1 T1US CITIZEN, FRIDAY, FEIHtlAItY 17, 1011. TURNS May Try to Impeach Foe! ker's Testimony. CHARGES AGAINST ACCUSER. Brooklyn Congressman Denies Intima-i tton of Fraud In Connection With Hit Examination For Admis sion to Practice Law. New York, Feb. 15. The trial of former Senator Frank J. Gardner of Brooklyn on n charge of attempting 4" brlbo Congressman Otto G. Foolker, J(he former senator, to vote against the faart-Agnew racing bills and who was indicted upon the testimony of Foclker and Assistant District Attorney Elder of Brooklyn, who has declared that Gardner told him how $500,000 had tyeen raised t" defeat the bills and how tuc money was to be disbursed, has hegun before Justice Seabury In Brook lyn. When the case was called District Attorney Whitman was ready, but Max D. Steur, of counsel for Gardner, wanted an adjournment to give him flme to oxnmlne documents In the pos acssion of tho district nttorncy. Jus tice Senbury said that the jury could be obtained a', once and that he would not require the taking of testimony wntil Thursday. When the ca'sc was adjourned six jurors had been accepted after nearly fifty talesmen had been examined. It was stated In an Albany dispatch that Franklin N. Danahar, secretary X the state bar examiners: Richard Barber, clerk of the court of appeals, and two members of tho state depart ment of education had been subpoe naed to appear In tho trial of ex-Senator Gardner. They are ordered to bring all documents relating to the examination and admission to the bar f Representative Foelker, the defense alleging that ho secured his regent's ertiflcate by being Impersonated by llax Sosslnsky, who Is now serving a nine months' term for securing such ertlflcates for law students. This the defense hopes to bring out In order to Impeach the reliability of Foelker's tes timony. Representative Foelker dO' rilos the charge. AIL FOR THE BOY SCOUTS. President and Many Governors Indorse Movement by Speech and Letter. Washington, Feb. 15. President Taft, Colonel Roosevelt nnd many gov ernors, Democratic and Republican, onlted by word of mouth, by letter and by telegraph in praising the boy aitout movement. President Taft re ceived the members of the executive council of tin; organization at the Whlto House. Ho declared himself In favor of the movement. Colonel Boosevclt indorsed the work In a let ter road at the banquet of the council at the New Willnrd hotel and Gov--ernor Hadley of Missouri, Governor Fosa of Massachusetts and Governor Brown of Georgia In messages read to 'tho banqueters. In his address President Taft, who is honorary president of the organiza tion, said he was glad to give his sup port to "such n movement as this, the rfbjoct of which Is to take charge of that electric lluld that we call the tplrlf of the boy and send it through Umj right channel." MAXES DARES FOR FUN. 'Man Who Threatens Railroad Property Is Arrested. Stamford, Conn., Feb. 15. After de tectives had watched railroad property 1ere for months to prevent the carry Ing out of threats made In letters to President Mellen of the New York, Xovr Haven and Hartford railroad, the .authorities arrested the man respon sible for the letters, only to have him aver that he only wrote them "for the deviltry of the thing." The man in custody is Hugh Ennis, twenty-one years old, son of John En nis, tho pedestrian, who went after Edward Payson Weston's cross conti nent walking record. TRAIN HITS A STREET CAR. At Cleveland One May Die as Rosult of Accident. Cleveland, O., Feb. 15. An east bound Nickel Plato passenger train struck a Kinsman road street car at a grade crossng. The train dragged the car 100 feet and then toppled It vcr Into u gully thirty feet deep. Eight people were seriously Injured. One probably will die. A score of others were Blightly hurt All were in the street car, those on the train escaping injury, although the loco motive and several cars were thrown IT tho track. TALE OF THE WEATHER. Observations of the United States weather bureau taken at 8 p. m. yesterday follow. ' Temp. Weather. New York 30 Snow Albany 14 Snow Atlantic City . . 38 Rain Boston 20 Cloudy Buffalo 20 Sleet Chicago 42 .Cloudy St Louis 52 Clear New Orleans ... 72 Clear Washington ... 40 Cloudy Jottings of New Books And Authors VOLUME of remi niscences by a veteran nuthor and editor. George Cary Eg g 1 e s t o it, tins made Its appear ance and receiv ed much com mendation from the critics. The volume is en titled "Recollec tions of n Va ried Life." which gives n fair Idea of the scope of the narrative. The many parts that Mr. Eggleston has plnyeu are emorareu in i. ia rrvpniioptions. Including his ex perience as n Iloosier schoolmaster, his life as a young man in Virginia ueiuiu the civil war, as n Confederate rol dlcr for four years and then hi"" many years as a newspaper man unu wncer in Now York. Tim render Is brought face to face with such national characters as Gen erals Jeb Stuart, Kitzhugh Lee and iiinni-P''nrd of the Confederate service. Grant as general and president, au thors like Franl; u. stocuion, .iouu TTnv Hilinuntl Clarence Stedman. Wil liam Cullen Bryant nnd Mark Twain and newspaper nnd literary men like Cnrl Schurz, Joseph Pulitzer. Tarke Godwin and W. M. Lnnan. Mr. Eggleston wns born in vevny. Tnrl In 1RM nnd tauirht school in that cin to T.ntnr he nrnctlced law In Vir ginia and served throughout the war in the Confederate army, tnen iook up writing in various ways, being literary editor of the New York Even- GEOIKIK CAIil XdOLKSTOX. Ing Post for six years; then editor of the Commercial Advertiser, now the Globe, of the same city, nnd then went with Joseph Pulitzer on the World, where he wrote editorials for eleven years. Ad anecdote of John Esten Cooke of the Confederate army, setting forth tho mnnncr in which ho waB made a ma jor, Is typical of Mr. Eggleston's style, running as follows: On Stuart's state be (Cooke) distin guished himself by a certain laughing nonchalance under fire and by bis eager readiness to undertake Stuart's most per ilous missions. It was In recognition of some specially daring service of that kind that Btuart gave him bis promotion, and Cooke used to tell with delight of tho way In which the great boyish cavalier did It. "You're about my size, Cooke," Stuart said, "but you're not so broad In tht chest." "Yes, I am," answered Cooke. "Let's seo If you are," said Stuart, tak ing off his coat as if stripping for a box ing match. "Try that on." Cooke donned the coat with Its three stars on the collar and found It a fit. "Cut off two of the stars," commanded Stuart, "and wear the coat to Richmond. Tell the people in the war department to mako you a major and send you back to me In a hurry. I'll need you tomorrow." In "The Doctor's Christmas Eve" James Lane Allen is said to hnva written a work worthy of standing besido "The Choir Invisible" In hla famous series of Kentucky storlea. Tho characters are much the same as are met In "The Bride of the Mis tletoe," but the story Is rated as being much finer In caliber. It Is told in a series of word pictures rather than the usual narrative and dialogue, but loses nothing by this handling. Tho storv re- rolves around the ,AUEB I'ANE AIXX(f love of Dr. Blrney, the faithful coun try physician, for Mrs. Ousley, "tho bride of tho mistletoe" nnd wife of his lifelong friend, nnd the effect it has on tho children of the two families. There are no villains In the story, but there Is the desolate homo of tho un loved wife. Tho doctor's struggle la tho mainspring naturally, but the dramatic features nro furnished large ly by the half grown children, espe cially In the case of the doctor's little son, who, gradually perceiving the true state of affairs and siding with hla father, brings affairs to a climax with one of those terrible remarks that only a child utters. SlttfAR MilIWi YOU GROW.' Americans nnd Britons Increasing in Height and Wcitfht. English and American glrla Just reaching womanhood, and the next generation in Its early teens, are un usually tall, standing a head or mere above their mothers. This has toon remarked on over and over again, and has been the subject of learned disquisitions. Yet no gen-e-Miy ncceptud cause for tho fact has been given up to this time. N'nw comes a London phjslcian of nctt nnd says hat it is simply a cn-v of lung honed sweetness. By 'sweetness" in this particular enso the nature of the young ladles Is not referred to, but their diet. In f.'Tt. statistics of recent years show I that Americans and Britons of both sees ar.i increasing In height and weight. Why? The physician re fit red to says It Is sugar. Great Brltains and Anie-ican- aro the cugnr eating nations of the world and have quadrupled MiUr saccha rine consumption In the last scoie .if years This Is now the best explanation cf an accepted fact, Lnd It will have to stand until a better one comes along. Lond.ir. Tit-Bits. Spotting Smokeless Powder. Gem. an military authorities are experimenting with a device y which the location of troops using smokeless powder may be easily tils covered By this device it Is pro posed to survey the landscape through pale red glasses. Thf (lash of smokeless powder npptars strong in red light, whllo o'dinary objects are dimmed. By furnishing field glasses with the device in question, which 1. provided with screens of the . rt. per tint, ihe position of conceal ed marksmen can be detected. Washington Herald. Girls Allowances. Parents should give their girls an allowance, however small, from their earliest years. To learn economy it is necessary to spend, and how can one spend what one has not got? Keeping accounts is an admirable practice, though the great Dr. John son scoffed at it. You won't eat less beef to-day," he said, "bera tr.o you have written down what it cost you yesterdf.y." Lady Violet Gro villo in Black and White. Women Detectives. In Paris, shoplifting has become a fine art, consequently watching has had to become a fine art also, and the Parisian shopkeepers are flndlug thai it pays them to employ proper women detectives to watch their stock, so now every house of import ance hps its own woman detective.. Woman's Life. An Ancient Robe. The robe which John Wesley wore when he was christened over 200 years ago is now the property of Miss Emily Pashley of Worksop, England, it having come to her 'rora her grnndfathei at whope house Wesley lived for a time when but an lefant. An Unusual Happening. A mill at Great Harrington, Mass., was shut down in a most unusual manner a few weeks ago, when wa ter bugs, crowding into the spagp around tha engine stop push button, produced a phort circuit and the con sequent stoppage. The Christian Brothers, The Christian Brothers, a religious congregation of tho Catholic Church, founded in 1680 in France, is build ing a large business college at Port land, Ore., nn entire city block hav ing been purchased for the school and a large playground. Canada's Fuel Supply. A serious problem for the people of Canada to solve is the fuel sup ply of the future. No coal of any kind has ever been discovered in On tario. In the older part of the prov ince the timber is practically ex hausted. Talk a Mile. The conditions of the Arctic at mosphere are so favorable for the transmission of sound that it is pos sible for two persons to converse through a mile of space. Coloring Brass. A color resembling pewter may be given to brass by boiling the casting In a cream of tartar solution con taining a small amount of chloride of tin. Firemen In the Metropolis. There are more firemen killed and Injured In the performance of their duties in New York City than In any other city in the world. Long Lived Swnn. Among tho birds the swan lives to be the oldest, In extreme cases reach ing 300 yenrs. The falcoi. has oecn known to live over 1C2 years. The Snwed Off. Laplaniers are the shortest peo ple in Europe, the men averaging feet, 11 Inches, the women 4 feet 9 Inches. The Bristol to Paddlngton (Eng land) express covers 118 miles In two huurn. Glass telephone pole reinforced by wire are being used In some parts of Germany. NEW TALES ' THAT ARE Tl The Point of View. Mrs. Mary T. Metcalfe, discussing tho pure food question at the Gotham club's recent meeting at the Waldorf Astoria in Now York, smiled and said: "I heard a food dealer once declare that chemicals in food must be nil right since salt Itself was n chemical. "A queer, argument, eh? It depends, you see, on the point of view. What 2222" "AH, DOT IT AIH'T TO.1T IT T7SED TO 111!." won't we say under the influence of the point of view?" "Once, at Niagara, a gentleman said to his hotel proprietor, pointing toward the falls: " 'Glorious, isn't it?' " 'Ah, but it ain't what It used to be,' the proprietor sadly returned. " 'No? Why not?' said the guest. "The hotel proprietor shook his head. " 'Too many hotels,' he said." A Tactful Niece. Miss Violet Oakley tells of n lady friend In Philadelphia who was excep tionally tactful always, and particular ly so when she had visiting her an uncle whose table manners were very bad. She caused his knife to be soaped, and when he tried to eat with It he exclaimed: "Mary, tills knife tastes soapy." "That's too bad," was the reply; "try this one." "Soapy, too, Mary, Just like the other one was." "I'm very sorrj-, uncle, but the city servants are very careless. Try eating with your fork. Maybe that is clean." Peppered ice Cream. "There's pepper In that," said a res taurant waiter, pointing to a small silver shaker he had placed besido a heaping dish of Ice cream ho was enr- riug to a guest. "Sure, it's to put on the Ice cream, too," he replied when an inquirer failed to see the connec tion between the two. "Lots of folks want to put peppe: on their Ices. You seo. If a mans stomach Is sensitive the cold cream hurts him, but pepper Is stimulating enough to overcome the effects of the cold. And the funny thing is that you don't taste tho pepper at all. The Ice cream Is so cold that It kills the oth er. If you don't believe it I'll give you some with pepper, and you'll (lnd that there's no taste of pepper there at all." There wasn't. New York Sun. Forgot the Proverb. "You may not get any more business from me. I've bought a law book." "I won't worry," responded the law yer. "In that caso I shall probably get more business than ever." Wash ington Herald. A Tip For John. Mr. Crimsonleak Here's an Horn which says tho swan outlives any oth er bird, in extreme cases reaching 300 years. Mrs. Crimsonbeak And, re member, John, the swans live on wa ter. Too Busy For Repentance. SingletonDo you believe In tho old adage aboyt marriage In haste and re pent nt leisure? Wedderly No, I don't After n man marries he hiis no leisure. -Smart Set. USING THAT RUBBERSTAMP AND GET SOME REAL LETTER HEADS Good Letter Heads Are Good Business WE PRINT TIIEM FOR YOU 11 An Old Christmas Law. The general court of Massachusetts Bay Colony, following the e.tnmplo of the English parliament, in 1050 enact ed n law that "anybody who is found observing, by abstinence from Inbor, feasting or any other way, any such day ns Christmas day sholl pay for ev ery such offense 5 shillings." This lnw wns repealed in 1081. It Got Warmer. Little Willie Say, pn, doesn't It get colder when the thermometer falls? Pa-Yes, my son. Little Willie Well, ours has fallen. Pa How far? Little Willie About flvp feet, and when It struck tho hall Hour it broke." On the Trail. "I'm gunning for railroads," an nounced tho trust buster. "Then come with me," whispered the near humorist. "I can show you some of tho tracks." Brooklyn Life. YOU WILL NEVER KNOW A tenth of what is going on in Town, State, Na tion and World If you fall to take THIS PAPER, Order It Jfota I Order It ffota I ITS "The day is cold, It rains, nnd the Rainy days are dismal days, cheerless and full of gloom; but thoy are sure to come Into the life of every person. You cannot hope to escape them entirely, but you may PREPARE FOR THE COMING STORM By opening a savings account in HONESDALE DIME BANK. Suca a "rainy day" protection Is better than an umbrella, for the latter will get old and fail to be of service, whllo the bank account, with its compound interest, will grow and grow and become a joy and comfort when you most need such factors of helpfulness. Come In nnd let us talk It over. With a one dollar deposit, which will belong to you, we give a Household Bank free. HONESDALE 1911 Special 1911 Sale EVIetiner & Co. Will close out Winter Goods in all their fladeup Stock. Ladies' Tailored Suits, Fur Coats, Muffs and Collars, Long Heavy Coats in black and colors, Separate Skirts, Ladies and Misses Bath Robes. A genuine reduction on regular prices. An annual opportunity that you will be wise to take advantage of. MENNER & CO. D. & H. CO. T1HE TABLE A.M. BUN A.M. A.M, I'.M, SUN 8 30 If 00 10 00 10 00 4 30 i 05 Albany .... . Iilnehamton . A.M.I 10 00 2 15 12 30 8 30 2 15 , Philadelphia. 1 20 2 08 7 25 8 15 4 40 5 30 1 20 2 08 7 10 7 551 ... WIIkes-Hnrre. Scrunton.... P.M. A.M P.M. P.M, A.M. Lv 5 40 6 60 B 05 9 15 9 19 9 36 9 42 9 48 6 20 6 30 2 05 2 15 2 19 2 37 2 43 2 49 2 52 2 67 2 59 3 0.1 307 3 10 3 15 ...Carbondale .Lincoln Avenue.. , Whites Fnrvlow Canaan ... Lake Lodore .... ... . Wnyniart..... , Keene ,. Steene Prompton .... Fortenla , ....Reelyvllle , .... Honesdale .... 5 54 0 M 6 11 6 62 6 68 6 17 6 23 6 26 6 32 635 6 3a 6 43 7 04 9 51 7 07 7 13 7 16 7 20 9 57 10 00 10 Oil 10 OH) 7 24 H 46 10 11 7 27 0 bO 10 15) 7 31 P.M. A.M. P.M. P.M. A.M. Ar The Earliest Irish Immigrant It may interest some of your Celtic readers to know that certainly ono Irishman accompanied Columbus on his voyage of discovery. Ho is so ubiquitous it Is not surprising that ho Btiould be found In any country or In any climate. In a "list of the persons who were loft by Columbus on tho Spanish ls lrnd (Santo Domingo) nnd found killed by tho Indians when ho re turned to sottlo it in the year 1493" (Navarrete) we find tho name of Gtilllermo Ires; natural de Calnoy. en Irlanda." It may bo n question whether "Ires" was Intended for Irish, but Gainey was ovldently meant for Galway. Ex-Mayor S. A. Green In Boston-Herald. TCIUE TRAINS. Trains leave Union depot at 8.25 a. m and 2.4 8 p. m., week days. Trains arrive Union depot at l.tO and 8.05 p. m. week days. Saturday only, Erie and Wyoming arrives at 3.45 p. m. and leaves at 5.50 p. m. Sunday trains leve 2.48 nnd ar rive at 7.02. NOTICE OK ADMINISTRATION, ESTATE OF ANNA M. WIZAIID, Late of Texas Township, Wayne Co., Pa. All persons indebted to said estate are notl lledtomnke Immediate payment to the un dersigned : and those having claims against the said estate are notified to present them duly attested for settlement. Wlllins Compton and Wllllnm Compton. Executors. Honesdalc. Pa., Jan. 11 1911. TO RMUI and dark, nnd dreary. wind .is never weary." DIME BANK HONESDALE BRANCH P.M. P. M, SUN A.M. SUN 10 60 8 05 7 31 731 2 25 1 35 P.M. 10 OS Ar P.M. P.M. 12 17 8 2S 8 17 8 11 1 64 "1 47 7 41 7 7 se 7 30 ?3 ?1! 12 071 12 03 11 41 11 37 1131 11 zi 11 20( 11 161 11 12 11 6S 11 oa Lv A.MJP.M I 11-- 2 00 10 50 12 40 8 45 3 63 7 31 7 32 A.M P.M 10 20 4 05 7 15 9 37 3 15 6 20 A.M. P.M. p&T 8 051 35 5 40 Y.'.'.Y. 7 61 1 25 5 30 7 60 1 21 5 24 7 33 1 03 5 08 7 25 12 66 5 01 7 19 12 51 6 66 7 J7 12 49 JM aKm! p.m. ::::::