Bellefonte, Pa., April 12, ’30I. TIRED MOTHERS. A little elbow leans upon your knee, Your tired knee, that nas so much to bear A child’s dear eyes are looking lovingly From underneath a thatch of tangled hair. Perhaps you do not heed the velvet touch Of warm, moist fingers, folding yours so tight. You do not prize this blessing overmuch ; You are almost too tired to pray tonight. But it is blessedness! A year ago 1 did not see it as I do today— We are so dull and thankless and too slow To cateh the sunshine till it slips away. And now it seems surpassing strange to me That, while I wore the badge of motherhood I did not kiss more oft and tenderly The little child that brought me only good. And if some night, when you sit down to rest, You miss the elbow from your tired knee, This restless, curling head from off your breast, This lisping tongue that clatters constanily ; If from your own the dimpled hands had slipped And ne'er would nestle in your palm again ; 1f the white feet into their grave had tripped, I could not blame you for ycur heartach then ! I wonder so that mothers ever fret At little children clinging to their gown Or that the footprints, when the days are wet Are ever black enough to make them frown If 1 could kiss a rosy, restless foot, And hear a patter in my home once more ; 1f I could mend a broken cart today, Tomorrow make a kite to reach the sky, There is no woman in God’s world could say She was more blissfully content than I. Bat, ah, the dainty pillow next my own 1s never rumpled by a shining head ! My singing birdling from its nest has flown The little boy I used to kiss is dead ! —May Riley Smith in Baltimore News. FOR THE SAKE OF THE CHILD. The head surgeon and his first assistant, a younger man by twenty years, passed noiselessly down the long padded corridor of the hospital, through the great entrance door, out into the dimly lighted street. No word had been spoken between them for some time. Each was busy with his own thoughts, both hoping against hope, yet vividly conscious and subdued before the coming of the great, grim enemy, whose shadow neither years nor experience can soften. Outside, the young man pansed for a moment to glance up at the broad, somber sides of the building, from whose windows countless green-shaded lights gleamed soft- ly out into the darkness. Involuntarily, his eyes sought the accident ward, where the figures of the attendants could be seen hurrying to and fro, dimly outlined against the lowered shades. ‘‘Poor Drake,’’ he mused regretfully ‘‘he wasn’t half a bad sort-so young too. But one can never tell.” His voice trembled slightly under its veneer of calmness as he addressed the head surgeon: ‘‘You think there is no chance for his life, dogtor—not the least?’ ‘I'm afraid not, With the aid of pow- erful stimulants he may hold out till morn- ing, bardly longer. That was a bad crush he got; it would be a blessing if he could £0 now, only there are relatives, I believe- and a wife. You knew him you say, be, fore—did you know him well 2” ‘We were friends,” the other replied simply. The two men paused at the corner, in the shadow of the hospital, where they were to separate and each mechanically took out a cigar. Turning to get the wind at his back, the older man struck a match. As the light flared up, he gave a start of surprise at the picture that met his glance. His eyes had encountered those of a illy clad woman fixed upon him in the utter blankness of despair. She was leaning against a lamp post for support, a big, loose bundle held tightly, almost convul- sively, in her clenched hands. Her face was white to the lips and her features, which still bore the traces of beauty seem- ed to be sharpened by intense suffering. The old gray-haired surgeon glanced pity- ingly at the hollow cheeks, the toil-hard- ened fingers, the contracted chest. No second glance was needed here to tell the story of honest labor and privation. He took a step toward her, his eyes softening at the mute evidences of hardship visible in every detail. Never during his long life of human service had the appeal of one of God’s creatures fallen upon him un- heeded. “What is it?” he asked gently, ‘is there anything—do you need help?’ For some: moments the wild effort the woman was making for optward calm mas- tered her, but gradually the drawn look about her mouth relaxed a little and her lips quivered. Her eyes sought those of her benefactor in that blank misery of sus- pense that knows no hope, yet dares to grasp at its ghost. ; ‘‘You—you are the surgeon of the hos- pital there, are you not?’ she asked, hoarsely, her white face growing the whit- er as she went on : “Then tell me, is he —is he—dead ?”? ‘You mean—"'’ “The man who—was—crushed this morning—hetween the cars. I saw it ina newspaper. - They had it all—everything. Ob, my God—he—he is my husband!” The last words trailed off to a husky whis- per, and the woman’s head sank upon her breast. The strain upon her nerves had blotted out sight and hearing, even feeling, for a moment. The next, she raised her head sharply and glanced at the surgeon with a thrill of fear. Her eyes clung to his in a passion of despair as she strained every sense to catch the reply. When it came, his voice was low and singularly gentle, as was its wont when in the pres- ence of another's suffering. : “No, he is not dead, but it is, I fear, on- ly a question of time before he will he. And you—you are his wife—.”’ His gaze rested upon her half wondering, half sadly for an instant before he went on: “I am glad you are here. T suppose you got the message—they sent for you, you know. Come with me.”’ Turning, he addressed the assistant : ‘You had better get your rest as soon as possible, Arthur Hampton goes off at 12 and—I don’t know—youn may be needed.’’ ‘When he turned to the woman again, he noted with surprise that her cheeks were now shot with vivid color, and a bright- ness, almost unearthly, shone in her eyes. And she? The years of desertion and neglect were all forgotten. He had sent for her. Her heart beat almost to suffoca- tion with the great, new joy that flooded her soul. Back through the unfading fields of memory her thoughts Ruin: and once more she stood with him upon the threshold of a world that was beauti- fal and full of glorious promise. And, al- though, at last she must meet him upon the borderland of Death, in her heart was no shrinking for the years to come beyond the grave, his soul would still be hers and there was only a step between. At the door of the hospital she paused and drew in her breath deeply. With a sort of timid hesitation she glanced up at her companion and smiled half wistfully. ‘‘You—you are quite sure that he—want- ed me sent for?’ : The old surgeon took one of her quiver- ing bands in his and pressed it reassuring- ly. ‘It was his wish,’ he replied. gently. The next minute they were standing in the great reception hall, blinded for a sec- ond by the flood of light that gleamed from innumerable gas jets. “We. will just go up,” the surgeon said, quietly. ‘‘No preparations need be made. They are expecting you. Lay your bundle on one of the tables and fol- low me.” Together they passed noiselessly through the long, deserted corridors and up the richly-carpeted stairway that led to the ac- cident ward, The woman's heart was throbbing painfully; a thousand memories came flooding over her and there wasa lump in her vhroat that almost choked her. With a sudden gesture she pressed both hands over her breast and set her teeth, struggling to crush down the tide of emotions that threatened to underminé her self-control. Bat in a little while she had gained the mastery, no outward sign giving testimony to the tumult within. At the door she hesitated, shrinking hack involuntarily, and her hands sank to her side, but only for an instant. With a quick effort she pulled herself together and they entered the room. At first everything seemed to swim a- round her and almost unconsciously she put one hand to her head; then, gradually the ‘mist cleared away and she glanced with a sort of nervous dread toward the cot on which the Idying man lay. There was a drawn, sunken look about the face that rested so motionlessly against the pil- low, and the pale lips were already smiling to meet the kiss or death. The surgeon had moved over to a table where a nurse was preparing fresh band- ages and sat down opposite her. Slowly, falteringly, the woman went for- ward and knelt by the little white cot. She took one of the wounded man’s cold, nerveless hands in both her trembling ones. ‘‘Arthur,”’ she called softly. The eyelids quivered for a moment, then lifted heavily. A faint look of recognition passed over the pallid features, foliowed by one of infinite despair. The fast-dimming eyes lingered tenderly on the woman’s worn face for a long time, then roved rest- lessly around the room as though in search of something, and closed wearily again. There was an unbroken silence of sev- eral minutes. Presently, the door of the ward opened and shut quietly and the sound of soft footsteps echoed through the room. The sharpened ears of the dying man caught the sound and he stirred rest- lessly on his pillow. For the second time his eyes opened slowly and a quick look of brightness came into them, then suddenly died out, fear taking its place. With a final effort, his glance sought that of the wife at his side, a glance full of mute agony and pleading. ‘‘Forgive,’”’ he whispered thick- ly. A glazed light stole slowly over the ap- pealing eyes shutting out foreverall human emotion. The next minute, another soul had gone to meet its Maker. In a dazed sort of way the woman re- leased her hand from that other one fast growing cold in death. She rose mechanical- ly from where she knelt, and now, for the first time, turned her eyes toward the new- comer. For asecond’s space in which she met the startled eyes of the other, her own hore a wild, hunted look. A wave of sick- ening apprehension swept over her at a ‘half realization of the truth. Then this other—this woman with the delicate, flower like face and fragile form with the infant in her arms—she was the wife for whom he had sent, and the child—his child ! ‘What she had before not entirely understood was all too clear now. There was a terrible stress of silence. The older woman noted the spasmodic clinching of the hands that crushed the infant to the mother’s breast, and the piteous question in the eyes which the lips refused to frame. Fora moment, a wild impulse rushed over her to ‘denounce him, his treachery, her own ruined life the for- feit—the other woman’s—the child’s. Her eyes glowed with excitement. Her breath came in quick gasps, and almost uncon- sciously her lips straightened into the old bard line. She clasped her hands tight to- gether in front of her with the gesture women sometimes employ in a wild desire for self-control. With a sudden; quick re- solve, she raised her eyes, that seemed weighted down by some physical burden, to the face of the child, nestling close to 1ts mother’s heart. She opened her lips once— twice to speak, but closed them again dumbly, while the tense lines about her lips relaxed and hot tears rushed to her eyes. Down the misty aisles of ‘memory her heart seemed, all at once, to'echo’ to the thrill of a happy past as she looked in- to the eyes of the child—his eyes—with the same light of love in their placid depths; the same quiet softness. * * % In a dazed, pitiful sort of way, she some- how hegan to feel that she was no longer a part of this life. The wild, despairing eyes of the young mother still clung to hers in an agony of suspense, yet she dare. not trust herself to speak—not yet. ' One min- ute passed, during which it seemed to two men that eternity must have rolled over their heads. After a while, the younger spoke, but her voice was strained and un- natural, the words almost unintelligible, ‘“Tell me—for 'God’s sake—are yon— was he anything—to you?’ ky ' For the space of a few seconds the other woman's face seemed robbed of all haman expression; it was as pale as wax, as ‘pale as that of the dead husband who lay so near. She glanced helplessly around the room with unseeing eyes. Then she moved mechanically toward the door, putting out one trembling hand to the brass knob for support. When at last she found words to speak, her voice was ‘curiously low and sweet, as though somehow it did not be: long to this world. ki wa i “You don’t know how—how I feel for you," she said brokenly, an eager flame leaping to her eyes. her face glorified by the light of sacrifice. ‘‘I—I loved him too —oh, so much, but not like you, of course, not like—you. This is the first time in ten years—the first time I’ve seen him—we quarreled and--he--I suppose yon know--he is high spirited. Before that we had been inseparable--he was my favorite--and I-- look at me--can’t you tell >—~I—I-—am his —aister 17° slinBal audit 8 ' ‘When she finished speaking, she turned her eyes; full of fearful apprehension, to- ward the table where the surgeon and the nurse sat, but she saw no outward sign there to indicate a single thought within. With a final glance at the now weeping mother, at the baby whose tiny arms clung close about her neck, at the pallid emotion- less face of the dead, with shaking hands, she opened the great door and passed noiselessly from the room; then down the broad stairway as one ina dream, and presently out into the still, deserted street, pocket. a bundle of unsewed shirts—the bundle she had left on one of the tables—crushed convulsively against her bosom. For a moment, she glanced up toward the room of death—the room where all that was mortal of him lay; then she lifted her eyes mutely to the star-sown sky above. ‘‘For the sake of the child,” she said slowly—‘‘his child.”—By Nellie Cravey Gillmore. Tried to Kill His Father. John Gulick, Who Shot his Mother and Brother, Thought He Had Slain Him, Too, John Gulick, who shot and instantly killed his aged mother and brother in Kline's Grove, Northumberland county, on Tuesday morning, tried to kill his father, Samuel Gulick, who escaped, after a desperate struggle. Samuel Gulick is 73 years old. His wife was aged 69 years. They have eight chil- dren, all of age and nearly all married. John and Philip were single. The four oc- cupied the house, the brothers occupying two beds in a large room. They were in- telligent men, representatives of the oldest and wealthiest families in Northumberland county. Their mother loved them dearly, and the sons were on good terms until a few months ago, when John conceived the idea that Philip was the favorite of his parents. Then the former grew sullen and frequently disputed with his parents and brother. He left home for a few weeks, and returned, promising to be. more affectionate in the future. Last week the father told the brothers he was going to build them a double house in Sunbury, where some of their relatives re- side. It was agreed Monday night that the brothers wonld drive to Sunbury on Tuesday morning to view the site of the building. Tuesday morning the father said that he, instead of Johu, would drive to Sunbury with Philip, as he was not feeling well. and the ride would benefit him. To this John, who had been ill-natured all morn- ing, demurred, contending that Philip should remain at home instead. His moth- er then remonstrated with him for being unpleasant. Philip went to the barn for the horses, while the father went to the sitting room for his hat, first telling John to remain at home and plow the fields. Mis. Gulick was standing behind the stove when John ran up stairs and returned with the revolver. He was wild with rage be- cause he had to stay at home. He thought everybody in the house wanted to get rid of him, and he determined to kill the trio. SHOT HIS MOTHER DOWN. While his father was kissing his wife good-bye Johu appeared, and, rushing up to the couple, shot his mother. The hor- rified father grappled with him and a des- perate fight ensued, the son vainly trying to discharge the weapon while his father held him by the wrists. The old man’s strength began giving way. He fonght his son toward the kitchen door. When against it the father by a superhuman ef- fort flung the assassin from him and stag- gered through the door. He held the knob. The murderer tugged from within to op- en the door. He could not. Then he made his exit by the front entrance and stood facing the barn, whence Philip, at- tracted by the pistol shots, was running to the house. John hurried to meet him. His father, who was hurring around the house to warn him saw the brothers meet. PUT BULLET IN BROTHER'S HEART. Philip tried to wrench the smoking weapon from John’s hands. After a brief struggle John pressed the revolver fairly over his brother’s heart and fired. As the young man dropped in death the heart- broken father shrieked in the agony of des- pair and fell fainting to the ground. John had paused to finish him, when he saw the old man totter and fall. The murderer, evidently thinking the bullet that killed his brother had passed through the body and ended the life of the aged father, fled over the hills. Harry Moore, a neighboring farmer, who heard the shooting, summoned aid and in- stituted pursuit of the murderer, of whom descriptions have been sent everywhere. Coroner Dreher swore in a jury, whose ver- dict is that mother and son came to their death hy shooting at the hands of John Gu- lick, and that the murder was unprovoked. A Pennsylvania railroad telegraph oper- ator at a station near South Danville Tues- day evening said that the murderer called on him during the day and said there was lots of excitement near Kline’s Grove, and that he was the cause of it. Then he ran toward Danville, where he has relatives ; but he did not pat in an appearance there. = LaTeR—Remorseful, haggard and worn John Gulick, who Jast Tuesday, murdered his brother at their home near Sunbury, was lodged in jail there this morning. He was discovered in the spring house on the Gulick farm. In this place he secured his first shelter since committing the crime. He said he was tired and had come back home intending to give himself up Mouday. Since the day of the crime he had roamed through the mountains during the day and at night went to nearby towns and begged d food from back doors. He positively re- fused to speak about the crime merely say- ing he ‘was very sorry. To Chief of Police Metler he stated that he had witnessed the funeral of his victims from a nearby hill. When searched the revolver with which he committed the crime was found in his coat ———— Fair Warning. A popular Cleveland doctor tells this story of a bright boy, his own, who had reached the mature age of 9 after an early career marked by wild and mischievous pranks. ob Hd Pitas ‘ ; His restless nature has made him some- thing of a torment to his teacher at times, and one afternoon not’ long ago she kept him after the others were dismissed and bad a serious talk with him. Perhaps she was a little afraid that her admonitions were falling on stony ground. Anyway, she finally said : ‘‘I certainly will have to ask your father to come and see me.’’ ‘‘Don’t you do it.”’ : The teacher thought she had made an impression. : ‘Yes,’ she repeated, ‘‘I must send for your father.”’ “You'd better not, said the boy.” “Why not?” inquired the teacher. *‘Cause he charges $2 a visit,” said the scamp. ——Upwards of 25 graduates of the Lock Haven Normal School have filed ap- plications for positions as teachers in the Philippines. The government is offering great inducements, in the way of wages and free transportation. Normal gradu- ates are especially desired for instructors as their training fits them for the work. Paradise in Southern Seas Peopled by Kindly Ones Who Delight in Love Tales. Captain Arnold Granger, a short, stout, grizzled mariner, arrived in port at San Francisco last week with his smart clipper, the Belle of the Seas. And the dougbty seamen had to tell of a modern romance of the sea, rivaling the adventures of the rovers of the Spanish main, rivaling even the picturesque fiction of W. Clark Russel. Following is the narrative which the captain gave’ frequently refering to his log as he spoke : *‘It was in January, 1900, that we left this port, bound for Columbo, Ceylon, for a cargo of sugar. But when I arrived at Columbo the condition of the market there was such that a cargo of sugar was unob- tainable. Rather than return 9000 miles without ballast I decided to cruise among the Samoan group of islands, in the hope of picking up a load of tropical products that would in a way lessen the loss of my use- less trip to Ceylon. CAUGHT IN A MONSOON. “We were some time out, just about crossing the equatorial line, when a fierce monsoon of the South Seas caught us. For days we fought it. The sun never shone. The clouds rendered the nautical instruments useless. The rigging stood the gale, but one night we got among reefs and the rudder was lost. We tossed about all that night, but at dawn the man at the lead reported that we mnst be nearing land. Suddenly the storm cleared and the water was calm. We drifted gently toward as beautiful a palm heach as I have ever gazed upon. There was pleasant, gently rolling country back of the beach, and still further back wasa range of frowning mountains. ‘A mere sweep of my glass disclosed be- hind the palm trees a hig village with the sun shining brightly in low cottages built ofa sort of terra cotta. Drifting gently as we were, it was a simple matter to drop anchor. This we did, and myself and Fe- lix Harmon, my mate, and four of the crew made for shore in a small boat. We were observed. A great crowd of persons gath- ered on the beach. We cocked our revol- vers and held them in our hands as we landed, ready to fire at the first show of hostility and then put back to the ship for our lives. SMILE ON EVERY FACE. ‘‘But,”’ said Captain Granger, laughing aud closing the log, ‘‘bless my soul, it was an unneccessary precaution. There stood the inhabitants on the beach, a light- brown colored folk, men and women with big, gentle eyes and smiling faces. Hand- somer men I never saw or comelier women. Later I found that the delightful climate and the fine old surf in which they ‘bathed daily and the simple habits of the people had made disease a stranger to the is- land. Old age is the sole cause of death in that little paradise in the sea.’ The captain reopened his log. ‘Now, owing to the faulty working of my nauti- cal instruments, I cannot he very exact, but the island is located at about 10 degrees south latitude and about 125 west longi- tude. Of course, I don’t want to be too exact. You'll see the reason of that later. “‘Well, because of our lighter color we were deemed superior beings, and men were never accorded a kindlier reception. The old men were considered the most honorable, and we were escorted to the pretty, red sort of brick cottages of the most venerable inhabitants. We were fed delicious fruits and certain cooked dishes that any hotel chef would give ten years of his life to be able to produce. I noticed that the houses of the older men were no larger than those af the younger. That was the key to the situation. There was uo dis- tinctions there. All were equal, were equally bappy. Food and clothing were obtained from a common supply, and both were to be had in plenty. THEIR SIMPLE ATTIRE. “Of course the clothing was scant. Men and women wore soft, clinging robes of white. At night sweet, cool winds blew over the. island, making sleep delightful, On the very next morning we came out of the houses of the patriarchs to find that in the night the natives had voiled so that each of ‘us was supplied with one of the pretty little cottages similar to those of the inhabitants. Were we so inclined, we were told, we might each choose a wife from among the island’s most beautiful maidens. ‘‘One mouth passed amony these delight- ful people. In all that time I never be- held anger flash in the eyes of one of them. The big mountains were the homes of their gods, and these were all good, amiable gods. The thunder was to them the laugh- ter of their gods, lightning the kindly flashes of the eyes of their gods and rain was a blessing; the whirling of high winds they listened to with dreamy eyes, like persons who listened to music and were pleased. There were beautiful beach dances by the maidens, and at night the men and women sang strange, sweet songs, and the old men told legends, all stories of: kindly deeds of beautiful friendships and. of faithful lovers. Tt is an earthly paradise, if ever there was one. ‘Daring this time my men had been busy fashioning a new rudder for the Belle from some very good timber obtained in. the forests. The natives were always around offering theirservices or seeing that our men had fresh sweet cocoanut milk to drink while at their work. : “‘But when the rudder was fixed in shape the men came to me in a body. They said they did vot wish to leave the island. It was not a mutiny. : Good feeling ‘and gen- tleness were catching in that island. But they begged of me not to ask them to go. In truth, I did not want to go back to civi- lization, with its cares, its strifes, its mean- ness, any more than they did. Nor did my. mate. ; ; : ‘‘ ‘Boys,’ said I smiling, ‘we’ll burn the ship.” ”’ : “They cheered so hard that the natives came rapning laughingly to know the cause, and when they learned they cheered too, and at once began arranging appro- priate ceremonies to celebrate our decision to remain with them for the rest of our lives. EXAMINING THE ISLAND. “My mate and I set out to walk into the interior, in order to know more of the is- land that was to be our home. As we ap- proached the craggy mountain I saw dis- colorations on the surface, that only an in- stant’s close scrutiny was needed to tell me meant iron ore, great, vast stores of iron. Harmon had gone to get a drink at a brook He came running back, white and breath- less, with his tin cup balf-filled with yellow dust and little nuggets, “Gold ! gold I” he shouted. ‘‘He had panned the dust in California and knew what he was talking about. ‘‘And those fools down there,” I said, waving my hand toward the village, ‘‘don’t know what they’ve got here.’ “The mate laughed : ‘I like to see you get them to mine bi : holes into these mountains. the Liomes o their nice, kind gods !”’ ‘“Well, when we got back we told the boys. Yon bet the Belle of the Seas wasn’t burned. The natives hugged and kissed us and begged us not to leave. But here we are. ‘*We’ve come back for a cargo of arms and ammunition.” “Arms?" a reporter asked. ‘‘What in ‘the world do you want arms for ?"’ “Because,” said Captain Granger, his eyes lighting with the fire of a lofty pa- triotism, ‘those ignorant, happy idiots down there are absolutely unfit for self- government. In the name of the United States, in the name of humanity, we’re now going back to civilize them. That's my reason, young man. A Novel Apartment. For the Use of the Unfortunate—The *‘Blind Room * in the Library of Congress at Washington and Its Frequenters Described. In the congressivnal library at Washing- ton, the large room is set aside for the ex- clusive use of the blind. This is the best equipped single-gathering place for the sightless in this country. This hoon to the blind, provided by a thoughtful, paternal government, is called by those who use it, *‘the national headquarters of the unsee- ing.” The room in question is situated on the first floor of the huge building, and as near the entrance as possible. It was opened two years ago and was instaytly popular. All the blind folks of Washington caused themselves to be led there, and from that day to this very few of the local ‘‘unsee- ing,” who are able to get about, have missed their daily hour in quarters of which they will never kuow the real beauties. They have been told overand over again, how the walls and ceiling are covered with decorations. by famous Amer- ican artists ; of how the color scheme is the outcome of good taste and artistic eyes ; of how even the colors of the furniture and the hangings are in perfect harmony with the decorations. But these beauties they can never enjoy through the sense of sight. The imaginations can only furnish them pleasure in the art beauties of the room, for many of them know not even what red, or blue, or color of any sort is like. Said one of them to me : “I know a black light and a white light, that is all, for I know when I am in the glare of the sunlight and when I am in a darkened room. But as for the rainbow and its colors, what like may that be?’ In addition to the local blind, the steady patrons of the blind room, there come year- ly a thousand or more visitors from all over the United States. Here they know they will meet others afflicted like them- selves, and the natural sympathy of misery draws them here where afflictions can be understood by experience. During inauguration week 125,000 per- sons visited the congressional library, but not more than a score of these visitors were blind. Of course, Washington at that time was no place for the unseeing, save in an intellectual sense. Three days after inanguration I visited the blind room. Instead of finding the sightless, I found an assemblage of people, half of whom had. two good, seeing eyes. It seems that every Thursday afternoon a musical is given in this room for the pleas- ure of those who cannot see their entertain- ers, but who can hear. On the afternoon of my visit, a lady, possessing a rich con- tralte voice, sang for a most appreciative audience. They said thatshe was the wife of a representive, and that her brother had lost his sight in a railway accident while on his way to Washington, and, that since then this lady had gladly devoted several hours each week to helping the blind enjoy their dreary days. She was followed by a young violinist. Then came a pianist, the organist of one of Washington’s largest churches. Then all three, the singer, the violinist, and the pianist, co-operated, the lady’s singing being accompanied by the other two on their instruments. All the rear seats were occupied by the seeing, all the front seats by the unseeing. Of the latter, about twenty were present. The sightless ones listened, with rapt at- tention, and applanded spontaneously. On all other days in the week, except Sunday, the hour between 2 30 o’clock and 3.30 o'clock is the entertainment hour for the blind. In other words every working day, except Thursday, the day of the mu- sieal, there is given here a reading, or a talk, on some subject of interest to the blind. Authors, scientists, physicians, lec- turers, missionaries, ministers, and army aud navy chaplains are in turns asked to addressed the meetings. : ; In charge of the blind ' room is Miss Gif- fen, a gentle woman of remarkable patience and endowed by nature with an abundance of sympathy. To her kindly offices and assistance, the popularity of the blind room is largely dae. The room over which she presides is equipped with everything help- ful in the intellectual development of the blind. Here are special typewriters, tele- graph instruments, a printing press, a type setting case, besides the usual books and pictures in relief. After the wusical, on the day of my visit, a blind lady kindly gave an exhibition of proficiency in the use of the typewriter. A young man, unsee- ing, displayed wonderful talent in the use of the telegraph key. Another set up type and still another used the printing press. It is these things and this room, put at their disposal in this way, that helps to | bring happiness to the blind of Washing- ton, 'All state government should try to, provide similar rooms for unfortunate ones, and all libraries could bring happiness to the afflicted in their respective cities, by writing to the librarian of Congress for in* formation concerning the establishment and conduct of a room for the blind. GILSON WILLETS. [Copyright 1901, The Chistian Herald.) Mry. Palmer a Politician. Mrs. Potter Palmer, assisted by her sons, Alderman-elect Honore Palmer and Potter Palmer Jr., entertained the precinct cap- tains of the twenty-first, Chicago, and ‘the officers and members of tne Tascarora club at the Palmer mansion in Lake Shore drive last Monday night. At the door of the salon Mrs. Palmer stood between her two sons and greeted the two hundred and seventeen men who had helped to make her boy an alderman of Chicago. The footman at the door called the names in stentorian tones and as each vis- itor passed Mrs. Palmer shook her hand and presented her sons, pronouncing the names of her guests as though she had a personal acquaintance with every politician high and low, of the 21st ward. After speeches made by Mayor Harrison and others, refreshments were served. —-Why did Pocahontas rush to save the captive Englishman from her father’s club? ; Because she pitied him. It must have been. It couldn’t be she was afraid it might kill off all the Smiths. The Heavens in April. Stars that May be Seen by Amateur Astronomers. _ Eleven stars of the first magnitude will be above the horizon at 9 o’cloek this even- ing. Named in the order of their brillianey, they are Sirius. low in the southwest; Capella, at about two-fifths of the distance from the horizon to the zenith, in the northwest; Arcturus, at about the same altitude as Capella. in the east; Vega, just rising in the northeast; Procyon, in the southwest, directly above Sirius, about midway from horizon to zenith; Betelbeuse, in the right shoulder of Orion, who now reclines above the western horizon; Alde- baran, just above the horizon, between west and northwest: Rigel, in the left foot or Orion; Spica, at about the same altitude as Sirius, in the southeast; Pollux, the more southerly of the Twins (Gemini), at two-fifths of the distance from zenith to horizon, in the west; Regulus, in Leo, now at the hour named just crossing the meridian at three-fourths of the distance from hori- zon to zenith. The very brilliant red star to be seen just above Regulus is the planet Mars. Ouly 14 of the 20 first magnitude stars are very visible to observers in the mean latitude of the United States, the remain- ingsix being too near the south celestial pole to rise ahove our horizon. The three besides the 11 just named which we may see at one time or another are Antares. Altair and Fomalhaut. CONSTELLATIONS. Leo, the Lion, may be recognized by means of the “sickle,” which forms his bushy head and shoulders, and in the handle of which stands the star Regulus. His tail is marked hy the star Denehola— ‘‘tail of the beast’’—of the second magni- tude, at a distance from Regulus to the east abont equal to the length of the Great Dipper. This latter well-known asterism, which forms the tail and hindquarters of the Great: Bear (Ursa Major, ) will be found to-night at the hour of our observation very nearly overhead. The four stars—Arcturus, Spica, Deneb- ola and Cor Caroli (Charles’ Heart), a star of the third magnitude, at about three- fifths of the distance from Denebola to the end star in the Dipper’s handle—form a large lozenge-shaped figure known as the Diamond of Virgo. Although this Diamond is, like the Sickleand the Dipper, a modern constellation, it is one of the grand land- marks of the heavens with which the novice in star-gazing should early become familiar. Within this diamond, about midway be- tween the stars Denebola and Cor Caroli, is the beautiful sprinkling of small stars known as Berenice’s Hair (Coma Bere- nices). an exceedingly pretty field, it hard- ly need be said, for the opera-glass. Two very pretty though inconspicuous constellations which may now be seen in the southeast are the Cup ( Crater) and the Crow (Corvus). The Cup—the more west- erly of the two—consists of a semi-circle of five or six stars of the fourth magnitude, of about the size of the Northern Crown, open to the east, which forms its bowl, and a short line of three equally faint stars on the right, which form its base. Although a little lopsided, the Cup isa very passable celestial goblet. The Crow is somewhat more conspicuous. It contains five stars, four of which form a trapezium, or irregular square, somewhat smaller than the howl of the Great Dipper. Capella, in the northwest, has already been pointed out. This star, the ‘‘She- goat,”’ stands in the left shoulder of Auriga, the Wagoner. Below and at the right of Capella may beseen Alpha Persei, a star of the second magnitude, at the centre of the constellation Persens. Below and at the left of Alpha Persei is Beta Persei. better known as Algol, a famous variable star, which is ordinarily of the second magni- tude, but at intervals of a little less than three days falls to the fourth magnitude. The ‘‘nova,’’ or new star, which was dis- covered in Perseus on the morning of Feb. 21st, by Rev. T. D. Anderson, of Edin- burgh, is about equidistant from Alpha Persei and Algola, a little above a straight line joining these two stars. When dis- covered this star was a little over third magnitude. It increased rapidly in bright- ness, and on Feb. 24th was fully the equal of Capella. Since then it has declined in brightness at the rate of about a half magni- tude daily. It is doubtful if it will to- night be bright enough to be seen with the naked eye. THE PLANETS. Mercury has been an evening star since March 7th, aud is now far enough out of the sun’s rays to be visible on a clear even- ing soon after sunset, almost exactly in the West. Venus will bea morning star, but in- visible, until the 20th of this month. After that date it will be an evening star during the 1est of the year. Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus are morning stars, the last in the Constellation Scorpio, the others in Sagittarius. Mars, in the position already described, is now the reigning evening star. Clipped Ears, Nose and Toes. Woon Infiicts Fearful Injuries on Herself at Toledo, 0. Mrs. G. Brunschneider, residing near Toledo, Ohio, occupies a ward at St. Vin- cent’s hospital, and is in a serious condi~ tion as a result of horrible injuries self- inflicted. i About 5 o’clock Tuesday evening, armed with an ordinary pair of scissors, she cut off all the toes of her left foot, both her ears close to the head and about an inch of her nose. Sins She then cnt out a portion of her right cheek, inflicting five gashes in the left cheek and finally began on her arms. Beginning at the left forearm she remov- | ed every vestige of skin, laying bare the muscles. She also lacerated the right arm ina horrible manner. ! ‘Nothing was known of the affair until her husband, who was absent during the night, returned home in the morning, and found her in bed, in a semi-conscious con- dition. A surgeon was called and she was taken to the hospital. Her recovery is doubtful. —-—Monday was ‘‘Settling Day,’’ as April 1st has long been known by Somerset county folk, and, judging from the crowd- ed condition of Somerset’s Wall street dur- ing business hours; it continues to oceupy the most prominent place on the calendar in the eyes of many people., All of the banks report a larger volume of business Monday than on any day during the year preceding, while the clerks in the pro- thonotary’s and register and recorder’s of- fices were kept busy as nailers and were obliged to work over hours in order to bring their records up to date, says the Herald. x Bits ~——Mann Brothers are bnilding an ax factory at Yeagertown, Mifflin “county, which will employ 100 men and will be run independent of the trust.