PAGE TWO THE CITIZEN. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1912. NO EXCUSE THIS TIME. I Rude Interruption : "Oh, dad, see what a funny old Tho Pait Show. That Democratic Suo- ' picture of yOU I've foundl" ces ana national Disaster Are In separable. l'"or tlioM! wlio voted Into power a Democratic low tnrifT ndiniiilstrntloii twenty years iiro there was tlio excuse that they hud no lesson of experience to wurn them from their course. More thnn Uilrty yenrs had passed since the enactment of a. protective tnriff, indus tries were flourishing, wages rising and tho treasury had a considerable sur plus. There was n feeling that Cleve land had not been accorded a fair op portunity to prove that "a tnrifT for revenue only" would benefit the coun try, and while tho issue was still in tho balance came n desperate labor struggle, amounting to a locnl wnr. to Inflame tho public mind and evoke a demand for Homo action on tho part of the national government to curb the power of large corporations. Tho Sher man lnw, enacted by the Itepubllean congress and signed by President Har rison July 2, 1800, was in force, but its lKiwcrs had not been Invoked, and its scope had not been determined by the highest Judicial nuthority. Mr. Cleveland's supporters nrgued that rad ical reduction of tho tariff would re strain corporate greed and prove a cure nil for economic evils. Mr. Clevelnnd himself took substantially this ground in his inaugural nddress. The facts of history are that tho tariff was reduced to a revenue basis, ! tho Sherman law remained dorninnt. j Takes Action to Protect United States capital shrank from Investment, facto- Military 8ecrets, rles wore closed or ran on short time. For tho protection of the military He business languished because very few crets of the United States, Presldont had money to buy. prices went down Tnft Issued an executive order forbld for tho same reason, tho farmer could , ding foreign vessels to enter the fol not sell his produce, and hundreds of lowing ports without the special au thousands of unemployed workers had . thorlty of the navy department: to live on the savings of former pros- Tortupis, Kin.: Great Ilnrbor, Culo pcrity or, if they had no savings, on bra; Guantanamo, Cuba; Pearl harbor, charity. A large number of tho un- J Ilawall; Guam nnd Sublg bay, Philip- employed formed what was known as . plno Islands. :rom St. Louis Globe-Democrat. TAFT CLOSES FIVE PORTS. "Coxey's army" and marched on Washington to demand relief. These ports are American naval bases. The order declared that thev Such were tho conditions under tho . were not subports of entry, and should last Democratic administration, and not be made snch. the peoplo waited longingly and re pentlngly for that four years to pass. Knowing that modified free trade had proved a failure, the Democrat's offer ed free silver as their next panacea, hut the peoplo would have none of It, It specifically closes tho harbors to commercial and privately owned ves sels of foreign register, as "well as to tho -warships of foreign powers, unless tho secretary of tho navy sanctions their entry. Most of tho porta have nnd when 1890 came Republican rule , been nrnctictilly eloped for some time. and Republican policies were voted in j but this order formally nnd officially with a whoop. closes them. Officials declared that Fifteen years have passod since a 1 there wns no particular reason for the protective tariff was restored in 1807. 1 action except the general policy of Under President Taft tho nation has ' guarding nnval secrets, achieved n height of prosperity far ex- j The treasury department hns notified ceeding any in the past Every leglti- j nn collectors of customs that importa mate Industry is active, wages are tions are not to be received at these nlghor than ever before, nnd the sav- porta. ings banks teem with thousands of millions of dollars of the wage earn ers' money. Tho Sherman act has been and Is being enforced against OTery violator, and important legislation has been enacted for the greater protection of employees of public service corpora tions within the Jurisdiction of federal authority. With the lesson of tho last Demo cratic administration before the peo ple a step backward in the samo di rection wonld have no sensible excuse. AN OLD CANE FOR WILSON. Andrew Jackson Cut It on His Form Ninety Years Ago. Governor Wilson has been prcented with a walking stick with a history. The cane belonged to George W. Oliver of Portland, Ore., who sent It to Chair man McCombs to bo given to Governor Wilson to use until he enters tlio Whlta House, and then the governor is to Whn .1lnKfr fnllntvrvl In tl, wnkn nf , UOn(1 11 0Vef t0 th0 HlstOrlcill BOCiety Cleveland's second election tho plea of i of w2-8,UJiEtta- ignorance could be offered for tho false step that had invited the loan four years of misfortune. A similar plea could not bo offered In tho future, should a majority decide to make the trial of another Democratic adminis tration. In view of past experience such a change would not bo from n certainty to nn uncertainty; It would be from a certainty of prosperity, in dustrial activity and good times gen erally to a certainty of depression, In dustrial paralysis, general reaction and privation. "I told you sot" could point with accusing and unerring finger to tho costly and painful lesson of 1803 97 whoso moral had been set at naught, and those who had brought nbout tho new era of wretchedness could offer no palliation for their folly. Happily all signs jwlnt to a contin uance of tho present fortunate condi tions under tho guidance of President Taft, whose sound, sane nnd Impar tial administration of nffairs has made these conditions possible. Tho Amer lean peoplo are not going to make a change simply for tho sake of change. From every part of tho country comes nssuranco that the Republican party Is gaining in renewed strength every day nnd will go to tho polls In No vember to roll up n Hubstnntial ma jority for Tnft, prosperity nnd progress. The enno was cut by Anarcw Jhck hou from the Jackson farm iu Tennes see. President Jackson gave It to Mr. Oliver's father. It has thirteen knots in it to represent the number of states in the Union at the timo tho cane was cut. It is a hickory stick with a silver tip, and Jackson's monogram has been cut in nnd preserved with nn edging of silver. WOULD KILL RATS GENTLY. New Yorkor Protests Against Mixture That Causes Agony. Surgeon General Rupert Blue of the public health service, who hns been exhorting tho country to war on tho rat as the conveyor of disease, re ceived a letter from a New York man protesting against feeding rats n mix ture of plaster, flour and sugar, which hardens in the stomach and causes a painful death. "Why cause thorn to die," tho writer oBka, "in agony? Neither you nor 1 would enre to die In that way. This is an appeal for bumano treatment" Dr. Blue replied tiiat ho would be glad If nil rats could die a quick and painless death. A NEW FIRING MANUAL Tho Product of an Army Board's Months of Work. The special board appointed by the secretary of war to revlso tho army firing manual after many months' work has completed its report. It con tains a recommendation for develop ing marksmen under conditions ap proaching actual warfaro, with less Importance to bo attached to slow fir ing and with a method of rating rifle men on rapid nnd slow firing. The new inn mm 1 will probably he roine effectlvo for next year's work. "We denounce tho profligate waste of the money wrung from the peoplo by oppressive taxation through tho lavish appropriations of recent Repub lican congresses, which have kept taxes high and reduced the purchasing power of tho people's toll," declared the Democracy In tho Baltimore pint form. Whereupon, that Job being out "The Best Tariff Speech Ever Recorded." Extract from speech of Honorable CHAS. 15. LANDIS, of Indiana, printed in bound Congressional Record, Fifty-ninth Congress, First Session, page 7311. Abraham Lincoln mado the best tariff speech over recorded when ho said: " I do not know much about the tariff, but I know this much, when we buy manufactured goods a'broad wo get tho goods and the foreigner gets the money. When we buy the manufactured goods at homo wo get both tho goods and tho money." That is the whole protective theory In a nutshell. Up to the enactment of the McKlnley law wo sent ?20, 000,000 abroad each year for tin plato. We got the tin plato and Great Britain got the ?20,000,000. Last year, and indeed for several years, wo made In our factories all the tin plate we consumed. In other words, under our policy, Lincoln's policy and McKInley's policy, wo got both tho tin plate and the money the American consumer got tho tin plato and the American laborer and American manufacturer got the money. And tho price of tho tin plate did not advance. Tho draining of this country of money, which is tho caso under low tar iff laws, is what makes it poor and weak. Tho gold and silver of a nation is tho lifeblood. Take it away by tho 'million to nav for (roods manu factured abroad and you sap our nation's strength, Just as you sap an indi vidual s strength If you tap an artery. Under a law Democratic tariff we send away our money our blood. Under a Ronubl can nrotectivo tariff wo aro getting new blood all the time, because, as a rule, tho balance of xraue is in our lavor. Head the messages of our Presidents back in tho ilfties and you will see that they tell how, under tho low Walker tariff, tho millions of gold mined in California wont in one ceaseless current abroad to pay for manufactured goods. Wo aro now keeping that gold, tho na tion's lifeblood, at home, where it belongs. In speaking of having both tho tin plate and the money that went into its manufacture under tho policy of protection, I called attention to the fact that the price of tin plato was, at tho samo timo, no higher to the consumer. American inventive skill and genius and competition al ways come to tho rescue when tho American manufacturer and American laborer aro given a chanco by tho protective tariff. Tho gentloman from Mississippi Mr. Williams contends that tho price of tho articlo that is manufactured, if protected by tho tariff, is always higher. This assertion Is absolutely without foundation. Inventive genius and competition almost Invariably reduco the price. Our oxporionco with wire nails shows how it works nnd explodes absolutely Mr. Williams' theory. In 1883 there were no wire nails produced in this country. Thoy were thon soiling at ?C of the wav tho Domoprnttn mmTOo b- . " " wuuu ii mrui 01 a Keg ui un. vwij, mo ucmocraiic congress, ...nH Iinip,i ,lnnn ... rn in issi wa Tnnninli to nnn v.. proceeded to pass moro appropriation bills, producing a net Increase over tho last Republican congress of $9,533.-201.0-1. "Whenever wo got desperately hard up I went back to Perkins," said Sena tor Dixon in describing tho raising of funds for tho third term movement. Very much of tho movement goes back to Perkins, nnd back of him to his steel and harvester trusts. Those political advisers who told Woodrow Wilson to bring tho tnriff to the front nro having tho time of their lives explaining that they didn't know it was loaded. Press dispatches say that Candidate Wilson spent Wednesday at Princeton revising his speeches. Revising tho tariff out of them, probably. tho price dropped to $5 a keg. In 1885 wo manufactured 200.000 kens. and tho price dropped to ?4 a keg, which was exactly tho tariff duty. In 1880 wo manufactured 500,000 Tiegs, and tho price dropped to $3.40 a keg. In 1887 wo mannufactured 2,000,000 kegs, and tho price dropped to $2. GO a keg. In 1899 we mado over 2,500,000 kegs, and tho prlco drop ped to 12.10 a keg. And all this timo tho duty was ?4 per keg. Tho avorago prlco in 1902, tlio last available report, -was ?2.1D. That is an excollont illustration of tho way Republican protection works. It Is exactly the samo as tho working of tho McICInloy tariff on tin plate, which built up tho tln-plato Industry from nothing to an ag gregate valuo of 120,000,000 a year. Republican protection not only protects, It builds up. It gives employ ment to American workmen. It secures to Americans tho control of tho markets of their own country. It affords to American labor a standard of wages far above tho wages of any other peoplo under tho sun. But. you ask, why keep tho tariff on if wlro nails aro soiling for less than tho tariff? I answer you that wo must 'keep tho tariff on to protect this country from holng mado a dumping ground for tho surplus products of tho nail mills of all tho other countries on earth. Wo need tho protective tariff, first, to onahlo us to build tho factory. Now that wo havo tho factory running, wo need a protective tariff to pro tect tho American market and tho laborer who la working In this Ameri can factory; and wo Tvllicontinuo to need It until tho American laborer is willing to work for tho low wages pa Id tho foreign laborer. To my mind nothing Is clearer. E MATTHEW PARREL, Late of Honesdalo, Pa. All pnrsons Indebted to said es tato are notified to mako immediate payment to tho undersigned; and thoso having claims against tho said estato aro notified to present them duly attested, for settlement. C. P. SEARLE, Ex. Honesdalo. Pa., Oct. 8, 1912. NOTICE U ADMINISTRATION, E8TATK OK L . ... WIU.IAM K'ATZ. I.ntp of the borotiKli of Ilonesdnlc, County of 1 Wayne, Pn. ' All iiersons Indebted to said cstntonre not! Ileilto make immediate payment to the tin (turslcneil ; nnd those hnvlnc claims ngiilnst tlio paid extnte arc notlllcd to present them duly attested, for settlement. t .. MAUDKM. KATZ.Ad'x. M..T. Martin, m Fourteenth St.. i bcrniitoM. I'll, Honesdale. I'n. I Att'y for hstntc. 7?Volli w V "j"v uummon l'icas: xriai jj uct. Term. 1912. Wagner vs. Wagner. Knapp vs. Stlnnard. Skinner vs. Dolsen. Noble vs. Braman. Lippert vs. Cortright. Honesdalo .Milling Co. vs. Ku nacn. Parnam vs. Erlo R. R. Co. W. J. BARNES, Clerk A IM'KAISEMENTS Notice is glv 1. en that appraisement of $300 to tho widows of tho following nam ed decedents havo boon fllod in tho Orphans' Court of Wayno county, and will bo presented for approval on Monday, Oct. 28, 1912 viz: John Bishop, l'aupack, personal. Edwin P. Torrey, Honesdale, per sonal. Ira Ellsworth, Manchester, per sonal. Chas. W. Orchard, Berlin, personal. Wm. R. Allen, Clinton, personal. uuurKo iueyer, icxas, personal. George W. Butterworth, Sterling, personal. H. J. Quinnoy, Honesdale: Real estate. W. J. BARNES, Clerk. Honesdale, Oct. 3. 1912. I Carpenters WANTED APPLY F, A. HAVENS & CO, ON SITE Honesdale, Pa. COURT PROCLAMATION. Whereas, the Judge of the several Courts of the Comity of Wayne has Issued his precept for holdlnp a Court of Quarter Sessions, Oyer nnd Terminer, nnd General Jnll Delivery In nnd for said County, nt the Court House, to becin on MONDAY, OCT. 28. 1912. nnd to continue one weeks : And directing that n 5rand Jury for the Courts of Quarter Sessions nnd Oyer and Terminer lie summoned to meet on Monday. Oct. 21, 1912, nt 2 p. in. Notice is therefore hereby given to the Coroner nnd Justices of the Pence, nnd Con stables of the County of Wayne, that they be then nnd there In their proper persons, at said Court House, nt 2 o'clock in the nfter noon of said 21st day of Oct.. 1912. with their records, iiinuislttons.exnnilnntions nnd other remembrances, to do those things which to their olllces appertnln to be done, nnd those who nrc bound by recognizance or otherwise to prosecute the prisoners who are or shall be in the Jail of Wnyno County, be then and there to prosecute against them as shall be Just. Ciiven under mv linnd. nt Hnnrxtrinin ti,i 3rd day of Oct., 1912. and in the 136th year of the Independence of the United States FRANK O. KIM1H.E. Sheriff. Sheriff's Oillce I Honesdale, Oct. 3, 1912. S0wl WHEN THERE p IS ILLNESS I in your family you of course call a reliable physician. Don't stop at 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 And 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. Preecrip 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. & H. Station, Honesdale. Pa. THE NEW MODELS FOB AUTUMN 1912 McCall's Magazine and McCall Patterns For Women Have More Friend than any other magazine or patterns. McCall's is the reliable Fashion Guide monthly in one million one hundred thousand homes. Besides show ing all the latest designs of McCall Patterns, each issue is brimful of sparkling; short stories and helpful information for women. Sare Moner and Keep in Style by sub scribing tor McCall's Magazine atonce. Costs only 50 cents a year, including any one of the celebrated McCall Patterns tree. McCall Patterns Lead all others in ctylr, fit. simplicity, economy and number sold. More dealers sell McCall Patterns than any other two nukes combined. None higher tiian 5 cents, lluy from your dealer, or by mail from McCALL'S MAGAZINE 236-246 W. 37th St., New York City H tT uplt Ccpj, fnalum CtUlofrai uJ PtUra Cu oguf 9 fr, vt rtquMk 'Stickley's Furniture" is unex celled in materials, con struction and finish. Only $5.85 For this attractive and massive stylo Iron Ded with heavy continuous posts filled with craceful scrolls, rods and or naments. HeiL'ht of bed G3 VI Inches, and in all retrular widths. Beautifully enameled In every detail. A bed of similar stylo and quality lells'always for U to t9. Carefully packed and shipped, freight charges prepaid, $5.85. Do you wish to save fully 25 in buying your furni ture. If so, send today for our latest catalogue. Free on request. BINGHAMTON, N. Y. wlfSi mf$ffl Up-To- Date Styles and Cloths h7: uL$&h. Mt In Menner & Go's Department Store; KEYSTONE BLOCK WANTED ! T9 Jm HassiasiaBiBHBsaBsH ILilsP ttsls'aflMHV Ml LABORERS AT ONCE Farview Criminal Insane Hospital WAGES, $1.75 a Day. Apply at Institution, Farview