Tins CIT1ZKN, Fill DAY, JANUARY 14, 1010. mm POULTRY AILMENTS. Vlgllnnco anil Conunonscnso Com bined will Work Wonders. Of tho causes for dlsonscs of poul try and especially chicks, tho great est 1b llco oi n wot spring, or during n rainy summer, tho llco will very soon get tho upper hand unless one is very vigilant. Tho llco can be mndo to leave the chicks, before feathering, by cover ing them with a coal oil sprinkled cloth leaving the chicks under tho cover for fifteen or twenty minutes. All the lice that wore on tho chicks will bo found on tho cloth dead, und most of the nits on the chicks will also bo dead, this rids them of the pest for the time, but if they run with lousy chicks or their mother hen is lousy, or their coops and run are dirty and contain nits it will bo but a short time until they are Infested again; so tho only chanco for safety Is In continuing tho coal oil wrapping every few days, or In thor oughly ridding the rest of tho fowls, and the. premises of all lice and nits, and then In keeping them so ridden. This is easier said than accom plished, for one louse will soon have descendants by the million, and tho now batch Is always vigorously ac tive. Keep a dry bath for all fowls and chicks nil the time and as dust Is not found In quantities yet, It will bo necessary to use sifted ashes for their bath. Clean all coops and premises as clean as tne proverbial pin; use white wash, strong with lime and coal oil, or other good liquid killer. In quantities, copious enough to rout each louse and nit; give the old fowls a good dusting with fresh pow der, use a dip on their legs; coal and lard are good. Use fresh Insect powder or fresh tobecco dust freely in their dust bath; when you may sit and rest easy for a few days. Not for long, however, for eternal vigilance Is required in this warfare. Now that things are nicely cleaned and started right, a half hours work each and every day will result In keeping them so. If above Is done thoroughly, the coops moved to clean quarters two or three times each week, good, whole some food only is allowed, and fresh clean water In clean vessels always at hand, the poultry aliments will be a missing thing. Not any chick or fowl can keep, healthy when Inhabited with vermin, or if given sour, or otherwise un wholesome food, or impure water to drink. Put your commonsenso Into active use. E. C. In Indiana Far mer. Feed Coop for Young Chickens. The ieed coop shown In the illus tration Is made by utilizing two old castaway spring wagon wheel rims. Then with three penny nails fasten laths or light boards across tho ends, leaving small openings between ac cording to tho size of the chickens. Place the ends 4 or 5 feet apart ac- FEED COOP FOR CHICKS. cording to the length of the material at hand, and nail on other strips after tho same fashion. This coop is easily made and will be found very practical for farmers who raise only a few chicks. Htiis und ICggs. Hens ?red for phenomenal egg records are not so.apt to havo strong rugged offspring. Extra heavy layers as pullets and yearling hens are not so valuable In their second year as teady layers. There is no ouch thl g as an egg laying type. The trap nest exposed that theory beyond a doubt. Hen3 forced for egg production will in time produce u weak genera tion. Pure food is tho safest stimu lation to use. Heavy winter layers are generally poor summer layers und vice versa. Tho largest eggs are produced by steady layers. Tho more eggs a hen lays tho b jailer tho size becomes. The color of the brown egg grows lighter as the numbers of her prod uct increases. The hen that will produce from thirty .o fifty eggs In succession will not havo vigorous gorms In her eggs. Successful Agriculture. Fowls to Havo Animal rood. Fowl, kept in confined runs Bhould have an nmple supply of animal food. Tils U not only necessary In order that they may lay a great number of eggs, but also to prevent egg eating and feather pulling. These dopraved habits are usually Indulged in by lovls that are confined and fed on too carbonaceous a diet. In sucli conditions they havo an insatiable craving for animal food, or In other words for some protlen and they strive to satisfy tho desire by eating their own eggs and plucking out and swallowing the feathers from each other's bodlea CUPID En iih nn uu iin nn nS My wlfo and I nro rather old-fash loned people, but we occasionally dine at a cosoy little rostnurant in the the atre district. I remember our II rat Introduction to finger bowls, but that Is not at all what I winh to tell yon about; possibly I never shall toll you, ns I dwell upon tho occasion entirely without joy. And tho wnltor, n stumpy little chap ho was. For quite a while I used to address him as "Mister," wltn an inviting pause, hop ing ho would supply his name. He nevor supplied It, however, nnd ns I am of a somewhat determined nature persisted in this form of address, un til on ono occason ho said to mo "Would you mind, sir, not cnlling me Mister'?" "Not at all," I replied, as blandly as I could. "What is your namo?" "It is Hezekinh, sir, but most pec plo call me Cupid, air." "For Rhort, I presume?" "No, sir," he replied. "I believe there's a god by that name, sir, who makes work for the parsous." Tho evening wns rather a rainy ono, nnd in consequence the dining room was comparatively empty. The waiter, therefore, had little to do but attend us. "You see, sir," ho wont on, "I'm of a very sentimental nature, sir "Yes," I replied, with ns straight a face aB I could muster, "It seems ns thought I have heard of Cupid." And from the table I received a remonstra tive kick from my wife. "I've figured in many a matrimon ial deal, sir. Mnybo you'd like to hear of tho one that gave me my nickname, sir?" "I should bo glad to," I replied, and the waiter, warmed to his subject by our receptive attitude, went on: "You see those little numbered dining rooms on the balcony above? Well, ono night when I was working up there, in comes an unhappy-looking couple that quite evidently wants to be alone, so the head waiter shows them up to No. 25. No sooner was they seated, sir, than another couple gloomier even than the first, comes In, and wo puts them Into tho next room, 26. I was to wait on them all, running in from one room to tho other as was necessary. We waiters sees funny things at times, but those two couples was amazing. They squab bled with each other, two by two you understand, neither knowing of the other's presence, and from soup to nuts, sir, not one of tbem really ate enough to fill a dicky bird. " 'You had no business to take me up so quick,' says the girl in 25; 'sup pose I did ask you to take me out to dinner, that's no reason why you should have done so.' " 'Now, see here,' says the man, 'this Is no picnic for mo, either. You're a charming girl, and all that,' he says, 'but I can Imagine at least as pleasant a companion as you are proving to be,' he says. 'Confound tho little minx,' he goes in a kind of musing tone, 'God bless her,' he adds quickly, 'she had no business to disappoint rne.' You see he was thinking of some other girl. "'And that odious Jack,' says the girl. 'If he hadn't been so stupid, I'd now be with him instead of you.' And so it went on, each mad that they wasn't with someono else. And In the next room it was just as bad. They weren't so outspoken, but 1 could see that a more miserable cou ple didn't exist that night. It didn't take me long to put two and two to gether, so to speak, and 1 knew that through some misunderstanding each was out with the other fellow's girl and wLshln' he wasn't; and the same with the girls. They had formally 'Mister'd' and 'Miss'd' each other so much that I know all their names, so finally I hit on a scheme that I thought might clear the atmosphere. "I goes into 25 and, begging his pardori, asked If this wasn't Mr. At kins? H was. Well, Mr. Atkins was wanted at the telephone In the man ager's ofilce and 1 showed him tho way to the 'phone. Then I goes Into 26 and asks wasn't this Mr. Brown? 'That was his name,' he says, looking nt mo as If he"d like to bite my head off. Well, Mr. Brown was wanted at tho telephone at the cashier's desk, and I shows him tho way, which was in n different direction. I had it all fixed that there was a mistake, and that the gentlemen really wanted had already answored tho calls. While the two men are gone, I puts the num ber 25 on Hoom 2C, and vicey versey, so to speak. You see those curtains up there with tho numbers on? Well, It was an easy matter for me to do this, and when the men got back each goes Into the other man's place. I was tnklng some chances, but It cer tainly worked fine. "Of course it had to come out right away what I had done, and such hap py looking sets of peoplo I've never seen before. Thoy run In huro quite frequent now, all four of them together, and they always calls me 'Cupid.' There's one thing nbout It, though, that I never could quite make out, not being very good at figures, sir." "And what was that?" asked my wife and I in unison. "Well, you see," said the waiter, "Mr. Brown's check wus for J5 and Mr. Atkins' was for $7. Now, each nan paid the other man's check with a $10 bill, and ooth of them told me to keop tho change. Which one do you think lost by It, sir?" "I'm sure I don't know," I laughing ly replied, handing him a ten myenlf. "But go thou and do likewise." "Thank you, air," said the waiter And he did. ELIZABETH HUMPHREY. mOCOCOCOOOCOODOOOXXXDOOOCt I SATURDAY NIGHT TALKS Dv REV. I E. DAVISON () n i tt K UUHUU, VI. Q Sccxxxx)cxxxxxxxxxxicooccB KING AND HIS CABINET. International Bible Lesson for Jan, 16, 1910 (Matt. 4:12-25). Tho selection of a cabinet for presidents and kings Is a most important nnd serious undertak ing. Peculiar fit ness is necessary for executivo of ficers and royal counsellors. You cannot Imagine King Edwnrd go ing down to tho Liverpool docks to find a prime minister, or President Taft searching among the fishermen of Mnrblehead for a Secretary of State. Yet that Is precisely what tho King of rhls kingdom did. He deliberately passed by the wise, and Influential and mighty and took the mnjorlty of his earthly cabinet from the fishing boats of Galilee. Imagine tho scene. In the background the lake in tho grey morning, tho mist slowly rising, the deserted boats drawn up on tho shore. An old man, Zcbedeo, standing with a bewildered look upon his face, trying to Imngine what ho would do without his sons, nnd what they would do without him; nnd In the foreground five men walking along, four of them without the least Idea of where they were going or of what they were go ing to do. That Is the beginning of the king's cabinet, Could anything be more ridiculous? Doubtless other fishermen talked It over among them selves that day and said, "Simon Pet er and Andrew, James and John have left their nets and gone off after that man, Jesus of Nazareth, who Imagines himself a king. He has made them believe that he is the Jewish Messiah and that he is to set up the kingdom of heaven1 upon earth, and they have forsaken everything and gone off on a fool's errand after him. Well. They will soon realize their mistake, they will be back again. Fortunate for them Zebedee will keep tho fishing boat3 nnd tho tackle, that they may have something to fall back upon when they discover how they have been deluded." It is almost impossible for us to real ize what it meant in thoso days, to those people, when Christ made up his cabinet. Where was there ever such a beginning? How could any thing be more ridiculous In worldly eyes weakness in the Leader who had such dreams of universal domin ion, weakness in the followers to leave a paying business of which they knew so much to take up a stupendous task of which they knew absolutely nothing. And yet, as we look back upon that scene, we recognize It now as one of the grandest and most logical begin nings the world has ever seen. No wonder Paul says of It, "God hath chosen the foolish things of tho world to confound the wise, and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things that are mighty, that no flesh should glory In His presence." Tho trouble with almost all men who enter the service of Christ Is that they havo so much to unlearn before they can qualify as witnesses, they know so many things that aro not so, they aro so much In love with their own Ideas and opinions, they have such an overwhelming conviction of their own Importance, that they consciously taint the water of life with their own personalities, and hide their Master behind themselves. Thoy aro not satisfied to deliver Ills mes sago until they havo rewritten It and taken tho heart out of it with their explanations, which do not explain The king's cabinet was not troubled with any of these things. They were to be witnesses unto Him and they knew no moro than to Intelligently re peat Just what thoy had seen and heard. Thoy never attempted to argue n case, they took the witness box and unflinchingly told Just exact ly what they knew of Christ Thuy had nothing to unlearn, they wero not troubled with the intellectual, social, spiritual, moral, political, sectarian difficulties of the high-browed profes sors and worldings of their day. Their minds were like unsoilod paper on which tho King could wrlto his mes sages to Bult Himself. Thoy carried tho seed of tho kingdom in untainted vessels, nnd all they had to do was to 30W it far and wide. Thoy wore to bo merely tho echo of His voice without any attempt to originate Ideas or to speak their own messngo, Ab itiner ant preacherB whoso work would do mand physical stamina and oblivious ness of weather conditions, thoso brawny, sun-burned, rugged Gulllee fishermen were Ideal timber for the sills of tho spiritual tomple Christ was about to erect. The moro ono thinks of It, tho more ono comes to realize that when tho King formed His cnbl net Ho showed His Infinite wisdom In the selection of the men who were to carry on His work In tho development of His kingdom. No wonder the apos tle In describing the church long after ward said, "Wo are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ, Himself, be ing the chief corner atone." TAUGHT TO BE HONEST. nante Revealed the Method Used to Reform Him. A few years ago thero was a shifts less colored boy named IlanBom Blnke, who, after being caught In a number of potty delinquencies, was nt last sentenced to n short term in tho pcnltcntlnry, whero he waB sent to learn n trade. On tho day of his re turn home he met a friendly white ac quaintance, who asked: "Well, what did thoy put you at In prison, Itanso?" "Doy started In to mako an honest boy out'n mo, sail." "Thnt's good, Hnnsc, nnd I hopo thoy succeeded." "Dey did, sah." "And how did they tench you to bo honest?" "Dey done put mo in tho shoo shop, sah, nnllin' pasteboard ontor shoes fo' leather soles,' eah." "LADIES AND GENTS." "Have you many married salesla dies in this store?" "Yes, quite a few." "What do their husbands do for a living," "Er their wives are still sales ladies." Blind Justice. We meet our philosophical friend and observe that he Is smiling con tentedly. "What has gone wrong, now?" we ask. "Nothing has gone wrong," he ex plains. "Something went right Sprig gins owed Hennott ten thousand dol lars, and put his property In his wife's name so that Hennett couldn't col lect." "But that isn't anything unusual." "And last night Mrs. Sprigglns eloped with Hennett!" Fulfilling Instructions. The managing editor wheeled hip chair around and pushed a button In tho wall. The person wanted entered. "Here," said the editor, "are a num ber of directions from outsiders as the best way to run a newspaper. See that they are all carried out" And the ofilce-boy, gathering th6m all into a large waste basket, did so. Her Interest at Stake. She never imagined how stingy he waB until after the honeymoon was over and he said: "I'm going to do the best I can to make you happy. I'll give you half-a- dozen kisses every day and a dollar every week for pin-money." "I think, dear," she replied, "I'd be happier if you reversed that." Twas Ever Thus. The nights were growing colder. "Well, au revoir, old chap," said tho Front Gato. "I'm off for my vaca tion." "Mine is Just over," rejoined the Parlor Sofa with a sigh; "and now I'll havo to get busy again." Chicago News. Unusual. Woggs Anything unusual about the bank failure? Boggs. -Yes. Tho absconding cash ier wasn't a member of any church, was far from being a respected man In the community, and the directors had been suspicious of him for a long time. Taken at His Word. Duke Needsome Dear .Miss Gould erbltz Geraldlne for some time I have realized that I could not oxlst without you! Miss G. Dear me, Duke! I had no idea you were us hard up as that! Unofficial Orders. Cook And wasn't you told never to como begging around hero nagln? Weary William. Yes, but It was only the missus that told me. I havo nover been officially notified beforo. Teacher (to dull boy in mathema tics). You should bo ashamed of your self. Why, at your age George Wash ington was a surveyor. l'upll. Yes, sir; and at your ago ho was President of the United States. Same Dope. Sho Do you believe In love In a cottnge? Ho Do you believe In Santa Claus? Imperfect Philanthropy. Knlcker Did your father give you an auto? Bockor Yea, but he didn't endow It At a negro ball, Instead of "not transferable" on tho tickets, notice was posted over tho door: -"No gen tleman admitted unless be comes himself." AROU8INQ FAL8E HOPES. Tho rocent newspaper announce ment of tho discovery by two homeo pathic physicians of "Tho-rad-x," tho most powerful therapeutic agent In tho world," which like all other cure alls "will revolutionize tho practlco of surgery," has been mado tho butt of rldiculo in serious medical papers. It Is asserted that radium has hardly lived up to the promises which were originally held out After all, It must bo confessed thnt we are still much In the lark as to tho therapeutical value of radioactive Biibstances. Tho in discriminate publication of such "dis coveries" cannot but havo nn evil ef fect in so far as they arouso false hopes. FRANKLIN'S CONVERSION. Benjamin Franklin, premier printer nnd philosopher, when sixteen read Tom Tryon's vegetable vagary, be camo a convort nnd thought fishing murder, but a nosey curiosity showed him llttlo fish In the stomach of big fish. Benny said if big fish eat little ones, it seems not wrong to eat big fish; also philosophized how conveni ent was reason, for It provides a good excuse and a reason for anything you want to do. NOTE FOR WIVES. It is said that no man can tell a fib and keep his big too still. If the women will Induce their husbands to take off their shoes beforo they be gin to question them they can catch them in a falsehood every time. Europeans may soon develop into a race with eyes in the tops of their heads if Zeppelin keeps on flying around. Holland conducts its famous her ring fishery with a fleet of about 750 ships perhaps 45 of them steam boatsand only 10,000 men. Telephone Announcement This company is preparing to do extensive construction work in the Honesdale Exchange District which will greatly improve the service and enlarge tho system Patronize the Independent Telephone Company which reduced telephone rates, anddo not contract for any other service without conferring with our Contract Department Tel. No. 300. CONSOLIDATED TELEPHONE CO. of PENNSYLVANIA. Poster Building. I CASTOR ALCOHOL 3 PEIt CENT ANgclaWePrcparal'tonfor.Vs similal!n$ihefMandRcduli ling Ik S tomachs andBowcisor Promotes DitJeslionXfiff M ncss and Kestontalns ncitlsr : Opiuni.Moi-ph.iae norWiocraL Nor Narcotic, j etfha Sad" JlxSaaa-f Urai UN' CtgnBtd Sugar Rt'wS' Aperieci Remedy for Cmusflja- 11011 30UT 3lUUUUl.Uiain. Worms ,Cowulsious.reverisir ru?ss andLoss of Sleep. TacSimOc Signature oT NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. Roll of HONOR Attention Is called to tne STRENGTH of the Wayne County The FINANCIER of New York Citv has published n 110LL Oh HONOR of the 11,470 State Banks and Trust Companies of United Slates. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS HANK Stands 38th in the United States Stands 10th ,n Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $455,000.00 Total ASSETS, $2,733,000.00 Honesdalo. Pa., May 29 lflOS., KRAFT & CONGER HOIMESDALE, PA. Represent Reliable Comnanies ONLY Tor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use Over Thirty Years GASTORIA YM CNTAVII DOHHIIT, MIW YO CITY. GASTORIA Bears the Ay 9 Signature JA