The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, July 05, 1911, Page PAGE 3, Image 3

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    THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JULY S, 1011.
PAGE 3
Jackson Has Been on the
Job at Harrisburg
HE IS VACATIONING NOW AT
TYLEK IIILTj LOOKING AF
TER HIS FAIDI.
Tho Citizen Is indebted to Hepro-
sontatlvo H. Clark Jackson, Tyler
Hill, for a copy of the July Issue of
tho Pennsylvania School Journal
containing tho full text of tho new
school code of Pennsylvania. A
careful porusal of the Legislative
Journal, containing the dally pro
ceedings of the last session of the
Assembly, reveals tho astounding
fact that 'Mr. Jackson was present at
practically every meeting of the
Stato's lawmaking body, and regis
tered his opinion on all important
bills brought before the House. He
even moved his family to Middle
town, a suburb of Harrisburg, so as
to be near his post of duty. His
record is all the more remarkable
when tho large number of "absentee"
legislators who belong to the "curb
stone brigado," and are afraid to ex
press their opinion on questions of
vital importance, is taken Into ac
count. Mr. Jackson is spending the Sum
mer on his farm in Tyler Hill, en
Joying a much-needed vacation after
his strenuous work at the State cap
itol. Believing, however, that rest
is merely a change of occupation,
Assemblyman Jackson is putting the
same energy and industry Into tho
broad acres under his care, as char
acterized his political work, and as
a Tesult, his farm ranks second to
none In that vicinity for productive
ness. IIAHY WEIGHS 122 POUNDS.
James Adolph Cody Is 2 Years and it
Months Old and Eats ! Times a
Day.
Mt. Airy, Ga June 2C. In James
Adolph Cody, 2 years and 3 months
old, Mt. Airy boasts the biggest baby
in the world. James Adolph now
weighs 122 pounds and is growing
every day.
With the first indication of the ab
normal growth his parents consulted
a physician, and James Adolph was
put under his care. All efforts to
keep the baby on a diet suitable for
one of his age proved unsuccessful
to keep him normal.
Tho baby's measurements are:
Height 39 inches, barefoot.
Around head 24 Inches.
Neck 14 Inches.
Bust 33 inches.
Waist 3 G inches.
Around arm, above elbow 12 in
ches. Wrist S inches. ,
Across hand, above thumb 04
inches.
Around first finger, near hand
2 inches.
Around thigh 25 inches.
Above knee 16 inches.
Below knee 13 inches.
Ankle 9 inches.
Around foot 8 Inches.
Length of foot C Inches.
Across shoulders 15 inches.
Baby sleeps well and is perfectly
healthy and very strong. His appe
tite is like that of a grown person.
For breakfast he will eat three and
four large hlscuits, with bacon
gravy, butter, and syrup; two glass
es of buttermilk, and two cups of
coffee.
Between breakfast and dinner ho
will eat two more biscuits with but
ter and syrup.
For dinner he can eat a large plate
of greens or any kind of vegetables,
with boiled bacon, cornbread biscuit,
and a whole pie if he can get it,
with two glasses of buttermilk.
Baby eats again between dinner
and supper, and his supper Is in
keeping with breakfast and dinner.
THE WEATHEIt MAN.
Everybody Jokes about the weath
er man. It is the correct thing to
do. Mark Twain could not havo
been worried half so much by his
inability to persuade people to take
him seriously once in a while, as
Chief Mooro1 is.
Mr. Mooro isn't funny himself. Ho
never cracks a Joke. He doesn't
like Jokes. Of late he has come to
hate them with a deep and abiding
loathing, because ho himself has
been made a Joke and tho unhumor
ous, important work of his life has
become a hackneyed subject for
laughter.
It Is perhaps only natural that In
an era of Investigation, commissions
and probes, Mr. Moore and the
Weather Bureau should como In for
their share of suspicion, A Con
gressman has asked him what ha
means by Joking at the expense of
tho United States Government, and
tho weary chief has replied by sub
mitting some voluntary letters of
praise from Western fruit growers.
One of these asserts that tho fruit
men saved $2,500,000 last spring
or approximately double the cost of
the bureau by availing themselves
of its forecasts.
How much this great, scientific
system of weather prognostication
means to the average citizen, he
would And it difficult to realize un
til he had teen deprived of it.
To be sure, rhe prophecy goes
wrong sometimes, but it goes right
much oftener. No method of obser
vation can produce an Infallible fore
cast, yet the simple and practical
one now followed by Chief Mooro is
correct nine times out of ten for the
reason that it Is based upon a study
of atmospheric facts and not upon
guesswork.
Tho Weather Bureau is doing a
great work at a very Jow cost.
Through the courtesy of "Life," The Citizen publishes the above picture In the hope that it may serve as a s
most patriotic celebration of Independence Day is a "Safe and Sane Fourth," and trust that this day in Vayn
deplorable and senseless loss of life.
The Citizen will publish
in each issue of tho week
one of the essays or declamations,
which formed part of the Com
mencement exercises of the
Honesdale High school for tho
benefit of those who were unable
to be present at the exercises.
The following oration on "The
Conservation of the American For
ests" was delivered by Ray Dibble
at the High school commencement
exercises:
"Conservation is one of the most
significant words in the English
language. Behind it lies a broad,
interesting field, ready for the stu
dent. He will find it to be a prob
lem confronting everyone in dally
life. To some it may mean protec
tion; to others, preservation; while
to all it means economizatlon. In
connection with the forests, conser
vation is a world-wide question.
Practically every civilized country on
earth is doing something toward the
frugality of its lumber supply.
Though conservation has been argu
ed In America for the lust ten or fif
teen years, it Is only lately that the
people of tho United States have
come to the full realization of its
vital significance. At a recent Gov
ernors' meeting at Washington,
James J. Hill said: "We are yearly
consuming from three to four times
as much timber as the forest
growth can restore." The conserv
ing of our forests implies three re
quisites the protection and preser
vation of the living trees, the saving
and using of those left to decay,
and the economical use of all lum
ber. "In the protection and preservation
of human interests, trees are of the
most vital importance. The devas
tating spring floods at Pittsburg are
duo to an inadequato number of
trees upon the Appalachian slopes.
Again because of the lack of forests,
tho Mississippi river is estimated to
be yearly transporting twice as
much sediment as is being excavated
from the Panama Cannl. Althnnn-i,
it is needless to enumerate the many
important uses or lumber and bark,
we fail to comprehend tho ultimate
fatality of this stupendous consump
tion. From fjiffnrrl PlnnVinf mn lann
that If the present rate of consump
tion continues, "a single generation"
will suffice to completely exhaust
our Vast lumber rpsnnrrns Twn r.r
the worst enemies with which tho
forest preserver has to contend are
tho wasteful lumber corporations,
and the ruinous forest-fires. Some
Of the ODDOnentS to forest pnnKorvn.
tion have the Idea that the reserva
tion of National Forest constitutes
thpir exclusion from public use.
On the contrary they are open to
Drosnectlvn mlnnra. sottlpra nntrlo
and sheep herders, who will obey the
forestry laws. Also the involved
counties derive ten per cent, of the
total receipts rrom these several
use.
"At the present time the govern
ment is the most extfinnlvo fnrpst
conserver in tho United States. A
recent report from tho Bureau of
.f orestry snowed one Hundred fifty
million acres nf fnrpst lnnrla iinrlpr
governmental supervision. The pro
tection and regulation of these im
mense tracts necessitates the em
ployment of experimental forest
rangers. These men receive a practi
cal trainine In fsMenHfln fnrpqtrv
either in state universities, or in
special rorestry schools. Upon grad
uation tnoy are immediately assigned
to a district In which tn rnmmpnnn
their duties. The latter are almost
innumerable, but their principal
tasks aro the periodic burning of tho
brush after n. Heht nnnw.fnll thn
scientific CUttlntr of thn nlrlp.r trppq.
and tho discovery and prevention
oi iorest nres. to accomplish tho
latter, they perform sentinel duty
from tho hlehnst. nninr In thpir .
spectlve domains. As an aid in
summoning tno assistance of other
rangers, telephono communication
has been provided in all the reser
vations. 'Another governmental
method of conservation Is tho tree
nurseries, where the seeds ar3 plant
ed and thn Knrrtura rnlaarl until
ready tor transplantation. The rail
roads practice still other forms,
which are a great help. They find
it necessary to buy enormous quanti
ties of timber In the shape of cross
ties. During tho years nineteen
hundred five and elx, they experl-
memea witn Tvood treated with a
preservative, either creosoto or zinb
THE MORNING AFTER
chloride. This proved such a suc
cess that by nineteen hundred eight,
twelve of our large railroads were
operating wood-preserving plants of
their own. The wood may be of
poor quality, and when thus treat
ed, lasts from two to three times as
long as previously. During the last
few years the Pennsylvania Rail
road has reserved several thousand
acres of forest land, In order to
meet their future demands for tim
ber. "Some of the cities of Europe have
established municipal forests. Ger
many encourages this by taxing no
forests until cut. The city of Ba
den, Germany, owns one hundred
thousand acres, yielding a net in
come of six dollars and twenty-five
cents per acre. Freiburg owns eight
thousand, Heidelberg seven thous
and, while the two hundred twenty
inhabitants of Aufen, owning one
hundred sixty-three acres have two
thousand feet of lumber per capita;
and the amount sold is more than
enough to pay its expenses. The
state of Oregon has vast national
forests, part of which might well be
turned to the use of municipalities.
Tlie legislature of Pennsylvania has
recently passed an act, giving our
cities and towns the right to own
and operate any such property.
"When the people of the United
States comprehend the real value of
our forests when they recognize their
Importance in connection with the
river streams and the consumption
of lumber and bark; when they con
sider the success of foreign countries
and realize tho existing American
opportunities; then it will be the
pride of every true citizen to help
extend forest conservation in the
United States."
EARTH'S MEASURE OF SUCCESS.
If you can keep your head when all
about you
Aro losing theirs and blaming It on
you;
If you can trust yourself when all
men doubt you,
But make allowance for their
doubting, too;
If you can wait and not be tired by
waiting.
Or beinb lied about don't give way
to lies,
Or being lied about don't give way
hating,
And yet don't look too good, nor
talk too wise;
If you can dream and not make
dreams your master;
If you can think and not make
thought your aim.
If you can meet with Triumph and
Disaster
And treat those two impostors Just
tho same.
If you can bear to hear the truth
x you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap
for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your
Hfo to, broken,
And stoop and build 'em up with
worn-out tools;
If you can make one heap of all
your winnings
And risk it on one turn of pltch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your
beginnings,
And never breathe a word about
your loss;
If you can force your heart and
nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they
are gone,
And so hold on when thero Is nothing
in you
Except the will which says to
them. "Hold on!"
If you can talk with crowds and keep
your virtue.
Or walk with kings nor lose the
common touch.
If neither foes nor loving friends
can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but
none too much;
If you can fill tho unforgiving min
ute With 60 seconds' worth of distance
run,
Yours is the Earth and everything
that's In It,
And which Is more you'll be a
Man, my son,
Rudyard Kipling.
German-American Home
I I fiStnlSflT. " "allarla, land, I
I I BHUHCIIa! q,Mi, 4, ia..rtll.r Da.tir.
F..LJ. Daaaliad ar Uaabaa Taa, Daa'l jadta all allla.
The GERMAN AMERICAN TREATMENT,
Blrlatla Hilaatllla Caalilaatlea Ual.al.il Caabiaaa aal
I 0000 Dlllaraal Drat!, to aa.ll auk k alary ladltUul
Caaa, la poalUr air Ua Only Cure, aa maltar waataaavar
faar Allaaat ar Ubaaaa nay aa, aaaaa ar arista, aa matter
waa (allaa. TTrlta. alata faar Caaa la atrial aoaHcaaca.
AOaraaiUltAMTKEU. UltauQLD GERMAN
OOOTOR. i'oat Uoi HUSO. ladLadiljtla. T'a.
LEE STARK FOR SHERIFF.
The subject of this sketch comes
from the first settlers of Wayne
county, tho Whites being his mater
nal grandparents,"and the Starks his
paternal ancestors. Both are among
the best class of people that Inhabit
Wayne county to-day and for many
years have ranked high In the dif-
ierent townsnips in wnicii tney nave
lived.
Lee Stark was born on a farm in
this county and has always known
what hard work means. He is ag
gressive In business pursuits and if
nominated for sheriff of Wayne
county would conduct that office
In a business-like manner, at
tending personally to the duties of
tho office.
Mr. Stark has always been a good,
straight Republican, has stood by the
ticket and always worked in the in
terest of tho party.
IJEWARE OF OlA'TMUXTS FOR CA
TARRII THAT CONTAIN' MER
CURY, as mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell and completely de
rnnge the whole system when enter
ing it through the mucous surfaces
except on prescriptions from reput
able physicians, as the damage the
will do is ten fold to the eood von
i can possibly derive from them Hall's
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J
Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no
mercury, and :s taken internally
acting dirootly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of thef'system. In
buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure
you get the genuine. It Is taken in
ternally and made in Toledo, Ohio,
by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials
free. Sold. by Druggists. Price 75c. per
bottle.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con
stipation. H. F Weaver
Plans & Estimates
Furnished
Residence, 1302 EastSt.
ArcbilGGt an Builder
TheOriginal$10,$.2f$15Suif House
troivniaHT iota
STROUSE & BROS.
DALTIMOHI
indent warning that the best and
county may not be marred by a
A. O. BLAKE
AUCTIONEER & CATTLE DEALER
YOU WILL. MAKE MONEY
HAVING ME
Bell Phone 9-U BETHANY, PA.
Advertise In The Citizen and get
results.
No Well Too Deep for
This Farm Pump Engine
Cannot Freeze or Overheat No Hours Too Long for It io Work
At last we have found a pump engine that serves all the needs of
the farmer and does it in the best possible manner. We investigated
a score or more different makes and designs of portable engines to find
the one best suited for our customers. We selected the Fuller & Johnson
Farm Pump Engine. It is the most wonderful portable engine made.
400 to 1,500 Gallons Per Hour
ut any time or any place, woras in any won,
pump engine completely solves we perplexing
3uvjjiy .ur mo mriu in wimcr as wen as summer, rumps an ma
water needed for the house, dairy, barn, feed lot and pasture In a
few hours. Costs less to operate than a tank beater and elimi
nates all bother and troume.
MMf i ill if y ill
Plenty of Power for Gomplefo
Engine Running Volume Pump
derful little worker It Is until you see It In action. Wo show It at our exhibition rooms, doing
exactly the kind of work you would expect It to do on your farm, lirins Ju the whole family and
took It over. It Is worth a special trip to town. lie suro and como In. (273)
HONESDALE. PA.
MONEY'S WORTH OR MONEY BACK
We specialize at these prices and give you the best
values in the city, which we guarantee cannot be dupli
cated in any other clothing store for at least five dollars
more on each suit.
Why do we save you $5?
Bregstein Bros, have associated themselves with a
large wholesale clothing firm at No. 4 and 6 Washington
Place, New York City, well-known manufacturers of
Men's and Young Men's Clothing, and are now in a posi
tion to sell you
Clothing Direct from Manufacturer to Wearer
Saving YOU the middleman's profit.
Come to us and Save $5
on your Summer Suit
Bregstein Bros.
WE LEAD; OTHERS FOLLOW.
THE ORIGINAL $10, $12 & $15 SHOP.
FULL LINE OF GENT'S FURNISHINGS
DIGNITY and
CONFIDENCE
It is wonderful what nn
amount of dignity and confi
dence one gets from the fact
that, he has a growing bank ac
count. The possession of mon
ey you havo earned and saved
yourself makes you Independent
mentally as well as in regard to
mnterial things.
Become a regular depositor in
a good, strong, growing Insti-i
tutton like tho
Honesdale Dime Bank
We will help you with three
per cent, interest. Each new de
positor is presented with a use
ful, as well as ornamental house
hold bank.
We make a specialty of loan
ing money to Wayne county peo
ple. Business accounts solicited.
Call and see us or you can do
your banking with us by mall.
Write" and we will tell you
how.
JOS. A.HSCH, Cashier.
E. C. MUMF0RD, President.
When you feel
vous, tired, worried or despondent it is a
sure sign you need MOTT'S NEIvVERINE
PILLS. They renew the normal vigor and
make life worth living. Bo sura und ask for
Mott's Nerverine Pills R'&fJiSS
WILLIAMS MFC. CO., Prop.., Cleveland, Ohio
FOR SALE BY
a O. JADWIX.
Wo print programs,
Wo print circulars.
recarmess of depth. TH13 tann
prooiom ot water
II liiT
Wafer System
Just the thins for
volumo pump,
pressure pump or
tank system.
Affords ample
power for small
Electric Lichtlnc
Plant.
Patented In tho United
State, Cnnadtinn'1 other for
eign countries. Other patents
apt-lied for.
Works ditch pump and spraying outfits perfectly
Handiest Llttlo Worker on the Farm (
Ensurlne a reliable water supply for the farm Is.
but one of the ways the Farm Pump Engine proves
its superiority. It has pulley for runnlna any kind,
of hand or foot power machinery. It helps the
women tolks In the dairy and laundry. Runs the
erlndstono.fcedmlll.fannlnemlll.etc.forthe men.
Does the work of two extra hired men. (
See the Little Wonder at Work 1
You havo read all about this engine In your Farm
Paners hut vnii cannot fnllv rr.nll7n ..-fiaf a ...m-
l la
SPETTIGUE
151577,