THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 191 2. PAGE SEVEN 1 THOMAS E. WATSON. 1 1 Populitt Leader Wants to Head 1 Georgla'o Democratic: Delegation. Atlanta. Ga.. .May .TO. Thomas E. Wntsou, tho former Populist leader mid candidate for president, went Into tho Georgia state Democratic conven tion hero with the determination to head tho delegation to Baltimore. Leaders of tho Underwood forces, which won tho presidential primary, nro opposing him. and n lively fight is expected. Watson supported Under wood In tho preconvontion campaign and is claiming his reward. AUTHOR DAVIS AGAIN SUED. Suit Filed In Chicago Charges Him With Desertion. Chicago, .May 30. Sirs. Cecil Clark Davis again instituted suit for divorce from Elchnnl Harding Davis in the su perior court She alleges desertion, but at the home 0 her father, Johnson M.. Clark, refused to add nnythlng to the statement In her formal complaint. In tills complaint Mrs. Davis recites that she was married to tho defendant at Marlon, Mnss., on May 4, 1S99, and that "until the early part of tho year 1009 she lived with him as a true, duti ful and kind wife." She adds that on May 1, 1010, he "wilfully deserted her and absented himself without reason able cause for tho space of two years." It is upon this specific allegation that the decroo is sought. Mrs. Davis returned to Chicago but a short time ago, preparatory, as It now appears, to bringing this nction. She declared In reply to all questions, however, that she had come back to devote herself to Illustrating, in which she had won some distinction before her marriage even. BACK YARD LIFE FOE LEPER. Permitted to Reside at Home, but Cannot Go on Street. Bay City, Mich., May 30. Dr. A. S. .Warthln of the University of Michigan and Dr. R. L. Dixon, secretary of tho iitate board of health, have made a per sonal examination of Herman IILrsch- ueiu, uc uuspecieu jeper wuo recently was brought from Ccnterrllle, la., to his homo here. Tho physicians con firmed his disease as typical leprosy. It has been decided by the local 1 rfiiiiiiu 111 in itu'll iifiriif. tin 14 ill build a porch on the back of bis house n in 1 1 im fi mrrui in Rruinn ma Timrt keep off tho front porch and will (II im iinriwfM on TMf Rirpi'i. MAKES WORLDWIDE HUNT. mud nciivwo acarcn ror narvara Student Who Vanished In 1907. The search for Albion Davis Pike of jUdcc, Aie., wno disappeared from vas etudying as a Junior at Harvard, ios been renewed vigorously. hat he has becomo almost a nervous sTock. lie has now caused a quarter f a million circulars to be distributed tiroughout the civilized world, all bear- iir nil, iiii'inri. linn nn iimipiro Mil. crlptlon of the missing student 30,041,323 Sovereigns Coined. Sovereigns to tho number of 30,041,- were coined by tab British mint nr vpnr. n Inrrnnsn rJ nnnrnvlmnfw bw.wu over tno year previous. Oh, justice claims Eomo large amounts Of money as Its duo, Btlll running up expense accounts While running down a clow! Washington Star. "But como now, senator, why did ie average cost?" "Simply because my pile was so iir'n iiii'iri'f limn rru nvfirnn-n ni n leveland Plain Dealer. r i.m cur- nnnup in 1 1 nniian unoea. tip as you leave him ho cannot refuse, e lives on the largess ho gets from his load road. Buffalo Express. I Iti 1 i. i a . . Jiut uu wuy oi uo trans- )en, "is dat it looks so easy." Wash- on Star. I Iovo the oyster, though at meals I do not eat my nil, I3ut It cannot be trained like seals To act In vaudeville. ! Interesting I To Be Made Provisional Regiment Will Have All Units of an Actual Campaign. OO0O00OOO-M' " TUB Unltetl States army is organ izing a provisional regiment along entirely new lines, equipped with now nccouter mcnts, and sending it into tho Held for nearly three months for practical dem onstration and experiment. Captain Alfred W. BJornstnd of tho Twenty-eighth Infantry and member of tho general staff thought out tho do talis, which Major General Leonard Wood, chief of staff, and the heads of the Army War college thought so good when presented to them in draft form that they directed him to work them out The plan involves tho organization of an elllcient brigade, and its equip ment and instruction along more ex tensive lines than ever before attempt ed in the army. In the Spanish-American war tho In fantry regiment consisted of twelve compnnles armed with rifle and bay onet, a small detachment of hospital rorps men, a chaplain, a doctor and sometimes a band. Sinco then the army, and particularly tho infantry arm, tho most important, has under gone many changes. The latest change of consequenco was about 1000. it In creased the uults of a regiment of in fantry considerably. The new plan in creases these units to nn even grcate: number, making It strong enough to carry on, without aid from artillery ot cavalry, quite an extended campaign. Tho provisional regiment organized by Captain BJornstnd and now In course of assembling consists of n colonel, n lieutenant colonel, nn adju tant a quartermaster, a commissary, a chaplain, a surgeon and twelvo com panies of 150 men and three officers each, divided into three battalions, nt the head of each of which Is a major. Under each major are a battalion adju tant quartermaster and commissary, a combat train, a battalion sergeant ma jor, two wagoners for combat train and two mounted orderlies. Directly under tho colonel and sepa rate from the rest of tho organization are n train sergeant, a trumpeter ser geant, two mounted orderlies (noncom missioned officers), six mounted order lies (privates), eighteen wagonors for field train, two wagoners for combat train, two horseshoora, a farrier and a saddler. Composition of Hew Regiment. The new regiment, taken as a whole, la composed of these units: Enlisted Units. Officers, men. Regimental headquarters 5 E Band 0 2S Headquarters detachment.... 0 3S Machine gun company 3 CG Mounted scouts 1 IE Personnel, threo battalions... 9 3 Twelvo companies 35 1,800 Total U 1,853 It will be seen that this regiment is equipped with a mounted detachment which virtually Is a detachment of cavalry. The work of this mounted detachment Is scouting, which is about all that cavalry Is now used for In any army. Tho machine gun detachment or com pany means field artillery. In addition to theso this regiment is equipped with a sanitary detachment and a field hospital. In battle the two combined would bury tho dead. This provisional regiment Is assem bling at Dubuque, la. It is comprised of Companies A, B, O and D of the Twenty-eighth Infantry, now nt Fort Snelling, in Minnesota; Companies E, P and G of tho Fourth infantry, now at Fort Crook, In Nebraska; Company n of the Twenty-sixth Infantry, now nt Fort Brady. In Michigan, and Com panies I, K, L and M of tho Twenty seventh Infantry, now nt Fort Sheri dan, In Illinois. Each will have a cap tain, a first lieutenant, a second lieu tenant, a first sergeant, a quartermas ter's sergeant, six sergeants, sixteen corporals, threo cooks, two musicians, j nn artificer nnd 120 prlvntes. The to tal will be 51 officers and 1,955 men. Purposes of the Plan. Captain BJornstad's Idea was to place under command of one colonel and Into one organization what here tofore has been under several officers and many organizations. It will not bo necessary to send cavalry with such TO REPRODUCE ANIMAL LIFE. Freshman at Trinity College Makes Successful Experiment. Announcement was made at Trinity collego that Lewis Bradford nipley of Glastonbury, Conn., seventeen years old and a freshman, has completed successful experiments in tho repro duction of animal life, with only one sex Involved. Tho student has accomplished what scientists have been striving nfter for years by tho use of sulphuric acid in connection with the eggs of tho moth and has hatched caterpillars. Professors of tho scientific depart ment havo examined Mr. Blpley's ex periments nnd approve of his conclu sions, which will bo embodied In a pamphlet to be issued soon and sent to tho leading universities of tho tvorld. -000000000 Experiment j by the Army ! Practice March of 300 Miles $ to Sparta, Wis., Mobili zation Rendezvous. o o o o a regiment, tho mounted detachment serving as such. Neither will It be necessary to send n field battery, the machine gun department nnswerlng tho purpose. Captnin BJornstnd said the purposes of his plan were: To determine the correct organiza tion of nn Infantry regiment nnd the component parts or units. To determine what is noeoss.irv In equipment. Including arms, kits, trans portation and the correct infantry I equipment manual. To t(wt certain proposed articles ot equipment which will he furnished aft er the Initial equipment. To test every provision of the In fantry drill regulations nnd to recom mend such changes ns the experiment might suggest. To give ullicors and noiicoinnilssloi) ed officers Instruction In combat firing nnd to procure data and suggestions that will be of value In prescribing training In infantry fire. To further carry out his plan Captain Bjornstad tins nrranged for n practice march of over 300 miles, at the con clusion of which the regiment will en gage in maneuvers at the regular army and nntioual guard mobilization and maneuvers at Sparta, Wis. Start on June 4. The regiment, it Is expected, will be fnlly organized nnd ready for departure on Its long "hike" by June 4. On June G the regiment is scheduled to begin Its march overland to Sparta, travers lng parts of Iowa, Missouri, Illinois and Wisconsin. It Is scheduled to ar rive at Sparta on or about July 10. From then until the middle of August it will engage In maneuvers with the regular army from the central division and tho national guard of the states of Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Wiscon sin, Minnesota, North Dakota, Iowa. Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, South Da kota and Wyoming. Tho maneuvers will consist of regulnr camp duty, n mimic battle, scouting duty and the study of war. The regiment will carry with it a full supply of quartermaster's nnd comniis sary and medical supplies. Tho troops will live on field rations, everything be ing cooked on the "hike." That means that the regiment will carry with it thr same material and supplies it would in actual warfare, except that there will be only blank ammunition. Colonel Itobert N. Getty of the Twenty-seventh infantry will bo in com mand of tho regiment. lie will have as his commissioned personnel the offi cers of tho first battalion of the Twenty-eighth infantry, tho second battalion of tho Fourth Infantry and the third battalion of his own regiment. Tho mounted detachment will con sist of one officer nnd fifteen men. The machine gun company will con sist of three plntoons, two guns to the platoon, threo officers and sixty-six men. Officers Will Go Along. Tho sanitary detachment will consist of three medical officers (a major, a captain and a first lieutenant) nnd eighteen enlisted men, threo of whom will bo ambulance drivers. The reglmentul hospital will cousist of two wagons, one officer and fifteen men. In addition to tho band the regiment will have twelvo trumpeters equipped with the now style trumpet and twelve musicians equipped with drums. While in camp it will bo tho duty of tho trum peters and drummers who aro attached to tho twelvo companies, two to the company, to do duty with tho bund. Accompanying tho regiment on the march nnd In camp at Sparta for ob servation and instruction will he these officers, who will make a report to the chief of staff: Lieutenant Colonel J. F. Morrison of the Twenty-llrst infan try. Major S. A. Colman of tho Twenty sixth Infantry, Major AV. It. Dashell ol the Twenty-seventh infantry. Major Edmund Wlttenmyer of the Twenty seventh Infantry, Mnjor D. B. Devon' of the general staff, Captain A. W Bjornstad of tho general stnff, Cap tain J. T. Mooro of the general staff, Captain iX. B. Flske of tho Twenty eighth lnfnntry, Captain W. J. Lutz of the Twenty-eighth Infantry. SAVES CONFEDERATE MONEY. Big Stock In United States Treasury Will Be Sent to Various Libraries. Confederate currency seized by the Union army during tho civil war and which has been stored In tho archives of tho treasury department for nearly fifty years will bo distributed by Sec retary MacVeagh to libraries state, public and university tho country over to bo preserved as historic relics. Assistant Secretary of tho Treasury Andrew communicated tho treasury's proposition to tho most importnnt and representative libraries In each state of tho Union. Tho supply is not suf flclcnt to send to ovcry library. Tho 7aulta of tho treasury hold a big stock of the currency. Tho notes came into tho possession of tho Union nrmy about tho close of tho war nnd were turned over to the treasury In 1S07. J. W. PORTER. Drove Industrial Workers of ? World Out of San Diego. r Thoto by American Press Association. J. W. Porter Is the lender of the vIrI lantcs who ran the Industrial Workers ot tho World out of San Diogo, Cat. Be cause of his activities in this matter Mr. Porter has been named In citation for contempt of court. J. E. HALEY AUCTIONEER Ilnvo mo nnd savo money. AVI attend sales nnywhero in State. Address WAYMART,PA.(R. D.3. OVER 66 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights etc. Anyone sending n sketch nnd description mar quickly nsccrtnlu our opinion freo whether an Invention 1b prohnbly pnientnblo. Communica tions Btrlctlrc-nnildentlttl. HANDBOOK on Patents sent froe. OMest agency for securing patents. l'ntenta tukon through Munn A Co. receive tptclal notice, without charge. In the Selenitic American A handsomely Illustrated weekly. T.arccest cir culation of Aiir sclentiuo Journal. Terms, 13 a your: four mouths, fL Sold b jail newsdealers. MUNN &Co.36,B'. New York llrauch O01c. 62S F 8 1 Washington. D. C. JBrIng in tho files and win prize. GET THESE Money-making Secrets WITH TjV.r 1 A A you can get now not only the Farm A Ul vpi.UU Journal for FOUR full years, but also your choice of any one of the famous booklets, "Money-making: Secrets," which other people have bought by the hundred thousand. Just note what the information given in one of these booklets, "The Million Egg-Farm," did for Robert Liddle, a clerk of Scranton, Pa. In May, 1910, Robert bought 2300 day-old chicks. He snent week studying( the methods now given in this book, his only preparation for the business. Result this ' greenhorn" raised 95 per cent, of all his chicks, and 1350 of them were pullets. ( Poultry Secrets" tells you this secret.) In less than seven months he was getting 425 eggs daily, and selling them at 58 cents a dozen. His feed cost averaged $4.00 a day, leaving him OVER $17.00 A DAY PROFIT, and this before all his pullets had begun laying. Isn't "Money-making Secrets" a good name for such booklets? Read what people say of the other booklets, and of the Farm Journal itself: "I find your Egg-Book worth untold dollars," says Roy Ciianey, Illinois. "What it tells would take a beeinner yean to learn. "I am much pleased with the Butter Book," writes F. J. Dickson, Illinois "and would like to know how 1 could secure 300 copies, one tor each patron of our creamery." "Duck Dollars is tiic best book I ever ha.l on duck raisine," says 1 M. Warnock, I'enna. "If your other booklets contain as much valuable information as the Kcl'-UcoW, I would consider them cheap at double the price," says F. W. Mansfield. New York. T. F. McCnc., a missionary in China, writes, "I found Garden (iold a ercat help in my uarden this summer. I lost my health in the creat famine, tryiiic to save the starving Chinese, and I am trying to cct it bick by cettini; near to the soil. Alter a lona tussle with the Chinese lanuuaRe and mission problems, it is a great rest to get out with the vegetables, trees, chickens, etc. 1 am saving money and regaining my health. My wife and I both find I'abu Journal, indispensable "The Fakm Journal beats them all," writes T. II. Potter, Penna. "Kvery issue lias reminders and ideas worth a year s subscription." "One year I took another agricultural paper," says N. M. Gladwin. Washington, "and it took a whole column to tell what 1'aru Journal tells m one paragraph." "I was very greatly helped by your garden page," writes Mrs. Joe Lawxince, Saskatchewan. "I was never successful in growing cabbage until last summer, when I tried the 1'aru JoURNALway. Now I have more thi.ii I need to use." "Farm Journal was a regular visitor at my boy hood home, writes Dr. Willi au Davis, New Jersey When the first cony came, it carried me back ten years, and I felt a boy again. I snail never be without it again I want home to seem like home. When it arrives, 1 feel the gladness jump right into me. I begin on the first page and read to my wile until half-past ten, and all through the month I drink of its cream. You must work hard to keep it so rich." "Fauu Journal is good for the man behind the counter, as well as the man in the field," says J. I, Sloat, a Virginia bank clerk. "If I could get as good interest on every dollar as I get from the 1'asu Journal, I would soon be a millionaire." says A. W. Wiitzel, I'enna. D Farm Journal FOUR full ru''bo$hior$! yeara, with any one tno DOOKlels, FARM JOURNAL, 333 N. Clifton St., Philadelphia Write tor free sample cofy, with i icnnums to club armt' II in rflr T jriL M THE POLITICAL CAMPAIGN OF 1912 Follow tho Pro gress of tho Campaign by llondlng a Xows. pnpor W h icli Fully 1U-ports Kverythlng. ltopublicans, Democrats, Independ ents AV1UL, FIND The New York Sun tho best moans of keeping in touch with all that's worth knowing during tho Campaign. For many years THE NEW YOIIK SUN has exortod tromendous Influence In -developing tho highest standards for National politics. Its efforts havo boon to servo tho people, to uphold tho tra ditions of representative govern ment and to assist In tho election of men best fitted to perform tho du ties of their olllces. THE NEW YORK SUN wants every ono interested In tho country's welfare to subscribe for It and bo como a regular reader during tho 1912 Campaign. Wo nsk that you Interest your friends, for ovory right thinking citizen will bo enlightened nnd benefited by reading tho political nrticles and roports which will bo most complete in THE NJ2W YORK SUN. A SPECIAL HATE. A Special Campaign rate of $2.50 ror seven months May 1st to Nov. 30 is offered to readers ot this newspaper. Tho regulnr subscrip tion price is ?G.OO per year. Don't Miss This Opportunity. Remember no other newspaper covers the campaign as thoroughly as THE NEW YORK SUN. Send In your Subscription Now. Address Tho Sun Circulation Department Sun Building Now York. HORSES Wait for another consignment to arrlvo In Honesdalo from Iowa tho early part of June. It will consist of DRAUGHT HORSES and MARES and FARM MARES All horses will como directly from tho farm and I will seo all horse3 working in harness before purchas ing. Horses will be sold as represented Watch this space for arrival of consignmont. M. LEE BRAMAN Allen Houso Stable. Church "'t. Farm Journal 2tZ3C "MONEY-MAKING SECRETS." These booklets are 6 by 9 inches, all Profusely illustrated. 1'OULTIiY SHCKETS is a great collection of discoveries and methods of successful poultrymen, long jealously guarded. It gives Felch's famous mating chart, the Curtiss method of getting one-half more pullets than cockerels, lloyer's method ot insuring fertility, with priceless secrets of mating, breeding, feed Lnd feeding, how to produce winter eggs, etc. IlOItSU SKCKI2TS exposes all the methods ot "bishopimr." "plugging," cocaine and gasoline doping, and other tricks of 'gyps ' and swindlers, and enables any one to toll nn iiiihouikI liirii. It also gives many valuable train ing, feeding, breeding and veterinary secrets. The 3II3YLION KGG-FAJOI gives the methods by which J. M. Foster makes over $18,000 a irar, mainly from eggs. All back yard chicken-raisers should learn about the "Kancocas I'mt," and how Foster FEIiDS his hens to make them prodjee such quantities of eggs, especially in winter. STIt.VSVJiKIUtY SKCHETS tells how you can have the finest fall.be iring strawberries almost until snow flies. It gives you the fruits of ten years1 work and study of experts in this new industry. It reveals the secrets of fertilizing and blossom-removing tu produce berries in the fall, tells inside facts about varieties, how to get three crops in two years, how one grower gets 10,000 quarts an acre and nets 15 cents a quart, etc L. J. Farmer, the famous berry man. says, "Any one who can grow ordinary strawberries can, if they read this book, grow fall berries almost anywheic." COHX SECItETS, the great NEW hand-book of l'rof. Holden, the "Corn King." tells how to get ten totui-ntr lnulii l iiiuri I't-r iutii of corn rich in protein and the best stock-feeding elements. Pictures make every process plain. THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells of seven cows that produceil half a tun nf tmttur each per year (140 pounds is the average). An eye-opener for dairymen. Get it. weed out your poor cows, and turn good ones into record-breakers. GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your back yard supply fresh vegetables and fruit, how to cut down your grocery bills, keep a better table, and get ca.li for your surplus. It tells how to plant, cultivate, harvest and market. BUCIv DOLLARS tells how the great Weber duck-farm near lloston makes every year M cents each on 40,000 duckliniM. Tells why ducks nay them better than chick ens, and just HOW they do everything. TURKEY SECRETS, the latest authority on turkey-raising, discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose, the famous Rhode Island "turkey-man," who supplies the wonderful Thanksgiving turkeys f ir the White House. It tells how to male, n s-i eugs, to hatch, to feed and care for the young, to previ-rt I'ckiv S. tv fiti' n. and how to make a turkey-ranch PAY. Roll of HONOR Attertion is called to the STRENGTH of tho Wayne County i Tho FINANCIER of New York City has published a ROLL OI HONOR of tho 11,470 State Ranks nnd Truet Companies of United States. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK Stands 38th in the United States Stands 10th in Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $550,000.00 Total ASSETS, $3,000,000.00 Honesdalo. Pa.. March 25, 1311. To Patrons Along the Scranton Branch of the Erie Railroad. Tho afternoon tram leaving Scran ton aa por schedule following, runs daily dlroctly to Honesdalo, giving peoplo time to transact tholr business at tho county seat and return homo the eamo evening. ARRIVE. LEAVE. 8:20 Scranton 1:30 8:13 Dunmore 1:37 8:02 Nay Aug 1:46 7:54 Elmhurst 1:55 7:43 Wlmmors 2:07 7:40 Saco 2:10 7:34 Maplowood 2:16 7:20 .Lake Ariel 2:34 7:09 Gravity 2:41 6:59 Clemo 2:51 6:53 Hoadleys 2:56 6:37 West Hawloy 3:27 6:12 WhitoMills 3-.3S 6:03 East Honesdalo .3:47 6:00 Honesdalo 3:50 LEAVE. ARRIVE. Published by tho Greater Honesdalo Board of Trade, Honesdale, Pa. Hurry up, and bring in tho flies -all you can find. Is this cock froferly heldt Poultry Secrets" tells how to carry fowls, and many other 1 iust one ""Portant. n flank mm J