THE CITIZEN, FIUDAY, NOV. 10, 1000. OIK COM! I English Clergy Take Issue with Prof. Carver of Harvard on Thus Subject DECALOGUE IS MAN'S MAKING Hence He May Change It Sermon on Mount Brings Sacred Laws to Date, Thinks Vicar of the British Parliament's Church. London. Prof. Carver's plea, Issued from Harvard, for the substitution of a commandment against drunkenness In place of the one against profanity in the Decalogue has been deported here and led to some comment among churchmen. A correspondent has talked with two of them who are leaders of religi ous thought In this city. While not agreeing with Prof. Car ver that the drink evil deserves a place among the Ten Commandments, the Rev. N. I. Campbell, pastor of the City Tomplo and author of "Tho New Theology," was willing to con cede that the Commandments were suscoptlblo of Improvement to meet modern conditions. "Indeed, I am convinced," he said, "that the basis on which human mor ality rests must be revised. There 1b no reason why man should not alter the Decalogue, which was made by man for man. That utterance now urgently demands expansion. As gen erally recognized the Ten Command ments do not now constitute a com plete code for human conduct and morality. All the same I do not agree with Prof. Carver that drink Is the most crying evil demanding a special Commandment." Canon Hensley Henson, Vicar of St. Margaret's, Westminster, the official church of Parliament, and one of the most noted of England's progressive churchmen, said: "Prof. Carver's reason for eliminat ing the Third Commandment Is uncon vincing, if what he said has been ade quately reported hero. It seems to me also superficial. The Third Com mandment, Is not a mere Injunction against heedless profanity. In its larger significance it means that we should not bo derelict In contracts of any nature. "Evidently the Decalogue was writ ten for a primitive agricultural com munity, as witness the reference to the ox and the ass, which is practical ly obsolete for present purposes. In the Sermon on the Mount, however, we find a construction put on tho De calogue making It applicable to all agos and to any circumstances. If one may have weakness for drink that Is no reason for the Issue of a new commandment against that vice. There Is no occasion for a special in junction against wine, for, properly read, the Decalogue as It stands cov ers every form or vice." DON'T WANT WAITERS. Undesirable as Jurors Because of Tipping Habit. Chicago. Porters, cabmen and wait ers are not desirable for Jurors, ac cording to Jury Commissioner Wil liam A. Amberg, who testified beforo the judges who are Investigating al leged irregularities In the drawing of venires. "The Jury commissioners believe that men who live by accepting tips are not of a character to make good Jurors," explained the witness. Following are others whom the commissioners Ignore In selecting veniremen: Actors, because they have no fixed abode; laborers and for eign tailors, because, as a rule, not of sufficient intelligence; bollermakers, because of defective hearing; saloon keepers and bartenders, because of their occupation; peddlers, Junk deal ers and scavengers, for obvious rea sons. CHICKEN YARD PICTURES. Agricultural Department Takes Them for Educational Purposes. Ithaca, N. Y. The Department of Agriculture has had an agent here taking a series of motion pictures of tho poultry farm conducted by the New York State College of Agricul ture. They were made for educational purposes, and farming audiences In many States will see the Cornel hens strutting about tho poultry yard, stu dents lugging straw to the hen houses, disinfecting the pens, filling the feed hoppers In the poultry range, filling the lamps In tho Incubators, and doing all the work of that well-managed sci entific poultry yard. The novelty of the picture scheme will especially interest country fairs, tt Is thought. Philadelphia. Angered at being teased by Ezra Sharp while she was sunning herself on tho porch of a Sycamore street, Camden, house, Prin cess Peary, a trained ape, broke nor chain and, chasing the man, caught him by the neck and pounded him until a policeman came to the reicue of tho frlghtonod man. Weston, N. J. A largo red fox en tered Martin Spocht'a pig sty and at tempted to steal one of a litter of lit tle pigs. The mother sow attacked Reynard with such ferocity one of her tusks was driven through his skull, killing him. NOT NEED i-rT-rfT'r'rT'jn-Trf-Ti.-rT'i X Selections SOD HOUSES. A Feature of Canadian Prairie Life Which Does not Mean Poverty. If you read that a family lives In n sod house you may conclude that pov erty compels It; but this Is not true on the Canadian prairies, whore sod houses are the advance agent of pros perity. Tho homesteader who obtains a slice of that rich wheat land doesn't wait to build a regular house before starting to grab riches from the soil. Even if he were minded to build he would havo difficulty In doing It, for there Is no lumber handy. So It Is better to wait until tho locomotive catches up. If you start out from uny of the towns which are springing up almost overnight In the fertile stretches of Saskatchewan or Alberta you will strike first well ordered farms and substantial houses, but If you got away ten miles or more tho sod houses will begin to appear. It Is not unusual to boo signs of lux ury about those sod houses. They aro comfortable abiding places, cool In summer and warm In winter. Status of the Dead-Beat. No man Is wholly free from oln, but so many lesser evils are tolerat ed that a man should hesitate long before becoming a dead-beat. Crimi nals aro despised and abhorred, but to the dead-beat all that Is coming, as well as the contempt of his fellow men. There Is something at once so mean and so little In taking advan tage of tho confidence which comes with friendship that tho hand of every man is turned against a dead-beat as soon as his reputation Is well estab lished. Tho dead-beat may fondly imagine he is living easy and making money without work, and of course he takes no account of the confidence he violates and tho hardships he In flicts on others. But, that aside, he really has a harder time than the man who Is honest and fair. Ho Is com pelled to move a good deal and peace of mind he knows not. Like other types of crooks, he doesn't prosper, and his finish Is more unpleasant than tho beginning. Artificial Coffee In Europe. Horrible disclosures are made of methods in common use for the "manufacture of coffee." It seems that of factories for that purpose ex isting in France there are 106 which turn out 24,000 tons annually, while there are 568 such establishments In Austria-Hungary, including 412 for tho manufacture of coffee from figs, and In Germany nearly 15,000 hands are employed In the trade, and the an nual output is 100,000 tons. It fol lows that a large quantity of "coffee" which we drink has not an atom of the real berry in it. The list of sub stances out of which It Is manufac tured Is alarming. Cereals soaked with beer, brandy, or rum, chestnuts and horse-chestnuts, haricot beans and broad beans, carrots, dates, and, finally, the hard roe of cod. The an nual output of what Is charmingly called "fanciful coffee" lor Europe Is estimated at ovor 257,000 tons. Paris Correspondence Dally Telegraph. Different Over In Europe. The two languages In which big notices over the Northern Station waiting-room in Parts aro printed in Russian and English. The two great race-courses of Paris are within tho great public park, the Bols. Twenty-two Parisian suburbs are connected with the city by pneumatic letter tubes. "Swiss cheese" In Paris moans n white cream cheese. It Is eaten with powered sugar. French barbers oddly advertise their art by wearing beards. Uniform of a French schoolboy on vacation: Heavy overcoat, straw hat, white cotton gloves, legs bare from the shoe tops to the knees. An Old Man's Lesson. We met a poor old man to-day who Is dependent on his relatives, and they don't like the enforced taBk of taking care of him. "Had I saved 10 cents a day during my younger years," he said, "I would have be;n Independ ent I might have saved a dollar a day during all my working career and not stinted myself In the least." This old man's experience Is worth think ing about. The trouble with Ameri can men is that they waste dimes while looking for a million dollars. At the end of life they have neither the dime nor the million dollars. More than half the men who dlo are burled by charity. Hint for a Groom-Elect. If a groom-elect has not provided an extra room to his house for stor ing his bride's linen he should build it in time, for these days whenever a girl marries, her mother closes her lips grimly, goes after Pa's pocket book, and does tho right thing with nine dozen towels, fifteen dozen nap kins, 'eighty-four pairs of shoots, etc. She doesn't expect her daughter to open a hoardlng-houso, but she has proper pride and Intends to do the right thing by the girl even if It breaks Pa. A Tip. Dusty Rhodes I wouldn't have to ask for help, but I've a lot of real es tate on me hands that I can't got rid of. Mrs. Rurall Try soft soap and boU Ins water. MIBRO-GINEMATOGRAPH FEAT Life of Active Microbes Recorded on Films by Ultra-Microscope Value to Science Is Immense. Paris. Jean Commandon, a young scientist, has succeeded In making cinematograph records of active mlc lobes. This feat is deemed of, the highest importance as it enables their movements and development to be carofully watched by regulating the speed of the cinematograph. He thus oxplatnB his success: "It Is due to the use of the ultra microscope, In which the lighting of the preparation to be examined Is done laterally. Infinitely small or ganisms, seen as dust, are visible playing in a ray of sunlight because they are laterally lighted. This meth od has enabled savants to discover a great number of new microbes which are invisible in an ordinary micros cope, however powerful. "Tho cinematograph apparatus' Is attached to the eye piece of the ultra microscope, and an uncolored drop of an Infected animal's blood Is placed between two strips of glass. Focuss ing is extremely difficult, but when It is accomplished thirty-two photo graphs are taken In, n second. "The magnification obtained after projection Is from ten to twenty thou sand diameters. The ultrn-mlcroscope renders visible objects the size of which Is one-two-thousandth part of a millimeter." ThoBe present at M. Commandon's demonstration at the Academy of Sci ence saw trlpanosbmes, which are the microbes causing sleeping sickness, as large as eels, rapidity rushing among the red corpuscles of the blood, and could see fatty globules, of the di mension of a micron that is, one one-thousandth of a millimeter which form the nutritive part of tho blood. London. Martin Duncan, who first combined the use of the microscope and cinematograph, says of the inven tion of M. Commandon: "It means a permanent record of tho movements of minute organisms, which can after ward be studied in detail at leisure. Its value to medical, biological and bacteriological science can hardly be exaggerated." Mr. Duncan's own films Include such records as the circulation of proto plasm In a common water weed, the various stages In a bloodsucking South American cattle tick's attack, and the movements of n water flea, showing the heart actually beating and the digestive process actually at work In the transparent body. CHICAGO "SPORT." An Ox-Killing Contest from Which Women Fled. Chicago. Fully 1,500 persons watched or started to watch the beef-drcsslng and goat-catching con test staged at the Lawndale Baseball Park. Butch Welsh re-established his claim to the title of the championship of the world by killing and dressing an ox In five and one-half minutes on a platform erected In front of the grand stand. The crowd In the grand stand diminished rapidly as the events proceeded In the "arena" constructed In the baseball diamond. Women fled for the gates at the sight, and later no less than 500 men and boys rushed down to Join In the scramble for goats. The first ox was led Into the arena pawing and looking wildly at the crowd. He was dragged upon a plat form that had been constructed, where the matador stood armed with a hammer, more unconventional than the weapon used by the Mexican and Spanish bull-fighters. The first blow of the hammer failed, and it took two more before the ox fell on the platform. After the con test the carcases were auctioned off to the assembled butchers, who came from all over the city and whose en terprise had provided the entertain ment. HIS HEART WAS OUT OF PLACE. Would-Be Suicide Fired Two Bullets Where It Should Have Been. Baltimore. Because his heart was several Inches from the normal posi tion, John J. Sauer, of Oardenville, near here, failed In two attempts to send a bullet through that organ. Death followed, however, from Inter nal hemorrhages, one of the bullets having penetrated his left lung. When Dr. W. D. Corse was sent for, shortly after the shooting, ho found Sauer dead. Two bullet holes were over the region of his heart, and the doctor declared that it was Impossi ble for Mr. Sauer to have fired the second shot, as the first shot would surely have bdfen fatal. An autopsy explained matters. DI8COVER8 BIG WATERFALL8. Explorer 8ays Highest One In West ern Hemisphere Is In Labrador. Oshkosh, Wis. Edward Balch Barr, Oshkosh explorer, who has Just re turned from Labrador, reports tho dis covery in the wilderness of that coun try of n huge waterfall which he Is confident will prove the highest water fall on the Western Hemisphere. The discovery was made while Barr, with his party, was traveling by canoe up tho Caster River. This fall Is said to be larger than Grand Fall, In Labrador, whloh Is 368 feet high. Brockville, Canada. A wild doer feeding with his horses was tho un usual sight which met William King of North Elmsley when he started to work on his farm. It followed the horsos up to the stables and then scampered back through the 3eldi and stayed with the cowi. It Is atlU In the neighborhood. DONT MUMBLE YOUR WORDS. Or Chew Your Cigar At Least Not When You Aro Dlotatlng. Before you condemn your stenog rapher be sure she was not too timid to Mk for a repetition' of what you said way down in your throat or with a cigar tightly clasped In your mouth. "I once knew a competent young man who lost his position In a rail road office," says a writer in the Bookkeeper, "because the official who did the dictating gave more attention to his cigar than he did to his articu lation. "Then some men havo a habit of pacing back and forth as they dic tate. When thoy make the turns or stand looking out of the window you can Imagine the result, especially If they also smoke. Of course the wise stenographer explains that she failed to hear and understand, but many are too timid or foolishly proud to do this, and thdy are stigmatized as In competent." Makes Elephant Sausage. Some time ago an enterprising Ger man pork butcher contracted for the carcass of an elephant belonging to the Ghent Zoological Gardens. The elephant had become unruly and It was necessary to have him killed. The butcher at once proceeded to transform the huge carcass Into Frankfort sausages. According to report he was able to manufacture no leas than 3,800 pounds, which found a ready sale, owing to their novel origin. The ele phant's heart, which weighed 'some forty pounds, was also sold In slices. This story Is suggestive of the re port from Paris that a butcher had used tho carcass of a Hon for mak ing "Lyons tmusages." 8elf-Advortlsement. Crankiness and rantankerousness In scientists, according to the British Medical Journal, are due not so much to conceit as to their high upp! frui tion of the greatness of science. This makes the inappreclatlon of the public so often the scientist's only reward very bitter to bear. "The hardest thing for a scientific man to bear Is the attribution of his discoveries to men who have come into tho vineyard at the eleventh hour and received the reward of his labors. The history t science is full of examples of such In justice; they all point the moral that it is the Inevitable fate of the man who has not the gift of self-advertisement to be overlooked." Friend More Fortunate. Gen. George H. Harries, commander-in-chief of the militia of the District of Columbia, is the busiest centurion in the land. In addition to being a soldier, he runs an electric light com pany and manages a traction com pany that is the wonder of those who know what good car service means. Also, he Is a member or alt commit tees of civic organizations. "I met Mrs. Harries Just a few min utes ago," said one of the general's friends by way of making talk when they met "Fine, I'm very glad to hear It," re turned the general. "I met her my self last week." Strange Foible. Some men make a vanity of tell ing their faults; they are the strang est men In the world; they cannot dis semble; they own It Is a folly; they have lost their abundance of advan tages by It; but If you would give them the world they cannot help It; there Is something In their nature which abhors Insincerity and con straint; with many other Insufferable topics of the same altitude. Swift High and Low Wages in France. The highest paid worklngwomen in France are said to be the cutters of precious stones. They receive about $1.80 a day. The lowest wage Is 60 eents a day, and 1b paid to dressmak ers. There are 14,000,000 women in France, and the majority of them earn their own living. France Is not Singular. There are persons In France who respect nothing. They spend their lives In trying to prove that Louis XIV. was a poor maniac, Napoleon a degen erate, and Joan of Arc a suspicious person. . . . Perhaps we talk too much of our national pride. Paris Le Matin. Advice for Young Ladles. It Is superfluous to decorate women highly for early youth; youth Is It self a decoration. We mistakenly adorn most that part of life which least requires It, and neglect to pro vide for that which will want it most Hannah More. His Musical Name. A correspondent reports the finding of a decidedly curious name In one of the records of York during the reign of Elizabeth Marmaduke Clarl onett It sounds like a character in a latter day burlesque. Notes and Queries. Couldn't Lose. "Things seem to be coming your way of late." "Couldn't be any softer If I was tho hero of a poker story." The Happy Neighbors. Farmer Wlnrow There's always two sldeB to every argument, Ezry, Farmer Hayboy Yey; yours and the right side, Peleg. Wealth In Swedish Bogs. The bogs of Sweden, tt is now esti mated, would yield 10,000 million tons of alr-drlsd peat Compared with pret est eoal Imports, this would supply the eaustry with fuel lor M6Q roars. mm ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. ASelaMerVeparatlonlbrAs-statotteFoodanaReflula-llnguiaSitmJisDndBwdsof EiIMu&L9iiii!mrci PtornofcsDigesHonflietrfiir ness and RestjCnntalm nriita- Oriuni-Morphloe norMtoeraL WOT JN ARC OTIC. AtrpeefOfdJkSMBMiJllWt Ihtpta SnJ- AdMtSiSt jftctftti Apetfect Remedy forCoreflpa- Worms A-orwuisionsJOTrisn- ness andLOSS OF sleep. facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Mi hi i il I Hi m - (Guaranteed unfcrtrveModij Exact Copy of Wrapper. The Choicest Fish That Cornel The whole world knows that fish is one of the most nourishing and strengthening foods in existence. And of all the fish that come out of the sea, the cod is the richest in nutriment. And cod, as you get it in Beardsley's Shredded Codfish, is also one of the choic est foods ever put on the table. Yet wonderfully economical. And sur prisingly easy to cook. TRADI Only the Sweetest Meat The cod we use are the finest flavor ed fish all the world's waters produce. They are caught off the New Eng land Coast. Cod which come from other regions can't compare in quality and taste with these. And of these fine fish we select only the fattest and plumpest. Each fish is examined three times. Then we take only the best part of each fish. Only the sweetest, most delicate uieat Ready to Cook We prepare Beardsley's Shredded Codfish in a way that saves you all bother and trouble. We take out the bones. Then our wonderful Shredding Process makes the meat fine and fluffy and dainty. Tim PACKAGE WITH THE RED BAND Unad with wax-paper. Wo preMrr atlr whattTiiurt Uif nonet sum! Rnctt alt. Also packed la tin and g-laea. STEADY ACCUMULATION of funds will wear away tho hardest rock adversity plants in your path. Dollars, dollars and yet dollars, slowly but surely deposited with us will slowly, but regularly and sure ly win 8 per cent. Interest each year, with Its compounding. FARMERS & MECHANICS BANK Honesdale, Pa. ASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use Over Thirty Years CASTORIA YHC OINTAUR eOHWIIi HIW TOR OITT. Out of the Sea It is ready to cook the instant yott open the package. No washing no soaking no boiling. Cheaper Than Meat A package of Beardsley's Shredded Codfish costs only 10 cents. Yet it goes farther than two or three pounds of meat, or a dozen eggs. It makes a full meal for five. Think of the vast economy in serv ing this fine food often, instead of meat or eggs. It makes a better breakfast or lunch than either. And there are so many tempting; ways to serve it, that your family will never tire of it You can have it at least once a week the whole winter through and never serve it twice alike. Let your family try this delicious and new kind of meal tomorrow. Order Beardsley's Shredded Codfish today. And please see that your grocer gives you Beardsley's the package with the red band. That is the kind you will like. For Beardsley's is the only Shredded Codfish. Our shred ding process is patented. Free Book of Recipes Ask your grocer for our book of tempting new recipes. It means pleas ing variety in meals. Or write us. We will send yon the book, and with it a generous sample of Beardsloy'a Shredded Codfish. J. W. Beardsley's Sons. 474478 Greeawk St, New York Bears the Ay 9 Signature For