THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1909. SATURDAY NIGHT TALKS By REV. F. E. DAVISON Rntla.d, Vt ANCIENT AND MODERN SEA VOYAGES. International Bible Lesson for Oct. 31, '09 (Acts 27: x-a6). BEES hV. AND Btt KExPBNu PRACTICAL HIVE LIFTER. Urt a rtf and) ROADMAKING KEEPS ROADS IN CONDITION. A sea voyage Is a memorable experience. It is an event to be anticipated with roseate dreams, and to be remem bered with pleas urable emotions. From time im memorial, the ocean has been tho object of the deepest interest to the dwellers on this planet Lure of the Sea. Its all-encompassing emDrace, ica mystery, its calms, Its storms, its reBt Icss motion, its heaving tides, its eter nal secrets have allured and baffled the minds of men. Mythology has peopled its depths with gods and god desses; Ignorance and superstition have made It the abode of entrancing sirens and seductive mermaids. Art ists have raved over it, poets have sung its praises, scientists have writ ten learnedly of Its value, explorers have pushed their prows 5nto its bays and inlets, or droppod their sounding lines and dredges Into Us fathomless depths, commerco has whitened Its bosom with the sails of Us merchant men, and countless multitudes have pitched their tents upon its beach in search of health and vlmr, or, crowd ed Its floating palaces ot light, which by day and by night, pint their way through its healing waters. The Bible is full of references to the sea, and some of its most drama tic incidents relate to that natural wonder, David, who perhaps never saw the ocean In a storm, In one of his Psalms has one of tlie most vivid descriptions of a nild-o;oan hurricane that has ever been penned. One of the books of the Old Testament, around which the fiercest criticism has centered, deals with the interrupt ed voyage of a preacher on the stormy Mediterranean, and no more accurate and vivid story of a shipwreck was ever written than the account, by the Amanuensis Luke, of the foundering of the corn ship off the Island of Mellta, on which the apostle Paul was being conveyed, a prisoner to Rome. Up to this, time Paul had been a land traveler. On foot, he had tramped all over Asia, with only oc casional excursions by water on short trips from shore to shoie, but his ap peal to Caesar, at his farcical trial at Caesarea, made It necessary that he should appear at the capital at Rome. That meant a long and dan gerous voyage in the winter season through a sea, swept by equinoctial storms, in merchant vessels, and any and every sort of crazy craft, whose owners dared or could be persuaded to take the risk of tempest and break ers. Ancient and Modern Ships. In these days of swift ships and modern improvements u voyage to Europe is about as pleasant at one season as another. The accommoda tions are palatial, every comfort and luxury of life Is provided, every wish is gratified, there is instant and con stant communication with the hemi spheres ahead and astern, the news of the world is found at the breakfast table in a newspaper damp from the press, and it is only a little matter of four days and a half from the shore of America to the shore of Europe, 3,000 miles apart. But Paul had no such conveniences on his historic voyage, 2,000 years ago. He was a prisoner under guard of a Roman soldier. The fare was of tlie coarsest, the accommodations were of tho poor est, herded with the imperial prison ers from all parts of the empire, be ing transported to the capital to an swer for their crimes, i-o considera tion was shown the man whose name was destined to endure forever; in hunger, cold, and weariness this dis tinguished prisoner tooK his Mediter ranean voyage from Caesarea to Rome. Personal Influence. And yet before that voyage was ended, that solitary man, little, and prematurely old, was providentially put Into a position, where his person ality and influence, parmeated and controlled the whole situation. In tho midst of a fourteen days' cyclonic tempest, the captain lost his head, the sailors were panic-stricken, tho sol diers wore ready to assassinate their prisoners, riot and utter absence of discipline prevailed. At that Junc ture, when all hope of being saved had expired in overy breast, this landlubber, unknown and unsklWed in sea craft, assumed command of the ship, put heart into the hopeless, by his calmness soothed the panic of the hysterical, and stopped their at tempts to abandon the passengers, gave directions about llfe-preserv- lng methods when the ship struck the beach and began to go to pieces under the pounding of the waves, and by his christian fortitude, calm trust, cheerful words, sensible directions, and general, all-around manhood brought passengers and :rew all fife to land without tho Iom jot a soul. -j It I a 8lmple Arrangement Attached to a Wheel Cart. I havo added a very simple arrange ment to my wheel cart that I use for moving hives, making It a practical hive-lifter, says H. R. Boardman, in Beo Culture. A weight is placed be tween the handles of the cart In such a way that It may bo easily removed to and from the axle. The object of this weight Is to counterbalance the weight of the hive. When lifting a hive I slide the ends of the framework under the hive cleats in tho usual A Serviceable HIve-Llfter. way and then move the weight back far enough so that It will hold the hive suspended. In this way the up per stories can be removed and hold to one side while tho frames in the lower story are examined; or the low er story may be removed entirely, if necessary, or replaced by another ono. For a weight I use an ordinary hive body in which I put whatever heavy material I desire. The illustration shows the trunk-rollers on the under side of the cleats, so that the weight may be slid back and forth without much exertion. with tnis arrangement 1 can weigh hives as well as move them. With my regular scales I weighed dif ferent hives and marked the position of the weight on the framework when a good balance was securnd. In this way I can get the weights of differ ent hives accurately enough for gen eral purposes. Directions By Which Home-Made Ditcher Can Be Constructed. A complete homemade ditch digger may be made by following the de scription here given. The bed piece, Ave and a half inches long, is cut out of a hard plank two and a half inches thick, bolted at each end and In tho middle to prevent split ting. The rear half is nine inches wide, and the front half six inches wide. The diggers are made of steel bars two and a half inches wide, three quarters of an Inch thick and twenty four inches long. They are fastened to the plank by a right angle turn and bolted. The two rear diggers are held firmly by a rod with nuts inside and out, the points being spread out so that the bed piece can easily drop Into the space when the ditch Is two feet or more In depth. The front din ger Is the samo size, but set In the middle. All are held lirmly by brace rods and sharpened like the flat end of a pickax. A wheel Is set under the front end to steady the movement and is braced backward. An adjusta RULE OF THE SEA, Whaling Law Applied to a Twice- Caught Cod. That etiquette is observed among the fishermen that Journey to the fish ing was discovered by an utm'eur angler his first trip tho other day. The amateur hooked a codfish, but his line parted just as the fish was above the water. Back fell the codfish, carrying with him two sinkers and the hook. Twenty minutes later another ang ler cried out that he had captured a cod with two sinkers and a hook. The amateur went up to the angler, who appeared to be an old salt, and asked for his hodk and sinkers, which had his name stamped on them. Ho was surprised when the old salt told him to take the flshlso. Accnrdlne to tho rules Generally fol lowed on tho fishing boats the second nnelor wnn untitled to the fish, but the hooks and sinkers should be re turned to their owner. The old angler explained why he wanted to glvo up the fish. It seems that he had followed the sea a great part of his life. When a young man ho was a whaler, and ac cording to whaling law, a dead whale belongs to the ship whoso name ap pears on tho harpoon that killed It. Therefore the old salt ligured that the amateur owned the codfish ne had taken. The Parachute. Tho inventor of the parachute la unknown. In 1875 an Englishman named Blanchard constructed a para chute in which he descended eight years later, but with such rapidity that ho camo near being killed. Tho first person who sucessfully descended from a balloon In a parachuto waa Andre Jaques Garderln in 1797. Health in City and Country. Despite general belief to tho con trary, it Ib a fact that, though th cities show higher death ratea from disease of the respiratory systom, tho rural districts have a higher dcatk rale from ' diseases ot the circulatory and nervous systems. Typhoid la a rural rather than an urban disease. So is anaemia. The latter fact ta t.nmo nut hv tho TTnttort Rtntog fonwia KRAFT & CONGER HONESDALE, PA. do be Notes on Bee Culture. Don't tolerate a leaky cover. Success does not come without an effort. There are no Ironclad rules in bee keeping. You should read one or more good books on bees. One must be a thinker as well a worker to succeed with bees. Think what you are doing and It right, and you'll succeed. The new pure food law will some help to the bee keeper. The one and one-half story hive for comb honey is the best hive for one who is raising comb honey for mar ket. All small tools used in the apiary should have a red string tied to them so they can be easily found if lost in tho grass. The pound foolish, penny wise fel low does without Improved hives and fixtures that make work with bee3 more pleasant and profitable. Farm ers' Home Journal. The Digger Equipped. ble draw iron is placed above, through which the rod may pass at any height suited to the depth of the ditch. The handles are also adjustable. raising them as the digger drops lower. In hard subsoils ono will save the cost of this simple device in digging seventy-five rods of ditch. In our hardpan sections of the east, which always need drainage, one does not feel encouraged to dig ditches with pick and shovel when more than half the energy Is required to loosen the dirt. With this machine the toughest subsoil when dry handles as rapidly as loose sand. Solar Wax Extractor. I very much doubt whether there is a better way for the rank and file of beekeepers to render wab than by using the sun, or solar, wax extractor. I believe it will pay to have a sun wax extractor. If you do riot care to buy one you can make one. All that Is necessary Is to have a box with glass over it, and you will find that when it stands In the sun the Inside of the box will be a very warm place. To melt your combs, put in the box an old dripping pan having a hole at one corner, or having one corner torn entirely open, and that corner the lowest, with some kind of a dish set under to catch the dropping wax. It is claimed that all the wax can not be got out of the combs in this way, but if any person will take off the glass frame after most of the wax has run out, and with a trowel, or something similar, rub down the ref use, so as to break down the cocoons that may remain whole, I think he will have no trouble In securing 90 per cent, of all the wax contained In any comb, no matter how old or tough it may be. Good Roads. A resolution was adopted at Darden Pomona Grange asking all the subor dinate and Pomona Granges to dis cuss the advisability of having the State Grange at their next session to ask the govenftr to include in his call for a special session a request for a law permitting ood road districts to be formed and the property owners of the district to be allowed to vote a special tax levy or vote bonds for good roads In that district. We belleva that the subordinate lecturer should have this subject dis cussed in their Granges. Under tho present system of building roads by subscription half of the people pay their share and the remainder do not. and receive the same benefits, while under this system everybody would pay his share. A Big 'Gator Skinned. An alligator considerably over seven feet In length attracted much atten tion while lying In front of Fire De partment Headquarters, where it was skinned by several colored firemen. The 'gator was a beautiful specimen of its kind, with a well-preserved hide and a beautiful head, according to the standard by which our alligators are Judged. The reptile was shot on tho Hagan plantation, about thirty-six miles north of Charleston, on the Cooper River, by Stephen Fraser, keeper of the Hagan tract, famous for tho splendid hunting opportunities which it presents and for its lumber preserves. The rifle ball which put an end to tho alligator entered the skull, and left only a small mark, which was hardly to be noticed with out close observation. The colored firemen who "peeled" the 'gator took care that the stoaqs situated near the tall of the animal were not lost. This portion of the alli gator anatomy Is considered as an ex ceptionally choice morsel by colored people. Charleston News and Courier. The Era of New Mixed Paints ! This vfl.ir rnrn. with a deluore of now mixed naints. A con dition brought about by our enterprising dealers to get some kind 01 a mixeu ijuiuu niuu wuuiu suuumuu umojiun 11. . . . . . 11 -1 i i - 1 PAINTS. Their compounds, being new ana neavny auvoruseu, may find a sale with tlie unwary. "iSSSESZ ;rrECHILT0N'S MIXED PUNTS Is JADWIIM'S PHARMACY. Sawdust for Roads. Sawdust is utilized in the South for roadmaking. Two ridges of earth are thrown up with a road machine at the required width from each other, and the space between Is filled with a six Inch bed of sawdust, which is then mixed with the dirt. This is said to make a roadbed on which the tires of the heaviest loaded vehicles make no impression. The cost is stated by the Jacksonville Times-Union to be about $300 a mile, showing it to be about the cheapest road material in use. One or two such roads were con structed in a South Georgia county twenty years ago and still In good con dition, showing its durability. Industry Full of Details. Beekeeping Is an industry full of details the neglect of which will haw an effect upon tho earnings of the api ary, and the detail that seems to re ceive a llttlo moro than its share of neglect is tho saving of wax. Beeswax is a verv important product, and in tho markets of the world It has more standard value than honey. There Is no substitute that can take the place of beeswax in tho many uses to which it is put in tho industrial arts, and when we havo a pound of wax we know there Is moro gold In it to tho snuare inch than there is in an equal amount of honey. To get the most wax from an api ary, it pays occasionally to scrape tho frames, honey boards and the In side of the hives, and when old frames aro broken up, to bo sure they make fine kindling wood, but before using them for that purpose they should be boiled; there is much wax sticking to old frames even after they are scrap ed seemingly clean. How to Set Fence Posts. Any timber will last quite well If set in this way: Dig a square hole about a foot deep, throwing the dirt well back. Sharpen the post and drive well into the bottom, then put a flat stone against each side and a chunk against the post, the boards holding it the other way. This pre vents their rotting off at the surface of the ground as they always do. Automobile an Aid. Tho automobile has from tho first been a powerful and persistent advo cate of better roads. It would be im possible even to estimate with any degree of accuracy the responsibility that should In fairness be given the motor car for the present revival of interest in tho movement for im proved highways. For Pure Wax. Any plan by which the wax is kept In a liquid state for a long time, the same being perfectly stationary dur ing this time, and while cooling and using quite a body of water with the wax for the dirt to settle into, has a tendency to separata tho impurities from the wax and give It a bright yel low color. A "Calico" Road. Des Moines, Iowa, Is to build a mile of experimental roadway to de termine the best method of construc tion. One section will bo of concrete, another of flag covered with broken stone, etc. A local newspaper facetl ously refers to it as a "calico" road Need Good Foremen. In macadam work, as In all other construction work, there should be a competent foreman or superintendent in charge. The Compass. The Chinese seem to have used the compass, or us equivalent, ai a very early date to guide them in their Journeys across the vast plains of Tartary. They made little images, whose arm, moved by a freely bus Dended magnet, pointed continually toward the pole. An apparatus of this kind was presented to ambassadors from Cochin, China, to guide them in their homeward Journey, some 1,100 years before our era. The knowledge thus possessed seems to have graun ally traveled westward by means ot the Arabs, though It was fully 2,000 years afterward before it was fairly applied among the peoples 01 West ern Europe. Availability. A nobleman was once showing friend a rare collection of precious stones which he had gathered at great expense and enormous amount of labor. "And yet," he said, "they yield me no income." His friend replied: "Come with me and I will show you two stones which cost me but 5 each, yet they yield me a considerable income." He took the owner of the gems to his gristmill and pointed to two gray millstones which were always busy grinding out grist. The Llama's Load. When the llama Is too heavily loaded, about 125 pounds, the wise beast lies down right then and there and goes on a strike ana refuses to budge a peg despite any amount of coaxing, beating or swearing actual ly knows the weight his burden should be almost to an ounce, or that's what they all say in the Andes. Most men know when they are overloaded, but they are afraid to He down. f VHMlJ Represent Reliable Comqanies ONLY There are reasons for the pre-eminence of CHILTON PAINTS: 1st No one can mix abetter mixed paint. 2d Tho painters declare that it works easily and has won derful covering qualities. 3d Chilton stands back of it, and will agree to repaint, at 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 tills chair It is sold for CASH at BROWN'S FURNITURE STORE at $4.50 each Macaroni. The word Is derived from the Mac aroni Club, instituted by a set flashy men who had traveled In Italy, and Introduced Italian "Maccheront at Almack's table. The Macaronis were the most exquisite fops that over disgraced the name of man vicious, Insolent, gamblers, drunkards, duel lers; about 773 the curse of the Vaux hall Gardens. Pity the Poor Horse Fly. Every purchaser of a motor car dis courages tho life of the horse fly. Some sort of a bug or fly will have to be invented to bite autos and mako them stamp, switch their tails, and kick up. We don't know what effect a cinder beetle would havo on autos. The question is referred to Judge Adna P. Gristlebone for an expert opinion. Ossawatomie (Kail.) Globe. Henry Snyder & Son. 602 & 604 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. Pa. PAY HIGHEST MARKET PRICES FOR Poultry, Eggs, Butter, Lambs, Calves and Live Stock. Apples in Season A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE FARMER. Old Phone 588 B New Phono 1123 PRINTER'S INK SPELLS Less Need of Railroads. If our country roada were what they should be what they are in Eng land there would he much less need of railroad oxtgmflon. . . Martyrs to Science. At Lisbon, during the plague, Dr. Camara Pestana was infected whilo searching for plague in a person sup posed to have died of pneumonia. It was plague; and the intrepid searcher died also. He wrote down hlB hor rible symptoms to the very end, for the benefit of medical science. Victim's Wall. It's all right for a woman to save time, but making cherry pies with tho stones in 'em is a poor way to do it 1 Detroit Free Press. IEET Mmm go We Make It SPELL For YOU at Prices So Low They Will Astonish You Come and Get Those Letter Heads You Hav Been Needlnfl So Lent