THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1912. PAGE THREE MINUTE "MOVIES" OF THE NEWS RIGHT OFF THE REEL i Everybody talked at a recent dinner tho Sphinx club, Now York. HUM I I III! I1I1I1UII lUfLL" LU nil U DVMUt) tli 11 club. tT TT t.. T?nl.1ttl 4Ut If jL4 XI, iff U HUM iUtllll v f a man cams only $12 a week his fo U ntltloil to nil of It rules Vice nilf'lHMir nLIVL'll&Ull Ul 11U JL'iBUli I i lovns rnnnoi n iinnnurv iiimic:iii'k ? nmlit flirt mnn nut u wiinrr ni iinir 1111111 iiiir kimikiiii sod with nine nimtors mi oa auu irty-Uiree wounded. Thero are no i1 In nililltifr in tho illuHtintton of 11 TT.. . I 1. 11. J il t to give up their 'careers;" Mrs. mpif or nrooKiino. jiass.. savs me ly real happiness comes to tho wo rn Willi alli.' auu ikuua d iu Chicago girls form a "?5,000 a IP fMl II. VI1W1IIIT III1L Llf W i'Al I111L11 HY WILSON DROPPED "T." i ri I i. r-l.i.f M I..,-. ill? Ill n L I T 1 J L 1.11L u iu rvutu"' word "Thomas' from the name 1I 1 tl'l 1 !, nt- 1 . oftlolti,wl Tim ntviclilniit lopf s in mini ii iirujusMJi ul m c-iuj ui iverslty. He wan In the courso of evening's call upon a fellow pro- o.r fllunnccini thn Intnrnstlnir MUb- t of names and their value. In niilillp life." said Professor lson. "the best kind of a name Is one i T-i..Irt1 lFndctnl. Tllrt I llf'NI Klllll 111 II UillUt? la lHIU Wll tlnL' of two Hnondee Woodrow Wll- . . ........ ..... . . . . ,.. a public career; second, Woodrow snn iras nnrioeiiv wuiiui: inui uv- ono should know It. 'ho utinnilnlrnl nnd d.mtvlle anecdote the president elect has ouly now iched the light of day. If Wilson d failed of election the story would vc died n natural death. Hut now .1.1.. . 1 . . .......... P 1 1 . . inn in fipT LUIU mill, luaivo ui ku n,.-i.j Wilson's days as professor of history d political economy nt Wesleyan Is ught Into the limelight. SWIFT SKY SHIP TO GROSS OGEAN I Carry 300 Persons at 67 Miles an Hour, TWO AND A HALF DAY JOURNEY German Inventor Has Drawn Specifica tions For a Thousand Foot Craft on New Linos, and Prominent Engineers Praise the Dosign Hundred Men In Crew and $415,000 the Cost. BULGARIAN WAR spiring SONG. of Kyrili March the Work Christoph. rhe hardly anticipated eagerness and .... 1.1.1. 1 ..... Alinnnnlniittnll .Kiessuess imu iuu tuuiui,n.i.i.-u lighting of the llulgarlans through t the campaign are largely due to the ntflni. ipiii. uniw. nf n nnHnnnl rinnf. ie IJulgar inarch of victory is the irk of the Bulgarian poet, Kyrlll iristoph, and the following transla n of it appears in the Sofia news per, the Slir: 11! . a jt ... mi.n !....!. e lonHttu iur uuy niu wwu. auu wnvm. rages 11! r hour Is here! t and forward! . . ..-.Ave nt lttnV ITlfilliPl' Q iiUUUIUU t till u.-.b. mm. people can suffer It. Ink nf It nnd kill! 11 without compassion and plant the Has of liberty. great enemy stands before our mother, t sho boro mlfihty avengers, ib. throttle, slay! Iwlr et Vio u'ttllR nf nnr mnthnr! Tlilnk of them 11' Give no mercy! DIo or conquer, day It is honor, today It Is Justice, be uncumpaeslonato. 11' hour is here! it and forward! to TAKES HIS FIFTH BRIDE. inois License, Man Demands Free but Doesn't Get It. ieorgo (jveruiiuer, uiiy-eiKm jcum 1, of Mascoutah, 111., entered tho -.(lorn, llfifinon liiifonil ntlil nulfiill tint tk ior a rree license, suiting inai It was his llfth visit he thought ho is entitled to it. The clerk declined, wever, to issue a iiennlt without a e, Mrs. Mnrv Miller, slsty-four years 1, wnn tho fifth bride, and tho elder- bridegroom declnres that her pies, aether with her advice and without u-oman's advice a man's life is futile, says-made a combination beyond 4 powers of resistance. Crossing tho Atlantic by airship is now only a matter of a very short time, according to a group of Germnn capitalists, which recently formed n company to exploit as a means of long dlstanco traveling a new typo of dirig ible balloon devised by Herr Uorner, a well known German engineer, which Is proudly calhsl the aerial ocean cruiser. Plnus for the realization of this schoiuo uro now well under way and have already advanced to tho point of chousing the site of a hangar on tho European side of the Atlantic, tho ex act location of which, however. Is kept a secret for tho moment. In the near future New York will bo visited by Kruost Gunthur ncnsol. the representative of the company, who was in Paris recently, with the object of ascertaining whero would bo the most sultablo landing place for aorhil cruisers bringing their load of passen gers from Europe. To Carry Throe Hundred Persons. Tho inventor and those backliiff him assert that not only will the now bal loon carry more than 300 persons nnd make tho 4,000 mile Journey in two and one-half days, but they also main tain that safety and comfort will be the chief features of the journey. The specifications of tho new dirigi ble havo already been drawn up in thirty-six different sizes for various purposes. The type destined for trans atlantic passage will bo constructed to navigate on the water if necessary as well as to fly. It will have a length of about 300 meters (or about 075 feet) by 30 meters wide and fitted with 31 benzine motors, 1" on each side, on an entirely new system capable of devel oping more than 5,000 horsepower. The airship will have its own power for rising or descending, which will permit the doing away with ballast and take no account of loss of gas. Tho average speed is estimated at sixty-seven miles an hour. The air ship will have a lifting force of 210 tons, which will enable it to carry '210 passengers, with a crew of 10'. Tho total cost is calculated at $105,000. A feature on which great stress Is laid by tho Inventor is the immunity of tho airship from explosion, oven if struck by lightning. The lifting force will bo supplied by fifty-five separate small balloons, which are covered by large envelope and insulated from the outer air by a compartment filled with nonexplosive azote Kas, which also protects the motors and their ros-ervolrs. A model airship has nlrcady been constructed down to tho smallost de tail, and aerial oxperts who havo been allowed to examine its spocial features are convinced of tho practicability of tho scheme. Experts Convinced. Count George von Dor Goltz, presi dent of tho Gorman Airship associa tion and vlco president of the Interna tional Aeronautic Federation, is re ported to havo Baid iu an interview tho other day that he wouldn't hesi tate to be among tho first passengers to cross the Atlantic in it. lie thought that it would help Germany to obtain the supremacy of the air. After a caroful examination of the new invention he stateu tnat it ap peared to hi m as if tho element of danger, hitherto inseparable from long air Journeys, had at last been ellui' Inated. E. Unibeck, another well known Gor man engineer, who has hitherto given prefWinco to tho noroplano over tho dlriglblo for series of flights, states in n Judicially worded report, nfter nn ex haustivo examination of all tho de tails, that he Is of the opinion that the Inventor has based his ideas on sound principles and that his experiments and thoso of others made with the new nlrshlp have opened fresh ground In aeronautics. He nlso says he has carefully checked the calculations and found thenl faultless and concludes: "Wo are on tho eve of seeing for tho first time a really practical and profit able dirigible." Itaoul Pictot, a Iirussols authority prefaces a long report by saying: "I have the pleasure of expressing my enthusiastic appreciation of your new system of dirigible. With real joy I linil iu your splendid work new ideas which will lead aeronautic sol unco in an unexpected direction." TIIK IIOUSINO OF LAYING 1IKNH. Many systoms for keeping poultry havo been introduced within recent ycara. Thoso who aro familiar with poultry publications must havo scon that tho "open shed" has boon ndopted almost exclusively in tropi cal or semi-tropical countries. Theso houses aro really llttlo inoro than opon sheds. Tho only protection or covering for tho front of the house Is close wire cloth; the rear and both sides colso built with n roof on top. Theso houses provide shelter from tho weather nnd aro usually cool during the night nnd when kept per fectly clean aro very comfortable resting places In which tho poultry may roost happily over night. Such houses answer very well in any locality whero tho thermometer does not get bolow freezing point. Hut in latitudes whero thero is buow, cold rains and oc2aslonally zero sides close built with n roof on top. openings in front, which aro closed at night and during had weather with muslin curtains arc most favor ably considered. To have theso houses best suited for all conditions there should be at least ono glass window, renchlng from Iloor to eaves In front. This to admit light and sunshine during winter days. The muslin curtain over tho open glass window provides air circulation nnd ventilation affording a most healthy condition within. Farther north as In Canada, glass windows aro used In all houses with less open front as It Is called, and with perhaps two windows In place of one, tho open front in ho closed with a tight muslin curtain. All poultry houses should faco the south, so as tovhavo the advantage of sunlight for the greatest number of hours during the winter months. In addition to fresh air and sun shine there must be dry floors and a dry interior. Nothing Is so destruc tive to poultry as dampness. iowis annot live In damn houses ana ao ell. They can neither keep their health nor lay many eggs. Danip- nss creates colds and croup condi tions, which when present In a (lock, stops egg production immediately. It matters very llttlo now plain tho construction of these houses, so long as side and rear walls, tho roor nd the glass portions ot tno iront re air tight or so closely built that draughts cannot pass through any part of the room. The iront snouiu be enclosed as stated, with glass indow and muslin curtain. While such construction admits sun and daylight with plenty of air It pre- ents dampness nnd com irom com ing directly In contact with the fowl as would be tho case if their open ings were without the protection ai forded by tho muslin curtained windows. All of theso problems havo been orked out by the poultry fanciers f the country. In almost every lo cality there are men willingly engag ed in doing all they can to promote poultry culture. All the poultry fanciers and poultry growers of this locality should send their fowls to be exhibited at the Town nan in i Scranton, during tho week of Jan. 4. Mr. A. W. Close, the secretary, as been distributing premium lists i from his office In Scranton for tne past ten days. John Osborno, who da sick with pnoumonln. Among Scranton visitors on Mon day wcro Mrs, C. N. Lorlng, Mr. and Mrs. Stownrt 1'cct nnd Robert Spangcnberg. Mrs. Agnes Mooro Is nt C. L. Simons' caring for Mrs. Angcllno Williams. Christmas bells will soon chime, likewise, salth Damo Humor, wed ding bolls. Earl Williams, wlfo nnd llttlo son Hobort. of Scranton, visited at C. L. Simons' over Sunday. They camo to seo Mr. WllllamB' mother, Mrs. Angellno Williams, who is very feeble. Mrs. John Osborno Is 111. Mrs. Asa Jones, who has been ill with pneumonia, a improving. Mrs. George Uartlow Is ill with a sovoro cold. Miss D. P. Hamlin loft on Friday for Hackettstown, N. J., whero sho expects to remain until after tho holiday season as tho guest of Mr. and Mrs. Georgo Clearwater. II. D. Spangcnberg Is homo from Spring Drook where ho has been em ployed for several months. School For Waiters In England. Kimclnl Hchnol for trnltiliiir bovB as liters has recently been cbtubllshed England in connection witii the okery school for uoya nt esimin- r. Foreigners trained as waiters on .. . 1 1 . AHI1I,, haiiiIi. e continent navu uccu uuuiuk iploymout in England through lack nntivo applicants, and It is nopoa at tho new scliool will attract Eng- h Imva In In llilu oecnnstlon John Brown's Executioner Dead Lieutenant Colonel Joseph C. Gibson who was In charge of tho troops that bunged John Ilrown at Harpers Ferry died recently on tils plantation nt Ver bena, Ala. Ho wus seventy-nlno years old and had been an invalid for sovcrnl years. Pleco of Done In His Heart. A particle of bono from a kneecap fractured while playing baseball work ed its way through his systom to tho heart of fifteen-year-old Georgo Hayes of PhtlHdolnlllu anil oanouit Ma i1o SPOUTING NOTES. For tho information of tho many fans who aro anxious to know when they can seo some more basket ball, wo understand that tho now mana ger of tho Itlnk docs not intend to havo any basket ball games, nnd in an interview with one of the Maple City basket ball team wo learn that they havo no games scheduled and do not know whether they will play any more this year or not. It seems as though it ought to pay, as this year Honesdale had a team which proved itself, In tho few games played, to be ono of the best teams In Northeastern Pennsylvania, and when It is considered that there is more basket ball played between here and Berwick than In any other section of tho country of tho samo size, that Is going some. This state plays more basket ball than any oth er state in the Union, and the Hones dalo team 'was advertised in Pitts ton a few weeks ago as one of tho "snappiest" teams In the state. Eddio Murphy and his White Mills team have come to tho front now with a half concealed challenge to Honesdale (in our last issue) and as they have a fast team, a series of gamea between these two teams would not only be interesting but would be a money maker. )CKXXOOOOCXXXXGX000X Our GOLD TABLETS if used' promptly will make short work of a cold. O. T. CHAMBERS, 3 PHARMACIST, g Honesdale, ... Pa. OOQOOOOOOOCOOQOOOOOOOOQOQOQOOQOOQOOOOOOOOOOQOQQOOQQOt The Golden Staff of Life Bread is the staff of life and golden-brown electric toast is its most delicious and healthful form. There's no use trying to demonstrate or even to imagine that ordinary toast is as good as ELECTRIC TOAST. In making ordinary toast it is very difficult to avoid burning the bread, and burnt bread is something very different from the crisp and delicate toast made by the clean electric heat of the G-E RADIANT TOASTER The electric toaster enables you to have perfect toast at any time without the fuss and bother of building fires and smoking up the house. There is nothing more suit able for an Electrical Christmas Gift. Get one from the HONESDALE CONSOLIDATED LIGHT, HEAT & POWER CO. The Wilkes-Barro Advocate, a 1 weekly paper devoted to the interest , of the colored people in Northeast ern Pennsylvania, lias suspended publication after an existence of , twelve j-ears. John S. Williams, the publisher, states In his farewell edi torial that it was impossible to mako tho journal a success because many of his subscribers did not pay for their paper. "New Way Air-Cooled C asonne No Water to freeze. No weather too cold. No weather too hot. No pipes to burst. I HAMLIN. Hamlin, Dec. 19. Georco Policy, a former resident f Lake township, who has been in , the west for some years, died quite suddenly at St. Louis, Mo. Tho body was broucht here tor nuriai. a funeral service waa held at tho homo of Flora Polley, Ariel, after which interment was made m tne iiamnn cemetery, on Wednesday, Dec. 11. On the same date, Delia, the four- year-old daughter of Mr. and .Mrs. A. N. Patterson was buried here also. Tho child was quite severely burned about tho body somo three weeks earlier but was thought to he well on the way to recovery, so that her death came as a considerable shock to family and friends. The funeral services were held at tue house, Rev. Itussell officiating. Mr. and Mrs. u. o. unieu spent nart of last week In Carbondalo whero they were tho guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tucker. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Fields nave been visiting their daughter, Mrs. Isaac Williams, in Scranton during tho past week. F. A. Peet, rjima reel anu .urs. Marlon Franc visited scranton and Moosic recently. The M. E. Sunday school will hold its Christmas exercises on tho even ing of Christmas Day. Miss Mabel llensei, or moosic, is caring for her grandmother, Mrs. ASK ANY HORSE Less Gasoline. More Power. Eureka Sold by (foolers aveeywbara Tbs Atlantio Refining Company $6,000 Farm for $4,500 If sold within a week Have you seen our Reo delivery truck? It's a dandy. Better look it.over. REO OVERLAND and FORD AUTOiMOBILES. No better cars made for anywhere near tho price. Place your order right now. Ilcttcr times coming; help it along. For sale at bargain prices: Auto Car ltunabout, Liberty UruMi Kimnhoiit and Maxwell ltunabout. Get in tho swim nnd own a car. E. W. Gamniell One of the best farms In Wayne county, assessed at $G,000, will be sold for ?4,500. Farm contains 118 acres of land, 50 of which are cleared and balance in pasture land, except ing 20 acres of good young growth of hickory. Ideal place for dairy farm. Milk station two miles from place. Good farm nouse, two barns, On R. D. Itouto. Telephone con nections. Locatea in Berlin town ship on main road 3' miles from Honesdale. Remembor tills farm Is assessed at f C.000. If sold immediately wo will close tho deal at 54,500. Buy-U-A-noino Realty Co. Box 52 .Tr.dwln ItulldliiK Honcsdnle, Pn. The 18 nan of the estates of your minor chil dren. It has the very best facilities for the profitable and wise invest mentand re investment oftheprinci- pal and accrued income -The Scranton Trust Co. Rift CtlK1lfA CtKAAt 510 Sprueo Street. TRY A CENT-A-WORD ihtMtx?xrv Widow Walitvs. SCKNKS FROM HENRY W. SAVAGE'S IMMENSE PRODUCTION OF "THE MERRY AVIDOW" AT LYRIC, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30. IIU2