THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, JULY li, I01J. PAGE T CHARITIES OF i YOUNG HEIRES SENATOR SIMMO.'S. I Girl of Fourteen Wants to Give Away $30,000 a Year. SHE INHERITED $30,000,000. Atkt Court to Allow Her to Divide Her Annual Income of $60,000 With Churches, Hospitals and Orphanages. Plan Is Her Own. Miss Catherine Barker of Michigan City, Ind., the fourteeu-yenr-old heir ess to the entire Barker estate of $30, 000,000, has applied to the courts for permission to contribute annually a large part of her Incomo to Catholic and Episcopal churches and hospitals and orphanages allied with them. Be ing a minor and under the guardian ship of the First Trust and Savings bank of Chicago, Miss Barker must obtain the consent of her guardians and the court to distribute tho money. The income of the estate is more than $1,000,000 a year. John II. Bar ker, her father, set aside $00,000 a year for the education and maintenance of his young daughter. The bulk of the big estate is In Chicago bank stocks, which were accumulated forty years ago by Miss Barker's grandfather. Through her guardian, rcpreseuted by President James B. Forgan of the First Nntlonnl bank, Miss Barker seeks to arrange for the division of her annuity by causing u petition to be filed In the Laporto circuit court asking leave to use part of her annual allowance In charitable work. Restrictions In Will. Miss Barker has been subjected to considerable nnnoyanco by fortune seekers and charity solicitors. Recent ly she was the object of Interest to an alleged prince of Sicily, who wrote her an endearing letter which was seized by one of her tutors. She lives In a big country homo In Michigan City In care of a governess and a corps of tutors. The will of her father gives her guard ians unlimited power over her future. She cannot marry until she passes twenty-one. Her future husband must bo approved by tho guardians, n com mittee composed of President Forgau of the First National bank and several directors. Not a dollar of her great fortune can be conveyed to her hus band, and sho must not live perma nently abroad. The guardians are empowered to control her Income and allow only what In their Judgment Is necessary. This power Is permanent, even after marriage. ATTACK ON HARVARD. Sidls' Book Also Contains a Thrust at Dr. Eliot. Boris Sldis, a psychologist of high standing connected with Harvard uni versity, In "Tho Philistine and Gen ius," a small book Just Issued, sharply criticises Harvard and other colleges and schools of the country and Inci dentally points out tho possibilities In the way at education by citing tho ex ample of his remaskable son, who nt twelve years of age reads Homer ami discusses authoritatively the fourth di mension. Even President Emeritus Charles W. Eliot of Harvard did not escape the writer's verbal castlgatlon, or at least It is supposed that President Eliot was referred to In this paragraph: "Not long ago wo wero Informed by one of those successful college man darins lionized by the office clerks, su perintendents and tradesmen that he could measure education by the foot rule." Harvard men were amazed when they read this reference palpably to Dr. Eliot's live foot shelf of books. CITIZENSHIP HARDER. Provisions of New Law Affect Half a Million Man. Various provisions of the naturaliza tion law, passed Ave years ago, are now In effect, and a study of them seems to Indicate that half a million men who have taken out first papers dur ing the last five years will find it Im possible to get their second papers. The leading provision of tho new law is that beforo receiving his sec ond papers tho applicant must fill out a new blank containing fifty ques tions. This ho must send at his own expense to Washington. Second pa pers cannot be granted until the Washington offlce has verified the proof of the man's landing here. It has been tho custom to accept n man's sworn statement as to his landing and the sworn statement of two witnesses. HE BREEDS TOADS. Colorado Man Uses Them to Kill Off Flies. A unique garden is that of, J. V. Crono of GroeJoy, Oolo., devoted to the breeding of toads as well as tho rais ing of gardon truck. Mr. Crone has caught hundreds of toads and put them on his, place. He says that they nro the worst enemy of tho fly and that the. time will como when people will domesticate thorn, for tho purpose of ridding premises of flies. Toads have cleared every fly from , tho Crone place, and neighbors at tribute absence of flies from their premises to the toad garden. Whose Amsndments to Reciprocity Are Lott. Washington. July 11. The senate promptly disposed of the Cummins and the Simmons amendments to the Canadian reciprocity bill, nnd In doing so made substantial progress toward passing the measure unchanged nnd adjourning congress by Aug. 1. All the efforts of the Insurgent Re publicans to amend tho Canadian reci procity bill were unavailing. On most of the propositions they could not muster more than fourteen nnd usu ally only twelve votes. Three of the Insurgents went over to the administration side and voted against the proposed amendments. Theso were Brown, Works and Poln-dexter. Flnnlly Senator Clarke, Wyoming, a stand pat Republican who hud been voting with Senator Cummins, also crossed over and voted with the op position. His System. "Percy," said his father sorrowfully, Percy, you have been fighting again." "Yes, father," said Percy. "And you have lost tho fight, Percy. Ihnt Is worse than anything. When 1 was a boy, Percy, I always won. 1 hnd a system by which I nlways con trived to get In tho first blow." "I did that, father." "Well, you did It badly. By my sys tem I always hit the boy fairly on the point of tho Jaw. My system never failed." "Yes, father, but suppose when you hit the boy on the point of his jaw ho fell Into a pile of bricks and got up with a brick In each hand, how would you have continued your Bystem when you were a boy?" "Percy," said his father, "you seem to have a quarrelsome disposition. Let your defeat bo a lesson to you. Now run away and-play." Pearson's. Nature's Rifle Bullets. What man has learned by dint of thought and experiment some of the lower nnlmuls appear to know through Instinct. An Instance Is furnished by what Is called the "spiral swimming" of certain organisms, such as the spherical shaped volvox and several elongated lnfusorlans. As these re volve about tho axis of progression In the manner of a projectile fired from a rifled gun, the consequence Is that they arc able to travel in a straight lino, as they could not do otherwise, tho revolution compensating with ab solute precision for any 'tendency to deviate from a straight course. With out such a device many of theso mlnuto creatures' would simply de scribe circles, making no forward prog ress. Guarding Its Own Goods. Honesty, In Its purpose, looks but little outside of Itself; honor gener ously alms to deserve the good opinion of the best, finding keener anguish In tho moral stain or blemish than in grievous bodily woimds. Honesty guards Its own goods, and loves self interest, whllo It gallantly protects the weak, relieves the oppressed from the grasp of cruel force, redresses tho lu Juries of others or defends Its own pure dignity. Albert Mathews. Art Enthusiasm. "Does tho public of Crimson Gulch remember my previous visit?" asked Mr. Stbrmlngton Barnes. "It does," replied Broncho Bob. "And Is It waiting to receive mo with open arms?" "Not exactly open arms. It looks more like a case of concealed weap ons." Washington Star, Good Impulses. A mere good impulse that does not result in good works Is rather worse than useless, for if not carried out In deed It has a reaction instead of an action as its outcome. Settled. Father I don't think much of that young Binklns who calls to see you". uaugnter rjever rnma, father, I think, enough of him for both of us! Nothing. Dinks Where I stent Christmas last year tho thermometer dropped to zero. Jinks That's nothing. Blnks What's nothing? Jinks Why, so rot PROBE KELLOGG'S EXPENSE ACCOUNT Trust Buster Drew $30 a Day For Personal Expenditures, DREW A TOTAL OF $23,311 Whlls on Standard Oil and Harriman Merger Cases In Addition He Was Paid $59,000 For His Work In Prose cuting the Rockefeller Combine. An average expense account of near ly $30 for every day of a period of more than two years. In the eyes of Chairman Beall of tho house commit tee on expenditures In tho department of Justice, even If the expenses are In curred In tho prosecution of tho Stand ard Oil company nnd tho Harriman merger of the Pacific railroads, is Romcthlng worthy of Investigation. Frank B. Kellogg, special assistant to the attorney general and Roosevelt's chief trust buster, drew from the treas ury $23,311.07 on expense vouchers. Ho made tho drafts from Dec. 23, 1007, to Feb. 11, 1010. The last mentloued lay Is about tho time tho reargument of the Standard Oil case was complet ed. Mr. Beall nnd his committee will be gin an Investigation of the Kellogg nc counts when the committee nssem bles again, probably in tho near fu turc. T. C. Spelling, one time as sistant attorney In the department of Justice, who declared tho Harriman merger case was bungled, has been employed by the committee to delve into tho matter. He said that the vouchers setting forth the items of ex pense incurred by Kellogg will be pro duced before the committee. Put Limit on McReynolds. Tho expenso accounts of J. O. Mc Reynolds, the special assistant to the attorney general In charge of the to bacco trust case, are also to be scruti nized by tho committee. So far ns can be learned, there was no limit on Kellogg. There was one on McReyn olds. His limit was $10 a day for subsistence, which was exclusive of railroad faros and telegrams. Ills meals and lodging while absent f-om New York city on official business might not exceed thnt limit. The committee Is expected to find out whether Mr. Kellogg was away from home every day during the time ho was engaged upon tho Standard Oil nnd Union Pacific cases. Members of the committee have an Idea that the actual dally nverago expense will bo shown to be something over $40 a day Instead of $30. From Sept 30, 1008. to April 1, 1000, tho expense ac counts amounted to $13,081.81, or some thing like $71 a day. The ordinary employee of tho gov ernment Is limited to an expenditure of $5 a day for meals and lodging. It is not uncommon, however, for the head of an executlvo department to In crease the limit to $10 or $15 a day for n trip to New York or somo other big city where It Is manifest that $5 a day would bo a low allowance, but Kellogg Is the only one thus far dis covered whose own discretion sot the limit. Durlngr the political campaign In 1008 be went frequently to Hot Springs to consult with Mr. Taft The vouchers will show whether these trips were made nt government ex pense. Kellogg's Expense Accounts. Tho amounts drawn by Kellogg are as follows: Dec. 23, 1507, Standard Oil case... tf, 282.80 April 7, 1903, Standard Oil case... 1.C35.97 Juno 29, 1908, Standard Oil case... 806.00 Sept. 20, 180$, Standard Oil case... 1.W4.M Sept. 20, 1909, Union PacWo cose.. 8,129.04 Jan. 2, 1909, Standard Oil cose.... 2,769.22' Jan. 2, 1909, Union Paclfta case..,. 1,806.85 April 1, 1909, Standard Oil case,.. 2.185,43 April 1, 1909, Union Pacific case... 2,036.75 June SO, 1909, Standard Oil case.. 817.59 April 2, 1910, Standard Oil oase... 2,149.42 Feb. 11, 1910. Standard Oil case... 727.94 Total 123.311.G7 These sums are all In addition to the $59,000 in fees paid to Kellogg for his work In the prosecution of the Standard Oil suit MAN-BEAST FOUND. Texas Discovery Has Feathered Wings and Monkey Face. The strangest freak ever found In Texas and which bailies ornithologists was captured In a cave in Bexar coun ty. It appears to be partly human, partly monkey and partly owl and Jub- bers In a tongue as though speaking an unknown language. Pnrt of tho body Is covered with feathers and part with hair, and its face is like a monkey's, almost hu man, Tho freak Is about three feet two Inches, and Its two legs are cover ed with hair. It has two short wings with feathers. Tho cave had not been explored for many years, and the freak appears to bo perhaps ten or more years of age and la believed to bavo been imported from some foreign country. Battleships For Turkey. The porte and the Armstrongs of England have entered Into a contract for the Immediate construction of an up to date battleship with engines and armament complete They have also signed a contract for a second battle: ship f and when the parliament pro vides funds. GERMAN AERO RACE ENDS. Koenlg Wins 1,116 Mils Dash and Gets $10,000. Berlin, July 11. Germany's 1,110 mile aeroplane race, which began at the Johannlsthal aviation grounds on Juno 11, has ended here. Koenlg, who was first nt tho finish, was awarded a prize In cash of $10, 000, whllo Vollmoeller, second, got $0,230. The third man, Buechner, was given $2,C00. None of tho fliers wero hurt, but thero were a number of enforced dp. scents. Tho machines used by the winners were all of German mnke except that Koenlg's motor was of foreign design. It will bo bought by the German government. Guarding the Bank of England. The Bank of England's nightly guard Is drawn from the guards stationed In the Tower of London. The custom of providing a little garrison of guards for the Bank of England every night dates back to 1780, the time of the Gordon riots. The troops are made very comfortable In the bank, nnd the officer in command Is provided with a dinner for himself and two friends. Of course an allowance of wine, sat isfactory from both points of view, is made. The vaults of the Bank of Eng land would make fine robbing. They frequently contain fifty millions ster ling. Several keys are necessary to open tho lock to tho whitewashed vaults, and each key Is In the posses sion of a different person. The gold lies piled on trucks to facilitate re moval or is heaped against the walls In sacks. NOW OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT FISHING, BOATING, HUNTING FIRST-GLASS BOARD. LAKE JAMES HOTEL Lakeville, Wayne Co., Pa. A. O. BLAKE AUCTIONEER & CATTLE DEALER YOU WILL MAKE MONEY BY HAVING ME Bell Phone 9-U BETHANY, PA. The Ideal Guardian of the estates of your minor chil dren. It has the very best facilities for the profitable and wise invest ment and re investment of the princi pal and accrued income -The Scranton Trust Co. 810 Spruce Street. 'f5 NEWEST PRODUCTIONS IN OUR COMPLETE STOCK The House Furnishing Department Is Complete with the New Goods from the Manufacturer. The Floor Rugs in all sizes made can be had in the Best Designs and Colorings. Quality and Value Leads and Satisfies. Carpets more t6 be desired than in any year are bright, soft and harmon ious in blendings Window and Door Curtains and Portieres are all that heart and eye can wish, Design and Shading very ar tistic and captivating The Fioor Coverings in Mattings and Linoleums are just the thing for the coming Spring and Summer use. Clean, healthful and cool. Shades in all grades and standard sizes on hand. made tc order and best goods furnished. Room SVIouIdings9 Plate Rails and Bead finish in many new styles and colors. Select your goods early and secure the best before stocks are broken up in many patterns and styles. Special measurements MEHNEQ & CO, Stores, Keystone Block HONESDALE, PA. FOR R ESU LTS ADVERTISE IN THE CITIZEN i THE DELAWARE & HUDSON COMPANY X X X x Saratoga Springs and Lake George EXCURSION Saturday July 15th Adults, $5.75 Children, $3.00 Tickets Good Returning On Any Regular Train Within Ten Days. Wilkes-Barre 7:00 a. m. 7:10 a. m. 3:15 p. m. ' TRAINS LEAVE Scranton ' 7:45 a. m. 7:55 a. m. 4:05 p. m. Carbondale 8:30 a. m. 8:40 a. m. 4:50 p. m. STOPPING AT INTERMEDIATE STATIONS For further information, consult Ticket Agents, or G. E. Bates, Division Passenger Agent, Scranton, Pa. t X X x