40 and 8:08 p. m. Saturdays, arrives at 3:45 and leaves at 7:10. Snndnys nt 7:02 p. m. vrOTICK OK INCOIIPOUATION i Notice is hereby given that an application will bo made to the Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, on 24tb day of March, 1010, by Jacob P. Katz, W. J. Katz ind Leon KatZ, under the Act of Assembly approved April 20, 1874, entitled "An Act to provido for the incorporation and regulation of cer tain corporations" and tho supple ments thereto, for the charter of an Intended corporation to be called "KATZ BROTHERS, 1NCOUPOUAT KD," the character and object of which is "buying and selling mer chandise, goods and wares of all kinds, nt wholesale and. retail and for these purposes to have, possess, and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges of said Act or Assembly and supplements thereto. E. C. MUMFOUD, Solicitor. Honesdale, Pa., Feb. 28, 1910. For .New Late Novelties -IN- JEWELRY SILVERWARE WATCHES GROWING RECORD $37,500 HONESDALE BRANCH P.M. 1A.M, P.. A.M. SUN Sl'N 10 50 8 45) i 7 317' 2 25:p"m 1 35' 10 05 ,P M. PM. 2 00 10 50 8 45 12 40 3 53 7 31 7 32 A ..M P.M.i 10 20 I 05 3 15 7 15 6 20 9 37 Ar A.M. P.M. P.M. . S 05 1 35 1 25l 5 40 . 5 301. 5 211. 5 Ost. 5 Oh. bar, . 4 61 4 4- 1 451. 4 41 . 1 37!. 4 311. 4 30!. 12 17 12 07' 12 031 11 44 11 37 11 31 11 29 11 23 11 201 11 h; 11 121 11 ll) 11 0C 8 29 8 17 8 13 7 54 7 47 7 41 7 311 7 32 7 :w 7 26 7 22 7 19 7 15 7 5 7 SO 7 33 7 25) 7 111 1 21 1 01 12 5t; 12 01 7 1 12 49 7 12 7 H 7 031 12 4.i 12 10 12 3fi 12 32 12 29 7 01 (i & li 85 I.vlA.M. P.M. P.M. A M.P M. boing new and heavily advertised CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS