Till: CITIZUX, FIIIDAV, OCTOIUMt 7, 1010, THE CITIZEN rURUBHKt) EVERY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY BY THE CITIZEN rUHUBIIINO COMrANY. Entered as secoiui-clnss mnttcr. nt the post olllce. llonesdnlc, I'n. 8UBSCIIIPTION 11.50 K. B. HAHDKN15KHOH. - - PRESIDENT W. W. WOOD. MANAGER AND SKC'Y IllnECTORS: C. D. DOnFI.INOER. M. D. AI.IXN. BKNRY WILSON. K. . II AHDENREROIt. V, W. WOOD. ritlDAV, OCT. 7, 1IHO. UKPUIililCAX T1CKI2T. I''or Governor JOHN K. TENER. For Lieutenant Governor JOHN M. REYNOLDS. Secretary of Internal Affairs HENRY HOUCK. State Treasurer CHAS. P. WRIGHT. For Congress, C. C. PRATT. For State Senator, WINFRED D. LEWIS. COUNTY. Representative, H. C. JACKSON. In our Inst edition n statement regnrdhiK our Into editor, HIlHnrd Itrucc, was misleading. It should have rend "Mr. llruco tilled the edi torial clmlr of The Citizen since last June" instead of Inst issue. Lower wages for labor means lower prices for all farm products brought about by less purchasing power on the part of labor, and thereby less consumption. See? All cogs In the wheel are Interdependent on each other. The cost of living may be going up but the cost of printing the bal lots is going down. The Herald se cured the contract this year at $67.50. Congratulations, neighbor! Tho commissioners had to pay $250 per election for ballots a few years ago. THE FAIOIKHS FOR TEXER. The most satisfactory political meetings Representative Tener Is at tending on his tour of the state are those at which his audiences are composed largely of farmers. Mr. Tener has delivered several addres ses at county fairs and at other gatherings patronized by farmers and dnirymen. These meetings have .been notable for Republican enthu slasm. The Pennsylvania farmer understands perfectly the issues of tho campaign, and, therefore, is en tlrely unresponsive to the blandish ments of the demagogue. This year, as usual, an overwhelming majority of the rural voters will support the Republican party. That party in Pennsylvania and In the nation In variably has responded to the de mand of the farmer for legislation that will advance his welfare. This will be a big year for the Pennsylvania farmer. He is assured of fine crops and good prices. The industrial supremacy of tho Key stone State and Its tremendous min ing interests overshadow its agri cultural importance. Many Pennsyl vanlans do not realize that this Is one of the largest wheat-growing states. This year, according to the estimates, tho wheat crop of Penn sylvania will amount to thirty mil lions of bushels. This production will be exceeded only by the five great wheat-growing states of the northwest. In this state are 225, 000 farms and many farmers do not raise wheat. Only two or three states exceed Pennsylvania In the value of Its dairy products. The duty of the Pennsylvania farmer this year is perfectly clear. Ho should talk for the Republican ticket until November 8th and then vote for It. In the revision of the tariff the farmers demanded protec tive duties on agricultural products and got them from the Republican party. No other American producer was so well cared for In the revision of tho tariff. Naturally, tho farm ers of Pennsylvania are grateful for what has been done for them by tho Republican party, and they aro anxi ous to give expression to their ap preciation. They can do this in an emphatic manner by Joining tho Re publican hosts who will record an unprecedented majority for tho Re publican ticket. Mr. Toner's candidacy has proven very popular among the Pennsylyanln farmers. His homo Is In a rural county and ho understands thorough ly the requirements of residents of rural districts Ho Is an earnest advocate of tho general extension of the good roads system and other pro jects with which the farmer Is direct ly concorned. In tho majority for tho Republican ticket every farmer In Pennsylvania should bo included. Menner & Co. etoro aro now show ing tho new lino In carpets, house furnishings, rugs, porters, curtains and wall hangings. 74eoi4 Tho State troopers did work at tho fair this year. good SUCCKSS. Thore Is but one way out of pov-1 crty for tho generality of mankind,, nnd Hint Is downright hard work, economy and solf-donlal. Young man, draw your coat, roll up your sleoves nnd wade in. This evcr lnBtlngly waiting for something to turn up waiting to stop Into doad men's shoes, will termlnato your career as a mero groveling, depend ent, subsisting nnd only existing and lllllng space without a real or single purposo in life. Wake up! Stir around and scud tho life blood coursing through your veins, nold up your head, clean your face, put on a smile, nnd cast that woebegone look Into tho rubbish by the way side, where It belongs.' Move for ward, clear tho track, and the grandest opportunities of life will open up, which you want to seize with a tenacious grip, nnd they will unfold to you all tho hidden treas ures you ever Imagined or conceived. oung man. this is no imaginative. drawing, a delusive sketch, a fant asy, and if you possess enough grit and stamina you can make It a pic ture true to life; thousands have done It, and you have nn equal foot ing today. Few rich men owe their possessions to accident; few great men owe their distinction to luck and chance. Thus far greater number have won by perseverance, push and pluck, diligence in business, spend ing less their earnings, surmount ing obstacles, overcoming dlfllcul ties, with a will Invincible. WOItKIXGMEX THAT ARE XOT ItEIXG ROIIItKI). If, as Is claimed by Free-Traders and Insurgents, American labor Is being "robbed by the Tariff-fed trusts," how does It happen that the enormous sum of $275,000,000 a year Is being sent out of the coun try by Immigrants to the United States who save their earnings and return them to the European coun tries from which they come either for the purchase of land, the assist ance of parents or friends, or the payment of expenses of emigration of those who desire to come to this country? If the wage-earners of the United States are being so oppressed and ground down by monopolies which owe to the tariff their exist ence and their power to extort, where does this $275,000,000 a year come from? Yet that is the sum which, according to the official report of the United States Immigration Com mission, annually goes to Europe from this country, sent there by for eign born wage-earners. The report shows the amounts sent abroad In the fiscal year 1907 a normal year because not affected by the panic which, occurred In October were as follows: Country . Amount. Italy $85,000,000 Austria-Hungary 75,000,000 Russia (including Fin land) 25,000,000 Great Britain 25,000,000 Norway, Sweden and Denmark 25,000,000 Germany 15,000,000 Greece 5,00,000 Balkan States 5,000,000 Japan 5,000,000 China 5,000,000 Other countries 5,000,000 Total $275,000,000 This is an estimate of the amount of money sent home by Immigrants nnd consequently does not take Into account the large sums carried by returning Immigrants. It is meant to cover conservatively only remlt ances made through the postofflce by International money orders; through Immigrant banks; by money orders of large metropolitan bank ing houses and express companies or by drafts direct on foreign banks; through foreign banks directly by means of general agencies in this country; and through American banking houses with foreign Uepart ments or other mediums of selling exchange directly to the Immigrant. The considerable sums sent through consular offices, charitable and other associations, except where included in one of the above groups, are not taken into account, nor are the com paratively small amounts sent in currency through the malls. The full amount of American mon ey which goes away and stays away every year in the shape of small re mittances by American wage-earners and of sums carried abroad by re turning immigrants probably is not less than $300,000,000. That this huge sum Is earned and saved by the foreign element among our workers proves conclusively that the worklngmen cannot be "robbed by tho Tariff-fed trusts " Exactly the same conclusion Is forced by the con stantly swelling deposits In savings banks, which are Increasing at the rate of more than $100,000,000 a year. All these workers aro not be ing robbed. It Is not possible. On tho contrary, the tariff increases their employment and wages. INSURGENCY DUE TO SELFISH NESS. The Democratic papers are hav ing much to say about Insurgency. Insurgency is as proline a topic as wo have In tho whole scope of poll tics and a few sidelights nlong that lino aro likely to bo Interesting. Take Kansas Insurgency when It came down to tno eastern ena oi Kansas and reached tho district of Hon. Phillip P. Campbell, which is located In tho Kansas portion of tho Joplln zinc region, Insurgency came to a sudden and effective halt, it so happened that the good people of tho Ninth Virginia congressional dis trict got In tho Payne law ,tho Pro tection thnt they needed for tholr zinc. Tho good people of tho Third Kansas district "know which sldo of their bread was buttered," and we heard ot no Insurglng against Con gressman Campbell. Take Texas for lnstanco. Most of tho Texas delegation, all Dem crnts, came In and assured tho Ways and Means Committee that they could tako tho tariff off of every thing except hides. Thoro was ono exception In that galaxy, and ho was Hon. Oscar William Gillespie, of tho Twelfth Texas district. Ho wanted freo hides, and lifted up his volco on behalf of freo hides. Tho good poo pie of Mr. Gillespie's district, it happened, raised cattle and lots of cattle. They also knew which aide of their bread was buttered and therefore they Insurged, and tholr Insurgency was against tho Hon. Oscar W. Gillespie, who endeavored to betray tholr interests Result In the prlmnry Mr. Olllcsplo wns overwhelmingly defeated for ro uomlnntlon. About two sides to this question of insurgency. Tnko Iowa. Senntor Dolllvor noted Insurgent. In the mnklug of tho tariff, howover, Senntor Dolllvor know which side of his bread wns buttered, and thorcforo strove for, and eventually gained Increased protection on barley. Iowa Is a barley producing state. Senator Dol liver wns obviously n Uttlo more politic than Congressman GIUcsplo. Take Wisconsin. Senator LaFol lette big Insurgent. In the mak ing of tho tariff, howover, when pulp wood and paper manufacturers wore under consideration, Senator LaFol lette was there fighting for more Protection Senntor LaFolletto knew which side of his bread was butter ed. They produce pulp wood and hnvo paper mills In Wisconsin. Senator Beverldgo of Indiana leading Insurgent In his speeches ho declared In effect: "I want Pro tection on nil the manufactures of Indiana. On other things let the tariff ho reduced." A very gener ous attitude on the part of Senntor Beverldgo, maybe. There are other phases of Insur gency Tennessee, for example. Ap parently there Is Insurgency In that state that counts for something. It Is Democratic Insurgency. They aro fighting against something that they will not Btand for, something they want changed. Another Instance, Is Maine. In that state they have had prohibition, and some of the provisions of the Sturgls law, which put Maine in the grip of prohibition, proved very irk some to the people; whence the ma Jority of them changed their minds and decided that they wanted local option Instead. Therefore they In surged. The Democrats of Maine es poused the local option side of the question and nominated their candi dates accordingly; whence the peo ple turned In and elected them. The people were insurglng against the objectionable phases of prohibition for which the Republican party con tinued to stand and they made their wishes known by electing a Demo cratic governor and legislature. Take California They are In surging there, and have been for years, against the Ironclad grip with which the Southern Pacific has held the state for several decades. This situation In California is nothing new. Men who have kept in touch . with the progress of events remember well the hard fight of the Insurgency that was waged In California a few ears ago, but which failed at the time, and Governor Glllett was nom inated. The only difference is that it was not called Insurgency at that time. The Insurgents of California were fighting the power of the South ern Pacific Railroad company. Take Virginia. There have been mutterings of Insurgency against the Democratic machine for years, but as in tho case of California up to this year, the Virginia Insurgency nas gained no measure ot success. Now the good people of the second district are up in arms. The Demo crats of Norfolk and Portsmouth are flaying the state machine for all they are worth. Just how far the movement will spread remains to be seen. It ought to, and probably will under the Impetus of the present general wave of Insurgency make strong headway all over the state. As to the Ninth district. The Democratic papers and orators have been ardently hoping for some In surgency there. But not so. The good people of tho Ninth district are as fully alive to their Interests as are the people of the Third Kan sas district, represented by Mr Camp bell, and the good people of the Twelfth Texas district, which will no more be represented by Gillespie. The Ninth district knows fully as well "which side of its bread is buttered" as do those two districts, or as did Senator Dolllver In fight ing for more Protection on barley. or, as uiu Senator LaFolletto in lighting for more Protection on wood pulp and paper manufacturers, or, as did Senator Beverldge In fighting for Protection on the manufactur ers of Indiana. THE STEEPLE JACK. Must Conquer Many Difficulties' in Ills Dangerous Work. The successful steeple Jack must possess determination, perseverance and Ingenuity. He must solve many a practical problem In hoisting great bodies aloft. He must know how to fasten a hook over tho summit of a skyscrapping chimney. Ho must liavo tho nerve to paint a steeplo that sways like a pendulum at the slender top. He must be able to tear down, build up, gild, paint, place electric wires and do many another task that would be difficult enough on tho solid earth. There aro many ways of getting up on a steeple, and when all others fall tho man will tio a rope arounu It and then, with a coll on his back, walk round and round It uutll the ontlro steeplo Is covered with rope, and In such case ho has probably been round it fully 300 times. But a steeple Is not tho most dim cult height to climb. Straight, tall chimneys aro the hardest ot all. Thoro a man has to work with iriight and main to lift himself Inch by Inch from the ground to tho top Sometimes the ton Is 300 feet high When It Is reached a ,hook Is placed over tho edge, a pulley is made fast. the swinging ehalr Is hauled up and work begins. . 'When tho chair Is near tho top It is easier to work, because the ropes aro short, but when they lengthen as the ground is approach cd thero is a tendency to swing, and tho wind gives Impetus. Tho steeplo Jack's safety depends unon tho hook, and until ho has raised himself almost to tho top it Is impossible for him to sco whether or not tho hook has been properly adjusted. Moro than onco a steeple cltnibor has seen when within ten feet of tho top that corrosion of tho Iron and tho collection ot soot have bo thickened tho wall that the hook Is merely balancing on tho top, so that tho slightest pull In the wrong direction would drag it on. Again tho bricks aro often loose at tho top, and the hook Is- likely to tear thorn away. Ono of tho nnturnl difficulties to conquer is the swaying of all high steeplos and chimneys. In a gale !! 10, " Lw ' , n half. Usually It sways from sev en to nine Inches. Painting it means reaching for a spot on tho right side, and finding It on tho left, und, when making a dive for It on tho left, to see It swny back to the right. Yet In spite of tho constant danger a born steeple Jack exults In his work and Is nt home, like tho Iron worker on the skyscraper, only when high above the world. Ho can stand triumphantly nt any height, if ho can have two and one-half square Inches to bear his weight. Har per's Weekly. DAY K 1 t A XX K V M I5X 1)1311 OF JIHX. In Human Life for October Max Marcou tells the strange story of how Dave Ranney, who Is winning the outcasts of tho Bowery back to mnnhood, was led to become a prac tical saver of souls. The article opens with this strik ing picture o the Bowery: "Light noise blatant, dissolute abandon, laughs without mirth, tears without hope, the primal brute in the raw, a never-ending blograph of vice, pain and shame rioting In hectic confu sion! Such Is tho Bowery, that strange apotheosis of the underworld running through tho center of New York's lower East Side. From Tex as to Georgia, from California to Canada, It Is the mecca nnd ultimate dream of the tramp and the 'down and outer.' There, beneath tho rum ble of the elevated overhead, the pan handler and the weakling, the crim inal and the prostitute, the 'con' man and the 'white Blaver' Jostle one an other on the pavement. Jammed side by side are gambling houses and cheap tawdry shops to tempt the idle. Everywhere always, sham! Pawn-shops where 'no questions are asked' wait grimly beside the glitter ing line of the dance-hall, Mio 'dive and the saloon. And at the same time, in the thick of all, flourishes Dave Ranney, saver of souls men der of men." SAMPLE LIES. Democratic and Insurgent news papers have been passing around very generally the following: The American Magazine com pares prices In Detroit, U. S., and Windsor, Canada. These two towns are separated by a half mile of river. The same hat that costs $5 In Detroit can be bought for $3 in Windsor, and a suit of clothes that sells for $25 In De troit can be bought for $15 In Windsor. Both hat and suit are made in the United States and the laborer gets the same wage for making each. The Tariff enables the manu facturer to rob the consumer In Detroit, while In Windsor he has to sell In competition with the world and the consumer does not have to pay a royaty to million aire trust magnates. This Is a fair sample of the lies which aro spoken and printed by Insurgent orators and muckraking newspapers and magazines. They do not undertake to tell tho truth, but deal wholly In falsehood and misrepresentation. The hat that costs $5 in Detroit cannot be bought for less than $5 any place In the world. It Is one of the high-class makes which are sold to retailers upon hard and fast contracts bind ing them under no circumstances to sell at less than $5. Therefore it is folly to suppose that these $5 hats, which leave the American fac tory at $30 per dozen, are being sold n Windsor at $3. In addition to tho factory price of $3 each the Canadian hatter must pay 35 per cent, duty on hats imported from tho United States. Another reason why the statement is a He. There are plenty of hnts to be bought for S3 or less in the United States, but they aro not the $5 kind. Equally false Is the statement that suit of clothes that sells for $25 n Detroit can bo bought for $15 In Windsor. The fact Is that clothing of the same quality and stylo can not be bought much, If any, cheap er in Canada than in the United States, certainly not If it is Import ed from tho United States. As a matter of fact, clothing In this country was never cheaper than now. Tiie New YorK uauy Traae Record of September 5, 1910, says: Substantial worsted suits that heretofore wore never sold below $15 to $18 aro now being put on tho market at from $12 to $15, showing substantial decreaso In price. 9100 REWARD, 5100. Tho readers of this paper will bo pleased to learn that thero is at least one dreaded dlseaso that science has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only posi tive euro now known to tho medi cal fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dlseaso,- requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up tho const! tutlon and assisting nature In doing Its work. Tho proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer Ono Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list ot testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Tako Hall's Family Pills for con stlpatlon. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough' Bears the Signature AL'TUMX ARBOR DAY. Tho observance of Arbor Dny has created a patriotic lnterost In tho kVconvM I)ortnnce of rovonting and stopplnj forct Hres, of the neel of re-forest' planting nnd preservation of trees. Ing the vast mountain arena from which tho timber has been cut, and of tho necessity of conserving tho for ests nt the sources of our streams thereby to regulate tho How of water and to lessen tho floods nnd freshots which rob tho land of Its soil and fortuity. Moreover It Is now gonorally ad mitted that Arbor Day should bo ob served when all tho country schools are In session. For this reason Fri day, October 28, 1910, Is designated as Autumn Arbor Day, and all tho schools, both public and private, are hereby urged to observe tho day by suitable exercises, especially by the planting of trees. Let us all plant trees and nsk others to plant trees. Let us plant trees for fruit, for shade. for beauty and for tho sake of tho many Industries In which wood Is used. Let us plant trees for tho sake of ourselves and our posterity, for the sake of the nation and of humanity. NATHAN C. SCHAEFFER, State Sunt, of Public Instruction. The nobby suits at Menner & Co. stores aro the new models for autumn and winter. 74eol4. Tho long coats for Ladles, Juniors nnd Misses at Menner & Co.'s store. All lntest makes. Two Tablets and ! Stomach Misery Gone G. W. Pell sells and guarantees the best prescription the world has ever known for disturbed and upset stomach, gas, belching, heaviness, heartburn, acid stomach and bili ousness. It Is called MI-O-NA, remember the name, and it banishes distress from over eating or fermentation of food In flvo minutes. It Is guaranteed by G. W. Pell to cure Indigestion, sick headache, nerv ousness and dizziness, or money back. No matter how long you have sufi fered you will find a certain cure In MI-O-NA stomach tablets. 'About six weeks ago I purchas ed a box of MI-O-NA tablets for an aggravated form of stomach trouble. I had been troubled for four or five years, had tried different physlclnns nnd a great many patent remedies, but of no use, until I used MI-O-NA. They entirely relieved me from pain and I can now eat most any kind of food and relish It." A. J. Fish, West Carthage, N. Y. MI-O-NA stomach tablets are only 50 cents a large box at G. W. Pell and druggists everywhere. Get a trial treatment free, by writing Ml-o-na, Buffalo, N. Y. 'Come Back' Sale Having closed up our branch store at Delhi. N. our stock at HALF PRICE AT OUR POPULAR STAND TTTTTTTtTTTTTTTtTTTTTtTTTT Full line of Men's, Gents' and Children's cloth ing and Gents' Furnishings must go to make room for our large fall stock. Bregstein Bros., Honesdale, Pa. ESTABLISHED 180 THE OLDEST BANK IN WAYNE COUNTY THE HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL, SURPLUS TOTAL ASSETS WE ARE AFTER YOU ! You have moro 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 ? t OUR SAVINGS 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 bejpald from the first of nny month on all deposits made on or before the 10th of tho month provided such deposit remain three calendar months or.longer. HENRY 25. RUSSELL. PRESIDENT. ANDREW THOMPSON VICE PRESIDENT. iiiiiinnmiiiittiiiiiH The Miracle Play. Passion Play Is a dratnnttc repre sentation of tho chlof events In tho passion of Christ, performed overy tenth year by tho Inhabitants of tho village of Oboramergnu, Bavarln, in nccordanco with n vow mado by them In 1C33 to express their gratltudo at tho cessation of tho plague. This vow has been religiously kept, with fow Interruptions, over since. Tho play depicts tho ovents recorded In tho Gospels, nnd Is Interspersed with tableaux from tho Old Testament and ohoral odes. It occupies about soven hours and a hnlf In its representation, onltsts tho services of 500 persona nnd Is performed In an open-air tho ntro accommodating C.000. Tho Pas sion Play is probably the only "mira cle play" or "mystery" in existence, and attracts great numbers of tour ists, as well as peasants, from all parts of tho Tyrol and Bavaria. Tho last performance took place In 1900. ooocoooooooooooooooooooooo Are You PLANNING for To-morrow No man ever accumulates a fortune unless he has the hab it of making sacrifices today in order that he may have some thing to work with to-morrow. The small amount that you are able to eave every week may appear very small, but in time systematic saving, with the aid of 3 per cent, compound interest, will give you some substantial capital as a basis for investment or to live on when you can no longer work and earn. HOHESDALE DIME BANK is yet young but it has helped many ambitions persons on the ..! :,i,i., n.wi .,., g cess. CK5OOO0OOO0OOOCXXXXXXXXJOO0O Y. we will close Leading Clothiers, $ 150,000.00 241,711.00 1,902,000.00 DEPARTMENT t EDWIN F. TORRKY CABIIIER. ALBERT C. LINDSAY ASSISTANT CABIIIE8 nt'H t