PAGE a Itm CITIZEN, WKDNESDAl", OCX. 11, 1011. What Causes Price Trust Charges It to Crop Short-. age, but Some Others Think Differently. Dy JAMES A. EDGER.TON. WHAT is the cause of the pres ent tiigu price of sugar? The sugar trust says it is crop shortage. The house wives shrewdly suspect that the ban ning season has something to do with it and aver that this is not the llrst time sugar has gone Up at canning time. Certain newspapers assert that there Is no crop shortage and broadly intimate that there is a twofold causo for the Increase, one the canning sea son aforesaid and the other being an effort on the part of the trust to get even for the congressional investiga tion into Its affairs and the govern ment prosecutions for short weights nnd other frauds whereby the Ameri can Sugar Heflnlng company was in duced to give up, not without loud shrieks of anguish, a sum exceeding $2,000,000. Now, $2,000,000 is quite a chunk of money, and if there is anything that harrows the soul no, not the soul; n trust has no soul if there Is anything that harrows the pocket nervo of a trust it is giving up dollars without a comeback. Thus it was that the wise men said, "Never mind; Just you wait,' that being the way wise men usually talk. "The trust will get all this back, and more." Were the wise men real 1-told-you-so prophets? Is the trust now tnking back that ?2,000,000 with interest at the rate of 208 per cent every two or three days? Is it? Well, nobody knows for sure, but there is a whole "parcel" of folks that have more or less violent opin ions to that effect. Incidentally it is not the sugar trust that is now emitting the shrieks. Yet the shrieking is good, and there are quite a few people who i.re rising to the occasion in magnificent form. Among them are the owners of can-, nlug factories and retail grocers, like-1 wise several million housewives, to 1 nay nothing of that much stepped on i Individual, the ultimate consumer. ISelow Is a sample yell, and there lire others. This particular ululalion comes from I'ittsburg, the grocers having printed it on the wrappers and paper bags in which they send sugar to the various households: The tariff on sucar benefits nobody but the sucar trust. Were It not for the tar iff and the trust this package would cost you 2 cents a pound less. Urge your coti BieSsman to vote for removal of the tariff on sugar. If he doesn't do It don't return him to congress. It Isn't our fault. If that sort of thing should happen all over the nation It ought to start something. As to Crop Shortage. As to the crop shortage proposition, the following figures recently made nulille by the ollichil statistician of the sugar trust may furnish a little light: ' On Sept. 21 there were on hand in New York. Philadelphia, Boston and Ilaltimoue 10.1,504 tons of sugar. The amount afloat, en route to this coun try, was estimated at 2S3.000 tons, nn inerease of more than 80,000 tons over the amount afloat at the corresponding date last year. Yet with this large amount of raw sugar on hand and the lnrgei quantity In sight the output of the trust refineries for the first three weeks of September was 37,000 tons less than for the corresponding period In 1010. In other words, the trust re-, fineries are running at about half ca- i pacify. From the trust's own figures It fol-' lows as a moral certainty that the rise j in prlcer Is due to i-educed supply, i That Is an old trust trick, to shut dowu j factories for the purpose of forcing up I the cost of goods to the consumer. One rather Interesting claim made is that the trust Is heavily Interested lu beet sugar, and therefore the higher I price was manipulated so that the beet ! sugar crop might be marketed nt the I advanced figure. Some concept of i the vast profits now received may be , formed when It is realized that the I trust income is $200,000 per day moro than It was on late .lime prices. This ,t.1 mnnn Cll firtft fMV , mntidi nn . approximately three months have al-1 liuullt; "nj's tIle freight Is now as gen ready elapsed. erally accepted as that two and two The People Paying. Evidently the $2,000,000 paid to the government because of those doctored scales is being taken back from the dear people with something like 1,000 to 1,500 per cent interest. It must bo understood that this 50,000,000 per mouth Is lu additional profits. It is to be presumed that tho trust was mak ing n fair profit before. It was at least keeping the wolf from the door. Practically every man high up in Its councils bad become so many times a millionaire that he regarded a man with merely one million ns a piker. The plain fact of the case is that tho trust was charging 2 cents per pound moro for sugar lato In September than it was late in June. Even at this rate it was selling only to its own customers. The independent refiners were selling at n yet higher figure, however, but gave as an excuse that they coald not got raw sugar. In ef fect they charged that tho trust had cornered the supply. Some color la the Present of Sugar? At Any Rate, the Consumers Arc Making Up What the Trust Had to Disgorge. lent to this view by the fact that on Sept. 22 the American Sugar Refining company (the trust) bought approxi mately 1,500,000 bags of raw sugai from Louisiana planters at a cost pre sumably of $20,000,000, which was said at the time to have been altogether the biggest deal lu the history of the Louisiana sugar Industry. It would seem that when President Washington 13. Thomas of the trust told the congressional investigating committee last summer that bis con cern would soon "hold an umbrella" over the entire sugar field he was not uttering an Idle threat. The umbrella Is up, nnd its shadow Is darkening every home In the land. "Circumstantial Evidence." Nobody appears to have nn Idea that a trust would be too good to get back at the dear public in return for prose cutions. Investigations and the like. Of course it Is next to impossible to prove that any trust hns done so, for the reason that only those on the in side know to a certainty, nnd they won't tell. In matters of this sort we have to depend on circumstantial evl dence. Yet men have been hanged on Photo of Claus Hprecliels copyrighted by proof thnt was less conclusive. So widespread Is the belief that other trusts have done this very thing that it has become a truism, a bromide, a joke. Tho public prints have been filled with such charges. Indeed, no governmental agency goes lifter the corporations without realiz ing that the public will bo tho ulti mate sufferer. When the states have agitated equal taxutlon tho stock argu ment has been made that the patrons of the corporations would have to pay the Increased taxation levied on tho railroads nnd the trusts. That the make four. The ultimate consumer is the only one who cannot pass tho buck. All he can do Is to nccept that passed by others. He now has a largo and varied assortment of bucks, and that Is nil he has. If a trust Is fined It passes the buck. If a corporation is investigated or prosecuted or lias anything else done to It the buck again is merrily wafted on Its way. If n railroad has to pay its taxes tho buck is sent spin ning down the line. Tho ultimate con suiner gets them all. There Is nobody on whom he can pass them. He can not sidestep, duck or make a getaway, lie Is nailed to the cross, tied to the post and lashed to the mast. He Is the jolt nbsorber. tho punching bag, the goat. Everybody tags him, nnd he Is It. In this buck passing business he has no moro chnnco than an lclclo In ;i blast furnace or an honest man In the legislature. Ho has to take all that Is handed him and say "Thank you." He Is not an easy mark. He la the easy mark, and everybody does him. He has no more show than the fath'll of a large family oi fashion able daughters. - They all gel his mon ey, and nil be gets Is an amused ur commiserating siiille. The ultimate ronsumer Is the original good thing. If he kicks, and that Is the sole right or privilege left him, he gets it harder than ever. Only because ho objected to corset spring scales he now has to pay 2 cents a pound more for his sugar. In the old days ho kicked about the Standard Oil trust and had to pay I cent n gallon more for kerosene, to say nothing of the ndded tariff on gasoline nnd the byproducts. When the $20,000,000 fine was nsscssed against the Standard nn official of the com pany was asked if he thought the pay ment of the fine would affect the divi dends. "Oh, I don't think so," he replied. "The price of oil can be raised, you know, and then the people can pay the fine." The Beef Trust. Then there is the beef trust. About a year ngo tbo federal grand Jury in dicted ten beads of the trust, and a few months later n federal Judge re fused to quash tbo indictments. The price of beef has been going up ever since. Not satisfied with that, the trust has also boosted pork. The or dinary four legged pig Is now worth so much he can be almost as aristo cratic as the two legged kind. It would take too long to go through a list of all the corporations charged with putting up prices because some body had the effrontery to try to make them obey the Inw. If any of the heads of big business ever go to Jail I wonder Just how high prices will go. The Investigation of the sugar trust last summer brought out some rather sensational evidence, a part of which boars directly on the mntter of re stricting output to raiso prices. Claus American Press Association. A. Bpreckels testified that he had been left lu charge of a Philadelphia re finery for n short tlmo after the trust hud spread Its umbrella over the Sprockets interests. During this inter val he received letters from trust offi cials, which letters he cnused to be spread upon the records. They make instructive reading, but are too long to bo reproduced here. Two of these sugary epistles were from John E. Searles and another from Henry O. Ilnvemeyer. The two points insisted on In all three were that Spreckels restrict production and hold up prices. Later this same Spreckels went intc business for himself. lie testified that his machinery was Injured and thai floor scrapings, filth and dead rata were placed In his barrels, ne did nol know who did this, but tho sugar trusl was the only oho Interested In Injuring him. The sugar containing these dead rats nnd this filth was Intended to be eaten by the American people. The sugar weighing frauds, because of which the trust refunded more than ?2,000,000 to tho government, were dis covered by Richard I'arr and others. Tho frauds wero committed by means of a corset spring placed in the scales on which imported raw sugar Intended for the trust was weighed. It was es tlmated that the amount paid the gov. crnment was ouly u fraction of the total out of which It had been swto died. Some of the minor trust officials were sent to prison. This is the same trust that now con' trols tho American sugar market Amerlcnu housewives are paying 8 cents a pound for sugar. These are the facts. The public is entitled to 1U own conclusions. UNITED STATES MPLOYS 513,854 Vast Army of Workers on the Government Payroll. 222,278 UNDER CIVIL SERVICE Bureau, Originated by President Grant, Has Become Greatest In World 64, 000 Clerks Are Paid by Fourth Class Postmasters Personally. Number of federal employees protected by civil service regufatlons 222,278 Number of exceptions 9,202 Number not under civil serv- Ice 64,892 There are 9 E25 appointments made by tho president without civil serv ice requirements and 28,191 laborers on the Panama canal, making the total number of persons employed by the federal government 384.0S8. The United States government has the greatest employment bureau In the worlds In tho civil service commission. The commission takes care of the employment of all the 384,038 persons who work for the executive branch of the government in various ways. Of this number 222,278 hold office as a re sult of competitive examinations held by the commission, nnd their tenure Is not subject to the whim of n states man or a politician. This army of 384,088 does not in elude all of the persons who serve the government. This number has to do with the executive employees. In ad dition there, are 2,115 employees of the senate and the house, and 484 men nnd women who serve In the congressional library. Then there are 4,390 employ ees of the Judiciary. Including judges, attorneys nnd mnrshals, nnd their cler ical assistants nnd messengers, ref erees in bankruptcy, and United States eommlssloners. Then the army has 80,521 officers nnd enlisted men. the navy 40.832. To these must be ndded 1,415 consuls, in terpretcrs, secretaries and clerks in the diplomatic nnd consular service. The result Is a grand army of federal employees numbering 513,854 persons. Bureau Has Run Twenty-eight Years, Tills employment bureau has been running twenty-eight years, beginning under President Gnrfield. During his term Garfield classified or mndo sub ject to competitive examination 15,573 positions. President Clevelnnd In Ills first term added to this number 27,330 President Harrison extended the com petitlve civil service to 42.02S addition al places. In ills second term Presi dent Cleveland added 81.8S9 more to the number, and his successor, Presi dent Mclvlnley, further extended the operations of the civil service law so as to include nn additional 85,150. President Roosevelt's term in the White House saw the list of classified positions swelled by 110,010, and to date President Taft hns ndded 4,110, milking the total of places made com petitive by presidential order to date 124.032. "The disproportionate Increase in tho number of government employees over the Increase in population," said an ollleial of the civil service commission, "is not at all an indication of extrava- neo or wasteful methods. It is rath er the necessary result or government entrance to new Holds of activity un dreamed of before the civil war. Tho wonderful growth of the department of agriculture, which was not created until 1802, is Just one explanation of the vast Increase in appropriations and expenditures for clerical assistants." Divided Into Classes. Tills nrmy of government clerks, mi nor officials and laborers coming di rectly under the civil service commis sion nnd which numbers 3S4.0S8 Is di vided Into several classes. First and by far the most important Is that of the 222,278 employees who are in the competitive class. Of laborers and un classified employees there are 04,802 Of excepted and noncompetitive places there are 50,202, and there are 0,525 positions filled directly by the president, the postmasters and diplo mats. To this number must be added 28,101 laborers, who nro listed as the "digging force on the isthmus." These canal laborers are nil executive em ployees of the United States, but no civil service test of fitness Is required of them. It Is said by some statistical sharps that this army of 513,845 federal em ployees does not Include all persons who are attached to the federal pay rolls. They say that the 04,000 clerks In fourth class postotllccs are not given in the official figures of the commis sion, which holds thnt these clerks are not government employees, as they are paid by the fourth class postmasters. Regarding them ns federal employees would bring the grand total of federal servants up to 577,854. Tho commission today has Jurisdic tion over more than half of all those who can In any way be classed as fed eral employees and over two-thirds of those working in the executive branch of tho government. Its work Is In creasing dally. Tho commission lends its assistance to those branches of the federal service which hold Independent examinations for candidates. The con sulnr service, under the stato depart ment, is one instance. Tiie persons appointed to this service gained their positions a siijijL result of competitive exumlnnfiriJBBavlucted by the com mission. NO REASON FOR POUBT. A 8Utmnt of Facts Backed by a Strong Guarantee. Wo guarantee complete relief to nil sufferers from constipation, or, in every ense where we fall, we will sup ply the medicine free. Itcxall Orderlies are a guntlc, effec tive, dependable, nnd safe bowel regu lator, strengthener, and tonle. They nlm to reestablish nature's functions In a quiet, easy way. They do not cause Inconvenience, griping, or nausea They are so pleasant to take and work so easily that they may be taken by any one at any time. They thoroughly tone up the whole system to healthy activity. Itexall Orderlies are unsurpassable and Ideal for the use of children, old folks, and delicate persons. Wo cannot too highly recommend them to all suf ferers from any form of constipation nnd Its attendant evils. Three sizes, 10c. 23c, nnd 50c. Remember, you can obtain Rexall Remedies In this commu nity only nt our storeThe Rexall Store. A. M. LEINE Roll of HONOR AtterMon is called to tne 'STRENGTH of the Wayne County The FINANCIER of New York City has published a ROLL Or HONOR of the 11,470 State Banks and Trust Companies of United States. In this list the VAYNI COUNTY SAVINGS BANK Stands 38th in the United States Stands (Oth in Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $527,342.88 Total ASSETS, $2,951,U48.26 Honesdale. Tii.. Decembi r 1, ltlo. The Home of the Honesdale ORGANIZED 1836 resseve Conservative Successful Will extend every. facility that good banking will iustify. Accounts of individuals, firms and corporations soli cited. Correspondence invited OFFICERS: 1IKNKYZ.UUSSELL--EDWIN F. TORltKY mESIDKNT. CABI1IEB, ANDREW THOMPSON - A.C.LINDSAY VICE PRESIDENT ASSISTANT CASHIER DIRECTORS: Henry '.. Russell Edwin F. Torbey Horace T. Menner Andrew Thompson Homer Greene James C. Birdsali, Louis J, Dorflinqer E.II.Hardenrerqii Philip R. Murray CASTOR I A For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Savings Signature PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Attorncys-nt-Lnw. rr Wilson, JJL. ATTORNEY A COONBELOR-AT-LAW. Office adjacent to Post Office In Dimmick office, llonrsdale, l a. II . LEE, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-L AW. Office over post office. All legal business promptly attended to. If oiiesdole. Pa, Tjy C. MUAIFORD, X. ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. n"m5?SrJ',IV!."y "J".1 "'"laing. opposite th Post Office. Honesdale. Pa. HOMER GREENE. ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office over Kelt's store, Ilonesdale Pa. CHARLES A. McOARTY, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR- IT-LAW. Special and prompt nttentlon elvon to the collection of claims. Office over Keif's new store Ilonesdale, Pa, FP. KIMBLE, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office over the nost office Ilonesdale, Pa. TIC E. SIMONS, iU.. ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office in the Court House, Honesdale, TETER H. ILOPF, A ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, . Office-Second floor old Savings Urns building. Ilonesdale. Pa. CJEARLE & SALMON, kJ ATTORNEYS A COUNSELORS-AT-LAW, Offices lately occupied by Judge Searle -4 CHESTER A. GARRATT.C ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office adjacent to Post Office, Honesdale, Pa Dentists. R. E. T. BROWN, DENTIST. Office First flnnr. nlH Knvlnna limit. kiih. Ing, Honesdale. Pa. TVR. C. R. BRADY, U DENTIST, HONESDALE. PA. 1011 MAIN ST. Any evening bv appointment. Citizens' Phone. Physicians. T B. FETERSON. M. D. JL . 1120 MAIN STREET, HONESDALE, PA. we mm ivur n specially, me nttlng or glass es given careful atlentfon. Livery. LIVERY. 1' red. G. Rickard has re moved his livery establishment from corner Church street to Whitney's Stone uani" ALL CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. FIRST-CLASS OUTFITS. 7fivl SPENCER i The Jeweler would like to see you if you are in the market for JEWELRY, SILVER WARE, WATCHES.i CLOCKS, DIAMONDS, AND NOVELTIES "Guaranteed articles only sold." ::t::j:n::::nn:::: ttmtttMttttfi WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS in your family you of course call a reliable physician. Don't stop at that; nave his prescriptions put up at a reliable pharmacy, even if it is a little farther from your home than some other store. You can find no more reliable store than ours. It would be im possible for more care to be taken in tho selection of drugs, etc., or in tne compounaing. I'rescnp tions brought here, either night or day, will be promptly and accurately compounded by a competent registered pharmacist and the prices will be most rea sonable. O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, Opp. D. A II, Station, Honesdale. Pa. German -American Home Treatment. ','," Men Jb Women young i old. It fialUriaf Jh c aat ctt Cared. I Quuki At il..il.l.. FooNd, I)mIt1 r nbhd Tb, D't 1dr all allkal The GERMAN AMERICAN TREATMENT. i.8lritlrHlotlIU CM.atIo B.Utt.d CoVbla.d oal Of 6000 IMtierDl Drnn, to !( Kh A trj ladlvldut Ciif, po.ltlT.lr U Onlr Our, bo ttr wbaUoutr yoar illnsat or uUtt mj b; cava or orlf lo oo Baiter who UiUd. Wrllo, (( ar Cat n strict toafldaat. A Cure (jnAHANTKKD. iddrtuQLD O E R MAN DOCTOR. J'o.l Uqx 8tt0. lLllldtlfLlpI. MOTEL DEEDS' BROADWAY nnd 11th new ronn CITY ST. tcpt, Half blurt; (root Vnmlr , NOrED FOR i terUximt&SMe? Wjm(ortibJfc Appomttncntu, couifl- "cnni-, Si. Of) wifj and With nrlvlieu of Bnth iSI ;50 tier day and un A EUROPEAN PLAN tl.t d'Hola Bnakfait . . OOo ( v Win-AYLOR & SON, Ino.