PAGE TWO THE CITIZEN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1913. I WOMEN TO PLAY IN WILSON 3 to Be Wonderful Event. By JAMES A EDGERTON. V rOTES for women!" will be tho slogan heard on the streets of Washington on March 3. It will not only bo heard, but seen.people along Pennsylvania avenue, Seventeenth street and other thorough fares traversed by tho suffragist pa rade being given a .chance to, goo HtWe else. It will bo the battlecry of the marchers, will shine from banners, transparencies nnd floats and will greet the eyo and the ear In every way that can be devised by the army of thou sands of suffragists that will Invade the capital from practically every state In the Union. It Is designed oven to go up In the air with It, a suffragist aeroplane carrying the magic legend above the heads of the marchers. The parade will represent the prog ress of women through tho ages, sec tions of It being In the costumes of the middle nges and others representing successive centuries from that time to the preseut. At one time It was de Blgned to go back even farther and garb some of the marchers ,ln the flow ing robes of ancient Greece and Rome, but the plan was abandoned when those In charge reflected with a shiver MRS. HELEN IT. OAItDENEK. on the usual brand of weather pulled off In Washington on Inauguration days. The women workers will also be represented. It Is asserted that there are now 0,000,000' of these In tho nation who have Invaded tho occupa tions of men and are earning their own living. Women lawyers, doctors, min isters, teachers, actresses, newspaper workers, stenographers, clerks, busi ness women, mill workers and other feminine tollers will bo represented. Other sections of the parade will show the number of countries that have granted women tho voto in whole or In part; also tho nine American states In which 'suffrage has triumphed. It was planned to have one float present in a striking way to tho eyes of beholders tho ones from whom tho voto is with held a baby, an imbecile, a convict and a woman. The Hike to Washington. One section of tho suffragist pageant will be given up to "General" Rosalie Jones and her fellow hikers from New York to Washington. It was the in trepid "General" Jones who led "Colo nel" Ida Craft, "Surgeon General" Dock and one or two others in tho march from New Yprk to Albany to present a suffrage petition to Governor Sulzer. After this stunt was pulled off with due publicity the grander design dawn ed on tho mind of the dashing leader that still wider publicity could be gain ed by a hike to Washington to present a similar petition to President Elect Wilson. It was on Lincoln's birthday, Feb. 12, that tho marchers got under way. At the stnrt off there wero "General" Jones, "Colonel" Craft, two captains and eleven privates. One of tho fair recruits had given up her Job to join the glad procession. It being rather damp marching across tho North river nnd tho Jersey meadows, tho hikers compromised by riding In a tube train to Newark. Colonel Craft did not think this was entirely right and tried to ease her conscience by marching back and forth through the train, much to tho disgust of other passengers, who shivered ns she opened tho doors. Colo nel Craft concluded that, as she could not march ns fast as the train ran, even this method smacked of fraud, jo she reluctantly subsided. Tho ac tual march started at Newark, An attempt Is being made to convert ev- everybody en route; also to tako on re- nrH iiiiii viirmiiM nimrvuiiiiiir luivuh iih lonir me iino 01 iuurcu. uuu u uuy '111IHH 1 lit V YVIIUlfl 111IL lini 1 . AL I IlllU' join the procession, and at Baltimore a whole company of suffragists are to BIG PART INAUGURATION Will Represent History of Woman's Progress Hike Under Way. fall in line and hike .across tho state of Maryland. The "Petticoat Cavalry." About eight days after the departuro of "Genernl" Rosalie Jones from New York Mrs. Gus Ituhlm is to lead a body of suffragists from the same town, but these nre to go on horseback. In the nilllfnnt terminology that tho suffra gists are adopting this is to bo the cav alry, the hikers constituting tho Infantry- It Is not stated whether Mrs. Ruhlln Is to be a general or only a colonel, but anyway she will be tho ft-ralnlne edition of the "man on horse back." She will not follow tho same route as General Jones, seeking to con vert a different strip of territory. This cavalry idea is to bo quite tho thing in the parade. Mrs. Richard Burleson of Texas, wife of a United States army officer, who Is also n cou sin of Representative A. S. Burleson, MISS INEZ SnLIIOLIiAKD. is to be the grand marshal of tho pa rade and is to be acompanled by a cavalry squad of about fifty. At one time it was reported that Mrs. Nicho las Longworth, daughter of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, was to be one of this fnir company. There will nlso be cavalrymen beg pardon, cavalrywom en from Virginin. The official an nouncements of the affair call them "petticoat cavalry." One of tho humors of tho situation is furnished by tho march stolen on the regular Inaugural committees by tho suffragists. It is tho custom to re serve nil tho rooms at hotels and boarding houses in advance for those nttonding the Inauguration. This year the women went about early reserving all tho choice rooms in Washington for their followers so that when the regu lar inauguration committees began their canvass no dcsirablo quarters wero left. The object of tho pageant Is boldly nnnouneed. It is tho beginning of a nation wide campaign for an amend ment to the federal constitution assur ing women the ballot throughout the United States. Heretofore tho suffra gists have confined their attention to the states. Now they are going after the nation. March 3 is chosen because at that time Washington will bo full of people attending the Inauguration, and tho suffragists can thus Impress the Incoming administration. Noted Women Enlisted. Advanco notices from suffragist headquarters present soma glowing promises for tho parade, from which tho following points are taken: In preparation for tho procession tho suffragists for tho last few weeks have been carrying on an active cam paign which will bo gradually in creased in excitement until the climax of endeavor Is reached on March 3. An average of six meetings a day, In cluding at least one street meeting, nro being held, with such well known women as Mrs. John Rodgers, Jr., of New York, sister-in-law of Secretary of War Stlmson, doing tho speaking. Thoso who are making tho nctivo preparations Include some of tho best I known women in tho country. Mrs. Robert M. La Folletto, wife of the progressive senator from Wisconsin, has been actively at work, and her 1 aughter, Miss Fola La Folletto, is chairman of the committee on nc- ; tresses. Miss Flora Wilson, daughter 1 of tho secrotary of agriculture, Is chairman of the commlttco on mu sicians, and Mrs. F. T. Dubois, wife of former Senator Dubois, Is In charge of women's clubs. Miss Alice Paul of Philadelphia la In active charge of all plans, and Mrs. I Jlnnnn Smith Ttnnin of Washington and Miss Hazet MacKaye rtll direct the pageant feature. Nordica W11 Help. Whllo the procession and pageant Is marching along Pennsylvania avenuo a scries of tableaux will be in progress on tho treasury steps. Mme. Nordica, impersonating Columbia, will bo the .central figure of the tableaux, and with her will bo Justice, Hope, Liberty, Peace, Charity, the virtues with which woman Is supposed to be endowed. Florence Fleming Noyes, the classical dancer, will take tho part of Liberty, and equally well known women will take the other parts. Scores of boys nnd girls in fancy costumes will till out tho scenes, and an orchestra will accompany nil movements. As Miss Inez Mlllholland of New York, herald of tho procession, ap proaches the treasury building riding horsebnek and dressed in yellow tho five Virtues will form a semicircle about Columbia, with their attendants back of them in wedge form, all mnk lng Columbia's crown. A giant mass meeting is to be held at Memorial Continental hall, the home of the D. A. R., at tho conclusion of tho procession. Here Dr. Anna How nrd Shaw, Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt nnd equally well known women will deliver addresses. The suffrage speakers who have been addressing meetings in Washington have been having some difficulty nbout their appeals, because In tho District of Columbia neither men nor women vote. Speakers from other sections, not always realizing this fact, have been unable to appeal directly to the men for justice, for the men them selves here have no more political rights than the women. Efforts on the part of men who want suffrago In the District to confuse tho Photo by American Press Association. "OENEIiAJi" IiOSAIilE JONES. two issues have been met with the diplomatic response that "wo wnnt equal suffrage, and you have it." From Baltimore will go a string of golden chariots, drawn by milk white steeds nnd driven by suffragists dress ed In Roman costumes. The forty miles from Baltimore to Washington are to be covered in one day, and a squad ron of petticoat cavalry Is to ride as an escort of honor. Tho Baltimore char lots have become famous in suffrage processions in the east Suffragist Pioneers Honored. One section of the parade will repre sent the early efforts for the cause in America, beginning with the first con vention In 1848. Descendants of Mi's. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and others of the early leaders are to participate, dressed in the costumes of the period. The workers In behalf of the pageant have not had all clear sailing. At first tho Washington society leaders were cold, but when they discovered it was all the rage they fell over each other in the rush to secure prominent places in the pageant. Perhaps tho squelch ing of the inaugural ball also helped tho suffragists, some of the modistes and others enlisting In n spirit of re venge nnd also with the idea of get ting rid of some of their accumulated millinery nnd dress fabrics. Major Sylvester, chief of the Wash ington police, nt first said that the fair marchers "could not appear on Penn sylvania avenuo, but after ducking tho resultant storm the major sang small and discreetly lost himself in the back ground. The boys who threatened to turn loose mice nnd rats along the parade route have also been properly squelched. Representative J. Thomas Heflln of Alabama, who advised the women of Virginia not to march In the proces sion on the ground that woman suf frage breaks up the home, brought down the displeasure of the suffragist leaders on his head. Mrs. Champ Clark, wife of tho speaker of the house, and Mrs. Helen n. Gardener, one of the nctivo leaders in the procession plans, Issued statements denying the claims of tho gentleman from Alabama. Mrs. Gardener called Mr. Heflln "the Beau Brumrael of the house" nnd said that thirty-three years before he was born Abraham Lincoln wrote a letter In which he said, "I go for all shnrlng the prlvlllges of the government who assist In bearing Its burdens, by no means excluding women." From all of which It doth appear that woman lovely woman Is amply able to take caro of herself: likewise that If the American suffragette does not 1 break windows liko her English slater she at least breaks Into print GOVERNMENT NOW TO RESCUE BABIES Children's Bureau Active on Big Task. TO FIND MORTALITY CAUSES From Care of Cattle and Hogs Fed eral Machinery Has Turned to Con servation of Children House to House Canvasses to Be Made Babies In Poor Localities Dio Fast. The federal government, which has been for years providing for the wel fare of cattle, bogs, potato giants and sugar beets, is nt last actually coming to the rescue of the babies. Beginning Immediately after Christ mas tho nowly created children's bu reau of the department of commerce and labor, of which Miss Julia La throp of Chicago is the chief, began a campaign to save tho lives of babies under ono year of age. This is tho first inquiry undertaken by the bureau. Investigators will go Into typical communities lu every sec tion of tho country and niuke a bouse to house canvass. "The purpose of th Inquiry is to find out why the babies live and why they die," said Miss Lathrop. "Of the 300,000 babies under one year of ago dying yearly In the United States, at least 150,000 could bo saved by the application of methods with which we are already as n people well acquainted. Death Rate of Babies. "The death rate for the total. popula tion Is slowly but surely declining; adults are living on the average longer lives, but tho death rate for babies less than one year old is not declining. The estimate of Dr. Cressy L. Wilbur, chief statistician, that at least 300,000 babies die annually in the United States means that ono baby out of every eight dies before it is n year old. "In certain unfavorable localities this rate is much, greater. Babies in poor neighborhoods in an American city, for which figures are available, die at the rate of 373 per 1,000 babies under one year of ngo, while the corresponding rate for babies In the good resldeuce quarters of the same city is 150. The New Zealand death rate for babies is but sixty-eight per 1.000 births. The great point about this Inquiry Is that it begins with the birth record of the child and follows It through Its first year, instead of taking the mortality record and working backward. Its method will bo to secure a list of all the children born within a given year in the communities under consideration. "The schedule has been carefully pre pared to cover the question of housing, feeding and care of the child, the milk supply, Industrial nnd economic condi tion of the parents and sanitary condi tions of the neighborhood in fact, the hygienic surroundings of the child. .JJJ. BANK DEPOSITORS KNOW HONESDALE NATIONAL Cash Reserve Agents (approved by U. S. Government) Bonds (Railroad, Government, etc.). Demand Collateral Loans Total quick assets. Bills discounted Total DEPOSITS We lead in cash on hand. We lead in reserve. We lead in ratio of quick assets to quick liabilities. We lead in capitalization security to depositors. We lead in EXPERIENCE. For over three quarters of a century wo have been recognized as one of tho solid banks of Northeastern Pennsylvania, and to-day have un excelled facilities for handling all kinds of legitimate banking. AVe invite you to become ono of tho many contented patrons of WAYNE GOONTY'S LEADING FINANCIAL INSTITUTION THE HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK, Honesdale, Pa. OFFICERS: Henry Z. Russell, President. Andrew Thompson, Vice-President. Lewis A. Howell, Cashier. Albert C, Lindsay, Asst. CoahUr. parents to He Visited. "The method of this Inquiry will nec essarily be that of vlslta to parents by the womon experts of tho bureau. It will be seen that this is an absolutely democratic Inquiry, Involving, ns It does, visits to evory mother of a bnb.v born within a given period of time. It seeks to discover the favorable condi tions concerning children who survive, nnd it is believed that Its whole pur pose Is such as to enlist the good will of the mothers of the country. "All the cities In which this Inquiry will be carried on have not yet been se lected. It is certain, however, that t present cities can only be studied which nro in that portion of tho coun try designated ns tho birth 'registration area' that is, the New England States, Pennsylvania nnd Michigan." NOBLE HOBO KILLED BY TRAIN Mangled Body of Descendant of Count von Bulow s Found. With both hands cut off and his skull fractured, Max von Bulow, said to bo a descendant of Count von Bulow, the famous German general, was picked up on the railroad tracks near Reuo, Nev., and died In tho railroad hospital at Starks. Von Bulow was a globo trotter and soldier of fortune. Several years ngo he married Miss Chrlstino Plumer. a wealthy w.Qman ofPueblo, CoIq..' IK31 THE DELAWARE AND Ten Days9 LsKg Saturday, August 2, 1913 Arrange Your Vacation Accordingly. JJJ.JJJ-JjJJ ARE ENTITLED AT ALL WHAT SECURITY IS BEHIND THEIR DEPOSITS t Statement of "THE OLD RELIABLE" HONESDALE, November 2, 1912. $ 90,934.00 NOTICE OF SPECIAIi BILL-. Notice is hereby given that dur ing the regular session of the Gen eral! Assembly of the Commonwealth of 'Pennsylvania to be held in the year ono thousand nine hundred and thirteen, there will bo Introduced a bill entitled "An act to amend an act approved tho eighth day of May one thousand nine hundred and one, entitled 'An act to incorporate tho Mllanvllle Bridge ' Company, In Wayne County, Pennsylvania.' " The object of said amendment is to change the annual date of meet ing from tho first Monday of Janu ary to tho second Monday of Janu ary in each year. MILTON L. SKINNER, President. Chas. E. Beach, Sec'y. Feb. 7, 1913. ,13eol4 HERE IS A BARGAIN Located in Berlin township about 3 miles from Honesdale Is one of tho best farms In that locality. It consists of 108 acres, which Is all Improved. Tho soil is eand loam and red shale. It is well watered by springs; orchard. Twelve-room house, barn 37x47 feet with shed 22x90 feet. Part cash, balance on easy terms. See Buy-U-A-Homo Realty Co. Jadwin Building, Box 52, Honesdale. ' Have The Citizen sent to you. HUDSON COMPANY Excursion JJ.J.J.J-J TIMES TO t and BANK PA. 159,692.52 1,140,274.37 218,573.50 1,609,474.39 223,823.25 $ 1,833,297.64 $ 1,485,000.00 4- DIRECTORS: Henry Z. Russell, Homer Greene, Hor T. Menner, James 0. Rlrdsall, Louis J. Dorfllnger, E. B. Hardenbersh, Andrew Thompson, Philip R. Hurray. 4.