PAGE 4 THE CITIZEN', FIUDAY, MAY ilO, 1011. THE CITIZEIT Scnil Weekly Founded 1008; AVccklr Founded 1844. PUPMRIIED WKDKESDAT8 AIID FRIDAYS BV THE CITIZEN PUBUB1IISO CO. KntPTfrt as second-class matter, at the postolUce. Honesdale. I'a. K, II. HAKDEN'ISKKQII. It. II. WITIIGRBEK. -J. M. SMELTZEK PKKSIDKNT MANAGING EDITOR - ASSOCIATE EDITOR directors: c. n, dokfllnokn, m. b.allen, ii. wilson, e, b. iiardenberoh, w. w. wood Our friends who favor us with contributions, and desire to have the same returned, should in every case enclose stamps for that purpose. TEHMS : ONE YEAR, - $1.50 THREE MONTHS, - 3Sc. EIX MONTH.", - .7i i ONE MONTH, - 13c. Remit by Kxyresi Mw.ey Order. Draft, Post Office Order or Hcsr lBtered letii-r. Address it.! oniniunlwi;lon to Tho Citizen. No. BOJMoIn Mit-et. Honesdale. Pit. All nut Ice of shows, or other entertHlimu'iits held for the purpo'e of making inoiicy or any Items tl'Ot contain advertising matte will only be admitted to this piipri on payment of regular- advertising rates. Xntln of entertainment for the licnellt of ehnr.-hes or for charitable pin ioses where a up U charged, will be puhlihed at half rates. Cnids ut thanks, memorial poetry and resolutions of respect will also be ihnr'ed for at the rate of a cent u word. The policy of the The Citizen is to print the local neics in an interesting manner, to summarise the news of the world at large, to fight for the right as this paper sees the right, without fear or favor to the end that it may serve the best interests of its readers and the welfare of the county. ' FIUDAY, MAY 20, 1011. So Mayor Gaynor's life is Just one child's elop ment after another. 0 0 0 Count that day lost and cross It out That sends no White Hope up the spout. 0 0 0 J. P. Morgan says that the oil decision satisfies him. That must take a load off the Supreme Court's mind. 0 0 0 Last Friday It was said "Peace expected In Mex ico Saturday." Must have been one of those week end parties you read about. 0 0 0 Neither Mr. Roosevelt nor anybody else can take the National Convention away from Mr. Taft with out Mr. Taft's consent. Mr. Taft's re-election Is quite another story. N. Y. World. A serial story continued in 1912. 0 0 0 A girl, travelling with her mother in Rome be came sick and the mother summoned a doctor from California by cablegram. His flying trip across the continent bids fair to break all records. News Item. Bet his trip won't have anything on his bill. 0 0 0 Unless otherwise directed by Congress, all that remains of the Ill-fated battleship Maine after It has been raised from Havana Harbor and stripped of parts of value, will be towed out to sea and sunk in deep water. Seems to be a case of up again, down again, rescue and drown again. "Remember the Maine" and then sink her again. 0 0 0 HKI HULLS AND IMXK HEAVENS. Irene Osgood, who has supposedly written a nov el since the papers call Iter a novelist, is suing her husband for a separation, because, in the words of her counsel, hubby said he would " make her life a red hell." Of course, that isn't any nice way for a husband to act. A red hell, or even' a black or blue hell, is not' a fit' environment for a novellstic lady. It makes her write books with unhappy endings and cuts into the gate receipts. It is presumed that her husband who writes in a letter, "I have cast alcohol away," did so because the decanter was empty or else he must have used a Boomerang Bottle. Don't know what a Boomerang Bottle is? How stupid. A Boomerang Bottle is a medium sized Fiask which, when "cast away," circles around to the nearest bar and returns filled to its owner's hip pocket. After having repeatedly "cast alcohol away," the writer's husband returned home seeing "pink heav ens" and proceeded to make the happy home a "red hell" by way of contrast, we suppose. Also, by way of diversion, he once tried to strangle his wife on a ship. It seems likely that the lady will secure her sep aration. We hope she will anyway. Then her hus band will probably " mourn his loss " by drinking black and white high balls until he dies. In all events, the lady's experiences should make capital material for a book on "Hells I have known" no matter what the color may have been. 0 0 0 TO IiIE OH NOT TO LIU. It is extremely doubtful If anybody ever journeyed through this life of ours without at some time or other having told a He. Of course thero are lies and lies, and it is a mighty peculiar thing that those of us who would rather die than soil our lips with a "black" He have no compunction whatsoever at uttering what Is popularly termed a "white" He. "Tell Mrs. Brown I am not at home." Some people would call this a lie and others would say it was an excuse. That old question, " Is it over right to He?" is likely to bo revived by the wide publicity given to the fact that the relatives and physicians in attendance on the French Premier not only concealed from him the death of the Minister of War, but told him that his friend was still alive, says the N. Y. Times. The ex cuse is the familiar one that in his weak state the re covery of M. Monls would he imperiled by the shock the truth would give him. The adequacy of that excuse In cases of this kind is never very seriously denied, and oven the most rigid of moralists would bo likely to admit it when the truth meant death, or danger of death, and false 'hood gave life, or even a better chance of life, to one in whom he was deeply interested. People of a mor ality less stern and arbitrary tell such "lies" without hesitation or compunction, from an instinctive feeling that the end justifies the means as, Indeed, It al ways does when the standard of expediency Is suffi ciently high and the means used are the only ones by which a really deslrablo end can bo attained. And It really takes a bad motive to make an in dubitable He, exactly as it does to make an indubitable murder. In the one Instance as in tho other there is a borderland. Certainly all untruths, or nontruths, are not lies, and fiction has its legitimate uses for many peoplo besides tho novelists and lawyers. Still, accuracy of 'statement is a fine thing, and tho reasons for departure from It should be good. A few doctors say that there is never any real need for outright ly ing to patients, but the vast majority of the profession are not so scrupulous and use unveraclty as readily by their practice as they do any ono of a hundred other poisons. 1 " Success and failure each have seven letters, but that doesn't prove anything, as far as the four letters in work are concerned. o o : Without war a nation would degenerate, would j become effeminate morally and physically, said Bishop Codnian, In Portland, Me., last week. He may be a Bishop but he talks like a !ish, a er cod, f'rin stance. 0 0 0 A Brockton, Mass., woman who Is 97 says she expects to live to be 100. One of her rules for ac complishing this is never to gossip. Most women would rather die nt twenty, is our entirely Innocuous opinion. 0 0 0 "HOW TO HE HAPPY THOUGH MAUKIHD." Such a delightful state of affairs as the one hint ed at In the heading of this edltoiial is not as impos sible as Is popularl) imagined. For the benefit of at least two young and, let us hastily add handsome and healthy bachelor barris ters of this community, we will indite a few rules, which if faithfully lollowed, will produce the desired result. To begin with, procuro a wife. This Is absolute ly necessary to marriage. Accept no substitutes, not even affinities. One wife is enough to experiment with, and even a Mormon starts off gradually. It Is quite easy to find a wife nowadays, much easier than a good cook. Good cooks who will stay are so very scarce. A wife has to stay. If she didn't she'd lose her meal ticket. A wife may be procured by an offer of marriage or through a matrimonial agency. The latter Is safer because then you don't know what you're getting. This thing of speak-for-yourself-John Is all right in poems and places where you can make faces at your self in a mirror over the girl's shoulder when she accepts you. Having secured a wife, you are then ready to begin married life, providing you are not lucky enough to have some one forbid the banns. Now for tho rules to be happy after marrioge. There are six of them. The first is "get a divorce as soon as possible." Tho other five don't count. 0 0 0 Little drops of whitewash, Little grains of dough, Make a Senator's toga Clean as falling snough. 0 0 0 YOUR OPPORTUNITY. i Y What Position Do You Want? You Can Take Your Pick If You Win The Citi zen's Scholarship Contest. Banking Assayer Teacher Chemist Navigation Bookkeeper Toolmaking Metallurgist Architecture Coal Mining Stenographer Gas Engineer Civil Engineer Blacksmithing Metal Mining Mine Surveyor Patternmaking Foundry Work Boiler Designer Marine Engineer Bridge Engineer Poultry Farming Advertising Man Mining Engineer Commercial Law Carpet Designing Electric Lighting Electric Railways English Branches Electric YVireman Textile Designing Telephone Expert Foreman Plumber Machine Designer Window Trimming R. R. Constructing Agricultural Course Municipal Engineer Electrical Engineer Show-Card Writing Structural Engineer Plumbing Inspector Linoleum Designing Stationary Engineer Automobile Running . Perspective Drawing Mechanical Engineer Sheet-Metal Worker Bookcover Designing Structural Draftsman Wallpaper Designing Ocean and Lake Pilot Cotton Manufacturing Mechanical Draftsman Concrete Construction Ornamental Designing Refrigeration Engineer Woolen Manufacturing Monumental Draftsman Commercial Illustrating Surveying and Mapping Telegraph Construction Heating and Ventilation Architectural Draftsman Heavy Electric Traction High-School Mathematics Contracting and Building Civil Service Examinations Electric Machine Designer Lettering and Sign Painting Plumbing and Steam Fitting DV CLIMB THE LADDER TO SUCCESS. 1 TH1P AROUND THE GLOHI3. 1 went around the globe last year. That's a strange performance for an old-ii.i.0 tjpesetter. I wanted to sea a v. h..:;. was as dark and as far bean. a iut limes ud tite advertise ments i.au said she was. I found her J. &. i.le same. 1 wanted to see if tho Japanese man was short and bowlegged and brown, aLd could live on a little and fight loieer, and If ho worked all the Unit and wasted nothing. I found him just so. Everybody works in Japan even father. I wanted to learn if tho Pacific was as quiet as it had the reputation of being. It was. 1 wanted to learn of those two Wheeled conveyances that they call jlnrikishas, in which a fellow-being goes between the shafts and yo.t ride on a spi ing-seat. I wanted to know if it was a comto: talile co.ivejunce. And it is. You look arounu first to see it anybody is looking oc you until you get acquainted v. 1th driv ing a fellow-being, without a line and without a nosebag to feed him at noon; but lie is there. I had heard, through advertise ments, that you could buy a white suit of clothes for four dollars in China. And you can. The advertisement was right; you could get them for four dollars. They measure you this morning, and put them on you tomorrow morning. Tho Chinaman sleeps when he has nothing else to do. The American works when he can't help it. That's the difference. I wanted to learn if the Suez Ca nal was over there, connecting the Red Sea with tho Mediterranean, as I had heard that It was, with the desert on the right and on the left. And It Is there. I wanted to learn if the Red Sea was near Sinai, over there where the Law was given. Sinai is over there, red and lumin ous against the sky, where it hadn't rained for three years. I wanted to learn if it Is really true that In Naples they drive a cow around and milk her in front of your house, and carry the milk to you In a tin cup without any for maldehyde in it. It is so. And When the man was looking away, I saw a great, healthy calf taking the whole neighborhood. And he was advertising the event with his tail. He was full of enjoyment. I wanted to see if the Pyramids were there. They were built to en able Napoleon to tell his soldiers that forty centuries wore looking down on them. They are there, with all the mummies and everything con cealed within their bodies. I want ed to know many things, and I went to find them out. I found ad vertising in Japan Is done with cari catures on tho wall; and the same thing In China. If a Chinaman wants another bottle of some goods, he takes tho bottle and label back to the place where he got it, and he will take no other; and If there is the change of a dot or the crossing of a " t " on tho new label, he will bring It back. The Chinaman is the most immovable man (except the Eng lishman) that there is on the globe. Speaking about advertising, there is one thing that needs to be adver tised, .and that is the United States of America and her merits and her people. I tell you that you have not a sin cere friend on the globe, outside of our own country. They may talk it on the surface, but when you come to scrape and get down in, you will find at least an opponent, if not an enemy, of Uncle Sam. An Englishman was traveling with mo when we reached Singapore or near there. He said: "I wish we could get to Singapore. I would like to get a London paper to learn the latest news In regard to the New York Insurance scandal," looking at me suspiciously. I said: "I wish we could reach Slugapore. I want to get a London paper. I want to see what English lord or earl or duke has eloped with some other man's wife." Of course, then we didn't speak for a couple of days. Inas much as we two were the only English-speaking peoplo on the ship, It was lonesome. I will tell you another thing. You will never see an American flag around this earth anywhere unless you have it in your valise. Every ship sails somebody's else flag, and every pound of our freight is car ried in the ships of the opposition. When we were going through tho Suez Canal this Englishman said: "Here, Colonel, come around hero on tho other side. There is an Amer ican battleship going through tho canal." I hadn't seen the old flag for sixty days, and I thought of tho "Mis souri," or the "Indinna," or the "Iowa," or tho "Kentucky" some great vessel of the White Squadron and I rushed madly around to the other side, to see an old tramp ship, black and weather-beaten, with her sides as discolored as her smoke stacks, and looking as if thero had not been an ounce of paint on her for twenty years; but from the stern there streamed as spotless a sample of the Star Spangled Banner as any you ever laid eyes on. I took off my hat. I said to the Englishman: "Take off your hat and saluto tho American flag, for that is an American battleship. With Just that kind of battleship we whipped Great Britain twice." Tho relations between tho Eng lishman and mo were disturbed again. Seriously, we need a friend at court. We need an advertising man In every port in tho world. We need somebody to raise his voice for Undo Sara. All through tho Orient you find everything made of Iron or steel marked, "Made in Germany." Why Is that so? Because Americans will not make the kinds of goods they want. They want a one-handled plow In many countries, and tho American manufacturer says, "Why, you idiot, you, that ain't tho kind of plow you want." And he loses tho trade. Tho German says, "I yust make vnt you want," and ho sells tho goods. The American everywhere thinks bo must be a missionary instead of a salesman. It is a big world, and if you want to know of just what little consequence you are, go around it. I sometimes think that wo can see more faults In our own country than in any other country; and wo aro all tho time advertising our faults, while every other laud conceals Its faults. Colonel Lafayette Young in The Fra. NATION' WIDE CAMPAIGN. Proceeding on the theory that tho coiiege-bred, scientific farmer is a factor for good or ovll In tho rural community into which he casts his lot the Board of Education of tho freibyterian church, leading all other denominations in this specific work, Is planning a nation wide cam paign looking to the fostering of higher moral standards In all state-1 aided institutions of higher educa tion. At State College, Pennsylvania's . :ii erslty, it is proposed to Invest $76,000 in a nev church which will be institutional In the sense that it will co-operato with the Faculty of Stato College in tho higher moral development of the 400 Presbyter ian students enrolled In the college all of whom are practically barred from attending the local Presbyter ian church because It seats only 200 persons; less than tho Presby terian population of the village of State College. Rev. Joseph Wilson Cochran, sec retary of the Presbyterian Board of Education, goes to Atlantic City next week with an exhibit showing the vast achievements of this Board in connection with the universities of America and he will undertake to demonstrate the peculiar needs of State College where, singularly enough, the church facilities of all denominations are particularly poor while the general religious atmos phere of the Institution Is better than that of almost any other State aided school in the country. To illustrate the far reaching in fluence of those identified with State College Dr. Cochran directs attention to the lectures and demonstrations made "by the instructors and stu dents of the Institution for the ben efit of those denied the opportunity to study scientific farming. Prof. Van Norman, probably tho best in formed man on the subject In Amer ica, discussed the flanancing of a model farm before a gathering of practical and embryo farmers say ing: "The phrase 'scientific manage ment' has caught the attention of the public. It means finding the quickest, easiest and cheapest way to do emcient work In a given time. It. means the elimination of guess work. The idea which it represents has just as much application in the agricultural world as it has In the manufacturing world. Its Import ance is less only in proportion as the volume of business on tho farm is less. Science as related to the growth of plant and animal life has dono much for the farmer, but this is not sufficient. The science of busi ness is his next need, and just as guess methods for fertilizing, for feeding and other things are being superseded by exact knowledge of fundamentals, so must tho guess methods relating to the cost of pro duction on the farm give way to ex act knowledge. "There are only two ways to in crease profits. One is to increase the selling prices; the other Is to re duce cost of production. Where tho selling price is fixed by general market conditions the producer's only recourse is in reduced cost of production. Figures from the Cow Test Association, organized among the patrons of the State College Creamery, show that on one farm 11 cows produced a margin of ?200 above the cost of their feed, for one year. That four cows consumed ?20 worth of feed more than they pro duced milk enough to pay for, so that the herd of lfj only produced $180 above the cost of feed. Sta ted in other words, had this farmer only kept the best 11 cows instead of 15 ho would have had $20 more margin; lio would have saved the unnecessary labor of milking and caring for four unprofitable cows; would have had tho feed which they consumed for other use. "As It was he kept these unprofit able cows these sometimes called 'robber cows' becauso he did not know which ones they were before ho joined tho Cow Testing Associa tion. He kept them becauso the whole herd showed a margin, and he did not realize that the best cow In his herd returned ?2.13 worth of milk for each $1 worth of feed con sumed, while four of the cows pro duced only 37c. to 9Sc. worth of milk for a ?1 worth of feed. Ho did not have this information be causo, llko the average farmer, oc cupied with a multitude of varied duties, ho found It difficult and often Impracticable to do the clerical work involved In securing this In formation. "Out of this condition which ex ists on thousands of farms has come the organization of associations of neighbors, who, in common, realiz ing the need of learning which are the unprofitable cows and what It costs them to produce milk, join their efforts and employ a man to visit their farms regularly one day a month, weigh the feed consumed by each cow, wolgh the milk pro duced and submit to tho owner a monthly statement showing what each cow in tho herd Is doing for the current month. At the end of the year tho owner has figures which show conclusively tho relative pro duction by and cost of production of each cow in his herd. The plan Is just tho same as may be found in tho city when several storekeepers finding it irksome to keep their own books, yet not needing a bookkeeper all of tho time, each employs part of tho time of a bookkeeper to keep their accounts. "Where not exceeding 2G farm ers within driving distance of each other, own a total of not less than 400 cows tho Cow Testing Associa tion can ne organized to employ all the time of one man at an expense of $1 per cow per year and board and room for tho man at each farm while he is there. "The successful working out of this plan Involves a spirit of co operation and tho employment of a man to do the testing who is com petent to do tho work accurately and acceptably. 'Pennsylvania has so far two as sociations. Other dairy States such as Michigan, Wisconsin and Maine hnvo many. The milk shipper Is Just ns much interested in tho cost problem ns the creamery patron, but frequently falls to realize the value of the Cow Test Association becauso he does not sell his milk by tho test." For Dress Home or Outing Wear these hot Summer days, of course, you want plenty of cool, neat-looking Waists. Wo have a magnificent line of Waists, splendidly made of handsome J and durable fabrics and attrac tively priced. SUMMER WAISTS Our stock is well prepared with suitable Waists for all oc casions. Our most popular Waist is the new two-color com bination, the Season's new fad, $l.BO value at 08c. Fifty differ ent styles to select from; long or "short sleeves, high or low neck. i THE GLOBE i DR. E. F. SCAN LOW, Only Permanent Itesldent Specialist In Scnmton. TEN YKA1IS' SUCCESS IN THIS CITY. CURING VARICOCELE Varicocele Impairs the vitality and destroys the elements of manhood. I dally demonstrate that i varicocele can uc posi i tlvely cured without the organs being mutilated; they are preserved and strengthened: pain ! ceases almost Instantly; swelling soon subsides; 1 healthy circulation i s rapidly re-established. Dr. E. V. Scanlon, and every part of the Varicocele Special organism alfeeted by the 1st. disease Is thoroughly re stored. A written guarantee with every case I accept. Write it you cannot call. Consultation and examination free. Credit can be arranged. Ofllee Hours: 5 a. m. to 5 p. m., and 7 to D p. m. ; Sundays, 12 to 1 p, m. Omces 103 Linden St., SCrtANTO.V, PA. (Opposite Postolllce ) Let US Do It 1 m If you have a pre- j scription to be filled, j get it at our store by I any means. p Bring it, send it or 'phone, and we p shall call for it. $ Reason is, that because prescrip tions filled here are filled absolute ly right. We have the drugs, the equipment and the knowledge, and when we put ourseal on a bottle, the con tents of the bottle are right. PERCY L COLE (Pharmacist) 1123 Main St., Honesdale, Pa. Both 'phones. nmsmmumtmnrmmmtmttmttmmn