THE CITIZEN, TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1913. PAGE FOUR THE CITIZEN Semi-Weekly Founded 1008; Weekly Founded 1844. Published Wednesdays and Fridays by the Citizen Publishing Company. Published Tuesdays and Fridays by the Citizen Publishing Company. B B HARDENBEItGH ' PRESIDENT Hi C.' VAN ALSTYNE and E. B. CALLAWAY . . . MANAGING EDITORS FRANK P. WOODWARD ADVERTISING MANAGER AND FEATURE WRITER. dibectobb : C. H. DOtlPLtKOKH. Mi B. ALLEN, E. B. nAHDENBERHll Our friends who favor us with contributions, and desire to have the same re nued, should in every case enclose stamps for that purpose. TERMS: ONE YEAR ?1. 50 -THREE MONTHS 38c SIX MONTHS 76 ONE MONTH 13c Remit by Express Money Order, Draft, Postofllce Order or Registered tetter. Address all communications to The Citizen, No. 803 Main street, All notices of shows, or other entertainments held for the purpose of making money or any items that contain advertising matter, will only bo dmltted to this paper on payment of regular advertising rates. Notices of entertainments for the benefit of churches or for charitable purposes where a fee is charged, will be published at half rates. Cards of thanks, 50 cents, memorial poetry and resolutions of respect will be charged for at the rate of a cent a word. Advertising rates on application. TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1013. OUR EFFORTS APPRECIATED Since the publication of The Citi zen's illustrated boom number the managers of this paper have receiv ed Innumerable compliments upon last Friday's edition. Some, who were not subscribers, after reading their neighbor's Citizen, came to this offlce and subscribed for The Citizen. Thank you, gentlemen. LI- JtESTIUCTlXG AUTOMOBILE CENSES. With a view of placing further re strictions around automobilists who, either through carelessness or igno rance, are a menace on the highways of the State, Commissioner Lippin cott, of New Jersey, has announced that in future drivers applying for licenses will have to pass a rigid ex amination before being given permis sion to operate cars. The commis sioner's data on accidents through out the State lead him to believe that much of the loss of life and most of the injuries sustained by per sons who use cars have been caused by inexperience and irresponsibility. Up to the present tme, the meth ods in force for licensing drivers have been very lax. Examinations to de termine the fitness of an applicant Jiave been merely perfunctory, if not downright farcial. The commission er proposes to change all this, and hereafter examinations will be held under the supervision of experienced men, and character as well as me chanical ability will enter into the question as to whether a man is con sidered competent to receive a li cense. This is a move in the right direc tion. Other States are doing the same thing, and there is no reason why New Jersey, which is becoming more popular each year as a ren dezvous for automobiles, should not be right In the van or progress in this respect. THE GURNEY CELEBRATION AFTERMATH Something About Those Who Figur ed Prominently in the Doings of Last Week. Owing to the vast amount of ma terial, which was printed in Friday's issue of The Citizen, there were some Important matters that were GEORGE W. PEXWARDEX, Trcas. parade. Each boy acted as an aide-de-camp to an automobile and did other patrol duty. The Scouts, like on all other former occasions, ren dered line service. The success of the parade depended largely upon them and their genial Scout Master, E. G. Jenkins. Honesdale could not get along without its troop of Boy Scouts, which is composed of a num ber of the best young men in the town. The discipline received is in valuable to young men. Their duty and service counts for all that is good and benflcial to mankind. A word for the town council of the borough of Honesdale. To these gentlemen, whoso pictures are found in to-day's Citizen, belongs the credit of vacating lower Main street and turning over gratis that part of the borough that now constitutes the site of the new Gurney Electric Ele vator Company. If they had dis agreed it is doubtful that the Gur ney plant would have been located in the borough of Honesdale. Much praise is therefore given to the towu council of the borough of Honesdale. BIG WINTER WHEAT CROP. tho JOHN ERIC, Secretary. inadvertently omitted. Among which was to give due credit to Chairman J. B. Nielsen for the ef ficient manner in which he perform ed his duties as chairman of the par ade of last Wednesday evening. The affair went off without a hitch and just as Chairman Nielsen and his faithful committee, C. E. Bates and Joseph Katz, had planned. To the owners of automobiles who kindly donated the use of their re spective cars, the Greater Honesdale Board of Trade is exceedingly grate ful. The Board wishes to express to these owners its appreciation in their making the parade the success that it was by giving the use of their respective automobiles. To Jenkins' Boy Band, a good re production of whose likeness is here THOMAS J. CAXIVAN. S. T. SANITARY WORKSHOPS. In a certain factory a number of employees were found to be suffer ing from tuberculosis. The homes of the men were in good condition. The disease evidently did not origin ate there. An expert was asked to solve the problem. 'He visited the factory. This -was what he found careless spitting, few cuspidors, no disinfecting of cuspidors, the com mon drinking cup, dust In the air, closed windows, no hot water for washing, a trough which was filled with water from which all the men washed, no recreation room. Tho men jvere obliged to eat beside their ma chines. Is it a surprise that tuberculosis thrived her6? Matters were remedied by moving to another building, and latest reports show a healthy force. It was not necessary to move, how ever. The introduction of drinking fountains, more cuspidors, properly cleaned and disinfected; more fresh air, hot as well as cold water, wash basins, a recreation room, together with the fumigation of lockers and thorough scrubbihg of the floors would have solved the problem. Employers and employees should insist upon good working conditions. The place where a man spends at least eight hours of every day snouiu tie pleasant and healthful. Many employers have their employ ees put through a physical examina tion periodically. This is an excel lent plan. A healthy workman ifl a healthy shop will by working harder and better more than repay the mon ey spent In making the shop sanitary, Karl de Schweinitz, Executive Secretary, Pennsylvania Society for tne prevention or Tuberculosis. the rural fences; tho roadside poles; and the rocks and trees thus made unsightly to the gaze of the wayfar ers. Something may be granted to the Chicago Judge who maintained that the State cannot interfere with property rights on merely esthetic grounds; yet all duo allowances made, and without any desire to strangulate business or deprive the public of useful information, it must bo admitted that advertisements tag ged in woodland spots or thrust ob trusively into view by held and hedgerow, are a needless offense from which the public has the right to be protected. From a business viewpoint, the benefits are inconsiderable, and there being plenty of other channels open to the advertiser, it follows there is no more justification for assaulting the eye than there would be storm ing the ear by deafening din. A dis tinction obtains between politely ask ing attention, and vulgarly compell ing it. The average citizen has the privilege of saying whether he pre fers scenery kept in its picturesque simplicity, or at least whether it shall be preserved from the ugly and incongruous advertisements which violate good taste. Zemo for Dandruff You Will bo Surprised to See How Quickly It Disappears. No more dirty coats from dandruff heads. Zemo stops dandruff. Apply it any time with tips of fingers. No smell, no smear. Zemo sinks into the pores, makes the scalp healthy, makes the hair fine and glossy. Zemo Is prepared by E. W. Rose Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., and is regularly sold by all druggists at 51 per bottle. But to enable you to make a test and prove what It will do for you, get a 25ccent trial bottle fully guaranteed or your money back at A. M. Leine's drug store. OF HAM. MARTIN CAUFIELI), President. with presented, (and by the way eight other members have joined the band since this picture was taken) unusual credit is given for the ren dition of street music and during tho concert at the celebration. Tho boys show a marked improvement in their playing. Under the leadership of F. A. Jenkins, excellent time was kept and the music was played with considerable expression. Truly Jen kins' Boy Band, considering the time organized, have accomplished won ders and are deserving the recogni tion of the public and county at largo Wherever tho boys have played they have had invitations extended for re turn engagements. Mr. Jenkins is to bo congratulated upon his band, and for tho boys it might be said that everyone Is fast becoming an ar tist. In a short time this band will have gained a reputation that will be envied by musicians of tho East. Boy Scouts, Honesdale Troop No, 1, at tho request of Chairman J. B. Nielsen, cheerfully and gladly re sponded to the call to assist in tho DOX'T MAR THE BEAUTIES NATURE. Big lettered signs that deface the landscape are a public nuisance. Men should not be allowed to mar and de stroy the beauties of nature in order to call attention to some articles they nave for sale. It Is forbidden by law in some places and a bill at Harris- burg now proposes that it shall bo forbidden In Pennsylvania. A State tax Is proposed on all bill board and advertising signs. The tax applies solely to signs which have no connection witn tne business con ducted on the premises. A signifi cant feature of tho proposed Act con sists in tho prohibition of posting ad vertisements on public property, trees or poles along the highways, The bill generally follows the order adopted during recent years in other countries and in certain localities of our own. Boston, Chicago and St Louis, though the provisions have by no means been enforced to the strict letter of the law. The measure is responsive to the widespread attention provoked by the gross excesses into which this form of advertising has been carried As Judge Woodson, of Missouri, re marked anent tho Supreme Court's sustaining tho St. Louis billboard or dinance "advertising is a legitimate and honorable business if honorably and legitimately conducted, but every other featuro and incident thereto have evil tendencies and should for that reason be strictly ro- gulated and controlled." Particularly Is this judicial view true concerning tho objectionable li cense assumed by those who placard Illinois tho Onlj' State Below Average. Reports which .have been gathered from many wheat States in the last two or three weeks indicate a prom ising outlook for tho winter wheat crop. With the exception of Illinois near ly every state In tho middle west has reported optimistically, tho only fear being that weather conditions will not remain favorablo, but that con tingency Is not likely now that tho year has so far advanced. Grain dealers, farmers and State statisticians are all agreed that an exceptional crop of winter wheat may bo predicted almost to a certain ty. Omaha, Neb. Winter wheat In Nebraska Is in absolutely perfect con dition, is tho report from every part of the State. The acreage is irom -5 to 15 ner cent, greater than normal, and if crop conditions continue as favorable as they havo been thus far the yield will be the largest in the history of the state. This is the report of grain dealers, members of tho Omaha Grain Ex change, managers of large elevator lines, railroad men, Implement deal ers, actual farmers and newspaper correspondents from every section of tho State. Nebraska is wetter than for'several years. Conditions are ideal. 'Indianapolis, Ind. Unless the un expected happens in the way of a de structive freeze Indiana may ex pect a bumper crop of winter wheat, according to local expert. Reports from all sections of the State show that winter wheat is in perfect condition and that the weath er conditions have been Ideal for a good crop during the last few months. There has been consider able rain. WM. II. KREITXER. I HARRY C. RETTEW. SHERMAN. What might have been a very sef ious runaway happened on Sunday afternoon when Willie Bowie and his sister were out driving. The horse got freightened and the lady jumped out and hurt her head and spine. She was unconscious for some time. Dr. Ritchcock was sent for ' and she Is now doing nicely. Willie was not hurt at all, but was badly scared. Rev. St. E. Carr of Cannonsvllle, is visiting friends in town. Dr. N. L. Brundage is gradually failing. B. W. Raymond, who has been on the sick list, is improving. Mrs. Eliza Travis, of Blnghamton is visiting relatives in town. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Curtis of De posit, visited at J. H. Smith's last Monday. ' Surest Way to End Catarrh Go to Pell, the druggist, and say: "I want a HYOMEI outfit." Take It home pour a few drops of HYOMEI from the bottle into the little hard rubber inhaler breathe it for five minutes and' note the refreshing re lief breathe it four or live times a day for a few days and Catarrh and all its symptoms will gradually dis appear. , Booth's HYOMEI is balsamic air; it contains no opium, cocaine or other harmful drug and is sold on money back plan for Catarrh, Croup, Colds and Coughs. Complete outfit! (includes inhaler) $1.00 extra bot- ties if later needed, 50 cents at Pell, 'the druggist, and druggists every-1 whore. Simple instructions for use I in every package you can t fail. Just breathe It no stomach dosing. GREATEST OPERA EVENT 1 HISTORY HONESDALE A Sir SS rtif OPERA CD. U$$pf& ymTX present a lavish )k PICTORIAL PRODUCTION OF iMll BALFE'S . V 1 r I J. I iL .fer'lw.Vi.. r Gi'l MILTON & SARGENT ABORN, MANAGING DOCTOR. J". rC"X cTOOE OF THE .!.Y. "IPPODR0ML JENKINS' BOY BAND. CAST, CHORUS AND ORCHESTRA OF EIGHTY PE0PL1 10 HORSES - 10 - ARABS CHICKENS, MONKEYS & ETC. PRICES Main Floor 1.50, last a rows $1.00; Balcony, first 2 rows $1, remainder 75c; Gallery CO. Scat Sale starts nt 0 a. in. Wednesday, April 30th. Special Theatre Train from Hawley, White Mills and East Honesdale.