PAGE THREE ESSY STYLES for S Ben Bolt ED ABOUT BY Jtu. Dam EngJttH THE CITIZEN, TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1913. PRING WILSON HED KtUn Xhtut Now on Sale at Menner & Go's Stores Junior and Ladies' , Tailored Suits Hew Cuts j and cloth. SPICY OF EliTE AINERS i t. Oh I don't tou 1. Un . W 3. And don't TOS 4. There's chxngfl hi r mcm-ber sweet tha kick o tt n mero-ber the tbe tMnjs.. I Al Ice. tree,.... school, loved,. Bolt, tUa Colt, Beo Bolt, Bca Bolt. Sweet Which With the The; hw Ben Bolt vrss written In 1842. but ws not brought to popular nttcciion until 1848, when a play mi put on in Plttabum called "The Battle of Btiena Vista." Tho play iHed, tut die song Uved in tact became the rage. It waa whistled in the streets, played by the hand organs, and Sweet Alice" was a public pet. A steamboat in the West and a ship in the East were named after her. The steamer blew up and the ship was wrecked, but "Sweet Alice" "floated safely in the fragile bark of sons." The streets of London were flooded with parodies, answers and imitations of it, and sold and suns by curbstone minstrels. In recent years, it received another wave of popularity when introduced in the popular play " Trilby," Everybody' sSingingThem What? Why Those Oocd Old Ssngs. of Course Tou will find them all In the GREAT SONG COLLECTION now being of fered as a gift under the conditions tiamed In the certificate Have These 0!d Favorites in the Hoase and Let the Children Sing Them AND REMEMBER this Is only one part oi the ereat gift distribution, for every one who secures the Great Song Collection also receives outright as an additional gift from The Tribune Farmer a full year's subscription to The Ladles' World, twelve big numbers. The Great Song Collection (In sheet form will cost $14 40) Is a large boolc of 674 pases of music, sub stantially bound In cloUi (so that It will stay open on the piano), and gives you back again the songs you used to love and sing the songs that live Patriotism College War and Peace The Sea Plantation Af fections Religion Nations Folk Operatic Selections arranged for mixed voices. Tfia Ladies' Vorld Is famed for Its departments, which tell women how to work; how to play; how to entertain; how to make money; how t be healthy how, why and when to do all manner of thinprs. "Simple Lesson In Dressmaking" givo tha Bhort, easy, best way to New Styles. Edited by a woman for the woman In the home and the woman In bustnvss. Tho Tribune Farmer stands far Better Farm Management Pi tiKrtsalv- Custern Agriculture Improving Itastem Farm Opportunities mil and Fair Treatment of All Farm Problems Farm Reorganization to Meet Changed Economic Conditions Experience of Practical Suc cessful Parroen as Our Most Valuable Teacher The Average Farmer, with Ilia Com. paratlvely Siniili Capital and Hard Conditions The Application of Modem Business Principle to the Management of the Varm. And THE WAYNE CITIZEN (Twice Every Week) THE WAYNE COUNTEAN (Once Every Month) Your own home papers While We Are taking Many law Friends by giving all these great gifts to those of our readers who send the one Certifi cate to our address named below, with tha small expense bonus named In the certificate. 33 -fit Sr HOME S0N0S PRESENTATION CERTIFICATE Presented you By This Paper 8. ? The above certificate, when forwarded with the price of a year's subscription to The Citizen ($1.50) and $1.50 additional to cover addi tional cost of packing, checking, expressage on premium, clerk hire, postage, etc., $3.00 in all, entitles the sender to TRIBUNE FARMER for ONE YEAR THE GREAT SONG COLLECTION, 574 PAGES THE LADIES' WORLD for ONE YEAR THE WAYNE CITIZEN for ONE YEAR THE WAYNE COUNTEAN for ONE YEAR Given with ONE PRESENTATION CERTIFICATE, and $3.00 BTo new subscribers and all old subscribers who will pay up arrearages and one year in advance we make this liberal offer. Name Street No , City and State Address Citizen Publishing Co., Honesdale, Pa. OOOOOOOOOCOOOwGOOOCOCOOOOOOOOCOOGSOOOOOOOCOOOOOwwOOO I Noah Was 1 6oo Years Old js Before he knew how 8 To build the Ark Don't lose your grip. Never too old to start a Savings I Honesdae Dime Bank Honesdale, Pa. Pays THREE Per Ce.t. Compound Interest. One Dollnr or more received at any time. ooooooooooooooooooooooocxx)ocooooooooocooocoooooeoooo Advertise in THE CITIZEN TRY A CENT-A-WORD Throws Washington Clubs Into Panic by Declining Membership. eao9oee9eeeoaeoooo V was not enough that Woodrow Wilson should get himself "In bad" with tho haberdashers, real estate agents, butchers, linkers and candlostloUmakers of Washington by upsetting tho plans for an inaugural ball, out of which they expected, as usual, to reimburse themselves with liberal Interest for their "contributions" to tho expenses of tho Inaugural com mittee. Tho Washington teapot, hard ly yet calm again after that disturb ance, he throws It Into even a greater tempest by declining honorary mem bership In the Chevy Chase Country club on the ground that public business will absorb his time largely, to the ex clusion of "clubblness." As a conse quence the Columbia Country club, also at Chevy Chase, and the Washington Country club, across the river In Vir ginia, and the Metropolitan, Army and Navy and Cosmos clubs, the principal downtown clubs of Washington, were In a fine frenzy of perplexity as to whether to make the usual proffers of honorary membership. There is hardly a literary or debating society in the District of Columbia which does not, as a matter of course, elect tho president to honorary mem bership; his downslttlug and his upris ing are beset by formal "honors" of one kind or another; every organiza tion of any consequence In Its own eyes, from Key West to Cape Mendo cino, sooner or later Invites him to ad dress the club or at least invests him with the degree of past exalted pan jandrum. Cannot Be Ordinary Person. For a simple, unostentatious, red blooded man the greatest drawback about the presidency of tho United States is the fact that from the mo ment of his election until his term of office expires, and usually long after that, he cannot be n mere human be ing, with the rights and immunities of an ordinary citizen. Wherever he goes he must be pursued by armed secret service guards, reporters and photog- aphers. He cannot sit down in a club corner, stretch his legs and express opinions upon nffalrs of the day like other men his every chance remark is quoted or misquoted on the street cor ners nlrnost before he has completed it. His trivial likes and dislikes nre known and commented upon; he cannot move hand or foot with the freedom that blesses his fellow men. Some men like this sort of thing. Within the memory of men still living there have been presidents one any wayto whom publicity was the breath of life, who basked In the limelight as in the normal sun of day and took some Executive Faces Siege of Those Offering Him So cial Distinctions. cooeoeaaaoooooeaoooo pains to keep It turned on when other men slept; who counted that day lost whoso low descending sun failed to And them upon the front pages of the evening papers and the early "bulldog" editions. Job Is Weary One. But to the nverage man, after tho novelty wears off, the position of "llrst citizen of Washington," must get to be a weary business. And If he has come to tho White House with any notion that ho brings with him rights of pri vacy, tastes or personal opinions of his own or any of the other attributes that make life bearable for John Doe nuu Richard Hoe, he soon finds his mistake The curse falls likewise upon his fam ily. The remarks attributed to Mrs Wilson to the effect that a president's wife could dress on $1,000 a year, set all the Washington dinner tables a-buz-zlng. Even the dressmaking of the presi dent's wife and daughters Is a public affair, and these alleged remarks whether Mrs. Wilson really made them or not will cause the gowns of the Wilson family to bear an Inspection of microscopic Intensity So, when you come to the question of club membership. It Is In the same at mosphere. Mr. Wilson cannot choose the club If any to which he desires to belong and apply for membership like any other man; ho must take It as a gift and In some sense an obligation or not at all. and this episode has shown that If he desires it not at all, it is taken more or less as an offense. Mr. Wilson Knows Dangers. There Is a serious side to the ques tion, and the consideration of it justi fies the suspicion that Mr. Wilson has instinctively sensed, or had some pret ty subtle information about the real situation in Washington, nud the diffi culty a president has at best in keep ing himself free of embarrassing en tanglements. A very plauslblo argu ment might be made against tho presi dent's nccepting membership in any lo cal organization in Washington. One of tho hard things about being president is that he can have few In timacies. For one thing, to be the in- .timote of the president, if the gamo is to be played "on the level," is to nave the door of advancement shut upon you absolutely. Membership in a "ten nis cabinet" has been at times in the past a peculiar qualification for pro motion. Before a now president has reached tho third week of his incumbency he suspects the "how-d'ye-do" of every man who greets him in tho street; from morning until night almost every person who comes near comes with a demand. IE us COLONY TO F Oil A UTOPIA II COSTA BICA ! coeeaoo t)oooaeooeo ofjooaoaoeeoaeoaoeocoeseea To establish a real Utopia in Central America for the future homes of many Englishmen and their families. Walter T. Knight, a lawyer of Bacup, Lanca shire, recently sailed for Port Limon. This is the second trip that Mr. Knight has made to Costa Rica. Teu months ago, as the representative of the SImpllcUts' Society of England, an organization with a membership of 800, he went down to seek an ideal lo cation for tho colony. "We have purchased sufficient laud to accommodate 230 families," said Mr. Knight "I am going back to mako preliminary arrangements, and in Juno tho advance guard of colo nists, Including carpenters, mechanics, doctors and others, will arrive. By Christmas we hope that 150 families will bo settled." Mr. Knight explained that while the new colony would be founded on the teachings of Dr. Theodore Hertzka of Vienna nnd that the doctor's ideas hud been adopted by tho Slmpllcists in CHOPIN'S LAST PUPIL PLAYS. Dr. Peru at Eighty-three Gives Con cert to Save Goods From Sheriff. The last surviving pupil of tho great Chopin gave a concert recently in Paris to save his poor belongings from tho sheriff. His name is Dr. Peru, and ho Is elghty-threo years old. Sixty-five years ago ho was one of tho favorite pupils of tho great composer. Tho poor old man played fourteen pieces by Chopin as tho master had taught them to him, and tho nudlonco was surprised and delighted with his beautiful performance. Eighty-three years old and his fingers as nimble as thoso of a girl of twenty. Peru, despite his great age, is still making a scant Hying as a piano teacher in the worklngmcn's quarters. their book of regulations, tho colony would be limited to Englishmen. Co-operation Is Plan. "Tho main idea is co-operation, with the protection of idivldual rights and liberty," Mr. Knight continued. "There will be no Individual ownership of laud. Farmers and workmen will own the product of their labor and will buy and sell among themselves in the currency of Costa Rica. "Women may work for their living If they want to, nnd will thus be sav ed the necessity of marrying for a home and support. Cooking and house keeping will be done by the community All work places will bo opart from the homo section. "Control of the colony will bo dlvld ed into twelve departments. Eduea tion will rank first, and Its object will bo to instill respect for tho rights of others. Interest charging will be illegal. No monopolies or combiua tlons will be allowed. There will bo no employers and no proprietors and no chance for idler's profit." FRAU KRUPP AIDS ARMY. Owner of Armament Works to Pay $1,800,000 to Military Fund. Tho Lokal Anzelger of Berlin printed recently a forecast which other news papers regarded as based on official in formation of the extent of tho levy on fortunes which is to go toward paying for the $250,000,000 increase of tho army. According to this, tho levy will bo at rates ranging from $1 in $100 on fortunes between $5,000 and $50,000 to $1 in $25 on fortunes of $20,000,000 and over. Frau Bertha Krupp, tho owner of the vast armament and shipbuilding works at Essen nnd Kiel, will bo required on this scale" to contribute $1,800,000 as her share, as her fortune is about $-15,-000.000. 0 1 The New Lengths and Weaves in Separate Goats. The Easter Waists in Silk, Net and Fine Lawn are attractive and Sty lish, The dainty shades in Silk Gharmeuse, Poplin and Ratine are exquisite and knobby. New Spring Kid and Silk Gloves. Our Corset Department have the new forms and InnrvtliA Linn a h Altar ,y iciiguid. nunc ueucii ABSOLUTE SECURITY FORTY-TWO YEARS OF SUCCESS Honesdale,, Pa. The Leading Financial Institution of Wayne County THE PROOF Wo lead In CAPITAL STOCK $ 200,000.00 We lead In SURPLUS and UNDIVIDED PROFITS 372,862.00 We lead in TOTAL CAPITALIZATION 572,862.00 (Our CAPITALIZATION is tho DEPOSITORS SECURITY) We lead in Deposits 2,463,348.60 We lead In TOTAL RESOURCES 3,040,099.22 This year completes tho FORTY FIRST since the founding of the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK. MANY BANKS have come and gon e during that period. PATRONIZE one that has withstood the TEST of TIME. OFFICERS: W. B. HOLMES, President H. S. SALMON, Cashier A. T. SEARLE, Vice-President W. J. WARD, Asst. Cashier. DIRECTORS: W. B. HOLMES F. P. KIMBLE T. B. CLARK A. T. SEARLH ,'W. F. SUYDAM C. J. SMITH H. J. CONGER H. S. SALMON J. W. tTAULiUY E. W. GAMMELL Nov. 12, 1912. snt hUIIwI B B 8kH B BsB H &9 mm newly papered and painted lo cated on Sevenfhg Se: Court Streets. Property known as the IMenna House, Seventh street lot, 30x82 feet, $2,400 Griffin HOIISB, Seventh Street, lot 30x82 feet, - $J Comer PrOperty, Seventh and Court streets, 2Gx56 feet SiXtil Street, Six-Room House. $2,200 Buy-U-A-Home Really Co. Honesdale, Pa Jadwin BIdg. Both Phones We Sell Surety Bonds. BENTLEY BROS. Fire, Life, Accident, Automobile, Liability and Boiler INSURANCE BENTLEY BROS, LIBERTY HALL BLDG., HONESDALE. Consolidated Fbone 1-U-L.