f AGE 3 PLANS TO SCALE ML M'KINLEY MEW STATUE FOUND OF The Delaware THE EMPEROR CLAUDIUS., HILAIUrtll 1 IS NOW FREE THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 0, 1011. Miss Keen, of Philadelphia, Will Attempt the Feat, PERILOUS PEAK TO ASCEND. Many Explorers Have Been Baffled by the Climb to Be Undertaken by Wo man Said to Have Found New Route to the Summit Miss Dora Keen, daughter of Dr. W. W. Keen of Philadelphia, 'Who boa ,won the reputation of being ono of the greatest women mountain climbers of the world, Is preparing an expedi tion for tho attempt at the scaling of Mount McKlnley, Alaska, which la universally recognized as one of the hardest peaks in the world to climb. If Miss Keen accomplishes this feat sho will have greatly added to her rep utation as a mountain climber and will be probably rated as tho equal of Miss Anna Peck, now regarded as the premier woman mountain scaler. Many Attempts Made. Mount McKlnley is the peak which Dr. Cook declared he had surmounted, but whoso claims were disallowed. Tho attempt to climb it has been made many scores of times by the best of mountaineers, but so far only one party has been credited with having reached the top. A party of tho most expert climbers that made the attempt last year climb ed more than 1.200 feet with tho great est difficulty, and then found above them still 1,000 feet of the peak ex tending upward In what they describ ed as an almost perpendicular wall of Ice. All of this, however, offers no dis couragement to Miss Keen, but makes her the more determined to accomplish tho feat. She will have to carry a large amount of supplies of all kinds with which to establish stations along the route which can be used as safe retreats in case of necessity. She is said to have in her party three of the most reliable and expert of the Swiss guides whom sho brought to America with her to assist in this ex pedition and also a number of Alas kans who have taken part in previous attempts to climb this peak and know much of Its surface and character istics. Friends of Miss Keen say that the young woman has so thoroughly mas tered the art of mountain climbing and goes at her tasks in such a mas terly manner that she will scale Mount McKlnley, If the feat Is possible of accomplishment. Has a Reputation. For many summers past Miss Keen has made her headquarters in Switzer land, attacking and conquering tho most lofty and dangerous peaks of the Swiss ranges. She has scaled Mont Blanc a number of times and has suc ceeded in ascending the Matterhorn from practically every side, a feat rarely accomplished by one climber. Sho has become such an expert in her work, and Is so well known In Switzer land that the very best and most ex perienced of the guides invariably make her ono of their party when there are strange slopes to explore or new paths to bo discovered. She has the reputation of being most quick of perception in discovering a possible passage, and has several times found an available climbing route when tho professional guides were about to de clare further search and effort useless. Sho climbs for the sheer love of It, which possibly accounts largely for her great success. If sho succeeds In reaching the top of Mount McKlnley it will be a feat of mountain climbing which probably has never been surpassed and will at onco attract the attention of the entire world. It is said that In her prelimi nary explorations of the peak she and her companions havo discovered a new route apparently leading to the sum mit which has never yet been tried, and that it Is by this new and un known route tho effort to reach tho top of tho world will be made. PECK'S WIDOW GETS $100,000 Carpenter Eloped With Waitress Fifty six Years His Junior. Burr S. Peck of New Haven, Conn., who came into prominence recently by bis elopement with Miss May Bryne, who was fifty-six years young er than he, is dead. Mr. Peck was eighty years old. His father was a carpenter, and his frugality enabled him to accumulate a small fortune. Burr Peck followed the occupation of his father. Through shrewd business methods Mr. Pock accumulated n large amount of property. IIo had been a widower several years, and whllo making his homo with . j eith er, who wns nlnety-elx ycaribf ago then, Mr. Peck took Miss Bryno for his second wife. Pock arid his young wife lived to gether for n short ttmo, when they had a disagreement and separated. Divorce proceedings were Instituted by Peck, but tho suit was afterward withdrawn. After his second mar riage Pock transfered a portion of his property to his young wifo, but this was returned to Pock about tho too the coupla had their dllQculUes. Peck leayk an. estate of $10Cy)00, nnd tolTSWU ,SwTh his widow, who was a 4Ttres3',ta a Yale student Unearthed In Recsnt Excavations and Is Seven Feet High. For three ycrrs Vlttorio Splnazzola, director of the Museum of Naples, has been conducting a scientific excavation among the temples of l'esto and from time to time has brought to light many objects of bronze and of marble and has uncovered several of the old walks around the temples. On June 17 at the end of a broad way his men came upon a great edifice with twenty columns lying before its facade, with a monumental entrance and sala thirty meters In length and eighteen in width. The sala contained six niches In which had originally stood as many statues. Five of these had long since been destroyed or carried away. There was one niche, however, which had been overlooked either through super stition or carelessness, and before this there lay where it had fallen the statue which had once stood within. It was a heroic size statue made of Parian marble and showed n face like that of the youthful Caesar Augustus, grown old with the cares of state. But instead of the toga it appeared to wear the sacerdotal robe of a priest 'Of Neptune. At first glance Slgnor Splnazzola rec ognized the type of the imperial fam ily of Julia Claudia and more particu larly one of the Drusl. It was perhaps Nero or Drusus. Now, however, all doubt is ended, for Slgnor Splnazzola, who is very learned In all matters pertaining to political Rome of the early Christian centuries, has identified the statue as that of Claudius himself Claudius im perator. He did this by comparing the robe with others of known dates and the features with those of others on well Identified statues of the em peror. The statue Is nearly seven feet In height nnd shows Claudius in the robe of Pontlfex llaxlmus in the act of sac rificing with veiled head. It is a wonderful piece of sculpture both In design and creation, even to the smallest details. It easily takes Its place among the most notable works belonging to the first century. I 4", for It bears a striking resemblance I to a mural portrait of that date pre served In the Naples museum. RILEY'S FIRST POEM. Former Governor Henry A. Buchtel Gives It to His Students. Chancellor Henry A. Buchtel of tho University of Denver, former governor of Colorado, recently gave a Riley read ing to his summer students and pre sented to each a copy of what he said was James Whltcomb Blloy's first poem. At the time It. was written (1876) Chancellor Buchtel was at Knlghtstown and was asked to deliv er a funeral sermon at the burial of Hamilton J. Dunbar, a man universal ly popular and Idolized by Illley. The poet afterward said to Buchtel: "When the service was over I went home nnd wrote a poem on Ham Dun bar and sent it to tho Indianapolis Journal, and the literary people said, 'A poet has arrived.' And that was tho first poem I ever wrote that gave me the Idea that I could be something else than a sign painter. So I always associate you," Riley said to Buchtel, "with the first poem I ever wrote." That poem has never been published in any of Riley's books because it is so personal. Following is an accurate copy made by Henry A. Buchtel for his students: Dead! Dead! Dead! We thought him ours alone. And none so proud to see him tread The rounds of fame and lift his head Where sunlight ever shone. But now our aching eyes are dim And look through tears in vain tor him. Namel Name! Name! It was his diadem. Nor ever tarnish, taint of shame. Could dim Its luster. I.Ike a flame Reflected In a gem, lie wears It blazing on his brow Within the courts of heaven now. Tears! Tears! Tears! Like dews upon the leaf That burst at last from out the years Tho blossom of a trust appears, The blossom above the grief. And mother, brother, wife and child Will see It and be reconciled, J. W. -R. TO MAKE AIR VISIBLE. Magazine Writer Thinks We May See the Atmosphere. Even though wo can fly and send telegrams without wires, there aro things to which we may look forward. At least, so thinks Augustus Post, who says In the Columbian Magazine, after recounting other possible won ders: Wo may also be enabled to see air by means of glasses which will polarize the light and tell us whether It is disturbed or quiet. Then we can ovoid tho Invisible eddies and wind gusts which now we can only realise the existence of by feeling them when they strlbo tho wtngs of the machine and which by qjricknoss of thought we aro ablo to overcome after long practice. Some scientists suggest that birds may have powers of vision which enable thorn to see air m motion as they fly, making tt possible for them to And rising currents which carry them up without any expenditure of enemy, for the currents of atr bkrw up and down quite as frequently as they blow in a hor izontal direction, as they aoem to do when our knowledge and experience aro limited to phenomena observed on the surface of the earth. I would suggest that tn order to study the action of the wtnd you watch smoke as it comes out of a tall chimney or clouds of dust or loose papers blown about by the wind in the city streets. Sometimes they are carried up far above the roofs of tall buildings and suggest how a skillful bird may be able to obtain power from the wind's velocity which tt I- -.l.l.l.lni, lla nmm flltrht. Newspapers and Magazines Print What They Like, MADERO PROMISE REALIZED, Some of the Comment Adverse to Ma de ro, but This Makes No Difference People Share In the Liberty Nt Abuses Followed Change. The Mexican press Is "free." That it should be was one of the many things promised by Madero, and local publishers did not wait for him to be formally elected before beginning tc exercise their newly acquired right. Their assumption, however, was jus tified. Emlllo Vnsqucz Gomez, minis ter of the department of interior, was not slow in publicly nssurlng the newspaper owners that they could publish whatever they liked. "The government Is sure that the liberty of the press Is the best way to obtain the efficient help of all news papers so as to realize completely the Ideas of the present government," he said In n public statement on the sub ject. That this unrestricted expression is stimulating has already been demon strated. Whether It will prove intoxi cating remains to be seen. Since the advent of Madero a dozen new periodi cals have been born, nnd as many more aro said to be projected. Lack of advertising doubtless will force many of these youngsters into their graves, for the only reason apparent for their being in some instances is that some one wishes a medium of public expression. No One Spared by Vriters. Most of the now periodicals are small magazines, the majority devoted to tho publication of satirical verse and prose, Illustrated with caricatures. No one Is spared by the writers and artists, but, as Is natural, tho most stinging and sometimes vicious work relates to those Individuals who were connected with tho old regime. Among the weekly periodicals Is El Ahulzote, n publication resurrected. This maga zine first appeared years ago, but be cause of Its cartoons of Llmantour and other public men was suppressed. Tho dally newspapers give the most lively evidence of this "freedom." El Impartial, n paper which has always been progovernment, has Inserted un der its head the word "Diarlo Indepon dlente," and independent It is. It pub lishes news and comment regardless of how It will be relished by Madero and his friends, for whom it pretends no love. The public also has caught the spirit of free speech, and almost all tho pa pers publish columns of comment fur nished by readers. Most of It is sign ed by the writers' own names. In this comment and In the editorial columns the political questions are freely dis cussed. Madero is criticised as well as praised, and those who would like te see nnother chosen, for tho presidency do not hesitate to say so. Capital Has "Yellow Press." News which never would have been reported during the days of Diaz Is now published under seven column heads nnd In ten point typo. The cap ltnl now, too, has Its "yellow press." "We're free," appears to be the un spoken Idea in the minds of thousand! of the poorer people of the capital and perhaps furnishes the explanation oi scores of curious sights to which the old resident has not become accustom ed. It is not uncommon to see hun dreds of men, women nnd children nnd not all of them peons wanderinf nbout on the grass of tho Alameda during a band concert. In the days oi Diaz none over trod that grass witl impunity. Notwithstanding signs that warn tlx public not to ascend the platform ol tho famous monument to Jaurez, thi snowy marble columns are not infre quently black with hundreds of ragged men and children gathered there t( hear a band or to witness a parade it tho street For a time taking a pris oner away from a policoman was e favorite amusement, but this dlversloi has been chocked almost altogether but not yet does an officer of the law insist upon doing his duty without see ing an expression of surprise on th faces of the ragged populace. Thej are "free" nnd to learn that there an yet restrictions is disconcerting. AN AEROPLANE HONEYMOON. A New England Aviator Will Taki Bride Aloft. Tho most novel honeymoon evei planned is to take place soon in New England. It will be In an aeroplane, out of reach of rice and old shoes. Mr. and Mrs. noctor Louis Morenu ol Cambridge, Mass., will bo tho first couple to speed down tho love" lanes of tho sky and spoon behind the fairy shelter of the clouds. They are tc mako their honeymoon trip through NewEngVnnd in auto nnd aeroplane. "It will bo great fun," soil tho bride. "I have never been pp yet, but 1 don't care how far our very first trip takes me in the air. If I am willing to have my dear husband In the cloud! alone, why should I be afraid to be with hlmr Moreau has been building flying ma chines for three years. He has pre pared a special aeroplane for the bridal tnnr EVERYBODY NEEDS A VACATION and there is if than at SARATOGA SPRINGS and LAKE GEORGE Popular Low ADULTS $5.75 CHILDREN $3.00 Tickets good returning on any regular train to August 21 inclusive. Good for stop-off at Albany or any point thereof. Special train leaves Wilkes Barre 7:00 A. M.; Scranton 7:45 M.; Carbondale 8.30 A. For other trains and further particulars, see ticket agents. GEO. E. BATES, Div. Pass. Agent Scranton, Pa. Hudson Co no better place to spend Excursion