THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER n, 1912. PAGE THREE MINUTE "MOVIES" I OF THE NEWS RIGHT OFF THE REEL Grccnpolnt (N. Y.) tnnn gets $12,000 Vico President Elect Marshall says uvcrnors. The telephone switchboard nt the nliotiiii liiictiltnt W Vrirlr lj nnmt- i i... 1.11...1 ..i.i Widows are barred by the Spinsters Dcrvntntlnh i Mm irlil1t2iittu lllllll nc mice wouiu lieu uie i;m. King Alfonso Is qualifying to be n i . , . . . i. ...i.i...- Los Angeles Is considering nn ordl- ni-i ill iiui-i' iiuiiTii i w viw iui;ii insulins snnnnintr uoiore ii. in. Mrs, N Hrnmber, a wenitny widow, tv with six toon trunks find sixty- irt nuns Fowler MoOormick, the grandson of be the greatest baseball pitcher In ...... tt.l.,1 ,1 ,,t.nH C.IIKI n i even luru. Even the price of water Is olnff up. reateued with a raise In rati by local companies. n fiK lnhnina mv snot n tin roil nni- from a rubber band and hit his n.lfnn...H I. 41. rn, ,.1,1 i..v. ... ...vi. . . . ...... ...v.. 1 1 1. i 1 . 1 !.. t 1 1 stored, An nmfn rnn L- tn ? i ti crrliW line TennsyhaT ii embodying the report a "SItoltitfo " ou the high cost of llv- 1.S00 yo r.s ago, excessive trans- . .... ... .... .i i. ...ii 1 1. ist innnaios iniii nnimcui iiosspk ni - -1.... II.. .. 1 II... 1. !!.. it u.iv tie i'.im"Mii uie hmh'i ikh if.lL. Itltlji iin.i . fntiiK.1 m.MMH. in ii'-tii in - tiui i iirnn i i iki 1 Sitnlmrr' ILVVAY EMJOI S DECORUM n Shoes, Flashy Neckties and Gum Banned by B. and M. an snuos, nusiiy neeKues, i-uewiug m, conversation with the women ssengers and the wearing of button le bouquets have lieen tabooed by Boston and Maine railroad anion;; itiiui fiiiiiuivn. ill Hi'e riirir ikki w regulations and others nro carried t "observers" have lieen engaged In fcu uiiuiiii;i nut' uii uiu uuuia to note carefully any violations. is must bo worn straight or the "ob- thing but the regulation buttons go, her No picture buttous or political ttons may be displayed, 'artaking of refreshments In a bag- ed Is forbidden, and It Is said that s now Is such a breach of train ctl ette that for disregarding it an ein yee may be severely reprimanded, e chewing of gum Is regarded as dis iceful and must be discontinued, the -nlntlnriQ nv. RTH POLE BY AEROPLANE. i! I.. r- ' 1. 1 . n . lett of Peary Party. The safest and easiest way to reach north pole and an entirely feasible y Is by aeroplane," said Captain bert A. Bartlett of the Peary north e party to the members of the Aero ib of New England, 'aptaln Bartlett said an aeroplane dd be taken by land to Capo Morris Jesup. which Is but Sal miles from pole 'lth the latest machines this would an but a few hours' flight to the e, he said. The Ico would furnish table landing places all along the le, out an necessary supplies wouiu 'ci in I... ,n..i,wl 41,,. l.ln .....1 l ill it iiiiiii:u x.n uii; .in, ii, iiiiii in the pole. rue weal trip, saiu mo speaker, ould be to L'o from Cane Jesuii dl- tly over the pole and land at Cap' dluskln in Siberia, the latter point. vecr. (icing 720 miles beyond tl e. In tin- summer months of July I August the conditions are perfect flying and I can see no serious dlf dtles which might not bo guarded ilnst " ELECTRICITY IS FOOD! entist Says a Thousand Volts Are Equal to Porterhouse Steak, hat an electric current of 1,(KJ0 Is is equal In food value to u porter lse steak with potato chips Is the nlon of Profssor Ilergonle, a Hor ux sWontlbt. Professor tlergonle louueed his theory early In the fall, co then he has been carrying out es Inients which fully bear out the the- that food can bo replaced by eluc- Ity l a communication to the Academy thermy. the method of applying n rent of low tension and high fro ncy, may partly supplant food by iilshlng the body with a great quan- or neat and saving the digestive ans from overwork, his current traverses the body with provoking tho least pain aud. given h nu Intensity of from two to threo eres anu at u voitago or from J,000 Kf r,i..,lul.nn ntmi i rr .. I . hour more than one-third of Uie t supplied by one's daily food. DISTINGUISHES Miss Edith Durham's Feats Class With Those of $ "Star" Men. M AKTIN DONOIIOK, "star" cor respondent of the London Chronicle with the Balkan al lies, has rovlved the best tra ditions of hU calling, bringing to mind tho exploits of Archibald Forbes, Mc Gahan and others who made tho war correspondence famous In the Franco Prussian aud the Turko-Husslan wars. And, while not In the least disparaging the brilliant work of Donohoe in thu Held and his hardships In getting his matter "through," let It bo told that another "special," Miss Kdlth Durham, who has been with the Montenegrin army since tho beginning of hostilities, has succeeded In doing what Donohoe did ou more than one occasion. In fact, Miss Durham's dispatches may fairly be said to be one of the journalistic features of the war. She lias ventured iuto places where few women have ever been before. She has described what she saw in clear, concise English, without the verbose exaggeration of the amateur corre spondent, and who has achieved n num ber of minor "scoops." She Is distinctly to be congratulated on her work. Of course, In her case, as In every other case of successful war reporting, she has been assisted by iutiiuato acquaintance with the peo ple and country In which she has oper ated and by considerable experience in the kind of work she has set herself to do. She Is not an amateur; there fore she has succeeded. The war In Mauchurla sounded the first delinlte note in Uieir recessional of the war correspondents. The present campaign in Macedonia and Thrace clinched the belief In the minds of newspaper men the world over. But it is just possible that people have taken too delinlte n stand in tho mat ter. Rode Two Days and Nights. In order to get his story past the cen sor Donohoe was compelled to ride two days and nights to Constantinople over muddy roads in an untrustworthy motorcar and then use up another day In traveling across the Black sea. along the Thracim and Bulgarian coasts to Costnnza, in Uoumaula. His feat was crammed with the hardships that tradition has allotted to tho suc cessful war correspondent. In fact. It was a true dime novel, calculated to enthrall the attention of any one who enjoys the hazardous. Nor and tills Is the significant part of the incident was Donohoe alone In his achievement. Another English correspondent, who, out of charity, shall be nameless, had been with him on the battlelield, had witnessed the terrific bombardment of the Bulgarian artillery, the demoralization of tho Turks and their final precipitate flight, even traveled in the same car with Donohoe to Constantinople and in the same boat with Mm to Costanza. But this man was overcome principally by the story of his own exploit He had been through all these perils on behalf of his paper; he had suffered, tolled, starved, traveled night and day. In his exuberant sense of self Importance ho completely lost sight of tho great battle he had witnessed. Difference In the Men. The two correspondents sat down side by side In the telegraph ofliee, wrote their stories at tho same time and filed them together, page by page. Donohoe wrote In short, snappy, graphic phrases a story of the historic scenes lie had witnessed, mentioning casually his own experience from time to time, so that they freshened up the running account; gave it local col or anil that mysterious faculty culled "grip." so that they served only to llx the reader's mind upou tho fact that tho man who was writing the descrip tion had actually seen everything himself. He wrote seven columns of this In time for his paper's morning edition. Tho other correspondent, working be side Donohoe, wrote what would other wise have been a very interesting ac count of his personal adventures, bris tling with tho first person singular and Hticli phrases as "your correspondent suffered more privations than had ever been his lot before," und In the course of five or six columns contrived very cleverly to elude almost any mention of what had occurred. In tho last par ngrnph or two ho meutloned that tho greatest battlo since the contllct at Mukden had been fought and that tho Turks had been smashed by Savoff. lite story was tho laughingstock of the Iondon newspaper ofllces for tho next few duys, nlthough in London tho (ersonal note in war correspondunco is iiniost ulwoys overdone. Raw Material Not Impressive. This man represented n great majori ty of the war corresondents who were sent out to cover the Balkan war. Ex port newspaper men und old war cor respondents who had seen service lo Mauchurla, lu tho Philippines and Cubu, ou tho Indian frontier, lu South Vfrlcn, the Budan and othor places wuere men have been fighting these 'nst few years Joined In decrying much ii SPECIAL" HERSELF IN FIELD nuw uui i uofjui iutn i to vviiu Allies Have Collected j News. of the new timber that "went to tho front." An nttnrhe of tho Amcricnn embassy In London tells that he was aghast at the array of self confident youths who had poured through London during tho early weeks of the war, airily discuss ing the assignments they expected to got from the general staffs of the sev eral combatants. "In fact," remarked the attache, "I um Incorrect In mentioning the general staff. I doubt If ninny of them had ever heard of such a thing ns a gener ol staff or had the faintest Idea of how n modern war was waged or how a cor respondent covered It. They seemed to believe that all a correspondent had to do was to proceed to the seat of hos tilities, introduce himself to the com manding general in that vicinity and expect immediately to bo Installed In n front row seat with a pair of binocu lars hi his hands, prepared to watch the shells burst. "A great many had no newspaper ex perience. Such as had seemed to have only the crudest Idea of what covering a war means. They evidently intended to go about it as they would go about covering n riot at home." The Case of lieutenant Wagner. Yet another case of successful report lug of tlie Balkan war and perhaps the best known one is that of Lieutenant IlennaYiegllt Wagner, the corresiMHid ent of the Vienna Uolchspost, whose dispatches from the Bulgarian head quarters were for weeks the ouly source of news concerning tho Bul garian operations. Wagner lias been attacked by jealous fellow Journalists because some of his dispatches have turned out to be incorrect. But there can be no doubt that be has scored an effective hit and that his reporting bus been not only workmanlike, but as re liable as such work can be done under high stress and on the basis of Infor mation thut is often misinformation served cut for specific purposes. As a matter of fact, AVugner was given his opportunity by the Bulgarian general staff for a specific purpose the dissemination of misleading intelli gence for the confusion of the Turks. The Turkish military Intelligence bu reau Is one of tho most inefficient branches of their organization, and they have relied for information con cerning their enemies' plans almost en tirely upon the statements of the Eu ropean newspaiors telegraphed to them from their embassies. Realizing this, the Bulgarians hit upon the clever expedient of having within call the representative of a conservative the Reichspost is the or gan of the Austrian Clericnls foreign Journal who, in return for favors of exclusive Information furnished to him, might be relied upon to serve as the mouthpiece for stories which would be calculated to deceive the Turks regardlug their enemies' plans. How successfully this scheme worked Is revealed to any one who spends a little time In studying Wagner's dis patches and the strategy of the war. Wagner's Qualifications. Wogner Is a former officer in the Austrian army, a mini who has spe cialized in the Balkans and Balknu problems all his life, who has an In timate knowledge of the several lan guages, especially Bulgarian. He got ills billet very largely be cause of this because, as has been said, the Bulgarian general staff wanted some man upon whose disin terestedness they could rely, who would even bo secretly In sympathy with their foes; a man who would be above suspicion beyond the boundaries of their country und who could be used to ndvantnge to disseminate In formation, false and true, which might be of assistance to Bulgaria. Wagner tilled the requirements, 'lie wus properly recommended, and he got thu billet. He was not an ama teur. Chance For Others. If other correspondents had ap proached the several Balkan headquar ters in more or less the same spirit they would probably have received somewhat the same advantages. Of course they would have been com pelled to give their words of honor or nt least come to n tentative under standing that only such news as wus officially given to them was to be sent out and that all such news wus to be sent out, no matter how unlikely it might seem. So perhaps one Is justified in deny ing the assertions that war corre spondence is at an end. Certainly war corresiwudenco is not to bo conducted as It was half n century ago. Condi tions are altogether different If the war office makes tho correspondent's disk more difficult it must bo recalled that the task of tho war office and Its representative, tho censor, has like wise been Increased. Telegraph lines nre more numerous and accessible, even In tho comparatively wild and uncivilized Balkans. Then, too, tho "obstructions In tho way of the corro i fipomlcnt in tho present campaign hare been unusually diDlcult, even for mod ern warfare, becuuso of tho extremo rapidity of movements and tho se quence of events. we IT WRITES 592 WORDS A MINUTE Shorthand Machine Leaves Ste nographers Far Behind, A MINIATURE TYPEWRITER, Th Basil of tha Operation and Re cording la Phonetic Spelling, Vnd a Person May Master tha New Art In About Six Months A Most Interest ing Demonstration. A competition was held recently in a New York business school that should be of Interest to thousands of stenog raphers und students of shorthand, ot whom there have been graduated from business schools throughout tho coun try an uverage of 300,000 u year. When the competition was concluded It was confidently predicted that thu day of the shorthaud writer was doomed tn give way to that of shorthand type writers, with stenographers supplant ed, as they were most decisively in the test by n simple little stenographic typewriting machine that weighs only eight pounds, can be carried as easily as a luuch box and record speech in plain and unmistakable typewritten let ters of the alphabet at the rate of O'.UJ words a minute nnd upward. Two eager young girl stenographers from the Outlook ofllces, whore Colonel Theodore Itoosevelt Is generally cred ited with ability to use language at some speed, were confidently on hand to show the assembled students how rapidly under such training they could take dictation stenogrnphlcally. Op posed to them were two operators who manipulated the new machine- a young man nnd a girl from Owens boro. Ky.. where people speak delib erately and don't write much faster and whore Incidentally the new ma chine was invented and manufactured. The two operators on the machines, who had kept their eyes fastened on tho speakers' lips and merely played as in u slow piano prelude upon the keys of their machines, announced that they had too. A second letter of MI! words in fifty seconds followed, with never a puuse for breath. Both stenog raphers, looking flrst pur.zled nnd then flushed and no little vexed, dropped out long before It was over. Too Swift For the Stenos. Then followed a letter of 180 words in fifty-nine seconds taken by the ma chines. Both stenographers by this time packing up their notebooks nnd pencils and shaking bauds frankly with their successful rivals, hud made their exit. Another dictation of ISO words in sixty-seven seconds followed, and thereafter each operator, taking the typewritten record of the other, read it off as ensily as were It his own and typewritten after the ordinary fashion. Next they took down, still noiseless ly and with apparent ease, difficult dictation from technical specifications In an architect's letter at a rattling rate of speed. And, finally, as a climax, but with more exertion this time, they took down from dictation so rapid that even those nearest the speaker could not distinguish n word a letter familiar to them, repeated over aud over for one minute. In that minute, by actual count. It was found they had typewrit ten shorthand records of 592 words. Tho previous regular shorthand record has been '2(7 words a minute. The new device Is a simple little ma chine with a keyboard like that of a typewriter, but containing only twenty, two keys. The basis of its operation nnd recording Is phonetic spoiling. Un like the typewriter, however, .which re quires a separato stroke for each let ter, the maclilno prints a chord of several letters at each stroke, on the average a word at each stroke instead of the six strokes required on the av erage by a typewriter. How the Keys Aro Divided. This Is accomplished by the peculiar system of dividing the keys. Seven of them, nt the left of tho keyboard, are used ns Initial consonants, and as there are only fourteen possible Initial con sonants the other seven are supplied by arbitrary combinations of these sev en keys, it being easily feasible to strike two letters with one linger. The right side of the keyboard con tains ten final consonants, aud the re maining eight flunl consonants possible iu English speech aro supplied by ar bitrary combinations of some of these ten. In the center of the keyboard are four vowel keys A, E, O, U the letter I being supplied by a combination of 13 and V. These twenty-two keys and their combinations cover any possible combi nation of sounds aud with the addition of some 1M) standard abbreviations constitute the solo system or code nec essary for the operator of the machine to master. Numbers i.ro recorded sim ply by using an asterisk In combination with various letters. Tho advantages of tho new system over ordinary stenography were de clured to be: That it Is easier to mas ter (tho operators In tho test were Bald to have studied It only seven and eight mouths, respectively); that it was abso lutely freo from tho puzzling uncertain ties and inaccuracies of a shorthaud system of straight und curved Hues, recording as It does In plain, typewrit ten letters of the alphabet; that tho record so written by any operator can be read by any other operator with equal eace. UK WI8I3 IN TIME. You cannot keep well unless tho bowels aro regular. Neglect of this rulo of health Invites half tho sick nesses from which wo suffer. Keop tho bowels right; otherwiso wnsto matter and poisons which should pass out of tho body find tohir way into tho blood nnd sicken tho wholo syetom. Don't wait until tho bowels nro constipated; take Dloodlno Liver Pills. They aro tho finest natural laxa tlvo In tho world gentle, safo and prompt and thorough. They strengthen tho stomach muscles, and will not injuro tho delicate mucous lining of tho bowels. Bloodlno Liver Pills have a constitutional notion, that Is, tho longer you tako them, tho less frequently you need thorn. They help Nature help herself and keep tho bowels healthy, bllo active, and stomach well. They never sicken, weaken or gripe. Mall orders filled by tho Bloodlno Corporation, Boston, Mass. 25c a box. For salo at C. C. Jadwln's. NOTICE TO BONDHOLDERS OK THE MILANVILLI3 ItHIDGE CO. Tho bondholders ot tho Mllanvlllo Brldgo Company will tnko notico that In pursuance of a resolution duly adopted by tho Company, and in accordance with tho provisions of tho mortgago dated January 2, 1005, given by tho Milanvllle Brldgo Company to Homer Greene, Trustee, one thousand dollars of the bonds secured by said mortgago have been drawn for redemption. On presentation of said bonds to Homer Greene, Trustee, at his offico in Ilonesdale, Pa., on or after January "New Way" Air- ENGINES No Water to freeze. No pipes to burst. No weather too cold. No weather too hot. Less Gasoline. IV! ore Power. Have you seen our Reo delivery truck? It's a dandy. Better look it?over. REO OVERLAND and FORD AUTOMOBILES. No better cars inado for anyvtlicre near the price. Place your order right now. Better times coming; help it along. For salo at bargain prices; Auto Car Runabout, Liberty Brush Runabout nnd Maxwell Runabout. Get In the swim nnd own n car. E. W. Qammell I CLOTHES OF Poise and Distinction in Bregstein Clothes IMUUM SO Furnishings for flen & Boys Columbia Shirts, High Grado Bath Robes, Dress Gloves, Sweaters, Ar row Brand Collars, Neckwear, Dress Suit Cases, Smoking Jackots, Um brellas, Traveling Bags. Hain Street BREGSTEN TRY A CENT-A-WORD 1, 1913, they will bo paid at their par value, together with Interest thereon to Janunry 1, 1913, on and aftor which dato Interest thereupon will cease. Tho numbers of tho bonds so drawn nro aa follows: 5 G 7 13141519 22 29 31 45 40 53 8094 09 113 140 150 158 107 170 175 184 185 195 197 214 231 244 249 257 259 2G5 2G7 2G9 270 282 289 294. CHAS. E, BEACH. Secretary of tho Mllanvlllo Bridge Company. 95w4. $6,000 Farm for $4,500 If sold within next three weeks. One of the best farms In Wayno county, assessed at $6,000, will bo sold for $4,500. Farm contains 118 acres of land, 50 of which are cleared and balance in pasture land, except ing 20 acre3 of good young growth of hickory. Ideal place for dairy farm. Milk station two miles from place. Good farm house, two barns. On It. D. Route. Telephone con nections. Located In Berlin town ship on main road 3 miles from Ilonesdale. Remember this farm is assessed at $C,000. 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