TUB CITIZEN, FIU1UY, JUNE 17, 1010. THE CITIZEN TUBUBIir.D EVERY WEDNESDAY AND mlDAY BY THE CITIZEN rilRLiSlllNQ COMrANT. Entered as Bccond-clnss mntter, at the post olllcc. llonesdnle. l'n. SUBSCRIPTION 1.50 K, B. IIAKDKN'IlKltGII, - PHKSIDKNT V. W. WOOD. - MANAGE!! AND SKC'Y 1IILMAKD nitUOK - KDITOH DIRECTORS: c. n.noRFLiNGt.n. m. n. allen. HENRY WILSON. E. B. HARDENnEKdll. W. W. MOOD. ritlDAY, JUNE 17, 11)10. ltEPUllLICAN TICKET. For Congress, C. C. PRATT. For Stnte Senntor, WINFHED D. LEWIS. COUNTV. Representative, H. C. JACKSON. "Our murderous Fourth" a Port Jervls preacher called it. Strong language, but pretty moderately ver acious after all! Three or four real warm days, one right after the other, and the conser vative Wayne county citizen will bid the winter understuff sklddoo. Hut will we get 'em! And after all that rain, Wayne county pastures are said to be not much more than half what they should be. Must we move to Alaska7 Washington will be the Deserted Village tomorrow, her political men from both sides of the party fence swallowed up in the great outpour ing of populace at a Xew York gang plank. To bring up a child in the way he should go, why Just travel that way yourself once in a while. Gilbert ville cor. of Stroudsburg Times. No sort of use; it ain't human nater! Honesdale may not get quite so safe and sane a Fourth as some cities expect and others are to demand; but Honesdale, it goes without elab orate argument, is going to ego a prosperous Fourth. With most of the glass men at work once more, drawing good wages and spending their money in the place where they earn it; with another shop coming to swell the list of local industries; with Wayne county gardens looking up after the rainy spell, and five-cent milk when most places in the East are paying six and seven who says we are not going to feel extra good on the great patriotic holiday this year? Hoke Smith will not run again for governor of Georgia. He planned to be governor again and to make a sec ond term in the state house at At lanta the stepping-stone to the sen atorship on which he long has had his solicltious eyes. The Hon. Hoke says he has not pulled out because he fears another primary licking like unto that of 190S from "Little Joe" Brown. He says he cares not a red cent for the antipathy and antagon ism of the railroads. Probably, then, he is forced out of the running by his aversion to more misspelling of the good old Peachtree name of Hoke on the part of the newspapers, at least a score of which Including one in the governor's own congres sional district alluded to him as "Hoax" Smith. The most important state conven tion of the summer comes next week in Ohio. Gov. Judson Harmon, who carried the state by 27,000 the same day that sas Taft get the Buckeye electoral vote by 00,000, will be nam ed again. The prevalent opinion in the middle west is that if he is not opposed by an extra strong candi date, the Democratic governor of Ohio, a man of prodigious personal popularity, may succeed himself at Columbus. If this should happen, the 1912 nomination of Harmon would ho inevitable. The strongest Republi cans in the state Burton, Garfield and Cole have turned the nomina tion down. Nick Longworth, the hard man to elect, is again proposed. His nomination would bo the worst blunder tho Buckoyo Republicans could commit at this critical moment. The son-in-law of Col. Roosevelt, more or less of a Joke In Washing ton, would bo moro than that in an effort to unhorse Gov. Harmon. Tho Democratic candidate for anothor term at Columbus must bo met with heavier timber or Ohio will have an other Democratic governor and tho 1912 ticket will carry tho name of a powerful Ohio Democrat for president. Glenn Curtiss, who flew down the Hudson at a mile a minute, got $10, 000 for the Job but a correspond ent asks, Has he got it now? Not all of it, probably. Aviator Curtiss hap pens to be married, you know. That St. Louis editor who believes the grewsome Job of coroner ought to be wiped off the face of the earth must be one of those rare, happy and peaceful souls of the Fourth Estate whose fear of a violent death at his desk Is not so distressing ns his fear of the sheriff and the sheriff's pad lock. That plan perfected down in Ari zona by which incorrigible boys nre to be sent to a summer camp in the mountains, where they are to govern themselves, does not look like the very worst form of punishment that could be devised. Woman's National Daily. Now, what would have been the matter with giving those "incorrigi bles" a football and compelling the whole gang to go to It for a week? Citizens imbued with the idea that New York needs good government and also with the realization that under Charles Evans Hughes she has been getting it deplore tho fact that the governor Is going to move away permanently, but Just the same the average newspaper reader will be delighted by the retirement of that Incessant sentence, "the governor was attended by Col. George Curtis Tread well, his military secretary." Here's .some compensation for the pain of parting from so excellent an execu tive as Gov. Hughes. Scranton Is fortunate indeed in the prospect of seeing Mrs. Phil Sheri dan in her midst when, on the Fourth, the beautiful Sheridan mon ument is dedicated. "Fighting Phil" was the most brilliant commander of the Civil war and every American heart is proud of the work he did to preserve the Union, but then, we all know It's "the girl behind the man behind the gun" that often furnishes the inspiration. Southern chivalry, too often prone to urge Itself as the motive for fool ish actions in the country below the Potomac and the Ohio, has gone the limit at last and in Gabbettsville, Ga., a pretty little miss of an even 11 summers is the train dispatcher on an important division of the Georgia Central. She was appointed "beca,use everybody that knew Frankie sa,ld she was competent, and we didn't want to hurt the little girl's feelings by turning her down." In less sen timental sections of this country de vout supplications will rise to the Creator that human life itself may not be turned down on the division that gets its orders from Gabbetts ville. Those Stroudsburg promoters of Old Home week who went over onto Jersey soil to get practical ideas anent this celebration scheme acted wisely, wo grant, for the folks to whom they applied for information are posted on the Job of running Old Home weeks the way they ought to be run; but why did they leave Honesdale off their map of inquiry? We had a reunion here that is ad mitted to have been a model of Its kind. Tho press notices of its suc cess were not too flattering. The former residents who came, some of them from a distance, to partake of our hospitality did not praise it too highly. Honesdale's Old Homo week exceeded the hopes of its most san guine supporters and set the pattern high for other small Pennsylvania communities that expect to celebrate. Stroudsburg, however, should and probably will do equally well with hers, for tho Delaware Water Gap, one of the bost-advertlsed places In Christendom, lies right at her doors, and tho Water Gap's ability to help get out the crowd is.worth something. PROF. SMITH ARItiIEI); NOW MAY SUE THE CITY. Harry Norris Smith, a professor in Mercersburg college, was arrested by Detectives White and Speeco in Har rlsburg Thursday, on the charge that he "acted suspiciously." Smith wltn a number of friends, camo to town to witness tho G. A. R. festivities. While elbowing his way through tho crowds Smith excited tho atten tion of Detective White and Speeco. Detective Whito said that in three different sections of tho central part of tho city Smith witnessed tho par ade. Finally ho went up to him, ask ed his name and homo town, and nf ter being told by Smith that ho was a student at Yale ho locked him up. Ho had In no way molested any one. At tho police station Smith told his correct name and profession and denied absolutely that his actions wero such as to cast suspicion upon him. Ho was then discharged. It Is said that he threatens to bring suit against tho city for falso arrest. The Keystone Press The City Beautiful must bo the City Clean. Let every citizen do as much to agitate the question as Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, and the problem of tho streets will soon be solved. Philadelphia Press. Evelyn Thaw has acknowledged on I the witness stand that she Is almost ' poverty stricken. All she has Is a . three-room flat, some furniture and $70 a week. It is dltllcult to see! how she makes both ends meet. j Philadelphia Inquirer. 1 A. Pittsburg exchange says that a boy crawled "from under an auto-' mobile with broken ribs." This I seems to be a queer accident to an I auto. We hope the boy did not I..., n ttimntimnil t r-r Qnrnnfnn ' Wilt U liuilvim vii ii ww tnnwH Tribune-Republican. John D. Rockefeller has to live chiefly on graham wafers and milk, yet there are plenty of fools who would trndo that ostrich-like recep tacle they have under their belts for John D's wealth. Uellefonto Watch man. i Announcement is made that fifteen 1 thousand persons who have contract ( ed the gold fever will sail from ! Seattle to Alaska as soon as navlga I tlon opens to- Nome. The north I seems to bo as attractive to thoso who annually entertain the less poetic i hay fever. Peckville Journal. The salvation of the primary sys tem depends upon a successful fol lowing up of the clues and the con viction of the wretches who sell their honor for a few dollars. The duty is plain. Will the agencies of law en forcement in this community meas ure up to It? Wilkes-Barre Record. Six pickpockets in Cincinnati, af ter paying a lawyer fifty dollars for successfully defending them, gather ed around to thank him and prompt ly stole the money back again. The next time lie defends a pickpocket he's going to do it with an ax. Phil adelphia Inquirer. An active man congeulally em ployed has no time for worry. There is nothing for him to worry about. He is doing all he can, and not only he but all the world knows it. The only man who has real cause for, wor ry is the idle one the unfortunate lazy Inheritor of wealth who doesn't know how to live. Philadelphia Inquirer. Editor Albert J. Barr of the Pitts burg Post is entitled to a Carnegie hero medal for rescuing a chauffeur who was in danger of being burned to death. But as Mr. Barr is a hero found commissioner he is ineligible for the honor. That seems to be 'the way with the editors all over the country. They get little but thanks for their good deeds. Scranton Tribune-Republican. A Pennsylvania Judge has lately held that the dangerous "thank you ma'ams" must not be allowed on the road, and that where they exist con stables must report the fact to ,the -courts. He holds that an automobile is a legal vehicle, with a right to use the highways, and that owners should have the hignways as free from ob structions as if traveled by carriages, and where such obstructions exist the supervisors should be held liable for injuries and criminally prosecuted. There are a large number of "thank you ma'ams" in this county. New Mil ford Advocate. GOVERNOR HARMON OK OHIO. A rapidly developing and import ant ilguro In public life is Judson Har mon, governor of Ohio. Human Life for June carries the story of this typi cal American, and when we add that Its author Is James B. Morrow, it goes without saying that the narra tive is strong, virile, and alive with picturesque features. "Even were he to wear a long coat and a tall hat, Harmon would still resemble a ranchman, a manufactur er, or some other driving man of busi ness," says the author, "and the scars on his big hands, tho sparkle in his gray eyes, tho robustness of his atmosphero are persuading assets out on tho farms and In the mines and factories. Ho looks like n strong man bodily and intellectually. He acts like a man who is not in fear of anybody." So much for Ills picturesque and impressive personality. Now what has happened In his brief administra tion ho has been In office but seven teen months to raise tho hopes of his party in Ohio that two years from now may And him entered In tho presidential race? Briefly, it's tho way he's stirring things up In his own state. Tho abuses that ho outlined In his Inaugural address arc steadily weakening under his body blows. In his own words, "ring or machlno politics had debauched tho public ser vice," and picayune grafters, profes sional party hacks, and all tho rag, tag and bobtail o fincapablcs aro squirming under his regime as though sitting on tacks. Examining records and probing In to carefully covercd-up transactions, ho has unearthed amazing instances of rascality and corruption, and has crushed to earth many a stealthy evil. CTLET US PRINT YOUR BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, STATE MENTS, NOTE HEADS. ENVEL OPES, CIRCULARS, ETC., ETC. Had For the Iloys. Success Magazino contains a sensa tional expose of "The Evils of tho Night Messenger Service," written by Lcroy Scott. Telephono nnd telegraph companies use boys for the delivery of messages, nnd besides this, In every city, there aro thous ands of boys, most of them under sixteen, whose business It Is to carry messages nnd do errands wherever they are ordered. They become go betweens in mntters of assignation; they nre made to pilot strangers through tho tenderloin; they aro sent to purchase liquor nnd opium nnd otherwise evade the law; they aro called to take drinks into houses of prostitution. As a result, the service becomes a veritable school of Iniquity. As has been expressed, "It Is a blind alley industry, with a gambling den nnd a house of prostitution nt tills end, and tho bread line and peniten tiary at tho other." The boys come to the service during the period of adolence, when they are especially susceptible to evil Influence and when they need most to be shielded from It, nnd are thrust Into temptations which almost Invariably ruin them. In other words, the service Is a com panion Infnmy with the white slave trafllc, the one wrecking tho working girls for purposes of profit and the other entrapping and ruining the boys because they can be employed cheaper than men. As Mr. Scott puts It: "Why nre these young boys em ployed In a service that ruins them, mind, soul and body? Tho answer is simple. The reason Is the same as impels the employment of children In cotton mills and coal mines. Chil dren can be secured for lower wages than adults. There Is more profit, more dividends, in children." The evils of the messenger service are things which have been exploited but little, but they nre not the less vici ous because not known; and this evil, like almost every evil that shames the century, is directly traceable to tho profit system, the system which many good but uninformed people seek to maintain as though it were the acme of morality. THE THR1CE-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 that 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 br made to you. If you want the news as It really Is, subscribe to the thrice-a-week edi tion of the New York World, which comes to you every other day except Sundny, and is thus practically a daily at the price of a weekly. The thrlce-a-week World's regular subscription price is only $1 pef year, and this pays for 15G papers. We offer this unequalled nowsraper and The Citizen together for one year for ?2. 47eiy. SALISBURY'S MEMORIAL. Pennsylvania Veterans to Attend Dedication in November. Arrangements are being made for the transportation of Pennsylvania veterans to attend the dedication of the monument at Salisbury, N. C, next November. There are a great number of Pennsylvania sailors and soldiers who passed through the bit ter dnys In that Southern prison who will go, not only to witness the dedi cation of the monument to Union bravery, which withstood the trials of that terrible incarceration, but to live again in reminiscence and mem ory of the days of hunger, privation and pain. The arrangement for transporting the veterans Is In charge of Col. J. D. Walker, of 0022 Centre avenue, Pittsburg, and all who were soldiers or sailors from tho Keystone state during the war and were confined In Salisbury stockades aro expected to communicate with Col. Walker by sending him tlioir names, including the designation of company and regi ment to-whleh each belonged. There aro 12,132 Union men bur led in tho prison, of whom only 94 are known. A Dead Stomach Of What Use Is It? Thousands? yes hundreds of thous ands of people throughout Amorlca aro taking tho slow death treat ment dally. Thoy are murdering their own stomach, tho best friend they have, and in their sublime Ignorance thoy think thoy aro putting asldo tho laws of nature. This is no sensational statement; It Is n startling fact, tho truth of which any honornblo physician will ot deny. Theso thousands of people are swallowing daily hugo quantities of pepsin nnd other strong digesters, mado especially to dlgost tho food in tho stomach without any aid ut all from tho dlgestlvo mombrane of tho stomach. Ml-o-na stomach tablets rellovo distressed stomach in llvo minutes; they do moro. Tnkon regularly for a few weeks thoy build up tho run down stomach and make it strong enough to digest its own food. Then Indigestion, belching, sour stomach and headache will go. Ml-o-na stomach tablets aro sold by druggists everywhere and by O. W. Poll who guarantees them. oO cents a box. Booth's Pills cure constipation, 2Cc. THREE TERMS FOR JONES. I I Advocate of Good Bonds Is on Both Tickets This Time. Hon. Edward E. Jones (Good Roads Jones) of Susquehanna coun ty lins been renominated for a third term In the legislature. At the recent primaries he was nominated on both tho Republican and Democrntlc tick ets. This Is a remarkable tribute to his popularity for Susquehanna coun ty has never sent a member for more thnn two terms. One-half of Mr. Jones's blood is Wayne county blood. His mother wns Marietta Blandln, n daughter of Daniel Blandln, a member of one of the old families of Honesdale. Mr. Jones has many warm friends in Wnyno county nnd they rejoice at his progress politlcolly. Read the Citizen. It pays. HONESDALE TUESDAY, JUNE 28th THE UNRIVALED TENTED INSTITUTION OF THE WORLD The Paragon of Radiant Romantic Realism Reached A Collossal Aggregation COL. HOWE'S HERD OF MUSICAL ELEPHANTS Including DUCHESS The Largest Elephant in the World. Marion Shcriden and THE MARVELOUS EDDY FAMILY The Acrobatic and Aerial Sensation.Marvelous Ex ponents of Athletic Art. SUGIMATOS Imperial YEDDO JAPANESE Troupe of ATHLETES 500 People. 250 v. . . The Most Complete, Extensive, Costly ZOO Col. of Wild Animals in Captivity THREE BANDS OF MUSIC, 20 EUROPEAN NOVELTIES IOO - FEATURE ACTS - - 100 Unlike anything seen here before BABY Camels, Elephants, Lions, and Monkeys An Endless. Amazing Thrilling, Startling Chain of the World's Greatest Acts. THE GREAT DELAVOYE, ENGLAND'S REST CLOWN. CCD At 10 O'Clock THE OLL In the Morning I HC PERFORMANCES DAILY Afternoon at 2 Night at 8 ESTABLISHED 1830 THE OLDEST BANK IN WAYNE COUNTY --THE ESDALE NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL, $ 150,000.00 SURPLUS 241,711.00 TOTAL ASSETS 1,902,000.00 WE ARE AFTER YOU ! You havo moro or less banking business. Possibly it is with us, such being the case you know something of our service, but if not a patron would it not bo well for you to become ono ? OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT will help you start. It is calculated to servo all classes, tho old and tho young, tho rich and tho poor, MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN IT RECEIVES DEPOSITS OF $1.00 AND UP and allows three per cent, interest annually. Interest will be paid from tho flret of any month on all deposits made on or before tho lUth of the month provided such deposits remain three calendar months or longer. HENRY J5. RUSSELL, PRESIDENT. ANDHKW THOMPSON VICE PRESIDENT. Lucas County, SS.: Frank J. Cheney makes oath that ho Ib senior partner of tho firm of F. L. Cheney & Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that Bald flrt wlli pay tho sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case o Catarrh that cannot bo cured by tho use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscrib ed In my presence, this Gth day ot December, A. D. 1880. (Seal) A. W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken In ternnlly, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by nil Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. of Sensational Features her Performing Lions Horses. 20 Clowns. 131(1 Spectacular FREE Street PARADE t t i t EDWIN F.TOMtEY CASHIER. ALI1KIIT C. LINDSAY ASSISTANT CASHIER Milium t HHimtimt1