The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, December 03, 1909, Image 7

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    THE CITIZEN', FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1000.
SATURDAY
NIGHT TALKS
H By REV. F. E. DAV1SOH
g Rutland, VL
THE GRACE OF GIVING.
International Bible Lesson for
Dec S, '09 (2 Cor. 8: 1-15).
The graco of
giving! Not the
fact of giving,
tie duty of giv
ing, but the
grace of giving,
that Is the theme
of the lesson. If
wo could see the
motive behind ov
ery dollar going
Into the treasury,
as ChrUt saw
the heart of the
widow who trem
blingly, b u t
cheerfully dropped In her two mitos,
"which make a farthing," what a rev
elation It would be.
Good 8teurlty.
How littlo giving there li of that
magnificent pattern. In Paul's day
the church In Antloch took up a col
lection, and sent Paul and Barnabas
to Jerusalem with It, and the offering
was permeated with love. Now, the
church has to keep a set of men busy
all the year round going from place
to place, prying money out of the
pockets of the brethren. Dean Swift
once preached a sermon from the
text, "He that giveth to the poor
lendeth to the Lord," and his sermon
consisted only of these words, "Breth
ren, if you are satisfied with the se
curity, down with the dust." He got
a generous collection. But even in
that instance there wsb shown a keen
knowledge of human nature, a desire
for security for every farthing doled
out. He who gives gracefully doeBn't
Inquire about the security. It la not
a question of lending, it is a straight-
out gift
Credit for Intention.
Much that passes for benevolence Is
not that at all. A man by mistake
put a $5 gold piece In the collection
plate in one of my parishes. When
ho discovered the error he came to
the treasurer and demanded the re
turn of the coin, saying that he In
tended to put a new penny in the of
fering. He was an officer of the
church, too, and had a bank account.
Another man who made that mistake
and who could not recover the funds
because the missionary had left town,
said bitterly, "Well, I will get credit
In heaven for $5 anyhow." "Oh, no,
you won't," was the pastor's reply,
"You. wjllget credit .for what you
meant to give one cent." "The Lord
loveth the cheerful giver." But he
who "casts his bread upon 'the wa
ters," simply and solely, that he may
get it back again after many days, Is
merely putting out his money at In
terest, anticipating increasing riches.
He Is planning to build bigger barns,
to buy another farm, to augment his
bank account, to feather his own nest.
There is not the slightest element of
pure benevolence about that.
Getting Money's Worth.
Neither Is the grace of giving exer
cised in the "ring cakes," "grab bags,"
"post-offices," 'and "auction sales" to
which many churches have resorted
as effectual methods of separating
tight-fisted people from their money
We have come to an age when young
and pretty maidens are educated in
the arts of wheedling susceptible
young men into buying at exorbitant
prices, things they have no earthly
use for, for the benefit of some
"cause," and many a man eats five
dishes of Indigestible cake, and two
dishes of cream, and labels it benevo
lence. It has come to be taken for
granted that like old-fashioned wood
en pumps, that have to be prlned with
a bucket of water in order to get more
water out of the well, a man must
have a turkey supper put Into his
stomach In order to get the money
out of his pocket. The "cooking stove
apostacy" is as much an evil In its
way, as heresy In the pulpit or wick
edness in the pew.
Not that there is anything wrong In
Itself in a good meal of victuals in a
church vestry. Christ Himself en
Joyed a square meal, and accepted
more than one Invitation to a fulL
Oriental banquet, the evil consists In
the false education that trains our
young people to think that when they
eat themselves sick at a church sup
per, and pay for It, they are giving
that money to the Lord. They are
notl They are paying for value re
ceived. They have already secured
the worth of their money, and carry It
away with them In headache, dyspep
sia and such like accumulations. Oh,
no, the man who, at a church supper,
eats GO cents worth of cake, and
strawberries and cream, and trouble
In his economy, and pays 25 cents for
it, and then refuses to give anything
toward the church debt on the ground
that he has already contributed has
been wrongly educated. He knows
nothing about the grace of giving.
Listen to Paul, "Ilemember the words
of the Lord Jesus, how He said, 'It Is
more blessed to give than to recelvo.' "
A complaining christian once asked a
preacher whether he really believed
we could get the heathen to under
stand or practice religion Just as we
do. "I hope not," said the preacher,
"for converted heathen sing and pray
and give, while from what I have
heard, of you, I am persuaded that you
do neither."
WHAT HE WANTED.
Rode a Horse Whan on Duty and not
a Crow.
A certain officer of the Royal Horse
Artillery, having his battery divided
Into half batteries which were gar
risoned over 40 miles apart, by road,
applied that he might have an allow
ance grantod him for an extra charger,
it being his duty to frequently visit
both portions. The war office ruled
that this allowance was inadmissible,
saying, "Measured by the ordinance
map, as the crow flies, the distance is
found to be only 33 1-2 miles."
For a time the officer was non
plussed, but an idea struck him and
ho seized his pen and wrote:
"There would appear to be somo
misunderstanding regarding my ap
plication. I am asking for an allow
ance for an' additional charger, not an
additional crow. I do not ride a crow.
I ride a horse."
He got it London Tits Bits.
Mennonltes Founder.
The Mennonltes take their name
from Menno Simons, born in Wit mar
sum, Holland, in 1492. He entered
the priesthood of the Roman Catholic
Church, renounced Catholicism early
in 1638 and was baptliod at Leou
warden. In the course of the follow
ing year he was ordained a minister
In what was then known aa the Old
Evangelical or Waldenslan Church.
From this time on to his death, In
16E9, he was active traveling through
northern Germany and preaching
everywhere. The churches which he
organised as a result of his labors re
jected Infant baptism and held to the
principle of non-resistance. A severe
persecution began to make Itself felt
against his followers, the Mennonltes,
and having heard accounts of the
colony established in the "New World
by William Penn, they began to eml
grate to Pennsylvania near the end
of the seventeenth century.
Somo Advice.
The following was sent by a coun
tryman to his son In college not many
years ago:
"My Dear Son I write to send you
two pair of old breeches, that you
may have a new coat made of them,
Also some new socks, which your
mother knit by cutting down somo of
mine. Your mother Bends you $10 with
out my knowledge, and for fear you
will not spend it wisely I have kept
back half and only send five. Your
mother and I are well, except your
sister Annie has got the measles,
which we think would spread among
other girls, If Tom had not had them
before, and ho Is the only one left.
hope you are well and will do honor1
to my teachings. If you do not yoil
are an ass, and your mother and my
self are your affectionate parents."
Sociable 8plders.
Our native spiders are notable for
their extreme unsociability. Of thoso
which are spinners, each one con'
structs Its web apart from those of Its
kind, and those which hunt, pursue
their prey alone. In other countries.
however, there are spiders which live
In communities, and one such, a na
tive of Mexico, is described by M. L,
Dlguet. It Is known as the mosquoro
and makes a large nest In oaks and
other trees. Here the spiders live
gregariously, and along with them in
the nest is found a mlnute'beetle and
another species of spider. The beetle
Is said to act as scavenger. Parts
of the nest of the mosquero are hung
up in the houses during the wet sea
son to get rid of the flies.
The First Language.
No one of the existing languages
has any legitimate claim to be con
sldcred the original of the family of
languages, standing to the other as
Latin, for Instance, stands to Italian
and French. Of an original primitive
language of mankind the most patient
research has found no trace. All of
them Assyrian, Phoenician, Hebrew
Arabic are sister languages, polnUng
back to an earlier parent language,
which has long disappeared. Since
the historical period man has done lit
tie In the way of the absolute crea
tlon of language. The work had al
ready been accomplished ages before
the birth of written inscriptions.
Witchcraft.
0 The number who perished In the
period of the witchcraft delusion will
never be known. In every country,
through fifteen centuries, the super-
stltutlon wont on piling up its victims,
In Geneva 600 were executed In three
months, 7,000 were burned at Treves
600 by a single bishop of Bamberg
and 800 In a single year at Wurtz
burg. At Toulouse 400 perished at one
execution. A Judge at Renny boasted
that he had put to death 800 witches
In sixteen years. A thousand were
executed In a single year In the prov
ince of Como. "Witches" were exe
cuted In Spain as late as 1780.
Great Writer's Prayer.
The service of the day is over, and
the hour come to rest. We resign
Into Thy hands our sleeping bodies,
our cold hearths and open doors. Give
us to awake with smiles, give us to
labor smiling. As the sun returns in
the east, bo let our patience be re
newod with dawn; as the sun lightens
the world, so let our loving kindness
make bright this house of our hablta-
tlon. Robert Louis Stevenson.
Praises American Women.
Alfred East says that American
women, like American machines, neod
but little man power. The American
woman, he says. Is the most chum
mable woman in the world, therefore
aha Is the most charming. Our excel
lent educational system, he thinks, is
responsible for the fact that American
women are such "good fellows.
3 LIVE m
STOCK
1
CARE OF THE FLOCK.
Sheep Need Little Sheltor Except to
Keep Off Rain.
Sheep need little shelter except to
keep off rain and snow. I have always
allowed them to stay out In the cold
est weather, If It was not stormy.
However, I never, under any circum
stances, allow them to take rains and
snows in winter, writes a correspond
ent of Farm and Home.
At this season I give good clover
hay, and In addition a little silage or
corn fodder about three times a week.
feed twice a day in the yard on the
ground if it is frozen, but when the
ground is not frozen I feed in racks
In the sheep barn. I feed a little en
tire grain, mostly oats to the breed
ing ewes.
My troughs are made of three
boards, 8 feet long, the bottom one 10
Inches wldo and the sides 6 Inches,
as shown In sketch. I scatter the oats
thin in these troughs and the shcop
cannot get a large mouthful. Thus
better mastication of the grain Is se
cured than in narrow troughs. I have
fed threshed oats to my sheep for a
good many years and have not as yet
experienced any bad results from
their use. I feed oats until after lamb
ing time, then I add about one ear of
1
Miwrr ma
Wall Sheep Trough.
shelled corn to one pint of oats per
day.
I know from my own experience
that it pays to keep sheep, provided
they are kept well, and those who do
not do this are very likely to condemn
the breed of sheep which they may
happen to have or the breeding stock
which they have purchased for the
Improvement of their flock when the
fault is really their own.
Live Stock Notes.
It's poor economy to feed lice upon
hogs.
Skimmed milk finds Its best mar
ket in the pig pen.
Next year's grain feed should be
planned for now.
The dairy hog has helped raise
many a mortgage.
Crowded sleeping quarters often
cause disastrous results.
The hard coal ashes can be dumped
into the hog pen to good advantage,
A dollar Invested in live stock is
worth $50 Invested in mining stocks,
Recently a successful farmer said:
"I can make more out of $100 invested
In sheep than In any other way."
Breed straight and improve your
stock. Don't be led away by some
cross-breeding that looks good to you.
A short-sighted policy of using a
scrub ram is the cause of the inferior
ity of the average flock on our farms.
One cross may answer, but in the
end cross-breeding becomes a very
complicated affair and has ruined
more than one flock of sheep.
Muzzle the horses and pad the out
side portions of whlffletrees and har
row when cultivating the orchard;
thus avoiding all bruised and "barked"
trees.
One great value of sheep on the
farm is that they destroy brush and
sprouts and reduce the crop of weeds.
It will almost pay a farmer to keep a
small flock of sheep simply to keep
down underbrush vegetation.
Thistle as Stock Food.
Stock of all kinds greatly relish the
plants of the Russian thistle, which
has fairly Jumped out of the ground
since the rains, and our Eastern plains
are verdant with it Why not make
hay of ltT So palatable is the hap to
cattle that they leave green pasture
and break through fences to devour
this obnoxious and outlawed weed If
It is cut and stacked before the .red
dish tinge comes on to the plant,
which occurs about the middle of July.
Many of our Colorado people have
used Russian thistle for forage for
several years, and some of them say
that it is as good as alfalfa. In a re
cent analysis the Russian thistle as
sayed as follows: Protein, 17.95;
ether extract, 3.61; ash, 21.98; crude
fiber, 20.14, and carbo-hydrates, 36.32.
All over Eastern Colorado there Is a
lamentable shortage of protein feed
stuff. Corn, corn stalks, straw, mil
let, Kaffir and prairie hay are all long
on starchy matter, but short on pro
tein. In the thistle we have a crop
that grows on the arid reaches which
will not only yield a large amount of
forage, but a very palatable one at
that, and a crop that Is rich in the
two elements in which others are de
ficientField and Farm.
Hog Feeding Test.
Hog feeding experiments by the
Missouri station produced the follow
ing results:
Corn and bluegrass $3.27 per 100
Corn and rape 3.34 per 100
Corn and red clover.,.. 2.98 per 100
Corn and alfalfa 2.59 per 100
Corn and skim milk.... 2.17 per 100
Corn and middlings 8.99 per 100
Grade Poland China pigs of 60
poundB each were used In the experi
ment and the prices Quoted were the
current market prices at time of the
experiment . ,
MMIGAN
GRAZE
HITS JEW YORK
Hotel Man Declares He Has Had
to Lay in a Supply to Meet
New Demand
TASTES LIKE SAND AND ASHES
Liking for Pemmlcan, Like that for
Caviar, Olives and Llmburger
Cheese Is An Acquired Taste Haa
Particular Effect on Eater.
New York, N. Y. Dellcacioa which
hitherto have been confined to the
frozen North will have a place on
every well regulated table during the
coming winter if reports from the Chi
cago packing houses are to be credit
ed. It has been an open secret for
some time that many of the Broad
way hotels and hunger huts were
otocking up with pemmlcan, musk ox
and polar bear milk, but no one bad
the temerity to forecast the crate for
Arctic foods which threatens to sweep
the country. Pemmlcan bids fair to
be the most popular of all the dishes,
and pemmlcan parties will be in order
from now on.
"If anybody had told me a month
ago that I would be featuring pemml
can on my bill of fare I would have
sent him to Bellevue for examination,"
said one of the big hotel men. "Right
after Cook and Peary discovered the
North Pole we had a few scattering
demands for it, but we paid no atten
tion to them. We thought It was sim
ply a novelty, and that it would die
out Bach day found the demand get
ting more Insistent The climax came
when a fellow rushed in and declared
If he couldn't get pemmlcan he'd
wreck the establishment We had to
use the greatest diplomacy to get him
out and the next day we laid In a
stock of It"
"What does It taste liket" asked
the reporter.
"You've got to acquire a taste for
it The first mouthful tastes like a
mixture of red sandstone and cold
ashes. It has a peculiar effect on you.
After you swallow it you begin to
blubber. The second mouthful starts
you exploring. The night I was lnlti
ated I was blubbering and exploring
all night I couldn't stop until my
wife put a cake of ice on my chest."
"What is It made of?"
"The groundwork 1b lean beef from
which overy sinew and tendon has
been removed. This is dried and pul
verized. Added to It are the best seed
ed ralslnB and currants and a quantity
of the best beef suet It is all mixed
up together, seasoned with pepper and
salt and put Into hermetically sealed
cans."
"Sort of a trapped mincemeat?"
"That's it. It's served with a ham
mer and chisel, and Is generally wash,
ed down with a cod liver oil cocktail."
The dish Is an old one. Its native
habitat was the plains of the Far
West, where the aboriginal Indian
after killing a buffalo, dried some of
the meat by hanging It up where sun
and wind would strike it pounded It
Into a paste, flavored it with Juices of
berries to suit his taste, pressed it
Into cakes and called It pemmlcan.
Later, Arctic voyagers, after the buf
falo had been eliminated, used beet
as the basis of a compound bearing
the same name and made In almost
the same way, raisins, currants and
beef suet being added, with salt and
pepper as seasoning.
It is this concentrated, queer tast
ing mixture which, according to re
port, bids fair to be the food novelty
of the season.
PUFF8 BARRED IN GIRLS' GYM
Normal School Authorities Find Rats
Interfere with Exercise.
Philadelphia. A ban has been put
upon puffs and rats In the Normal
School, and It is whispered that a se
vere Grecian style of dressing the
hair is required in the gymnasium.
The girls were reticent about it all
to-day, and Dr. Grace E. Spiegel, medl
cal director of the gymnasium, would
not commit herself. It was learned,
however, that three seniors had actu
ally to be requested to leave their
superfluous hair in their dressing
rooms when they donned their "mid'
dies" and bloomers.
It is an uncomfortable thing for a
girl, when she takes a running high
Jump or vaults over a bar, to have a
section of her back hair become-de
tached or to have her rat flop up and
down on top of her head. One of the
Juniors intimated that such things
have happened, and that in order to
avoid them and concentrate the sent
ore' attention on their athletic feats
this mandate has been Issued:
"Who enters hero leaves all rats be
hind."
EATING TACK 8 WON A WIFE.
"That's the Man I Want to Cook for
He Can't Fuss," She Said.
St Louis, Mo. Mrs. Terrenoe
O'Grady, who until her marriage was
Miss Gertrude Arnoldy, and is now
wife of the "human ostrich," said that
she had fallen In love with O'Grady
when she saw him eating tacks at one
of his exhibitions.
"I thought I would like to cook for
a man like that" she said. "Ho can'
fuss at what I prepare for the table.1
The couple were married by Justice
Martin Moore. Mrs. O'Grady says her
husband has promised to teach her
tlit art of eating tacks and .ftUss.
ermong
For a
Theme:
MATERNAL. AND
MORAL ADVANCE.
fr "ir 4r
By Rev. Charles E. Perkins.
j f j
Text: "And went backward, and
not forward." Jeremiah vll:24.
Hh -i 4?
The early settlers of our country
made their voyage to-this land slowly
enough it seems to us, who have short
ened the distance from months to
days. The frontiersman took days to
make Journeys that are accomplished
In hours at the present time. Such is
the advance In the means of travol.
Tho log cabin and adobe huts are
supplanted by commodious homes
and palatial residences. Luxurious
furnishings add to the comfort and
pleasure of our people. Delicious vi
ands from the world's end are spread
upon our board, according to the
wealth and tasto of tho people. Ad
vance Is the watchword of our man
ner of living.
Modern discoveries havo harnessed
the lightning so that whether on land
or sea, we may bo in continuous com
munication with our friends, either
for pleasure or for profit Future
generations may not only read tho
great speeches of our orators, but the
actual reproduction of them upon the
phonograph will become a great
source of amusement and revenue to
them who are minded to keep the re
cords as relics in days to come. Nor
do we rest content Improvement is
the demand of the age. What shall be
next? Who can say?
Methuselah, with his reputed 969
years, were a babe indeed as com
pared with a young man of to-day,
The latter has seen more wonderful
achievements and traveled more, and
accomplished more in the material
welfare of his time.
A wise man cannot afford to depre
ciate the blessings that have resulted
from this advance. But he also asks
himself, "Is this the whole of life?"
Then he wonders if the moral ad
vancement has kept pace with the
material. Does the warning of the
old prophet come to us with any sign!
ficance to-day? Is there an Increased
appreciation of eternal principles?
Perhaps the Investigation is not so
rich in direct evidence. The intangi
bility must be recognized. But we
believe we can speak words of hope
and faith to our generation.
Principles of righteousness are
operating to-day. This is evidenced
in the exposure of certain corruptive
principles which obtained In political
and commercial affairs not long since.
Men became alarmed when these
were made public. No doubt they felt
like Jeremiah, that the people have
gone backward and not forward. But
men of faith and hope took courage.
They believe that publicity is a good
thing. Indeed, they welcome it Their
vision Is beyond mere temporalities.
They rejoice at the .onslaught upon
the spirit of corruption and selfish
ness. These investigations give value
to the etymology of an old English
word. So that when an Intelligent
man asks to-day "what is a man
worth?" he expects the answer, not
to be in dollars and cents, but is de
sirous of knowing the character of
th man. We use this word in its
highest sense when we speak of how
much a man is worth to a given cause.
"If a man gain the whole world and
lose his own soul" In narrow, hard
hearted, commercial competition,
what has he gained?
Another positive advance to-day Is
found In our appreciation of peace
after warfare. No parades of victors
bearing the scalps' and spoils, or cap
tives taken, would be tolerated. In
stead, great commemoration is made
annually of peace proclamations.
Monuments are erected to establish
their permanence and importance. The
Red Cross societies minister to friend
and foe alike.
Better still Is the effort made by
peace commissions to make warfare
as remote as possible. As a nation
we are approaching nearer to that
Ideal of the Master: "Love your ene
mies." Many other instances we might cite
In a general way, such as our institu
tions of learning for all people, homes
for the orphan, the aged and infirm,
A keener sense of civic righteousness
lb being aroused. Men of faith and
hope ire not resting in a lethargic op
timism, crying "Let well enough
alone." They believe, as there has
been a remarkable advance In ma
terial progress, so there has been
growth In eternal principles among
men and that there is still opportun
ity for progress.
Kingdom of God.
The Kingdom of God Is more than
a fine sentiment or a beautiful figure
of speech. It is the realization of all
our hopes and desires, of our highest
aspirations and deepest longings.
Rev. G. W. Grinton, Episcopalian,
Newburgh, N. Y.
Committing Sin.
To deny God is usually to disobey
His laws, and that le to commit sin.
Rev. Cyrus Townsend Brady,
Protestant Episcopalian, Toledo.
Heavenly Life.
You cannot have the heavenly Ufa
without the heavenly lore.
MIND'S INFLUENCE on BOtrr.
Dr. Vaughn 8aya tho Dogma le With
out a Scientific Suport
Taking for his subject "Tho Physical
Basis of Life," Dr. Vaughn, speaking
before the Association of American
Physicians, said that much had been
heard of late concerning the Influence
of the mind over the body. That as
sumption was as old as the philosophy
of Plato. It always had bewi and rrv
malned to-day a dogma without scien
tific fact Every attempt to apply it
to the treatment of disease h-xi lc-1
to the deve'oproent of conscious or
unconscious charlatanism and re
sulted in more or less marked ata
vism. Medical observation and study had
shown that healthy cerebral function
was to bo found only when the activ
ity of the brain was influenced prop
erly by normal function of all the co
rolated organs.
"We know f qval'y," said he, "of the
influence of tho brain on the othbr
organs of the body. Wo are fully
aware of the fact that Impulses may
bo started in .'be brain throngh any
of the five senses that may favorably
or unfavorably Influence the activities
of the corelatod organs. And for cen
turies the medical profession has em
ployed this physiological principle in
lh treatment of disease."
Tuberculosis Among Soldiers.
For 1,000 active troops in the armies
of the groat world powers, the follow
ing figures show the pereentase of
cases of pulmonary tuberculosis:
United States, 4.72; Great Britain and
colonies, 2.4; France, 6.8; Germany,
1.6: Austria, 1.0. and Russia. 2.7.
1ft t tilt ttttti
MARTIN CAUFIELD
Designer and Man
ufacturer of
ARTISTIC
MEMORIALS
Office and Works
1036 MAIN ST.
HONESDALE, PA.
Eves
Tested
Fitted
GRADUATE OPTICIAN,
A. o. BLAKE,
AUCTIONEER.
You will make money
byhavlne me.
bell phone s-u Bethany, Pa.
Time Card In Effect Ci' 31st,' 1809.
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