THE CITIZEN, FIUbAY, OCTOHEIt 7, 1010. TEDDY FOLLOWED LEAD OF PENROSE New York Platform Ilia Same as Pennsylvania's, ON ALL NATIONAL ISSUES Republicans of Two Great States to Battle Under the Banner of Taft and a United Party. Pennsylvania salutes Now York and congratulates the Emplro State- for fol lowing tho lead of tho old Koystono commonwealth. Under the leadership of Colonel Itoosovelt tho Republican convention recently hold at Saratoga followed al most literally the planks of the plat form bearing upon national issues adopted by tho Republican state con vention at Harrisburg, with Doles Pen rose as the leading spirit in the party organization. In their declarations of fealty to tho time honored principlos of the Repub lican party, their commendations of the splendid and remarkable work of the Tuft administration, and the plac ing upon record of tho progressive legislation of the present Republican congress, and especially their praise of the new tariff act, as not only fram ed to protect American capital and labor, but to Insure largely Increased returns for tho support of tho federal government. Now York Republicans, with Roosevelt dominating their con vention, were no more earnest nor em phatlc than were the Republicans of this stato, who woeks before had worked in accord under tho leadership of Penrose. Two Conventions Contrasted. The Pennsylvania convention was tho most harmonious ever held in the history of the stato; thoro was not a dissenting voice to any plank In tho platform either in committee or on the floor of the convention, and an un precedented feature was the fact that not an opposing candidate was placed In nomination and not a vote was cast against any one of the men nominated on the state ticket. "While the New York gathering was most spectacular and sensational, Toddy finally had his way, and his way as far as the platform was concerned, at least, was "the Pennsylvania way." Roosevelt and Penrose have been fast friends from the time of their col lege days. No president could have troated Penrose in the matter of per sonal consideration and patronage bet ter than did Roosovelt. That under their direction Republicans of these neighboring states will work in unison to promote the general cause of Re publicanism may bo takon for granted. In close congressional districts along tho border line, tho Republican com mittees of both states will work to gether to defeat the common enemy, the Democratic party. Roosevelt Appreciates Pennsylvania. Roosovelt within a few weeks, in his speech in Pittsburg, gave evidence of this appreciation of the work of tho Republican party In Pennsylvania, when he was unstinted in bis praise of tho school laws, tho liberal appro priations to public schools and to char Hies, the legislation to protect tho lives of employes, for tho conservation of the forests and tho water ways and tho other meritorious laws upon tho statute books. It has been a matter of comment that the ono issue for which Roosevelt fought hardest in the New York con vention, that of direct primaries, has already been met under the Penrose leadership, and along with the uniform primaries, Pennsylvania has tho cor rupt proctlces act and the personal registration law, which were passed by Republican legislators and signed by a Republican governor. President Taft is showing a keen in tcrest In the success of tho Republl can party in every stato in the Union, and his Bpeoch at tho dinner of the National Republican League In New York attests the concern ho has for the election of every Republican noml neo for congress. Penrose Confers With Taft. Senator Penrose had a coudIb of ner sonal Interviews with President Tnft In Washington laBt woek, following his official conferences with him and PoBt master General Hitchcock regarding the establishment of postal savinKS banks. As chairman of tho commltteo on postofllces and post roads, Senator Penrose has given tho subject of pos tal banks much study and ho savs he la pleased with tho progress being mado by tho postal donartmont to nro vido for this Innovation. Ho is of tho opinion that tho proposed system Is In advanco of tho methods employed In older countries. Senator Penroso's conferences with tho president woro mado the occasion of much newspaper comment. Tho Washington, D. C, Evening Star, an Independent paper, directing attention to the strength of tho Republican par ty in Pennsylvania, made this state ment: "Senator Penroso, since the wiping out of tho Now York "Old Guard" bosses, romalns, neat to Theodore Roosevelt himsolf, tho greatest politi cal chieftain in tho country. Undis puted In his control of the Republican organisation of tho surest Republican itftto in tho Union, Senator Penroso watelns with Intuiwst tho factional itrlfo and contention nil over tho coun try. Tho storm has not ronched hie own stnte, and ho and his organiza tion nro pnsslng through tho most quiet year politically thoy have had In Bomo tlmo. It It so placid that Sena tor I'onroio hns bad llttlo to do in th? way of directing tho leaders through out tho state." Penrose scorns to bo ono of the few rromlnont men in tho Republican par ty who stnnd well with "tho Old Guard," nnd who nro on Intimate torme with Roosovelt. It Is believed that the rolotlonshlp between Roosovelt and Penroso has more of a personal side but while he was In tho White House there wns no ono with whom Rooso volt talked more confidentially upon lmportnnt political mattors than he did with Penrose. FIGHTS POR $200,000 HOME. Mrs. W. C. Stewart Seeks Injunction Against Her Stepdaughter. Montcluir, N. J., Oct. 4. The sequel to the forcible eviction n week ngo of Mrs. W. C. Stewart nnd her daughter Feme from the ?200,000 home pur chased by Sirs. W. IJ. Leeds in South Mountain avenue, Montclair, was fur nished In the filing of a bill In tho Trenton court of chnncery asking that the action of the district court In Es sex county ngalnst Mrs. Stewart be set aside. The wife of tho former millionaire nnd one time associate of John R. Walsh, the convicted Chicngo br.nker, also seeks through her nttornoys to ob tain an Injunction preventing Stewnrt or his daughter, Mrs. Leeds, from dis posing of or in any way disturbing the Montclair house or its contents. RECOVERS HIS MEMORY. Missing Man Revived by Reading About His Disappearance. Stamford. Conn., Oct. 4. At New Rochelle Charles Swenson, the Stain- ford civil engineer who disappeared Saturday after live weeks of wedded life, read In n New York newspaper un article telling of his disappearance. Tlie nrticle had the effect of clearing his mind and dispelling a complete loss of memory. Since Saturday night Swenson, a victim of aphasia, had been wander ing, nnd until he saw his namo in the paper nnd read about tho disappear mice ho could not tell who he wns. When his mind cleared he took tho flrst train back to Stamford. WANTS NEWS OF HERSELF. All That Mrs. Crawley Remembers About Her Babyhood Is Vague. Newark, N. J., Oct. 4. Tuken from her home forty-four years ago when she wns a child of four years and left nt the Homo For tho Friendless In New York, Mrs. Georgo M. Crawley of 1 Summit street is trying to locate her parents or some relatives. She wants to And out something about her par ents, her birthplace and her family name. Mrs. Crawley, who was once "Wil belmlna Schmidt," obtained a clew in a curious way seven years ngo nnd followed It as fur as she could, but did not secure her desired Information, LARGE PAPER MILL BURNED Destruction of Lake Champlaln Com pany's Plant at Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, N. Y Oct 4. Tho pa- per mill and pulp mill of tho Lake Chnmplain Pulp and Paper company In this city was destroyed by fire. Tho loss is estimated at $100,000, with In Burnnco of 80,000. The principal stockholders aro Georgo F. Tuttlo and William J. McCaffrey of this ctty and John J. Conninghnm of Glens Falls. Tito mill will bo re built as soon as possible. Umbrellas. As a screen ngtilnut tho sun tho urn brella was used In tho cast in very romoto times nnd figures prominently In Assyrian and Egyptian sculpture, where It appenrs to be part of tho In Bignia of royalty. As a protection against rnln tho umbrella waB first used In England in Queen Anno's reign ( CHARLES W. MURPHY. ( He Tossed Coin to Determine ) the World's Series Opening. ) 11 II WGRK. Will Be Weeks Before Worth uf New Code Is Proved. ACCURATE PASSING ESSENTIAL With the Direct Pass From Center, a Legitimate Play, the Coaches Have Had to Revise All Their Methods. Mlxup of Signals Expectod. This Is tho yunr sticklers In tho rudi ments of football will have their in nings. With tho direct pass from ccu ter a legitimate play tho coaches who huvo been in n habit of rushing thMr men into Intricate formations and trusting to time to bring skillful and clean handling will have to roviso all their methods. As Walter Camp has pointed out. It will probably bo weeks beforo tho real worth of the new gamo enn be de termined. Jumping In and taking di rect passes from center sounds easy enough. Any number of ambitious pigskin hustlers are now willing to offer even money that there never will bo discovered nnythlng half bo elusive as a football. Until the teams nro thoroughly drilled In tho rudiments tho now game is bound to bo hnrder on the teams than tho old. It was hard enough to develop good centers when they had only an occasional direct pass to make for a kick. Under the new order of 1910, by American Press Association. CAPTAIN WITniNOTON OP HARVARD. things it Is probable that almost every pass will go direct from center to the enrrier. Look For Many Fumbles. Tho chances for fumbling nro in finite It will take time for a vast majority of tho centers to get their passes, many of which will bo mado nt all sorts of angles, under control. Misunderstood signals, too, will bo a source of danger. Where tho quar terback took tho ball It was possible to remedy a slip-up of this charac ter. Somo ono nt least received tho ball. Ho at least got tho leather If thero was no one to whom ho could relay It. Crossed signals now nro al most certain to result In a loos6 ball. Formation Must Wait. That Is tho main reason why most of tho big eastern teams started prac tice this fall weeks earlier than they Uavo In previous years. Tho new rules do requlro a heap of studying, but It was for tho extrn work In tho elementary stages of tho game that all the extra work was ordered. Until tho players do get so they can handle tho ball cleanly und accurately fumbling and luck aro bound to have a greater promlnenco than they have lu tho past The teams that quickest mas ter tho rudiments, therefore, will have a big udvnntngo over their slower rivals. Tho sooner thoy get so they enn hun dlo a flying ball tho sooner tho coach es will bo nblo to work out tho lntri cato formations that are expected to play bo big a part in tho game this season. 8adowskl Reds' New Shortstopskle. Grlfllth may try out nn amateur shortstop named SadowBkl, who is said by tho natives of Long Island to bo a whalo. no may bo all O. IC, but if Mr. Sadowskl should ever chuck- ski a gamcskl Into tho cnnskl by a muffskt Griff would kick his pantskl. Paull Will Quit Running. Wilton Paull, tho collego champion tnllo runner, who negotiated the dis tance In 4:17 4-5 for Pennsylvania In 1000, will retire from tho track. Ue will practice dentistry In Buffalo. DAIRY- ft CREAMERY SIX CAUSES ,OF POOR BUTTER. Includes Improper Handling of Cows,. Wrong Feed and Sanitation. Tho following aro somo of tho causes for poor quality of butter: 1. Some of tho creamery managers do not instruct their patrons as to tho proper handling of their cows and tho milk nnd cream. 2. Garlic and wild onions aro re ported to bo causes In the spring and fall of tho year. 8. Thero Is a lack of proper sanita tion on the nverage dairy farm, tho most doflcicnt points of which are lack of proper light, ventilation nnd cleanliness of dairy barns, milking unclean udders with unclean handB, use of unstoriie dairy utensils and Improper cooling of milk. 4. There is a lack of technical training In dairy lines nmong butlor makers, which would enable them to proporly grade tho milk as it is re ceived at tho creamery, pasteurize It, make good Btarter, proporly ripen cream, control their overrun and in struct thotr patrons in methods of pro ducing sanitary milk and cream. 5. The majority of creamery mon aro engaged In other occupations and dovoto only n part of their time to tho creamery business. 6. Tho majority of creamery pa trons are engaged In diversified farm Ins, and dairying is only a side lino with them. For Cream Test Balance. A simple and sensitive weighing instrument to bo known as the Wis consin hydrostatic cream balance has been devised at the agricultural ex periment station of tho University of Wisconsin. This instrument meets the long recognized need for a slm plo and accurate method of weighing cream In the Dabcock test bottle for testing. The ordinary cheap scales are inaccurate, and the more delicate oalanccs are too expensive for general use by farmers. Tho new invention consists of a specially devised brass float, similar to a dydromcter, which is placed In a f553iO CHEAJI BALANCE. cylinder of water. Tho Instrument floats steadily in a vertical position, and supports a platform on which a cream bottle and a nine-gram weight ore placed. Small, one-tenth gram weights are placed on tho platform until tho float sinks to a lino marked on tho spindle. The nlno-gram weight is then put into tho bottle with a pipette In a sufficient amount to again sink tho float to a lino of tho spindle. This gives tho weight ac curately and the devise is bo sensi tive that it Is affected by a single drop of cream. Tho woighing can be done rapidly, however. Sweet Cream from Sour Milk. A rather unusual but successful process of making sweot salable cream from sour milk has been tried at tho Virginia Experiment Station. The 'result seems to point a way for tho disposal of milk received in bad condition at creameries, or for somo reason hold too long in largo dairies, or oven for tho disposal of milk re ceived by city contractors and not dis posed of to the ordinary trade. Tho method was to skim a very hoavy cream, fifty per cent, and to add to It sweet Bklmmllk as to innko a cream of about twenty per cent, pasteuriz ing tho mixture nnd cooling it Imme diately to forty degreos, then ship ping the resultant cream rather than to manufacture It into butter. This product wns shipped to a market thirty-six hours distant and gavo excel lent satisfaction. Othor lota woro shipped about as far with entirely satisfactory results. It was found that ovon though tho milk was quite sour and oven stale tho fat could bo oxtractod and treated by this method so as to produce a porfoctly satisfac tory product When lovoly woman stoops to folly Anil does things sho should never do It's nafo to wager slio Is mnklni? A ilonkey of somo fellow too. Chicago Kccord-Herald. She I wonder why Methuselah lived to Btich n great old ago. Ho Perhaps some young woman married htm for his money. -Ilostoti Transcript. Indianapolis' Big Trap Shooting Event. Tho Indianapolis (hid.) Gun club is to hold one of tho biggest events of tho season. The second week in Oc tober tho Post Amcrlcnn handlcnp will bo held on tho club's grouuds nt Hen Davis. The Post American is tho event that decides tho nntional chnm plonshlp nmong trnp shooters. Flvo sectional tournaments are held the eastern, western, central, southern nnd Grand American. Winners of these flvo tournnments nre later brought to gether in ono meet to settle tho su premacy of tho United Stntes. This yenr tho championship will bo decided at Indianapolis. Soon wo shall eeo theso signs Posted on government soil: "Don't pick tho (lowers or coal." "Keep oft tho grass and oil." New York Sun. He I've been engaged about ten times. She You must be unlucky in love. He Oh, I don't think so. I'm not married yet. Spokane Spokcsmnu-Ite-vlew. Ho saw a deer, blazed at It hot. Tho hasty charo went wide. But, though he failed to guide tho shot. By jlngs, ho shot tho guide! ruck. Sundny School Teacher Now, John ny, why do wo put n penny In the plate today? Johnny 'Cause thero ain't nuthin' smaller. Harper's llazar. For every rose thero Is a thorn. We've heard It o'er and o'er. And oft It seems each rose forlorn Must have at least a score. New York Times. Lawson Are you going to hnve n new suit of clothes this fall? Dawson No, but I found n dnllni bill tucked away in the vest pocket nt the old suit when I took it out yester day to brush It up. Somervllle Jour nal. Jones tells me many a story Which he thinks Is full of wit. But the darned thing Isn't funny. That's the funny part of .it! Bill Lang's Career. Lan Franchi Is Rill Lang's real namo. When he was the village blacksmith In faraway Australia bo was n wres tler and football player. Then he took ud boxing. Copernicus. Nicholas Coieniicus. 1473-1513. flrst demonstrated the fact that the earth moves around the sun rather than the sun around the earth, which was tho universally accepted belief. Tlio Kind. You Have Always in uso for over 30 years, All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" nro but Experiments that trillo with and endanger tlio health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR I A Castorla is a harmless suhstituto for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotia substance Its ngo is its guarantee. It destroys "Worms nnd nllnys Fcverlslmcss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind. Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation nnd Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. CENUBNE CASTORIA ALWAYS SI Bears tho The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TWt OKNTAUH COMPANY TT MUNMV STRICT NCW TOAK OITV jJ How Wars Begin. "Here's a remarkable statement," Bald Mr. Dlbbln, looking up fn . y i nowspapor. "What Is it, dear?" his wifr - 1 "It says thoro haB not been a i' r In the last five centuries In wb' I ; r has not boon waged somowhprc in c world." "Isn't that drondful? Wly . 't pooplo bo reasonable an?. 11 i 'i pooce?" "Uecauso pooplo are mot!y 1 orant fools," Mr. Dlbbln an i 1 declare it makos ivnn 8' ' hlfl kind." Ho crumbled the pa, dashed it to the floor. "There, there, Ellas," said h.i ? "don't get excited over it." "Who's getting excitod7 I o I've got a right to express nn i In my own house." "It's no more your house than j I'd have you know," said Mr? bin. "I guess I worked and s. r J as hard ns you did to get it." "See here, madam!" "Don't you mndam me. Elf t b bln. I won't stand it." "Oh, you won't, won't you? " ' you were a man I'd punch o?. m pertinent Jaw!" "No you wouldn't, you big b You wouldn't dare say boo ton i r ' "I wouldn't, heh?" He stunt o ward her, shaking his list, "fo- ' j cents I'll " "You lay a hand on me," a.iid V i. Dlbbln, snatching up the ro e "and I'll" Just then tho door bell rang. Male Fashions In 1850. Male fashions of 60 yearB ago had other discomforts besides long hair. Trousers were tight nnd buttoned un der tho foot with broad straps. Every man who aspired to be well dressed wore his coat so high In tho collar that the back of the hat rested upon It This fashion was so prevalent that, according to Sir Algernon West "every hat had n crescent of cloth on the back of the brim to prevent tho rubbing of the beaver, or Imitation beaver, of which the hat was made, for silk hats were not then Invented." And from tho same authority wo learn that "opera hats were unknown, and In the evening a folding chapeau bras was always carried under tho arm. Nobody but an apothecary or a solicitor would have dreamed of leav ing his hat in the hall of the house where ho was calling or dining." The Elgin Marbles. These famous sculptures are so called from the name of the English Lord who took them from Athens to London. When Lord Elgin wns ap pointed Ambassador to the Porte, in 179D, his attention was called to the Imminent danger of destruction under which tho Athenian sculptures lay and at tho flrst opportunity he haa them taken from their places In the Parthenon nnd conveyed to England. They were finally acquired by tho Brit ish Government and in 1816 were de posited In the BritiBh Museum, where they are treasured with almost re ligious care. Bought, and which has been has homo tho signaturo of and has been, mado under his per sonal supervision sinco its infancy. Allow no ono to deceive yoti in this. Signature of KRAFT & CONGER HONESDALE, PA, Represent Reliable Comoanies ONLY