EST Bellefonte, Pa., March 28, 1902 SPRUNG ON SPRING. When the crocus ix a croaking, And the garbage piles are smoking, And the busy housewife poking Everything : When the geese are northward going, And the dust and dirt is blowing, That's the way we have of knowing That it’s spring. When the streets are awful slushy, And the poets write rhymes gushy, And young lovers all grow mushy, Never fear : Soon the birds will all be singing, Street pianos will be ringing, And the mud will soon be elinging— Spring is near. AN EASTER EGG. The half-grown boys of Blue Bridge were the worst lot of young scoundrels out of Hades—so the forefathers of the hamlet said, and they guessed they knew, for al- though they had never been to Hades, they had themselves been bad half-grown boys in different sections of the country and kept the worst company they could find. Yet there was one day of the week when for an hour and a half the Blue Bridge hoys were as orderly as a lot of deacons; the day was Sunday, and stranger yet, the hour and a half wasspent in Sunday-school. Their parents and even the local Constable wished that thisshort but gratifying spasm of propriety was due to a desire to learn the ways of 1ighteousness, but they knew it wasn’t; it meant merely that for the time being they were with one accord wor- shiping Ipsie Brett. their teacher, who had accidentally taken the bad boys’ class one Sunday, and got along so well with it that the regular teacher joyously resigned in her favor. It should therefore be inferred that Miss Ipsie was pretty and interesting. Half- grown boys are quite as quick as their eld- ers to appreciate that sort of thing and to enjoy it, and as they have no hesitation about staring at whatever they admire it happened every Sunday that ten pairs of eyes regarded Ipsie Brett so fixedly that it was hard to divert any of them to a book. They were not the only eyes, though, that contemplated the young woman with much interest; all young men not already ‘‘pay- ing attention’’ to other young women, as well as some who were, found Miss Ipsie a most engaging person to behold, and as no young man was her “regular company,’’ hopes sprang anew in manly breasts when- ever Ipsie appeared before manly eyes. Of course the bad boys knew, each for himself, that none of them could ever win and marry the teacher; they wished she might wait a few years before giving herself away, but there was little chance of it when balf a dozen more or less likely fel- lows, with half a dozen years the advan- tage of the boys, were doing all they could to prevent it. | Of course too, each half-grown boy was. distinctly of the opinion that he knew just which oue of the ‘big fellows’’ the pretty teacher should marry, and the opinions differed hopelessly. the members of the bad boys’ class would stroll off by twos and threes, to perpetrate some foreordained mischief, or go in search of that which Satan finds for idle hands to do. As they walked there was unanimous agreement about anything complimentary that any of them said about the teacher, . but before long some boy would free his mind as to which of the big fellows should win Miss Ipsie; then was the beginning of strife, with the usual accompaniments of fisticuffs, hair-pulling and shocking bad language. Such had been the situation for some months before the sun rose on a certain Easter morning, and each member of the bad boys’ class prepared for worship—of the teacher, and for combat, the latter, so far as was arranged for, being the old country custom of ‘‘fighting Easter eggs. Each boy put on his Sunday jacket, and perhaps was carefully buttoned and smoothed down by mother or sister, on- ly to have all the style taken out of him a moment or two afterward when he sneaked to the barn or woodshed and filled his pockets with eggs that had been boiled hard and highly colored. With these eggs he would have cracking matches with other hoys. the cracked eggs being the property of the winner, who promptly put them where hoys think eggs do most good, and, as the chances were about even, there was scarcely a Blue Bridge boy who had any appetite left for Easter Sunday dinner at home, or who didn’t wake with a head- ache and a bad temper on Easter Monday. Egg-fights were indulged in onthe way to Sunday school; they were slyly kept up in school itself, particularly during prayer time, when all heads were bowed, and they were continued even in church itself by such boys as were trusted to sit in the hack seats and out of range of paternal eyes, as they still are in thousands of villages every Easter morning. : But not all the colored eggs in the town of Blue Bridge were doomed to destruction on the Sunday with which this story bas to do. Fully a week before the eventful day there had come to Billsey Chubb, the biggest of the bad boys and almost old enough to rank with the hig boys, that it would be the proper thing for the class to make its teacher a present of a box of Eas- ter eggs, each boy to contribute his hand-- somest specimen. t “It don’t need to be the hardest, you know,”’ explained Billsey, ‘‘for of course she won’t have nobody to fight eggs with. Gosh ! Just think how awfal it must be to be a girl—a young woman, I mean.”’ ‘Not to he her,” replied Jack Mulling, who ‘was as imaginative as he was bad, and:who always wore long hair and the mosh brilliant neckties that the village store could supply. ‘'A daisy like that wonldn’t be a hoy if she could—not for a hundred egg fights, an’ all the rest of the fun that’s going.” “This was so strong a statement that all the boys gave it a moment or two of wide- eyed thought, but no one ventured to deny it. Finally Billsey Chubb remarked : ‘‘Well, there ain’t to be no eggs given her that ain’t as pretty as pictures. I’ve got a. toney box to put ’ém in, an’ we'll | lay ’em in colored cotton, just like them breastpins that’s for sale at the store. Say, fellers, would it do to put in a note, sayin’ we hope she won’t give none of em to any of the young fellers that come a ‘visitin’ her??? ‘No, it wouldn't!’ exclaimed Jack Mulling.. ‘‘Ladies don’t give away the presents they get. I read all about it in the ‘Answers to Correspondents’ in a news- paper that my sister takes.” “Good !"” ‘said Billsey.. “I didn’t know but she might give one of ‘em to Lije Minsey, who goes up to her house sometimes Sunday evenin’s, an’ he ain’t fit to be her daddy’s sick mule. If she wasa * After Sunday school | .| won’t do. i mind to give one to Luke Holway, now—" ‘‘Luke Holway don’t need nothin’ but hoofs to make him a hog. All the rest of | him’s finished. Lije Minsev’s a gentle- man; he puts cologne on his handkerchief Sundays an’ he knows lots of pieces of poetry, an’ hespent two whole weeks in the city once, there !”’ said Jack. “Luke’s a gentleman, too,’’ insisted Bill- sey. Don’t he get two new hats every winter, an’ ain’t the buckles of his buggy ! harness silver plated? What’s cologny handkerchiefs an’ poetry pieces alongside of that?” The other boys, to whom Billsey looked appealingly, seemed in doubt as to which side to take. It really was a puzzling question, for Lije Minsey was the Sunday school librarian, and had made a special collection of money from the solid men of the village to buy such books as he thought the bad boys’ class would like, while Luke Holway was not the man to let a boy walk in the dust of the highway while he was driving in his sweli buggy—not even if Luke had his Sunday clothes on and the boy was covered from head to foot with dust and cockle-burrs. It is hard to say how long the boys would have delayed their decision had not the youngest and most wandering-eyed of the crowd sudden- ly piped out : ‘‘Hey, fellers; she’s a-comin’.”’ Sure enough down the brick-paved, oc- casionally shaded sidewalk came Miss Ipsie Brett. None of the boys knew enough to assume respectful attitudes, but all stared reverently and Billsey half whispered, half croaked : ‘Don’t she just look like a mince pie at Thanksgivin’ ?”’ ‘More like a glass of lemonade after go- ing swimmin’,”’ suggested Jack. After a moment he continued : “If Luke Holway was a gentleman he'd be takin’ her out buggy ridin’ a fine day like this.”” ‘If Lije Minsey was anything but a store clerk’’ retorted Billsey he'd be a walking home with her.’’ - At any other place and time the differ- ence of opinion might have been settled: with fists, but Miss Brett had been ap- proaching so rapidly that she reached the group just as Jack’s remark ended and she put on a quizzical smile, which the boys thought was too pretty for anything, as she stoppad and said : ‘Talking over next Sunday’s lesson, boys? Be sure you all have it correctly.’ Then she passed on, while Billsey groaned : ‘Gosh, boys, I s’pose she thinks we’re just like her—ain’t got no use to think of nothin’ but what’s good.?’ Several of the other boys groaned, through sympathy, and thought to themselves that between them and their pretty teacher there was as wide and deep a gulf as that which separated the winter skating from autumn apple-stealing. But Jack Mulling was not one of them, for suddenly there came to him an inspira- tion that made him jump as if he had been stung by a yellow-jacket. Several hoys asked him what was the matter, but Jack replied merely that it hadn’t yet been set- tled who should present the class present to the teacher and how the presentation should be made, and when. : ‘‘You’re the feller to de it, Billsey,” said he. “ “You're the oldest and the big- gest of us.”’ Billsey at ouce blushed, tried to shrink, and showed other signs of embarassment, concluding with the statement : ‘‘Not by a durned sight. I ain’t got no gift of gab.’”” Several other boys declined in rapid succession, and finally voted n- nanimously that Jack Mulling, having been the first to think of it, should be deputed to make the presentaticn, that being ac- cording to the custom of town meetings re- garding any man who made a suggestion of anything special to be done. The several days that followed were very busy ones for Master Jack Mulling. The youth had been the cleverest student in the Blue Ridge Public school, but sudden- ly he recited so imperfectly that his teach- er, who had once been a bad boy himself, suspected that some new mischief was brewing,so he provided himself with a new lot of hickory switches, such being the most approved means of school authority in that part of the country. Jack was home at meal time every day, instead of being late through pressing engagements with other boys. and he did not go out af- ter supper—two facts which encouraged his mother to believe that he had ‘‘got un- der influence’’ at some of the special meet- ings, which had recently been held at the church. The only place beside home and school at which he spent any time was Driver’s store, which Lije Minsey was the sole clerk. Minsey attached no special importance to these visits, for lounging at the store was the delight of all the village loafers, old and young, but he was ‘some- what surprised. during a late afternoon lull of business, by Jack asking, with a painfully sheepish face, if ‘he would look at a piece of poetry and see if it was all right. I “You see,” Jack explained, “I know well enough what IT want to say,but I ain’t sure I’ve said it correct, and it’s got to be just ‘80, aud thundering nice, too, or it Now, you know lots of ' pieces of poetry—I’ve heard you speak some of em at the Literary Society evenin’s, so' I thought mebbe you'd —"’ ; “Why, certainly, Jack,”’ said the clerk heartily. « ‘I'll do anything to help a bud- ding poet into bloom. ‘What are the verses about—beautiful spring or a girl 2” : “Why, a girl, to hesure. aud she’s as beautiful as a hundred yearsfull of springs. Say, Lije’’—here Jack’s face suddenly be- came very earnest and inquiring—*‘did you ever know one of that kind 2’! “£4 The clerk wanted to laugh, but suddenly his own fancy went on a short journey— only as far as the home of Ipsie Brett; and’ he replied softly : i : ‘‘Yes, indeed; I've one in'my mind now. Between men; Jack —between men, mind— she’s there all the while. But that poem of your’s—read it to me, hefore some one comes in.”’ ats “It’s about Easter eggs; colored ones,yon know," said Jack as he drew a bit of fold- ed paper from the inside pocket of his jacket. : “I thought you said it was about a girl 27? kind “*Well, so it is. Here—read it yourself, and then you'll understand. It’s to go with a present of a box of Easter eggs.” The clerk unfolded the manuscript with the judicial air with which any poet ap- proached the work of anv other man who thinks he ean write poetry; he read for a moment and then, suddenly saying, ‘‘I’ll have to take it to the window; the light isn’t any too good in this part of the store,” made haste to secrete himself between the desk screen and the window and laugh himself almost into apoplexy as he read as follows : 4 A prettier lot of eggs than this No fellow ever saw ; But you'd be prettier than the lot It it was a million more. + If you love me as I love you, Give me both hands on Sunday ; Bat if I ain’t no good to you, Please smash the eggs on Monday. “Jack,” said the clerk, when finally he could trust himself to return with a straight face to the counter, ‘‘you have two quali- ties for which many older poets have striven in vain-—breviey and directness. 1 think, though, that the latter tends too strongly to abruptness.’’ “I felt sure there wassomethin’ wrong,’ replied the maker of the verses. ‘‘-ay, Lije, won’t you help me out? Mebbe I can do as much for you some day, some way. make it yourself, if you was going to send a bully lot of Easter eggs to the prettiest girl you know—just the very prettiest girl in the world ?”’ The clerk fell quickly into a day dream dared send a present of Easter eggs to Ipsie Brett and ask for her heart at the same time. Would that he bad the courage of extreme youth, as exemplified by blunder- ing Jack Mulling. Really, how would he put it ? Wonder and fancy and love took possession of him; the store remained void of visitors, except the boy poet,so the clerk went again to the desk. ‘Don’t leave out that about giving both hands on Sunday, Lije, if you please, ’’said Jack. ‘‘I ain’% so particular about her smashin’ the eggs on Monday—I put that Jine in to make the verse come out right, for I counldn’t make it work any other way.” ‘All right, Jack,” came a drawling reply ‘Don’t talk to me any more for a few minutes.”’ Jack would have seemed very good com- pany for himself, had anyone seen him in the quarter hour that followed; he smiled, he winked, he slapped his leg, and did many other things peculiar to half-grown boys in high spirits, and he did not seem in the least offended when the clerk show- ed him some verses in which his own had been revised almost out of recognition. On the contrary, he exclaimed : ‘‘Bully for you, Lije. Say, tell me something I can do to pay yon for taking all thie trouble.” . ‘Well, Jack, you may give me your poem for mine, if you like; fair exchange is no robbery, you know.” “It’s a bargain,”’ said the younger man, folding the revision carefully and hurrying out of the store, while the clerk re-read the original manuscript and laughed until the arrival of a customer, who chanced to be Miss Ipsie Brett,who made a small pur- chase and was hurrying away when the clerk remarked : “I’ve just had a serious interview with one of your Sunday charges, Miss Brett— Master Jack Mulling.”’ “Indeed ? Ididn’t suppose boys ever could really be serious. They seem to try very hard while in my class, but I pity them for the terrible amount of self-re- straint it must take. You see. I’ve broth- ers, and I know.”’ : ‘‘Ah, but Jack's seriousness is of a very different kind. He’s in love, or thinks he is, which amounts to the same thing, so far as his feelings are concerned.’’ A ‘*Poor fellow,’ sighed the young wom- an. wish him well”? | : L ‘‘How good of you. If only more mature years are necessary, won’t you extend your good wishes to such other of your aec- quaintances as are in Jack’s condition of mind ?”’ “With all my heart. if they are as hon- est and earnest and adoring by nature as that scamp Jack.”’ The clerk responded with a look that caused Miss Brett to turn quickly and de- part, though not soon enough to hide a store, to the clerk’s eyes, into a nook in Paradise. The day before Easter Sunday was the Blue Bridge had known since that before the Fourth of July. The bad boys’ class set as a committee of the whole on theac- ceptance of Easter eggs for the testimonial to the teacher. The session, which lasted from frosty morn till dewy eve, was held in Billsey Chubb’s father’s barn, where the ist had done his very best, assisted by such home talent as he could command, and the results wonld have amazed most artists and horrified not a few. Jack Mulling had ‘been so intent on his poetry and other de- vices that he had not succeeded in coloring a single egg which met the approval of the committee. When this fact was forced upon him he bravely offered to trade his entire lot for any single egg which would be accepted. : . : The question of the eligibility of colored goose eggs and turkey eggs being raised, it was referred to a sub-committee of three and the members retired to the corn-crib for consultation, prudently carrying their utes the discussion became so animated the sub-committee’s room and found the and a mass of broken eggs, and when order was restored the three disputants looked somewhat like gigantic chickens newly | hatched, ‘so abundantly were ‘they covered | with yellow stains and fragments of shell. ain by the praise which had been award- ed his bright particular egg, insisted that on each egg should be scratched with * the point of a pin the initials of the giver. This suggestion was voted down, as also was ope that the givers should unite ina ‘‘round robin’’ to accompany the box. Jack Mulling listened to everything, but said little; but he moved the appointment of a committee to devise an appropriate in- soitiption. He was made the chairman of said commiftee, and soon brought in a re- port that there should be no inscription ‘whatever upon the box, this being the pur- pointed. It was agreed that for the bearer to say that the present was from the bad boys’ class would be sufficient. Finally after many arrangements and re- arrangements of the eggs and a fond, last look at them in their rosy nest, it was dis- covered that no bad thought to bring paper and string with which to wrap it. Then came the opportunity for which Jack Mull- ing had been hoping, and which he had vowed should come some day, no matter what trick he might have to play to bring it about. He said his mother had some silvered paper and thin blue ribbon. and that if the boys "would let him take the box to his house he would hook enough to make it almost as pretty as the ‘daisy for whom it was intended. i The offer was accepted, and within five minutes Jack, with a smile so large that made him feel as if his face wasstietching, had slipped under the cover of the box Lije Minsey’s poem in Lije’s own hand- writing, and neatly wrapped and tied the package and rejoined the boys. Then, as Won't you fix up that poem for me | so it'll be just right? Just like you’d | and wondered what he would wrire if he | “If he were a few years older T would" most important that some of the youth of | box and the'red cotton had been on private ' view for three successive days. Each color- | surplus’eggs with them. Within five min-’ that the committee of the ‘whole’ invaded’ members on the floor in a triangular fight! Then one boy, who had been made over-' pose with which he had the committee ap- blush which. transformed the dingy old | to the boys that there was no better time to deliver it. and he was escorted by the whole class to the teacher’s house, with the instructions to give the present only into the teacher's own hands. He had no trouble in doing this, but when the young woman asked him from whom the package came he stammered. ‘*‘Mebbe the name’s inside. If it ain’t, I reckon yon’ll know the writin’—it’s that «of the nicest young man in the town.”” He dared not trust himself to remain for fur- ther questioning, so he dashed out of the house and rejoined the boys, who greeted him with a. chorus of hoarse whispers. “What did she say ?”’ ‘She said,”’ Jack replied as coolly as if he were a veteran politician and a disbe- liever in a hereafter, ‘‘shesaid that she was much obliged to us, and:she wouldn’t ever forget onr kindness.” Most of the bad boys’ class spent the re- mainder of the evening in longing for the morning “and the egg-fighting which, ac- cording to the time-honored custom, could not begin until sunrise, but Jack Mulling was not sure that he was in a hurry to see the light of Easter morning. Now that the deed was done, he recalled some well- meant practical jokes upon young men and women that had made an immense amount of trouble at Blue Bridge—jokes for which over-smart people had been compelled to leave town, some of them failing to get away before they had been soundly kicked or otherwise soundly punished. Suppose that he was mistaken in believ- ing that his friend Elijah and Miss Brett were quite fond of each other and the young clerk learned what nse bad been made of his verses. what would hap- pen? Suppose Luke Holway were really the favored of the pretty teacher, and was shown the poem, it would be just like him to go to Driver's store, thrash Lije, who was much the smaller man, demand an ex- planation afterward, and theu go for Jack himself with a buggywhip or whatever might come handy ? Suppose Miss Brett herself should be angry, find out how it all happened, and dismiss the well-meaning but meddlesome perpetrator from her class? Indeed, if anything hut the right thing were to bappen, Jack would wish he had run away from home—he would 1un away now but for the egg-fighting he would do in the morning with the fruit of a trusty hen whom he bad treated to unlimited bobe-dust for a month. He took no part in the early morning contests, but stood among the earliest at the Sunday school door, prepared to hurry away ahd hide should any alarming signs appear. When Miss Brett arrived she af- fected Jack like an apparition, for, of course, she had on a new bonnet, like any other young woman on Easter Sunday, and Jack, like most other members of his sex wasn’t quick to discern a familiar face under “an ‘unfamiliar bonnet. A load tumbled. from his heart, though, as the if Jack was connected in her wind with something pleasing. So far, so good ; but how: about Lije Minsey, who wasn’t'vet in sorts of names, but they made the situation ‘wo better. Could he in any way. give Lije | a quiet tip. He was sure he didn’t see how, but with a wild determination to do something he stood in front of the build- ing, and as soon as he saw Elijah afar off he hurried toward him. ‘‘Good-morning, Jack,’’ said the young man, and then continued with a quizzical look. ‘‘How did the verses work ? How’s the girl ? *‘She’s prettier than ever this mornin’ ?’ Jack replied. ‘‘How’s youis?”’ ‘Mine? Ob, I haven't any.”’ ‘“‘Haven’t? Then why don’t you make up to my Sunday school teacher? She’d suit you, wouldn’t she ?”’ g ‘Ah, she’d suit any man, Jack.’ “Why don’t you get her, then, b fore some other feller grabs her? I reckon she’s sweet on you already.”’ ‘Upon my word, young man,”’ exclaim- ed the cierk-librarian, stopping and staring at his companion, ‘““are you in the habit of observing women closely ?”’ ‘I"ve looked at her lots, an’ I guess you don’t know how much she looks at you in Sunday school when you're lookin’ some other way.’’ Minsey’s face reddened ; Jack went on: ‘Pity you didn’t send them verses to her instead of givin’ ’em to me-—’ specially that part about givin’ her two hands on Sunday. She’s a picture to-day, I just tell you.” By this time the couple had reached the school, and both entered, and it seemed to Jack that his teacher and Lije quickly ex- changed tender yet embarrassing looks. ‘The school service opened in the usual ‘manner, the lesson of the day was discussed and Miss Brett tried her utmost to make it of practical value to her . graceless charges. The school was held in the church huilding, each teacher having a pew instead of chair ‘or desk, with ‘her scholais in one or two pews behind her. - At one end of the front row. of bad ‘hoys was Jack, with Bill- sey Chubb beside him, and Billsey asked several times why Jack was so confounded silent and ‘stupid, for the youth had. neith- ereyes nor: thoughts for anything but his pretty teacher and Lije Minsey. Toward the end of the lesson, while the librarian was collecting the hooks returned, Miss Brett's thoughts seemed to wander from the lesson itself, and as Lije approached her seat the lesson paper fell from her hands. Jack leaned slyly forward ; he saw Lije how, put down both hands to take the re- turn books of the class, then he saw the little hands steal into those of the librarian. Then Jack dropped back in his seat, heaved a long sigh of relief and gave Bill- howl that brought the entire school to its feet. while’ the librarian snatched the hooks and hurried away and the pretty teacher blushed as red as the roses in her bonnet ; and Billsey Chubb turned on his tormentor with a long pin, and the super- intendent, who on week-days managed a | lamber yard, hurried down to the bad boys’ class, snatched out both Jack and Billsey and deposited them on the sidewalk with a vigorous kick or two by way of em- phasis, and both hoys went into an open lot nearby to adjust their differences, and Jack got a severe drubbing without whinip- ering a particle. Then. he - made his way home to remove the dust of battle from his garments and thus avoid a painful inter- view with his father. He had just finished and the ‘‘last bell for church?’ services was tolling when a loud and persistent knock- ing summoned him to the front door, where he found himself face to face with Lije Minsey, who gasped : : “Jack, you young scoundrel, you're mixed up in this thing in some way. Tell me all about it—quick.’’ ‘“What’s the matter with’ yon? asked Jack, assuming as bold a front as he could. **Ain’t you in luck ?”’ “Yes, but—"’ ‘‘Ain’t she happy ?”’ the shades of night had fallen, he suggested | teacher’s eye met his, for there seemed a. | grateful, though shy look in it—a look as the secret at all ? Jack called himself all teacher’s head drop slightly ‘and her. two: sey Chubb a mighty pinch that elicted a ‘‘She certainly seems to be, but—"’ | ‘*Well, then, what are von coughin’ | about ?”’ It took some effort to get a frank and | [nlf statement from Jack, but when Lije | learned that there had been a deliberate | bit of match-making developed from some | hero worship in which he himself had been | the hero he said more pleasant things than | Jack had ever heard about himself before. All that seemed to trouble the happy man was that his taste in colors might be judged by the epgs—he had seen Blue | Bridge Easter eggs before. When how he relieved himself from this imputa- tion Jack never knew, but when the en- gagement of the belle of the village was formally announced Miss Brett gave a din- ner to the bad boys’ class, there being no other guests present but Lije Minsey, and after the meal the young lady brought in the box of eggs which all the boys remem- bered well, and begged each of the givers to pencil his autograph upon his own con- | tribution, and later in the evening the | boys saw one anther home without a single fight, although Billsey Chubb remarked two or three times that he couldn’t see what excuse Jack Mulling had at that din- ner for putting on about as much style as if he was a grown man.—Jokn Hablerton. Easte rn ‘Jerusalem. , ‘Christ is risen I” “*Chuiist is risen, in- deed, and hath appeared unto Simon.” Thus were Christians in primitive times wont to salute each other on Easter morn- ing. This beautiful custom is retained in the Greek church. In Russia one may still hear these words which recall theday when the surprised disciples first listened to the joyful tidings. The anniversary of the Risen Lord will be commemorated throughout Christendom on Snnday, but in no spot will the cele- bration of Easter have so deep a significance as in Palestine, the scene of His birth, min- istry, crucifixion. resurrection, ascension. A traveler gives an interesting account of Easter in Jerusalem. **On Easter Day the tomb of Christ in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is covered with the lilies which are used all over the world. The Mount of Calvary is visited hy the Christian population of the town and the members of the various religious orders inbabiting it and flowers are strewn upon the spot where the cross is supposed to have stood. The archways under which tradi- tion tells us Christ walked upon His way to the spot of crucifixion are standing just as they stood fully 2,200 years ago. Every Easter the little children of many of Jeru- salem’s families are taken to this place of the cross and told what the various objects signify and of the great events which tran- spired there, “On Easter Sunday every believer in the doctrines which were preached by the Be- ing whose resurrection is celebrated, makes his way to the mount, and there, in some form or other, observes the day. There are processions of old and young. One hears that familiar anthem, “Gloria in Excelsis?’ all about. Now to the mount or the Gar- den of Gethsemane comes a troop of young girls all in white and singing ‘Christ the Lord is Risen Today. Alleluia.’ ; “This Garden of Gethsemane, where the children love to spend muoch of their time on Easter, is a small enclosure 100 ft. long and 150 ft. wide. It is cared for by a col- ony of Franciscan monks, who spend much time beautifying it. The place is beauti- fully adorned with hedges kept in exquisite order by the monks, There are innumera- ble beds of pinks and roses and visitors are given a nosegay hy the monk in attend- ance. : “The Easter celebrants are ‘also almost sure to visit the bunch .of seven venerable olive tiees, some of them nineteen feet in circumference, and so old that their trunks are stored up with stones. These trees are believed to be descendants of those which existed upon the same spot at the time Christ lived inthe world. This belief is lent what seems positive proof by the fact that they are unlike all other trees of the same -variety in that country. The only spots in the garden where the appearance of the Easter visitors indicates other than a feeling of joy and religious inspiration are those where a monument marks the spot where Judas Iscariot gave the kiss of be- trayal. Even the little children scorn the memory of that most famous of traitors.” . Billed as Potatoes. A Young Man in a Sack Travels 700 Miles in a Freight Car. Billed as a choice sack of potatoes a young man has arrived in Chicago from Kansas City tied up in a sack. For three days and a half he had been confined in the sack, and during that time he had traveled close to 700 miles in a freight car. The sack which covered him was inclosed in an open fruit case. \ The traveler, who is Martin J. Klansdig- ger, a machinist of Kansas City, was nearly famished when he was cut from his prison at the Chicago & Northwestern freight house by a friend who had been waiting for a day and a half in the city for him to ar- rive. - 8 Lo Klansdigger began his journey with only a quart of water and two pounds of crack- ers in the sack with him, this being a con- dition of a wager of $300, which caused him to make the perilous trip. When re- leased Klansdigger was nearly blinded by | the dust which had crept into the sack,and ‘his throat and mouth were so parched that be could hardly speak, his little cask of wa- ter having been spilled after he had heen on his journey a day. | : For nearly three days he had been with- out water, and he stated when he was able to talk that had it not rained Wednesday he would certainly have died of thirst. During most of the storm the car in whieh he was packed was side tracked out in one small country town, and the water came through a crack in the roof and fell on the sack. ' The burlap became quite wet, and he was thus enabled to snck from the cloth a few drops which allayed his thirst. ——May—Charley Stubtoe is a good dancer in hig way. gpa Sue—Yes, and in everybody else’s way. VERY CURIOUS. A nomiy came tilting over the lawn— Curious ! Curious ! Curious ! He glanced all ahout with his bright litlle eyes, a And he hauled up a worm of a very great size And he gobbled him down with an air of sur- prise— i Such a very ridiculous air of surprise! (Curious ! Curious! Curious!) And [ said to him: “Birdie, reflect—is it wise, i In a manner so frantic and furious, To gobble down worms of such terrible size ! Don’t you think it is very injurious ?"’ But all he would say as he hurried away Was: “Curious ! . Curious! Curious! What curiosity! What-what ! © Curious— curious creature ! 4 — Alice Reid in Harper's Bazar.’ and | .| perfectly light when handled. Special Cakes for Easter. Many of the delightful old observances attached to Eastertide have become almost obsolete. The practice of serving special kivds of breads and cakes on certain days is still kept up by those who love the old | time customs. The lists of these breads and cakes con- | sidered appropriate, or having any signifi- | cance in connection with the days, is not very varied, heing confined to pancakes, { fritters and buns. Bat ignoring the mean- | ing attached to all observances of this sea- | son, we may take the same liberty in this,as | we doin choosing other dishes toserve dur- | ing the Lenten season,if we still observe the ‘‘eternal fitness of things’’ in the selection of the materials composing them. Pancakes and fritters, to be stric tly or- thodox, should be served only on Shrove Tuesday and on Good Friday; but are in keeping for luncheons all through Lent, especially on Wednesday and Fridays. PLAIN PANCAKES. Break six eggs into a bowl and beat un- til very light. Allow to each egg a gill of milk, an eighth of a teaspoonful of salt and abcut an ouuce (quarter of a cup) of flour. Sift flour into a bowl. Make a well in the center and add the eggs and milk gradual- ly, mixing toa smooth batter. If eggs are large a little more flour may be neces- sary. The batter must be the consistency of thick cream. Place a smooth iron frying pan on the fire; see that it is perfectly clean and smooth or the pancake will stick. When the pan is hot put in a small piece of sweet butter. When it is melted pour in just enough batter to cover the bottom of the pan; about half a enp for a pan five inches in diameter. If made thin enough they need not be turned. When done sprinkle .over with powdered sugar, roll it up in the pan and take out with large eake turner. Place on a hot dish before the fire until you have sufficient quantity fried to serve. They are better served as soon as fried. A little grated lemon or orange rind may he added to the batter orsifted with the sugar. If the whites of the eggs are beaten sepa- rately and added to batter the last thing the pancakes will be lighter. . Allow four or five minutes for the very thin pancake and six or eight for the thicker one. Very rich pancakes are made with eggs. cream, sugar, sherry, grated nutmeg and flour. ORANGE FRITTERS. Measure a cupful of sifted flour and sift into a mixing bowl with a level teaspoon- ful of salt. Beat the yoke of one egg with a tablespoonful of good salad oil; mix these gradually into the flour by making a well in the center of the flour and adding egg and oil. When the batter is ‘smooth add gradually enough to hold a drop let fall from the mixing spoon. Beat whites of the eggs to a smooth froth and fold lightly into the batter. Put two or three slices of orange into this batter; cover them well, and then slide into hot fat aud fry a golden brown. Remove with a skimmer or wire egg whip; dust with powdered sugar and serve hot. POPOVERS. Mix to a smooth batter two cups of flour, and two cups of milk and the yolks of two eggs; add a level teaspoonful of salt. If you do not possess iron popover pans, but- ter six little earthern custard cups and place in a pan in a hot even. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and fold lightly and quickly into the batter. Fill the hot, buttered cups about half full of batter and bake until they are brown and These can be served for breakfast, eaten with butter, or for luncheon or dinner as a dessert, using a good sweet sauce or maple syrup. BREAKFAST ROLLS. Heat to scalding poiut one pint of milk with a large tablespoonful of butter, a tablespoonful of sugar, a level teaspoonful of salt. Turn into a howl and when luke-: warm add half a yeast cake dissolved ina little lukewarm water. Beat in flour enough to have rather a thick batter; beat for five minutes until full of bubbles, then add flour to make a dough. Knead for at: least ten minutes, until the dough is smooth and elastic to the touch. Set in a moder- ately warm place and let rise for four hours; watch that it does not get too light. Knead down well; take pieces of dough about the size of an egg, roll out on board, having the roll about an inch thick in the middle and pointed at each end. Place some dis- tance apart in well-buttered tins;cover and let rise for an honr; then bake in a quick oven. HOT CROSS BUNS. Two pounds of sifted flour, two cups of sugar, two oups of currants, half a tea- spoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of mixed spices. Mix these all together in a bowl. Make a hole in the center and add half a pint of warm milk and half a cake of yeast dissolved in a half a cup of lukewarm wat- er. Mix slowly into the flour until you have a smooth, thin batter; cover and set in a warm place until light, then add half a pound of melted butter and milk enough to make a soft dough of all the flour; cover" this with a thin. coating of flour and let rise once more for half an hour. Shape in- to buns and lay them far apart in buttered tins. Cover and set to rise for half an hour. ' Just before going in the oven make a cross on each one by pressing the back of a knife almost entirely through the dough. Bake in a quick oven for ten or fifteen min- utes. j LIN10 ' ANGEL FOOD CAKE. : Take one and one-half cupe of granulated sugar and sift twice, one cup of flonr sifted . four times. the whites of eleven eggs, a teaspoonful of vanilla and half a teaspoon- ful of cream tartar. ey Add a pinch of salt to the whites and beat them about half stiff, then add, the cream tartar and continue whipping until eggs are very stiff; sprinkle the sugar in’ lightly. then add the flavoring, beat in; then fold in the flour as lightly as possi- ble; sprinkle it in, a spoonful ata time. Do not stop beating or folding until ready for the pan. Pour into an nngreased pan and bake ina moderate oven for forty min- utes. , ANGEL CHARLOTTE, Make a loaf of angel cake by above. recipe. When perfectly cold carefully cut out the center, leaving a wall at least an inch thick. Ice the sides and top with boiled icing, then fill the center with sweetened and flavored whipped cream or charlotte russe, heaping it up roughly. Scatter over the whole candied violets.—By Lida Ames Willis. The Oldest Grand Army Man. Aaron Young, who died in Lynn, Mass., the other day, was said to be ‘the oldest Grand Army member in the country. He was born in Union, Me., April 14, 1808,and exempt from military service when the Civil War broke out, being fifty three years old, | he enlisted in the Thirteenth Maine Volun- teers and followed his twenty year old son. to the front. He was a member of Post 5, Department of Massachusetts, the largest post in the United States. ¥