TIIE CITIZEN, FltmAV, JULY 8, 1010. THE CITIZEN rUBLIBIIED EVERT WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY BY THE CITIZEN FUBL1B1IINQ COMPANY Entered as second-class matter, at the post olUce. Honesdale. l'a. 8UDSCRIPTION J1.50 H. B. HARDENIIERQH, . PRESIDENT W. W. WOOD. MANAGER AND SKC'Y BILLIARD 11HUCK - - - KDITOK directors: C. n. DORrLINOERt X. n. ALI.E.N. HENRY WILSON. E. B. UARDENBEKOII. , W. W. WOOD. Kill DAY, JULY 8, 11)10. HEPUBLICAN TICKET. For Governor JOHN' K. TENER. For Lleutennnt .Governor JOHN M. RETXOLDS. Secretory of Internnl Affairs HENRY HOUCK. Stnte Trensurer CHAS. F. WRIGHT. For Congress, C. C. PRATT. For Stnte Senator, W1NFRED D. LEWIS. COUNTY. Representative, H. C. JACKSON. The man who kicks about to day's weather would kick about his crown. "Dies In grim presence" runs a headline In the. Doylestown Intel llngencer. Does this mean the ticket he tops went down to Its grave right where a well limelighted citizen of Doylestown could stand and behold the spectacle? The Scranton Truth says this world Is growing better. WILLIAM TRAVERS JEROME, once principal prosecutor of criminal causes In New York, will probably move that the! name of the paper be changed to the ! Scranton Liar. Don't throw kisses, my boy; de liver them in person. Nicholson Record. Why certainly, certainly if over in Nicholson you be so fortunate as to find anything like a fair dupli cate of the winsome femininity we have in Honesdale. A sayso ballplayer got in the coop at Bellefonte for stealing pipes from the showcase of a barbershop. Pity some of the fakirs of the diamond couldn't be jugged for the pipe dreams they peddle about being able to pelt the sphere for a home run with two men out and the bases full in the last of the ninth! "Orders" are multiplying. We had Elks, Eagles and Owls, and now we have Foxes. Who says we are not advancing far away from Darwin's initial monkey? Tannersville cor. of Monroe Jeffersonlan. So much the better for the dila tory husbands and sons-in-law of Tannersville, then. No longer need they Invent transparent excuses for being out late at night. "I've been to my lodge" was never so handy a phrase for them as now. Fined for bathing within the city limits of Pittsburg is the fate of a tramp caught in a doctor's bathtub. This action may explain the reason of the color of Plttsburgers, but we are still in the dark as to why the doctor owns the bathtub. Harrls burg Telegraph. To get off the soft coal smudge, porkhead! Didn't you ever go into a Smoky City shaveshop and have the white-coated comrade sponge your face off before ho applied the soap suds to your physiognomy? Well, that gives the most feasible idea of Pittsburg dirtiness, so why not bath tubs? All around the country doctors are raising their rates and preparing to soak the sick man with bills as well as with pills, but one redeeming feature of the doctor's trust is a de sirable result It seems likely to pro duce. Some timid souls that for merly Med to tho sanctum of a M. D., for every stomach belch and too ache will suddenly get bold and spunk It out without tho help of tho extortionate practitioner. And as for all his twaddle about the unpaid bills that almost break tho pages of a doctor's ledger, wo hate to waste paper to point out tho imbecility of that argument. Tho woods aro full of poor clerks, poor farmers, poor meehnnlcs who scrimp their stom achs nnd wear $4.98 suits of clothes Just to gather money enough to pay tho fancy charges of some hlgh fnlutlon son-of-a-gun who- wears a Prlnco Albert coat at church on Sunday and tries to look down on the plain, practical citizen whoso surnamo has the good fortune not to bo prcceoded by any heavier han dle than tho altogether democratic Mister. The top of the morning to Rev. I C. 0. MILLER, Intely arrived upon j the hills of Honesdale as the pastor of the German Lutheran church 1 He knows enough about human na ture to realize that short, simple ser mons are sufficient unto the needs of the average Sunday gathering In summer. He never plana to preach more thnn 15 minutes; sometimes, ho says, he gets to his peroration in 12. This is downright good sense on the part of this new addition to the locnl cloth. The tired and jaded sinner in hot weather Is the hardest sinner In the world to reach and benefit. The mnn whose body Is tuckered by long-winded pulpit ora tory In July nnd August Is not the mnn who is going to reward the leader, of his flock with the acme of spiritual responsiveness. Even In Congregational New England, where the parson of Puritanical days used to talk two hours nnd 20 minutes by the clock while the vigilant tithing mnn patrolled the aisles, eager to give the llrst Sunday napper a vig orous swat on top of the head, the sermon seldom exceeds the half hour limit now. Wherever you find pro gressive communities these days you will find contributing to that pro gress preachers of the gospel who In their discourses can economize time and crowd down language. One Honesdnle pnstor who essnyed to tnlk 25 minutes Sunday on a pa triotic subject talked eloquently, but he afterward admitted that 25 minutes at the reading desk on a torrid night in July was a good stiff physical proposition for him. The Keystone Press Why, certainly, Beverly, Mass., is now spelled with a summer capital. Lancaster New Era. The Scranton Truth predicts that Mr. Tener will be elected the next governor of Pennsylvania by a rec ord breaking majority. Carry this news to the North Americnn. Bris tol Courier. We want to say for one clergy man in Cambria county that he has' the right idea. He said he was in terested in the coming Jeff-Johnson bout and didn't care who knew It. Johnstown Democrat. The Philadelphia Inquirer says that the Democratic mule in Penn sylvania is in a sad state of division. Evidently the kicking part is the only part that has any life remain ing. Wilkes-Barre Record. Beauty will make things go when we are young, but pretty men are not greatly In demand. What the world wants to know of a man Is whether he can do anything. View ed in that light, the contents of a head are more Important than Its facial outline. Titusvllle Herald. And now comes Mr. Welser of the Allentown Democrat with the state ment that Allentown is the bright est star in the firmament of Penn sylvania municipalities. Mr. Welser knows, however, that Johnstown Is the brightest star in the galaxy of Pennsylvania cities. Johnstown Democrat. The state laws require that suit able guide hoards shall be placed at the intersection of all roads, and It is the duty of the township super visors to carry out the law. It Is the duty of the constables to report any negligence on the part of super visors to the court. Officers, do your duty. New Mllford Advertiser. An authority estimates tho value of this year's hay crop at 5000,000. 000, practically equivalent to the value of the cotton crop. After all, we are compelled to confess our de pendence upon the farmer, who draws from tho soil tho enormous crops which keep In vigorous being nnd prosperity our great nntion of ninety million ultimate consumers. Lancaster New Era. Congratulations are duo Charles E. Pottor, rural mall carrier out of Towandn, for his nctlon In causing the nrrest of tho supervisors of threo townships of Bradford county for neglect of duty in failing to keep their roads in decent condition for travel. It Is to ho hoped that every wilfully derelict supervisor In tho state will bo proceeded against in the samo way. Mllford DlBpatch. Tho good old Uays are coming back samo as Halley's comet did. The story of tho sea serpent was re vived in tho report that a big green eyed serpent with a head like a tur tle had been seen In Great Kills, Staten Island. Ono day last week that other old Btandby of editors in tho good old days was also revived. It was tho story of the eaglo with tho gigantic wing spread carrying off tho llttlo baby. Like Halley's comet tho reappearance of these stories was tame and failed to create tho old-timb Interest. Carbondalo Leader. After running down a small boy and cutting his head so badly thnt n doctor was necessary In the case, n local bicycle rider scolded the child and threatened to have him arrest ed for playing In the street. A dis position of such character might bo Improved if the grouch would try the same performance with a man. But ho would bo too cowardly to at tempt anything of the kind. When it comes to the queslon of rights the llttlo boy was not out of placo In the street. Ho was In danger of be ing injured but he had Just as much right there as the man with the bi cycle. The only reason why such n man will take liberties Is because of i n difference In size. Titusvllle Her ald. $ RIGHT OFF THE BAT. X That baby girl at our house Is all that she's cracked up to be. And my big boy, he'll tell you just what his pa said about It. Ben Robin son. That red and black bird the hoys got on the cliff and sold to mo died, and I never have found out for i certain what It was. Timmy O'Con nell. The ice ' cream business Is very good, thank you, but don't eat up nil my" salted peanuts while you give me hot air nbout my cream. Fred Ruppert. Yes, Texas No. 4 made a little money on that Fourth of July pic nic at Bellevue park on the hill. Don't you see me on the way to the bank with the doughbag? William A. Slumnn. Earl Sherwood Is mad at me. He says he wants to sleep, and that I keep him awake with a noise from my room like a thunderstorm. I'm sorry, but I can't help It this hot weather. Michael Galvln. I beg to announce I have just bought a cane for $1, reduced from $1.37 and that now any man or woman who disobeys my orders knows what to expect. Harris, of the Globe. When Teddy lectured In England he talked about the Roundheads, and the Longheads of British history, but we've got "longheads" enough here In Honesdale to suit me, the way the women are wearing their hair now C. C. Jadwln. When I say "Go 'way" I don't really mean exactly that. I don't want you to go. I don't expect to go myself until October or Novem ber. It's simply an expression I've gotten Into the habit of using. J. M. Hale, state road Inspector. I wish the young men of Wayne county were not quite so sporty. That's why I've had to get outside help on the Dyberry road. Our boys are good fellows all 'right, but they simply wouldn't take the road Job. That's the truth. George Sea man. Yes, we marched In Scranton, we Grand Army boys, and after march ing a little we would halt, but, speaking for myself, I am candid to tell you that the marshal always called those halts in the wrong place. Judge Henry Wilson, Commander Ham post. There is one bright lawyer in Washington. Every time I go Into his office he says "What can I do you for?" He doesn't say "What can I do for you?" the way some folks would. That man knows the game. Ho is one of the best friends I have in Washington. Earl Sherwood. They tell me the young folks of my flock do a good deal of marrying more than those of most churches. That's good! I can only add my hope that the marriages I missed may be an Inspiration for more some that I shall not miss. Rev. C. C. Miller. On my Jersey vacation I shall not see Atlantic City. That is nn old story to mo. I used to go there fre quently from Philadelphia for a swim nnd n dinner and thought It great fun, but the novelty has all worn off, and I won't go near tho boardwalk this time. Rev. George S. Wendell. ".Mind Your Own Business." A Port Jervls man who Is fre quently annoyed by some peoplo en quiring Into his personal affairs, has had cards printed which ho hands out to tho unduly Inqulsltlvo ns n gentle hint to mind his or her own business. Tho card reads: "Recommended to tho attention of Mr. and Mrs. Busybody, by a mem ber of tho Antl-Poklng-Your-Nose-In-to-Other-Peoplo's-Buslness Socloty. Wanted Immediately, a person of fair character, (ago or sex imma terial) nt a salary of $500 a year, to mind their own business, with a periodical Increase, equivalent to $1, 000 per annum, only to leavo other people's business alone. For furth er particulars enquire of Mr. Troublo-No-Body, No. 1 Quiet Street, City of Peace, N. B., N. W." Have you thought of Snratoga Springs and Lako Georgo - as the placo to spend your vacation this summer? See advertisement. D4t4 PENROSE AS SENATE LEADER. As the time draws near tho prog nostication which wo made some months ngo that United States Sena tor. Penrose would probably become the chnirrann of tho Senate finance committee and the leader of the majority In the Senate upon tho withdrawnl of Senntor Nelson W. Aldrlch, of Rhode Island, appears to be correct. It Is now Intimated that this was virtually agreed upon at tho time of the closo of the recent session of Congress. Senator Burrows of Michigan Is tho ranking member of the finance committee, but there arc two reasons why he may not become tho leader. Ono of them Is that ho Is very old and may not care for the work and responsibility Involved nnd another Is that he Is having a severe contest for re-election,- rind may not enro to go hack to tho Scnnte. It Is ngrced on all sides In Wash ington thnt Senator Penrose is the man for the place, the ono who has the masterly skill, the experience, the knowledge .and ability, and who could commnnd the following of those In the party who make up the majority In the upper branch of the national house of representatives. It will be a great compliment to Pennsylvania when Penrose Is eleva ted to this important and responsible post. Deprived of tho presidency for one reason or another for many a year and with no Immediate chance to get one of her sons In tho execu tive chair, the next best thing is to have her senior Senator tho chair man of the powerful finance com mittee of the Senate nnd the recog nized lender of the Republicans In that body. Senntor Quay was recognized by all the Republicans of the country to be a man of great ability and one who had all the qualities of leader ship, but it never fell to his lot to become tho leader of the Senate. Penrose has grown In stature ever since his ndvent into tho Sennte. He enme there first as the junior to Quny, but he soon made his Impress upon that body and he has been advnnced steadily ever since in the importance of his committee assign ments and In the responsibilities which have been put upon him. In all the posts to which he has been assigned it has been marked that Penrose has more than "made good," while at the same time he has broadened in statesmanship and experience. Each year has found him higher and higher in the coun sels of his party and with more work to do and greater responsibility to discharge. It has been noted among the great men of the country that Penrose has grown with each new assign ment a,nd that with every new re sponsibility he has broadened. The natural consequence has been that he gained continually more and more the confidence of his conferees. Senntor Aldrlch will be at his old post, of course, during the next ses sion of the present Congress, which will be held during the coming win ter, and which comes to nn end on March 4 next, after which there will be a reorganization of Congress and of the important committees. Then It Is expected Penrose will come to the fore. There will be much important business before the finance commit tee during the next Congress. Mone tnry legislation, the tariff and all the more Important matters of the Senate will be settled In that com mittee, hence there is need for a big and wise leader. Pennsylvania Is fortunate In that it has as its representative in that august body the man who will take the helm and direct things. Of course, Penrose, In his new position, will have to servo tho entire coun try llrst and foremost, but his ca pacity for serving Pennsylvania and her best Interests will have material ly increased by reason of his ad vancement. Editorial in Philndel- phin Star. FIGHTING THE DUST PLAGUE. It Is a pleasant thing to sit in a big touring car, admiring the beauti ful landscape of the rural districts while the car Is spinning along the dusty country roads at the rato of thirty miles an hour. But tho rural residents who are minus .automobiles do not think that It is so pleasant to eat tho dust which rises In dense clouds as tho benzine buggy passes out of sight. Tho residents of many small towns through which scores of automobiles pnss every dny positive ly refuse to submit to tho dust nui sance. That is tho roason. why tho autolsts find so many oiled highways at present. .There aro very few towns that have tho facilities for sprinkling tho streets, nnd even if they do it is necessary to sprinkle them twlco a day to prevent them froimjettlng dusty. Crude oil is tho only thing that Is available, for tho hamlets and vill ages to abolish the dust nuisance But it Is very effective, and whore it has been used tho residents are very well pleased with tho results. After tho dust has onco been saturated with this mixture It Is very easy to keep tho roads In good condition, and dust is a thing of tho past. It Is a safo prediction that within a few years all tho towns will apply this remedy, becauso it makes better roads, offering more resistance to water which, ns a result of heavy rains, is often responsible for tho bad condition, of country roads, Editorial in Allentown Call. Llttlo Fun With Brother Woodward. Editor Harlan K. Woodward, whoi seldom takes a vacation from his job of running tho Peckvllle Jour nnl, got weary In well doing at last and started, "knee deep In Juno" as James Whltcomb Riley called It, for n trip to the oil regions of, Ohio, where It is hot enough In July nnd August to roast delinquent subscrib ers in tho public streets without sending them down to Shcol to be .disciplined. As Mr. Woodwnrd was successful in getting a lower berth on the through sleeper he boarded at Wllkes-Barre, ho reached Flndlay,. the heart of Hancock county's oil country, sufficiently refreshed to look over the first town In tho United States to fine the Standard Oil com pany $5000 and tho costs of pros ecution. A brjght letter from Find lay to Mr. Woodward's paper' had much Interest for, tho editor of The Citizen, ,who has "newspapered" In Flndlay, one of the real live, up- and-coming, ginger towns of the lake region, and, remembering the Journ al's editorial announcement that "we (Mr. Woodwnrd) may bo lo cated by addressing police head quarters, Flndlay," he dropped a line to Chief John L. Kramer and Capt. Frank M. Grant, two prime good fellows connected with the Ohio city's bluecoat force, asking them to take the Peckvllle mnn at his word and give Mr. Woodward the time of his life. As Kramer and Grant are competent men when It comes to the entertaining effort, there is every reason to assume that the Journalistic brother from across the mountains got all these men could llnd as properly coming to him. Wo hope In the next number of the Journal to learn more about this Woodwnrd outing in tho Ohio oil country. We mistrust it will make rich reading If the Peckvllle editor unbosoms himself without re serve and writes the rare good story he is capable of writing. CHICAGO'S INSURGENT JUDGE. There are twenty-seven stand-pat judges on the municipal bench at Chicago and one insurgent. The lone Insurgent is McKenzie Cleland, and his story, as told In Human Life for July, is too good to miss. After his appointment to the mun icipal bench Judge Cleland dutifully lined the crowds of offenders up be fore him each morning and sent them to jail in the good old wny to be warmed and fed big, able-bodied men at the city's expense, while their families suffered mennwhile with cold nnd want. But It wasn't a week before Judge Cleland's conscience turned insur gent. He saw that the whole pro cess was unreasonable wrong. So one fine morning he threw the old system overboard, nnd started on an entirely new tack. The method he adopted was so revolutionary that It has drawn the attention of the entire country to the man and State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, SS.: Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior partner of the firm of F. L. Cheney & Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that sad flrr will pay the sum of ONE HUNDREL DOLLARS for each nnd every case o Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Cntarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before mo and subscrib ed In my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1S86. (Seal) A. W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken In ternally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. 4- ESTABLISHED 1830 THE OLDEST BANK INWAYNE COUNTY --)THE HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL, $ 150,000.00 SURPLUS 241,711.00 TOTAL ASSETS 1,902,000.00 t ! i WE ARE AFTER YOU ! You have more or less banking business. Possibly it is with us, such being tho 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 annunlly. - Interest will be"pnid"froin the first of any month on nil deposits made on or before the lUth of tho month provided such deposits remain three calendar months or longer. . HENRY Z. RUSSELL, I'liKSIDEXT. ANDREW THOMPSON VICE PRESIDENT. his Idens. Ho has kicked over the traces of mediaeval Ideas In the ad ministration of justice In a manner calculated to glvo tho stand-patters 57 different vnrieltes of shocks, says that Judges ought to bo trained, for their work like any other set of specialists, not with books and Latin phrases, but by being immersed for a period In tho lives of tho men and women with whoso fate they are to bo entrusted even advocates estab lishing a Bchool for them In the Ghetto, where they might come to know the problems of the peoplo who are brought before them for sen tence. For all of this thoughtful people recognize Ills' as "the voice of ono crying In the wilderness" and pointing the wny to saner and hu mnner treatment of the helpless and hopeless derelicts on the sea of life, Human Life Publishing Co., Boston. Co Into the ATLAS E-Z Seal Jar Whole a fact which qives it great advant age over old-style, small-mouth jars. Stop cutting up large fruits for canning. Go to your dealer nnd ask for Atlas E-Z Seal Jars. After that you can fill your shelves with tars holding full-sized fruits natural looking as well as good tasting. Atlas E-Z Seal Jars are very strong; smooth at top and sure sealers. HAZEL-ATLAS GLASS CO. Wheeling. W. Va. GUARANTEED Wafer Bonds TO YIELD From 5 to 6 per cent. In denominations of 100, 500 and 1,000 If interested call on or address D. D. WESTON, 303-I4th St., Honesdale, Pa. 53tl6 TN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 1 OF WAYNE COUNTY. Katie fiett v. Adln Gett. No. 105.Tnnunry Term 1910. Libel In Divorce. To A DIN OKTT: You are hereby requlr oil to appear In the said Court on the second Monday otAusiust, toanswer the complaint exhibited to the said court by Katie (iett, your husband, In the cause above stated, or In default thereof a decree of divorce as pray ed (or in said complaint may be made aealnst you In your absence. M. LEE 11RAMAN. Simons, Att'y. Sheriff. Honesdale. Va.. June ffl. 1010. SiwI I t t t EDWIN F.TORREY CASHIER, ALBERT C. LINDSAY ASSISTANT CAeiUKK