THE CITIZEN, FIUDAV, DEC. UO, 10J0. Copyright, 1S10, b American rro93 Auto elation. NINETEEN-ELEVENI That i. going some. Tcmpuj is fugifing. It ha the habit. We sprint forever after day to come As swiftly as the nimble jackass rabbit. We dream each year will bring us For tune's plum And through the Future stretch our hands to grab it, Only to find, in spite of our endeavor, Next year it is as far away as ever. TIME deals. Twelve months hve gone to the discard Since last we had to pen our New Year's greeting. And now the date returns and hits us hard With melancholy duties of repeating. The form with fresh remarks wc inter lard. Like "Turn a new page here," and "Life is fleeting." The same we've said, with lame at tempts to vary. Each year1 and will again next January. WITH high resolves today our hearts are warm. This is the happy season that we swear off. We are protected from Temptation's storm. to be given every ery cfiufo of Ten This offer includes back subscriptions NOMINATE A CANDIDATE Nomination Blank Good for 1,000 Votes The CITIZEN'S Tour of Bermuda and Prize Contest I NOMINATE ADDRESS DISTRICT NO SIGNED ADDRESS Only the First Nomination Blank Cast for Each Candidate will Count as 1,000 Votes FIVE YOUNG WOMEN WILL TOUR BERMUDA CITIZEN PAYS THE BILLS. Visit the Lands of Love, Lore and Romance Contest now open.'Phone or calS for particulars. At least until our resolutions wear ott. Well, it is good we've one day for re form, In view of what on other days we tear off. Our vows at least may aid the paving movement In Colonel Satan's latest town improve ment. AND, speaking of improvement, here on earth Have you observed the clip wc have been going? Old Nincteen-ten had reason for his mirth, And Uncle Sam can be excused for ' crowing. Accomplishment has so increased its girth That what this year may bring there is no knowing. In twelve months we may all of us be flying Or break our ailerons and necks in trying. TIS New Year's! Let us think all things are new, And so ttiey arc for us till we have won them. This momtnt dilfcrs from all momente through. The patlw of life are novel as wc run them. Whatever &x- our deeds, it still is true This is (he first time this time wc have done them. Ninetecn-eleven wipes out last year's sorrow, And Nineteen-twehe is beckoning to morrow. Excluded. Ascum Well, well! 1 concrntulate you, old man. And how is the baby to bo named? Poplcy By my wife's people, it seoms. Exchange. Yearly S l This is cancsecaaie in im ui i Bfciris &raat i ou m m m bh n ma m mn n nan aam hi n n stv wau irm h m atu .s. . r uhscript ONE WHY TO MAKE RE TIIB man who resolves not to en courage folly hi otlicrs Is nn ovcrlndulgont husband or n too easy going fnthcr. Ills vows and resolutions nro nlnrmlng when they nro mndo, but nro of short dura tion usually nnd should not be taken seriously by his family. The woman who resolves to keep track of the household expenses and tho girl who swears to keep n Journal arc hopeless. If they carry out their threats, nnd to the very bitter cud, they become unbearably complacent. If they fall It pnlns one to think how weak of will they are. You sec, thcro Is absolutely no way to please one's friends In this New Year's busluess. Tho only way to make a New Year's resolution with any hope of keeping it and your natural and amiable bearing toward the world Is to adapt .1. M. Barrio's recipe for enjoying a day In bed. The fun of staying nil day in bed, says thnt canny Scot, is to begin by saying. "I will get up in fifteen minutes," When the fifteen minute- "i suKinl" arc up you continue to nap or lounge. But you rau3t not say: "I'll stay here all day. How delicious!" You must say, "Another half hour nnd then I'll have to get up." But at tho end of the half hour you still rest among tho pillows. And so on, tasting your ease all day long. And that's the way to make New Year's resolutions. Say, "I won't buy bargains or smoke or drink or read French novels or go to problem plays this month." Then at tho end of tin? month renew tho threats, and tho first thing you know It will bo Dec. 31 and you will have passed an exemplary and colorless year And your stock of sons to THE new su an opportunity SECOND I'RIZES:FOUR DIAMOND KINGS. THIRD PHIZES: KOUIt COM) WATCHES. Ambition, Energy and Popularity required to win Address all communications and subscriptions to The Bermuda Tour Department, THE CITIZEN PUBLISHING CO. HOIESDALE, PA. egotism won't mount bo IiIrIi ns It iloea. when ono makes yearly contracts with one's conscience nnd nbldes by them. Now York Couimcrclnl Advertiser. NEW YEAR'S EVE IN PARIS. Stirring Description of the Scenes In tho Great City's Markets. After having chanced to spend n New Year's eve hi nearly every coun try In Christendom, writes n corre spondent of the Pittsburg Dispatch, It Is my opinion that there Is more be wilderment to gaze upon mud more bedlam to hear In and nround the "hallos" of Parts than can be found compressed in any other spot on earth. Tho hallos are the markets of the vast city, tho center into which pour thou sands of trains nnd vehicles of every nort from nil the country round nnd from which issues tho food supply that keeps :s,000,000 people from starving. Even on the most ordinary night of the year the great Paris market is a place of entrancing Interest. Victor llugo describes it in several of his nov els. Other French nuthors have chosen It as tho chief scene In their works. Zola's "The Stomach of Par- j Is" treats of It, and It figures in no end of melodramas that have been trans- , lnted ' Into every known language. M reover. It Is so invariably regarded i as one of the great sights of Paris I that no foreigner ever comes here j without devoting a night to tho ex- plorntlou of the quaint neighborhood, i What It is on other nights, however. I is nothing to whnt all that vicinity be- ( comes on icw icars eve. 'mere is nothing quite like It anywhere else on the globe Into a space bounded by tiearly a do?:cn blocks and flaring In a light that makes It almost ns bright as day comes a huge proportion of tho population, some on business, others on merriment bound, and all radiating with noise Bands of Itinerant musi cians dot tho singing sea here and thire. fighting for dear life to keep their feet In the rush, but all the time screei'hlng out Instrumental discord. Temporary booths fringe the side wnlks, behind which aro peddlers of all sorts shrieking their wares so loud thnt you might think they were trying to tempt the Inhabitants of Mars tc come nnd buy. Every little while you hear what sounds like the sharp re port of a pistol shot, but It Is only the drivers of market wagons notifying the crowds to look out for the wheels. Young men and boys go by in bands, blowing deafetdng horns with an ener gy thnt mone.v could not buy. Every human belli; among the thousands who hasn't a horn at his Hps Is using thnt favorite of all wenpons for Frenchmen his mouth In a way that would make n bellowing elephnnt blush with envy. And every one is either Inughlng or doing whnt repre sents it. for nil Paris Is merry. Hit Both Ways. "It ain't no fun boin' a kid," observ ed a boy bitterly. "You nlways haftor go to bod when you ain't sleepy an' git up when you nro." Tolpdn TUo,u before Monday, January whether same is paid for in ew Entries. Making a Major. John Eaten Cooke, who went Into the wnr ns an enlisted man In a Rich iiioud battery, was noon afterward ap pointed an oiUccr on the Muff of Gen eral J. E. B. Stuart On Stuart's staff, Mr. George Cnry Eggluston says In "Itccollectlons of a Varied Life," ho distinguished himself by a certain laughing tionchulnuco under Ore nnd by his eager readlno.is to undertake Stuart's most perilous mlsslous. It wns iu recognition of soma spo clnlly daring service of that kind thnt Stuart gave him his promotion. Tho delightful way lu which the great boy ish southerner did It is licit told la Mr. Eggleston's own words. "You're about my sire, Cooke," Stu nrt said, "but you're not so broad In tho chest" "Yes, I am," nnswered Cooke. "Let's aco If you arc," said Stuart, taking off his co.it as if for a boxing match. "Try that on." Cooko donned the coat with its thrco stars on tho collar and found it n fit "Cut otf two of the stars." Stuart commanded, "nnd wear tho coat to Richmond. Tell tho peoplo In the war depnrtmunt to make you n major nnd send you back to me In n hurry. I'll need you tomorrow." How It Feals to Bo Run Over. "Whun 1 wan run over," writes a corresiKindent, "I had not seen the car approaching. Tho first thing I knew wns that I was on the ground, kicking upwnrd with my logs in an effort to get from under tho car. Then 1 felt a wheel going over my chest, which bent as it passed over. In tho Inter vening second or two I went through several minutes' worth of feelings, f had the sensations of nstonishment nt being on the ground, of wanting to roll nsldo and away, of bracing myself and my chest especially stiff to resist something, whatever it might be. while n lightning flash of fear was dimly there nnd a subconscious query, 'What on earth next?" Yet It was hardly fear, because there was no time for such a durable sensation. It wits rath er a sense of being suddenly confront ed with a grave reality, of doubtful, obscurely terrible Import." London Chronicle. Teaching the Teacher. Teacher Johnny, whnt part of speech is 'nose?" Johnny 'Tisn't uny. Teach erAh, but it must be. Johnny May be yours is, bocnuso you talk through it, but the only part of speech I've got is my mouth. Same Old Story. "Does ho pay his alimony promptly?" "No. Ho hns to bo urged nnd threat ened overy pay day; but, then, of course, I pot used to thnt when wo tvero living together." Cleveland Wain Denier. Masculine Perversity. Mon nro funny croatures to enter for, A woman will buy the things sho wants, but n man will only buy the thlnirs ho nel -Exehnneo. r ot Bermuda and prize CUT THIS OUT THE CITIZEN'S Trip To Bermuda Contest 25 VOTES CANDIDATE Address District No. This Coupon, when neatlv trimmed out, name, address, prop erly lilted in nnd brought or sent to the TOUK DEPARTMENT OK THE CITIZEN, will count as 125 votes in THE CITIZEN'S TRIP TO BERMUDA CONTEST. Tho first one of these Coupons received-for any young lady will place her in nomination and will count for 1,000 votes. CUT THIS OUT Contest closes Jan. 30, at 9 p. m. CONCERNING NECKTIES. Which One May Buy at Prices .High or Astonishingly Low. A man can pay 25 cents for a neck tie or 50 cents or $2 or more. H con find neckties Just as expensive an he wants to pay for, and then ho can got neckties a good deal cheaper than any of the prices named. Hero, for Instance, was a street vender with n pushcart full of neck ties, hundreds of neckties of various colors, though all of one style, of thnt ordor of necktie architecture known as the butterfly, a bow pinched in small at the middle nnd having at tho back a tiny loop of clastic by which the tie Is attached to tho collar button. Five cents nplecc for tho greater number of these silk butterfly tics, a gre.it array of them on cards in paste board boxcii covering three-fourths of tho bottom of tho pushcart and built up at the back to enhnnco tho dis play. Then If you wanted n moro ex pensive tie this vendor had them, plenty of them, ties of the samo do sign but of bettor quality, covering tho other fourth of the cart's availa ble space, tlos at 10 cents apiece. But these more costly tlos woro Just at this time anyway neglected, at this raomcn' the people halted at tho cart were gathered around its otter section, looking at, Inspecting and buying cheap' r ties, the ones at fivo cents each. New York Sun. i American Phosphate Deposits. A recent report of tho Geological ' Survey shows that in the Northwest ' country of Idaho. Wyoming and Utah tho United States possesses probably I tho laigest and richest phosphnte de i posits In the world. From surveys re- cently cast up in totals these deposits show evidences of 207,000,000 tons of I high grade phosphate rock, whllo tho chances are that millions moro tons may be added to this total before tho pay rock Is exhausted. These deposits show tho rock in pebble formation, closely cemented in ma ses and containing some calcite. Tt"se round particles vary from a microscopic size to pebbles half an inch In diameter. In color the phos phate rock ranges from a gray to a Jet black, the black probably due to carboniferous matter. All public lands suspected of containing valuable deposits of phosphate now are with drawn from public entry until such, time as the value of the deposits is tested, preserving the status of 'he land until Congress shall take action. Chicago Tribune. New Ice Machine. An Icemaklng machine has ' i invented at Grasst. France. Th p-- ant feature is a cylinder In ' i tU.- chemicals are sealed (the " r cot requiring renewel and lasting :s lcng as tho machine itself), tnl -hlch revolving in water, prod t the ice. It can also produce c - I air uontest tor ev- 2nd at 8 p. rci. advance or for