THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1011. -OOCi 1 SI IB 111 1 HI III IN II 1NW Miners and Operatives at Loggerheads For Four teen Months -Ooo THE Btrluo of thu Westmoreland county (Pa.) coal miners, whii li remains unbroken nfter four teen months, lias lasted longer than any other strike In the history of labor unionism In this country. Over 10,000 miners, living on an al lowance of $2.50 a week collected through flfty cent assessments from every union miner In this country anil forwarded from the headquarters of the United Mine Workers of America in Indianapolis, have been eking out an existence amid the greatest vicissi tudes within a stone's throw of twenty-eight of the richest coal mines in tills country without having swung a pickax or lifted a shovel for over a year. As for (he owners of rue twenty eight mines, they publicly made th. (statement not long siyo: "We pay the state of Pennsylvania $100,000 a year in taxes, yet we haven't mined a ton of coal for over n year." The mine owners In explaining the.r refusal to arbitrate the strike or to consent to the strikers' terms say thai they are "merely trying to manage our own business In our own way without Interference from the labor union." The Miners' Side. The striking miners, on the other hand, say that for many years evciy wagon of coal they havo filled has been unfairly measured by the coin pany ofliclals and that they have had to work twelve hours a day instead of the desired eight hours. They say they havo been obliged to patronize th: companies' high priced stores and thai they havo been discharged by uiin foremen because they refused to vot a certain political ticket. They say they were forced to b3ai the cost of the new explosives and oi the safety lamps which the companies have prescribed In the mines during the last two years. They say that they held a grievance meeting in Green burg fourteen months ago to protest against these costly prescriptions mill that a score of the men who had p ir tlcipated in this meeting were dis charged by the coal companies. Tli y say that they felt that the only vn' to protect themselves from contlnu d oppression from the companies vas t insist on the companies recognlzin their newly organized union. The companies, on their side, relor that the miners' objections to the new explosive and safety lamps are mere pretenses and that the minors were all perfectly contented until delegate of the United Mine AVorkers of Auier iea came from the Indianapolis head quarters and began to talk unionism tn the region. SInco the 15,000 miners formally struck In March, 1010, and marched from one mine to another in the dis trict calling to their fellows to strike, too, there havo been bloodshed and misery a-plenty throughout the Greens burg district. 120 Babies Die. Scores of strikers, deputy sheriffs and strike breakers have been beaten, stoned and shot. Out of the 349 ba bies that have been born in the tem porary homes of the miners since the strike began 120 have died. The min ers themselves, having been dispos sessed from the drab colored rows of wooden houses rented to them by the coal companies near the mines before the beginning of the strike, have built a colony of wooden shacks. These shacks, according to persons who recently visited them, nre .not even weather proof. They are built from whatever loose lumber the min ers were able to pick up through (he district. Throughout the bitterest days of the past winter they were SACCHARIN BARRED. Government Forbids Its Use Said ta Disturb Digestion. All persons having a desire for something sweet must find otter means of satisfying the craving than saccharin. That populnr substitute for sugar will be forbidden after .Inly 1. Tho flat of the agricultural de partment prohibiting the use of sac charin in any food product has gone forth. Saccharin tecnically is a product of coal tar. It Is used as n substitute for sugar nnd Is 300 per cent sweeter than sugar. Tho objection to saccha rin is that Jt Is n disturber of diges tion. The decision Is of the most, sweep ing nature. It directly affects more than thirty different classes of food, including soft drinks, sweet pickles, Jellies, Jams and also some makes of beer. The referee board of consulting sci entific experts in Its report says: "Tho continued use of saccharin for a long time In quantities over three tenths of a grain per day is liable to Impair digestion. Tho addition of saccharin as a substitute for cane sugar or other forms of sugar reduces tho food value of tho sweetened prod uct and hence lowers its quality." ooo- Ten Thousand Men Are Living on an Allowance of $2.50 a Week ooo heated with pans of such coal as tli miners could pick up near the mil; entrances and along the roads. Following this winter of shack life there arc many tales of suffering, of children horn In open fields, of fami lies that lived tireless through fierce storms of snow. According to tin mine owners, the strike would never havo begun hut for the mine workers' national organization, and both side agree that but for the contribution- of the national organization the stril;.' would have been broken long ago. $20,000 Distributed Weekly. Every week since the strike started 52O.0CO has boon sent to Greensbti!" from the mine workers' national head qunrters at Indianapolis, the money being deposited In the shape of n check in a Grcensburg bank. It is drawn out in specie and green backs by a man named McCartne who represents the national organb' tion in the striking district. It is car ried by him to the second floor of r deserted private residence in n Greens burg side street, which Is occupied ti the strikers as a local headquartei and which has paper Instead of pane of glass In Its windows. Once a week across a kitchen table while n Hue oi almost 1,000 men, women and children file by him ho pushes a bill or n hand ful of silver across to each In turn $2.50 to each man, 75 cents to each woman and 50 cents to each child in every striking miner's family. Every mine worker in this country, it Is said, is being taxed 50 cents a week to make up this weekly ?20,000 contribu tion to the Grcensburg strikers. According to a recent visitor to the strike gripped region, about ten per sons have been killed and nearly 100 wounded In the course of the four teen months' strike. The striking miners say that all the.i want is to arbitrate with the mine owners. They sot much store on the fact that Governor Tenor of Pennsyl vania stated publicly recently that he was greatly in favor of a congression al or legislative investigation of the disagreement of the miners and em ployers. A bill making possible n con gressional Investigation has already passed the house of representatives and is before the senate. Arbitration Desired. What the strikers would particularly like, according to their representatives, is the creation of an arbitration com mission of three. One member of this commission would be chosen by the strikers, thb other by the mine owner and the third either by the first two commissioners or, if those could not agree, by Governor Tenor himself. A few weeks ago in a pouring rain the striking miners of Grcensburg had a big procession celebrating the strike's fourteenth month of unbroken contlnu ance. Fifteen hundred men, 100 wo men and 150 children marched In the ranks. Two wealthy and philanthrop ic women and two clergymen of wide ly different creeds led the procession and afterward joined In making speeches to the strikers In the town' cramped and crowded public hall. One of the women was Mrs. Glen dower Evans of the Woman's Trade league of Boston. She is the wife of a stockholder in one of the mines In which the strike is going on. The other woman was the wife of a polit ical officeholder in Pittsburg. One of the two clergymen was the Rev. D. L. Schultz, who last August resigned his position as pastor of the Loraine Street Baptist church of ritts- burg in order to work among the strikers. The second clergyman who headed tho strikers was Rabbi R. I Coffee of tho Tree of Life synagogue of Pittsburg. WHALE NETTED FORTUNE. It Yielded Oil and Something Else. AmbergriR Worth $60,000. In a vault at the headquarters of a wholesale drug firm In Boston nre about 100 pounds of ambergris. It is valued at $00,000, according to experts. Trade quotations give the present market value of nmbergris at from S10 to 15 an ounce. Tho 100 pound pack ago is by far the largest amount of am bergrls received in Boston or New Ene land In many years and is said to b of uncommonly high quality. It was picked up by the crews of the bark Bertha, Captain Ben Vera, and the brig Viola, Captain John A. Cook, who found it while whaling off tho coast of Africa in December. The crews of tho Bertha and Vloln were pursuing sperm whales when tho lookouts sighted several spouting In tho sunlight. One fellow about thlr ty feet long lagged behind tho others. IIo was sluggish, and It happened that the harpoons which simultaneously pierced his sides came from small boats from both ships. That's why tho crews aro dividing the spoils. The laggard yielded only fifteen bar rels of oil, but the grumbling of the whalers was dispelled by the huge black lump of ambergris taken from him. CASE LIE TH! SIAMESE TWINS Mystery of Indian Boy's Dis appearance Explained. HAD BEEN MISSING TEN YEARS Body Found In a Cave In Oklahoma Has Two Heads, Four Arms and Four Feet Boy Came Across It While Hunting Rabbits. The mummified body of a child was recently found In a cave near Okmul gee, Okla.. by Emmons Lowe, a farm er boy. The body has two heads, four arms, four legs and four feet and is that of a person nearly five feet tall. The arms are all of the same length and reach far below the knees. Tho Lowo boy found the mummy while hunting rabbits. He followed his dog on the trail of a rabbit Into the cave and while groping around came upon tho body. The flesh on the bones has dried, and apparently there lias been no decay. Old residents In the vicinity of the cave say the body is that of an Indian boy who has been missing several years, it was known to theru that there was such a boy among the In dians, lie was kept out of sight as much as possible by the other mem bers of the tribe to which ho belonged, but had been seen by a number of white persons. John Pepper of Okmulgee said ho had seen the two headed Indian boy a number of times. The monstrosity was in reality two persons witli one body, ho said. Tho mummy Is that of two persons, apparently, even the shoulders of each being separate anil perfect, the body very wide nnd the lower limbs fully developed. The bodies appear to be Jollied together be low tho shoulders and from there down to the hips. Physicians havo examin ed the body and say there were really two persons or two bodies and that they were grown together and could not have been separated oven by n sur gical operation. Pepper remembers that tho Indian boy or boys walked and talked when alive. The Indians were reticent about them, or him. nnd llttlo was known of him outside of the tribe to which he belonged. It Is supposed that the "twins," as they were called by the white people who had seen them, wan dered away and died In tho cave. Pep per says they have been missing near ly ten years, or at least It has been that long since he saw them alive. Go! When you're feeling sort of tired And you don't know what to do, Kind of feel you need tho doctor, Find yourself becoming blue, Get to think you must bo ailing. Can't enjoy your special dish. Drop your work and take to loaflns Go away somewhere and fish! New York TelesrMfl V. B. HOLMES, President. A. T. SEARLE. Vice Pres. We want you to understand the reasons of this -arrxis- WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK HONE SD ALE, PA., HAS A CAPITAL OP - - - $100,000.00 AND SURPLUS AND PROFITS OF - 427,342.00 MAKING-ALTOGETHER - - 527,342.00 EVERY DOLLAR ot which must be lost It has conducted a growing and successful an increasing number ot customers with its cash tunds are protected by jnuDEivr) BTisisii vaults. All ot these things, coupled with conservative management, insured by the CAREFUL PERSONAL ATTENTION constantly gWen the liank's affairs by a notably nble Hoard of Directors assures the patrons ot that SUPREME SAFETY which is the prime essential of a cood . Rank. DECEMBER 1, 1910 Total Assets, - 8- DEPOSITS MAY BE MADE BY MAIL. t3 DIRECTORS W. R. HOLMES CHAS.J. SMITH. H.J. CONGER. W. F. SUYDAM. A. T. SEARLE T. R. OLARK FOR ITGIVESJfTiE BEST RESULTS. 1 EIGHT, iL 'TRADE' W The SMITHSONIAN I CORRECT "A"l 5 TRUSS j " ViX IMPOSITION, i C. G J" -A EVE A SUFFRAGETTE. Dominated Adam and Caused Him to Eat the Apple, Says Professor. The original suffragette, according to Dr. Paul Haupt, professor of Semitic languages in Johns Hopkins univer sity, was Eve, who dominated Adam and caused him to eat of the forbidden fruit. "Some people think that when the Lord created Eve ho took not only a rib from Adam, but also the back bone," says Dr. Haupt. Dr. Haupt apparently subscribes to this view, nis theory Is set forth In a paper which ho read before the American Philosophical society In Philadelphia. For his authority Dr. Haupt quotes the Bible. In Genesis xvll, 7, he finds the quotation: "And unto thee shall bo his desire, and thou shalt rule over him." The context seems to have no relation to this quotation, and Dr. Hnupt inti mates that it was interpolated prob ably by n woman who knew her rights, for in the preceding chapter Dr. Haupt finds that tho Lord pronounced a curse on Eve, saying: "I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy sighing. In pain thou shalt bear children. Nevertheless thy desire shall bo to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee." i Dr. Haupt says: "I have discovered that the story of the fall of man and tho story of Cain nnd Abel were writ ten in parallel columns. In the space between commentaries wore made. Some woman or some man under the Influence of woman wrote this suf fragette gloss in tho space between the columns. Later it crept into the col umn containing the story of Cain and Abel, and there it is found todav." Korea's Population. Figures recently published by the Japanese ministry of finance give the population of Korea as 12,303,400 na tives. 143,040 Japanese nnd 11,701 for eigners. There Is plenty of room for very ninny more people, as the country is COO miles long by 135 miles broad. Its parallels are about tho same as from Concord, N. n., to Wilmington, NT. C. HAIR HEALTH. If You Have Scalp or Hair Trouble, fake Advantago of This Offer. We could not afford to so strongly endorse Rexall "03" Hair Tonic and continue to sell It as we do, if it did not do all we claim It will. Should our enthusiasm carry us away, and Rexall "03" Hair Tonic not give entire satisfaction to the users, they would lose faith in us nnd our statements, and In consequence our business pres tige would suffer. We assure you that If your hair Is beginning to unnaturally fall out or If you have ary scalp trouble, Rexall "03" Hair Tonic will promptly eradi cate dandruff, stimulate hair growth and prevent premature baldness. Our faith in ltoxall "03" Hair Tonic Is so strong that we ask you you to try It on our positive guaran tee that your money will be cheerful ly refunded if it does not do as we claim. Two sizes, 50c. and $1.00. Sold only at our store The Rexall Store A. M. LEINE. H. S. SALMON, Cashier w. J. WARD. Asb't Cashier for the ABSOLUTE SECURITY Bank. before anv depositor can lose a PENNY business for over 35 years, serving hdeenty ana satisfaction. - - $2,951,048.26 F. P. KIMBLE II. S. SALMON J. W. i'AULKY SALE BY 3D W" X 1ST. "ST. DENISi BROADWAY and 11th ST. Within eaiv ccceit of erery point of in. lerett. , H.ff block from WaEimikitV NOTED UFnriwair of &"f DUtrict. . win line nis, courieou a emce and homelike surrounding. Ro"J!l 51.00 per day and op With privilege ol Bath SI. 50 per day and up Kunurun pi mi Tabia d'Hote Braakfaal . . 60a TfM. TAYLOR O, SON. Ino. mmatjmaumHBmBttttjmanmmuBj H is 1 MARTIN CAUFIELD jj Designer and Man ufacturer of MEMORIALS 8 Office and Works 1036 MAIN ST. a HONESDALE, PA. 1 i MmamnmroHannaaanammattttmi j SPENCER The Jeweler t would like to sec you if you are in the market! for i J JEWELRY, SILVER- WARE, WATCHES, CLOCKS, I DIAMONDS, AND NOVELTIES I "Guaranteed articles only sold.' KICK. THE Have you a kick coming ? Is there anything that displeases you ? Are you unhappy and need cheering up? Has any little thing gone wrong ? Tell us your troubles. Let us help you ? For each of the three best kicks each week, The Citizen will give a brand new crisp one dollar bill. Don't kick too long. 50 words to a kick. No limit, however, to the num ber of your kicks. You don't have to be a subscriber to be a kicker. Open to everyone alike, men, women and children, subscribers and non-subscribers. Old and young, rich and poor. Remember two cents a word for the three best kicks. There must be something you don't like. Kick about it. What good is an editor any way except to fix up the kicks of his read ers? Relieve your mind and get a prize! KICK! KICK I KICK! A few suggested subjects at which to kick! The weather, of course. Tight fitting shoes. The high cost of living. The hobble skirt and the Harem trousers. High hats on week days. Suffraglsm, etc., etc., etc. The funnier the better. Several people have asked us if the fifty-word letters containing kicks have to be signed. How else will we know to whom to award the prizes? Whether in the event of the letter winning a prize and being published, the name of the kicker would appear Is another question. Undoubtedly the writer's wishes would be followed on that score. Our Idea of the "Kick Kontest" includes everything except direct and offensive personali ties. Sit right down now and dash off flfty words about anything you don't like and want to register a kick against. It won't take you five minutes and you may win a prize. The more original tho subject the better chance for a prize. One dollar for les3 than five minutes work is pretty good pay. Of course you can make your kick as short as you wish. A clever fifteen word kick may win a prize over a full-length fifty-word one. The shorter the better. For the best kick of ten words or less The Citizen will pay an additional prize of one dollar. Now then, lace up your shoes and let drive! PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Attoriieys-nt-Lnw. H WILSON, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office adjacent to Post Ofllce In Dlmmick office, Honesilaie, Pn. WM. H. LEE, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office over post office. All legal business promptly attended to. Honesdale, Pa. EC. MUMFORD, . ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office Liberty Hall building, opposite the Post Office, Honesdale, Pa. HOMER GREENE. ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office over Kelt's store. Honesdale Pa. Charles a. Mccarty, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR- IT-LAW. Special and prompt attention given to the collection of claims. Office over Kelt's inew store, Honesdale. Pa. P. KIMBLE, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office over the nnst office Honesdale. Pa. ME. SIMONS, . ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, Office in the Court House, Honesdale Pa. PETER II. ILOFF, ATTORNEY fc COUNSELOR-AT-LAWj Office Second floor old Savings Bnk building. Honesdale. Pa. s EARLE & SALMON, ATTORNEYS 4 COUNSELORS-AT-LAW. Offices lately occupied by Judgo Searle x. CHESTER A. GARRATT,' ATTORNEY 4 COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office adjacent to Post Office, Honesdale, P Dentists. DR. E. T. BROWN, DENTIST. Office First lloor, old Savings Rank build ing, Honesdale. Pa. TiR, C. R. BRADY, U DENTIST, HONESDALE, PA. Office Hours 8 a. m. to 0 o. m. Any evening by appointment. Citizens' phone. 33. Residence. No. 8G-X Physicians. PB. PETERSON, M. D. . 1126 MAIN STREET, HONESDALE, PA. Eye and Kar a specialty. The fitting of glass es given careful attention. Certified Nurse, MRS. C. M. BONESTEEL, GLEN EYRE, TIKE CO., PA., Certified Nursc.tP. S. N. Telephone-Glen Eyre. limol Livery. LIVERY. i red. G. Rickard has re moved his livery establishment from corner Church street to Whitney's Stone Barn ALL CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. FIRST CLASS OUTFITS. 75yl Advertise In Tho Citizen? EDITOR!!!