THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1912. PAGE THREE danoc 1 nnimn FOR A PRESIDENT oureeo s. Hano a x. pnmnarn - 1 1 and Deschanel Possibilities, ALLIERES HOT CONSIDERED, nuni n l- rnwnt 1 nnn a Xmr-nrt ri I mrm For Its President Clemonceau and hoaDD " I a n U U LI IU Will rv Horses" The Situation. While the fnlted States ia In tho Iflttt nf nil OTnlHni- nnwfilnnttnl nnnii iiltii I'rmif'i ih iiiihv iimniiKNiiiir win. fl I llfi nor llnTT nrnnr nrnnllt 1 n President Fallleres' seven yeur term iU. IIILI'UJLILB UL 1 1 riTHltlL'ULa IU HUUL't'l.'U oihkpIvps liro looked nn nnfarnmhlr France; so there Is no question of nvi tnnn hnvi hnnn rnnn!piimialv litloncd as probable occupants of tho ........ 11 T- . 1. Mn11 4t.nM TM.t... I BL'L'i UH L1J IT r 1 tllllTlI lull L1IIT11 Ik 1111 t? amber of deputies and senate when likely to fall upon one of these live, .. . 1 .. . iV t 1 . J A..V UMh ... niivuhW 1UI HIV ilUUMk ni mnT ro;iiiT in inn o nnrinn nr n rir inpan man," could without much doubt mil 1 1 if iiri'Nini'iii' v II ill Hiiniiin Tnniro slightest effort to do so, but IJour- for thirty years, has lately been of health and has let it be under- hntltrh ho linn rnfmlnivl frnm nral. .1 .. nnmnillilnn t.lv.. 1 IT.. 1 n iu m:iiiv piininers. nns nn fi i in t ... ... i .. i... .... i i lonal fame on account of his work Ihe Hague conferences. After the of tho Calllnui ministry Bourgeois s usLfu to lumi u new mimsiry, uui present unimportant portfolio In the ncare cabinet In order to lend tho ei uuieiii. Hanotaux Booms Ribot. abriel Hanotaux, the historian nnd urmer minister or loreigu auairs, started a boom for another former :imr. .- ni n rn liinnr. wnno w in Miss Mary Bureh of Chicago. lie the nuthor of numerous historical, catlonal and political works. 1 ....... . ,. . . . I . ..II 111... . Polncaro, the present premier, iimi nrpKinoni or rnnpn nnu ir 10 unlikely that the choice may fall n him. for hp hns miiflp nn otppI- record as president of the council CtlUKln Tnflft lllm n ti Intnl-nfitlinnl re. Hut Polncaro Is not politically iltlnns lie believes ho could best e his country in his present post has said he prefers tho position remler to the presidency. atonln Dubost, the president of the TP. nrrilin lliv 1c tun mnct- nnllrn iiuuie lor r nineres place. )r tliree terms now tho president been chosen from the senate. It eneraiiv eonsuiorpri. therernro Mint chamber of deputies will Insist se n president. If it forces Its upon the people Its choice for ident will be Paul Deschanel, who presides over tlie chamber. Al ign younger than any of tho other ible cnndlilates except Polncaro, manel has had long political expe ee, Is well known as a writer and Clemenceau a "Dark Horse." tho choiro should not bo confined lie live mentioned the two "dark os" most deserving of attention Clemenceau nnd DpIpiikep. Tim er favors Polncaro and would not e any effort to obtain tho plnce, If bitterness between candidates T 1 .-i ... .... .lira iv.MJITli UKUUUK IlllillllJeH forco him to tho front. Delcnsse nerally supposed to have a secret Itlon to Inhabit tho Elyseo, but nany enemies in political life proli- wlll succeed In keeping the door d to him Interesting commentary on the .. . - - . J j fcVllll Uli.Uil c ia luuiiu in uio iacc mat i-aiii- IV T I ( nu lll-rtullnll f ftn .......... nnMn .. .... i t.iv4v.-liv I Ul HCll'U Jfillrt received in salary and expenses .000 a year or altogether more . a million and a half, has Just J iui ?.,nw u jtur nn iiparimcnc h ho will occupy when he retires public life, This rental has been uemuu uu in some (junners ns ex igant, slnco Lonbct paj-s only 0 n year for his apartment, to h visiting sovereigns go to renew aintance with a statesman who entertained them at tho Klysee. ILLINOIS MAN CAST HIS FIRST VOTE IN 1840. Michael Mark ley Was For Von uren and Recalls Stirring Events. There are few men In tho country like Michael Markley of Mount Car roll, III., who can boast that his blood was first stirred in a political discus sion in the days when Andrew Jackson was president and who cast his first vole for Martin Vnn Huron, tho Dem ocratic nominee against William Hen ry Harrison In 1810. Mr. Markley re cently "reminisced" in the presence of n visitor from Chicago. Mr. Markley has voted in eighteen natlonnl elections. After 1840 he enst his vote for James K. Polk agalust Henry Clay and in 18Ti2 for Kranklln Pierce against Wlntlcld Scott In IS.".! ho Joined the Itopnblleun party and voted for Kremont. "Tho year 1 voted for Van Huron I had a lot of hot nrgumeuts," said Mr. Markley. "Thoy had processions for 'Tippecanoe' Harrison and fireworks and shooting of cannon. AVe never had a rally M-Ithout tiring cannon. The people were Intensely partisan, and I never wont to n rnlly without expect ing a list light. People got so angry when they nrgued that they would wind up In n row, and somebody would get hurt. "In the early dnys a man could work thirty yearn on a farm nnd accumulate only about JIJ.OOO to !?-i.000 money was that scarce. Hut those sums went a lot further than they do now. The trouble with the country is that money is too cheap. There are too many mil lionaires. Everybody's got money." MAY WEAR RELIGIOUS GARB. President's Decision Not Held to Bar Attire of Church Orders In Sohools. President Taft's decision concerning the employment of the Catholic reli gious garb in the government of In dian schools is not expected to prohib it the wearing of such garb by nuns nnd Qther teachers who have been al lowed to wear a distinctive religious i nttlre In the past ! The Indian IMchts association, which has been opposing tho wearing of the j religious garb in tho Indian schools ; and Indorsing the position taken by Commissioner of Indian Affairs Valen ! tine, has circularized its members with 1 a statement in which it concedes that j tho president's decision will go against Itliein to this extent. But tho assocla ! (Ion hopes thnt tho president will re , fuse to allow new teachers to wear the sarb. Under date of Pept. 4, 1012, tho in 1 dlan Illghts association, through S. M. Broslus, its Washington agent, Issued n "progress report" to Its members, which makes this prediction rcspect I Ing the action of tho administration on i the religious garb question: "Secretary FlRher has handed to the president IiIb docislon In the celobrat- ed garb order of Commissioner Valen- tine. No Intimation Is given as to the j nature of the decision. Just when the j president will mnke n final decision Is not known. Politics being chiefly con- sldered, It will not be surprising if the I announcement Is delayed until after the i fall elections, although I look for n comprehensive decision. I mean to In fer that It may bo held that those nuns already admitted without civil service examinations shall remain, but that no further violations of tho rule will be permitted and the peculiar garb of the orders shall bo permitted In other cases." TEST GYROSCOPES FOR USEJN WAR Experiments Being Made Willi Torpedo Boat Destroyer, WOULD REDUCE ROLLING, He Wants No Such Assistance. a To Build Finhtlng Aeros, Is stated at Aldorshot that tho sh War office was so Impressed by army maneuvers that It has de- to build two fleets for special oses. Ono will bo armed with 1 flro guns nnd tho other will be solely for scouting purposes. Tho er win ue in iroiu anu. ino pilot ship. Tho propeller will bo In instead of In tho rear, nnd the dno will have, a speed of eighty an hour. SILENCER FOR BABY CRIES. Indiana Mother Designs a Wall Ab sorber. Maxim and his siloncer has nothing on Mrs. Esther Prouty of Fort "Wayne, Ind., and her baby mulller. Mrs. Prouty entered the notol Balti more lobby, Kansas City, recontly and placed her two-year-old baby on a set tee while she registered. Tho baby squirmed and kicked and made faces, but thero was no noise. "Poor thing!" some ono said. "It Is deaf and dumb." The mother smiled nnd said: "No, ho Is crying his best, but ho Is wearing his shock and noise absorber. If I would remove it he would 1111 tho lob by with moro nolso than you ever heard." A crowd gathered, nnd Mrs. Prouty assumed the role of lecturer, with Il lustrations. A thin rubber hood fitted over tho baby's chin nnd mouth. Of tho samo color of tho baby's skin, It could not bo seen nt a dlstanco. Around tho mouth was a jxieket, lu which was a filmy cloth resembling mosquito bar, of silk. Mrs. Prouty changes this pad ding every day, and tho baby woars It only when in public. Tho child can breathe through It, nnd It Is removed when tho baby wants a drink. The nbsorher Is fastened In tho back under tho baby's hood, and cry ns much ns It wlshos, tho nolso founds no louder than a dull buzz. Mrs. Prouty will not patent her de vice. She wauts every mother to have the advantage of it. Root's Latest Joke. Senator Ellhu Hoot made ills reputa tion as a humorist at the United States hotel, Saratoga, during the recent Ho publican state convention. Entering tho original model of tho first elevator, he settled down for tho upward Jour ticy. "What floor do you want mister?" fisked tho colored operator. "Tho fourth, please," replied tho sen ator without cracking n smilo. "What time nro you duo thero V" Navy Department Guards Against Knowlodge Reaching Othor Govern ments Tests Have Boen Going on For Several Months. A policy of greater secrecy adopted recently by the navy department In relation to what takes place In navy yards, on board battleships, in experi ments with guns, powder, explosives and submarines has been observed so rigorously that few know thnt tests of two large gyroscopes of American in vention have been going on aboard tho topedo boat destroyer Wordcu for sev eral mouths. The Worden, commanded by Ensign W. H. Monroe, has been running In and out of the New York navy yard two and three times n week for the last four months, equipped with tin gyroscopes, In an effort to discover U the problem of preventing such crart from rolling can bo solved. Belief that this type of gyroscope, called the active, Is successful and fear that spies of other navies will try to steal tho secret have kept every offi cer and man In the torpedo boat on the alert day and night. Constantly Guarded. A bluejneket Is on guard within a few feet of the gyroscopes constantly. No ono Is permitted to go near them, although they are under cover until tho ship Is at sea. The gyroscopes are placed lu tho main dock forward, ono on tho port side and the other on the starboard. From the size of tho covering they seem to be about throe or four feet In diameter. O. H. Miller, lieutenant commander; Guard Knox, naval con structor, and Lieutenant J. A. Monroe have charge of the tests, and they are on board the torpedo boat whenever she goes out beyond Sandy Hook. None of those officers can be Induced to say a word about the gyroscopes. The type Is said to bo tho Invention of n navy officer, and Is superior to tho passive type of gyroscopes used with great success by the Germans. Tests have been going on for a year, it Is said, in the laboratories In tho navy yard. A torpedo boat destroyer like tho AVordeu has an angle of stability of ninety degrees. She has rolled as much as fifty degrees. In the great storm last Christmas, in which a fleet of torpedo boats nnd destroyers were tossed nbout and damaged badly on tho way to Culm, several having to put In to Bermuda, one of the boats is said to have rolled 110 degrees. She dipped water with her smokestacks. Rolling Causes Suffering. In bad weather life aboard a torpedo boat almost Is unbearable. The crew suffers much, and men In the engine room nro knocked about and hurt. Walking across the dock ia done with great risk of life. Such secrecy now Is being observed In the navy that orders even have ! Issued that no officer can dis"uss su: marine tactics. Tho navy departmen: considers the evolutions of a subui.i rlno of such vital Importance that in navy officers, It Is said, save tho.;t who formerly served In submarines, now can go aboard that kind of craft nnd get knoweldgo of the newest de velopments. The Worden is 218 feet long, 23 feet 10 inches wide, and draws 10 feet 8 Inches of water. Her speed 1b 20.S0 knots. SLEEP BY ELECTRICITY. German Doctor Announces Successful Experiments. Electric sleep, to be turned on or off nt will, Is the alluring promise held out to sufferers from sleeplessness by Dr. Nngelschmldt, a German physician, who describes his invention in tho Ber liner Kllnlsehe Wochenischrlft. Bo far the electric sleep has been pro. duced only In rabbits and dogs, but the experiments on animals have been so free from evil effects thnt Dr. Nngel schmldt thinks thnt human beings enn bo subjected to tho same treatmeut without danger. Sleep Is produced by n new form of olectric curreut devised by Dr. Nngel schmldt. When it is npplied to the base of the brnin, ho says, n nnrcotlc effect la cuused which enn bo main tained ns long ns is desired. Tho ani mals on which tho experiments were mndo returned to consciousness and en tirely normal conditions within n mln uto or two. Dr. NagelBchmldt declares that the new method also hns tho power of cllm Inntlng pain in any portion of tho hu man body. A condition is produced In which even incisions of tho surgeon's Unlfo nre not felt as long rs tho patient remains in the electrified stnte. tinuirmmmram WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS News Itom, Dacon Intimated In the senate that the Republican chances In the campaign would bo enhanced should the country be plunged Into war as the result of the disturbance In Nloaragua or Mexico. OH! FOK THE .IOVS OF MOVING, "Easy on that bedstead!" "Don't think you'ro handling Junk!" "Oh, my lovely mirror!" "I think those men are drunk!" "Look out, you'll ruin that table!" "Catch it by tho side!" "Now you broke my dresser, I hope you'ro satisfied!" "John, don't bo so helpless!" "You stand there like a stone!" "Lift a little, can't you?" "Go 'way! I'll do it alone!" "Whero'd you put tho hammer?" "Mercy, I smell gas!" "Try to be moro careful!" "That barrel is filled with glass!" "What's thnt? You've got a van load!" "You'ro talking through your hat!" "You'll have to get it on there!" "I'm not as green ns that!" "Hurry, John, we're going!" "Yes, I'll tend to that!" "Mary, take your dolly!" "Don't forget the cat!" "You'll have to stop that swearing!" "I hope I don't get sick!" "Before I'd 'move again, John, "I'd burn up every stick!" "A Xo. 1" Said to Have Hccn Killed. "A No. 1," tho famous railroad tramp who has been in Honcsdale, is dead, having been ground under the wheels of a railroad train in Houston, Texas, September 2C, ac cording to a dispatch. The dispatch from Houston to a Chicago paper follows: " 'A No. 1,' tho king of hoboes, Is dead. Slipping from the rods of a passenger train on the Louisvillo & Nashville Hallroad, the man who boasted that ho had traveled more miles and paid less fare3 than any traveler of his generation, was caught by tho trucks of tho heavy coach and literally ground to death. 'Chicago' White, his companion of the last year, brought the news to Houston. 'Chicago' and an old priest had stood uncovered by tho shallow grave that held tho fragments of llesh and bono that could be found." "A No. 1" was a puzzle, even to the men with whom ho had roamed to all parts of the world. He told no one his name, his birthplace or of his family. He was merely "A No. 1," tho king of tramps. From Maine to California his namo Is painted or carved on box cars, watertanks, rail road sheds, in fact everywhere "A No. 1" could find space his name in big letters and two arrows, pointing in the direction the hobo king was traveling at the time he "signed up." Hundreds of these signatures are to be found along the Erie railroad. LEGAL DLANKo ror sale at The Citizen office: Land Contracts, Leases, Judgment Notes, Warrantee Deeds, Bonds, Transcripts, Sum mons. Attachments, Subpoenas, La bor Claim Deeds. Commitments, Ex ecutions, Collector's and Constable' blanks. in your family you of course call a reliable physician. Don't stop at that; linvo his prescriptions put up at a reliable pharmacy, even if it is n little farther from your homo than some other etore. You can find no more reiinblit store than ours. It would be im possible for moro care to bo taken in tlie eelection of drugs, etc., or in tlie compounding. I'rescrip tions brought here, either night or dny, will be promptly and accurately compounded by n competent registered pharmacist and tlie prices will be most rea sonable. O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST. Opp. D. t 11. Stntion. Honesdale. Pa. ttmaataxttttaasrontroatj ttttttmtSKmmmitm MARTIN CAUFIELD Designer and Man ufacturer of ARTISTIC MEMORIALS Office and Works; 1036 MAIN ST. HONESDALE, PA. A DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Estato of Fletcher Gilpin, M. D., late of Sterling, deceased. All persons Indebted to saidestate aro notified to make immediate pay ment to tho undersigned, and those having claims against tho said es tate are notified to present then duly attested for settlement. Mrs. LIbblo Gilpin, executrix of the estate of Fletcher Gilpin, M. D., by Friena C. Gilpin, attorney. 118 North Ave., West, Cranford, N. J., Aug. 2S, 1912. 70eolG. EJ E3 El E3 E3 E3 El El E3 E3 El SECOND NOW READY Each CONTAINS THE REMAINING 30 LESSONS. E2 E3 El E3 E3 B H El El E3 EI El E3 E3 EJ EI E3 EI El E3 mailed to any ad- I dress in Wayne or ad- joining Counties upon I receipt of 6 cents. Uruguay Being Afforested. Uruguay, which lias the general ns poet of nn nlmost treeless prairie, is being rnpldly nfforestcd. In thirteen of tho nineteen departments tho for estry census records 17.-102.000 planted trees, principally eucalyptus, pines, poplars, poradlsd trees and acacias. E3 EI El El EI El E3 EI EI ITIZEN PUBLI SHING OMPANY HONESDALE, PA. E3 EI B El El El El E3 El E3 H El El EI ' El H EI El HEEDEIHHHEIH E0H00HEH EH BHiaiCiIEEIHEI tHEl