PAGE SIX THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1912. Roll of HONOR AUertion ia called to the STRENGTH of the Wayne County 1 1 The FINANCIER of New York City has published a ROLL Oi IIONOR of the 11,470 Stnto B.inka and Trust 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 Honeedale. Pa., March 25, 1911. Another Consignment of HORSES from South Dakota HEAVY DRAUGHT AND DRIVING HORSES All horses will ho SOLD AS REPRESENTED M. LEE BRAMAN Allen House Stable. Church ?t. ntMfffttTtfMtttM I SPENCER ; ; The Jeweler - TEwouId like to see you if I you are in the market! for JEWELRY, SILVER- I WARE, WATCHES, CLOCKS, :i DIAMONDS, :i AND NOVELTIES '. ". "Guaranteed articles only sold." I t ASK ANY HORSE ( Eureka Harne V Sold by dealers avorywhore The Atlantic Refining Company n:::tiutuui WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS in your family you of course call a reliable physician. Don't stop nt that; have 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 the selection of drugs, etc., or in the compounding. Prescrip tions brought here, either night or day, will bo promptly nnd accurately compounded by a competent registered pharmacist and the prices will be most rea sonable, O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, Opp. D, t II. Station, IIomeboalk. Pa. Bank i 1 1 NEW YORK MAN PLANS ELECTRIC CHICKEN FARM. Dr. R. C Liennu to Fatten Poultry Aft er Method Discovered In England, Dr. Rudolph C. Licnnn, n Now York dentist, la having installed on n farm belonging to him nt (3 rent IUvor, N. Y., tho apparatus necessary to raise chickens by electricity. Dr. Llcnau expects that his chickens will equal ordinary chickens in weight in half the time or, in u similar period, will exceed tho common barnyard fowl In weight by some 38 per cent. The- dentist says that his Ideas aro similar to those of Dr. Thoroo Baker of London, who finds that by prac tically continuous doses of high fre quency electricity ho can shock his chickens into rapid growth. Dr. Lie nnu telLs of n comparison which Dr. Baker made. "Tho conditions surrounding the two classes of chickens, four in each class, were identical," said he. 'They had tho same food and tho same runs. Some D.000 volts of electricity were used in alternating current, which was io directed that it swept the basking funs of tho treated birds. Tho cost of the treatment was found to average 4 cents a bird from tho time It started to killing time." Tho dentist presented the figures of Dr. Baker's test showing that four chickens which had been treated with electricity to the broiling stage weigh ed 4 pounds 14.8 ounces, whllo four not spurred to more rapid growth by the current weighed only 3 pounds 8.C8 ounces. Dr. Liennu says he has devised some Improvements in the manner of con veying tho shocks to the chickens, but otherwise his farm will bo modeled on that of Dr. Baker's. FOR A BUFFALO RANGE. New York Zoo Offers Ten to Govern ment as a Nucleus. The New York Zoological society has offered tho American Bison society a herd of ten buffaloes, consisting of males and females of various ages, for the nucleus herd with which to stock the new Wind Cave national bison range when it Is established by con gress. A hill is now pending In both houses of congress to authorize tho es tablishment of this Wind Cavo na tional park, near the Black mils dis trict, South Dakota, as a national game preserve and especially for the purpose of preserving tho American bison, the elk. the Rocky mountain sheep and other largo quadrupeds in digenous to the United States. Tho measure has been favorably re ported up by Secretary of Agriculture James Wilson nnd Secretary Fisher of the interior department It provides for the establishment of the preservo to include tho Wind Cave national park, comprising some 10,000 acres, al ready tho property of tho government, nnd about 5.000 ndjacent acres, most of which Is also government lnnd. Tho ndjacent lands, tho 0,000 acres outside of tho present park, contain several good streams of water nnd fine pasturage area. The bill provides for an appropria tion to cover the cost of such addi tional lands as may bo purchased and the cost of fencing tho same, a total of only $32,000. Tho American Bison so ciety has agreed to stock the game preserve with n herd of buffalo. Own ers of other varieties of nnlmals have also offered to help the enterprise along. Dr. W. T. Flornaday of the New York Zoological society assured the Bison society that the herd ho of fered is of tho purest blood. EXCESS LOANS IN 989 BANKS. Comptroller Issues Peremptory Order Against the Practice. After a number of warnings against infractions of tho national banking laws prohibiting excessive loans Comp troller of the Currency Murray has Is sued a peremptory order that on or nft er Sept. 1, 1012, no national bank shall have excess loans that Is, individual loans of more than tho legal proiior tion of capital nnd surplus. Tho returns from tho last call for statements of tho national banks, showing condition as of April 18, re vealed that 0S9 bauka In vurlous pnr.s of the country had excess loans. The comptroller in a statement points out that he lins frequently called attention to this abuse, and, lindlng this Inef fective, he litis ordered thnt losses re sulting from excess loans shall fall on the directors authorizing them nnd not on stockholders of tho hank. Tho peremptory order is given two months nnd n half in ndvnnco of tho date it becomes effective to allow suf ficient tlmo to adjust tho excess loans without loss. Tho comptroller tnkes the ground that since tho excess loans law hns boon pretty generally violat ed for fifty years it is only fair to give tho delinquent banks tlmo to adjust them. MONUMENT TO IDA LEWIS. Schoolgirl Raising Money For Me morial to the Lighthouse Keeper, If tho efforts of Jane Dcwlck, daugh ter of Mrs. Georgo Dewlck of Now port, R. I., nro successful tho gravo of Mrs. Ida Lewis Wilson, Ida Lewis, as sho was known while keeper of Lime Rock lighthouse, will bo marked by n monument, a memorial from tho citi zens of Newport. A subscription was started by Miss Dewlck. When aho has enough mon ey she will request Mayor P. J. Boylo to appoint a committee to get a mon ument and havo It erected. "I""."". f DEFORESTATION OPP08ED. r An appeal to save the trees which benefit mankind and towns. De trees dey dress up In dey bes', T A-drlppln' wid de dew. Dey save a place fer de jaybird nes An' a home fer do rain crow too. Da birds dey como kaze dey ain't 'traid In de Ian' Miss Springtime rule. De river say he want some shade Fer do water lilies cool. 3. Dey des reach out an' dey call de breeze Fum de eas' an' fum do wes'. L An' de cattle thankful w'en do T trees Say, "Lay In my a'ade an' res'." T Oh, de trees Is good ter de fiel' , . an' town, An' ter peace an' res' dey call. Hit's des too bad fer ter cut um down W'en dey shelters one an' all! Atlanta Constitution. -H-H4 CITIES JOIN NATIONAL SWAT THE FLY MOVEMENT. Offer of 10 Cents For 100 Flies Brings Results. Tho Anti-tuberculosis lcagiio of Nashville, Tenn., inaugurated a fly campaign in which it offered 10 cents a hundred for dead flics brought to the offices of the organization between 3 and 4 p. m. for the week beginning May 1. Consignments were paid for in lots ns smnll as ten, and mnny of tho youngsters of tho city who had probably never beard of tho Nashville Anti-tuberculosis league wero able to pick up n few extra pennies by chasing tho ubiquitous household pest with the implemeuts at hand. In answer to an offer of tho city to pay n rewnrd of a cent for every ten flies delivered dead nt the city hall school children of Cleveland are "swatting the fly" with vim and vigor. The crusade will continue for two weeks, when tho offer expires. Tho city henlth officials believe that every fly killed at this season of the year means the nbsencc, so to speak, of nine flics later; hence tho posting of the re ward. Compulsory legislation for spraying breeding places of flics wns urged nt a recent executive board meeting of the Anti-tuberculosis society of Grand Rnpids, Mich. It is probable that the society will ask the common council to pass the necessary measures to ob tain this result Numerous indorse ments of tho proposed ordinance have already been made by organizations of tho city. Among tho first bodies to support it wero the Trades and Lubor council, local union No. 335 of the Unit ed Brotherhood of Carpenters nnd Joiners of America and the Building Trades council. MAKE A SPOTLESS TOWN. A Few Rules For Those You Want to Help. First Take away all tho ashes and dirt from your back yard immediately. Send your rubbish to tho dumping ground. Second. Clean out your cellars, sta bles and sheds. Whitewash your cel lar walls, fences and henhouses. Third. Burn all rubbish that will burn. Clean your vacant lots and al leyways. Fourth. Avoid mixing ashes and garbage. This is against the law. l'ou may be fined. Fifth. Refrain from throwing old paper, banana or orange skins Into tho streets'. Sixth. Plant some grass and flower seeds to make your home beautiful. Every house should havo a little green grass and a few trees. Seventh. When you havo cleaned up once, keep your yard clean all the time. Dirty yards causo flies, sickness, death. Old tin cans hold water; water breeds mosquitoes. Rotten garbago makes bad air, bad air makes weak bodies, weak bodies make big doctor's bills. State Gives Trees to City. Twenty thousand pine trees have been presented to tho city of Cleveland by tho stnto forestry department, and tho movement to causo a Schwarzwnld to spring up along Cleveland's inner nnd outer park belt Is now on in car nest. City Forester Roddy said the stato authorities aro intensely inter ested in tho plan to establish state for est reservations nlong the valleys near Cleveland. The city soon will recover 10,000 small trees, mostly white pine or cypress. Boston Plants Trees. About 800 trees hnvo been set out by the public grounds department of Bos ton, and tho work is being continued In louis Pastour avenuo, in tho Fen way; in Bennington street, East Bos ton, and in Bluo IIIU avenue, between Grove hall and Mattapan square. The department of public grounds will seek an appropriation of $25,000 to continue tho work of treo planting this year. Tho species of trees being planted are linden, poplar and elm. New Sewerago System. Tho now sewerago system of Clear water, Pin., has been completed, turn ed over to the city and accepted. Tho Bystcm has been installed under ex pert supervision nnd Is particularly up to date. .t-f-T-t-t. INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF WEATHER AND STORMS. Willis Moore Is Moving For Compul ory Reports and Warnings at Sea. The first formal step In the cam paign for the establishment of an In ternational weather nnd storm bureau has been taken by Willis Moore, chief of the United States weather hurenu. Speaking of his plan, Xlr, Moore said: "If tho plan Is ndopted, so far ns storms nro concerned, the crossing of the Atlantic will be mndc as safe as a short strcot oar Journey. Great ocean liners, which hove hut little to fear from any tiling except the most de structive gale, may by altering their courso fifty miles or more on receipt of the warning escape a rough pas snge, whllo tho smaller steamera and sailing ships by making a wide detour may escape possible destruction." Mr. Moore outlined tho plnn at a luncheon given to him by Dr. William Shaw, head of the British weather service, and the scientific stuff of tho London moterologicnl station. According to this plnn, a median lino will 1)0 established throngh tho north Atlnntlc. All ships sailing In ci ther direction wostward of this medlnn are to bo compelled to take a dally weather observation, which must bu sent by wireless telegraph to the near est ship in communication to the west. Thence the messages nro to le relayed until Uiey reach the nearest American land station. Tho messnges are then to bo telegraphed to Washington, where the weather bureau will make up a wenther chnrt and a storm warn ing, which will be Cabled to Europo. Ships to the onstwnrd of tho medlnn will relay the messages nntll they reach London or Paris. The wenther chart nnd storm warnings made up by tho European station will bo cabled to Washington, and tho storm locations from America and Europo as compiled will be sent by wireless telegraph to tho nearest ships, which will be in duty bound to transmit them to ves sels near the storm threatened nreaa. PROF. JENKS LEAVES CORNELL Will Assume Charge of Department of Politics In New York University. Professor Jeremiah Whlpplo Jenks, who has tnught political economy nnd politics at Cornell since 1891, hns re signed. Next fall Professor Jenks will assume general charge of tho de partment of politics at New York uni versity, in New York city. Professor Jenks says that his rea son for leaving Cornell is that in New York ho will have n better opportunity to study the economic, socinl and oth er problems that havo Interested him. The field there, ho says, is broader and ho can study conditions more advan tageously. Professor Jenks was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1873 and the University of Ilallo, Germany, in ISSo. lie studied law at Michigan nnd wns ndmitted to the bar then;. IIo has been n member of mnnj com missions on economic, social and finan cial work for tho United States gov ernment. In 1903 he went to China as the rep resentative of the commission on in ternational exchange, created at the request of the Mexican and Chinese governments, nsklng the co-operation of tho United States government In bringing about n fixed relationship be tween money of gold standard coun tries and silver using countries. lie also was a member of tho Immigration commission. APPENDICITIS HOSPITAL. Boston to Have One Devoted to That Ailment Exclusively. Boston will shortly have tho only, hospital in the world devoted exclu sively to the treatment of appendicitis. It will be opened next October by Dr. William Brooks, Jr., with whom will bo associated Dr. Georgo Oliver Clark. Among the donors nre Mrs. Bayard Thayer, Mrs. F. R. Scars, Mrs. George Agassis, Mrs. W. G. Weld, Mrs. Dud ley Clarke, Mrs. O. E. Mason, Mrs. Ed gar Harding, Mrs. Charles D. Sias, II. II. Proctor, F. E. Snow, William L. McICeo aud Frank Beebe. Tho old Phillips House, a part of the Phillips estate, on Beacon street, has been acquired, it Is a largo brlek structure, with open ground all around It Tho building Is largo enough for tho care of both ward and private pa tients. 1 Tho maximum charge for patients in tho wards will ho ? 10 n week. No case will be refused because the person has no money to pay. NEW ANAESTHETIC TRIED. Patient Laughs and Talks as Tumor Is Removed. Painless operations of n serious na ture can bo performed with tho patient entirely conscious and without any of the unpleasant nauseating effects that result from ether if tho now local au aesthctlc, composed of quinine ami urea hydrochloride, is used. Dr. Prank M. McCartney of Denver performed an operation at St. Antho ny's hospital which shows conclusive ly that this preparation is tho ideal lo cal anaesthetic, no removed a tumor as big as a man's fist from tho shoulder blade of Oswald N. Rlchter. Tho patient not only felt no pain, hut laughed and talked witii tho snrgecn whllo the latter was using the knife. When tho operation was finished he walked unassisted to his room and eat down to a hearty luncheon. Tho credit of the new discovery. ac. cording to Dr. McCartney, Is due to Dr. Henry Thlbault of Arkan.i H . F. Weaver Architect and Builder Plans & Estimates Furnished Residence, (302 EastSt. W. C. SPRY BEACIILAKK. AUCTIONEER HOLDS BALES ANYWHERE Hi STATE. OVER 66 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs CopmtoHTS &c. Anyone tending n flkttrh and. denerlntlnn may lulcklr ascertain nur ohlnlon free whether an liiTentlon Is probably patcntnbtn. Communion tions Rtrtctly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents out free. (J I doit aatrcr for npnirltiff riAtpnta. Patents taken through Aluim & Co. receive tveeial notice, without cfaarae. In tha Scientific American. A handsomilr llln.trnted weeklf. T.nnret cir culation of anr f ctentlQo Journal. Tcrmfl, $3 a year: four montlil, L Bold by all newdelcM. MUNN&Co.36,BfMdwa'. New York Ilrancb (Jfflca. 625 F Bt Washington. I). C. J. E. HALEY AUCTIONEER Hnvo mo nnd save money. Wl attend sales anywhero in State. Address WAYMART. PA.(R. D. 3: G We wIsTi to secure a good correspondent in every town in Wayne county. Don't be afraid to write this office for paper and stamped envelops. JHHHllllllllK Honesdale National Bank Honesdale, Pa. CHANGING BANKS : There aro times in every business career when a man can see some advantage in changing banks. If you are thinking of changing your bank account, wo would like to have you call on us and talk the matter over freely before deciding what you will do. Our facilities aro equal to the BEST ; wo try to more than please our patrons and endeavor atall times to keep on the safe side of every loaning proposition. BANKING with us will not depend on your Politics or Religion With the reputation established by SEVENTY-SIX YEARS OF SQUARE PEALING this bank is entitled to consideration if you think of making a change. Commercial accounts solicited and satisfaction guaran teed. Three percent, interest paid on all Savings Accounts HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK, Honesdale, Pa. Organized 1836 Open Saturday evenings from 7:30 io 8:30 OFFICERS : H. Z. RUSSELL, President, L. A. HOWELL, Cashier, ANDREW THOMPSON, Vice-President, A. C, LINDSAY, Asst. Cashier, DIRECTORS: Henry Z. Russell Andrew Thompson Edwin F. Torrey Homer Greene Horace T. Menner James C. Blrdsall Louis J. Dorfllntfer E. B. Hardenbergh Philip R. Murray I'KOFESSIONAr, OAIIDB. AttorncvB-nt-Low. H WILSON, . ATTOKNKY A COONBKLOR-AT-LAW, omce adjacent to rost Offlco In Dlmmlck ofllce. Honesdale, ln. M. II. LEE, ' A TTn Tf V V V A rmtUDvtnn.iK.T ,w Offlce over post ptHce. All lecal business promptly attended to. Honesdale. Pa. T71 O. MUMFORD, XJ. ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAWi 'Pf?Srr',lV,rtjr ILa1,1 bnlldlne. opposite the 'oat OIQcc. Honesdale, l'a. P HOMER GREENE. ATTORNEY A COHNSEt.OR-AT-I.AW, omce. Court House, Honesdale Pa, c HARLES A. McOARTY, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-IT-LAW. Sneclnl and nrnmnt nttcntinn elvpn tn tha collection oi ciaitns. Otllcc. City Hall. Honesdale. Pa. ME. SIMONS, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office in tho Court House, Honesdale Pa. PETER II. ILOFF, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office-Second floor old Suvlnes Unit bulhlliiL'. Honesdale, Pa. QEARLE & SALMON, O ATTORNEYS A COUNSELORS-AT-LAW Ofllces lately occupied by Judce Searle "1 HESTER A. GARRATT, J ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, Otlice adjacent to Post Olllce, Honcsdalc.Pa. Dentists. DR. E. T. BROWN, DENTIST. Office First floor, old Savlncs Bank build ing. Honesdale. Pa. R. C. R. BRADY. DENTIST, HONESDALE, PA. 1011 MAIN ST. Citizens' Phone. Physicians. PR. PETERSON, M. D. . 112GMAIN STREET, HONESDALE, PA. Kyeand Ear a specialty. The fittlnc of class es civen careful attention. I VERY F. G. RICKARD Prop. FIRST-CLASS WAGONS, RELIABLE HORSES. Especial Attention Transit Business. Given to STONE BARN CHURCH STREET.