Bellefonte Pe., Februrary 12, 1904. THE HISTORY OF LIFE. Day dawn’d. Within a curtained room, Filled to faintness with perfume, A lady lay at point of doom. Day closed. A child had seen the light ; But for the lady fair and bright, She rested in undreaming night. Spring came. The lady’s grave was green, And near it oftentimes was seen, A gentle boy, with thoughtful mien. Years fled. He wore a manly face, And struggled in the world’s rough race, And won at last a lofty place. And then he died ! Behold before ye, Humanity’s brief sum, and story, Life, death and all that is of—Glory. —Barry Cornwall. PRINCE ROSELEAF AND A GIRL FROM KANSAS. Edgington was at the end of the long gallery when he heard the swish-swish of many feet, the high, penetrating voice of the American girl, and a laugh that was frank and free and unlike anything to be heard obo the coutinent, ‘‘That,monsieur,”’ explained his guide‘‘is a partie of Cook’s.”’ The young American looked with distaste at the Belgian whose supercilious tone he resented for his compatriots. But he look- ed with distaste, too, upon the miscella- neous assortment of Americans, male and female, being herded into the ‘‘salle. And he blushed at fancying himself among them: and then had the grace to blush be- cause he had blushed. The ““partie of Cook’s took possession of the place. Its flight-like that of wild geese the guide first,a girl with a green veil nexé a hardy adventurer following after a space, another, and then a scattered bunch—Iled straight for the great Rubens. A swift con- centration about the guide-magnet, a per- functory. ‘‘Here you see before you, la- dies and gentlemen,” ‘‘Ici, mesdames eb messienrs, vous voyez,”’ ‘‘Hier, meine da- men und herren, sie sehen’’—following in rapid succession without a varying tone or accent. A choral ‘‘Oh!”’ a murmur of as- tonishment, curiosity,gratification and then swiftly on the wing again; alighting before the Rembrandt, just tonching earth a min- ute before an Ary Scheffer, then taking flight reluctantly and strung out like re- gretful peris leaving Paradise; a clatter; a swish; a.silence; the swift murmur of the polyglot guide; an ‘‘O--oh!”’ the slip-slip of many feet on the marble floor—and that was all. They vanished’ as they came and Edging ton, who stood musing before Van Dyke’s ‘‘Saint Catherine.’’ looked after them, a puzzled frown on nis boyish face. He walked a few steps after the radiant- visaged Belgian who was his guide, then absent-mindedly dismissed him. He stood a moment irresolute, looking upward. But he did not see the palely beautiful frescoes above the arched doorway for him the wall was lettered as Belshazzar’s. But the let- tering that held Edgington’s attention, was in a most modern, business-like hand, and it read: “You are altogether mistaken, my lad, if you fancy your father’s a fool. I'm not putting up for a prince’s tour over the continent. You're at liberty to cut it all short and come home, or to see Europe on what's left to you, but no more of Jim Edgington’s dollars go to prove to the na- tives that another young American ass is abroad.” Heyward Heriot Edgington recognized his father’s forthright style in those words. He could not only thank fortune that it had been given to him to read them rather than to listen to them, and that very day he join ed this ‘‘partie of Cook’s.’” Mary Daley looked once at his full signa ture on the hotel ‘register, and the new member of the ‘‘partie’” found himself christened ‘‘H-H’’ hefore he had been among them a day. This, Miss Daley play- ed upon by a natural series of facetious puns. At different times during the next day he was known as Mr. Hyphenated Hy- phen, Hy Hiram, Breakfast Food, Dejoon- er (Miss Daley scorned the affectations of foreign pronunciations), Jooner and June. Where this girl led, any and all dared to follow. Her high spjrits, the passion for sightseeing that possessed her, ber untiring bodily energy and unceasing native delight and her pert wit made her the head as well as the life of the party. Sheknew the pro- fession and the pretenses of its every mem- ber. She could mimic the serious, intelli- gent, blonde German lady-professor from St. Lonis as cleverly as the handsome boy from the South who was devoted to her. And she so loved to practice her mimicries, and was so careless of consequences that at times, her victim found himself among her audience. This happened once to Edgington, who, following on her heels as they all arrived at the station at The Hague, heard her cry to ber friend Miss Merton: “I beg your pardon,but may I ask the name of the brad canal with the Jorge building on this side She tripped as she was saying it, and. in recovering her balance, her eve fell on Edg- fogton’s outstretched arm and flashed iace. She looked donbtful a moment, and then said with an irresistible giggle: ‘“’'Tain’t a very good imitation, is it? Bus you see you haven’t been with us long enough yes.” ‘‘Long enoogh to get from H-H to Jane’ he answered. ‘Ob, you know that too? Well—it’s the common lot of man to be nicknamed. And it’s good for him. And’’ she looked up at him out of the corner of her eye, as though testing how far she might go. (Na- ture had lingered lovingly on the details of this fat little girl's face, and the mark of Her artist’s fingers was upon the corners of lips and eyelids, in the molding of chin and forehead )—*‘and it’s my opinion yon haven’t had enough of it, Mr.—June!"’ *‘What makes you think so?” ‘‘Have you got a lot of brothers and sis- ters?’ *‘No—none.”’ ‘I thought not.’’ : He was undecided as to whether he was resentful or not, but the charm there was in watching the dimpled corners of Mary Daley’s mouth, and the special effective set of her eyes, led them on. Core,” he urged, ‘‘give me your rea- sous.”’ ‘“You’ll be mad if I do.”’ ‘‘No—I won't.” . ‘‘Well, you see, no man who wasn’t his father’s only son could put such awful 30n- descension into joining us as you do. No man who had been laughed at a lot when be wae a boy could find us all—me espe- . oially—so volgar. No man could suffer such agonies at being classed with us who —I said you’d be mad.” He did not answer. He was “mad” clear through. An impulse to be thorough while she was about it possessed her. Do you know your real name?’’ she 1 Well, I’11 tell you. asked pertly. ‘‘It ain’t June—it’s really —1I say’’—the impudence in her face broke into a bewildering maze of dimples—*“I say—guess what it is !"’ He shook his head. ‘“You must be awful mad,’’ she teased, ‘“‘if you’ve not curiosity enough to ask. You are the P. L. G. —the perfect little gentleman. He wasn’t little, which was some small consolation to him; but he flashed under her taunts. ‘‘And what may vou be?’ he demanded. ‘*Me ? Oh, I'm a dozen things, accord- ing to your point of view,’ she answered, with good-natured composure. ‘I’m the Kansas Schoolma’am. I'm Dickens’s fat girl. I’m Lady Raw-and-Ready. I’m Bessie Backwoods. There are lots of nick- names I deserve, but youn can’t make me mad by calling me them.” She looked up at him with a frank pleas- ure that was disarming. “You see,’’ she went on, “I'm nine- teen. I’ve been teaching school, off in the country, ever since my fifteenth birthday. I’ve saved every dollar I could scrape to- gether—there’s nobody in the world to look out for me but my aunt, and her hands are full--and I’m blowing it all in on this trip that I’ve dreamed of all my life,and that’s greater than all my dreams. I may be crude and ignorant and fresh— but I’m happy; bappier than these artistic swells who are bored to death, ashamed or afraid to say what they like and what they don’t, and so penned in and tyrannized over by rules orsomebody’s opinion that they daren’t be natural. I don’t care a darn whether I know the proper thing or not, and I hate people who pose and pre- tend that they do. All that stuff hasn’t anything to do wish life or living.—How does that sound to you—vulgar ?”’ Edgington yielded to a sudden impulse to match her frankness. ‘Look here, I'm not such a prig as—as I seem, evidently, to you. Ido like the proper thing—not because it’s the proper thing, but because it suits me. I do like to travel, to live, to appear well. I like the best restaurants, the finest trains, the best-dressed women, the ocleverest clubs—all because the raw- nesses of life are hidden, and the rough edges turned carefully under in them. I like the best—and I took it and had it and enjoyed it till my letter of credit was a sum of subtractions, and then the old gen- tleman, who likes these things as much as I do, and from whom I probably inherited my fondness for them, got one of those sudden economical seizures to which he is liable. So when I heard of the fellow be- longing to your party who was taken sick at the hotel and couldn’t go on——" ‘‘How old are yon—if you don’t mind ?*’ she interrapted. “Twenty-three. Why ?”’ ‘‘And living on your father?’ He nodded curtly. ‘‘What’s a man to do who’s just through college ?’’ She was silent a minute. ‘It seems fanny to a girl who’s made her own living ever since she left short skirts behind. No wonder you don’t enjoy this trip as I do— you didn’t earn it for yourself; somebody gave it to you.” ° They had reached the hotel and Edging- ton was glad of it. He got out in a hurry and lost eight of his tormentor till the evening, when the whole ‘‘partie’’ sailed in a body into the glittering ‘‘salle’’ and sat down to a table d’hote dinner. It was then he heard her say in an aside to Miss Merton: ‘‘You don’t know how these public appearances afflict An Only Child. He, you know, can’t bear life unless the rawnesses are hidden and the rough edges carefully turned under.’”’ It enraged him so that he forgot to besensitive to the lofty disdain of the head waiter, whose disap- proval of merely middle-class toarists in a body was as unmistakable as his own; and whose sharing of his sentiments made him feel like a lackey himself. It was an old hotel that took its age and its traditions very seriously. And it shook to its very center—where the be-buttoned, polyglot portier sat like a fat spider, his bulging eyes watching the incoming flies-- when a shriek from a bedroom on the first floor startled the night some hours later. Edgington and his room-mate heard the wild cry and, pulling on their garments, followed the proprietor, the portier, the maid, and the pert little Boots, as they hurried along the corridor. In front of the door whence the shriek had escaped the little crowd congregated while the portier knocked lustily. “Who is it ® What do you want ? It’s all right. Go ’way. Don’t bother. Never mind. It’s a mistake,” came in quick sentences from behind the closed door. It was Mary Daley’s voice; Edgington and the boy from the South both recognized it. *‘But I demand to enter !”’ cried the portier after a colloquy in Duteh with the proprietor. ‘‘Enter then !"” The door was flung open and the party entered. Miss Daley, her hair in two long braids over her shoulders, a loose red gown over her night clothes, her face looking absurdly fat and baby-like,re- ceived them. At sight of Edgington her bright eyes grew round and challenging,so he deemed it safest to remain with the Southern boy, outside. ‘Miss Merton, who is lying behind those bed curtains trying not to snicker,” de- clared ‘Miss Daley in an official tone to the portier, ‘‘shrieked because she was waken- ed from a sound eleep by Queen Wilhel- mina’s picture crashing to the floor. Will you go now and let ue get to sleep ?”’ ‘But I do not comprehend,’” said the portier, picking up the large, gilt-framed portrait from the floor, ‘‘what bad weak- ened its hold ?”’ “It might have been my washing.” ‘‘Washing ?’ ‘‘Yes——washing:’’ She stuorned and waved her band. The large pier glass over the mantel, the window panes, the portrait of the Queen’s mother, the glass of the dressing-bureau—all were plastered with’ wet white linen adhering to the smooth surface. The portier looked with incredulity, with disgust, from Mary Daley to her handi- work. r ‘*And the portrait of the Queen——?’ ‘‘Was as good as anybody else’s,”” sup-. plied Miss Daley sturdily. ‘Yon know— or perhaps you don’t know—that after yon- wash handkerchiefs you must spread them very, very smoothly on a glass surface. It saves ironing. Wilhelmina was rather bigh vp and my arms got tired, but I smoothed that handkerchief flat on Her Majesty’s face and the cord, being royalist, 1 suppose, broke three hours later.’ ‘‘Mademoiselle,’’ said the portier, his big face red, his prominent, fish-like eyes pro- trading farther in his shocked displeasure, ‘it ia not permitted so—-1’ “Then why didn’t you say so?’ she in- terrupted gaily. ‘‘The whole continent is plastered full of things that are verboten— how was I to know you preferred dirty handkerchiefs to clean ones ?"’ “It is supposed—’’ began the portier with dignity. ‘‘It is supposed that when one pays for a room to sleep in, she’s going to he permit- ted tosleep in it. Good-night.”’ In the morning they took the train for Brussels. Edgington leaned over to Miss Daley as she sat opposite in the second- class compartment, studying ber Baedeker. ‘‘Would you mind if I open the window, Mademoiselle Mouchoir ?’’ he asked. A sudden explosion of laughter shook her. ‘“You are actually getting on,”’ she ex- claimed. ‘‘The Only Child ought to be disgusted. Think what awfally bad form ——to do such a thing——and be caught at it! And you’re not shocked so as to wish you’d never joined us?” He shook his head. ‘‘Well—if you're sure you're unot--I’ll confess that I am shocked--a bit. But I had to bluff, didn’t I, with you out there in the ball? I'd have died before I’d have admitted that I bad the least idea how aw- ful that poor. plastered, gold-mirrored room looked. ”’ ‘So it was all for my henefit ?”’ “Mostly.” ‘Well, Mademoiselle Mouchoir,”’ he said audacionsly, ‘‘you might have saved yourself the trouble. I saw only the girl with the black braids and the sleepy, rosy face--why would a man want to look fur- ther ?’’ He had an agreeably novel sensation of holding the whip-hand as he watched her face crimson with confusion. *‘I call that mean,’”’ she cried, rallying. ‘‘It surely can’t be the proper thing to re- mind a girl of an unavoidable thing like that.”’ “Bat you know we're ‘darning’ the proper thing.”’ *‘I am,”’ she returned stoutly. not--sincerely.”’ ‘Well, I say, suppose you help me to; teach me to. Show me how much pleas- anter i6 is to travel second-class than de luxe; to scurry through museums when you’d love to linger over something that specially strikes you and basn’t hit the guide’s exquisite taste; be crowded in with a lot of people who——"’ ““Aren’t congenial and not received in the best families? No--you’re not teach- able, Prince Roseleaf. And why in the world--tell me that--should you travel bet- ter than most ? Why should you go first- class ? Your father’s got a right to, per- haps, but where did you earn any ?”’ He sat back as though he had been buf- fetted about the ears. She took np her Baedeker and read sternly through ‘‘Brus- sels to Antwerp.”” Then sbe dropped the little red-covered volume. “Why in the world,’’ she said, sudden- ly taking up the conversation where it had fallen, ‘‘don’t you say ‘it’s none of your business ?’’ ‘‘Because it isn’t,’ he answered simply. This time she got from “Antwerp to Paris’? before she spoke again; it took longer to read away a rebuff received than one given. “That ought to make us even,’’ she said. “Shall we call it a draw 2’ They separated immediately, to indulge in the cordial mutual ill-will that follows an indecisive battle. On the Rhine boat he heard her demand of the waiter, who was serving an English party. ‘‘Kennen sie taken ein autre or- der 2’ and demanding ‘‘swei of this”’— pointing to the bill of fare. Hesaw the lift- ed supercilious eyebrows of the English- men whom her mixed essays amused, and he felt like punching the pert, red-faced German waiter for the excellent English in which he answered. The ‘‘partie’s first day in France ended at the Invalides. Stretched ont,they made half of the circle of hero worshippers who look down upon the massive red-brown grauvite sarcophagus on its pedestal of green black marble, with not a line of ornamen- tation, not a flower, not an inscription to belittle this burial box of stone and the dead greatness it encloses. Edgington’s eye wandered from the tattered standards from whose folds, like insense, rise the memories that shook a world, to one after the other of the twelve Angels of Pradier, that mighty sisterhood of stateliness, seren ity and beautiful gravity and watchfalness. As it completed the circle, the young man’s eye, unconsciously lifted, took in the oth- er end of the semicircle directly opposite, of which he was the beginning and the little Mary Daley the end. Her pretty, child- like mouth was trembling, and the tears rolled down her cheeks, unheeded. Edgington covered the space that separat ed them in a moment. He stood beside her his shoulder shielding her from the curious eyes hent upon her for some moments he- fore she noticed him. Then she looked up wiped the tears, of which she bad been un- conscious, from her cheeks, and, gulping down her sobs, she exclaimed while ber lip still trembled: ‘‘Ain’t it dandy ?”’ In some altogether unaccountable way this seemed to mitigate the effect of that deadly draw which had separated Mary Daley, of Wichita, from Heyward H. Edg- ington, of Rittenhouse Square. Edgington swallowed his sooial scruples once and for all and came in out of the chill atmosphere of criticism into the warmth of the little girl’s friendliness. He found it much pleas- anter to laugh with her than at her, for the world provided endless food for laughter to Mary Daley. She was born a flesh-and- blood caricaturist, quick to catch and mim- io it with just enough exaggeration to stamp it as a characteristic. And she car- tooned all Europe in poses and sentences and expression. Edgington soon found himself contribut- ing to the merriment of the ‘‘partie’’ by singing as the break which held them all dashed along the Hohenweg at Interlaken. And when the first verse of his favorite Princeton jingle was answered by the next from a passing automobile, he laughed at the amazement of two of his classmates in it who bad recognized him. He took off his hat in response to the unuttered sentiment Mary Daley’s face expressed and to accom- pany the salute she made, when they came unexpectedly across the Flag on a little launch bobbing about on the lovely lake of Thun. He climbed with her and launched with her and was stared at with her, and lite seemed a lark to him in the sunny in- souciance her unaffected happiness reflect- ed’ Till ove day, just before they were to sail, they went to the banker’s together for letters, and he opened and read one with an enclosure from his mother. He looked from it to Mary Daley’s face and then crammed the letter in his pocket, saying whimsieally, half alond : ‘It’s too late, Mamma Edgington.’’ Mary Daley’s eyes lifted. ‘‘Not bad news ?”? she asked with ready sympathy. ‘‘Would it be bad news $o you, if it pre- vented my going back on the boat to-mor- row with the ‘partie ?”’ ; ‘Wait a minute.” She dived down into a side-satchel from which she drew her much-weakened letter of credit. She look- ed it over carefully before putting it back. ‘‘Look here, Prince Roseleaf, you and I have got to be pretty good friends haven’s we? i } He waited, disappointed. He was look- ing for another, less frankly expressed,sign of interest. ‘‘Well, then,’’ she went on, ‘'why don’s “You’re you ask me to let you have enough to pay your passage money over? I can do it and still have enough left to get back to Kan- sas. Why in the world don’t you say some- thing?” “Why it’s awfally good of you—of course I thank youn over and over, you kind little soul, but. you see, my mother is sending me a check, and —"’ ‘Ob!’ The circumflex accent had more than the ordinary allowance of savagery in it, he thought. ‘‘And a swell like you wouldn’t, of course, go back on a slow steamer if he could ges supplies in an un- derband way from his mamma after his father had denied him. . This time Edgington told himself that there was something he never could forgive He saw her ou deck the second day out,but all the women except herself were below, battling with misery, of which they spoke facetiously and thought with terror, and she was walking briskly about, very much in demand. with the boy from the South on one side and the Minneapolis professor on the other. She bad only a curt nod for him, that declined to show even suprise that he was on board. She planned a ‘progressive euchre party with the boy from the 8S,uth, and captain- ed an entertainment that was given in the cabin, to neither of which functions did she deign to invite Edgiogton. Her activ- ity and her good-humored informality took her everywhere. She was the first to get over on the forward deck to play shuffle- board, to be invited up on the bridge by the Captain, toget down on the lower deck in the early morning and shell peas with the women from the steerage, who were working for the cook in sheer ennui. She came up from this last excursion and twisted her ankle on the wet deck, and fell into Edgington’s outstretched arms; which was not surprising, as he got up, before the first gong sounded, for the express purpose of following her, and, in the comparative seclusion of early morning, ‘‘having it out with her.”” Bat now that he bad her in his arms, a plamp, pretty, helpless weight for an instant, his heart began to thump madly, and, instead of berating her, he bent over in a Christian spirit and kissed the mouth that had so often wounded him. She struggled from him indignantly, her round face aflame. “I couldn’t help it,”” hecried—but there was no apology in his tone. She hid her face in her hands, murmur- ing like a shamefaced child: *‘I knew I was going to care for vou.”’ *‘And this Miss Daley,’’ demanded Edg- ington senior; ‘‘you say you took her to a hotel before coming home? You must think a lot of her to postpone seeing your mother and nie after so long an absence.” *'I do—a lot.”” His son smiled ; but there were indications in his manner that so ex- perienced a woman as Mrs. Edgington could not overlook. “Who introduced you, Heyward?’ she asked. “I think,”’ he said slowly, “I owe her ac quaintance to father.”’ “To me?” Old Edgington slipped his finger between his collar and his throat; it was a protest, grown involuntary, against the dictates of conventionality in men’s dress. It always irritated his wife, who had been one of the Heriots, of Baltimore,as an unnecessary and humiliating reminder that the iron manu- facturer had begun the accumulation of his fortune unhampered by stiff collais—or any other kind. Young Edgington looked at his mother. ‘‘Who is she, Hevward!”’ Mrs. Edging- ton asked appealingly. ‘Absolutely nobody—but her own sun- ny self.” His mother threw up her hands. “Well, let us see her anyway,’’ she said. So Edgington’s mother sgw Mary Daley. ‘A dumpy little thing with no style, a good complexion, and positively awful man ners,’’ is the way ~he described her to her sister. What Miss Daley thought of Mrs. Edg- ington she told that lady as soon as she saw her. “I knew you'd be a swell,’ she said, looking up admiringly at the tall, slender, youthful-looking woman, who had donned her most imposing Heriot manner and her handsomest afternoon frock to receive her threatened daughter-in-law. ‘‘But I did hope you’d generously let me down easy. This kind of thing,”” she spread out her dimpled hands eloquently, ‘‘overpowers me. It must seem a pity in a way to you, doesn’t it, that Prince Roseleaf and I should care for each other—but we do.”’ s ‘ ‘Why, really,’”’ began Mrs. Edgington, summoning her savoir-faire, “*it’s so new to me yet, that I have hardly accustomed myself to the thought.”’ Bat the absolute sincerity of the girl’s voice sounded sweet to her husband’s ears. “Why, ‘Prince Roseleaf’?’ he interrupt- ed. ‘‘Why, you should have seen him when he joined us-the dainty disgust of him, the air as being in reduced circumstances—tem- porarily, oh, very temporarily—the shock- ed surprise at how little we knew and how much fun we bad; and the tenderness of him about what people might think! My, but be was raw—in another sense than I was—from the wounds to his sensitive soul Mr. Edgington roared. Young Edging- ton smiled, not deprecatingly. Mrs. Edg- ington lifted her beautiful chin—all the Heriots have beautiful chins. ‘‘And you resented it, didn’t yon Mary? Young Edgington’s tone made his mother Shivers the loving confidence of it sounded final. ‘Yes. Because—of course you know ?’’ she said, smiling past Mrs. Edgington’s haughty face into old Edgington’s. eyes, “‘because I cared for him from the very be- ginning. And I couldn’ bear to think I was growing fonder and fouder of a prig.”’ ‘A prig 1” ‘Don’t yon worry, Mis. Edgington, he isn’t one—not a bit of it. He’s the— Well, you know, I can’t tell you what I think of him when he’s aronnd.”’ The contrast between the delicious shy- ness of her voice, just then, and the assured manner with which she had faced his wife, won James Edgington. **Yon wouldn’t have had him, ’’he asked, his eyes twinkling, ‘‘if he had been what he seemed when he joined you?”’ ‘I'd have hated him—or tried to,’’ she added softly. ‘‘But,”” Mrs. Edgington said, quite as softly ‘‘did it never occur to you that some thing of what he stood for might be a very desirable thing?’’ ‘That reminds me of what yon said that time about the ‘‘rawness of life’ and all that rot.” Miss Daley turned with the fullest trust in being understood to her Prince, ‘‘Excuse me, Mrs, Edgington, it’s going to be bard for you and me to get on together, ain’s it? You're Lady High-and- Mighty. I’m just any girl from Kansas. It’s too bad for you that Prince Roseleat should care for me, but—but it’s very, very good for me, If I could, I'd do a lot to try to make myself over to be your kind. Bat I counldn’t if I would and—no I wouldn’s —if I could. I would die for him, but I wo SO won’t live to pretend for bim. It’s what your friends will think of me that bothers you—isn’t it? But don’t you let it trouble you too much—my being what I am; at least not for the present. For, after I've gone back to Kansas, you won’t be bother- ed with me for a long time, and one can’t say—'’ “So you're going back to Kansas 2’ Mr.. Edgington crossed over to where she sit and took her plamp hand in his. *‘School begins Monday,’ she said. ‘‘School?’’ inquired Mrs. Edgington with a flash of hope. ‘‘You are attending some finishing school?” “It’s all kinds of school—the one I teach’ mixed grades, yon know.”’ **Why don’t you say something ?"’ Edg- ington turned to his son. **Because I think Mary can explain her- self quicker and better than I could.” ‘‘He means I give myself away all in a bunch, so that you’ll know rights away the extent of the calamity that’s befallen vou. But--but put yourself in my place for a minute, Mrs. Edgington. How could I help caring for him?’ * It was the first direct appeal she had made. It occurred to both the younger and the older Edgington to step into the breach but something in the girl’s frankness made the subterfuge seem unworthy. There was a pause, significant, long. Then the blood of the Heriots came to the lady’s assistance *“That’s not the question, ’’she said brave ly, “it’s how could he help caring for vou?’ The Edgington blacks, famous at many a horse-show on the Wissahickon, carried Mary Daley down to the station the next morning. “I’ve simply got to go back to Kansas to teach,”’ she said when old Edgington tried to prevail upon her at the last minute to change her mind. ‘‘The sooner I get to work the sooner Heyward will. Of course, I couldn’t marry a man who couldn’ sup- port me himself—not by taxing his father. We have talked it all over and he won’t let anybody but himself—not even you’’— she had learned a special way already of saying ‘‘you’’ to Mr. Edgington —‘‘pay my board bill after we're married. I'll go to work and so will he. It’s best for us both. Aud perhaps’’ she smiled at Mrs. Edging- ton in a way that made that lady feel as thoughshe bad a little girl, a very winning fat little girl to deal with, ‘‘perbaps I'll work some of the rawness off down in Kan sas.’’ But she clung to young Edgiogton till the conductor’s warning cry sounded. ‘Oh, do work—hard—hard,’’ she sobbed as she bade him good-by. ‘For I can’t bear it long. I—I love you so, my boy, my boy!’.—By Miriam Michelson, in Me- clure’s Magazine. A Strange Use for Skimmed Milk. A use to which skim milk, sour milk buttermilk, or even whole milk is not often put is paintmaking, yet this product of the diary makes possibly one of the most en- during, preservative, respectable. and in- expensive paints for barns and outbuild- ings It costs little more than whitewash, provided no great value is attached to the milk, and it is a question whether for all kinds of rough work it does not serve all the purposes and more of the ready-mixed paint, or even prime lead and paint mixed in the best linseed oil. It is made as fol- lows, and no more should be mixed than is to be used that day: Stir into a gallon of milk about three pounds of Portland cement and add sufficient Venetian red paint powder (costing three cents per pound) to impart a good color. Any other colored paint powder may be as well used. The milk will hold the paint in suspension, but the cement, being very heavy, will sink to the bottom, so that it becomes necessary to keep the mixture well stiired with a paddle. This’ feature of the stir- ring is the only drawback tothe paint, and as its efficiency depends upon administer- ing a good coating of cement, it is not safe to leave its application to untrustworthy or careless help. Six hours after painting this paint will be as immovable and un- affected by water as month-old oil paint. I have heard of buildings twenty years old painted in this manner in which the wood was well preserved. My own experience dates back nine years, when I painted a small barn with this mixture, and the wood to-day—second growth Virginia yellow pine—shows no sign whatever of decay or dry-rot. The effect of such a coating seems to be to petrify the surface of the wood. Whole milkis better than buttermilk or skim milk, as it contains more oil, and this is the constituent which sets the cement. If mixed with water in- stead of milk, the wash rubs and soaks off readily. This mixture, with a little extra of the cement from the bottom of the bucket daubed on, makes the best possible paint for tress where large limbs have been pruned or sawed off. —By Guy FE. Mitchell. in Scientfiic American. Vermont Woman Preparing to Cele brate Her 114th Birthday. The oldest person in Vermont, and pos- sibly the oldest in New England, Mis. So- nora McCarthy, of South Shaftsbury,is pre- paring to celebrate her 114th birthday. Mrs. McCarthy does not recall the day of the month on which she was born, but says that it was on the first Friday in Lent of 1790. That she is 114 years of age was confirmed by records found in the parish in Ireland, where she was born. —_—— Mere Momey and a Picture Hat. ‘I witnessed an amusing incident at one of the local theatres the other evening,’ remarked the theatregoer. ‘‘A woman, wearing a large picture hat, was seated directly in front of an elderly man, who was straining his neck in an endeavor to see what was happening on the stage, and, of course, it was only possible for him to see but one-third of the performance. *‘The second act bad begun, and I could plainly see that his anger was increasing. At last, when he could stand it no longer, he lightly tapped the woman on the should- er and, in as gentle tones as he possi- bly could muster, said: ‘‘Madam, pardon me but I paid $2 for this seat, and your hat— “My hat cost $25, sir-r-r!’” came the haughty reply, “The conversation was atan end.’’ Phila- delphia Press. Glass Factories Closed Down. The DuBois Express says: The fires have been drawn at the window glass factory of this place, and no window glass will be made in DuBois this season, unless some arrange- ment is made between the company and and the workmen. A large number of hands will be compelled to remain idle for some time. They refused to consider the proposition of a reduction. The fires at the other glass factories in that vicinity bave also been drawn. This will meana loss of several thousand dollars a week to DuBois and other towns in the mountain distriot. PLEASANT FIELDS OF HOLY WRIT. Save for my daily range Among the pleasant fields of Holy Writ, I might despair —Tennyson. THE INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON. First Quarter. Lesson viii. Matt. xii, 1—183 Sunday February 21, 1904. JESUS AND THE SABBATH. The Sabbath was the ‘bloody angle’ in the contest between the Pharisees and Jesus. They bad idolized the Sabbath— bad converted it into a veritable Jugger- nant, whose ponderous weight they were rolling over men’s hearts and homes.: Their micrology would have been ludicrous if it had not been exercised upon something so sacred. With this spirit-destroying literalism, Jesus took strongest issue. Of set purpose be broke the tradition, while he yet kept the Sabbath. He wrought seven conspic- uous cures upon as many Sabbaths, as if to show the merciful character and uses of the day. But heconld not expect to lay his hand thus rudely upon this Pharisaic fetich without raising a din and ory, and being branded as a sacrilegious person. On this occasion the Pharisaic espionage followed him in hopes that it would dis- cover that he took one step more than the two thousand cubits allowed for a Sab- bath-day’s journey. It congratulated itself upon a still greater *‘find.”’ Ic threw up its hands in well-feigned horror at the dreadfal infraction; for were not the dis- ciples reaping and threshing on the Sab- bath? According to the refinements of their traditions, plucking the ripe wheat- ears was a kind of harvesting, and rubbing them between the hands and blowing the chaff away was a kind of winnowing. What a sin! The reply of Jesus is a master-stroke: “David is your hero-king. It is not pos- sible you are ignorant of what he did in an emergency; how, flying from Saul and famishing, he took, not standing corn in the field, like my disciples have, but the showbread from the golden table before the very presence of the Lord: and that, too, when it had been freshly laid there, and there was none to replace it. David did this! How is it that you find no faul§ with him?’ The law of merey in this in- stance supplanted the law of sacrifice. The scene shifts now from the wheat. fields to the synagogue, but the issue re- mains the same. The cripple is used asa bait to catch Jesus with. Jesus called the unfortunate man to a conspicuous pesition, The alternative which he proposed pus them to confusion: Which accorded better with the spirit of the Sabbath-law—to do good, as he proposed, by setting this un- fortunate free from his malady, or to do evil, as they were doing when they en- tertained a jealous and inhuman spirit; to save life, as he soon would (making the poor man’s life worth living), or to kill, as they were now (cherishing the spirit of murder in their hearts)? No wonder they were silent. Jesus was unanswerable. THE TEACHER’S LANTERN. The technism of piety reached its com- pletest development under the hair-splis- ting genius of the Pharisees. * * * * * They enumerated 365 prohibitions, 248 commands (equal to the number of bones in the body), 613 precepts (number of letters in the Decalogue). * * * * * Their dialectical skill was especially busy in framing the casuistry of the Sab- bath: determining whether it was right to eat an egg laid on gabbhath, ete. * * * * * There was a serious side as well as ludi- crous in this excessive legalism. Hebrew pilots dropped the helm on approach of Sabbath. Hebrew soldiers allowed them- selves to be butchered rather than fight on the Sabbath. * ® * * Jesus crushed these hollow traditions, showed how intent of the Sabbath was prevented by them. * * * * * He did not abolish the Sabbath. ‘Lord of the Sabbath’’ would bave been no hon- orable title if it wae a repealed institution. He was Lord of the day in the sense of ridding it of the barnacles of tradition, elevating it and filling it with life and sanctity. CHILD-STUDY AND SUNDAY-SCHOOL METH- ODS. A little gil when asked what made it rain, disclosed the fact that she helieved that rainy days were ‘‘wash-days’” in heaven, aud rain was caused by the throw- ing out of the water, and thunder by the . rolling around of the empty tubs. A five-year-old said, ‘‘Mamma, where does God live?”’ The conventional answer was, ‘‘Everywhere.”” Quick as a flash, but de- void of irreverance, came the response, “Why don’t he build a house and stay at home!” The inadequacy of our traditional terms as vehicles of truth to the ohild- mind is apparent. It is a question wheth- er they do not often fall short of convey- ing anything except a sound of words, or else a positively false notion. The teacher who is fit will find what the child’s idea is, will enlarge or reduce it, or substitute an- other, as the case requires. Rules for Prolonging Lite. Famous English Physician's Ten Commandments of Health. The question of the possible extension of human life has recently had renewed con- sideration by a British scientist. In a lec- ture delivered before the Royal College of Physicians, in London,Sir Hermann Weber, M. D., F. R. C. P., propounded certain conclusions which he had arrived at as to the best means for prolonging life. The main points in his advice, says Harper's Weekly, were comprised in these prescrip- tions : Moderation in eating, drinking and physical indulgence. Pure air out of the house and within. The keeping of every organ of the body, as far as possible, in constant working order. ; Regular exercise every day in all weath- ers; supplemented in many cases by breath- ing movements,and by walking and climb- ing tours. Going to bed early and rising early, and restrioting the hours of sleep to six or seven hours. : Daily baths or ablutions according to in- dividual conditions,cold or warm, or warm followed by cold. : Regular work and mental occupation. Cultivation of placidity, cheerfulness and hopefulness of mind. Employment of the great power of the mind in controlling passions and nervous fears. Strengthening the will in carrying ous - whatever is useful, and in checking the craving for stimulants, anodynes and oth- er injurious agencies.