nis Dewar tiie Alale mt ;Isee beyond the distant hills a high and! i — TON EN RRA ge A PERT RET TY A SSRI TAT TR ESE TIERS AT ™ Bellefonte, Pa, November 2i, 1890. [For the Warcumax.] LEGENDS OF THE BALD EAGLE. (Of the past and present Century.) BY J. 8. BARNEART. In years agone near Milesburg, on the stream just by its side, Brave Logan, the Cayuga Chief, would now and then abide; There's Logan's Gap, and Logan's Branch ; the name is always there, And whether-white man's friend or foe, Logan was every where. 1 do not mean the Mingo Chiaf—wanx friend-- revengefu), too, But he who told the traitors plot John Weston had in view, From east to west, from hill te dale, he bore & friendly:trace, But sleeps the sleep of death elong the Chick- a-la-ca-moose. Of Shaney John not much is known: he was the white man’s friend, Who built his. wigwam in the vale down .yon- der to defend. He ends his days in quiet life; the brave he sinks to rest, And sleeps the sleep of death mesr by. the old Bald Eagle's nest. Job Chillaway. another brave, would smoke his pipe of peace. Deliver wampum on a string, that war might ever cease ; He roamed our valleys here and there, and every where around, Until his spirit light went out fer ether hunt ing grounds. All honor to these worthy braves who .stayed the crimson figed, And saved our helpless kindred from a -savage thirst. for bloed ; There's something which I seem to.sce and which my love for lore Would rescue from receding years, as.time. is passing o'er. Then eome with me, eseend the hill toretro- spect the view, And from old Muney’s rugged height I'llctell more things to yen, Will tell you of the savages with kerrid tragic yell, Resoundinglike.a. revel in a carnival of hell. I'm thinking of those voices which are shouting over there, Where the sound is raising upward on the stillness of the air ; I see fantastic figures gesticulating erime, And I hear the.warhoop @choes dowa the «¢or- rodors afitime. Near Milesburg in the valley fair nature seems to smile , And there a savage aspect is arrayed in .gpan file, The warriors have weapong, some have toma- hawks and knife, And the running of the; gauntlet means the: cause of noise and strife. . And thus a worthy chieftain spake as hea, vietim led : “The red mar’s bleed cries from the grewand’ thy guilty bands have shed, Your lite must pay.the forfeit, for your erimes’ has broke the law ; Run now between yon files you see; your punishment for cause.” The savage sped through strokes and blows, ! with fearful speed he ran— ! At_length a brave struck down a blow that | killed the wretched man. | This is the way their.cede of Jaws in blood is satisfied, | And, down there near Bald Eagle's nest the A culprit savage died. * * *® E 3 ® #* EJ # I see that eagle build its nestupen an island tree, There rear 1ts young and sear away, proud em” hlem of the free! Whence from its eyrie eame the name to val- ley and to stream, Which sparkles in the sunlight down among the grassy green. Oh! the grandure of yon Eden—how sublime it seems to be, As waters of Bald Eagle ereek flow .dewnward to the sea, Through wossy banks and shady neoks—no tongue can ever tell The sweetness of the music that has. sijrred my hegrt so well. Now see the fields and hamlets, ard the, husy life of yore, Soin my dreams of other days I viewed them o’er and o'er; And then I turged in pensive moed to view the distant hills, «Where water gurgles from their base which form the rigpling rills. i rounded pegk, ; Where falling leaves of autumn in a theusand; voices speak; i They fill the heantyrith sadness asl linger! long and lone, Enchanted by the jnusic of the mountain zephyr’s moan. 1 i The murmur of the cadence with the rippling | .of the streams, Send something down igto the soul whic | thrills the poet’s digams; It is the monitor of ehapge, in story I will | trace, ] That paints that subject op the heart which | time cannot efface. And while I'm looking backyard let me tell you somethin g more; Isee the log heaps smoking gnd the brush light up the shore, And then the grand old sycamares and oaks sway ir the breeze, And fall before a father’s hand remeving such as these. I see the early pioneer’s strong arm and fer- vent toil, Go forth to brave the storms of life wpon the virgin soil ; I see the forest disappear and then with nerve : and brain, There is built up a cabin home down yonder on the plain. Long years, and years, and years ago, I hardly know just when, In seventeen ninety-five or eight, perhaps it was not then, A flitting from the valley starts from out the cabin’s door, While hearts behind were weeping in the wilderness of yore. James had just wedded Nancy, they had packed up all their goods, On two pack saddle (horses, meant fo travel through the woods, They had no roads to follow, but to guide them was a trail, On which the Indians traveled from the lakes 1 have often heard the legend, but to you it may be new— The twain moved on in silence up the Alle: gheny’s view, They turned to takea last fond look upon the hills so blue— Now tell me gentle reader would these things have melted you? It was the. sister leaving home, out of the wooddy dell, Two hundred miles to seek a home, and with a husband dwell; Of other sisters left behind--one’s name was Isabel, And if you only listen I have something more to tell. Then Mary, too, in ater years, appeared with smiling face, That sent a charm af sweet content into her dwelling place ; Her raven hair and sparkling eyes may be remembered still, # For oft she pushed the old canoe across the croek at will Now I see within the valley of my legendary lore, Another habitation with its smoke ascending o'er, New neighbors settled in there trom the Sus- quehanna vale, They brought strong hands and muscle, and had no such word as fail. (Henry loved the blue-eyed beauty—Jacob, the raven hair, And the brothers! mazried sisters in the val- ley over there, Their homes were full of friendship and their hearts were full of love, And a halo dwelt within them from the angels home above. Haw fondly I remember I would tell you if I could, But effort fails me trying to do less than half I should; Yes, the blue and passed away, In hope of that new springtime when life is bright and gay Lam thinking now of Mery, I saw her last in tears, At her dear old home to meet again, perhaps in coming years; She put her arms about my neck, gave me a mother’s kiss, And then invoked God’s blessing for a better world than this. yed maiden wedded ; she lived #* = # # # & 3 # # # I see the houses here .and there with clap- baards for the roof, All chunked and daubed with straw and mud against the winter proof, And from my view I note the place, the smoke is curling round, Where kindred of the old time days could here and there be found ; J seem to see an aged man with gun and pow- .der.born, A hunting something in the woods, long ’ere that I was born; It is John Holt, the pioneer, a wandering all about, To shoot the wild deer, if he could, as he might spy them out. And then I see the fleeing deer, down there from where they stood, With dogs in hot pursuit of chase to catch them, if they could, With fearful leaps from off .the shore one bounded strong and quick, And tried to swim the swollen flood across the Bald Eagle Creek. Then from the cabin door there ran into the fens and bogs, “Aunt Jane,” who caught the fugitive, a swim- ming from the dogs, {| A hunter's knife was soon at hand, a brother's heart was thrilled, As “Uncle Tom” sprang out to help and quick the. deer he killed. And so it was from out the reach of dark fore- boding fears, The God who fed Elijah fed the early pioneers; Children became a blessing, to lahor all were reared, Where loom and oldtime spinning wheél in every home appeared ; With cheerful hearts and willing hands each hepeful, good and true, Is something of the old time ways the people had to.do; The woodman}in the forest. and his axe within the vales, Resounds and echoes back to.me how time is telling tales. Isee the springtime blossoins, and winters pass away, And the hopeful age af manhood going down in life’s‘decay, Where I oft have been admonished, and have seen life’s ebbing tide Move over, gently onward, to the Jordan's other side. I hear the German aeeents ringing now npon my ears, As I said good by, grandfather, in the days of other years. Yow my head is silvered over, and my heart is full of pain, JForthe days I so remember will no mare re- turn again. The past is in the present, and the future yet to be; Js.wmhere the life’s elysium lies beyond tle crystal sea; The oldtime joys and sorrows, now forever Jhuashed and still, Repose in silent slumber ‘on yon éemeteny hill. | I look upon the valley, and I see the village green, Where scpiptured marble marks the end of lifels.gmbitious dream ; Now when aur dream is over, lay me some- where down to rest, To rise from out that slumber in the glory of the blest. He Hap A WIDE MARGIN POR GRA- TITUDE.—Of the late Bishop Ames the following anecdote is told : While pre- siding over a eertain conference a member began a tirade against the universities and education, thanking God that he had never been corrupted by contact with a college. After pro- ceeding thus for some minutes the Bish- op interrupted him with & question, ‘Do I understand that the brother thanks God for his ignorance ?”’ “Well, yes,” was the answer; ‘you can put it that way, if you want. “Well, all I have to | say,’ said the bishop, in his sweet music- al tone—%all I have to say is that the brother has a good deal to thank God or.” ——In China the man who lives near- est the scene of a murder is accused of the crime, and he must prove his inno- cence or stand the punishment. Con- sequently if he is innocent he rattles around pretty lively to discover the unto the vale, criminal, DOROTHY’S ROMANCE. Dorothy Field looked very sweet and demure as, with her father, old Squire hung brother Andrew, she walked to church one Sunday morning forty years. ago. The litle village of Framleigh was always quiet, yet on Sunday morn- ings it seemed even more peaceful than usual. Dorothy was sometimes a lit- tle oppressed by the calm, and wished it would not make itself quite so ob- structive. But on this May morning no such rebellious thoughts were in her mind, for she entered into the gen- tly beguiling mood of nature, and her heart was full of sunshine. As they neared the rather stately- looking brick church littie groups were seen coming from all directions. For every one in Framleigh went to church. Althongh the congregation was not large, it was, on the whole, a well-to- do-one, for the inhabitants of this little village, most of whom were decended from a few aristocratic families, prided themselves on this fact and kept up their good name. As Dorothy from her place in the choir looked over the familiar faces which showed themselves over the high, straight pews, her attention was caught by an unfamiliar face in Dea- con Gray's pew. Surely, never before had she seen this tall, elegant young man, with the pleasant eyes and sunny bair. And as she looked from him to her good-natured, awkward brother, 1t seemed to her that Andrew’s coat nev- er fit so badly. Occasionally, during the service, she glanced demurely over the hymn book | at the new face beside the staid old deacon,and while she was singing in her sweet soprano voice, ‘Sweet fields be- yond the swelling flood,” she looked over toward the deacon’s pew, to see it.the new occupant was singing, and finding his dark eyes resting on her with a calm, interested gaze, this sim- ple country girl blushed and nearly lost her place. At the various dinner tables in Framleigh that day this young man was spoken of with more or less inter- est. It became gererally known that he was a cousin of the deacon’s wife, and had been studing av the medical school in Cambridge, but was obliged to give his eyes a rest. The blooming damsels of Framleigh, who outnumbered the young men of the village, were especially interested in the stranger. Rebecca Thompson, a good-natured, red-cheeked girl, who was hospitably inclined, was much grieved that it was too late in the sea- son to have a sugar party, that she might invite Mr. Deane, but finally de- cided to content herself with a ‘“gath- ering,” which meant a social meeting of the swains and maidens of Fram- leigh, in the large old parlor, where they played “fox and geese’ or ‘around the chimney,” and ate apples and cake or popped corn. The gath ering would break up at 10 o'clock, when those of the youths who were not too bashful would ask their favorite Mehitables or Abigails if they might see them home. This kind of gaiety was quite ngw to the young Harvard student, and, al- though he went in a rather superior mood, thinking to be mildly amused by the harmless gambols of these country people, yet he felt a thrill of interest as he wondered if he should see the sweet-faced girl who had sung in the choir on Sunday. And when he entered the parlor almost the first per- son he saw was Dorothy, looking very charming and pensive mn a dainty fig- ure brocade dress which had belonged to her mother. Rebecca, the hostess, ushered him in and introducee him to every one in the room. Then Robert did something whica quite shocked the feelings of Framleigh society. On one side of the room ail the maidens were sitting, while on the opposite were all the young men ; looking awkward enough in the straight backed chairs and dress- ed in their best clothes. For this was the way in which the guests were al- ways arranged at the “gatherings’’ un- til the games began. But Robert, with an easy, graceful manner, took a seat on the girls’ side of the room, be- tween Dorothy and little Ruth Hawkes, and began to talk to them as it very much at ease—a proceeding which «caused a surprised flutter on one side of ithe room and struck consternation on the other. But when they began to play games the chilly air of reserve which seemed to encircle the company was changed to one of merry good humor. From the moment whe Dorotby’s clear, shy .eyes looked into his, as she took the cat’s.wradle off his hands, Robert had a feeling of exhilaration, and knew that he should enjoy himself. Aud when he left Dorothy at her own door he felt very joyful as he walked home to the deacon’s, and it seemed to him that there was nothing more charming than a country village in May. Dorothy eame down to breakfast next morning looking very trim and domestic in a light print gown, and when Andrew spoke in a joking mav- ner about her new city beau she blush- ed ap to the little curls on her forehead and looked rather conscious. That afternoon she thought she would go into the woods to see if she could find some late arbutus. When she reached the top of the hill she found a beautiful bed of May flowers which had come out late, as they were under a pine tree which had kept off the sun. As she was bending over the flowers, pulling off the dead leaves which covered them, she heard a deep voice humming : “Qh, do you remember swect A ice, Ben Bolt? Sweet Alice, whose hair was so brown ?” Looking up, she saw Robert Deane not very far from her. Just at that momene he saw her and came toward her. So together they gzathered the arbutus, and when Robert said that picking Mayflowers seemed to be the appropriate thing in the world for her to do, she was so like them, she turned pinker than the pinkest of flowers in her hand. And then he added, “1 "neyer knew how beautiful the arbutus Field, and her tall, rather loosely-. was before.” After they had gathered all the blossoms under the pine tree, Robert wanted to go higher on the mountain to see if there were not some flowers there. So they did not get home till supper time, and Dorothy, who was usaall very capable about the house, seemed rather abstracted that evening. As the days weat on Robert Deane still stayed at Framleigh. The simple old deacor, in speaking to the minister about him, said: “It does seem mighty queer avout Cousin Robert's eyes. The doctors told him he wouldn't need to rest them for more than a week or so, and here he isn’t able to go back to Cambridge yet; but he does seem mighty contented here.” May chang: ed to June, and still he stayed. He acquired a great interest in walking, and he and Dorothy used to take long ‘rambles on the moantains or by the | He told her about | his past life, his hopes and ambitions, quiet little river. and to this country girl, who had no interest outside of the little village, it seemed as if a new world had opened. One morning when she was working in the kitchen, the old knocker went in such a vigorous way that she hur- ried to the door with her apron on. She found Robert Deane there, looking pale and anxious. She had hardly time to say “Good morning’ before he began: I have just had a letter say- ing my mother is very sick. I must go home. Cousin Nathaniel is going to drive me to Dayton, and Iam go- ing right on. Buti 1 couldn’t go without seeing you. May I write to you, Dorothy?” Doro- thy very softly and blushing told him how sorry she was that his mother was sick, and that he might write to her if he wanted to. Then, with an earnest, lingering look and then, a gen- tle pressure of the hand, he was gone, leaving Dorothy in a aery bewildered state of mind. She stayed mn the house for several days, and then she began to go to the postoffice. At first she asked the good old postmaster if there was any mail, demurely, with a happy conscious lit- tle blush. Then, as the days went on, and no letter came, she would ask with an anxious nervous manner. Poor lit- tle Dorothy ! Although she was faith- ful in her visits to the postoffice, she received no letter, and after a while all the pink went out of her face and it grew pale and had a pathetic expres sion. She always cherished a faithful hope that she should hear from Robert, and although one of the most well-to- do young men of Framleigh was urgent in his proposals of marriage, and the squire would gladly have welcomed him as a son-in-law, she told them it could never be. It was a bright June morning. Miss Dorothy, now a nice old lady of 60, was picking roses off the large old cin- namon rose bush at her back door. Al- though her face was not so youthful looking as it was that afternoon when she gathered Mayflowers with Robert Deane forty years before, yet it was still very attractive, with its clear, kind eyes, its sweet mouth and just a trace of the roses that used to bloom in her cheeks. Perhaps it was partly her kindly face chat made all the children ot .Framieigh love Miss Dorothy— Aunt Dorothy, as they called her—and no real aunt ever had more regard and love than she had. Her life was not an unhappy, lonely one, for it was so full of kindness and blessing to others that she was happy and content. A few years after Robert Deane had gone from Framleigh she had heard that he had married a rich Boston girl. Only about a year after she had read of his death, While practicing at the hospital he had taken some con- tagious disease. That was all she knew about him. Although at first her heart had been bitter toward Rob- ert, yet as time, went on, her feelings had softened, and she thought of him in a fond, tender way as one she had loved. This morning as she was picking the roses, little Tom Chapin, one of her most devoted cavaliers, came out of the back door and said, “I left a letter on the table in the sitting room for you, Aunt Dorothy.” “Thank you, Tommy. Don’t you think your mother would like these roses? L'hey’re about the last there'll be, I guess, and if you'll come in I'll give you one of my ginger cookies.” So Tommy followed Miss Dorothy in, and she gave him a large round cooky out of the stone jar which she always kept full so that she might have something to give the children when they came to her. When he had gone, with a large bunch of roses in one hand and a cooky done up in brown paper in the other, Miss Dorothy went into the sit- ting and opened her rather official-look- ing letter. There were a letter and a letter and a note inclosed in the envel- ope. She unfolded the note and read: SALEM, June.— Miss Dororay FIELD: In refitting the boxes of this postof- fice it was necessary to take down the baseboards behind the receiving box, There we found this old letter directed to you. On ascertaining that you still live in Framleigch we at once forward it. Respectfully yours, PosTMASTER. There was another envelope, yellow with age and with a postmark of forty years before. Miss Dorothy opened it with trembling fingers and read : SaLeM, June, 185—. My Dear Dororry :—I havethought about you a great deal since I left Framleigh, and now that my mother is better I must write to you. I could not bear to come away without telling you that I loved you, although I think you must know it. I never supposed that I could care for any one as I care for you. Now, dear Dorothy, it you return my love at all, let me know, and I will come at once to Framleigh. If you do not and cannot care for ne, do not pain yourself and me by saying s0, but do not write at all. Hopefully yours, He is out here waiting. | mist came over her eyes. This was! the hardest moment of her life, harder | than those weary weeks of suspense. As she thought of Robert’s weary, rest- | less waiting, of his heartache and sor- | row, and of the sadness which had come into her own life, it seemed to her that a very cruel fate had guided the course of that letter. But Miss Dorothy’s trusting heart sould not be bitter long. She believed that somehow all things must be best as they were, and after a few quiet | | hours spent alone, she came out of her room with her usual sunshiny manner. Then she went out into the garden to | pull some of her nice radishes to send | to unattractive, old Miss Durn, whom she pitied very much, for she firmly believed that she never had a lover. I ————— | A Republican Who Seems Satisfied. ' and influential Republican of Bellefonte, "in reply to one from a personal friend, has been handed us for publication. | While it takes no decided ground for or | against any one, it will be noticed that | that the defeat of Quay and his candi- date does not cause any particular sor- row, or the selection of Pattison create any cause for distrust or dissatisfaction | in his mind. BrrLLeroNTE, Nov. 11th, 1890. happy to gather from its perusal that | you and I are not very far apart in our | views, touching the late political can- vas, its methods and results. It is very possible that one who fails in securing his object may nevertheless be possessed of great merit. In the case position, the less worthy may succeed, and often does. We should, to a cer- tain extent, sympathize with the defeat- ed aspirant, for it is comely to do so; and regard him as wnfortunate, rather than undeserving. 1 suppose candidates for political favor think of the uncer- tainties of the conflict on which they are entering, and so are not altogether unprepared to accept, with more or less cheerfulness, the verdict of the people. Whatever may be the character of the defeated candidate for Governor as to personal force, he was undeniably from the start handicapped, as few nien un- doned. Mr. Delamater was not the choice of the people, as represented in the nominating convention. The “ful- ness of time” had come in the history of Mat Quay. The “vindication” was not delayed, but came to him and ‘his able to him. The dissatisfactian referred to, at an early date showed itself in the canvass. Mr. Delamater was kicked and cuffed in such a persistent method as no other candidate could have experienced, Un- der vituperation he was patient. In- deed, it might be said of him, he opened not his mouth, but bore the sickening incubus with rare composure and with grave dignity. Not so the other man. He endured not the contradiction of the maligning editors, but kicked, and smote the conscience of one of them in such a way that in penitence the offend- er came and acknowledged his guilt and begged forgiveness, which was fully granted him, by the stern candidate of the Democratic party. One other indignity was cast upon the defeated candidate, and perhaps harder to bear than all the other inflictions put together, and that was the indifference with which the much abused man was treated by his own constituency in Meadvilleand Crawford county. ‘Et tu Brute.” Truly is Mr. Delamater an illustration of this utterance. “A pro- phet is not without honor, save in his own country and in his own house.” T, for one, wish that he may draw from this gracious declaration all the comfort there is in it; and I do not overstate, perhaps, when I say that very many Republicans who voted against the Quay candidate have similar kindly feeling for the man who so miserably represent- ed, in the late canvass, the grand O. R. Party. ‘With regard to Robt. E. Pattison, let us all hope that in his official life, as in the past, he will avoid the association and intimacies which have degraded and debauched so many men in high official position, and that be may take good care of his soul and mind and body, so that he may prove adequate to the dis- called in the future. I have made no reference to that part of your letter touching the commercial and industrial interests of: this great country. I but very imperfectly under- stand the detailed workings of the won- derful system, and am confused when I try mentally “to take it in;” but I am a believer in progress and hope that our country within the near future, may establish the fact that we can bold our better understanding, in its practical application, of the great problem of “supply and demand.” George, you do not love me as well as you used to.” Husband — “Why?” Wife—¢Because you always let me get up to light the fire.” Husband--{‘Non- J RoseRrT DEANE. . . | As poor Miss Dorothy read this a sense, my love. Your getting up to light the fire makes me love you al the more.” The following letter from a life long | Dear Sir: —I received your letter | yesterday and read it carefully, and am | | that he “might receive the gift of poet- of two men, Delamater and Pattison, | for instance, seeking the same coveted | der the circumstances have been con- | house” in a form and manner not agree- | charge of any trust to which he may be own in a “stand up fight” with the! world, and this to come about by our | —— Wife (pleadingly) —“I'm afraid, In a Poet's Youth, | William Cullen Bryant's Farly Lyrical Aspirations and Performances i The poet Bryant was an exception | to the rule which ordains that precocious { children will either die while youns or | become ordinary men, says the }Yout/'s Companion. On his first birthday ‘he | could walk alone, and when but a few | days more than 16 months old knew ull | the letters of the aiphabet.””. lr his { sixth year he ‘was, as he himself tells us, | “tan excellent, aimosy infallible speller, and ready in geography.” In his six- teenth year Le entered college, having mastered in less than a year all the Greek and Latip required for admission | to the sophmore class al’ Williams col- i lege. The boy was as precocious in rhyming | as in studying. Before he was 10 years old his grandfather gave him:a 9 pence for a hymed version of the first chapter of Job, and the country paper published a rhymed description of the sghoui he attended, which he wrote and de- claimed. John Bigelow, in his life of Bryant, says that “though these early verses gave no particular poetical promise, i they were remarkable for two charac- teristics by which all his poetry was destined to be distinguished—the cor- rectness both of the measure and the | thyme.” * So intense was the boy’s ambition to { be a poet that he not only read what poetry fell in his way, but in his pri- ate devotions often prayed with fervor | ic genius, and write verses that might | endure.” “Thanatopsiz,” the poem which gave | him a national fame, was written in 1811, before he had attained his édight- eenth year, though it was not published until 1817. The story of its publication, as told by Mr. Bigelow, is a unique literary anecdote. One day Dr. Bryant, the youth's father, while looking through the drawers in his son’s desk, came upon sonie manuscript verses. He read them and was so impressed that he hurried to the house of a friend, and thrusting the verses into her hand, exclaimed, while tears ran down his cheeks, “Read them ! They are Cullen’s.” In a few days the doctor went to Boston, without communicating his in- tention to his son, to show these verses to his friend William Philips, who was one of the editors of the North American Review, then two years old. He left the verses at the office of the Review with- out their author’s name or any intima- tion of their parentage. Mr. Philips read them and went to Cambridge to submit them to Richard | H. Dana and Edward T. Channing, his editorial calleagues. They listened while Mr. Philips read the manuseript | and heard the little he had to tell about its history. “Ah, Philips,” said Dana, with a skeptical smile, “you have been impos- "ed upon. No one on this side of the At- lantic is capable of writing such verse.” Inquiries, however, showed that Mr. Philips, instead of being imposed upon, | had read to them the poems written by "an American boy who had not yet at- tained his eighteenth year. One of the poems was entitled “Thanatopsis,” and ‘appeared in the September number of the Review for 1817. The poem which accompanied it also appeared in the sane number under the title of “Frag- ment.” Itis now known as “An In- scription for the entrance to a Wood.” A significaut fact associated with the two poems is that “Thanatopsis’” was six years old when it was printed and the “Fragment’’ two years. Such -‘pa- tient waiting” is rare with young authors. Levon CREAM Pie. —For the filling for this pie there must be taken the juice of three and rind of one lemon, a | half of corn starch, a large cupful of wa- ter, a cuptul of granulated sugar, four tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and four eggs, and the crust will require three large tablespoonfuls of flour, one large tablespoonfuls of butter and some water. Make the crust by rubbing the butter { into the flour, adding cold water enough | to make a smooth, stiff paste, and then rolling very thin. Mix the corn-starch with four table- ! spoonsfuls from the cupful of water. Put [ the remainder of the water into a sauce- | pan, with the lemon rind and juice and the granulated sugar, and heat to the boiling point, then stir the corn-starch into the boiling mixture, and cook for two minutes. Stir the butter into the mixture, and set away to cool. When cool add the yelks of the four eggs, well beaten. Pour the mixture into a large, deep plate that has been lined with paste, and bake in a moderate oven for thirty-five minutes. During the last quarter of an hour make a meringue by beating the whites of the eggs to & stiff, dry froth, and gradually beating the owdered sugar into this froth. At the end of thirty-five minutes cover the pie with the meringue and bake, with the oven door open ten minutes longer. ‘By following this rule one gets a very large deep pie. The materials are suffi- cient for making two pies, but these would of course be sma ler and thinner. At serving time the dish should ve as cold as possible. — Marian Maloa. Vaseline as-a Shoe-Cleaner. It is not generally known that the ensiest way to clean shoes or rubber overshoes which have become muddy is with vaseline. A little “swab” of flan- nel on the end of a stick is good for this purpose. Even if the vaseline touches the hands, it forms a coating over them "£0 that the task is not so pleasant as it otherwise would be. Such a lressing as ' this is sufficient for come fine kid shoes, but others may need a coat of = polish. If the polish is put on after a coat of vaseline it is not liable to erack the ber overshoes, especially, look much better and last much longer if cleaned. in this way than if they are washed with water.— New York Journal. — Nearly every building intended for theatrical performances is called an opera house. If itis overa rich man’s store in a swell little town the show hall will be called the grand opera house, though its patrons may never see grand opera nor any other kind of opera. leather and it lasts much longer. Rub- 7