PAGE TWO THE CITIZMK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1913. DEMOCRATS AND TO CONTROL CONTROL Sentiment Will Be Largely For New Ideas-Deadlocks Numerous. By JAMES A. EDGERTON. ONE of the fathers which one does not matter hero compnred the Dnlted States senate to a saucer In which it was then the fashion to cool one's coffee. Some of us yet remember that custom, the cof fee being absorbed from the saucer with noises varying all the way from a sigh to the rip of a crosscut saw. Saucers have now gone out of fashion as colToe coolers, but the senate, wheth er out of fashion or not, is still there. Perhaps it yet acts as a cooler of leg islation, but lias exactly the opposite effect on a lnrge part of the populace. It makes them hot, in consequence of which they have called it the "million aires' club" and other uncomplimentary names and have threatened to abolish it. The only thing tangible that has come from all these denunciations is a constitutional nmendment now before the states for ratification providing that senators shall be elected by direct vote of the people. It is said that the senate is the last part of the government, excepting the I by American Press Association. JOUK W. WEEKS OP MASSACHUSETTS. Bupreme court, to be affected by a pop ular movement. Yet that It is so nf fected In time is proved by the chang ing character of the body during the past few years. The Insurgency nnd progressivism that overturned the house nnd revolutionized politics In the last presidential election have also had their echoes in the senate. Indeed, "echoes" is too mild a word for La Follette, Cummins, Brlstow, Clapp, Poindexter and others who made the senate Insurge till the older heads rub bed their eyes and wondered Just when the world was coming to an end. La Folletto and the rest are anything but echoes. They are original voices crying In the wilderness. Democrats In Control. The new senate will bo still more progressive. In politics it will be Democratic by an uncomfortably nar row margin. That In itself will bo a revolution, but more significant still la the prospect that the progressive element of the Democracy will control. If they need any help La Folletto and bis bunch arc still there. All the new senators are not yet elected. On Jan. 23 there were some thing like seven deadlocks in as many state legislatures, Involving eight or nine senatorshlps. The situation in the deadlocked states in brief is as fol lows: In Illinois there aro two senators to elect. No party has a majority in the legislature, the progressives holding the balance of power. The Democrats have more votes than the regular Re publicans and lack but a few of a ma jority on Joint ballot Tho deadlock at this writing is on tho election of n speaker and the organization of tho house. One consequence of tho mud die is the delay of inaugurating Gov ernor Elect Dunne and the now ad' ministration. Lawrenco Y. Sherman was indorsed in the Republican pri mary for senator and James Hamilton Lewis In tho Democratic. The New Hampshire deadlock resem bles that In Illinois, in so far as party divisions aro concerned. Tho Demo crats lack a majority, but aro more numerous than the Republicans. The Progressives hold tho balanco of power, The Democrats and Progressives Joined forces in electing tho speaker, and there has been a persistent rumor that they would eventually do tho same in choosing a senator. The last ballot at this writing resulted as follows: Hol Hs (Dem.), 108; Pearson (Rep.), 187; Bass (Prog.), 21. A Bunch of Deadlocks. In Wyoming Senator Francis E. War ren Is a candidate for ro-clection nnd on tho face of the returns seems to have a fragile margin of ono or two In tho legislature. Enough of tho Re publicans Joined the Democrats, how ever, to enable the coalition to organize the house. A riotous scene ensued when the speaker nnd speaker pro tern, both tried to preside nt once. An effort is being made to unseat some of the Re Dubllcans, and If the coalition holds to WW E TRE NEXT SENATE Amendment Asking Direct Election Has Good Out look For Success. gether this may ho done, which would mean Warren's defeat. Tho Republicans control the Idaho legislature and have already re-elected Senator Borah, but are deadlocked over n successor to Senator K. I. Perky, appointed to All the vacancy caused by the death of Senator Hcyburn. On ono of the last ballots former Governor James II. Brady came within three votes of election. The Democrats have a slim majority In Di'laware. National Committeeman Willurd Snulsburv, was tho caucus nominee, whereupon four of the Kenny Democrats bolted, in the successive ballots Snulsbury has received twenty five votes, whereas twenty-seven are required to elect. The bolters say thoy will never go to Saulsbury. The West Virginia legislature is con trolled by the Republicans, but a dead lock occurred in tho attempt to organ ize. Former Senator Elkins, son of tho famous Senator Stephen B. Elkins, is mentioned among other possibilities for rsenator. In New Mexico Senator Fall asserts he has been already elected for the term ending in 1010, but tho claim is disputed, tho contention of his oppo nents belli;: that the previous legisla ture had no right to choose him for more than the short term, tho long term belonging to the new legislature now In session. The senate itself may be called npon to settle the question. Should Help Popular Elections. With all these deadlocks before the country as an object lesson It should not be dlfllcult to adopt the constitu tional nmendment for direct election of senators. This is now before tho states nnd has already been ratified by Mas sachusetts, Minnesota and Now York. Favorable action by thirty-six states Is required. Thirty-eight legislatures aro now In session, nnd if the matter is pushed it may bo possible to hnve the amendment adopted this winter. If not. some of the other legislatures nsserable In 1014, and the nmendment should be ratified by a snfilclent num ber of states to put It In force before Photo by American Press Association. dEOltaiS W. NOIU1IS OF HEnlUSKA. tho senatorial elections of that year. If horrible examples of scandals bred by the old system are needed to help along the new these deadlocked states certainly furnish all the necessary ar guments. Of the holdover senators there are thirty Democrats, thirty Republicans and one Progressive, Polndexter of POR IVES j kiji,....l'!lL,...; Washington. Of the new ones already championship of white supremacy, ne elected or certain to be elected there -as beaten twice for the senate before are eighteen Democrats and nine Re- finally attaining tho goal, publicans. Ten of the new senators I George W. Norrls, Republican, Ne have been re-elected, tho other sixteen braska, hai been a house Insurgent having never before served In tho leader nnd was formerly a prosecuting body. Thus the Democrats have forty- attorney and district Judge. Thomas eight certain. As there is a total mem- sterling, Republican, South Dakota, Is bership of ninety-six, this will give a prominent lawyer, dean of a law col them sufficient to organize with tho lego and has been n member of tho casting vote of Vice President Mnr- j state senate and constitutional conven- shall. Of tho nine still listed as doubtful tho Democrats aro practically certain to elect in Delaware, which will raise their total to forty-nine, thus giving them a majority of two. They also Itnnd a chance In Illinois, New Hamp- ways nnd means committee, but re jhlro and Wyoming, though in the last ilgned to beat James Smith, Jr., for named Btate It may bo slight Tho Re - publicans now havo thirty holdovers and nlno certainly elected, making thir ty-nine. Of the doubtful states tliey are firly sure of West Virginia, New Mexieo and Idaho, raising their total to forty-two, while they havo a chanco In Illinois, New Hampshire nnd Wy mlng. There Is already ono outright Pro cresslro senator and a chance to elect another In New Hampshire or Illinois. It must be remembered, however, that many of tho senators cities ed as Re publicans are progressive In principle, among whom may be mentioned Works, California; Borah, Idaho; Cummins and Kcnyon, Iowa; Brlstow, Kansas; Ster ling, South Dakota; Clapp, Minnesota; Norrls, Nebraska; Gronna, North Da kota, and La Follette, Wisconsin. My own forecast of the new senate is that It will contain about fifty Dem ocrats, forty-four Republicans nnd two' Progressive party men, with nt least ten of the Republicans and the two Progressives liable to break over and vote for Democratic tariff bills and other rndlcal measures. The old senators who have been re elected are as follows: Democrats John II. Bankhcad, Alabama; A. O. Ba con, Georgia, now alternating with Galllnger as president pro tcm.; F. M. Simmons, North Carolina; R. L. Owen, Oklahoma: B. R. Tillman, North Caro lina, and Thomas S. Martin, Virginia, present minority leader. Republicans -William E. Borah, Idaho; William S. Kunyon, Iowa; William Alden Smith, Michigan, and Knute Nelson, Minneso ta. It is significant that nil of the re elected Republicans, except Smith of Michigan, have been classed nt some time or another as insurgents. The new senntors so far elected fol low, with a line about each: John F. Shafroth, Democrat, Colo rado, has been governor for four years and prior to that time was a repre sentative in congress. Mr. Shafroth gained national fame by voluntarily relinquishing his congress sent, al though elected by nearly 3,000 majori ty, because ho became convinced that by Chlckerlng Co. LE BARON B. OOW OP ItHODIS ISLAND. the election was tinctured with fraud. Charles S. Thomas Democrat, rado, is already sworn In to fill a va cancy. He is a Denver lawyor, for merly governor nnd was once tem- I porary chalrmnn of a national con vention, wuuam ti. xiiompson, uum ocrat, Kansas, Is n new man In na tional politics, but beat the redoubta ble Governor Stubbs, the Republican primary nominee, for senator. literally a Big Man. Ollie M. James, Democrat, Ken tucky, Is now In the house. James will be the biggest man In the senate, 1 both horizontally and la displacement. I Ho may not be tho baldest, but his dome will be among tho far shining. 1 J. Thomas Heflln once told Ollie that I a postolilce In Arkansas had been I ninned for him and got tho Kentuck llan quite puffed up until J. Thomas explained that the postoffice was Bald Knob. James is a Bryan man, was a I lawyer for Governor Goebel, refused I a vice presidential nomination and I was pormanent chairman of the Balti more convention. Joseph E. Ransdell, Democrat, Lou isiana, Is also a house member and has been for several years president of the national rivers and harbors con gress. Edwin C. Burleigh, Republican, Maine, has been congressman and gov ernor and In tho old days was known as the head of the state Republican machine. John W. Weeks, Republican, Massachusetts, is now a congressman and was chairman of the house com mittee on postofflces nnd post roads. He was formerly In the navy, is a banker nnd Is noted as n clover politi cian and a good committee worker. James K. Vardnmnn, Democrat, Mis slssippl, was formerly governor and nttractcd national attention by his tlons. John K. Shields, Democrat, of 1 Tennessee has been chief Justice of . the stnto supreme court. William Hughes, Democrat, New Jer sey, was known as the labor member of congress. He was a member of tho 1 )io senate. Morris Shoppard, Demo crat, Texas, who succeeds Senator Bal- ley, is a young man nnd on orator. Lo Baron B. Colt, Republican, Rhode Is land, has long been a United States circuit Judge. Thomas J. Walsh, Dem ocrat, Montana; Key Plttman, Demo crat, Nevada, and Harry Lane, Demo crat, Oregon, aro not much known In national politics, but this defect may be remedied In due season. SCIENTniUO, ELECTRICAL AND OTHERWISE. Amundsen's proposed North Polar Journey has been postponed for a year, at tho suggestion of the Nor wegian government, seconded .by Prof. Nansen, in order to give tho staff more time for thorough train ing in oceanography, the subject to which tho expedition will devoto principal attention. Captain Am undsen is to bo presented with a gold medal for his discovery of tho South Polo, at tho annual banquet of tho -National Geographic Society, In Washington. New York Erects Twelve Thous and Buildings During tho past year some twelve thousand structures of various kinds were erected In New York. Were they all dwellings for singlo families, the sum of $207, 000,000 expended would furnish suf ficient homes for a city of about 00,000 people. In Manhattan the sum of over ?11C, 000,000 was in vested in the construction of build ings. During the year, over ?30, 000,000 was expended on office buildings alone. At Meadl, a suburb of Cairo, is a sun-power plant of unusual interest. It consists of 'five reflectors, each 204 feet long, whose cross-section Is in the form of a parabola, with the generator units at tho focus. Tho last-named- are of zinc, built of rectangualr sections 14 Inches wide. To render them efficient, they are painted with a black paint of high heat-absorbing capacity. The water is introduced .at the lower end and the generator at Its upper end is provided with a steam connection 4 Inches In diameter. The reflectors aro lined with silvered glass mirrors. The plant works best at a pressure slightly below tho atmosphere. Twenty-seven Years' Progress in Incandescent Lighting An English electrical magazine publishes an in teresting diagram showing the pro gressive reductions in the cost of the incandescent electric light which have taken place since 1885. The improvement has been twofold: In the increasing efficiency and life of the lamp, and in the reduction In the cost of current. It is probably not realized by the average consumer of electricity that whereas tho first carbon filament lamps, supplied with energy at about 25 cents per unit and consuming 5 watts per (British) candle-power, gave only 200 candle hours for 25 cents, with the best type of drawn-wire tungsten filament lamp today, supplied with energy at 8 cents per unit and consuming 1 watts per candle-power, the same sum of money gives 2,400 candle- hours. The Essential Feature of the Die sel Engine In the course of a paper recently read by him at Berlin, Dr. Diesel denied that the essential feat ure of the Diesel process was the auto-ignition of the fuel. He stated that motors in which the auto-ignition of tho fuel took place were in use before the Diesel process came into being; indeed, he had never laid a claim to auto-ignition In any of his patents. What he was aiming at was a process in which heat was utilized to the highest possible ex tent, and auto-Ignition became em bodied in the process incidentally during the evolution of the design. " The height of compression," said Dr. Diesel, " was riot determined by the Ignition .limits of the fuel, but solely by the endeavor to obtain the highest possible figure for economi cal fuel utilization." iBlackenlng Tan Leather To blacken tan leather it should De first rubbed with a ten per cent, solution of tannic acid. Let this solution dry thoroughly, when a ten per cent, so lution or iron sulphate should be ap plied. This gives an intense black, is easily applied and is harmless to the operator. Artificial Sponger of Paper When paper pulp Is treated with zinc chloride there results a viscous mass. Sodium chloride (or ordinary table salt) is added to this; the mass is then thoroughly rinsed with alcohol, and is finally submitted to the action of a press whose platform bristles with a number of fine metallic points or projections. These penetrate the mass, forming tubes like those in an ordinary spongo known as " canali cules." The block thus obtained is of a spongy consistency and is both in soluble and unalterable in water. It Is smooth and pleasant to the touch, and Is not susceptible of put refaction. It is a very ingenious employment of tho cellulose to which we owe so much. Removing Iodine Stains To re move iodine stains from bacterio logical Instruments or the hands a strong solution of hypo sulphite of soda is good and effective. The so lution should foe qulto strong, and after its application the solution should lie rinsed off with warm wa ter, and the stained article dried well. WHAT IS PROFANITY? Some progress seems to have been made by the Clean Language League in its efforts to curtail the use of profane speech and ribald adjective In public places. A good service has at least toeen performed by calling attention to what is manifestly in defensible in tho common intercourse of men; but the crusado has al ready 'brought the officers of this association to a demand for a defini tion What Is profanity? All tho sisters, cousins and aunts of a noted admiral of English song were horrified by his use of tho foig D , oven upon the high seas where admirals ruled, for these sus ceptible relatives assigned the ex pletive to the realm of profane s-peech; yet, if this be prescribed, then will hundreds of thousands of men rise in excited protest against an elimination of what they deem the most forceful, elastic and ex pressive adjective in their lexicon. Indeed, tho definition of what is pro fanity may prove as recondite as tho perplexing query, "What is beer?" or the more cryptic one, "When is a trolley car full?" It 1b true there Is tho example of Washington when ho overreached his vocabulary in characterizing Lee's cowardice at Monmouth, 'but It must be borne In mind that the com mander of the Continentals was making profane history. It would be a manifest anachronism to apply tho adjective used by Washington to complete a description of a base hit at a ball game or give a verbal index of the sensation of slipping on a banana peel. Tho events do not synchronize. Moreover, there wore no ladies around when tho Father of his Country spoke to his recreant subaltern, and women are always In attendance at a baseball match or looking on when a man sprawls up on the sidewalk. Thero are differ ences and distinctions the subtle mind will appreciate. -Have The Citizen sent to you. GROWING WAYMART BIDS YOU WELCOME The hustling little borough of Waymart. located on the Honesdale branch of the Delaware and Hudson railroad, at tho base 'of tho Mooslc mountains, is growing rapidly. There is only one house vacant In that village and it is one of the best bulit nouses, there, too. It con tains eight rooms and is a store and dwelling combined. Can be used for two families. The property Is lo cated In the center of the town and is directly opposite the postoffice. It would mak6 an Ideal place for al most any kind of business. Tho lot is 60x160 feet and can be bought on easy terms of the Buy-U-A-Homo Realty Company, Honesdale, Pa., Jadwin building. If you cannot come to Honesdale use the telephone or write and further description will bo cheerfully given. 99tf. VTOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION, 1 ESTATE OP OAKLEY B. MEGARGEL, Late of Sterling, deceased. All persons Indebted to eaid estate are notified to make immediate pay ment to the undersigned; and those having claims against said estate are notified to present them, duly attest ed, for settlement. H. R. MEGARGEL, Admr. Sterling, Pa., Jan. 14, 1913. 5w6 The of the estates of your minor pal and accrued income. OOOOOOtKKXCKOCKXOOOGOOCCXOOOOOOOOOGGOOOOOOKOGCXvX9!3C Our GOLD TABLETS if used promptly make short work of a cold; ' O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, Honesdale. joooqocooqooooocooooooooooooqoooooogqoooooogooooooooc m I The FARMER MECHANIC HONESDALE, PA. M. E. SIMONS, President. O. A. EMERY, Cashier. CAPITAL STOCK - - $75,000.00 Corner of Main & 10th street BANK WITH THE PEOPLE Reasons Why ! It represents more stockholders than any other bank in Wayne county. ITS DEPOSITS HAVE REACHED OVER THE $300,000.00 mark and is steadily growing with the people's confidence and the bank's progressive yet conservative methods. Its expense of management is limited to amount of business; together with it's trust funds invested in bonds and first mortgages on improved real estate assures its de positors absolute security. It treats its hundreds of small depositors with the same courtesy as though their funds were deposited by one or more persons. Thib bank comes under tho strict requirements of the State banking laws as all savings banks and is frequently visited by the Pennsylvania State bank examiner, besides having a board of directors consisting of sixteen of Wayne county's reliable business men and farmers. DntEOTORS: W. H. Fowler, W. B. Gulnnip, It. J. Hanlan, John E. Krantz, Frid W. Kreltner, J. B. Tiffany. U. B. Allen, George O. Abraham, J. Sam Brown, Osear B, Bunnell, Wm. H. Dunn, The Thrice-A-Week Edition Of THE NEW YORK WORLD Practically a Dally nt tho Price of a Weekly. No Other Ncwspnpcr in tho World Gives so Much at so Low a Price. This is a time of great events and you will want the news accurately and promptly. The Democrats, for tho first time in sixteen years, will have the Presidency and they will also control both branches of Con gress. Tho political news is sure to be of the most absorbing interest. There is a great war In the Old World, and you imay read of tno ex tinction of the vast Turkish Emplro in Eurppe, Just as a few years ago you read how Spain lost her last foot of soil in America, after hav ing ruled the empire of half tho Now World. The World long since establish ed a record for impartiality, and anybody can afford its Thrice-a-Week edition, which comes every other day in the week, except Sun day. It will bo of particular value to you know. The Thrlce-a-Weok World, also abounds in other strong features, serial stories, humor, mar kets, cartoons, In fact, everything that is to 'be found In a first class daily. THE THRICE-A-WEEK WORLD'S regular subscription price is only $1.00 per year, and this pays for 156 papers. We offer this unequalled newspaper and The Citizen together for one year for $2.00. The regular subscription price of the two papers is 42.50. 6t4. CHICHESTER S PILLS !W -rr- THE DIAMOND BRAND. K , Ladle! 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