iiiis citizen, Friday, September 2, 1010. THE CITIZEiN rUBLISIIKD EVERY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY BY THE CITIZEN FUnLISHING COMrANY. Entered ns sccond-clnss matter, nt the post olllce. Honcsdalc. 1'a. SUBSCRIPTION $1.60 K, Jl. JIAHDKNI1KI101I, - PllKSlDKNT W. W. WOOD. - MANAGKIl AND SKC'Y BILLIARD UIIUCK - EDITOR DIRrCTOBS: C. D. DORrLINOER. M. B. ALLF.N. flENRY WIL60N. E. 11. HARDENRERalt. W. W. WOOD. FRIDAY, SEPT. 2, 11)10. REPUBLICAN TICKET. For Governor JOHN K. TENER. For Lieutenant Governor JOHN M. REYNOLDS. Secretary o Internal Affairs HENRY HOUCK. Stato Treasurer CHAS. F. WRIGHT. For Congress, C. C. PRATT. For State Senator, WINFRED D. LEWIS. COUNTY. Representative, H. C. JACKSON. Bishop Fallows says that hope is the best remedy for the blues. That recalls the fact that an Irishman said the best way to cure Insomnia Is to go to sleep and forget all about it. Louisville Courier-Journal. It is true that Marse HENRY sometimes goes to sleep, but not in slumbers that are produced by In somnia. Lillian Russell's new play is call ed "in Search of a Sinner." Going to open in Wilkes-Barre? Scranton Tribune-Republican. What's the matter this time? Some other Electric City young man gone wrong at the further end of the Laurel Line? RENNET OFF FOR MA1XE. One of the G. O. P. spellbinders in the Maine gubernatorial and Con' gresslonal campaign now nicely warming up in Portland and Bangor and Augusta will be the Hon. WIL LIAM STILES BENNET, affection ately known to his New York, Port Jervls and Wayne county intimates as "Bill" BENNET. He is slated to talk this week and next in the principal Pine Tree cities and then, by and by, he may go to the back counties to address the lumbermen of Androscoggin and the potato growers of old Aroostook and Fort Fairfield, away off there in the woods that go clean to the Canadian boundary. Of course, Maine will role up her habitual Republican majority of 23, 000 to 30,000 at least there can be no possibility of doubt as to that; but just the same it is alwayB a wise plan to send tried men of long and successful party influence to talk the party's beliefs in sections of the country where the enemy's lines are weakest and most insignificant. It does the people on the Down East coast and in the rural regions back from salt water a world of good to meet solid men from New York and Washington, and tho plain, honest citizens of methodical Maine will not hesitate to tell Mr. BENNET, precisely as they told Mr. BLAINE and Mr. REED, what their corner of the land needs in the way of na tional legislation. We know Mr. BENNET, a guber natorial possibility on tho other side of the Delaware, will be freshened and stimulated by the bracing breezes of tho Pine Tree coast and by tho sweet waitings of tho Pine Tree woods; and tho people of Maine will be benefited by his lucid and vigorous exposition of the issues of this Congressional campaign of 1910, which means a lot to Ponn sylvania as well as to Maine. IS NOT A BRYAN VICTORY. HOKE SMITH, who will bo the next governor of Georgia, having just administered an impressive primary whaling to Gov. LITTLE JOE BROWN, the deposed railroad com missioner who In 1908 downed Gov. HOKE by 14,000 and a littlo bit more, is a BRYAN man from tho top of his high Panama to the solo of his patont leather footings; but the SMITH victory in tho Peachtree stato should by no means bo counted as equivalent to a resumption of the Peerless Pleader's prestige In tho most intelligent state, of tho solid South. Tho anti-railroad agitation that elected SMITH tho first time was again very busy as primary day drew on; other local Issues, with possible statewide prohibition in tho background, assuredly had something to do with tho return of SMITH to the statehouse in Atlanta. Mr. BRYAN never was strong in Georgia; and no mentally vigorous southern Democrat savo Capt. GON ZALES of Columbia and Col. JOE DANIELS of Raleigh 1b green enough to believe tho thrice-belated knight of ! the Platto country could get a fourth nomination if he wanted it. Mr. BRYAN, though ho never tells it, Is as much n 16 to 1 advocato today as he was in that spellbinding 1896 campaign of his. He still believes there should be silver coins among the gold. The South sorao time since recovered from its free silver im becility of 14 years ago, and tho man who still Is a sllverlte at heart is as dead politically In the country below the Potomac and the Ohio as ho be came in his own Nebraska when a state convention that is a part of very recent political history told him to go to the rear and bo seated. The census olllco announces that Paterson's population, 105,000 In 1900. Is 125,000 now. How many out of that new 20,000 are Anar chists? We wrote something the other day obout the desirability of quality as well as quantity in the population of large, cosmopolitan cities and here is an illustration. If 1,000 out of Paterson's 20,000 new citizens arc men and women trained to troop under the red flag, it would have been much better If the Jer sey silk city, with her 100 mills and her abundant opportunities for the employment of skilful and order ly workmen, had rested at 75,000 in 1890 instead of climbing to 105,000 in 1900 and to 125,000 in 1910. There was sincere sorrow mani fested on every hand Tuesday when the sad news was broken in the borough that ORVILLE L. ROW LAND, an able lawyer and a genial companion, had crossed the river where there is no bridge. His call ing away was so sudden, so totally unexpected, that his friends and he had a world of them in Pike as well as in Wayne county simply cannot comprehend It. The men that knew him best will mourn for ORVILLE ROWLAND many days. He was accomplished, unostentatious, approachable and kind. Ho made his friends readily, without seeming effort, and his friends stuck by him. No man In the circle wherein he moved was more congenial to his associates, and on those who met him professionally and otherwise the loss occasioned by his untimely death is second only to that of the family bereaved. They know, as well as any men need to know, there was much to admire and to love in this man ROWLAND, and to them it is particularly distressing to see him cut down in his prime. 0. GINGERSNAPS. Optimism is sometimes due to a shortage of experience. Many a man has been stung by tho political bee in his bonnet. The worm usually turns after It is too late to make a get-away. The man who pays as he goes sel dom gets beyond the speed limit. A man seldom appreciates liberty until after he finds himself married or in Jail. The man who shaves himself might be perfectly happy if he could cut his own hair. Sometimes it is a man's cheek of brass that enables him to grasp a golden opportunity. We are glad wo don't know it all when we hear what people say about men who think they do. Many a man would enjoy being cast away on a desert Island. Then he would not have to call on his wife's relations. Yes, Equinunk is In tho limelight again. Tho row that has ended in a $20,000 suit for false arrest was precipitated there. Only Ave weeks to tho fair. Get out your high corn and your heavy pumpkins! Tho field stuff is going to bo in evidence this year. Wo noto with some Burprlso that "Mayor Gaynor has eaten a beef steak" and "Is doing well." Ho cer tainly is doing doggono well to have a beefsteak to eat In this year 1910 A. D. The love-sick swain who takes the matrimonial plunge on $12 a week these days Is about on a par with tho man whose, only preparation for a dive Into a 12-foot lake Is a cor respondence school courso in swim ming. A Now York maglstrato has de cided a man may take a second look at a pretty woman without being guilty of flirting. Life has its com pensations, after all even In tho torrid metropolis! On tho other hand, did you ever! hear of a man marrying a woman to reform her? After planning your Christmas shopping Just figure on how sanely you aro going to spend tho next Fourth. Time is time, in Wayno county ns elsewhere on this terres trial hall. It Is a good thing tho Now Jersey clerk who holds that in order to be qualified to take out a marriage li cense a man must bo sober didn't stipulate also that he must bo in his right senses. Texas had snow this week, but the white Texas this time was the Texas away down between Oklahoma and tho Rio Grande and not tho Texas that thinks according to some of her prominent Democratic citizens that Honestlnlo ought to be hitch ed on as the tail of tho Texas kite. Boston's Mayor, "Honey Fltz," will run for governor of Massa chusetts in November, but neither sweet manners nor sweet nickname can bo expected to overcomo the normal Republican majority of 75, 0000 in tho Bay stato and put "Honey Fltz," whoso real name is John F. Fitzgerald, in the executive chair on Beacon hill. It seems doubtful if Virginia's new nnti-cusslng law will be any more effective than tho antl-klssing move ment in some quarters of this coun try. The Virginia summer and the Virginia fall, even in an off year for politics, are enough to make the safest and sanest citizen blaspheme with tho best of 'em; and as for the other thing well, brother, It's just a waste of wind and Ink to try to make human nature go back on itself by putting laws on tho statute hooks! MM I KEYSTONE PRESS Some of the work which "speaks for itself" stutters terribly. Oil City Blizzard. A well-read man is one who knows almost as much about the subject as we do. Williamsport Sun. The drouth has not yet affected the quantity or price of booze in this vicinity. New Castle News. It Is mighty hard to forgive oth ers for being more successful than ourselves, but some of us can do It, all right. Punxsutawney Spirit The harmony program of the ad ministration may have the desired results. President Taft and former President Roosevelt are working along lines that will doubtless pro duce good results so far as "party peace Is concerned. Bradford Era. If you would fill your measure fiom tho well of happiness you must carry more there than you take away. Happiness Is the return from an investment, the interest which accrues from honest, patient and earnest living. No man can leave sorrowful faces along the trail and carry away happiness for himself. There are no deadheads; every man has a ticket, and pays for it. Titusville Herald. Tho striking feature of tho flight from Paris to a point near London by John B. Molssant, the latest claimant of aerial honors, is the way in which he has maintained a definite flying schedule. Prior to his depart ure from the French capital ho mapped out a course much as a sea captain would chart a voyage. Then, with compass between his knees, be proceeded to steer through the air lanes and over cities, towns, cliffs, valleys and waters entirely un known to him. Ho alighted at or near places which he selected in ad vance; he flew at a speed of his own choosing. Philadelphia Bulletin. t t RIGHT OFF THE BAT. I do not get much timo now to sing and play dominoes. It takes mo most of my timo to push tho fair, and it's going to bo a dandy, bellovo mo. Emerson W. Gammell. I still believe it would bo desir ablo to annex tho borough to Texas and suggest that Jan. 1 bo the time appointed for Greater Texas to be gin buslnesB. What does tho Great or Honesdalo Board of Trade say to that? William A. Sluman. I told Mr. Cody, when ho asked mo to writo up tho poultry meeting at Hawley, that ho would cortainly catch It if I did tho story, but ho said ho didn't mind that In tho least. Ho said a roast on him would bo a big ndvertlsomeut for tho poultry Bhow at tho fair In October. Ho seemed to realize that overy knoclc Is a boost nowdays. I wroto him up, gooso and all, and I have yet to hear that tho reverend gentleman got soro over what I said about him. Joseph Stephens, White Mills. When I went to Hawley tho other day to seo about tho poultry farms I got Interested and waltod up to tho last minuto before going to tho hotel for supper. Thon 1 was lato getting through. Tho rest of tho boys Joe Welch and Stocker and Lord went . to the station ahead of mo and waltod for tho train on tho platform outside. They passed the time away making fun of me. "Whero'a Cody?" one of them said, and the answer was, "Why, Cody la over eating." By that, of course, ho meant that I was over at tho hotel eating. Ho simply got his words transposed. The, Idea of a country parson over-eating! Preposterous! Rev. J. B. Cody, Bethany, When I was a lawyer In Wood county, Ohio, I met some interesting men. There was W. F. Duncan, Judge of the common pleas court in Han cock, tho next county to Wood and tho man who reversed Judge Banker of the probate court after Banker had lined tho Standard Oil ?5,000 for illegal methods in Hancock. I also knew Judge Scroth of Tiffin, over in Seneca county, tho littlo man with tho tuft of whiskers on his chin who Is known and liked all over north western Ohio. But tho brightest one In tho lot was Tyler, a criminal lawyer, who once was hired to de fend tho scapegrace brother of a well-to-do merchant and keep him from going to the Columbus pen If possible. Tyler cleared his man, but the $500 promised by tho broth-1 er In business wasn't forthcoming. Tyler rendered bills, but they were Ignored. At last he got tired of waiting. Selecting a day when he knew the brother of his client would have a storeful of customers, he walked In, strode up to the counter where tho proprietor was handing a bundle to one of his best custom ers, and shouted: "Did you employ mo to dofend your brother and keep him out of state's prison?" "I certainly did," meekly an swered the frightened man on the other side of the counter. "Did you, or did you not, agree to pay me ?500 mind you, sir, $500 to keep your brother out of state's prison?" "Yes, I did," was the desperate answer. "And did I succeed, sir, in keeping that rascal out of the pen, where ho belonged?" "You did," said Tyler's Inter locutor, now thoroughly humbled and eager for a settlement on most any basis. "That's what you did, Mr. Tyler." "And did you pay me, sir? Did you give me that $500 you agreed to give me for keeping your rascally relative out of state's prison, tho place where he belonged, sir?" "I don't," began the proprietor. "Can you give me a check today, sir a check for $500, to pay me for keeping your " "Here's your money," fairly shouted the agonized man behind the counter. "I'm making you a check. (He was getting out the book and the pen.) I'll pay you now. I'll give you $500. I'll " Before he finished, Tyler had the check and was off, and tho proprie tor and his customers breathed a long sigh of relief. Herman Harmes, Hawley. FOR SEPTEMBER. Now softened suns a mellow litBter shed, The laden orchards glow with tempt ing red; On hazel boughs tho clusters hang embrowned, And with tho hunting horn the, fields resound. Old September Poem, Well, wo should say so, and tho mellow horn of Mr. Morgan will awake the morn, bidding us garner for the bins and cribs in which we labor for his royal nibs. Tho sum mer ended and tho blower on, the respite over and tho money gone, and Rockefeller as wo drill along, bow ing and hoping wo aro well and strong. Tho seaside sojourner will quit the shore, and tho summer girl will lino up three or four conquests in puppy love she has around, and chooso tho one that is to go undrowned. Tho which selection from tho litter born of summer madness sho will then suborn with things sufficient to un lock Its eyes, and hurry homeward with tho gasping prize. Tho busted tourist will return from Franco with hotel stickers stuck up on his pants, and tarred and postal carded by his friends, will reap the penalty of what ho sends. They'll waltz him up and down upon a rail, and alternately turn him head and tall, or howsoever they may best en Joy tho views in Venico or tho sito of Troy. Tho festive calf will blithely sniff and snort and deftly tip up where the hair is short, and in tho quiet oven afterglow tho quail will pipe his dulcet piccolo. Tho bold insurgent will insurgo tho moro, and All the planet with his dreadful year, and each ono betting ho will not bo last, the autumn candidates will gallop past. Tho now progressive and tho Dem ocrat, tho unlnsurglng that aro stand ing pat, and In tho midst of them, unfaint of heart, our Mr. Bryan on tho water cart. A mazo of Issues, and a mass of men, and lo, a gallus busting now and then, and not es pecially alarmed by It, the trusts de sisting till tho swarm has lit. The man from Elba trying to como back, And tho poor consumer In his cul-de-sac Unknowing If tho quaking earth por tends Death or tho near approach, perhaps, of friends. But howsoevor and be It as may, tho dread mosquito will have had Its day, and Joining Satan in Its spectral growth, have made It real holl there for them both. Tho while tho earth ly remnant of it swings upon tho win dow screen, and drying clings to that post which, though wanting mortal fire, It still holds with Its faco against tho wire. The sad first day of school will como to pass, And tho barefoot boy will hldo out In the grass, And by tho tlmo we've caught these malcontents, The Crlppen chase will look like thir ty cents. Milady Fashion in her hobble skirt will stride the pavement with tho men alert to Bet her right sldo up again In caso sho should in time turn turtle any place. It does beat thunder what the women wear, and how they stick on other people's hair, constrict their middles and constrain their toes and what importance they attach to clothes! But bless us, aro they after all to blamo, or had they been In these things quite the same If Mother Evo's first thought, as wo suppose, had not been necessarily of clothes? Was it to be expected In her case that with a man somewhere upon tho place she ever thought of anything at all but gowns, slippers, or perhaps a shawl? But anyhow, tho crawfish will have holed, And tho pumpkin shown tho faintest trace of gold. The sassafras will don a redder dress, And the gods will crowd around the cider press. Or prohibition or whatever will, here Is a fountain that shall serve us still, a place of resting and a steal away out of the desert and the heat of day. A place of quiet and the shade of palms, of irrigation and the soothing balms that no reformer till the poles embrace shall ever capture for a bathing place. The hosts of labor will parade tho street, which will remind us of a happy feat in arbitration from the olden days when Julius Caesar was a sort of craze. It is related of that ancient time that sweet September In the Roman cllmo was hot as blazes, and the union file could only march about a half a mile. It wasn't anything at all, they Bay, to watch the mighty pageant get away, the music playing and the flags displayed, and see It suddenly duck for the shade. The gasping drummer with his sounding drum, the bronzed mechanics who perhaps had come a dozen squares, and in the frantic rout, age and apprentice with (ts ton gue stuck out. The faint Impression the procession made on Roman capital for long dis mayed the union leaders, when the serried ranks at times not even pass ed the Roman banks. And so It was HOW'S THIS? We offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, tho undersigned, havo known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and fi nancially able to carry out any ob ligations made by his firm. Waldlng, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken iti ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggsts. Tako Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. The good style, fine ing make this suit a model that will be eagerly chosen by the woman who appreciates correct attire. As this suit has the Wooltex label, you maybe certain that it will give you long time service and look well as long as worn. For those who wish other models, we have a large number of styles. Let us show them to you. KATZ BROS. 9 Inc. The store that sells Wooltex. when mighty Caesar came, and hav ing found tho populace aflamo, ho shoved September from tho seventh place along to ninth, which has re mained tho case. Ho merely Inter changed It with July, but when ho asked them how was that for high, thoy fairly inundated him with smiles, and have slnco been doing about twenty miles. Tho autumn equinox will como around, And Roosevelt, by that tlmo eastward bound, Will aid It In the making of such storms As they may find necessary to a few reforms. And then the sun will turn still Bofter yet, And tho bold October, having duly set His planes, and carefully put on his brake, Will see what sort of landing ho can make. Let wonderful WASHWAX do your family washing; savc3 rubbing and saves the clothes; makes them clean, sweet and snowy white. WASHWAX is a now scientific com pound that washes in hot or cold water without tho use of soap. It is entirely harmless and different from anything you havo ever used. Send ten cents stamps today for reg ular size by mall. You will bo glad you tried It. Agents wanted to in troduce WASHWAX everywhere. Address Washwax Co., St. Louis, Mo. Otto Heumann and Miss Elsie Heumann have been at Shohola, tho former home of the family, this week. Mrs. John Lake of Sherman, Wayne county, is visiting Mrs. Theron Loomls of Lincoln avenue. Carbondale Leader. Food Fermenting Causes Indigestion "I got a box of Ml-o-na tablets for a distress In my stomach, and the first dose relieved me, and after I took tho fourth I have not felt any more of It. I think It Is a wonder ful medicine." Hiram Shultz, Wat seka, 111., July 27, 09. If your stomach Is out of order or distressed, no matter from what cause, Ml-o-na stomach tablets will give instant relief, and If taken reg ularly, will cure indigestion, acuta or chronic, or money back. Every sufferer from stomach trouble, gas, belching, sour stomach, nervousness, dizziness, and bilious ness, should get a fifty cent box of Mi-o-na stomach tablets to-day and start a treatment. In three days' time the stomach and bowels will be thoroughly puri fied and sour stomach and distress will vanish. Continue the treatment for two weeks and the stomach will become so strong that It will be able to di gest the heartiest meal without dis tress. Sold by druggists everywhere and by G. W. Peil. Booth's Pills best for constipa tion, 25c. TORONTO AND RETURN AUG. 31, 1910 70 ALL RAIL SO SK RAIL and 3,00 STEAMER RETURN LIMIT SEP., 7 Ask Ticket Agent For Details. CORRECT STYLE AND FINE TAILORING IS SHOWN IN THIS MODEL. This Business Woman's Suit is the Smart, Trim, Practical Model that women of good taste choose for gener al all-around wear. fabrics and exquisite tailor