THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1913. PAGE THREE ASKS CAPITAL TO AID FARMERS Myron T. Herrick Advocates Euro pean System of Rural Credits, OPERATION IS HOT INTRICATE American Agriculturist Spends $250, 000,000 Yearly For Interest, Which Would Not Be the Case if He Were Able to Enjoy the Benefits of the System Life Insurance and Credits. Myron T. Herrick, United States am bassador, obtained leave of absence from big post at Paris mainly to urge before the rccont convention of the Association of Life Insurance Presi dents In New York the adoption of a financial plan for the relief of the farmer, who Is now paying about $250, 000,000 In Interest. He told the Insur ance men that the psychological mo ment has arrived for the adaptation of a plan from the European system for financing rural credits in this country. In this connection the ambassador sug gested the creation of a life Insurance plan to cover the Indebtedness In the event of the death of the borrower. "This subject of agricultural cred its," ho said, "while of great magni tude, Is really, after all, not intricate. The ope-ation of the Credit Foncler, the Landschafton, the Ilaiffelsen and hundreds of kindred Institutions for land and personal credit so eminently successful and beneficial In their re sults In Europe can be very easily ex plained. It Is simply an application of the story of the bundle of sticks tied together singly, easily broken; togeth er, able to withstand any pressure. "Villages, municipalities, cities In America are really a fungous growth on the country. They are the natural out growth of the fertility of the soli. They are dependent upon it for life, for existence. The Credit of the Village. "The village, in order to maintain schools, make streets, build waterworks and lighting plants and other munic ipal utilities, pledges the united credit of the municipality, the security ex tending over long periods. This is done by aid of legislation, which also pro vides restrictions as to tho amount of the loan, etc. In other words, it la a financial 'setup' created by legislative authority, and tho result is magical in Its effect "As soon ns this security Is created by uniting tho credit 6f tho municipal ity It becomes cosmopolitan In Its na ture. Instead of depending on tho home market it has become current security In any money center of tho United States at a low rate of Interest. "Were It not for this legal authoriza tion of the nrrangement It would de pend on the local market and neces sarily little or no improvement could take place, or at least It would be slow, cumbersomo and expensive. Incon sistent as it may seem, the result is that that which is an artificial growth on the country has a broad and secure market, while the country tho great country Itself, which produces and Is re sponsible for tho existence of the vil lages and tho municipalities and the cities has a local and restricted market and insufficient capital to promote its legitimate advancement "Every year tho farmer Is spending something like $250,000,000 more for In terest than would be the case If he were able to enjoy the benefits of this system. The sum which ho expends in Interest should be applied to the de velopment of tho country. It has been estimated by good authority that he needs immediately for legitimate de velopment of tho soil more than 2,000, 000,000. "It only needs the application of the alert minds of tho Americans to work out and ndapt these systems, for the psychological moment has arrived when It is necessary for It to bo done. Will Unlock Vast Capital. "There are largo accumulations of capital which are now restricted to lo cal communities for investment, being permitted to be applied only to munic ipal bonds and securities of that class, nside from local loans. When this se curity Is created nnd put Into the same category this vast capital will then be unlocked for this Investment. "In tho creation of rural securities I have considered with especial Inter est the embodiment of a life insurance plan. It would undoubtedly be of great value to have tho debenture, or secu rity, accompanied by such n policy, which would insure the liquidation of tho Indebtedness In caso of the death of the borrower. "This is tho usual practice whero land and buildings are mortgaged. A firo Insurance policy accompanies the mortgage and becomes n part of tho bond security. In case of tho maturity of tho policy by fire tho money Is to be paid to the holder thereof 'as his in terest may nppenr.' "Tho Introduction of tho life Insur ance policy In agricultural credits Is undoubtedly a sound economic propo sition. Furthermore, it would give the rural community, which Is almost a virgin field for life Insurance, an un derstanding of tho value of life Insur ance. There has Just been created In Franco a commission to draft a report on agricultural insurance. This Is Just along this line. Tho life Insurance policy would also be nn excellent nc compaulment for the security of tho Dersonal credit societies" SUBURBAN TRUCK BE A RESULT Representative Tells How Farmers' Profits Are Made Greater. A CONDITION that allows tho fjLrmera of tho country to get but $8,000,000 for what finally gold to the consumers for about $13,000,000 is dlroctly attacked by tho now parcel post service. As to the raannar In which farm profits aro In croasod anil price. to consumer re dueod by tho sorrico, Representative David J. Lowls of Maryland has given an lutovostlng rovUw, In part as fol lows: "Tho mere articulation of tho farm end couutryslda with tho town and railways! by tho postal ran will bo of vory groat social importance. It will load to a now Industry tho suburban gurdonur. Ho will bo able to send his shlptnonts V his patrons direct at cost of sorrico, and tho economic barrier of an individual transportation system Is removed. Four acres nud Independ ence has been n dream of the past It In apparont that It may become n fact through tho postal van. And what a fact! Shifting tho unwholesome ten dency of population to tho nickelodeon civilization of tho cities back to the country. As tho president has stated, the high cost of living -was bound up In thU postal legislation. Two dozen eggs, a dro3.d fowl, thrco pounds of butter, a llko amount of country sau sngo, a country cured ham and a half bushel of apples sold recently at a farm near Washington at $2.85, but when they got to the consumer tho cost was $5.55. Giro the small shipment its transportation rights nnd the means havo been provided by which tho pru dent and husbanding spirit of the work ers of our country can glvo themselves a measure of rollef. "There Is considerable objection to the parcel post In this country. It conies from mon who make their ob jections with an earnestness and spirit that should cnuo one to halt nnd con sider. I moan tho local merchants. They ask 'Why make tho limit from four to eleven pounds in weight? Is not this limit obviously dosigned to be just largo enough to got his patron away from him to the mall order house and yet so small as to exclude tho local merchant, since ho commonly ships In larger weights? This objoctlon was largely ovorcorno with the substitution of tho zone system for the flat rato proposition. Tho rates should not cre ate unnatural markets by Ignoring dis tance. The flat rato idea represents a misapplication of tho 'principle of neg ligible costs' In rato making. It Is rightly applied to letters, because tho element of transportation cost with tliom is less than ono-fourth of tho to tal cost. But where weight Is Involved to any extent tho transportation cost is not negligible, nnd even In the small est countries, llko Switzerland and Bel- glum, the ratos recognize distance. Connects Farmers With Outside World. "Some 40,000,000 of our people, the producers of vital necessaries, live In tho country, off the railway lines. Tho express companies, of course, and the railways, too, havo no means of reaching this country population. Any system at all adequate to directly con nect the producer and consumer, espe cially with reference to vital necessa ries, will have to connect tho farmer with the railways and tho towns. Only tho postal system possesses tho agency for that purpose. It possesses It in the rural free delivery structure, now almost complote and ready for adaptation to tho larger service. Wo aro spending over $40,000,000 on that service, and It Is waiting, one might say, with empty wagons to receive and convey In retail quantities tho neces saries of life from tho farmer In tho country to tho hungry mouths that need them In tho city. Tho express company, therefore, Is excluded as the remedy to connect producer and con sumer for two main reasons Its rates are prohibitive and Its Instrumentali ties do not reach tho farm. Tho com putation of tho outlay tho postofllce department will havo to make for this increased sorvlco can only take place as tho development of tho traffic pro coeds. Tho simplified and reliable mo tor truck Is now In sight. No abrupt chango will tako place, and tho postal department will gradually adapt the rural delivery structure to meet the needs of the traffic ns they become manifest "The postal system of the United States Is certainly the most efficient agency of Its kind throughout tho world. I havo divided tho number of postal employees in England, France and Qcrmauy Into tho number of mall pieces bandied each year nnd then mado a llko division for tho United States. Tho result shows that for the year 1008 tho efficiency of tho average employee in England was 31,117 pieces handled, In Franco 38,241, In Germauy 25,001 nnd In tho United States 51,501. Wo certainly havo tho most efficient postal agoncy to handle tho small shipments." Tho now net naturally mado neces sary big appropriations for equipment of tho various cities. It Is worthy of note that Chicago has received attention as being the most Important parcel post center In tho country. That city has received nu apportionment of $15,000 for the rental of automobiles and otli- TO POST OF Exprcss Companies Must Cut Rates to Hold Their Town Business. er vehicles for the delivery of parcels. Beyond doubt, Chicago will receive tho largest volume of business in 'tho new service of any city. New York, Bos ton and Philadelphia have received ap propriations of $10,000 eachfor parcel delivery. The Parcel Post "Hospital." Anothar feature upon which postof flc department officials aro putting much thought Is the "parcel post hos pital," to correspond to the dead letter office. One example of an office In London is cited. A clerk had sixty-one loosa address labels and these wero the articles which had lost their ad dresses: Ten geese, nine ducks, six rabbits, four dolls, six boxos of cigars, ono tin trumpet, one ostrich feather, two powder puffs, one toy locomotive, three Jars of jam, one plum cake, ono plum pudding, one wheelbarrow, one seed cake, ono bottle of gin and two bottles of whisky fifty articles and slxtyone labels. All trouble might have been avoided had the public packed their articles In telligently. Express Eates to Be Changed. Tho express companies aro meeting the rates in effect under tho parcel post law. They will compete for the par cels that come within the scope of the Bourne net. It Is the purpose of the express people to try to hold their busi ness In the towns and cities. They cannot deliver their parcels In the ru ral districts. If tho express companies cut their rates to compete with the parcel post law, starting with New York as a cen tral point or basis, the following re ductions must be made: From 20 cents on a one, two or three pound package, within fifty miles of New York, to 5, 8 or 11 cents; from 30 cents on a four or five pound package to 14 or 17 cents, and from 35 cents on a six, seven, eight, nine, ten or eleven pound package to 20, 23, 20, 20, 32 or 35 cents. Six pounds, about the medium weight for a parcel, will be carried by tho postofllce department 50 miles for 20 cents, 100 for 20, 200 or 300 for 32, 400 or 500 or 000 for 38 cents and 1,000 for 44. For tho same service the ex press companies would charge: Oue hundred miles for 35 cents, 200 for 45, 300 or -100 miles for 50, 500 miles for 55, COO miles for 00, 700 or 800 or 000 for 70 and 1,000 for 80. The parcel post package cannot weigh more than eleven pounds, but ono can send sixty-six pounds In six packages fifty miles for $2.20, for which the ex press companies charge $3.05. A com parison of aggregates shows that the express companies charge $51.50 for what the pnrcel post will charge $33.28. Tho parcel post rato reduction from tWi present express charges Is 25.07 per cent. In order to meet tho competition bet ter the express companies will Increase their delivery force and employ the most modern equipment. The contest Is to be spirited. PLAY GIVEN AFTER MIDNIGHT. Stage Society Outwits Police and Sun day Law. Shortly before midnight recently au tomobiles began to arrive In front of the Lyceum theater In New York and discharge men and women In evening dress. Soon all tho orchestra seats In tho theater wero occupied, nnd the cus tain then roso for tbo start of a dra matic performance. It was the first production of the Stage Society of New York, and tho performance was hold after midnight because the police had threatened to arrest all concerned In the play, plan ned for a week earlier, If It were given on Sunday. Thero was no pollco Inter ference, although Inspector Dwyer was In tho audience nnd tho society had on hand a city magistrate, who is a mem ber of the organization, no was said to be there to accept ball If thero were any arrests. Among those who were In the audi enco wero leaders In tho theatrical pro fession, in tho operatic field, in arts and letters nnd society. Tho object of tho organization Is to produce plays by new authors and such as might not be readily accepted for production by the atrical managers. Tho members of thq organization wore Jubilant at tho success of their venture, nt tho crowded house and tho presence of so many persons whoso at tendance meant influence for tho so ciety. There was a good deal of Jesting heard at the expense of tho police, nnd It appealed that tho members felt that they had outwitted them. Three ono net plays wero given, and tho performance, beginning promptly nt 12:15 n. m., as was promised, lasted well Into the morning. The hour was a test of faith in tho principle, but it -was met pretty well. Each Has Lifeboat Ticket. Tho Toyo KIsen ICalsha Steamship company of Japan has Introduced n pew feature in tho direction of provid ing for tho safety of Its passengers. To each ticket sold Is attached a cou pon representing a certain seat In a lifeboat. CARDE1C PARCEL UWE ARE OUR OWN BETTERS" TREE Famous Englishman In Speech Strikes Qui at Snobbery. SAYS WE REVERE BUTTONS, Declares Most Pitiable Framo of Mind Is That Admitting Social Inferiority, Says Gentleman Is One Who Doesn't Try to B One. At tho Hudson theater, In Now York, Sir Boarbohm Tree talked ou "Our Betters" to uu audience which was not only lutorested but interesting. On tho stage were Viola Allou, Daniel Frohrunn. Bishop Boyd Carpenter, Francis Wilson, Edwin Markhani, Dr. Henry Lelpzlger, A. Barton Hepburn, Huury Clews, William McAdoo, Dr. E. It. Gould. Louis K. Anspacher, J. 1. C. Clarke and other well known men and women. It was tho first time that most of the audience had seen the distinguish ed Englishman In his own undisguised personality, nud It was apparent thut they docldedly approved of him In tho role of himself. Ills commanding fig ure and erect carriage prepared them for on personal reference which he mado In tho course of his lecture. "In an Interview with me printed in ono paper," ho said, "tho statement was made that I am seventy years old. Well, I think that must be what Is called being born before one's time." Sir Bcerbohm's Ideas about our bet ters wero expressed when he declared there Is no more pitiable frame of mind than that shown in the familiar utterance of thousands of Englishmen, "God bless tho squire and his rela tions and keep us in our proper sta tions." "On that symbol of respectability, the frock coat, thero are two buttons," he Bald. "Nobody knows why they are thero, but no one would dare appear without them. A reverence for hut tons Is one of the attributes of our common humanity. And we put on our mental clothes, buttons and all, with the same subservience to custom. We slug in unison the hymn of respec tability. And to be respectable is to bo what other people are. Belug oue self Is the greatest of luxuries and, I may add, one of the most expensive. "Valor In the weak Is always danger ous, I heard a story the other day of a mouse that strayed Into a wine col lar and. coming across a pool of whis ky, dipped ono foot in and licked It ex perimentally. " 'Humph!' ho said, 'that's pretty good!' and forthwith put In two feet, then all four, then rolled In it, and lick ed himself all over. After awhile he reached the point that ho bounded up tho stairs two at a time, and having reached the top ho exclaimed: 'Now, Where's that cat that chased me last week!' "People imbibe from their betters habits of good form they aro never able to shako off. "But whnt is n gentleman? Ho is a man who doesn't care whether he is a gentleman or not! He is a man whose courtesy Isn't regulated by his interests. "I saw in Munich recently an exhi bition of the cubists and futurists. 1 was quite sure of one picture. It was a monk shooting wild duck. But 1 wns told it was tho 'Dawn of Buddhism. What I took to bo an Egyptian mum my floating In green pickles was a cab accident By tho way, I notice that theso schools always paint their dogs green with red spots. That's symbolic of something. I am confident it is. But I don't know what "Among our betters are those who could show us tho right pronunclatiom of tbo English language. Tho stage has done a great service in preserving the langungo of Shakespeare. I wish there could bo established a standard of pronunciation for tho English speaking world. Thero is none now. Among our Inconsistencies is the drop ping of the 'g,' which is vulgarity In the lower classes and a sign of smart ness in tho upper ones. And, by tho way, In another local Interview I am represented as saying 'Fnwncy!' Now, an Englishman never says that. We say 'Fancy!' Sny It very often." Sir Beorbobm summed up by saying that tho boy scout movement is doing much to break down artificial social distinctions. In tho end men's betters aro themselves. TRAFFIC RULE FOR WALKERS. Compelled to Obey Policemen's Whistle In a Test In Chicago. Pedestrians in downtowu Chicago have come under tho sway of the po liceman s whistle tbo same as vehicles. The test was mado recently, and tho scheme may bo extended. Eight po licamen four mounted and four on foot were on duty nnd expounded to pedestrians tho now trafllc ruling. "One minute, please, ladies and gents," they would say. "Stand whero you are for the present on the side walk. There, don't push out in tho street that way. Ono moment, thero, madam; wait for the signal. Pedes trlans are to bo put under tho same regulations ns toamsters. Pedestrians going north or south can pass when the officer blows ono long blast on his whlstlo. Two blasts from the whistle lud east and west trafllc goes through. There's your signal, people. Learn to recognize it. Al( right; step lively now." fifl'''' fjfiSTOItIA Bill w For Infants and Children. Hi f USTOHU e You "ave Isi Blb Always Bought IMfl ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. IMgil : AVcgclablcPitparalbnfrAs- -n liIL slmllaitag theFMdamlRcgula- BearS 1116 w . WflHlll 1 j$Stma IcUa 9 linn MKtte&its- i a v in l flBStfiEKn I Tf J, USB 98nffl : Worms,Cfflwulsimsfeverish- g hfl 1SVPP SW rassanilLossOFSLEEP. 8 WwUl Thirty Years Exact Copy of Wrapper. thi ointau company, new von city. Bne win HONESDALE, PA. 171 41 YEARS BECAUSE we have been transacting a SUCCESSFUL banking business CONTINUOUSLY since 1871 and are prepared and qualified to renderVALU ABLE SERVICE to our customers. BECAUSE of our HONORABLE RECORD for FORTY- ONE years. BECAUSE of SECURITY CAPITAL and 8 BECAUSE of our TOTAL BECAUSE GOOD MANAGEMENT has mado us tho LEADING FINANCIAL INSTITUTION of Wayne county. TJT7,1 A TTQH! P flioon vnn onno urn rurft i an f 1 ir n air vnn r OFFICERS : W. 15. HOLMES, PRESIDENT. II. S. SAMION, Cosliier. A. T. SEARLE, Vice-President. W. J. WARD, Asst. Cashier DIRECTORS ; H. J. CONGER, W. B. HOLMES, C. J. SMITH, H. S. SALMON. T.'B. CLARK. E. W. GAMMELL W. P. SUYDAM, mmm " I I 7 UJ WXri A.fiA'Z&r Advertise in THE CITIZEN TRY A CENT-A-WORO County fin EUcirtlc OF SUCCESS 1912 guaranteed by our LARGE SURPLUS of $550,000 00. ASSETS of $3,000,000.00. COURTEOUS treatment to all CUSTOMERS whether their account is LARGE or SMALL. 'INTEREST allowed from the FIRST of ANY MONTH on Deposits made on or before the TENTH of the mouth. J. W. PARLEY, P. P. KIMBLE. A. T. SEARLE, . inATT o nnimrn Minn 06 uurcutn HONESDALE, PA. Rearesent Reliable Cnmoanies ONLY