THE! CITIZEN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1800. SATURDAY NIGHT TALKS By REV. F. E. DAVISON Rutland, Vt PAUL AT ROME. International Bible Lesson for Nov. 14, '09 (Acts 28: 11-31). Paul at Rome is a themo that authorizes glow ing description. Jerusalem and Rome were U10 pivotal centres from which went out the world's transf o r m 1 n g forces the one, the homo of di vine gorernment; in the othor, the god of this world was enthroned. He was a lone man, a poor man, a man in chains, and yet he was tho .tvaat courier of a rising power that was to turn the tide of Roman history, Bnd revolutionize the world. Had Nero on his throne been aware of the dynamic force embodied in that little travel-stained prisoner lie would hare been as profoundly moved and great ly troubled as If some foreign foe were thundering at his gates. But he knew It not, and he continued his drunken revels while the city slept, uncon scious of the transformation scene which the entrance of that prisoner assured. Getting a Hearing. It is not hard to got a hearing for the gospel when tho seeker, like Paul, has the "Are In his bones." He was a prisoner after a sort but was so well reported of that he was allowed to live "for two whole years in his own hired house." But "the Word of God was not bound," ad Paul felt that he could not rest without delivering his mes sage. He might have spent his time amid tho splendid architecture, world famous sculpture and historical anti quities, but nothing of that sort could divert him from his work. And hence within three days after his arrival at Rome he calls around him the chief of the Jews, the rulers and leading men of the synagogues, that he might disarm their prejudices. Without a trace of bitterness he forgives and forgets the evils that had been In flicted upon him. One thing must be said to the credit of his persecutors, they had not sent on to Rome their evil reports and base slanders, and he Is assured by his countrymen there that they had heard nothing against him. Expository Preaching. Paul waB not llko some modern preachers who take a text and preach from it. He was a splendid type of that very uncommon class of divines who preach expository sermons the meatiest, Julcyest, most interesting of all the styles of preaching. Ho took his text from the Old Testament, the only Bible there was In those days, and appeared to have no difficulty in finding Christ in tho Gospel accord ing to Moses. So captivating, evan gelical, Scriptural was he In his ex position, and so tremendously In earn est, that he preached all day but held his congregation to the end. That was the first Gospel sermon that his listeners had ever heard and they were so deeply stirred tliat they took so note of time. A Crisis of Destiny. It makes no difference who the preacher is, or what or how long is his sermon he cannot make his hear ers believe. To preseut the message is the duty of the man of God, to ac cept or reject It Is the hearer's prero gative. It is some comfort to hard working modern clergymen that even Paul failed to convert vho majority of those to whom he preached. Some churches seem to think that if they could only get Brother Sllvertongue for their preacher their entire congre gation would be swept into the king dom. But whoever occupies tho pulpit this will be tho verdict of history "Some believed the tilings which were spoken, and some believed not" The same truth produces different ef fects even as the shining of the sun softens ice and hardens clay. Promoted. With this lesson tho story of the life of Paul abruptly closes. Luke the amenuensls, very likely took the time to write It during the two years in which they dwelt at Rome. And Paul wrote many of the epistles, which are incorporated in tho sacrd canon dur ing that time. Tradition says some thing about release, io-arrest and execution after five years more of toll. But the book of The Acts is the only certain historical guide In tracing his life. Nevertheless, all critics agree that the life of Paul did not extend over more than f.ve years from this point. One day a small procession wended Its way through the gates, and "Paul the Aged," was again in the midst The mightiest mind in the Christian church was on his way to promotion and coronation. He bad just penned his last message and was, now "ready to be offered. He had fought the good flght He had kept tHtf faith. He had finished bis course." Soon the sol' dlors halt and the executioner steps forward. For the last time those tot tering limbs bend in prayer. There is a flash in the sunlight as the beads mu's axe desoeada and the worn and weary vticrtan te a yBet ooooooooon FARM POULTRY HOUSE. There Is Nothing Better Than a Mov able Colony One. For a farmer's poultry houso 1 know of' nothing that will give bettor satisfaction than a movablo colony house, such as is used at Macdonald College, Quo., a photo and plan of Front View, which accompanies. This house Is 8 xl2 feet floor built on two skids and accommodates 25 hens and 3 males in the winter and half as many more during the summer. A toam of horses can draw It to any part of the farm that may be desired. This gives fresh ground to the hens, and feed that might otherwiso go to waste, con be made use of. For farm use the stud ding need not bo so high, and tho houso can be built of available ma terial. A loose board celling over which is placed straw provides for the absorption of moisture and even In Plan of Interior. the coldest days, hens are quite com fortable. A farmer can add to his equipment one house at a time, and gradually work up to the desired number. F. C. Elford. Color of Shell and Quality. It Is sometimes said that the color of the shell of an egg indicates the richness of the yolk, but In the ab sence of positive proof we should say that the color of the shell In no way affects the quality of the egg. One breed of hens will lay eggs with white shells, while others will lay eggs with all degrees of shades, from the light tint to the darkest brown, and we have yet to find any person who could distinguish the kind from the flavor. It Is true that all markets have their preference, some demanding the white and others the dark, but this Is due merely to a matter of choice and not because the people think one better than the other. Of course, food, in a measure, may, and doubtless will, affect the richness of tho egg, but the color of the shell will not Indicate this. Supply the kind your market prefers and your profits will be larger. Water for the Chicks. Take an ordinary baking pan and have the tinsmith rivet on an "ear" on one side for nailing to a tree. Have him also make a hole in the bottom in one corner, that the water can be let out every day and the pan be kept clean. Nail the pan to a tree about twelve inches from the ground, so the chicks can drink without getting into it with their feet. The birds will soon discover thnt It is a fine place from which to get n drink on hot days. Sometimes they find, too, that it Is a convenient place for a bath, and this of course makes the water dirty. But It is not much trouble to refill tho pan with clean water, and this should be dono two or threo times a day. Chickens and birds require a great deal of water, and they often suffer for lack of it. Don't neglect them. Guinea Fowls. The flesh of guineas is generally dark colored, tender, juicy and in fla vor equal to the ring-neck English pheasant Many think it more pala table, for the flavor is not so pro nounced, and thcro Is considerably more of it The flesh of the white guinea Is light in color, and if they are crossed with the pearl variety the meat of the latter will become nearly as light Two Yards for Chickens. Where possible, it is advisable to have two yards, one on the north side of the house for a warm weather run, and the other on the south side. Oround frequently becomes "fowl slok" from long use. It is necessary, when tlrta condition prevails to plow up the ground and plant It to some crop. By this msans, the earth be cjogfeM 'alow of poisonous droppings. It s IHrjg i kUIJ., MONARCH ANDJEIR AT WAR Prince Albert, Belgium's Crown Prince, Is Leopold's Dearest Political Enemy. London. No band played, no royal saluto was fired, no kingly message was sent whon Albert of Bulglum, heir presumptive to the Belgian throne, started last spring on his long voyage through tho Congo. The band will play loudly when he re turns, but thoro will bo discord in Its sound. King Leopold allowed his nephew to start without a friendly message for tho most sufficient of reasons. Ho had no friendly message to send him, Prince Albert. The king knows that this journey through the Congo bodes no good to him. His consent to it was asked only as a matter of form. Prince Al bert, rich by inheritance from his father, endowed -with a revenue by tho Blgian parliament, owes little to, and knows ho will get nothing from the king. When he returns from the Congo he will throw off all pretense of submitting to leading strings, fol low a policy of his own, and, inevita bly, will find himself at the head of a party hostile to the king. '''here may be no open scandal. The prince, surrounded by the atmosphere of the German courts, will break no rule of etiquette. In public he will be deferential to his sovereign. King Leopold, most acute of men, will be, In public, as loving to his nephew as ever. But war there will be, with or without scandal. Prince Albert, wliilo holding aloof form politics, already has dono and said enough to show what his policy Is. It Is a policy op posite in all things to that of King Leopold. 300 GIRLS NEVER SAW PIGS. This Is Brought Out by Inquiry In Kansas City High Schools. Kansas City, Kan. The statement of a young woman In the Central High School that she never had seen a pig was regarded as a remarkable admis sion by the teacher before whom she was reciting. However, when half a dozen other young women in the same class confessed they had never seen a real live pig the Instructor con cluded it was time for his pupils to begin to grasp a knowledge of every day things. The fact that bo many students in one class were acquainted with pigs only through hearsay led to Inquiries to ascertain how extensive the ignor ance of school children with regard to pigs really was. A canvass of tho three Kansas City high schools re vealed that almost three hundred girls never had seen one. And this in Kansas City, one of the largest live stock markets in the world. TOO MUCH PROSPERITY. Prevents Boys from Studying, Says Kansas University Chancellor. Kansas City, Kan. Overflowing granaries and bulging banks have brought a new danger to the Univer sity of Kansas. Chancellor Strong pointed out the peril. The university is determined, however, to offset the result of too much prosperity. "So much money has been made in this Western country In the last ten years," Chancellor Strong said, "and the boy has been furnished so much of it, that ho has desired to live pret ty well, and some of them have craved and have had motor cars. All of this has a tendency to distract attention from studies and we have had some hard work to combat the tendency.' AERIAL LODGE FORMED. Ceremonies Formally Conducted at an Elevation of 7,200 Feet. Greenfield, Mass. Aerial Lodge No. 1, A. F. and A. M., has just been formed here, the first aerial lodge of Masons In the world, at an elevation of seventy-two hundred feet above the earth. The lodge was conducted with all Masonic observances possible under the circumstances. J. J. Van Aiken burg, of South Framlngham, Mass., was worshipful master; Jay Benton, of Boston, senior warden, and Chas J. Glldden, of Boston, junior warden. The Masonic ceremony was tho chief feature of a short but interest ing aerial journey from Plttsfleld, Boys, 4,634 Years Old Make Merry, Wlnsted, Conn. Fifty-eight "boys," their ages aggregating 4,634 years, mado merry at the thirteenth annual reunion of the Old Men's Club of Bris tol at Lake Compounds. Ellas Bur- well, who will be ninety-eight next month, joined the others in eating baked sheep and friend corn. Tho youngest boy present was seventy-one yearsjpld. ROLL of HONOR Attention Is called to the STRENGTH of tho Wayne County The FINANCIER of New York City has published a ROLL OP HONOR of the 11,470 State Banks and Trust Companies of United States. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK Stands 38th in the United States Stands 10th in Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $455,000.00 Total ASSETS, $2,733,000.00 Honesdale. Pa., May 29 1908., Time Card In Effect 8ept. 14th, 1909. SCRANTON DIVISION 1 n. - I'o 151 aggi Stations IS Ik HIP u I. ...I TOTlArN.Y. II P U1 WOK, 00 Ar....- uuomih i, 2 1U, II Oil 12 60 " ...Hancock.... 1 12 4li " ..Starlight.... 1 215 2 SO; ?45 2 65 4 06 4 201 10 34 12 29, 1219 12 03 rrcscoB raric 1 " ..Wlnwood... 1 " ..royntello... ' " Orson " Fleasant Mt. 1 4 35 10 24 4 4tJ 6 Ml 10 03 816 8 27 3 40 9 51 11 SI 5 1fl s u as II 30 6 30 V GUI " ..Unlondalo.. 8 43 8 55 6 33 9 20JI1 2N .Forest City. " 6 45 woe! mos; ' CTb'ndaloYd 14 04 15 541 0 04 not " .Carbonaala. " Wblte Bridge ' .Mayflcld Yd. " ....Jermyn " ..Archibald.. " .... WInton.... " ... Peckvllle... " ...Olypliant... " .. .Dickson.... " ....Throop " .Provldeaee.. " ..Park Place.. 410 6 0M 8 56 10 56 4 IB 42j 8 08 8 4S10 48 6131 8 48 8 40 10 451 4 28 618 10 40 4 30 4 34 4 39 6 201 8 M 10 8 6 24 8 82(10 32J 61 18 10 28 4 42 4 45 8 251 10 261 6 8 as1 6 41 8 3210 32 81M10 1 44fl 4 51 8 ihio loiLiv... scranton .. .Ar 4 55 e u 6 45 A XI H Hi IF Additional trains leave Carnondale for War. Held Yard at 6.60 a. m. dally, and 5.36 p m dally except Sunday. Additional trains leara May. Hold Yard lor Carbontlale 6 38 a m dally aud t it p. m. dally except Sunday. i. O. Anderson, J. E. Welsb, Tramo Manager, TraTellnjf Agent, 66 Dearer St., Now York, Scranton, P, 74 BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS A ORAND TOUR OF THE WORLD Portraits of the Rulers of the World Six Months' trial Subscription to HUMAN LIFE ALiIj FOR OO CENTS. Our wonderful TOUIt OF THE WOULD picture cards dono in water colors will bring to your view scenes tlint cost thousands of dollars and months of actual travel to visit. These cards are made by a new French process which produces pic tures superior to the many cheap cord pictures now on the market. Our RULERS OF THE "WOULD picture cards are printed in beauti ful colors, each curd representing a separate country. Tho center of each card is given to an up-to-date photograph of tho Ituler or Presi dent of the country. Beneath each picture is a brief summing up of facts regarding tho country, govern ment, area, population, .products, industries, etc. Tho two complete sets, "TOUR OF THE WOULD" and "IIULEHS OF THE WOULD" and a six .months' subscription to HUMAN LIFE for (10c. Send us !50c. and wo will send yon the 7-1 cards without tho maga zine. HUMAN LIFE PUBLISHING CO., 530 Atlantic Avenue, - Boston, Mass Robbins Memorial, St. Rose Cemetery Carbondale, Fa. 65 I t: m Ml; 1 " JR it: m sm I Designed and built by l.44...I......j..I....t..2....!..2...IiMl..l..Mll...i..i The Era of New Mixed Paints ! This year open 3 with a deluge of new mixed paints. A con dition brought about by our enterprising dealers to get some kind of a mixed paint that would supplant CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS. Their compounds, being new and heavily advertised, may find a sale with the unwary. THE ONliY PliACE IN IIONESDAIiE AUTHOKIZEI) TO HA.NDI.iK Is JADWIN'S PHARMACY. There are reasons for the pre-eminence of CHILTON PAINTS: 1st No one can mix abetter mixed paint. 2d The painters declare that it works easily and has won derful covering qualities. 3d Chilton stands back of it, and will agree to repaintat his own expense, every surface painted with Chilton Paint that proves defective. , . 4th Those who have used it are perfectly satisfied with it, and recommend its use to others. We Pay the Freight No charge for packing this chair It is sold for CASH at BROWN'S FURNITURE STORE at $4.50 each II llllll M llll 111 III! IIIIIIIIWIIIIII Henry Snyder & Son. 602 & 604 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. Pa. PAY HIGHEST MARKET PRICES FOR Poultry, Eggs, Butter, Lambs, Calves and Livestock. Apples In Season A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE FARMER. Old Phono 588 li New Phono 1123 TV .ft, When we get your wireless call for HELP, we will come to the rescue with flood old - PRINTER'S INK GOOD ADVERTISING HAS SAVED MANY BUSINESS MEN FROM FINANCIAL SHIPWRECK 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 3 per cent, interest each year, with its compounding. FARMERS & MECHANICS BANK Honesdale, Pa. KRAFT & CONGER, HONESDALE, PA. Represent Reliable Comnanies ONLY CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS 'OiiH w Wr CHlH MARTIN OAUFIBTjD