THE C1TIZKN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE IB, 1010 THE CITIZEN PUBLISHED EVKRT WEDNESDAY AND FI11DAY BY THE CITIZEN PUBLISHING COMPANY. Entered as ecooiut-clnss ninttcr. at the post omcc. Honesdale. l'n. SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 K, B. HAKDKXIIEIIGII, PRESIDENT W. W. WOOD. - MANAGER AND SKC'Y Dinrcrona: c. n. DonrLiNtinit. m. n. allek. HENRY WILSON. E. II. UAIIDENnEIiQII. W. W. WOOD. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, tlMO. ItKI'UUIilCA N Tl C K ET. For Congress, C. C. PRATT. For State Senator, WINFRED D. LEWIS. COUNTY. Representative, II. C. JACKSON. Ililliiml Hrucc nf Norwich, Conn., late nssoolato editor of the 1'ensn coin (Kla.) .Journal mid previously inniinghiK editor of the Raleigh (X. C.) Evening Times, hns assumed the posit ion of editor of Tin Citl.en. V. W. Wood continues as manager of the paper. The June bride may need her fur coat and her mittens at the altar, the way the crisp, cool summer seems to be steering for us now. Anyway, that tiresome Ballinger Plnchot hearing has demonstrated Ollie James, the Kentucky congress man and ardent advocate of Col. Billy Bryan, as one of the best snapping turtles of his time. The fellow who does not deem it a hardship to keep bachelor's hall for a month or longer has already commenced to count the days that may be expected to elapse before his wife goes to the country, and it may with equal truth and veracity, be stated that now and then a country brother may be found who is glee fully agreeable to his wife's proposi tion to go to the city. Jt's altogether too bad that the two Wright boys and Glenn Curtiss should be tied up by prospective liti gation. Curtiss, who winged his line aeroplanic whirl from the Albany gateway to the Manhattan skyscrap ers at a mile-a-minute clip, almost, wants to race somebody to Washing ton, and Orvilie and Wilbur Wright are the only foemen real worthy of the Curtiss steel. "On to Washing ton" between Curtiss and one or both of the Wrights would be sport worth while! -ti A snowstorm visited Alberta, Can ada, and practically all the great ter ritory of Saskatchewan last week, but instead of growling about It, the inhabitants greeted it with great sat isfaction. That is a wheat growing country, and the melting snows give the grain a fresh impetus that in sures a good crop. Exchange. The Canadian northwest, a strong hold of optimism and no place at all for pessimistic pleaders against the ultimate certainty of heavy crops, can show some of the States when it comes to the spirit of local progress. There are older and professedly smarter people on this side of the Canadian boundary whose nerve would be Invigorated by a season In the wheat fields of Manitoba, Alberta or Saskatchewan. Color spite, one of the growing menaces of the country, got its re buke in a Norristown court the other day when Judge Swartz informed a juror who admitted he did everlast ingly hate "niggers" that he was an undesirable juror and need'nt sit on that case. The fad of telling liow you ( detest a black face, once pretty well limited to the south, where there Is some ground for the prejudice, has lately been spreading north, though its foothold In the west is ns yet nominal. Tills juror at Norristown, who does not nppoar to have been n southern man or in any way familiar with the social conditions In the south, presumably thought it real smart and clever to say ho had "no earthly use" for a black man; that no matter what evidence appeared in tho prisoner's defence, ho never would give the negro the benoflt of the rea sonable doubt. Tho attention of tho juror whom Judge Swartz so prompt ly and properly pulled out of tho box Is directed to tho experience of Bourko Gockran, who, assigned by tho New York Supreme Court to defend a hapless darkey without a dollar, said: "Your Honor, this man is one ot God Almighty's creatures, llko you and I, and I shall be glad to do tho best I can." And tho best of Bourko Cockrnn Is nothing to be sneezed at. Will Joe Daniels be at the dock to greet the Returning African Hunter when he coins down the gangplank to the salute of harbor guns and tho music of a Gotham band7 Yellow Journalists looking for a little addi tional color that day undoubtedly must hope so. Tho North Carolina Democratic National committeeman, the one large mail on the skyline of the Tarheel state who dares to stand right out In meeting nna say the Peerless Pleader of the Platte will be renominated and elected In 1912, likewise said that Is, ho let his Raleigh News and Observer say that "Mr. Roosevelt, the organizer of the club, Is the real Ananias." There is power in the pencil of .loscphus, but In speech, like Moses, lie Is halting. The battle between the Colonel from North Carolina and the Colonel from Africa will be very one sided If, instead of watting for the Outlook, Mr. Roosevelt proposes to have the argument take a verbal form. COOK VS. PEARY SUIT. If it be true that Dr. Frederick A. Cook, somewhere on the high seas, has brought suit for damages against Commander Robert E. Peary, at pres ent lecturing on that probably still u n found Polo to stolid audiences of Johnny Bulls and other folk beyond seas, the American people at large have a feast of laughter on the way that cannot be exceeded by anything their shores have seen since the Hon. LI Hung Chang, the Chinese em peror's pet envoy and boss borrower for the Celestials, was over here try ing to raise money in 1S9G. What does Dr. Cook expect to prove against Commander Peary? He was not in this country 24 hours after the doctor's polar competitor got back to his partisans of the Army and Navy Club and, according to Cook's allegation, "commenced to talk about him." How does Dr. Cook or Commander Peary either, for that matter expect to prove he found that long-elusive top of the world toward which pole-seekers have been - sledging, and around which white men and Eskimos have been famishing and starving, since those early days of G. W. Melville and oth er pioneer pole explorers? Can he point 'to a vindicatory verdict from the University of Copenhagen, that "neutral body in a neutral nation" on which, until last January, he plac ed such simple, unostentatious and trustful reliance? The rector of Copenhagen University, a somewhat solemn as well as sagacious gentle man of the sciences, shook his head above the table that held Cook's Arc tic data; he was "persuaded, though reluctant to admit it," that the Brooklyn explorer didn't know where the Pole was save as he had seen it since boyhood boldly Indicated on the blue and pink surface of a geography map. Does he expect to prove Peary collusion and chicanery by Harry Whitney, the young New Haven mil lionaire whose peculiar stamp of wanderlust has led him to spend so much time and goodness knows how mucli money hunting in the Arctic night? Harry Whitney sailed the other day for Greenland, Iceland, Labrador and way stations, without a word as to the alleged tampering with the Cook outfit stored In the cache at Etah, and' 'Harry Whitney has gone back to that mooted coun try of Cook and Peary in Peary's old ship Roosevelt, a fact that may or may not lend color to the belief that he Is now a Peary partisan, but which just the same Is worthy of being taken into consideration. While wo cannot for tho life of us see where the first claimant of tho Pole lias a leg to stand on, legally or morally, still we do honestly hope, for one reason, that Dr. Cook's suit Is real and that lie Is to press it just so soon as he can get back from Valpariso, Cuba, London, Constanti nople, Brownsville and other points of moro than passing interest whore the brave Arctic gontloinan has been sighted. Presumably ono side or tho other would call tho Hon. John R. Bradley, tho wealthy and vehement Now Yorker-Florldlan, who put up tho rlno for tho doctor's dashes Pole ward. Wo lmagino tho testimony of Backer Bradley, who said so em phatically "ho has fooled us all, from tho King of Denmark down, and now has 'beat It out of tho country with out saying good-hyo to tho man who financed his expedition," would bo equalled In vigor by that of a certain eastern senator who shouted "lnfamouB liar" In responso to ovory question propounded to him when a fairly notable divorce case was .on trial In Baltimore. - Former Gov. Joe Folk, from Mis-1 souri wants to be shown why he is not of sufficient size for 1912 presidential I timber. i The boy at school Is doing the best ho can to keep his legs and hands between bounds another 10 days. And then! It may be a silly question to "ask, but in common with how many in telligent fellow citizens we Just stopped to wonder wlint the wind and weather scapegoat will be .now that Dr. Halley's disobliging protege has taken French leave until the far off summer of 19S5. Great is the dignity of a Jersey dogcatcher! The Hackensack custo dian of the unlicensed, homeless bowwows was called on by the agent of tho society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to wash his auto mobile of a quiet morning when there were no illicit dogs to pursue. The dog officer resisted. The agent of tho "society with the long name" insisted. The dog ofllccr threw up his Job, which paid $25 a week. "Uncle Jimmy" Wilson, the nestor of the McKlnley, Roosevelt and Taft cabinets and the most up-and-coming secretary of agriculture this nation over knew, will be in New York when the colonel comes off the boat. The Grand Old Man of Iowa Is still among the strenuous spirits of the country. His step Is firm and his eye Is bright, for all he has left the Psalmist's al lotment of years behind. No hand will take a tighter hold of the re turning hunter's fist than will his. Fire Chief Croker of New York is the nephew of Tammany Boss Rich ard Croker, who ruled New York so long and who, on the whole, was not the most admirable sort of a citizen; but the chief is right when he takes the civil service commission to task for loading up his fire-fighting force with men of inferior physique who get on because they can write plainly, read English quickly and correctly, and are fitted out with a Twentieth century knowledge of mathematics. The chief says a book education is not the main essential fof an engi neer, a hoseman or a driver; that "husky, stout fellows, even if they can't read or write or cipher, are the men to fight fires." The commis sion has retaliated to the chief's criti cism of its appointees by cutting the height minimum half an inch and the weight minimum five pounds. This is plainly wrong. New York pays high for her 8,000 policemen and New York pays high for her 4, 100 firemen. Her cops are mostly stout enough to keep peace in the city. Her firemen are not always on a physical par with her policemen. The score of deaths of firemen on the ladders at a recent tenement blaze proves that. The Keystone Press The Methodist Episcopal church, South, lias voted to drop the word "South." The war is over. Tunk hannock Republican and New Age. It looks now as though the greet ings of Roosevelt's homecoming will be drowned by the noise of the Jeffries-Johnson mill. Carbondalo Leader. " Two million dollars lost by tor nado," Is the headline over a Rome dispatch in tho New York Sun. Now if the Sun would only tell us where the tornado lost it! Harrisburg Telegraph. This weather is certainly unfavor able for growing crops, and some aro declaring that corn and other crops will not have time to maturo. Cold and wet Mays and Junes aro not un common nnd crops have always had time to ripen. So don't borrow trouble over tho cold wet season. Nicholson Examiner. There is an Increased number of applicants for schools among teachers this year, Superintendent Stearns being credited with saying thnt thero are about 30 por cent, moro appli cations for positions than last year. A largo number of younger ones be ing added to tho profession each year slnco the salary Increaso went Into effect. The examinations aro also much moro stringent than in previous years. Montroso Republican. A news dispatch from Wellsboro says: "The state roads In this vicin ity aro worn down to the hone; that Is tho top drosslng Is gono and traffic Is now wearing ruts in tho expenslvo foundation, and It will not bo long, if they aro neglected, till all theso roads will bo worthless. Consider ing the first cost, it is a 8 1mm a to abandon them, when at slight propor tionate outlay for now top dressing they can bo restored to excellent con dition." Wyaluslng Rocket. President Taft is, perhaps, deter mined that Roosevelt shall not have all the say. He can do something In the speech-making line himself. In his address to tho graduating class of the Ohio Northern University, at Ada, Ohio, the other day, ho opened up upon the "muck-raker" and what ho said would do credit o tho strenu ous ono himself. Philadelphia Star. That New York woman who turned up after relatives thought they had her safely burled Is mad clear through, because while she was work ing, her family "was riding in car riages llko millionaires to her funer al." It Is probable, judging from the way she feels nhont it now, that when she has another funeral she intends to be there, dead or alive. Philadel phia Inquirer. Chief Croker of the New York firo department bitterly denounces the civil service commission plan of se lecting firemen for their theoretical knowledge rather than for their brawn nnd courage. He said of the commissioners: "They have given mo hollow-chested, cigarette smoking highbrows. I don't want 'em. Give me huskies with lungs." These re mnrks were caused by the death of two brave men nt a recent blaze where the civil service firemen failed to mnke good. Scranton Truth. At an auction sale of government school lands held at Medicine Hat, Alberta, last week, 4S7 parcels of land, aggregating 7C.300 acres, were sold. The total amount realized was 1 $1,00S.G3", the highest price being I 51C5 an acre for 1 CO acres within a' few miles of this city and the lowest price $7 an acre, with an average of! slightly over $13. Since the opening1 of the government land office at Med- 1 iclne Hat on April 4 last 2,899 homesteads have been filed on a total i of 371,169 acres of land. Settlers' are still pouring in from tho United States and every steamer arriving from the British Isles is loaded with immigrants for the Canadian West. Scranton Times. Glenn H. Curtiss was not the only aviator who had his eye on that $10, 000 prize for flying from Albany to New York. Several others intended to make the attempt, but Curtiss had the luck, the pluck and the gumption to get into the game first, Just as Louis Paulhan, the Frenchman who stole a march on his rivals, made the trip from London to Manchester ahead of the other fellows and gath ered In $50,000 as a reward. But prize-getting, stimulating as it may be to effort, is not all there Is to aerial navigation. The operators of aeroplanes have made some wonder ful demonstrations. Now, if the science of aviation is to be more wide ly useful, let them show how the air ships can be employed with safety in practical everyday service. Pittston Gazette. Criticism of medical education in various states by the Carnegie Foun dation will serve a good purpose, even if one of the first results is confusion of mind in the case of a few. In fact, that confusion already exists wherever there is failure to distin guish between the reputable institu tion of learning and the degree fac tory, or between the products of both. Doctors suffer ns much as any class In the community from criticism, caused by unreasonableness or ignor ance. The high ethical code under which they work, forbidding as it does self advertisement or open crit icism of one another, furnishes a cer tain advantage to the less scrupulous. A formal setting forth of conditions, therefore, by an independent even if not infallible authority, must work for good In the long run. Pittston Gazette. Twenty Gallons of Milk From One Cow in a Day. Twenty gallons of milk a day from one cow Is the record of a York Run, Fayette county, man, according to re ports that have reached tho Connells ville Courier, but the sumo rumors for selling milk that didn't originate with the cow. According to the story, William Davis, a prosperous fanner of the York Rim district, has been arrested for disposing of lacteal fluid that does not come up to specifications. It is alleged the man has invented a chem ical process to make imitation milk out of water. The alleged fraud was discovered Catarrhal Asthma and Hay Fever Tens of thousands of sufferers from hay fever and catarrhal asthma find great comfort and quick relief by breathing Hyoniei. Of course, whero asthma is not caused by a catarrhal condition, but by nervous contraction of tho bron chial tubes, Ilyomel is not recom mended. But In a caso of asthma whero thero is a discharge ot mucous, breathing Hyomel gives most won derful relief by soothing tho Irritated and highly inflamed membrane. Mr. W. A. Willie, R. F. D. No. 1, Evansport, writes: "I havo been bothered with asthma for over flvo years hut could not get any rellof un til I tried Hyomel. I hnvo spent lots of money on remedies for nsthmn, and If I could not get anoth er bottle I would not bo without Hy omel for $50. I recommend it." A comploto Hyomel outfit, Includ ing hard rubber pocket inhaler, costs $1.00 with instructions for uso in hay fever and asthma. Extra bottles of Hyomel cost 50 cents at druggists everywhere and at G. W. Pell, Druggist. by Dr. Clyde Conn of York Run, who treated a child for some minor ail ment. The child did not thrive and It took Dr. Conn hut a short time to discover that tho principal reason was lack of sufficient nourishment. He took a sample of the milk and had it analyzed. According to the story told by parties coming Into Smith Held, the analysis showed thero was no cow's milk in tho concoction. Davis is said to have done a pros perous business. Tho discovery of the bogus milk is said to have result ed in tho discovery that Davis was disposing of 20 quarts of milk a day, yet he had but one cow on his place. Editorial In Somerset Herald. Indian Trails For Airships. Orvilie Wright recommends for both tho St. Louis and Chicago aero plane flights the line of the Hudson nnd the Erie canal to Buffalo, thence the lnke shore to Cleveland, where the St. Louis route would diverge to the southwest. This is, as far as Cleveland, pre cisely the route the unlettered civil engineers of tho Iroquois Indians laid out before white men came to the country, except that tho Indians at times varied it by taking Wood's creek to Oswego. Living on the Mo hawk trail, they easily ruled the tribes far and near in either direction. They made paths for moro than they knew, those Six Nation pio neers. After them tramped the royalist armies; the wagon-road fol lowed their footsteps, then the canal, tho telegraph, six parallel railway tracks and Anally the airship will ply their route to regions they once readied so slowly by paddle and portage. Mr. Wright does not consider it wise at present for an aeroplane to cross the Alleghanies, since height reduces motor efficiency and emer gency landings are few. Ultimately the aeroplane must take this route also; and when it does it will not fly straight over tho bristling moun tain tops like a balloon, but will fol low the lower level of the old Lennl Lenape trail along the Susquehanna and the Klskiminetns to the scene of the Braddock massacre. The Indians could hardly have guessed that they were surveying air ship routes when they made their trails, but they were. Editorial in N. Y. World. Milfonl Paper on Kimble. The Milford Dispatch in its cur rent issue says: " We are pleased to note in one of our exchanges that our esteemed friend, Frank P. Kimble, esq., of Honesdale, is to be one of the candi dates for Judge in the Wayne dis trict. Mr. Kimble Is well and favor ably known here, where he has been engaged frequently in important cases for the past 25 years. His broad knowledge of legal principles and universal fairness to the court and litigants in the trial or causes have won for him an enviable reputa tion as a lawyer and his host of friends In Pike county, both of the bar and laymen, congratulate Wayne county on tho opportunity of placing on the bench a man of rare talents and ripe judgment, whose life has ever been an open book and whose integrity and manly character are be yond question." TH1C THItlCE-A-WEEK WORLD. It has invariably been the great ef fort of the thrice-a-week edition of the New York World to publish the news impartially in order that It may be an accurate reporter of what has happened. It tells the truth, irre spective of party, and for ttiat reason it has achieved a position with the public unique among papers of its class. The subscription season is now at hand and this is the best offer that will be made to you. If you want the news as It really Is, subscribe to tho thrice-a-week edi tion of the New York World, which X ESTABLISHED 1830 X TIIO OLDEST BANK IN WAYNE COUNTY X --THE -- x Honesdale National BANK CAPITAL, SURPLUS TOTAL ASSETS WE ARE AFTER YOU ! You have more or less banking huim'Sh. Possibly it is with us, such being tho case you know something of our X service, but if not a patron would it not be well for you to X become ono I X OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT t will help you start. It is calculated to serve all classes, tho X old and tho young, tho rich and tho poor, X MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN X IT RECEIVES DEPOSITS OF $1.00 AND UP and allows three per cent, interest annually. Interest will bo paid from the first of any mouth on all deposits made on or before tho 10th of ttie month provided such deposit remain three calendar months or longer. HENRY Z. RUSSELL. I'KESIDtNT. ANDREW THOMPSON VICE I'llESIDKNT. comes to you every other day except Sunday, and Is thus practically a dnliy at the pried or a weekly. The thrice-a-week World's regular subscription price Is only $i per year, and this pays for ICC papers. We offer this unequalled newspaper nnd The Citizen together for'ono year for f2. 47eiy. Red .Man Is Off For Reading. William Schloss left Honesdalo bright and early Monday morning for Reading, where the campfiro of tho Red Men of tho state Is glowing this week. Ho represented Oslek tribe of this place. Reading is giving the fraternal visitors the -best entertain ment of which a naturally hospltablo city Is capable. The Honesdale Restaurant and Lunch Co. have added another de partment to their business, for they established some days ago a fruit stand and they are now Installing a shoe shining parlor. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lmss County, SS.: Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior partner of tho firm of F. L. C heney & Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said flrr wlll pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case o Catarrli that cannot be cured by tho use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscrib ed In my presence, this Cth day ot December, A. D. 188C. (Seal) A. W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken In ternally, and acts directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Tak Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. THE NOBBY LONG COATS - - AT - - r & Cos Stores Are Suitable for Real Stylish Wear $ 150,000.00 241,711.00 1,902,000.00 EDWIN K.TOKKHY CASHIEIt. AI.11KHT C. LINDSA A6HIBTAM CASHIER Menne