The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, January 03, 1913, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1913.
THE) CITIKN
Bcml-Wockly Founded 1008; Weekly Found 1844.
Published Wednesdays and Fridays
Entered as second-class matter, at
. B. HARDENBERGH
H. C. VAN ALSTYNE and E. B. CAL
dimcctoem:
It. WILSON,
U. DOBFLtHOEB,
M. D. ALLEN,
Our friends who favor us with contributions, and desire to have the same re
wmca, should in everi case enclose stamps for that purpose.
TERMS:
ONE YEAR J1.50 THREE MONTHS 38c
BIX MONTHS 75 ONE MONTH 13c
Remit by Express Money Order, Draft, Postofflce Ordor or Registered
Jotter. Address all communications to The Citizen, No. 803 Main street,
Honesdale, Pa.
All notices of shows, or other entertainments held for the purpose of
making money or any Items that contain advertising matter, will only be
omitted to this paper on payment of regular advertising rates. Notices
of ontertalnments for the benefit of churches or for charitable purposes
where a fee Is charged, will be published at half rates. Cards of thanks,
cents, memorial poetry and resolutions of respect will bo charged for
t the rate of a cent a word. Advertising rates on application.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1013.
THOUGHT FOR, TO-DAY.
If I were you I would do every-
tning i was asKed to do. That Is
tho way to get on In life. Did you
ever hear It said that ho who takes
care to do no more than he Is paid
ior will never be paid for moro than
lie does. Go right In and do every
thing, from sunrise to sunset, and
you will go right up. Mayor Gay
nor. AVILL THIS LESSON IJE HEEDED?
Organized labor was not on trial
in tho Indianapolis dynamiting cases.
Forty individuals were on trial, and
the jury has found thirty-eight of
them guilty of tho crime charged
against them, which crime was far
less heinous than their real offense.
A great, an overwhelming major
ity of all the members of labor or
ganizations are law-abiding citizens
as good citizens as can be found
anywhere in the country. But they
have made a fetich of unionism.
While sharing In tho benefits, they
have shouldered little 'responsibility
for the management of affairs. The
control of unions has been drifting
Into the hands of labor demagogues,
and when the demagogue Is Intrust
ed with power he always becomes a
tyrant.
The men responsible for all these
dynamite outrages made their living
out of the unions. They were the
parasites of organized labor and
were concerned chiefly in keeping
themselves In office. Tho power of
the union was their Individual pow
er, and they hesitated at no crime to
maintain it or extend it. No man's
life or property was safe if it stood
in their way.
Tills criminal conspiracy carried
on Its reign of terror year after year,
and every outrage which it commit
ted was not only a crime in itself,
but it was a form of criminal black
mail levied upon all other employ
ers. It was the labor demagogues'
warning that surrender must bo un
conditional. It was not tho .fault of bonest
union men that these criminals mur
dered and destroyed, but it was the
lault of honest union men that such
criminals attained and held auto-
w.iatu; iJuww in juuur organizations.
Tho lesson of this verdict is a lesson
tbat honest union men must heed.
Otherwise, all the inestimable good
of organized labor will bo over
whelmed with the evil.
This country Is weary of organized
crime, Whether It is committed by
captains of industry or by captains
or toll. The patience of a -patient
people Is well nigh exhausted. If
the decent majority will not as
sume control of the affairs of trades
I Unionism, thpn froml nnil Vinrl gllln
must suffer tho consequences.
There can bo no compromise on
this Issue. New York World.
THE SPEAKERSHIP.
Friends of Representative Geo. E.
Alter of the Twelfth district of Alle
gheny county aro supporting him for
speaker of the Housa at Harrisburg
Tor a variety of good and sufficient
reasons. They commend him to the
people and to the favorable consider
ation of his fellow .members as ex
emplifying the best type of state leg
islator. They believe that all kinds
of Republicans can turn to him with
the assurance that they will be en
tirely safo in sinking factional dif
iferences and uniting on him as a
step toward restoring Republicanism
in Pennsylvania to its former mili
tancy. Mr. Alter's candidacy Is not set
upon narrow foundations or pres
criptive purposes. While it is urged
upon positive grounds It is not es
sentially hostile to any Individual as
such nor directed with malicious an
tagonism at any group of men. It is
not in derogation nor to the dis
paragement of others who may be
seeking the same honor. Mr. Alter's
adherents do not rely upon negative
arguments to advance his causo.
They point to the man, to his flaw
less record in two sessions of the
General Assembly-, to his honorable
career at the bar and his standing In
tho community for confirmation of
their claims In bis behalf. It la a
fact beyond dispute that every mem
ber of the new House of Representa
tives who served with Mr, Alter In
past years, no matter what may be
by the Citizen Publishing Company.
the postofftee, Honosdalo, Pa.
PRESIDENT
LAWAY MANAGING EDITORS
E. B. HAKDENBERall
W. W. WOOD
tbat member's present afllliatlons,
frankly acknowledges tho Spring
dale man's conspicuous ability and
his superior qualifications .for the
speakership. This may not be ex
actly a quick asset, but It is val
uable testimony nevertheless, and it
is eloquent of the fundamental re
quisite which should obtain in the
selection of a speaker.
An examination of the roll of
membership and its political com
plexion discloses undoubted reasons
why the House should elect a Re
publican speaker. That party is pre
dominant. But there was that in the
recent election and there Is an at
titude on the part of some Repub
licans or quasi-Republicans which
renders it desirable that tho new
speaker shall represent something
more than the party name. He
ought to be broad enough in his
views and inclinations to possess the
full faith of Republicans and at the
same time inspiro the complete con
fidence of former Republicans and
members with other partisan lean
ings. Such a man is Mr. Alter. It
is said of him that, although he en
tered the House in 1909 a stranger,
It was not long until he was Influen
tial In Its committee work and de
liberations and had elicited warm
commendation from Gov. Stuart for
the intelligence and fidelity with
which he went about tho public's
business. In the session of 1911
nearly all of the administration
bills, so called because they wore
Intended to carry out recommenda
tions specifically .made by Gov. Tener
in his Inaugural address, were com
mitted to Mr. Alter for introduction
and floor management. As Governor
Tener is expected to submit a num
ber of important subjects for action
In his forthcoming message all of
them constructive and marking defi
nite stages of legislative progress
it would appear to be the part of
wisdom, from tho standpoint of the
commonwealth's real Interests, that
the governor should have the benefit
and aid of a speaker who will bo in
thorough sympathy with executive
plans for advancement. In this
respect Mr. Alter's election would bo
admirable.
Tho speakership situation Is sur
rounded by many complications. If
a blunder is mado the consequences
may bo serious to the Republican
party's future and not to the ad
vantage of tho state. Tho oppor
tunity is presented in Mr. Alter's
candidacy of achieving a popular
move which will go far toward re
establishing public approval of the
motives and methods of the Repub
licans of Pennsylvania. Pittsburg
Gazette-Times.
THE YOUTH'S COMPANION IN
JANUARY.
The ambitious amateur photo
grapher, In his first attempts to take
.indoor pictures of Aunt Susan or
Uncle Joe, Is apt to produce some
thing the like of which was never
,seen on sea or land. The Youth's
Companion in its New Year's Num
ber offers suggestions for .getting
good Indoor camera portraits.
A boy can learn to send and re
ceive the Morso telegraph code with
his own private line even learn to
read by ear, although that takes
time. Tho Youth's Companion has
a practical article on the subject in
its Now Year's Number.
Tho wife of Maurice Hewlett, the
English novelist, is a licensed "bird
woman" the first, dndeed, to have
been granted a pilot's certificate In
Great Britain. In Tho Youth's
Companion of January ICth she will
tell "How a Woman Learned to
Fly."
The life of a sailor on a battleship
is not, perhaps, as free and easy as it
appears to visitors who go abroad
when the vessel anchors in a harbor.
But at tho worst it is not the dog's
life of tho good old .times, as one
oan learn by reading In Tho Youth's
Companion of January 9th an arti
cle by Reginald Belknap, a former
executive officer of the North Da
kota. 2t
The vounc bovs nml clrla win
soon bo skating on tho Ice.
CASTOR 1A
For Infants ana Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
MAJOR GENERAL O'RYAN.
Governor Sulzer Restores Him
as Head of National Guard.
1913, by American Press Association.
Almost immediately after his Inaugura
tion Governor Sulzer announced that he
hod rescinded the ordors or his predeces
sor, Mr. Dlx, placing Major General John
P. O'Ryan on the supernumerary list and
had restored him to active duty command
ing the national guard.
SEVEN DIE AS BRIDGE GIVES WAY
Piling Undermined by Floods, Engine
Plunges Through Structure.
Huntington, W. Va., Jan. 2. The
first day of the new year brought to
the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad dis
aster. An engine of the heaviest type,
pulling westbound freight train No. 09,
plunged through a temporary bridge
spanning the Guyan river at Guynn
dotte, on tho eastern edge of this city.
Seven men were hurled to death and
a half dozen more seriously hurt. Tho
dead are:
P. E. Weber, engineer; Henry White,
watchman; Charles Haddie, Emmott
Wood, James Crawford, Charles Cny-
ner and J. G. AVhcclcr, bridge workers.
The financial loss to tho railroad com
pany is estimated will reach ?500,000.
Freight traffic on the road was com
pletely tied up and passenger traffic
was resumed after a delay of several
hours by the use of the tracks of the
Baltimore and Ohio railroad.
Tho Guyandotte bridge, tho scene of
the disaster, was known to railroad
men as the hoodoo bridge, the accident
making the third on this structure.
Tho railroad officials claim that the
collapse of the bridge was duo to tho
piling being undermined by tho high
stage of water now prevailing in Guy
an river.
Fifteen men were working on the
bridge, and eleven of them went down,
five being rescued from the river. The
others fell under the engine nnd enrs.
So far it has been Impossible to dis
cover the bodies of any of the victims.
MR. REID'S BODY HERE FRIDAY
British Cruiser Natal, Delayed by
Weather, Sends Wireless.
New York, Jan. 2. The British
cruiser Natal, bearing to this port the
body of Whltelaw Reld, late ambassa
dor to England, announced by wireless
that she expected to get here tomorrow
morning. The United States battleships
North Dakota and Florida sailed to
meet the Natal off Nantucket and es
cort her to an anchorage In the Hudson
river. Heavy weather has delayed the
Natal.
Tho following committee was ap
pointed by the president of tho Union
League club to attend the funeral serv
ices of Ambassador Reld at tho Cathe
dral of St. John tho Divine next Satur
day morning: Joseph II. Choato, Chaun
cey M. Depew, norace Porter, Elihu
Root, George R. Sheldou, A. Barton
Hepburn, J. Plerpont Morgan, Henry
Clews, Joseph E. Gay, Charles E.
Gregory, Charles E. Rushmore and
Bamuel W. Fairchlld.
GRIEF KIUS BEREAVED GIRL.
Drops Dead as Friends Try to Comfort
Her For Mother's Loss.
Jersey City, N. J Jan. 2. Mrs. Mary
A. Wholan died suddenly a week ago
at her home, 407 Humboldt street, Un
ion Hill. Her daughter Mary, twenty,
was so crushed with grief she lost nil
Interest In life.
Several of the girl's friends called on
Miss Whelan, hoping to comfort her.
While they were talking to her she
suddenly got to her feet, staggered and
fell dead.
Doctors said sho hod died of heart
failure. Friends said It was heart
break.
John D. Loses at Golf,
Tarrytown, N. Y., Jan. 2. John D.
Rockefeller went down to defeat in his
first game of golf of the now year with
Ellas Johnson. Ho played Frederick J.
Hall and I. B. Johnson and lost, six
up. Mr. Rockefeller said bo was not a
bit superstitious and would retrieve
himself at an early date.
ROUND THE GLOBE
A now roofing material is steel coat
ed with lead.
Last year the Russian forest reve
nues exceeded $42,525,000.
Automobile fire engines will soon be
In service In Bangkok, Slam.
According to the last census, thero
are 147.000 foreigners in Egypt.
A Bombay philanthropist has given
$75,000 to start war on tuberculosis.
Double deck electric cars are run
ning on tho suburban system of Paris.
Many denominations have Joined to
form a creedless church in Forest
Hills, N. Y.
Iron nnd steel manufactures aro now
being exported from this country at
the rate of u million dollars a day.
In sixteen years conflagrations In
Russia have destroyed 3,000,000 build
ings worth more than $SOO,000,000.
Durango. Mex., has a population of
not more than 30,000 people, yet it uses
up 120,000 pairs of shoes each year.
Old John Street Metnodist church,
New York, has just celebrated Its one
hundred and forty-sixth anniversary.
Denmark has dropped its plan to en
large the harbor of St. Thomas, In tho
West Indies, owing to lack of finnnclnl
support.
An advertisement recently appeared
in a daily paper in Germany offering
n reward for a watch lost from an
aeroplane.
Quartz lamps aro experimentally in
use on the streets of Chicago and are
said to put the other electric lamps in
the shade.
Vegetarianism is almost the rule. In
northern China, the food principally
consisting of turnips, potatoes, maize,
rice and millet.
The Austrian courts have recently
affirmed the principle first established
in the United States that a typewrit
ten will Is legal.
A factory in England has succeeded
in making paper from Australian blue
gum wood, of which thero is a largo
supply available.
Tho number of employees of both
sexes in Swiss hotels exceeds 00,000.
Tho 18,000 restaurants give employ
ment to 45,000 more.
Very few American families spend
less than $150 a year for meat, and
milk and butter cost tho average fam
ily at least $75 a year.
There is some clamor In nolland for
a direct railway line which would re
duce the distance betwen Rotterdam
nnd Amsterdam one-third.
Two Belgian army officers have In
vented a carriage for machine guns
which can be drawn by dogs, tho
wheels having pneumatic tires
'kinds as an independent monarchy in
1813 will bo commemorated in various
forms in that country next year.
Offering prizes to Its motormen for
tho most effective operation of cars by
an English company has resulted In a
saving of 25 per cent of the current.
Tho city of Osaka at the end of 1911
had a population of 1,230,373, being
the second city in size and the largest
manufacturing center In tho Japanese
empire.
In the construction of tho new com
edy house at Fraukfort-on-the-Maln
the usual footlights are dispensed with.
A better system of lighting the stage
has been devised.
Tho Bulgarian military transport
service impartially uses pack animals,
buffalo carts, horse drawn wagons nnd
big automobile trucks, according to the
road or lack of one.
On tho second day of tho year every
stranger entering n Roumanian house
is expected to throw a small quantity
of salt on the fire. The salt Is kept
ready in cups on the table.
An Australian ranchman In New
Soutli Wales has come to the conclu
sion that he can get a better return
from ostriches on 2,500 acres than from
twice that area devoted to sheep.
By a decree of the Spanish govern
ment women will In future bo admit
ted to all universities in Spain on the
same terms as men and will be entitled
to follow any profession for which the
university diploma qualifies them.
Vermont is now tho only stato that
has an unbroken record of Republican
victories since the formation of that
party. Vermont cast Its electoral vote
for Fremont In 1850 and it has been
regular ever since, in fifteen successive
elections.
Raton Tata, a wealthy Bombay mer
chant, has given $7,000 a year for
three years to the University of Lon
don to promote the study of tho best
means for preventing and relieving
poverty. The fund will be administer
ed by a bureau provided for that pur
pose. Organizations of women known as
housfrauenverelno, or housewives' as
sociation, based on tho principle of co
operation nnd mutual assistance be
tween the housekeepers of town and
country, have attained a considerable
growth In the extreme eastern part of
Germany.
An English landlord, Sir Fortescuo
Flannery, has Informed farmers on his
Essex estate that he will take.no rent
for land ou which sugar beets are
grown. He thinks this crop should bo
more extensively grown In Great Brit
ain and Is trying to encourage It with
in bis own sphere of Influence.
Servla has long been noted for tho
generous provision mado by its hotels
for travelers' requirements in tho way
of toilet. Not only docs one find pub
lic soap, but also public hairbrushes,
combs and clothes brushes. Sometimes
there Is even a public toothbrush, and
always there Is pair of slippers pro
Tided in every bedroom. J
MINUTE "MOVIES"
OF THE NEWS
RIGHT OFF THE REEL
H-!-I-l-I-I-M"I-M-iH-H-4-H"H-444I'
With unusual candor a woman's or
ganization in Connecticut has been
named the Nut club.
There is an unlimited field for the
surgical science that has just provided
a Dickinson collego freshman with an
entirely now face.
No lesson Is to bo learned from the
death in Dublin workhouse of Mickey
Smith, nged 110. He smoked constant
ly nnd drank all ho could get.
Chicago man has invented a table
knlfo the blado of which cannot be In
serted in the mouth. Local capitalists
have refused to finance n company for
him.
Awakened by a black bear in her
barnyard, a widow living near Wnuk
haw mountain, in New Jersey, went
out and killed the brute with a pitch
fork. A Michigan man owns a shepherd
dog whose services in herding sheep he
values at $5 a day. To protect the
dog's feet the owner provides expen
sive shoos.
The Junk pile for one more old tra
dition. Board of review of the Na
tional Trotting association decides that
the age of a horse cannot bo determln
ed from his tpeth.
BANS RED SCH00LH0USES.
Member of Chicago Board Says They
Make Babies Cross.
Climbing ivy and other vines are to
be substituted for red paint on the Chi
cago school buildings if a suggestion of
William Rothmann, ono of tho mem
bers of tho board of education, is fol
lowed out. An nttempt at renewal of
a five year custom to paint the build
ings red was vigorously opposed by
Rothmann, who succeeded in staying
the proposed action of tho board.
"This Idea of painting schoolhouscs
red overy five years Is a bad one," said
Mr. Rothmann. "The color strikes you
In the face two blocks away. It makes
the babies in tho neighborhood so
cross no one can sleep at night.
"We should plant ivy and other vines
nnd the buildings will bo covered by
nature In a few years. This will elim
inate the cost of painting nnd will bo
more beautiful than any paint as well
as acting advantageously on tho minds
of children."
Hi -
Boo i n i rx,-.ri az-fita,
iv i in va ft v j-pHii II II w I 1 I -Hir.-'tsB-.-.iKi i i
fj X. I 11 Hl'--. w '-A-'vll I llllll 1 111 I V T.'J I I s
Your Telephone; A Direct
Line, Just theServiceYou Want
Think of il a direct line telephone, right on your
own desk in your own living room, where you can use
it every day to the dealers, the shops, friends in a
hundred different ways which occur to you when you
say to yourself: "I wish I had a telephone."
Order it right now, and you'll realize the fullest
benefits of the best service possible; exclusive service,
yours twenty-four hours a day. Call the Business Of
fice from any Public Telephone.
The Bell Telephone Go, of Penna.
W. A. DELLMORE, Agent.
HONESDALE, PA.
VA
Friday, Jan. 3d
BENJ. H. DITTRICH, Lessee and Manager.
W. D. FITZGERALD presents
ROSE MELVILLE'S PRODUCTION of the
World-wide Famous Comedy Drama
"SIS HOPKINS"
f I4th annual tour and still the favorite.
I A play of the fireside, a thousand laughs, a
few tears, and a world of satisfaction.
I Production carried in its entirety. A splendid
acting company.
PRICES: 15, 25, 35, 50 and 75c,
SEAT SALE, Thursday, Jan. 2d.
STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING.
Tho annual meeting of the stock
holders of the Honesdalo Consoli
dated Electric Light, Heat and
Power Company will be held at tho
office of the company on Monday,
January 20, 1913, beween tho hours
of three and four o'clock p. m., fot'
the purpose of electing directors for
the onsulng year, and the transac
tion of any other business that may1
come before the meeting.
M. B. ALLEN, Secretary.
Honesdale, Pa Jan. 3, 1913. 2w3'
RULES OF HEALTH.
Every school day every public
school child In New Jersey looks at
the following rules of health which,
are hung on placards In the school
room. Read these rules, apply them
to yourself and keep well:
"Fresh air and sunshine are neces
sary to .good health. Cold or damp
fresh air does not harm If the skin
is kept dry. Night air is as good as
day air. Breathe only -through tho
nose. Avoid hot, crowded, dusty,
dark or damp rooms. Breathe deeply
and throw back your shoulders fre
quently. Live on plain food and eat Tegu
larly Eat slowly, chew thoroughly,
and avoid fried food. Drink water
freely (not iced). Have your own
cup If drinking fountains aro not '
provided at school. Go to bed earlv
and sleep with tho windows open.
ueguiar exercise is essential to good
health.
Wear loose clothes. Wear no mora
clothing than you need for warmth.
Never sit with wet feet or In damn
clothing. Consumption and other
'diseases are spread by careless spit
ting. Spitting on the floors of
rooms, halls, stores and cars will
certainly be breathed In the form of
dust. Keep your finger nails clean,
and wash your hands and before you
eat. Never hold money, pencils, pins
or other things in your mouth."
-O-FJA
STOMACH TABLETS
Drive Out Gas nnd Sourness at Onco
and End Dyspepsia.
Don't complain; if your meals do
not digest get a 50 cent box of MI-O-NA
Stomach Tablets to-day and
stop distress, gas, sourness, fermen
tation and that lump of lead feeling
in fivo minutes.
And why should any sensible per
son ever suffer from any stomach
trouble when G. W. Pell is author
ized to refund tho purchase price to
any dissatisfied person If MI-O-NA
Stomach Tablets do not do away
with Indigestion, Acute or Chronic
Dyspepsia, Dizziness, Nervousness
and Sleeplessness.
For Vomiting of Pregnancy and
the effects of over-eating, drinking
or smoking they are simply fine.
4 v-
There's the Place for
1
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