THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1912. PAGE THREE OF THE SULTAN 0! Nicholas of Montenegro Has Been In Power For Fifty two Years. K I KG NICHOLAS of Montenegro has been ruling for tlio Inst fifty-two yenrs, although ho lias enjoyed the title only since Aug. 28, 1010. He ncceled to tho head of tho government lu 1S0O, follow ing the denth of his uncle, Dnnllo, who had been shot by n Monteucsrin whom he hud exiled. For just forty years of his reign ho was known simply as Prince Nicholas. In 1000 ho assumed tho tltlo of "royal highness" and ten years later a de cree announced that he was thereafter to be king. Shortly after the accession of Nich olas an insurrection broke out In Her zegovina, and the sympathy which tho mountaineers dlspluyed with their Christian kinsmen led to tho country's rupture with Turkey. The war re sulted disastrously for the young ruler and severe terms were iinoosed on tho principality by the convention of Scu tari. During the fourteen years of peace which followed the country suffered greatly from pestilence and famine. Within this period the prince carried on a series of reforms. He reorgan ized and rearmed his army, initiated an educational system and granted a constitution under which he surrender ed various prerogatives to tho senate. In 1S09 the Krivoshlnns rose against the Austrian government, and the prince had his hands full preventing his subjects from going to the aid of their neighbors to the north. In 1S7C Prince Nicholas formed an alliance with Prince Milan of Servla and declared war against Turkey. He led nn army into Herzegovina and cap tured Medun. The Servian army suf fered heavy reverses during the cam paign, and nn armistice was arranged in November of that year. During tho following year the deter mination of Russia to take the Held against Turkey encouraged Nicholas to renew hostilities against the Ottoman arms. The prince captured Nikshitch, Autlvnrl and Dulelgno. He also recov ered the seaboard which had belonged to Montenegro during tho middle agos. With the exception of some troubles on the frontier Nicholas has enjoyed a peaceful reign since 18S0. He has been rated as an autocratic ruler, but the country has ndvanced materially in prosperity during his reign. The marriage of Princess nelen, daughter of Nicholas, to King Victor Emmanuel of Italy in 1S90 led to an increase of Italian influence in Mon tenegro. The King of Greece. George I . king of tho Greeks, was born in 1S4S. He is the second son of King Christian of Denmark. Fol lowing the expulsion of King Otho In 18G2 the Greek nation elected the Brit ish Prince Alfred, duke of Edinburgh, to the vacant throne, and when ho refused the proffered honor they re quested Great Britain to namo a can didate. The British government chose Trlnce Christian William Ferdinand Adolphus Georgo of Schleswlg-nol-Bteln-Sonderburg-Glucksburg, whose election as king of the Hellenes with the title George I. was recognized by tho powers in June, 1803. A few months before the accession of tho new ruler his sister, Princess Alexandra, had married tho Prince of Wales, afterward King Edward VII. of England, and Ids father succeeded to the crown of Denmark during the following November. Upon his accession Georgo signed an act resigning his right to tho throne of Denmark in favor of his younger brother, Prince Waldemar. He was a A NEW AGE OF ICE COMING. Professor Schmidt Thinks We May Soon Be Busy Keeping Warm. "I have no doubt that we are now In an lntcrglaclal period similar to those which havo already existed and in the future the human raco will havo n nsn nn its L'nnw w pn in cnoiner fight for its life against tho encroach ing ice," said Professor Nathaniel Schmidt of tho history department at Cornell. Speaking of the ice age, he added; "I wish to call attention to tho recent discoveries in Switzerland of four dis tinct periods of glaclatlon and to the fact that Professor Wlnchell of Min nesota has been able to produce defi nite proofs that Kansas has gone through the same four periods. This is important becnuso it proves tho con temporaneousness of tho glacial ago In lth hemispheres." American Trade Benefited, American trado has been much bene flted by a recent law in Uruguay ex empting from Import duties agricul tural Implements and repair parts. Gas Stoves In Great Britain, In 1S91 thero were only 40,000 gas stoves in use in Great Britain. In 1011 tho number was 1,191,000. Sweden' Butter Exports. Sweden exported last year $12,000,000 worth of butter. RULERS ALLIED STATES WHOM THEY WAR Mohammed Effcndi Was Placed on the Tlyone by the Young Turks. popular ruler from the first. Ho adopt ed as tho motto of his rslgn, "My strength Is tho love of my people," and ho lias ruled in strict accordance with constitutional principles. King Georgo was married on Oct. 27, 1S07, to the Grand Duchess Olga Con stantlnovna of rtussla. The queon has becomo distinguished in Grocer- for her activity on behalf of charitable ob jects. Their children were Prlnco Con stantlue, duke of Sparta; Prince George, Prlnco Nicholas. Prlnco Andrew, Prince Christopher id Princess Marie. Leopold of Bulgaria. Ma.xmllllau Karl Leopold XIarla. Fer dinand, king of Bulgaria, was born Feb. 2l. LS01. and ascended tho throne In 1.SS7. For twcl'e years he ruled under the title of prince, but in 1890 the grand subrayno confirmed the title of royal highness to Ferdinand and his heir. Four years ago he proclaim ed the Independence of Bulgaria aud took the title of king. Ferdinand was carefully educated In his youth. Ho early exhibited a taste for natural history and is now rated ae a scholar In this branch of learning. In 1870 he took a trip to Uracil, and the results of hU botanical discoveries In that country were published in 1S83 and wldoly circulated. He was kerviuc as a lieutenant of the Auetrlun humors when he was, by unanimous vote of the national assem bly, choion as prince to succeed Prince Alexander, who had abdicated on Sept. 7, 1SS7. For awhile the young ruler was kept busy putting down revolu tions, but the porto nnd the great pow ers continued hU election in 1800. The prince was married on April 20, 1S93, to Marie Louise de Bourbon, eld est daughter of Duke Robert of Par ma. Ferdiuund had adhered to tho Roman Catholic faith, but his son and heir, the young Prince Boris, was re ceived Into the Orthodox Greek church in ISOfi. In 100S Ferdinand was married to Eleanor, a princess of the house of lleuss. The accession of Peter Karageorge vlch as king of Servla followed tho assassination of King Alexander and Queen Draga in June, 1003. The new ruler was selected by the regicides. Immediately after he had assumed the throne Peter called tho senate and skupshtiua nnd had the constitution of 1SS9 restored. Peter Karageorgevlch. King Peter was bom in 184-1. He is the sou of Alexander Karageorgevlch. He was married in 1S83 to Princess Zorka, daughter of King Nicholas of Montenegro. At first the authority of the new king was merely nominal, ne was guided In his every official action by the men who hnd slain hia prede cessor. At his coronation In September, 1004, all tho powers, except Great Britain, were officially represented. England resumed diplomatic relations with tho country they had been broken off with the assassination of Alexander In 1000. Peter has had trouble -with Turkey tho better part of his reign. The Sultan of Turkey. Mohammed Reshad Effcndi became sultan of Turkey In April, 1000, suc ceeding his brother, Abdul Hamid IL, who was deposed by the national as sembly through the Influence of the Young Turks. The deposed ruler was sent to Salonikl. On Aug. 5, 1000, the new sultiin is sued an Imperial lrade proclaiming a new constitution. Many reforms were mado in the system of government through his orders. &' .Q WATER IN CANAL JULY 1 NEXT. Dredges to Be Put to Work In Culebra Cut. Tho Culebra cut of the Panama ca nal will bo filled with water on July 1, 1013, according to an official announce ment from Colonel Gocthals received by the isthmian canal commission In Washington. As soon aB tho water is let into tho cut a ladder dredgo is to be brought from tho Pacific side to clean up any earth which may fall Into the excavation from the slides along the cut. Tho dredgo will also remove the dlko at Gamboa. Thia wall of enrth is now tho only obstaclo which prevents tho rising waters In tho great artificial lako formed by tho Gatuu dam from pouring Into the canal. Next spring when all tho work on tho locks haB been completed tho artifi cial luko will bo filled to tho elghty flvo foot level, which will be tho main level for the passage of ships through tho canal. Steamers Have Oil Burner. Nearly all tho steamers of tho Cana dian Pacific railway coast fleet havo been equipped as oil burners nnd aro proving satisfactory, both as to econ omy and power. Wireless on Harbor Tugs. Tho Dover (England) harbor board's flotilla of tugs has been fitted with wireless telegraphy Installations, with a range of 100 miles. EXCESS OF MEN IN THE UNITED STATES. Census Uhows 106 Males to 100 Fe malesDue toExtonsive Immigration. The population of tho United Stntes (exclusive of Alaska, Hawaii, Porto It! co aud other noncontiguous posses lions) comprised lu 1010, according to (lie Inst federal census, 47,:t.T2,277 males nnd M.G.'IO.OSO females, or 100 male to every 100 females. In 1000 there were 101.4 males to overy 100 fcmnlcs. These figures are contained In n state ment Issued by Director Durand of the bureau of the census, department of commerce nnd labor, and are based upon n tabulation prepared under tho direction of William C. Hunt, chief statistician for population In the cen sus bureau. The figures arc prelimi nary and subject to revision. Tlie excess of males In the United States Is mainly due to the extensive immigration, a much larger proportion of the lmmlgrautM being males than female. In the foreign born whlto population there are 120.2 males to 100 females. But the native white popu lation nlso has a slight excess of males, the ratio being 102.7 to 100. lu the negro population the males ate outnumbered by females in n ratio of tis.0 to UXi. Among the Chinese lu this country males outnumber females by more than 14 to 1, nnd among tho Japanese by about 7 to 1. The In dians show a small excess of males. 103.5 to 100 females. The preponderance of males in the aggregate population of the United States is most marked In the Pacific and mountain divisions (far western states), with ratios in 1010 of, respec tively, 120.5 nnd 127.0 mnles to 100 females. The proportion of mnles is lowest in New England, this being the only geographic division lu which there Is a slight excess of females over males. There are only five states In which females outnumber males, namely, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Maryland. North Carolina and South Carolina. Of the fifty cities having over 100,000 inhabitants there nre twenty-eight In which the males outnumber the fe males. In thirty-nine of the cities the proportion of males was greater In 1010 than in 1000, nnd in eleven It was less. The number of males per 100 females was greatest In Seattle (130.2) and only slightly less In Portland, Ore. (134. B). Nashville shows tho smallest proportion of males, with a ratio of 80.6 to 100 females. Of tho eight cities having fiOO.OOO or more inhabit ants, Baltimore has tho lowest number of males per 100 females (02.4), and Cleveland the highest (100.0), but the ratio is almost as high In Chicago, where there are 10G.3 males to 100 fe males. New York city's population Is 'almost evenly divided by sex; in Phil adelphia the females outnumber the males. PRINTS PARCELS POST MAPS United States Geological Survey Gets the Postoffice Department Contract. Postmaster General Hitchcock has awarded the contract for printing 125, 000 parcels post maps of the United States to the geological survey, which submitted the lowest bid. Mr. nitch cock la thus nble to take advantage of tho resources of the government to fur nlsh these mnps and rely thoroughly upon their accuracy. The parcels post system must be in operation on Jan. 1. Mr. Hitchcock announced that tho maps will be In tho hands of the postmasters Iouk be fore that time. On tho maps the whole area of the United States Is divided into quadran gles, measuring thirty minutes on each Bide. These quadrangles aro known as units of nrea. In the lower left hand corner of tho map will appear a table of rates and brief Instructions for its use. HIS NEPHEW'S STEPFATHER. Harknets Is Soon to Marry His Broth er's Widow. Harry IS. Harkncse of Altooua, Pa., soon 'will become his nephew's step father. Harkness, who is fifty-three, nnd has been n widower for two years, is to marry his brother's widow, Mrs. Elizabeth nnrkness, fifty-three, of Philadelphia. At the same time that Mrs. Harkness marries, her son, Gehring Harkness, will marry Maud C. Walton of Phila delphia, who was divorced last July. Suppose Gehring Harkness has chit dren. What relation -will they be to their futher's uncle and stepfather? A WOMAN COMPTROLLER. Miss Bessie H. Townsend Appointed to That Office In Atlantic City. The appointment of Miss liessle n Townseud ns city comptroller is an nounccd by tho city commission of At lantic City, N. J. Sho has been book keeper in the ofllco for several years and will bo tho first woman, so far as known, to hold tho position of city comptroller in this country. Miss Townsend succeeds City Comp troller Barrett, who, with tho city so licitor, Wootton, was removed from office. Turkey's Care of Injured. Thero Is no Red Cross society in tho Ottoman omplro, but thero Is the Otto ninn ited Crescent society, which serves thy samo purpose. Shortly bo foro tho Ilusso-Turklsh war In 1877 the Red Crescent society was started and took good care of tho sick and In jured In that war, as well as in wars that followed. nutmt:mOTntutiui:mmnmmmtnim. I WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS in your fnniily you of course cnll a reliable physicinn. Don't atop nt that; have hia prescriptions put up at n reliable pharmacy, even if it is n 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 tho compounding. Preecrip tiona brought here, either night or day, will bo promptly and accurately compounded by o competent registered pharmacist and tliu prices will be. moat rea sonable. O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, 0i. D. .t II. Station, HoNKfliuLr. Pa. u::::n:::::nin:j: RttmcumtnmtHSimstsmmmmmt MARTIN CAUFIELD I i Designer and Man- $ ufacturer of a ARTISTIC MEMORIALS H Office and Works; I 1036 MAIN ST. I HONESDALE, PA. otmmniit::uus:t:t::n::tnnre:mtt DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Fletcher Gilpin, M. D., late of Sterling, deceased. All persons indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate pay ment to the undersigned, and those having claims against tho said es tate aro notified to present tho duly attested for settlement. Mrs. Llbblo Gilpin, executrix of the estate of Fletcher Gilpin, M. D., by Frlena B. Gilpin, attorney. 118 North Ave., West, Cranford, N. J., Aug. 28. 1012. 70eolG. E3 E3 El E3 a B E3 E3 E3 E3 E3 B H E3 CONTAINS SPELLING g 000000000000000000000000000 E E3 Mailed to any ad- I dress 0 E3 joining I receipt El E3 El El El El El El El El ITIZEN PUBLIS HONESDALE, 0 0 0 0 E00000000 0 0 0000000 000 00000EI THE NEW MODELS FOR AUTUMN 1912 Ipll ni mm Menner & Go's KEYSTONE BLOCK i v- ' l..fcr..-oii-A . - f j;: . v ( - j For Results Advertise SECOND NOW READY CONTEST ts Each THE REMAINING 30 LESSONS. in Wayne Counties upon of 6 cents. HING Department Stores KRAFT & CONG wniir;nii r pa Represent Reliable Cnmoanies ONLY "m The Citizen H E3 H B H El E3 B B H - EI IS El H H El or ad El El El El El El El El El El El COMPANY, PA.