THE CITIZEN', "WEDNESDAY, MAIICII 22, 1011. MJSSOURI HELPS CLOTHE PEERS FOR CORONATION. Furnishes Weasel Skins to Deck Eng lish Aristocracy. Mnlcs are not the only useful article Hint trie state of Missouri furnishes to tho British empire. Weasel skins also B from "show me" land to London. In a big St. Louis fur houso n score tf men have been busy sixteen hours a. day at sorting thousands of weasel pelts, which arrive iti an endless suc cession of mall and express packages. Jt Is a long way from this scene to do gorgeous historical pageant of the coronation of King George V. Yet the xveasol skins which tho St. Louis work men stack In neat piles are destined, wider tho aristocratic name of ermine, o ornament the robes of peers and peeresses and perhaps tho state gar ments of the king and queen them boItcs. For St. Louis, "the fur cnpltal of the world," Is supplying most of the er mine which the lords and ladies of the English realm will wear at the crown ing of their sovereign. One St. Louis rm sent 43,000 ermine pelts to Lon don last month and has 15,000 more vfhich are being held for an expect ed rise in price. .Tan. 25 an auction tlouso in London sold 70,000 ermine akiiLS, most of which were collected hj St. Louis dealers. The little animals from which tho ermine skins were stripped are tho name in species as the marauding thrown weasels which farmers' boys In Missouri and Arkansas catch In traps in their henhouses. But in Canada and such northern states as Minnesota and Termont, nature, to protect the weasel, tarns its coat white in winter to mntch the snow. Four months ago, when the northern mows fell, they turned pure white, ex cept that the tip of the tall became a fflossy black. The change in color wrought a miracle. When brown the pelts are worth about 2 cents'each send are considered fit only to cover toy animals for children. But on be coming white the fur Is metamorphos ed into ermine, to which for centuries the adjectives "royal" and "precious" have been applied and which in Aus tria all nre forbidden by law to wear save those of the emperor's blood. One ermine skin before being manufac tared may be worth from $1 to For eacli robe from 500 to 1,000 pelts will be needed. What the king's coro aatlon robe will require may be judged from that of Czar Nicholas of llussia, which was made of 250,000 skins. LAWS FOR BELGIAN PAINTERS Restrictions Regarding Intoxicants and Employers' "iesponsibilities. Belgium has just drawn up a special de of laws governing painters and the exercise of their craft which are singularly strict and exhaustive. From the fashion in which the new laws bodge them in with enforced pre cautions one would think painting the Most dangerous trade in the whole catalogue. In tho first place no em ployer of painters may employ a man who drinks alcoholic beverages to the temporary extinction of his logical jBOwer, and no intoxicating liquors nre to be brought into the vicinity of the porkers. Employers are responsible for the care which their men take of their persons. They must see that every painter washes his hands before eating, sus pend the men whose health is not sat isfactory and discharge any one suf fering from lead poisoning. A painter may not wear the same clothes on the treet or in his home which he uses In his trade. lie Is Imperatively required to arm himself with a special suit of f4otlics and a screened hat. Contractors and master painters are restricted in the use of white lead to the ground lead mixed with oil, and It is stipulated that this mixture must be o handled that it does not splash or some in contact with the painter's kands. Tho law strictly forbids scraping of dry painted surfaces In which white lead has been used. This will doubt Jess prevent much carelessness and pro tect tho careless painter from his own indiscretion, but It is terribly restric tive and smacks of ovcrlcglslatlon. SONGS BY WIRELESS. Experiment In Telephoning Made by Harvard Students. Members of tho Harvard Wireless oiub are winning success in their ex periments with wireless telephoning. Conversation, songs and instrumental music on the graphophono have been flashed from the Ilarvard college sta tion in Jefferson hall to the stations of flio members, whero it was said to be reproduced with absolute clearness. By using electric current of high fre quency alternation in connection with wireless telephony dlstnnces up to for ty miles have been negotiated success fully. As for long distance telegraph rec ords, the members of the society feel that they have no reason to complain, tt. B. Wolverton, the manager of tho club, has picked up messages from Mil waukee, Chicago and Tampa, Fla. Oc casionally he is nble to hear messages from Key West. Irrigation Opening India. Tho canal system of tho Punjab, In dia, Is not only opening up that prov ince to profitable cultivation and there by making houics for millions of peo ple, but it is a sourco of revenue to tho government to tho extent of 12 per cent on tho capital 'invested. The mileage Is 4,405, Irrigating an area of L74n.fi07 acres. 0 : Milady's True Beauty. Beauty rides on a lion. Beauty rests on necessities. The line of beauty Is the result of perfect economy. The cell of the bee Is built at that angle which gives the most strength with the least wax. The bone or quill of the bird gives the most alar strength with the least weight i "It Is the purgation of superfluities." said Michelangelo. There is not a particle to spare In natural structures There is a compelling renson In the uses of the plant for every novelty of color or form, and our art saves ma terial by more skillful arrangement and reaches beauty by taking every superfluous ounce that can bo spared from a wall and keeping nil Its strength In the poetry of columns. In rhetoric this art of omission Is a chief secret of power, and In general it Is proof of high culture to say the great est matters In the simplest way. Em ersoti Recipe F:or Beauty. If you have a hurry call to be beau tlful without the time to work up to the permanent affair here's your chance: First wasb your face with warm water and almond meal. Make a sort of paste of those things and wash off with warm water and dry lightly. Then apply your skin food lest there be any reaction from the drastic treatment to follow Now take a piece ot lemon and roh It over the face till the skin smarts. Itinse again, this time with water that Is gradually brought down from cool to cold. You are then ready for the final cer emouy. Ilold a good sized piece of ice In a towel and Iron your face with It. Then look in the glass. This has been found an absolutely reliable rec ipe before asking for the coveted new bonnet. Viscountess Wears Huge Earrings. Viscountess d'Azy. wife of a distin guished French naval officer, who re cently was In Annapolis, wears rings In her ears which are round and large as a silver half dollar. She lias a seemingly endless variety of these huge ornaments, certain ones Tuscan gold set in rubles, others diamonds and aluminium, others pearls and em eralds in tillgree old gold. One of the most bizarre combinations Is worn with a costume of cerise satin and meclilln lace and shows three plgeoti Uliinil rubies depending one over the other in a hoop of thin Tuscan gold There nre similar ornaments on tiei bodice and a big belt buckle in the hai l; made in the same way. Six bat pins ot exact design ns the earrings adorn the big black beaver trimmed with cerise plumes and u bird of par ndlse. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. The egg shampoo la one of the best to be obtained. It is cleansing and uj the same time provides food for the scalp and hair, making It fine uud glossy Ose may be made of the almond meal jars and cream jars of good size by filling these with medicated cotton, which Is employed for applying pow der and liquids for the toilet use. , Excellent for sprains is the starch poultice. Pour bulling hot water on starch, spread on linen and apply hot Poultices may nlso be made of hops hemlock or charcoal. Medicated poll I tlces may contain any drug ordered If instead of drinking a strung cup of tea or coffee when suffering from a had headache a woman would drink a cup of hot milk she would be more apt to cure the pain, not because hot milk has medicinal properties, but be cause it Is more easily digested than tea or coffee and soothes instead of stimulates the nerves A clear, healthy complexion Is an I in possibility for a woman who stays much indoors In winter. Women should understand that the pores as much as the lungs need fresh air. and failure to give It will simply make lliem larger In their effort to breathe. The fact of living in badly ventilated rooms Is frequently ttie cnuse of large pores in the face. In bathing the bands tepid water and a bland soap should be used, and always dry them thoroughly. If they arc- inclined to chnp it Is a good plan to use a lotion composed of glycerin, one ounce; rosewater, one ounce, and tincture of benzoin, five drops. Hub a few drops Into the hands whenever they are bathed. Use nlso before re tiring and draw on a pair of large, soft gloves. People who are told to use smoked or colored glasses in the bouse some times find this Impracticable because they interfere so greatly with vision. This objection does uot npply to or dinary white glass set In cuplike frames bo shaped that they cut off all light save that which comes from the front The protecting part may be of wire gauze, vulcanite or such Ilka Glasses to suit the vision may be set In such frames, and the latter, even without the glasses, are of use when one reads by a light placed at the right or left of the head. Another good protection for the side of tho eye is a pair of lensless spectacles with hinged side pieces of black glass. FOR THE mWB The Eskimo Coy's Sling. In the far north hi .May anil .It.ne l:n mense numbers of elder ducks lly won. the coast bound for their breeding grounds far to the east of Point Bar row, Alaska. At this season every per son, male and female, is supplied with the Eskimo implement called by them ke-lov-i-tow-tln. which Is made as fol lows: Eight balls three-fourths of an inch In diameter are cut from ivory or bone with a tip or ear through which a hole Is drilled. Eight strands of finely braided sinew nre tied to these balls. At tho opposite ends the strands nre brought together, each of exactly tho same length, and tied to ten or twelve quills of some sea fowl, when the Im plement Is ready for use. Tho bunch of quills is grasped with the right hand, while the fingers of the left comb out the strand, and when nil clear tho balls are bold between the ! forefinger and tho thumb. This is done in n few minutes when a flock of ducks are seen approaching When the game is near enough, with li quick, circular motion, Just the same i as throwing a stone with a sling, the ! missile Is launched among the Hying j birds, when, if one of these strands crosses tho neck or wing of n duck. It j brings it to the ground, where it Is thou captured. j The notion of the air ou the strings tends to separate tho balls In their : flight, so that they cover quite a space, and if the birds are bunched they I often bring one down, and the boy or girl who can do tills is proud and J happy. ! I A Noble Youth. I In the Bodleian library at Oxford is ' a most touching record of heroism and . self sacrifice on the part of n child. The lower door of St Leonard's church, Bridgoworth. was left open, and two young bojs, wandering in. were tempted to mount to the upper part and scramble from beam to beam All at once a joist gave way. The j beam on which they were standing j became displaced. The elder bad just I time to grasp it when falling, while the younger, slipping over his body, j caught hold of his comrade's legs. In I this fearful position the poor lads j hung, crying vainly for help, for mi , one was near. At length the boy clinging to the beam became exhausted. lie could no longer support tho double weight He called out to the lad below that they were both done for. "Could j-ou save yourself If I weiv to loose you?" asked the younger lad "I think I could," returned tho elder "Then goodby, and God bless you!"' said tho little fellow, loosing his hold Another second and he was dashc' to pieces on the stone floor below Trained Horses. It would be quite natural to th'nl; when we see the wonderful thlni's that trained horses nre made to do in tho circus of today that all this be longs to modern times and that such things were never done or even thought of nmong the ancients. But tho truth is that all the wonderful feats performed by trained horses now are merely repetitions of what wns done several hundred years ngo. Horses were then trained to dance on their hind legs and to fight mock battles, striking at their enemies with their fore feet, and to perform many other so called "tricks." One of the most wonderful feats ever learned by a horse was In the olden time. A large three sided braided rope was stretch ed several feet from the ground, nud on this the horse walked, preserving its balance perfectly. Catching the Snake's Tail. This Is a Japanese game and Is play ed as follows: The players form a line, each resting his hands on tin shoulders of the player in front. The one who is tho catcher is out. The first player on the lino is called tho head and the last the tail. When the game begius tho catcher stands about fifteen or twenty feet away from the head and at a given signal tries to catcli the tail or end player without pusldng any one else. The others de fend the tall by moving about In any way they choose, except that the line must. not be broken, for should It break the tall Is considered caught and con sequently must become the catcher, while the catcher goes to the head of the line. Zuni Toys. ZunI Indians make their toys out of clay and bake them bard so that they will not crumble. They know how to model dolls and goats and frogs and cows and birds that warble when one fills the hollow body with water and blows through a tube inserted in the back. And they make all kinds of curl ous clay rattles. A Forgotten Land. There used to be a country whero all tho children were polite, but tho geog raphers have forgotten Its name. At Dinner. No matter where we children are We run In answer to the bell, And dinner comes in piping hot. It makes us hungry Just to smell. Poor father sharpens up his knife And carvts with all his might and main, But lone before he's had a bite Our Willie's plate comes back again. We eat our vegetables and meat, For mother, who Is always right, Bays those who wish to liave dessert Must show they have an appetite. And when a Sunday comes around Bo very, very good we seem you'd think moat any one could tell That for dessert we'd have Ice cream. -St. Nicholas. Historlo Boautles. The famous beauties of tho world are wise when they leave no portraits ot themselves. Take Marguerite of Va lols. She was an Immoral, dishonor able, criminal, scheming, unscrupulous villalncss. but she was dowered with euch charm that there was not a Jailer or an chemy she could not charm when she tried. No, nor a woman not even the wives of her lovers. Men camo from every country, taking year long Journeys, only to see her and went away, after a little glimpse, saying they bad "seen loveliness itself." Then one sees her portraits. Too much fore head, not enough eyebrow, a straight nose and expressive mouth (In one pic ture n lovely mouth) and that is all. Mary, queen of Scots, was very lovely three kingdoms battled because of her beauty and yet her pictures leave one cold. Fouche said her portrait showed every trait of the lowest crim inal type. That was before he knew whose picture he criticised. London Truth. Lost Meanings. "Those who care for the beginnings of things may be glad that the quill pen survives to remind us that the original pen was plucked from n bird," observes a writer. "Germans and Frenchmen nre in no danger of for getting that thanks to their respec tive words 'feder' and 'plume,' but tho English 'pen' suggests a feather only when one chooses to think about It and recall tho Latin 'pentia.' Almost all our writing materials are no longer what etymologically they profess to bo. Paper is no longer made of pa pyrus; a pencil Is not a little tall 'penlcillus,' like a camel's hair brush: the 'lead' of a lead pencil Is not lead, and the 'India rubber' with which we erase Its marks docs not and never did come from India. Even of parch ment there is probably not a fragment In the country, except perhaps. In a museum and coming from Pergamum. in Asia." Chicago News. Tho Man's Mistake. Out of loyalty to bi3 own sex the manager of the woman's suit depart ment discharged his young woman stenographer and hired a man. The first batch of lette.rs dictated to the man were written to about a hundred old customers, whom he Invited to ex amine privately a lot of exclusive gar ments before they were placed on sale. The day after the letters were mailed the women Docked Into the store, but the fire that burned In their eyes was the fire of the avenger rather than of the bargain hunter. One word which each woman had underlined in her letter explained their wrath. The gar monts, so the manager had meant to say, had been designed for women of stock figure, such as they possessed, but the male stenographer had drawn on the alphabet and had written it "stocky." "No woman on earth would have been guilty of such a mistake." growled the manager. The next week the girl stenographer had her Job back. Philadelphia Led ger. Possibly. Mr. Briggs Here's an article, my dear, a very Interesting article. In which a prominent doctor say that a certain cure for nervousness In women is silence coiuplete silence. Mrs. Briggs (promptly) I'll bet nnythlng some fool of a man doctor wrote thntl Cleveland Plain Dealer. HKPOItT OF THE CONDITION OF THE HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK HONICSDALK. WAYNK COUNTY, PA At the close of business, March 7, 1911. resources. Loans and Discounts $ 220.200 3' Ovcrdrafts.securcd and unsecured 10 M U. S. Ilomls to secure circulation. 55,000 00 Premiums on U. S.lionds 2.800 00 Hoods, securities, etc 1,352,491 67 Hnnktner-hniisp. furniture nnrt fix tures 40,000 00 Due from National Banks (uot Heservo Agents) 3,031 13 uue irom ciaieanurrivaie lianics and Hankers. Trust Commmies. and Havings Hanks 306 97 uue irom armroveu reserve agents 112.G88 25 Checksand othercash Items.... 2.2J4 82 Notes of other National Hanks.. b55 00 i' ractionai paper currency, nlcK cls and cents 250 Lawful Money lteserve in Bunk, viz : Specie $81,243 60 Legal tender notes 0,825 00- 91.0G8 50 iieueniption mna witn u. h. Treasurer. (5 ner cent, of circu lation) 2,750 00 Due from U.S. Treasurer 000 00 Total $1,881,887 St LIAIIir.ITIES. Capital Stock paid In $ Surplus fund... Undivided profits, less expenses and taxes paid National Hank notes outstanding Due to other National Hanks Individual deposits subject to check tl,lJM70 81 Demand certificates of deposit 23,661 00 Certified checks 63 00 Cashier's checks out- standing COS 56-$ 1 Itonds borrowed Notes and bills redlscounted Hills payable, including, certifi cates o! deposit for money bor rowed Liabilities other than those above stated 150,000 00 150,000 00 70.850 31 61.60(1 00 Ml 51 ,458,696 07 None None None None Total $1,881,887 92 Stato of Pennsylvania, County of Wayne, ss, I. II. Z. Russell. President of the above named Hank, do solemnly swear that tne above statement Is true to the best ot my knowledge and belief. 11. Z. Kussell, President, Subscribed and sworn to before me this Uth day of March. 1311. It. A. SMITH, N. IV Correct-attcst: Andrew Thompson, 1 P. it. Murray. J-DIrectors. K, B. Habdenberoii, I 20w4 A. O. BLAKE, AUCTIONEER & CATTLE DEALER You will make money by having me. BBKI.L PHONE 9-U HfitliatlV. VS. ... j , . . (ttmssMtiMftH Great Men Tail' and Short. A recent Investigator has attempted to show that Lombroso and, his follow ers were wrong in asserting that men of genius were of smnll stature. Of 230 individuals of eminence he found that figures were obtainable for 103; of these sixteen were of middle height. fifty-eight above .nnd twenty-nine be low. Americans particularly combined greatness with Inches. Jefferson and Jackson were more than six feet tall Sumner wns six. feet four Inches, nnd Washington, Lincoln nnd Becchor wen more than six feet Among famous foreigners Tolstoy was a large man and so were Thackeray, Bismarck nnd Darwin. On the contrary, many of the world'e greatest geniuses were undersized nnd even deformed. Napoleon, Poo, Pope Alexander the Groat, Nelson. Blake nnd Caesar were small men. After all is said, genius Is no re specter of rules. New York American Cards on Sunday. Pepys, the diarist, was greatly scan dallzcd when he first saw cards played on a Sunday. "I did find the queen the Duchess of York and another at cards, with the room full of ladles and great men. which I was amazed to sec on a Sunday, having not believed, but contrnrily flatly denied the snme a lit tle while since." Small Thinjs. We nre too fond of our own will. We want to be doing what we fancy mighty things, but the great point Is to do small things when called to them In n rleht snlrlt. JOSEPH N. WELCH ire The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Office: Second floor Masonic Build ing, over C. C. .Tadwin's drug store, Monesdale. ::n:tt:n:::::u::::::::::t:::::::i::t::ttn3 h MARTIN CAUFIELD Designer and Man ufacturer of MEMORIALS Office and Works 1036 MAIN ST. HONESDALE, PA. a i: a ii a a t: mtttmtm::mnam:a::ttaaatmaa M. LEE BRAMAN EVERYTHING IN LIVERY Buss for Every Train and Town Calls. Horses always for sale Boarding and Accomodations) for Farmers Prompt and polite attention at all times. AXXEN HOUSE BARN WINDOW GLASS AA QUALITY FREE FROM WAVES AND BUBBLES. The largest assortment of sizes, single and double thickness, at JADWIN'S DRUG STORE. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION, ESTATE OF KUGENE SWINHLK, Late of South Canaan Township Wayne, Co. All persons indebted to said estate are noti fied to make immediate payment to the un dersigned ; and those having claims against the said estate arc notified to present them duly attested tor settlement. JEANNETT SWINGLE, Executrix. South Canaan. Pa.. Feb. 27, 11)11. NOTHJls is hereby given that an ap plication will be made to the Gov ernor of Pennsylvania on April 18, 1911, at 11 o'clock a. m., under the Act of Assembly, entitled an Act to provide for tho Incorporation and regulation of certain corporations, approved April 29, 1874, and sup plements thereto for the charter of an Intended corporation to be called the Wallen-Paupack Power Com pany, tho character and object of which is tho storage, transportation and furnishing of water with the right to take rivulets and lands anil erect reservoirs for holding water for manufacturing and other pur poses, and for the creation, establish ing, furnishing, transmission and us ing of water power therefrom and for these purposes to have, possess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and prlvleges of the said Act of Assem bly and supplements thereto. LAURENCE H. WATRES, Solicitor. Scranton, Pa. 22eolS m:tmut:ut:::n:nmm:tr;::tmmmm I WHEN THERE t: li w IS ILLNESS in your family you of course call 8 it a reliable physician. Don't stop U i at that; have bis prescriptions a J put up at a reliable pharmacy, w U even if it is a little farther from Jt 8 your home than some other store. JJ i You can find no more reliable f jj store than ours. It would be im- jf possible for more care to be taken ; JJ in the selection of drugs, etc., or 51 in the compounding, l'rescrip- jj ft tions brought here, either night 11 J. or day, will bo promptly and U ti accurately compounded by a tt y competent registered pharmacist H jt and the prices will be most rea- Jj n sonablc. JJ jj O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, H II Opp. D. it II. Station, Ho.nusdale. Pa. jj t! :: :::::::::n:::::::::::::a:j::t::n:::ms5:::t: Attention is called totne STRENGTH of the Wayne County The FINANCIER of New York City lias published a ROLL Oh HONOR of the 11,470 State Ranks and Trust Companies of United States. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS RANK Stands 38th in the United States Stands 10th in Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $527,342.88 Total ASSETS, $2,951,048.26 Honesdale, Pa., December 1, 1910.