T1IE CITIZEN. PKIDy, AUGUST 5, 1010. MME. TETEAZZEII. Consuming Hats Cautcs Soi; Bird to Refuto to Olr.g New York, Auk. 2. Arthur Ilanitm'. stein reported that Mine. Tetrazzmi has definitely Informed Andreas Pip.T thnt she will not return to slna Wit n the Chicago (Jrand Ojiern company ! cause of Gattl-Casazza'a conneeio1 with that organization. She Is si'ji bitter, it Is said. liecnusc the dlrivt . of the Metropolitan would not give lu" an opportunity to sing at Iu Sin' when he wns In control of the MIl.i. house. The manager of the Metropollt.-n company nlso refused to give her chance to sing In that orgnnlznti' -when she wns unknown. Her -lecisl' i not to join his forces means that s will not sing In grand opera in il. United States this year. ALL AROUND TITLE. Big Entry List For Individual Honoj Contest Chicago, Aug. 2. The all rouii championship of the Amateur Athletiv union, which will be held at Mnrsh.ul Held, Chicago, under the auspices o? the Chicago A. A., promises to be tin most Interesting competition of tbr kind that has ever been held. The eu try list that has been sent to President Brown of the Chicago A. A. is tnt largest ever received for an all round championship. So many entries havr been received that it will necessitate the track events being held In heats he following are the entrants: Ellery n. Clark, Boston A. A.; John J. Cody. Newton Y. M. C. A.; Fred Thomson Los Angeles, Cal.; Victor Kennard, Chi cago A. A.; A. Brnndage, Illinois; V Draper, Notre Dame; I. Byrd, Illinois. It. G. Haskins, Michigan; John II. Gil lis, Vancouver, B. C; II. W. Fltzpat rick, New Orleans; B. Gish, Seattle A. C; G. AV I'hllbrook, Cleveland A. Q.; AV. Crawley, Chicago university; E. B. Archibald, Toronto Y. M. O. A.; John Bredennis, Princeton; A. Menaul, Chi cago university. J MINOR FOR CONSULAR JOB. Two Obstacles Which He Hopes tc Overcome by Diplomacy. Brooklyn, Aug. 2. Ethan Allei Welnlierg, nineteen years old, has been notified of his npiMJintment as Unltiil States consular agent at Port dt Aubres, Morocco. The place pays $1,800 a year and $200 excuses. Being a minor, the young man can not nceept the appointment unless hlf parents sign the paiers, and Mrs Weinberg can't make up her mind to do that, at least at present. Besides, young Weluborg Is engaged to Miss Minerva Schechter, and a bachohu entering the consulate service cannot marry within four years. He hoie.s t overcome lKth obstacles before tin time for biking the job at the be ginning of next year. SPAIN'S AMBASSADOR DEPARTS Papal Secretary of State Hesitates to Recall Nuncio From Madrid. Home, Aug. 2. The Marquis Emlllo de OJedu, the Spanish ambassador to the Vatican, who has been recalled by his government In connection with the religious dispute. Is on his wuy to Madrid. The note of tho Spanish government recalling the marquis wuh delivered to the ixipuJ authorities yesterday by the messenger of the embassy Instead of by the councillor, as Is the diplo matic custom. In spite of tho fact that Cardinal Merry del Val, the pupal secretary of state, considers this as most offensive, ho hesitates to recall the nuncio at Mudrid. WOULD RESTORE HARMONY. Morris Wants New York Republican Leaders to Meet New York, Aug. 2. Bobert a Mor ris, at one Unto chairman of the Ito publican county committee, is Incur ring himself to get up a conference ot the loading Itepubllcuus of the stati with a view to restoring harmony lu the party, nis idea Is to havo tho con ference take place before tho meeting of the state committee to llx tho date of the state convention. Sultry ! c a: A FIRELES3 BROODER. How to Make This Valuable Aid to Chicken Raisers. Only during the Into spring and summer Is it advisable to attempt to brood chicks artificially without heat Some forty years ago the theory was first advanced that chicks could bo brooded artificially by confining the heat made by their llttlo bodies, but not until quite recently has this the ory received general attention. The assertion tins been mado that chicks could be brooded by this method out of doors during the most severe win ter weather, and some who havo tried It have been successful. The process has hardly left the experimental stage far enough, however, nnd the attempt to use It on a large scale should not be made until It has been tried on a small scale first. But the flreless brooder may bo employed for secondary use or for brooding In warm weather or In heat ed houses. It may be used ateo In emergency cases whero the hen leaves the brood a little too soon, when tho brooder becomes overcrowded, or when the brooder is wanted for an other flock. Tho principal object sought In building one of these brooders Is to mako all parts oasily accessible for cleaning nnd caring for the chicks; to confine tho heat as much as posslblo and yet have a good supply of puro air; to have the hover adjustable nnd padded with plenty of heat-holding cloth, so the chicks may have some thing to press their backs up against as they do when brooded by the hen. The brooder shown in the Illustra tion Is mode In four different parts, each of which may bo quickly and easily cleaned. The outside measure ment of the box la 2x2 1-2 feet Tho height is eight Inches. Tbe floor la mode to Jit up In the box so that the four walls fit tightly on the floor of the brooder house and not on the floor of the brooder, as tt may seem from the first glance at the illustra tion. Where the box 6lts on the floor of the brooder It is too oasUy dis placed. Four holes are made In the Flreless Brooder. " ' corners of the box an Inch apart and the top hole an Inch from the top lodge of tho walls. A peg fitted Into one of the holes In each corner holds the hover at any height sultedtothe age of the chicks. There areali3 four large holes In the walls of tho box, one In each corner an Inch or an inch and a half hi diameter for venti lation. These ventilators are made high enough so that tbe air muBt pass through tho cloth of tho hover before it can reach the chicks. In this way there Is a continuous In flow of puro oir without a draft Tin slides may be made to fit over tho ventilators so the supply of air may be regulated during cool pights. Tho borer shows two folds of cloth drooped down, but onotnor fold or two may be used with good rosults. Wool on flannel Is the best material to use. An old blanket is generally available. Tho top Is made to fit down tightly on the box and may be covered with tin or tarred folt or some good roof ing paper. Tlio brooder should not be usod out la tho open, but a good smooth roof is provided mare oa a roosting board than anything elso as tho chicks soon take to It Watch Your Turkey Hons. Loot spring ono of my turkey hons stolo her nest uiuksr a pile of lumber back of tho barn, writes H. B. Robert son. Another chose tho straw stock, and a very tame ono eot In a nost on tho henhouse floor. If yours elude you, look In out-of-the-way plares. TurkoyB like old boxes and barrels on thoir sides. Last spring I had a turkey sitter to occupy a sleigh box. Anything Is better than tall woods or grass, where dogs and other enomlos bo easily got thorn. A coop with a wide roof that pro vents rain from boating In Is valuable for hens with young poults. If tho "roof over Uio ooopa Is not good, in severe storms tho motlver will movo atKMt In the coop to get out of tho ruin, the stupid llttlo poulta will not follow, and soon will bo wot. chlllod and ready to dlo. All coops should be on high ground so ns to bo dry aa possible. Young turkeys ore vory tender and cannot stand to bo wet very much. Before beginning tho ubo of tho in cubator or brooder fox spring work, thorough cleaning and dlsinfootrng- is Important In tho Jong days of win ter an opportunity for this work la presented. gfaturday Qight yKn!lrc By Rev. F. E. DAVISON OIiVJ Rutland, Vt fOKK4KlMl-qq-l:Oi-0 THE KING REJECTING MEN. International Bible Lesson for Aug. 7, M0 (Matt. 19:1-2; 1326). Great professions Imply ability. Credentials presuppose performance. It Is no test of a perfect machine to keep the belt on the loose pulley. A horso that can trot in 2.10 is out of his class In a 2.40 rncc. When a steamer is guaranteed 20 knots an hour, the government will not accept It If on a trial trip It can only mako 18. Tall men can reach higher than short men, and should be expected to do so. It Is preposterous to apply the same rule to a G footer as to a man only 5 feet four. Men do not look for philosophers among the illiterate. The Strait Gate. A conspicuous example of this law Is to be seen In this lesson. Ordinary reformers heartily welcomo to their cause men of education, money, Influ ence, and commanding positions. Not so, Jesus Christ. He was so cauti ous and exacting as to seem nlmost oppressive. Ho made the gate strait and tho way narrow. A very "right eous" young man came to him with an eager inquiry, and He proposed a test to him which sent him awny sorrowful, tecause he could not ful fil it Why did He do that? Simply because of what tho young man claim ed. If he had really done what he claimed, tho test was nothing remark ablo in Its scope. Other people, since then have done it, and have not made n titho of his pretensions. A Living Decalogue. This young fellow claimed to be tho living embodiment of the Deca logue. He had absorbed the teaching of Sinai into his life and had kept the Ten Commandments from his youth up, to let him tell It Tho law was written on tables of stone, but here -was a table of flesh. How could Christ resist a man who could say that he had perfectly kept the Ten Commandments I According to his claims Christ and he were the only two persons since the world was cre ated who had ever done so. As a matter of fact the Lord was more ex acting with this young man required more of him than he did of the Publi can, tho adulteress and the thief. Any thing wrong about that Why shouldn't he? Aooordlng to his claim he was next to Christ Himself, let him do one -thing more that Christ had done, and he would be His equal. Other people brought nothing with them but sin, he brought the Ten Commandments without a wrinkle or a stain. And yet when tested on one single point, his pocketbook, he col lapsed. He wanted eternal life much, bttthe wanted pla money .more. His bank account was real, heaven was visionary. A wealthy disciple would have been to his taste, but a poor dis ciple had no attraction for him. After all self was the stronghold of the young man's life and when it came to a show down as to which had the greater hold on him, the command ments or the money, the money had it Only He who reads all hearts would have been able to see what the fatal lack was, but Christ put His finger on the sore at the first diag nosis. The Price of Success. No matter what the object of your ambition you must pay the price or miss the goal. It is true of every kingdom that Is worth having that tho way into it is strait and narrow. It is true of the kingdom of nrt How many there nre who would like to become great painters. How few realize their ambition. Artists are not born, they are made by strugglo ond quenchless zeal. The desire Is born, but he who wins the prize does bo through self-denial, through awk ward attempts, through tears of mor tification, through Jeers perhaps and eenseless mokory, through nbsoluto refusal to yield to disappointment, through pressing on while hundreds give up In despair and fall to enter In. The maaterpteoes of art are the transfigured sou la of tho artists. That Is tho way It is with the king dom of music. Who are tho men and women who sit on tho thrones of vocal and Instrumental music to-day? Are they tho dreamers who fondly Imag ine they liavo musical talent? They are the iieoplo who from childhood havo paid the price. They have giv en up all for It Thoy havo not dab bled In this and that they havo known but one thing, and by day and night, year in and year out they have beaten, beaten, beaten against tho door of music, until those portals havo swung open to their persistent nppcal. Ten thousand npproach the gate and ore not willing to pay the prtoo. That which costs you nothing usn ally is worth nothing. You valuo more highly thot which costs you moot Credentials do not count for much these dny; ability to do 1b the main thing. You may be boosted Into position by admiring friends, but you will b a misfit and will not bo ablo long to hold It, unless you nre com potent Not what you claim to be, but what you are Is tho test To profess ability is one thing: to de liver tho goods is sometimes quite nn other. Men who Imagine that fitness for heaven, consists only In puttying np a few cracks, and varnishing over a few dlseolomtlons nro us much mis taken as the rich young ruler, Evl dently something more than com mandment Is necessary If one would enter tho Kingdom of Heaven. Mosea may be a wise teacher, but Christ is life giver. FOR A kiwioaoooaoooaooaaoooGoot Theme: MAN, THE IMAGE OF GOD. 4 BY JUNIUS B. REMENSNYDER. Text And God said; Let us make man In our image, after our likeness. Genesis, I., 26. t- -1- -1- There are two theories of tho origin of man. One would bring him up from tho earth beneath, placing his genea logy with the worms.. The other, tho Biblical, brings him down from above. According to Genesis man was made In the divine "likeness." What are the marks of this "Image of God?" First the gift of reason. God Is a rational, thinking spirit And, In dis tinction from the lower creaturoa. He has stamped upon us this likeness of Himself. God has graven His mathe matical thoughts upon atoms and crystals and snowflakes and on stars and worlds, and w-e can read these thoughts and admire tbe wondrous picture He has painted in the vast gallery of nature because wo havo a faculty of reason akin to His own. The 'Image of God," again, consists in freedom. God Is free. He knows no law but His sovereign will. He does what He chooses to do. Nature is under the grip of law. Necessity holds It with unbending hand. The animals obey their Inevitable Instincts. But God has clothed man with this divine prerogative of free wilL He Is a sovereign. "His mind to him a kingdom Is." To Him pertains the power of choloo. He Is the architect of His own soul. He Is the fashioner of His own destiny. In the exercise of this perilous power he can raise himself to the angels or degrade Him- elf below the brutes. The "image of God" further appears m man's moral nature. As power the pagan deities, so righteousness and goodness characterize Jehovah. He Is the "Holy One of Israel," "Thou lovest righteousness," "Just and true are Tby ways." The seat of man's likeness to this divine quality is In conscience. To bo pure In heart to shun Injustice' and wrong, to cherish noble and un selfish ideals, to do good to fellow men, this likens one most of all to God, Jds Mokeri This unique truth should Imbue; man with a sense of his greatness. Ill should impel him to self-respect. Td stoop to the low and mean is to dd violence to his high nature and to commit sacrilege against God, whose image he wears. Only good and no ble ends are worthy of him. Again, it shows that we are fitted for divine fellowship. Man's thoughts can reach up and Gods though tscan come down and meet, because our na tures are akin. Hence we can have Becrot speech with God. Prayer Is justified. The whispers of our souls are the voices of a sea that beats on the shore of life, but of a sea that stretches away to shores where Is set the throne of God. We are taught respect for our fel low man. In every one, no matter how fallen, we should see vestiges of this divine lineage. Hence, too, Issues a sure hope ot Immortality. The supreme character istic of God Is that "He Hveth for ever." If we are mode in His Image wo cannot dlo. We have the Inbreath ing of an Indestructible life. Let no one then mar this "Image of God," but preserve Its pristine beau ty, and remember that He who made us in His likeness made us for Him self to serve not perishing, but tho noblest ends of being. In His Leading. God's leading Is not Intended to ex empt us from the duty of Initiation. Paul did not wait to bo shown, in some miraculous way. what his duty Was. He went straight forward In tho lino of tho great purpose o his life. fniKftnir God to arrest him or to divert him. Such Indications of duty as tho vision of the man of Macedonia wore exceptional. The normal course of tho nnontlo'8 life shows us a man mov ing forward stoadlly along tho llnd which his Judgment and conscience approve, believing, with all ms soui. ihnt hn was eolng In God'a way foii hhn, and oonlldont that God would! chock him or make his way plain u Hi naught he erred. To all who do thlHi God irtnlnly speaks, "I am the Lortl thy God which . . . leadeth by tho way that tliou shouldst go." Working and Preaching. In ono of the mission station in China two shoemakers worked to gother. Ono of them was a superior workman, and tlus otlier a good ox hortor. Tho first ngrtKx to do tho work in the shop, and lot tho othor give np half his timo to missionary toll, while he holiwd to sustain his family. One's day's work a week for every ono of tho Church members In America, estimating tho wagoe at only ono dollar per day, would amount to more than $500,000,000 aud support one million missionaries, which woutd bo ono for every ono thousand persons in foreign lands. American Church members, however, give for mission loss than an average of twenty-five cents n year, Hot. A. B. Simpson. Risen with Christ Risn with Christ means nothing thnn to be (load and burled with mm tha BOlMlfo abandoned, the Christ-Mfo rolUved. B. M. Herman. BUTTLE IN KANSAS Insurgents and Regulars In Primary Fight. LOOKS LIKE STUBBS VICTORY. Indications That Progressive Repub licans Will Defeat Two Stand Pat Congressmen Madison and Mur dock Are Not Opposed. Topekn, Kan., Aug. 2. The great battle between Republican insurgents and regulars is being hotly fought to day. The state wide primary election be ing held today marks the climax of n bitter factional struggle within the Rinks of the Republican party In this state. Tho Kansas congressmen came home from Washington u month ngo, nud all of them uxcent Murdock and Madison lined up with the regulars. Senator Curtis went out on tho stump with WagstnfT, and Senator Brlstow spoke from the sumo platform with Stubbs. Two ex-governors and a United States senator have traveled over the state pouring hot shot Into a Reput lican state administration. Governor Stubbs' managers declare that he will be renominated by 3,000 majority over Tom Wagstaff, the reg ular candidate. Manager Stich of tho Wagstaff com mittee claims the nomination of Wng staff by 15,000 majority and says he will carry six of the eight congres sional districts. The light is equnlly bitter between the regular nnd Insurgent candidates for congress. Anthony, regular, will defeat McNeal, Insurgent, in tho First. In the second Scott, a regular, appears to have the beet chance. In the Third Campbell, regular, is certain to win. In the Fourth Attorney General .Tack son will defeat Miller, regular. Calder head and Boeder, regulars In the Fifth and Sixth districts, have hard fights, and both may be leaten. Neither Mad ison nor Murdock, Insurgents, have op position. As it looks, Governor Stubbs will win and the Insurgents will defeat two stand pat congressmen. Biggest Grasshopper Harvest. Longmout Col., Aug. 2. J. O. V. Wise, a farmer, claims all records for a grasshopper harvest In three days he garnered 125 bushels of hoppers. He used oil to kill them. Wise says he will dry the grasshoppers and feed them to his chickens next winter. ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AVcgelaWePreparalion&rAs slrallating thcEl?OflamRcguI ting (lie Stomachs andDovtmof Promotes DigestionJChretM ncss and RestXontalns neither OpiuniJMorphiac nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. S2o ScaptofOUDcSSHOmiWEa. lsnfhn Seed" jtbtSama Hpgermh- , jatarionnttSm ItinaSttd- SMS. Anerfect Remedy for Conste leZ tj Hon , Sour Storach.Dtarrtoa Worms,ConTiisioiisjeTrisn- ncss andLoss OFoLEER lacSinrile Signature of NEW YORK. Guaranteed undo rtlw oJaj Exact Copy of Wrapper. First Dining Car. "Just forty years ago," said T. Cv Newton, a Chicago railroad man, "tho Chicago & Alton Railroad put on tho first dining car ever operated, on any railway train In the world. This was on the run between Chica go and St, Lou la. If that car could, bo exhibited now it would create uni versal merriment It had oilcloth table covops, tho seats were screwed to tho floor, and Its illumination de pended on candles. Think of the contrast between that primitive af fair of 1868 and the modern dining: car finished In aolid mahogany, with gorgeous furniture, and a menu a.s elaborato and cooking as dainty aa that supplied by any of tho foremost hotels of America. Verily, we havo boon 'going some' In tho four decades that havo gone by since tho Alton's first crude experiment" Baltimore American. Norwegian Wles Half Fare. Under a new Norwegian railway regulation, when husband and wlfo are traveling together the wife need only pay half price. Tho Idea may Blmply bo to encourage family life, on tho theory that b Norwegian who normally leaves his wife at home will be toraptcd take her along at re duced rates. It will, of course, bo necessary when taking a husband-and-wlfe ticket to display one's mar rlago certificate and make an affi davit that the lady is one's wlfo, In order to prevent collusion at the booking office between perfect strang ers. Kansas City Journal. A Knotty Question. In a close-woven rug, llko a Kir man, measuring a mere five feet by eight feet there are four hundred knots to the square Inch. As tho weaver's speed Is about three knots a minute four years of continuous labor would be required on such a rug. Skull of Hie Dinosaur. A restoration of the skull of a great horned dinosaur has Just been sot up for exhibition In Peabody Museum, Yale University. It la nearly nine feet long and about six feet broad, and is said to be tha largest skull of any prehistoric land animal. Ancient Pearls. As long ago as the thirteenth cen tury a Chinese named Ye-jlng-yan discovered a method of Inducing tho formation of pearls in tho Chines River mussels. The mussels wor gently opened and small pellets us ually of clay, inserted. Covering the Mirror. Covering the mirror when there la death in the family originated In tho superstition that goblins, sprites, elves or other uncanny creatures would crowd to the glass to look on. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought n Use Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TH OIMTAUR eOHMMT. NtWYOMCITV. KRAH AllIR MM HONESDALE, PA Rearesent Reliable Comoanies IQNLY Bears the Signature J$ ft . AV I IF For I N