rtm C1TIKKN, FltlDAY, FKIIRUAKY 11. 1010. WARNING TO FRUIT GROWERS. Crown Gall Is Warty Outgrowth or Ex crescence Upon tire Apple. Crown gall Is a torni applied to certain warty outgrow .lis or excres cences upon the apple, posr, peach, raspberry, etc., forming chiefly on tho parts below ground. On the applo these growths aro more apt to occur on grafted trees at the union of tho root nnd tho clon, but they may form nt any placo whore tho roots have been Injured In transplanting, etc. Experiments by tho department of agriculture show that crown gall Is caused by speclllc parasite. Every orchardlst should carofully iuspect all stock which ho purchases for setting. All trees showing evidence of crown gall should bo either returned to tho shipper or burned, and future orders placed with nurserymen - who can and will furnish trees free from disease. Under no condition should trees bo planted which show growths of this kind upon the roots, for not only will It result in an unthrifty and unprofit able tree, but It will also endanger other plants. Device for Husking Corn. The husking device invented by an Iowa man is sufficiently helpful to be Hook Catches the Husks, considered pretty Important, even if it doesn't eliminate manual labor. This device consists of an operating rod with a husking hook on the end and fitting In a tube which is attached to the upper arm Just below the shoul der. A strap goes around tho wrist, holding the hook firmly in place along the inside of the hand, and as tlia arm Is bent or extended the bar runs back and forth in the tube to give it the required length. Equipped In thla fashion, tho farmer or his men can each do double tho amount of husking that can be done by any man who has only two arms to depend on. Farm Notes. When packing apples do as you would be done by. A weed killed now means 100 fewer weeds next spring. Plow up the old strawberry bed if It is falling and start a new one. Store early dug potatoes in a cool, dry place. Do not put in the cellar. Allowing a potato to take a second growth spoils It for eating purposes. Clip grapes off with a pair of shears, Don't allow anyone to tear off the bunches. Mulched potatoes will not grow as badly as the unmulched-if wet weath er comes on. Plowing the orchard lata encour ages lato growth of wood which is apt to winterkill. Letting weeds go to seed means that you are laying up trouble for next year. Large Profits in Farming. The largo profits In farming in the west In the past havo been due to two causes: To tho appreciation in value In farm lands, and to extensive meth ods of farming rather than intensive. But now that land Is becoming more valuable, more intensive methods must be employed. Notwithstanding the fact that the farms of tho eastern states have been cultivated for 100 i years or more, the average yield an acre for tho principal -crop produced Is, In most cases, greater than in west ern states on land that has only been under cultivation a very few years. Cabbage Worms. Tho common cabbngo worm is among the best known of all garden pests, both ns a larvae and In the adult stage, when It becomes the com mon spotted, white cabbage butterfly. The young plants should be sprayed with arsenate of lad, 1 ounce to a gallon of water, and the foliage kept covered until they begin to head up well. Water heated to 130 degroes Fahrenheit will destroy all worms which It hits, without injury to the plants. The 8orrel Horse. There is no color of horse so In sensible to heat as the sorrel. There Is seldom any coat so silky or re sponds bo quickly to good care as the sorrel, and many horsemen claim there Is seldom any horse with such sound1 feet and limbs or possoHsfng the enduranco of the sorrel. To Guard Against Cut Worms. Tar paper placed around cabbage and tomato plants will keep off cut worms. Insert the paper In the ground, making a circle about I Inches in dlamotor and 3 inches deep. WHYS OF fljEJMPES In This Bird Family the Male Sits on the Nest and Hatches the Brood. Whother years nre bringing changes In the ways of tho birds or their hnblts aro bettor known nnd more carofully observed from year to yoar there Is a growing, frequency In the reports of wanderings from accustom ed routes of travel. The northern phnlaropes. familiar nlong tho Cana dian coast In tholr migration to and from their remote breeding grounds, do not often wandor Inland. But this season the decoptlve expanso of tho great lakes and tho chnrms of the Humber valley brought a straggler by the overland route. The phalnropes are peculiar In many ways. They aro ploverlike birds, run ning along tho shore or Rtandlug on masses of woods gathering a supply of minute Insects. But Instead of the slender feet of the plover and sand plpors they have lobod feet that rend er thorn expert swimmers. They seem almost ridiculously small and Insigni ficant when swimming courageously over tho waves In a breaking surf. In domestic affairs tho phalarope3 havo adopted the most startling of modern Innovations, and if they ever establish political organizations the chief question will be as to the wisdom or otherwise of extending tho fran chise to males. The female is the larger, and In summer wears a gay costume of black, white and buff, with a reddish brown gorget. In this she sports ibout on the shore of her arctic summer resort, whllo her insignificant partner, in sombre plumage, sits on the nest, hatches out tho brood and attends faithfully to the duties of his appoint ed sphere. Having the more impor tant duties to discharge, he is natur ally less consequential than his gay and proudly satisfied partner. Some day there may be a suffragette move ment among the male phalaropos, but so far they have been content to do their duty as they are directed by tho heads of their respective households. When the period of domestic life Is over they venture almost to assert themselves and assume a place in the mixed Hocks. The heads of the sev eral households have then left off their way plumage and the natural dispar ity is not so apparent. On the south ward journey there may be a passing recognition of something approaching equality, for travel and contact with strange habits and unfamiliar views of life may have its effect, even in the lofty night flights and the days of loitering recuperation. EARLY GRECIAN COINAGE. Mark on Gold Ingots to Guarantee Weight and Purity. The Invention of coinage is duo to tho Greeks, most probably to the bankers of Halicarnassos and adja cent Asia Minor Greek colonies, who toward the end of the eighth century B. C. began stamping the small gold and electron ingots which passed through their hands as currency with a mark of some sort Intended to guar antee the weight and purity of the metal; such Ingots very soon assumed a round and more regular shapo, which we find already In old silver coius from Aegina, nearly contempo rary with Asia Minor "beans." Curious to say, none of the sur rounding peoples with whom the Asia tic and European Greeks were in con stant communication, political or com mercial, took up the wondorful Inven tion which at present seems to us of such obvious necessity that we scarce ly realize how the civilized world of old could have got on without it. Ever-Busy Woman. A newspaper writer, sympathizing with women because there is no long er any cradle to rock, or hardlv a baby to care for, no home schoo" uc necessary in the presence of the mod ern kindergarten, no sewing to do i this ready-made age, little how work In this day of flats and su' s and restaurants and prepared fonii . asln with concern: What are we ,.o lng to do with the woman out o a Job? Let him put that question f to face to his woman acqualntar.- and dollars to doughnuts he will 'mi them all so busy trying to keep with their engagements that ti v won't have time to answer his foo 1 ;.i questions. A Plea for a Real Home. There Is no subject of greater portanco than thnt of home and b o life. Almost everything of Inte ;t to tho individual, to the nation -"! to the world Is bound up in home ' . If the home life of a nation Is v'c n or not what it should be, the nr.n can never rise to an exalted position. Home to many people Is simr'v a place where they eat and sleep. 15' e should be a place where the fu 'r, mother and children can enjoy them selves better than any other pis o on earth. The attractive featurp of most homes Is that there la no 'or mallty, no stiffness, no forms of 'I quette to Interefpre with comfort. Woman's Life. The Purposeless Man. A man without a purpose In Ufa is like a dog with no tall to wag Shr Expected as Much. "I never thought she would do ne such a mean turn," said Mrs. Je"or son Judd, "but then it was Just exact' ly what I expected."- Kansas t':y Times. A Poor Way. It Isn't llkoly that the Lord ever intended to have preachers try to win people to his side by being disagreeable. UNCLE JEDEDIAH'S DOG. Painful Silence Followed the Owner's Tale About Him. "No," snld Uncle Jedcdlah, reflec tively, us ho leaned back against the sugar-barrel at the postofTtce, "I don't suppose anybody'd believe it, but that there dogg of mine, Andy Jnckson, hns been run over by thutty-two orto mubbles since the bcglnnln' o' this yerc season. On the Fourth o' July three red honkers from up l'ortlnnd way come n-slzzlln' along tho pike at n forty-mllc-an-hour gait, whllo Andy Jackson laid asleep In the mlddlo o' the 'road. Every blessed ono of 'em Jounced over him , nnd b' Gosh! I thought he wns a goner sure enough; but, after the last ono had passed over him, ho opened ono eyo and be gun scratchln' Ills left ear with his off hind leg, llko he thought thoro'd been a fly or two buzzln around, and then he gapped a bit and turned over and went to sleep ng'in. A week later another feller come n-hlkin' through on a little pink gas-buggy with a Noo Jersey number tagged on to his hind wheels, and that old dogg stood square in the track of It just as if it warn't any moren'n so much fluff. 1 never expected to see the pore antmlle alive ng'ln, nnd I turned my head th' other way, drcadln' the spoktlkle I felt shore he'd been turned Into, but by Jlmlny! a half an hour later I found him a-settln' on that there counter Jest behind the sugar-barrlll catchln' ilies. It's been the same all along. Car after car has run over him, and he's got so now when he hears ono comin' he runs out o' the store llko mad and lies down before it, as much as to say that he likrd bcln' run over." "Well, that's mighty funny," said the stranger In town. "How do you account for It, sir?" "Wa-al, I dun'no'," said Uncle Jede diah; "but I guess his bark is so thick they can't break through to no vital part." A painful silence followed in which the stranger Joined, looking sternly meanwhile out of the door. "Cnn I sell ye a muzzle?" asked Uncle Jedediah. after a while. "What for?" asked the stranger, with a frown. "The safety of the public," replied the old man "I have reason to be lieve, young man, that there be times when you bite." More Than Five Feet. A certain newly-rich man had built himself a fine house. He thought it well to have a library, and went down to a book-store, where he ordered some books. "What kind of books?" asked the clerk. "Why, books," replied the man. "Books, you know; reading-books." The books came and were installed in the library. Soon after a friend came up to look over the place. "Here," said the man, "i3 my li brary. Hero is where I love to get with a book and a pipe, and forget the outside world." The friend was somewhat of a book shade. He took down a book, looked at It, and put it back; took down an other, looked at that, and put it back, and repeated the process several times. Then he asked: "John, where did you get these hooks?" "Oh, replied John, "I picked them up here and there. Whenever I found one I liked I bought it. It has been the work of many years." "But Isn't It strange that you should have bought six hundred copies of McGuffey's Fifth Reader?" Washing ton Stnr. SLIPPED OUT. "Snarely came near being engaged once." "How so?" "Tho night he was getting ready to go and ask the girl, a fellow enmo along nnd nsked him to go bobbing for eels." Little Willie Knew. Little Wllllo, the son of a German town woman, was playing ono day with the girl next door, when tho lat ter exclaimed: "Don't you hear your mother call ing you? That's three times she's done so! Aren't you going In?" "Not yet," responded Wllllo lraper turably. "Won't she whip you?" "Naw!" exclaimed Willie in diB gust "She ain't goin' to whip no body! She's got company. So, when I go in, she'll Just sny: 'The poor little niau has been so deaf since he'd had tho measles!' " Tricks In All Trades. Strangor, "Zum Donnerwetter, now you havo cut my chin a second tlmo! If you can't shave better than that you will lose all your customers pret ty quick." Barber's Apprentice. ."Not at alH I am not allowed to shave tho regular customers yet, I only shave strangers!" fjort 6evmong FOR A 30QOOOOOOOOUCOOOOOQOOQOI Themo: PARADISE LOST. BY REV. A. W. SNYDER. Text: So he drove out tho man; and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden Cherublms, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life. Genesis, III., 24. The meaning Is that, as for our first parents so for us, tho Almighty has set certain meets nnd bounds, and that within these wo will find prosper ity and peace, and, furthermore that in overstepping tho sacred limits ap pointed for us to walk in wo will find ourselves outside tho Eden that God made; .yes, and often kept out of it by a flaming sword which turns "every way, to keop the way of tho treo of life." In innumerable ways wo see that It is so. Thus it Is a beneficent provi sion that the parent should provldo for tho child and bring him up "in tho nurture and admonition of tho Lord." In conformity with this law wo find peace and satisfaction of soul. Hut let a man not bo content with a rea sonable competence for him and for his children and thore Is danger of his becoming nt last a mero money maker and of finally finding that a flaming sword Is keeping him out of the Eden of a happy homo and hearth stone. Falling more and more under the mastery of tho money mania, the man becomes essentially a miser that Is a misor-ablo man who has turn ed to his hurt that which should havo been for his good. Or consider tho case of an ordinary young man who, in a position of trust, is plodding along at hard work nnd small pay. He rends of millions mndo In a day and the tempter tolls him to iroke "a dash" for a fortune, ifc) thinks ho can soon replnco tho money taken to speculate with and no one will ever know it. But his venture turns out disastrously and the embez zler becomes a fugitive or n prisoner, inrl then finds that a flaming sword which turns every way keeps him out of the Eden of an honorable place airong men. Supposo that, by some rare oppor tunity, a man suddenly gains a fo--tune in a day, and that, too. with no loss of honor or self-respect. But. 3von so, he has lost that which no man can afford to loso; that discipline of patience and proof of principle thnt would have come to him in the staid and sober process of a regular and systematic work In the world. Alas, of how many it may bo said, ns it wns of Adam: "So ho drove out the man; nnd ho placed at tho east of the garden of Eden Cheru blms, and a flaming sword which turn ed every way, to keep the way of tho tree of life." The Enlarging Vision. The grandeur of the Christian life consiBtB In the ever enlarging vision of truth which It affords to all true disciples of the Master. Jesus 13 a teacher as well as a Saviour, nnd all who do his will are continually learn ing now wonders of truth nnd grace. It is a blessed thought that they who follow on to know the Lord shall know him over hotter and better. Jesus said of himself, "I am tho Way, tho Truth and the Life." Christ Is thus our way to the truth, which in storm becomes a stay and Instrument of life. Crucify the Flesh. Turn wholly from yoursolf and glvo up yourself wholly to God with the30 words: "O my God, with all tho strength of my soul, assisted by Thy grace, I resolve to roslst and dony all my own will, earthly tempers, selfish views and Inclinations, everything that the spirit of the world and fallen nature prompt me to." This must be the daily, tho hourly exerclso of your mind till it Is wrought Into your very nature, and you fool yourself as habi tually turned from your own will and earthly desires as you aro from steal ing and murder. Wm. Law. Servants of Christ. Profitable or unprofitable? is what every servant of tho Lord la called to ask concerning himself. What the Lord requires 1b faithfulness, what he rewards la fidelity. It is not original or fundamentally a question of ono talent, or of five talents, or of ten tal ents, iut of good nnd efficient uso of tho powers one possesses, be they 6mu.ll or large. After n long tlmo the Lord of the servants reckonoth them. The period of probation ends at last. For that final account-giving now is our time for preparation. Harmony. There would not be bo many di vorced people In America if they had learned patiently to put up with each other's faults. Harmony la tho thing that makes heaven here as well as hereafter. Something to Go for. Men do go to church, and in large numbers, and with sympathetic soul, when you give them something to go for, something that satisfies their highest intellects, their spiritual as pirations and needs. Household Remedies. Under tho heading "Parts of Living Creatures" Culpoper lnid down tho fol lowing Tho brain of a haro being roasted helps tremblings and prevents hair falling off. The head of a coal-black vnt being burnt to ashes In a new pot and some of the nshes blown Into the eyes cures blindness. Tho head of a young kite treated tho same and u dram taken every morning cures the gout. Crabs' eyes aro good, and the lungs of u fox dried strengthen tho lungs. Later ho observed that "the skull of a man that was never burled, beat en to powder nnd given Inwardly, helps palsy, and tho small trlangul-ir bone Sri the skull absolutely cures fall ing sickness so that It will never comu again." Among tho household remedies that one should always have by ono Cul peper mentioned flakes of brass, salt and brimstone burnt to ashes, young swallows, hedgehogs, frogs, toads and mice burnt In a vessel, thin Hakes of lead with sulphur, the fresh lungs of a fox dried, and many other savory matters. No Blessings of Grief. Prophet nnd poet and priest have alwnys made stock talk of the chas tening and beneflcinl effects of sorrow and grief, which is utterly and bitter ly contrary to the experience of the modern experienced practitioners of medicine, alienists nnd directors of in stitutions for the Insane. Deep grief in moderns Is a most" pernicious emo tion which Is now drowned out ns quickly as possible. Perhaps modern man differs greatly In nervous struc ture from his rugged, sound, quiet, sol emn, sleepy ancestors. Anyhow, the old truths of the blessings of grief no longer maintain. Blessed Is the man who sorrows, If that man be strong; true he mny sorrow, but he will not sorrow long, for some strong-minded men can in n few hours or days cast away n grief that would haunt a weak ling into the grave. ALCOHOL 3 PEK CENT AVegetabterYeparationlbrAs similal in the FootJanJRedula lingUic Stomachs aMBowlsof Promotes Di$estionGiterftf ncss and Rest.Contalns neitisr OpiumMorphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC. Inz4a Seed Jlx.Scaa wm Kkitaftea llimr. Aperfect Remedy for Consfipa- uon . sour aiomani, u iu 1 u Em VYorms,lmmilsions.rcwrisff ncss andLOSS OF bLEEK Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. I Telephone Announcement This company is preparing to do extensive construction work in tho Honesdale Exchange District which will greatly improve tho 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. Foster Building:. Roll of HONOR Attention is cat a to tne STRENGTH, of tho Wayne County The FINANCIER of New York City hns published a ROLL Or HONOR of the 11,470 State Ranks and Trust Companies of United States. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS HANK Stands 38th in the United States Stands 10th ,11 Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $455,000.00 Total ASSETS, $2,r33,000.00 Honesdale, Pa.. May 29. 190S For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Over Thirty Years ASTORIA THE CKNTAUR COMPANY. ncWVONKCITT. KRAFT & CONGER IT MM HONESDALE, PA. Represent Reliable Companies ONLY Bears the 9 Signature A3 X Use T For