THE CITIZEN) Mil DAY, JANUARY 20, 1011. SPIRITS Rffl COOa They Say He Was Nearr Pole Than Peary. HAVE SIR JOHN'S WORD FOR .7 Arctic Explorer Who Died In 1847 In sists That He Traveled With the Doctor Until the Last Day, Then Quit Him. Washington, Jan. IS. According to the testimony of prominent disembod ied spirits, neither Dr. Cook nor Com mander Peary reached the north pole, but Cook got nearer to the goal than Peary. This somewhat astonishing state ment is contained in a letter from Wil liam T. Stead of the Itovlew of Ife Tiews of London to Arthur Itollinsnii Oolburn, a lawyer, of this city and forwarded by Mr. Colburn to Itcpre sentatlve Itoberta of Massachusetts, a member of the house committee on na Tal affairs, who has been outspoken in his opposition to the proposition thai ongress reward Peary for his nnii explorations. In Mr. Stead's letter to Mr. Collm:v he says: "With regard to the polu coutro Tersy, the only message which r have received on the subject wan mi from Sir John Franklin last year, lit' did not say anything about Peary, but said he had personally conducted Coo' early to the pole and then left him to toniplete the Journey himself, Secinv you have received a communication in the same sense, I thought this would Interest you." Mr. Colburn adds: "It Is most noteworthy that the Us Mmony of the spirit world Is unani WILLIAM T. STEAD. mous that neither explorer readied the pole, but that Cook got nearer than Peary. This testimony I havo received and friends of mine declare HUewK" from fifty gifted psychics rangin.., from those who simply hnvo powers to receive correct mental impression to those who havo the wonderments of the Independent voice, material!.:! Hons, etc. "And, too, those psychics represent all phases of Interest In the polar con troversy from thosp deeply Interest-."! to those who think the whole matter a piece of folly. Inconsequential and val ueless " Mr. Colburn believes tiie stranger feature about the communication from Mr. Stead Is the statement that who near the polo the spirit of Sir John Franklin, the arctic explorer, who died in 1S47, left Dr. Cook to finish the journey alone. k "With a friend of mine, the jfcsido!. of n corporation here In Washing! or I visited a physician of great psych) power. He received through his own hand the signatures, correctly, of proli ably llfty friends of the doctoi Including one of whom my friend had never heard. "Then Sir John Franklin, In his owi. proper handwriting, gave an extended message on the subject of the polur controversy. Giving It from mom in as best I can, It was that he. Sir John was the Insplrer and sustalner of Cool, In his quest; that the cold was so In tense that the breath would free:;r upon tho Instruments, welding or i', tcrferlng with their working parts .-iim rendering them useless. "That the effect of the cold on t!i mind was to render it" dreamy and ui. able to think In a normal way, or t make observations; that the monoton, . mirages, hardships and exposure made everything around seem unreal am' fantastic nnd that any observuti in made under such circumstances v,i- valueless and that reliable evideiai jonld not be obtained. My friend dl jtot know the handwriting of Sir Join, but on comparison it was found sail faclory.'' Mr. Colburn concludes his letter h.' stating that: "Lieutenant ISooth Lock wood im communlcnted with us at our home through great trance mediums and sustains Cook as against Peary." Representative Itoberta Is mucl cheered up as n result of theso com municatlons from the spirit world. THE WILSON INAUGURAL. Photograph of New Jersey's New ( Governor Reviewing the Parade, t 1SU, by American Press- Association. HERE'S A REAL FISH STORY. Whale Charged Ship and Damaged Steel Plates, Captain Says. Xew Orleans, Jan. 18. With a score of plates on the port side badly dam aged In a light with a whale In tho gulf Of Mexico', the Norwegian steam er Mount Vernon came limping Into port. It is' a queer story that Cap' lain Falsen, master of the vessel, has to tell. Three days out from Bocas del Toro and not far from the entrance to tho South pass, at the mouth of the Missis sippi, lo was awakened early In the morning of Jan. 13 by feeling tho p-ow of his ship strike something soft that resisted the progress of the ship. He rushed on deck nnd saw a huge whale, which he estimates as seventy-live feet long, backing away from tho forward quarter of the Mount Vernon. Blood was streaming from the monster's sides. A hundred yards or so from the ship the whale stopped, threshed the sea with Its tail and then drove straight at the boat. The massive head struck just below tho point where the fright ened skipper stood. The force of tho blow was tremendous. The heavy steel plates buckled. Falsen was thrown to tho deck. But naturally It was tho whale that suffered most. With the rebound of the blow ho was hurled back, Ills crushed head upreared for a moment and the body sank out of sight. THAW'S SISTER-IN-LAW WEDS. Mining Engineer Is Third Husband of Mrs. Frieda Peet. Reno, Nov., Jan. 18. In tho house here occupied by Mrs. W. E. Corey, first wife of the former president of the United States Steel corporation, while seeking divorce Frieda Marsh I'cet, divorced last month from J. Dot ride Peet, a traveling salesman of New York, whom she married In 1005, took for hor third husband, Professor Fred erick Edward Young, a wealthy min ing engineer, grandson of Dr. Edward Young, founder of the bureau of sta tistics at Washington. The bride's first husband was Ed ward Thaw, brother of Harry Thaw. Tho bride Is a daughter of Professor John Edward Marsh, a scientific writer. Tho bridegroom Is manager for James Breen, a millionaire Montana mining operator, and is a son of Charles E. Young, a civil engineer of Washington. $500 FOR BEATING WIFE. Fine Raised From $25 After Judgo Saw How Small Woman Was. Kansas City, Jan. IS. Upon tho size of the wife a man beats depends tin size of the fine he must pay in .ludgt Carlisle's court in Kansas City, Kan Luther Chambers was fined $25 foi beating his wife. Ho said he could prove by her that It was his first ot fense. A sweet faced little womai, walked out of the crowd to take tin witness stand. "Is that small woman your wife'' asked tho court before she had testi fled. "Yes," responded Chambers. "Your fine Is raised to 500," said tho judge. S SAILORS DEAD ON DELAWARE Causo of Accident Not Reported All Killed by Steam. Washington, Jan. 18. In an accident in tho Are room .of the battleshit Delaware, en route from Guautnnaiuc to 'Hamilton Roads, eight enlisted mer were killed and another was danger ously Injured. , The cause of the accident was not reported. Captain Gove nsked that t tug bo sent from the Norfolk navj yard to Hampton Roads to take oil tho bodies of the victims of tho acci dent. The deaths were caused bj burns resulting from escaping steam. Sherman's Mother-ln-Law Belter, Utlcn, N. Y., Jan. 18, Mrs. Eller Babcock, mother-in-law of Vice PresI dent Sherman, who had been serious ly 111 for some time nnd whoso Indis position threatened to Interfere witb tho social plans of Vice President and Mrs. Sherman In Washington this win ter, Is now on the vad to recovery, Weather Probabilities. Fair; continued qold Wednesday ani Thursday; light to moderate norther ly winds. 9 fev J. . ..-.'-V Hostesses at dinner must put guo?U of honor at the right of themselves and Ihe hosts even If the usual sit ting places are changed to suit the oc casion. When n married woman en tertains at dinner she puts at her right the husband of the woman whom they so wish to honor, and tho wife must bo nt the right of tho host. To place the guests of honor In any other posi tion Is to deprive them entirely of the distinction Intended. With a round table the' matter 'of seating guests becomes simple; for there Is no head and no foot, and !h .' desired position arranges Itself with out change. Frequently the hostess does not bavc ri. s'eat;,tlrcctly opposite to the host, but In a, circle) this is not conspicuous, i With an-ovfl or square table and eight guestn tlx nrrangement becomes complicated.. Three persona on a side means that the hostess must abandon her usual place or she will, have two women together and two men, than which nothing could show greater Ig norance. There Is nothing for the hostess then lo do but to change hor position, leaving her husband In that which ,he, always occupies. The woman guest of honor then goes at his right, and. if possible, the hus band Is put at the right of tho hostess on the side of tho table. When all tho guests are married couples even the husband of the honor guest cannot be at the hostess' right, though she has abandoned her regular seat. An English Custom. Tho very sensible English custom of mentioning the date of departure In writing invitations for visits hns be come almost universal in this country. the exception being In tho homesteads south of Mason and Dixon's Hue. There a friend or relation Is asked to come and stay as long as convenient, ind tho stay sometimes stretches over months or years. There are always relations who are disposed to overlook any little discomfort that such a visit brings as well as tho positive Incon venience they may be causing their hosts, and such is the courtesy of the people of this part of tho country that the visit only ends at tho visitor's will. Instances could even bo given In which the visits of poor relations or friends havo lasted the rest of their lives, the greatest courtesy and consideration be ing shown to them by host and hostess even where they became helpless In vallds. At the Dance. A woman waits to be sought by hor partner. When tho music for the dance which she has promised him strikes up should he fail to seek her out she may expect an apology and plausible ex planation for his delinquency. If a man Is doing duty as an escort on coming from the cloakroom he awaits his companion's appearance somewhere outside the ballroom door, at tho head or tho foot of tho stairway or In the hall, having agreed with her beforehand just where they are to meet. Before he fills his dance program with other names ho asks a dance or two of the woman In his charge. Ho also holds himself in readiness to ac company her to the supper room If ho sees that no one offers to serve as escort In that capacity. On Letter Writing. The girl who has a correspondence of about half a dozen or so of her school mates has formulated the following rules concerning her letter writing. t which she adheres: Write name and address legibly and correctly on each envelope. Write your own name nud address In tho upper loft hand corner. Place on eacli the correct amount ot postage. Before sealing see that in each en velope you havo Inclosed tho correct letter. Keep as close a duplicate of every letter as It is possible to do. Never write personalities. Clever Idea. A girl who has Just returned from n long visit, during wilcb she collected a number of spoons which are souvenirs of the various places visited, recently made them the key to n table talk at a little luncheon, Beside each plate were two spoons hearing pictures or seals of various cities, and during tho luncheon the guests were 'asked to tell some interesting fact about that partic ular city. All the guests declared that. It was not only a unique mqthod 'of directing the conversation, but tho means of making tho occasion most In terestlug. Hint For Speechrnaking. The frequent reason of failure In so called Impromptu speeches nt wedding breakfasts is the fact that the speaker Is not brief 1 what he says. It Is far better to utfr only a few sentences, stopping will v the others would havo a 'person go -i. fhan to occupy much time In willed guests might be talking lo each oilier wore they given the op portunity. Then, too. If there are oth er speakers to follow the evening grows boresome If all talk for many minutes. Congressman James A. Tawney of Minnesota. distil' t 2. .s . MS W10, by American Press Association. Congressman James A. Tawney of Minnesota, most prominent of the standpatters who fell by the way Ride last fall, may enter President Tnft's cabinet after March 4. Rumor first selected Mr. Tawney for the Panuma canal commission, but Intel1 assorted that he would succeed Sec retary Balltnger when congress ad journs. Friends are working in his behalf and assert there is no doubt of his fitness nnd that the appointment would bo popular. Twice chairman of the house com mlttoe on appropriations, Mr. Tawney for many years has been a prominent figure in congress and In national pol itics. Nine successive times he was the choice of his constituents In the First district of .Minnesota, then ho was defeated In tho primaries for renoml- natlon. This reversal of the opinion of the voters was due to insurgency Mr. Tawney was criticised for his ac tion on tho Aldrlch-Payno bill, f or his support of Speaker Cannon and for his stand pat attitude generally. Congressman Tawney Is a native of Pennsylvania and learned the black smith's trade In the shop of his father. In 1877 ho removed to Winona, Minn., nnd worked ut his trade until admit ted to tho bar in 18S2. He was elect ed to the Minnesota state senate In 1890 and tho following year began his congressional career. Commander Sims of the Navy. Commander William Sowdon Sims of tho United States ship Minnesota, whose speech at the recent dinner to the American navy In London has boon tho subject of International correspond ence, was for several years naval aid to President Roosevelt. The banquet at which the speech was delivered was given In honor of tho officers and men of the American fleet in the English channel and was one of the functions which marked the visit of the vessels to English and French ports. Replying to the welcom ing speech of tho lord mayor of Lon don, Commnnder Sims, according to the press dispatches, said that, speak Ing for himself, ho believed that If the time ever came when the British em pire was menaced by an external en emy they might count on every man WILLIAM S. SIMS. every drop of blood, every ship nnd ev ery dollar of their kindred across the sea. Commander Sims is a Canadian by birth aud entered the service of Uncle Sam from Pennsylvania; he was grad uated from the Naval academy In 18S0. In addition to tho regular sea duty, ho served for several years as naval at tache In Russia nnd In France. In rec ognition of his work as inspector of target practice President Roosevelt as signed him to command .the Minneso ta, Commander Sims thus becoming the first olllcer of his rank to havo chargo of n first class battleship. In a letter of commendation the president said that Sims was largely lnstrumen tal In building up a- system of gunnery that had "enormously Increased pur ef flclency as a sea nower." 8 Sk.',' V Wasted on Him. "Occasionally." remarked the vlslllng Londoner, "t see In some Amcrlcau pa per a supposititious colloquy referring to an aeroplane Hue to Mars. Do you know, that strikes mo ns being exceed ingly funny. Evidently the writer U Ignorant of the fact that our atmos phere does not extend upward more than fifty or n hundred miles and be comes more and more tenuous ns It nears the limit. He does not seem to know that tho air Is absolutely neces sary In Dying an aeroplane. It is high ly probable that no aviator ever will ascend to a higher elevation than ten or fifteen miles even If he can endure tho excessive cold he will encounter nt that altitude. The Idea of salllug an aeroplane through the Imponderable ether Is Ineffably absurd." Chicago Tribune. Scottish Names. No country lias experienced the dllll culty arising from the commonness or one surname in a district more Intense ly than Scotland. With a whole coun tryside populated by Campbells, Era sers or Gordons, some moro distin guishing nomenclature had to be found. And no doubt this was the chief reason why at one time men were always known by the name of their estate or farm. Dean Ramsay remembered an old cowherd who was always known as Boggy. Hi's real uame was Sandy Anderson, but he had once owned a wretched farm called Boggendreop, and he was Boggy to the day of his death. At tho Top. "I take a good deal of pride In my cousin Hector," said Mrs. Lapsllng. "lie paid his own way through .the medical college, got his diploma, pud now he Is .a full fledged disciple o Osculaplus." Chicago Tribune. FOR DYSPEPSIA. You Risk Nothing by Trying This Remedy. We want every one troubled with Indigestion and dyspepsia to come to our store and obtain a box of Rexnll Dyspepsia Tablets. They contain Rls-muth-Subnitrate and Pepsin prepared by a process which develops their greatest power to overcome digestive disturbance, Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets are very pleasant to take. They soothe the irritable, weak stomach, strengthen and Invigorate the digestive organs, relieve nausea and Indigestion, pro mote nutrition and bring about a feel ing of comfort. If you give Rexall Dyspepsia Tab lots a reasonable trial we will return your nvmoy If you are not satisfied with the result. Throe sizes, 25 cents, CO cents and .$1.00. Re member you can obtain Rexall Rem edies only at The Rexall Stole. A. M. JjEINE. The Bank FARMERS and i $1 starts an account. Are you with us? Courteous Treatment Assured COMPARATIVE GROWTH : DEPOSITS June 1st, 1907 - $24,393.54 Nov. 7th, 1910 - $266,463.61 OFFICERS ! M. E. SIMONS, Pres. C. A. EMERY, Cashier. DIRECTORS: M.B. Allen, George C. Abraham. J. Sam Krown, Oscar K, Bunnell Win, ir. Dunn. V. M. Fowler. V, 11. Oulnnlp. John K. Knmtz, Kml. W. Kreltner. John Kuhbacli. O. Wm. Sell. M. K. Simons, Fred. Stevims.iGeorge W, Tlsdell, J. E. Tiffany , John Weaver. D. & M. CO. TIHE TABLE A-M. A.AI A..M. A.M. I'.M. htahoib SUN oulv - 8 30 10 00 4 30 Albany 1C oo 10 00 o 05 .... lllnt'lmmton .... . A.M. 10 00 2 15 12 30 8 30 2 15 .... Philadelphia,... 1 20 7 25 i!"" 4 !0 20 TTo .... Wilkes-liarre. ... 2 OS 8 15 5 30 2 OS 7 65 bcniliton....... P.M. A.M "."II P.M. TIT. A.M. Ly Ar 5 10 05 ll.'.'ll 6 20 2 05 8 J5 Carbondale 5 60 0 15 (1 30 2 15 8 65 ...Lincoln Avenue.. 651 U 10 .0 31 2 10 86U Whites..,,... Gil 9 3ii C 62 2 37 It 18 ...,. Kurvtew,.i..,. 0 17 ii 42..... It dH '2 43 11 24 ....... t'aiman B 23 0 i 7 04 2 4a 9 20 .... Luke i.oilore .... U2(i 9 61 7 07 2 62 9 32 ... . Wnyniari It 32 II 57 7 13 2 57 9 3T Kct-ne 0 3.1 10 00 7 10 2 D!l 9 39 .. &tcene. 0 39 10 01 7 20 3 91 9 43 l'rompton...... 0.43 10 as 7 24 3 07 9 47 Fortcnia 4l 10 11 ...... 7 27 3 10 0 60 M'elyvlllo, 6 00 10 15 , 7 31 3 15 9 65 Honesdale p.m. a.m. ;:!;:; p.m. p.m. m. at . , ly JOSEPH N. WELCH (9 m Fire The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Ofllte: Second fioor Masonic Build ing, over C. C. Jadwin'B drug Btore, Honesdale. tnjKKJ:::K:::::::::m::H:t:::::t:t MARTIN CAUFIELD Designer and Man ufacturer of ARTISTIC MEMORIALS Office and Works 1036 MAIN ST. HONESDALE, PA. 8 mmamjaromHmmuttnnttamuiqt M. LEE BRAMAN EVERYTHING IN LIVERY Buss for Every Train and Town Calls. Horses always for sale Boarding and Accomodation for Farmers Prompt and polite attention at all times. ALLEN HOUSE BARN -Union revival meetings all week f!k Classes J. E. TIFFANY, Vice Pres- HONESDALE BRANCH I'.M. A.M. A.M. SUN UN 2 00 12 40 10 60 8 45 10 60 8 45 3 83 ,V . M 10 20 937 7 31 7 32, P.M. 7 15 7 31 7 32 4 05 3 15 2 25 1 35 P.M. 1&03 0 20 A.M l'.M P.M. P.M. P.M. K 05 1 35 1 25 5 40 6 30 12 17; 12 071 12 0! 11 44 11 37 11 31 7 51 7 60 7 33 7 25 7 19 1 21 6 24 1 (13 6 OS 12 m 12 51 6 01 .6 60 7 17 12 49 12 43 12 40 12 30 12 32 12 29 12 25 '4 61 11 20 11 23 11 20 11 10 7 12 7 0!l 7 05 4 48 4 45 4 41 4 37 4 34 7 01 0 11 12 11 09 11 05 0 65 4 40 Ly A.M. P.M. P.M. A.M