PAGE TWO THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 191 2. PHILADELPHIA HAS AN ATHLETIC CARP. Is a Combination High and Broad Jumper The Record. While Affiorlcnn athletes tire break ing records nbrond nn American nth lete living In Philadelphia, says the Philadelphia Tress, has broken n wcrld's record and sot n mark which 1 mill doubtless remain for some yoars I unless the athlete In question sees lit 1 to break his own record. Being modest and spurning the ap plause which attends such events, he performed the remarkable fent In the , presence of two of his associates be- j longing to the fair sex and a stranger of whoso presence he was unconscious, j It was through this stranger that the , new champion was made known to the world I He did not search for n big stadium filled with thousands of admirers, but took In preference his everyday envi ronment. The new world beater is n large carp which has recently been received nt the nquarlum. who in defiance of Mr. Mee ban, In charge of the aquarium, Jump ed from his tank and started to make a tour of Inspection In Knirmount park, showing marked partiality for thu Schuylkill river. Since his arrival at the aquarium Mr. Carp has entertained his lady ac quaintances and his keepers with mar velous Jumping feats. Ills acrobatic accomplishments were becoming too pronounced for his good health and the state of mind In which he kept his keepers. As a check to his wanderlust a wire netting was placed above his tank to prevent him trying his hand nt aeronautics. One day recently ho resented this re straint of his liberty and with a mighty jump lunged against this Hereon, knocked it off and hit about six feet from his tank. Ills jump was fully three and a half feet high, which makes a combination high broad Jump. Mr Meehan has now solved the ques tion of Mr. Carp's captivity and has tied this top on with large rope. NAVY TESTS ALASKAN COAL. Cruiser Maryland on Northern Cruise to Study Results. The cruiser Maryland recently left Tacoma, Wash., under orders to ply Alaskan waters until Septcmler. Cap tain Ellicott Is Instructed to Inspect the government coaling stations on Prince William sound and Resurrec tion bay, the Bering lake and Mata nuska coal fields ami oil fields at Oil bay and Cold bay. The order Is believed to have result ed from Investigations made last win ter, when intervention in Mexico was threatened. It was discovered that in the event of war chartered foreign ships taking coal to the Pacific would be subject to seizure for carrying con ( traband of war, leaving the Pacific fleet In a helpless condition. It was pointed out thnt Alaska coal was 2,000 miles nearer the Philippines than the Mare Island coaling station and 12,000 miles nenrer than the Vir ginia coal mines. As early as four years ngo Alaskan coal was tested by the government, giving returns of 2 per cent greater utility for naval purposes than Vir ginia coal, now brought around Cape Horn at great exicnso. The Maryland will further test the Alaskan coal. Becently she loaded at Tacoma 000 tons of Gale creek coal, mined near Tacoma, which has given the navy better results than any other Pnclflc coal. The lighthouse vessels on the Pacific are substituting It for Virginia coal. NATION IS GROWING RICHER. Has $3,640,407,621, and Most of it Is Safely Locked Up. The American government and peo ple began the new fiscal year with $3, 040,407,021, of which nil but $503,021, 003 Is in circulation. The balance is held in the treasury vaults ns the as sets of the federal government. This vast volume of real money breaks all records, so far as the treasury state ments show, for the winding up of a fiscal year, and It beats a year ago by ?si,rxx),ooo. The treasury offlclals, estimating that the population has grown to 95,(;jfl,000 up to July 1, say that a pro rata dis tribution of this money would glvo each person ?.'U.20, or 0 cents more than a year ago. The total volume of gold Is $l,S.11.-JffU0O. Of this amount $C07,445,10:i is in circulation, nn in crease of 5in,rx).ff)0 during the year. Tbo country has $7:i2,l(V.,173 in silver. FAMOUS "MORY'S" CLOSED. Yale Resort, Celebrated In Gong and Story, Passes. "Mory's." the New Haven (Conn.) chophouso nnd student meeting place, famous In Yale song and story, lias closed its doors, and the littlo frame building will lie torn down to make room for a business block. Yale men have met nt "Mory's" for moro than half a ceutury, nnd the placo liad grown to I almost n irt of tho university. At "Mory's' during Utclr college days Gathered many students wtvo Irnvo tlneo becotne prominent, notably Pres ident Tuft TI10 pJaco was full of ivIIch of priceless valuo to Yale men. J. A- Samfrie New Treasury Cashier. James A. Smnple of South Bciul, Jnd., was recently appointed enshiw at tho United Ktntf-s treasury. Me. Sample had v!kmii assistant cashier. The ouTce at cashier lias been Yttcant ineo the resignation of Edward R. rruo moro than a rir ago. Not Enough He Urges Taking Boys Off the Streets and Away From Temptation. I By THOMAS It. M AltSli ALL, Governor ot Indlina. THE home, if a proper one, is the place for tho boy. There he can obtain mental and moral ed ucation, observe Ideals and do lelop idea--, it rarely happens that n boy In a home deliberately goes wrotig. It Is perhuis necessary, however, that I should define a home. Tho grade of Its mateilal surroundings, If cleanly, counts but little. If It Is n place where the father returns to eat and drink and sleep and swear It Is not a home, no dlftcrciuc what other ndvantnges It may possess. If the mother Is anxious to get rid of the duties and responsi bilities of motherhood and stays only because of necessity nnd seeks every opportunity to shift her i hlldren on to the Sunday school or the day school or the neighbors and is more Interested In (lie big chappies who watch her along the avenue than in the little chap who calls her mother, then the place she rules Is not n home. It may bo humble In Its character, rented from week to week, nnrrow in Its quarters and poorly furnished, but if it Is a place where oe man and one woman believe the giv .test happiness on earth to be. If the; realize that there opportunity exists to train up in the tenets of our most holy faith a boy for useful citizenship, if it Is a place where no sacrifice Is too great, where hope smiles and love sweetens every duty, then that humble place is an American home. Parents In Bondage. Unfortunately for tho good of the republic these homes are not numer ically Increasing In the land. The con stant trend of population from the country to the city, the vast growth of manufacturing Industries, the high cost of living nnd the cost of high living are putting the fathers and mothers of the land in bondage. Deprived of time and opportunity to look after their boys, they must needs let them grow wild. Under such ei cumstances the boys turn to the streets and alleys and unlnclosed commons of our great cities. Theoretically speaking, the family and the home have a right to their own boys; theoretically speaking, the family and tlie home are responsible for the nurture and training of these boys, and, theoretically shaking, it Is no-IkhIj-'s business whether they turn out well or 111, but here again conditions force our theories down. Another unfortunate condition of our present day civilization, induced large ly by the Influx to the cities of our population and the ever widening chasm between the immensely rich and j the unutterably poor, is the soclnl life I in many of our churches today. We I cannot say with truth that we Chris . tinns love each other to the extent that our churches are units of Christian so cialism and that the members, without regard to their social standing, their educational advantages or their ma terial surroundings, meet upon a com mon level with a genuinely mutual feeling tlmt nil are the children of tho selfsame God and tlmt each is inter ested In tho material, social and re ligious welfare of the other. It may be stated that almost uni versally tho Jew and the Ilomnn Cath olic do look after their own, and many churches in tho various Trotestant de nominations do as well, but Protestant churches there are, nnd in numbers too great, where tlioso of n certain grade in society merely meet and go through a religious service. Her feeling may bo wlwlly unfound ed, but the woman in a calico dress does not feel at home in tho same pew with the woman in silk, nnd the man with a business suit who walks to church shares not a fraternal feeling with the man wearing a Trlnce Albert nnd n silk hat. There is either no time or no inclina tion to distribute Christian charity among tlie nnforrunato of Christ's lit tle flock, nnd tho stricken lambs are taken to tho township trustee for as sistance. Paternalism That Is Inimical. Tin,' whole trend of modern c'.vlllm. : Hon Is toward the management of all 1 Ional and charitable work by the state. I This Inevitably tends to ixiternnllsm. A paternalism which remove resiwn sibllity from tho Imwiw niwl wtiL-li t ISM. ens the zeal of tho church Is distinctly Inimical to the best intertts of a ieo pic. We face tlie condition. We cannot let men go wrong Ikichuso tlio Iwmo is not doing itu duty. Wo cannot let people BUfTer lxx-ause tho church has not seized its opportunity. The Btnte, which is the common par ent of us ail, must assume all these burdeiw nnd renponsibllltloa and must bo answerable in sight of God and inun for tho attitude and conduct of ncomlng generations. It behooves, therefore, ail Uiour;litful citizens to ns certain w1tlicr poino inotliod may not bo devised wiienrby mwieurubly wo can return to U10 original Ideals and theories of tl Hairing nnd Imeplng of ourcitizun&hln. It may not bo needful, but It Is cer tainly udrisublo that men Interested fn humanity at large and In the republic In particular slxsald band themselves 1 Real Homes 9 Marshall Commends Boys' Club Move ment as Tending to Good Citizenship. together and by formation of societies which are not a delegated authority of legislative power endeavor to correct these evils and both by precept nnd ex ample Impress upon the home nnd tho church the Inevitable necessity of n re turn to first principles. Boy of Today Is Primeval. Ah a starting point for tho nccom- I pllshmcnt of these purposes right I minded men first turn their glnnces to I ward the boy and the boy's condition I in tlie great centers of population. I Tlie boy of today Is as primeval ns 1 Cain and Abel. He is born not lmmor al. but unmoral. He Is a cave man. lie Is the sole survivor of the stone age. Nothing Is sacred to him. He Is born without the pale of the law, and he has not heard of the gospel. Ho does not understand In his natural state why anything that Is loose does not belong to him, nnd be does not njv preciate grass except ns something to walk upon. Very probably he lives un der surroundings where there Is either no time, no opportunity or no desire to tench him the great laws of life. Now, the state Is facing these condi tions: The juvenile courts are crowd ed, the number of probation olllcers is constantly being Increased, tho reform atories and schools for incorrigible lioys are being taxed beyond capacity, and petty offenses are growing more numerous nil tho while. It docs no good for us to say that this is none of our business. It will not help matters the least for us to sit down and fold our hnnds nnd say that God will reme dy tliese things. Tho thoughtful man must put nslde his theories, his opin ions and his prejudices In the face of actual conditions, and he is unworthy of his high heritage who will not by thought nnd word nnd deed render all possible assistance. It was, I think, tho theory of those who inaugurated tho Boys' club move ment In America that much as they regretted Interfering with family rela tions they deemed it wise to begin in terference before the state took a hand, thereby rendering it Improbable that the state would ever bo called upon to redress grievances, punish wrongs and take the doubtful chance of mending n broken character. Highest Type of Citizenship. The highest type of citizenship lives Its life, does Its work and leaves Its Impress upon this day and generation because it liar, been obedient to au thority. Sooner or later all men re alize that there must be obedience to law. Thrice happy are those parents who early begin to train their children to a knowledge of their responsibility to God and man and to hold a decent respect for constituted authority and to cheerfully obey tho laws, human and divine. The boys' club movement does not wnnt to abolish the home Its purposes are In strict accord with tlie highest Ideals of home. It seeks by tlie forma tion of its clubs and tho erection of Its buildings to take tho boys off tlie streets and away from tho temptation of a great city; to instil into their minds right ideas and correct prin ciples; to seal their eyes to tho wrong and evil of the world until their Judg ment and conscience shall become so stable and fixed that they will prefer tho right to tho wrong, understand that tho right not only pays, but is the only thing that pnys, and thnt from tho wrong they can never obtain any peace, satisfaction or profit; to give them an avenue whereby their boyish enthusiasm may find an outlet in nil tho simple and tonest pleasures of life; to teach thorn coumgo and fortitude; to ascertain by exiwrimcnt tho things which they aro fitted to do In life; to bring them together and haw them as sociate underuuch conditions that tiioy will bo mutually regardful of each other's rights; to endeavor to keep their minds clean, their Hps pure and their conduct above reproach; to help them to understand thnt they aro to Income tlie future citizens of the state: and In n reflex way und without hypoc risy and emit to assist fathers and mothers In taking an Interest in the welfare of tlieir loy. PASTOR TO BECOME BREWER. Jotwvrtown (Pa.) Preacher Resigns to Enter Business. Tiro ftev. Herman Kautlmnnu of Johnstown, Pn., has resigned to be cotno a brewer. Tho minister comes from Germany, nnd beforo ho camo to America to study for the ministry and Inter to nccojrt Mm rectorship of ono of tlw largest churches hi Johnstown he was identified with tlio brewery bustnets in bit) homo town of Ilscn burg, Germany. Ho handed in his resignation to tiio trustees of St Paul's German Luther an church in Morrellvlllo, a fashion able Buburb of Johnstown. It was ac cepted, and fn giving his reason for leaving the pulpit Mr. Kauffmann said that ho Intended to lenvo tlio min istry to return to his homo In Ibsen baafind enter the business of his farn 17. Tho family of tho minister la the owner of a largo brewery. UNCLE SAM'S GARDENER. Late W. R. Smith Was One of Wash ington's Picturesque Figures, William It, Smith, tho venerable su perintendent of the national lxjtanlcnl gardens, wlio died recently, had for nearly sixty years been the superin tendent of the botanical gardens and was ono of the most picturesque fig ures In Washington. Scotch to Mm core, ns ardent In his love for tho heather and the highland of his native land as be was for his plants and (low ers, ho asked no prouder tltlo than to bo called "gardener." Mr. Smith possessed what is believed to be tho greatest collection of Itobert Hums' works In the world. He wns a warm personnl friend of Andrew Cnr negle, and 200 volumes of his Hums collection were given to him by the lnlrd of Sklbo. Under Mr. Smith's direction the bo tanical gardens have been developed nnd expanded to their present propor tions. The gardens fell far short of his nmbltlons, nnd ho was often Impa tient with tlio apathy and Indifference of congress. Now thnt he Is dead tliey may bo abolished altogether. Head Tho Citizen. Don't Run The Risk of spoiling preserves, beal them with M, Pure KtfintJ Parafftne) Just melt and pour over the preserves Estry pachast carriet tht Para Food Cuarante. Sold by Grocers and NOTIC ETO WATER The use of water for sprinkling lawns, gardens, streets, etc., is hereby prohibited EXCEPT between the hours of 6 & 8 a. m. and 6 & 8 p. m. 1 Honesdale NOTICE OF APPXJOATIOX FOIX CllAItXlMt. Notice Is horoby given that appli cation will bo made to Alonzo T. Searle, President of tho Court of Common Pleas of Wnyno County on July 2u, 1U12, at 10 a. m., under the provisions of tho Incorporation act of 1S74 and Its supplements for a char ter for Intended corporation to be called Tho W'hito Mills Heptasoph Ass ji latlon, tho character anr" object of which aro for lodge purposes, and for social enjoymont, and for theso purposes to have, possess and onjoy all tho rights, benefits and privileges conferred by the said Act and supple ments thoroto. SEAItliE & SALMON, 52w3 solicitors. GHICHESTER.S RILLS r-v TII,: UIAMO.NI KHANIM" V ttrn atrial DIAMOND KUANII 1ILI, for 85 ry jwii aown hi sum, Aiwtys KeuibU -C. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE This Is good weather for flies. They aro around waiting to give your littlo ono typhoid fevor. Kill him and don't delay. Duy a swatter at the hardware store and got busy at once. your jellies and Ok. - Absolutely air-tight No sharp-edged tin covers Easy to nse Inexpensive Druggists Everywhere. The AUanlic Refining Company Philadelphia Fittstmrgh wport) Consolidated TN THE COUIiT OF COMMON PLEA8 1 OF WAYNE COUNTY. Libel in Divorce. No. 19, March Term, 1912. LILLIAN C. DUELL, Llbellant, vs. LEWITT E. DUELL, Respondent. To LEWITT E. DUELL: You aro hereby required to appear in tho said Court on tho second Monday In August, to answer tho complaint exhibited to tho judgo of said court by Lillian C. Duoll, your wlfo, in tho causo abovo stated, or in dofault thereof a decree of dlvorco as pray ed for In said complaint may be made against you In your absence. P. C. KIMBLE, Sheriff Mumford, Attorney. Honosdalc, July 2, 1912. 54w4 JOSEPH N. WELCH re Insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Uflice: Second floor Masonic Build ing, over C. C. Jadwin's drug store Honsdale. nman:nnnar WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS in your family you of course call a reliable physician. Don't Etop at that ; have his prescriptions put up at a reliable pharmacy, even if it is a little farther from your home than some other store. You can find no more reliable store than ours. It would be im possible for more care to be taken in the selection of drugs, etc., or in the compounding. Prescrip tions brought here, either night or day, will be promptly nnd accurately compounded by a competent registered pharma'cist and the prices will be most rea sonable. O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, Opp. D. i II. Station. Hoxesdale. Pa. ONSUMERS Water Co.