Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 7, 1904. ee THF END OF THE FAIRY TALE. She was entirely fashionable in every- thing save ber motherhood, which still bore faint traces of kinship with that of hu- man mothers and the beasts of the field. For instance, althongh she generally for- got, she never regretted her only child’s existence, and sometimes in rare lulls be- tween her romps and frivolities she found the child as amusing a pastime as ping- pong on wet afternocns. During that day on which the smart American widow was to dine her and a handful of congenials at the Savoy, en route for the Empire,came a wire announc- ing the illness of her hostess. Then the big London house was moved ab its two extremes, the kitchen depths sending up their grumble that “she” was dining at home after all, to the nursery heights; with the result that the little Aurelia, reckless with sudden hope, eluded her nurse and the household, burried down- stairs (right foot, right foot, right foos, foremost all the way down, for the stairs were steep and her legs bad only five years to grow in), and entered the drawing-room in ber nursery overalls. There, to the childish eyes, the dearest and most beauti- ful lady in the world was sitting in a low chair near a tiny tea-table, and a long, straight man, who bore his eye-glasses bravely like a pain, was filling up his glass from a svphon. ‘‘Mother,’’ said Aurelia, they heard ber thumping heart, ‘‘you’re not goin out after all, so please be with me all this evening, and piease put me to bed.” And baviog come thus far in her unheard-of and desperate adventure, the mite could not be swept away, except with the given promise. At hal-past six the Mother came down stairs, and now, as will often happen, a long neglect was followed by a sudden ac- cess of care. Are these the warmest night-socke the poor child has?’ And are those pajamas thoroughly aired?’ she inquired of the nurse. For answer, the woman swept the little silken garments off the fender-rail and gave them to her in contemptuous silence. She had to the bess of her personal and class ability mothered the little girl for three years past. She bad nursed her through croup and scarlet fever; she had made her clothes, adding the little unnecessary em- broideries and fine tuckings that seem no less than love in the busy worker; she bad as conscientiously frightened her with re- ligion when naughty as she had dosed her with physic when ill; and in her own esti- mation there was very little anyone conld teach her about children, not even doctors, and least of all a lady who hardly ever saw her child save in her prettiest clothes and best behavior. “Does she still have such cold little feet?’ said the Mother, pulling off Aurelia’s stockings. “‘T have never known her to have cold feet since J was here,’ replied the nurse. “Well, she’s certainly in better condi- tion than she was when last I gave her a bath.” The wvurse put np her eyebrows and went on tidying the room; what else than a bettering of condition was to be expected of a child in her charge? And how much bigger!’ said she lady, still intent upon ingratiating herself with this important person. ‘Yes, madam,” said the nuree, dryly, knowing herself far too valuable for dis- missal; ‘‘you see she’s had time to grow.’’ The Mother made no further overtures, but devoted herself to the little girl, and nurse, whose contempt was mingled with jealousy, retired from the room with the air of one who knows herself invaluable, yet not valued, needed yet not desired, to sit nursing ber feelings and darning little socks in her fireless bed-room rather than in the well-warmed linen-room next door. Then began a great frolicking in the bath, which continued till the room was splashed from side to side. “Oh, what will nursie say ?”’ laughed the Mother. “‘T don’t care,”’ sang out Aurelia, and wet as she was she plumped herself down on her mother’s lap and bugged her. ‘My gown !” cried the lady, but the mischief was done and one might as well enjoy the joke. “I don’t care for anything to-nighs,’’ cried Aurelia. ‘‘Because I’m so dreffiy bappy—Oh, Mother, can I sleep in your bed to-night ?”’ / This was a rare pleasure only granted to the little girl on birthdays and other such blue moons. And even pleasure is a poor name for the feeling that filled Aurelia’s heart when she entered the silken chamber and lay in the wonderful bed where the little golden angels (for that was how Au- relia thought of the winged Loves) held up the gauzy curtains, while all the lights of the room seemed filtering through rose- leaves. A poor name, too, for her feeling when she woke in the night, and remem- bering the company she was in, stretched out a little hand to make sure; or for the feeling which kept her (a fidgety, chatter- ing creature from six a. m. onward as a rule) lying quite still in the morning in that rose-and-fairy-land—as still as ever she rat in church and much, much happier, until such time as Nurse came and fetshed her away from her sleeping mother’s side. And so, ‘‘Let me sleep in your bed to- night,’’ said little Aurelia, coaxing all she knew. ‘*Well, just this one time you shall,” said the Mother, intent on fulfilling her duties to the uttermost since she was in the mood and they so pleasant. Aurelia whooped and danced about with almost as great a din as when she succeeded in dis- lodging the Boers (Ada, the sewing-maid) from tneir fortified Kopje (the nursery side-board); and then quite out of breath tumbled into her mother’s lap again. The child’s joy was so flattering and so wondering if refreshing thas the Mother found herself | 1 wondering why women were not better mothers than they were. This sort of thing was really great fun, and unlike most fun there wasn’t any harm in it. She felt quite grateful to Mrs. Van Troden for going down with the influenza. ‘‘And what’s more,”’ she went on with further quickening of innocent desires and good resolutions, ‘‘what is more—bust come button up your dressing gown and let’s draw close to the fire!—what’s more yon shall sleep there to-morrow night as well. “Oh!” sighed Aurelia, and leaned against her mother. She could not thous or jump for joy any more; her bappy heart was like an over-laden honey-bee. ‘And besides that, I’ve a wonderful plan in my head,” continued her mother. The child sat up. ‘‘A plan for a lovely treat; indeed, I think I've got plans for a hauodred treats,” she said, lavishly, smil- ing and looking deep into Aurelia’s round eyes; it was worth being lavish to arouse such shining love and worship as she saw there, and it is only fair to add that as her promises slipped out she believed in them as faithfully as the child. ‘‘What would you say if some day when the spring comes you and I, just you and I together, run right out together in the country on the motor-car? and go into the woods and see primroses grow? When I was a little girl like you, my home was set among woods, Aury. And we’d just be gipsies together, you and I, and take our food with us, and sit on the ground and pick flowers and go home quite late in the evening. Shall we, dear?” “Let's! Let's! O Let’s”’ cried Aurelia, emphasizing with hugs. ‘‘And then? Then there’s the summer; what shall we do when that comes? And then there’s the autumn, and then there’s next winter. Why we shall have time for heaps and heaps of treats, sha’nt we?’’ “Bus if I sry to tell you all the treats I have in mind,”’ said the Mother, ‘‘we shall never ges to bed!” We shall never get to bed?”’ exclaimed the child. “Will you come tco then when I go? or will yon come quite soon after? Do! do! then we can go to sleep together. I have never done this in all my life, in— all—my—life! O do!” The Mother had not intended this, but filled with an unwonted sense of well-be- ing in this kingdom of love and innocency into which she bad strayed, she willingly yielded yes further to the will of its queen. “Yon funny little soul,’”’ she said. °‘It isn’t eight o’clock! Still, as you're so keen abons it 111 come to bed ever so early--I won’t even go down to dinner,’’ she .add- ed, every moment driven to further ex- travagances by the long arrears of mother- ing in her heart. ‘I'll get Pickney to bring me a cup of soup up here and then come to bed.”’ “Really and truly? Promise? O yom dearest!”” A vigorous hug followed. “I hope vou always say your prayers, Aurelia,”’ the Mother said, gravely,smooth- ing her hair. “Yes, I do; I say them just after my night-socks, so that’s now,’’ said the child. Straightway she knelt down, asking God to bless her mother and her daddy in South Africa and bring him home safe, and to bless nursie and to make herself a good girl, Amen; and then standing up and put- ting her hands behind her she carefully re- peated a hymn all about lambs aad’ little children and Jesus Christ, which somehow brought the tears to her mother’s eyes. ‘Little Aurelia,’’ she said, drawing her cheek against her own, ‘‘why don’t youn sometimes say, ‘God make daddy and Tote good’ as well‘make me a good girl,’ eh ? ‘‘Becanse you’re grown up!’ was the prompt reply; nothing more, because it was such a well-known fact that it was only children who were naughty. Aurelia’s cup of joy was not yet jull, for a fairy tale was promised, to be told before the nursery fire while the fire in the rosy room was burning up. It was long since the Mother had told a fairy tale, longer still since she had read one. In her desire to pay a long-owed debt of ‘good influ ence,”’ she wove a very threadbare story round about a whole bundle of obvious and naked morals. Aurelia listened greedily and loved it all, although therein were allegorized many of ber pitifal little sins and weaknesses. The dramatis persone were a Princess, a Bad Fairy and a Good Fairy. As she Bad Fairy arrived in time for the christening and the good one did not, the poor child was morally handicapped through early cbild- hood, and the description of her unregener- ate condition was full of home-thrusts and unmistakable meanings ; but with the ‘gradual mastery of the Good Fairy, the Princess became a person of immaculate {smorals and behavior who never came down- stairs without politely asking permission, and certainly never in a dirty frock, never was selfish, asking her mother to play with her when she was busy or had a headache; pever was cheeky to her nurse; would have died rather than slap a sewing-maid ; never left her porridge, nor refused tc eat crusts. ‘But I do finish up my porridge now, and I don’t leave my crusts, ’’said the child in disappointed astonishment. ‘‘Don’$ you ‘member how I tried and tried, and then I didn’t leave it any more, and so then you gave me Doll Dinah? Don’t you 'member?’’ (It had been such an epoch in the little life.) ‘Now how naughty of me to forges,” said her mother. ‘‘Of course you did.” For a moment, the thought of preaching to this generous, loving and interesting oreat- ure became an absurdity and indecency. Bat, ‘Go on, please,’’ coaxed Aurelia, and so the story went forward, relating how happy the Princes’s mother became in see- ing her little girl so good, until the listen- er again interrupted with— “I will try to be like the Princess. I will try to give my strawberries and oream to poor beggar children. I will try and not be selfish any more—and even if I have the loveliest doll in the world—like Doll Dinah even,’’ she said, shutting her eyes sight and nodding her head in great jerks to emphasize her determination, *‘I will try to give it to somebody else if you like. I helieve I’m not going to do anything naughty or unkind any more all my life for ever and ever, and be juss like you, Mother dear!”’ She opened her eyes and drew breath. ‘Well, and what did the Bad Fairy be able to do?’’ she went on, “I don’t think the bad fairy could do much, because the Good Fairy was so awfully strong, wasn’t she, don’t you believe?”’ “Well, I'm just coming to that,’’ said the Mother. ‘‘The Bad Fairy—"’ Someone knocked at the door and a maid entered. ‘‘Major Morrison is here,’ she said. ‘‘Major Morrieon?’’ repeated the Mother, with a sense of shock and disappoint- ment. . Aurelia’s hold became a clutch. “You won’s go, will you?’’ she said a little stern- ly. “You promised me.” “My dear Heart. I didn’t know when I promised that—"’ The child flashed around on the maid with blazing cheeks. ‘‘Please tell Major Morrison to go away,’’ she said, imperious- y. v “Hash, Aurelia, how dreadfully you speak! I don’t want to leave yom, but I mustn’t be rude or unkind just for your pleasure’s sake, must I?’ . ‘Why must you see him?’ the child pleaded tremulouely. ‘‘Why must you? Why?” The superior maid waited in chill and immovable silence. “I’ll come,”’ said the Mother, flushing a little, and looking at her above the child’s head. The superior maid turned to go. “‘Stop,”’ said Aurelia, with heaving chest; ‘just ask Major Morrison to wait ¢ill we’ve finished the fairy tale. And then after thas,’’ she continued, imploring- ly, ‘how soon will you come up-stairs to go to sleep with me?’ ‘The maid closed the door. ‘‘Now, my sweethears,’’ said the Moth- er, ‘I want you to be the most sensible little princess in the world. I can’t finish the story now, and I can’t come up as early It wae a poor bit of ars, but as I had hoped to do—but very soon after you are asleep, I—"’ Aurelia jumped off ber lap. ‘‘That man is a big, cruel beast. and I bate him, I hate him, I hate him!’ she cried, stamping her foo. ‘I hate anyone who takes you away from me.”’ Then she burst into passionate sobbing. Perhaps her criticism was juster than she knew. Certainly, it was unwelcome to her mother’s ears. ‘‘Hush, bush, Aury! If you loved me you would try to love my friends.” She took her on her lap again and sooth- ed her into some sort of resignation; then she suddenly laid her head on the little shoulder. ‘‘You make me very unbappy, Aury,”’ she said, and it was perfectly true, but this | gg was not hy reason of Aurelia’s short-com- ings. Why bad this visit happened this peaceful evening? It filled her with a sense of unseemly intrusion; it jarred and put her out of tune with itself and herself, and her new-found peace as well. And yes, a very little later, after promising to come back and show herself before going down to the drawing-room, she left her child and went away to dress. Something had certainly gone wrong with the world to-night. Aurelia was conscious of having misbehaved herself just when she meant to be, and thought herself as good as any princess! She sat alone by the nur- gery fire, wondering ruefully and holding on to the one fragment left of her wrecked but glorious evening; her mother would come and show herself when dressed, and Aurelia loved to see how white she looked against the soft, black, misty stuff, with bright things glittering like frost in her dark hair. But apparently the Mother for- got all abous it, and went down-stairs withant coming near the nursery; and ab pine o'clock, nurse found the forsaken child still waiting. “So that's the way she does it, does she?! sniffed the woman. But she wrap- ped her charge up warmly and carried ber tenderly enough over to the far-off-rose colored chamber. > “Do yon mean my mother?’ said Aare- lia, with the threatening of tears. ‘‘Please don’t say ‘she’; it’s rude.” There was a soft rustling outside the doar, and then Aurelia’s mother came in, very pale, brilliant-eyed, and still wearing the dress which she bad worn in the nurs- ery. Aurelia stared, and then, ‘‘Mother! Mother!’ she cried, quite suddenly wide awake, suddenly comforted, suddenly over- joyed; and she jumped up and down until the glass and silver knick-knacks jingled. “That will do, Nurse,”’ said the lady, speaking a little breathlessly as though she bad sped up the stairs. Pasting the cling- ing child’s head, she waited for the aston- ished woman’s departure, which was so de- liberate as curiosity could make it. When the door at last closed upon her unwilling ig the mother lifted the child into her ap. Yi was so dreadfully afraid you'd be asleep, Aury,’’ she said, as if this bad been a matter of lifeand death. ‘‘I want you, I want you, I want yon!’ Hugged to ber bosom as she was, the child could feel her mother’s heart beating. In the midst of her blessedness, she felt shy and awed. She snbmitted to the embrace without re- turning it, only looking up out of the depths of blissful, wondering eyes. ‘And you can really stay with me?’’ she asked very gravely. ‘‘Has the visitor gone?’? “Oh, yes,’ answered the Mother, and she bent her head to untie the ribbon of her little one’s bedroom slipper. Then followed a silence as the lady folded baok the silken cover of the bed and make all ready—a silence of reverie on the one hand and ignorant, wondering sympathy on the Sebel It began to weigh upon the little ears. oy ‘Well, Mother darling?’’ she ventured at last, with tentative tone and smile, “‘I s'pose—well, I s’pose you don’t feel in- olined to tickle me or anything like that, do you?” ! The quaint overture surprised the lady out of her reverie and made her smile, “T think I feel inclined to do anything you ask of me,’’ she said, lifting her little girl unto the bed. Aurelia was immediately at ease with her mother again. Hurrah!” she cried, bouncing up and down on the bed. ‘‘Hur- rah! Hurrab! Hurrah! D’you really mean it, Dearest?’” She put her head on one gide and wheeled. ‘‘I 8’pose you couldn’s let me have Bluebell to sleep with as well as you? I don’t s’pose you could do that, could you, now?’ ‘‘Bluebell, my night-toy,’’ as she de- scribed the huge toy rabbit with shoe-but- ton eyes which had lain in her arms so many nights that all'his perturbances were worn bald and shiny, had always been for- bidden her mother’s chamber and, as Aure- lia firmly believed, bad taken the sight to heart. Now for the first time he was to have an invitation. ‘‘Hurrah! you exquisite Mother!’’ cried Aurelia, bouncing harder than ever. ‘‘And will youn go on telling me the story, too, and will you go to bed, now when I do, and anything else I like? Now, whatever else do I like, I worder?’’ she added anx- iously. ‘“‘Well’”’ said her mother, beginning to undo Aurelia’s dressing-gown, ‘il we were in the middle of a story we had better fin- ish it I shink. I’m very stupid to-night— what was it all about, and where did we ges to in it?" ; : “Don’t you ’member?’’ said Aurelia, and in ber eagerness she hardly knew that the fluffy garment was taken off in the luxur- ious bed. ‘‘It was about the Good Fairy who helped the Princess to be good and the bad one who made her , and you didn’t know which was going to win. Don’t you member? Which did -win, I wonder. “Yes, I remember now,’ the Mother said. She bent down and laid her head on the pillow beside the child and looked and looked into those clear eyes—then she closed her own to hide her tears. Hoel, which did win then?” asked the child. ‘I think perbaps the Good Fairy—and I’m quite certain the Good Fairy—won the day,’’ answered the Mother.—By Maude: Egerton King, in Everybody's Magazine. World’s Fair Accommodations The St. Louis Young Men's Christian Association has organized a World’s Fair Bureau, through which it is prepared to furnish reliable accommodations at reason- able rates in hotels, boarding houses, and splendid private homes. This is really an extension of the boarding house register, which such Associations have always main- tained for the benefit of strangers. The St. Louis Association makes no charge to its ‘patrons, either directly or indirectly, for the service, and the benefits of the Burean are extended not ‘only to young men, but to the public generally. Those interested are invited to correspond ' with E. P. Shepard, Secretary Y. M. C. A. World’s Fair Bureau, Grand aod Franklin Aves., 86. Louis. State Board of Agriculture Meeting. An important gathering that will be held in Bellefonte and at State College pext week. Oct, 11-15, is the meeting of the State Board of Agriculture and Nor- mal Farmer’s Institute. The following lengthy and moss interesting program has been ananged : : Tuesday Forenoon, Oct. 11, 1904. (Session in Court House, Belletonte.) Call to order at 10:30. 1. Roll call of members. 2. Reading of minutes. 2. Appointment of committee on credentials. 4, Reception of Credentials of members-elect and delegates. 5. Address: “Relation of State Board of Agri- culture to the farmer and farmers’ organization.” . Blyholder, Armstrong county. Report of committee on credentials, Unfinished business. New business. . Miscellaneous business, 10. Adjournment. Tuespay, Ocr, 11, at 2:30 p. m. Co. John A. Woodward, Howard. Pa., Chairman. (Session in Court House, Bellefonte) Address of Welcome, by Gen. Jas. A. Beaver, Bellefonte. Response, by Hon. A. L. Martin, director of institutes. 2:30-3:30. Dr. Wm, Frear. “Soil Improvement.” 3:36-4:30. Prof. M. S. McDowell, ‘‘Commerciai Fertilizers.” 4:30-5:00. Round table, Dr. Wm. Frear. 5.00-5:30. Round table, Prof. M. 8. McDowell. Tuesday evening, Oct. 11, 1904. S. F. Barber, Harrisburg, Pa., chairman. (Session in Court House, Bellefonte) Pras Call to order at 7:30. Music. Mrs. Wells W, Cooke, ‘‘Domestic Science.” Mrs. Mary A. Wallace, “The Country Home and Its Sanitation.” Dr. B. H. Warren, “Importance of Prompt En- forcement of the Pure Food Laws.” Musie. Prof. John Hamilton, ‘Normal Schools of Agri- _culture for Institute Workers Wednesday Morning, Oct. 12, 1904 J. 8. Burns, Imperial, R. F. D. No. 1, Pa., Chair- man. (Session at The Penn’a State College.) 9:30. Music. Address of Welcome, by Pres. Gee, W. Ather ton, State College. 9:30-10:30. Section A. Dr. H. P. Armsby, “Ani mal Nutrition.” section B. Prof. Wm. A. Buckhout, “Prin- ciples of Plant Feeding.” 0:30-11-30. Section A. Prof. Geo. C. Watson, “Principles of Animal Breeding.” Section B. Prof. Geo. C. Butz, “Fruit Culture ; Large Fruits. Round Tables. 11:30-12:00. Section A. Prof. H. P, Armsby. Sec- tion B. Prof. Wm A. Buckhout. 12:00-12.30. Section A. Prof.Geo. C. Watson. Sec- tion B, Prof. Geo. C. Butz. . afternoon, Oct. 12 Wednesday on, OtanZ Howard G. McGowan, Geiger’s Mills, man (Session at State College) 2:30-5:25. Section A. Dr. I. A. Thayer, “Feeds and Fertility,” Section B. ’ Prof. Geo. C. Butz, “Fruit Culture; Small Fruits.” : 3:30-4:25, Section A. Mr. L. W. Lighty, “The Farmer’s Cow; Her Care.” Section B. Dr. J. H. Funk, Fruit Trees’ Round Tables! 4:30-5:30 Section A! Dr! I! A! Thayer and Mr! L. W. Lighty 4:30-5:30 Section B! Prof: Geo. C. Butz and Dr. J! H, Funk. “The Pruning of Wednesday Evening, Oct. 12. W. H. H. Riddle, Butler, Pa., Chairman. (Session at Bellefonte) 7:30. Music. Duet, Mrs. H. A. Surface and J. P. Pillsbury, ; 3 Prof, W. G. Johnson, editor of American Agri- culturist, “The Art of Instruction as a Science.” Music. Mr. T. D. Harman, editor of the National Stock- man and Farmer, “The Influence of a Local Insti- tute Worker.” Thursday Morning, Oct. 13. 8. X. McClellan, Knox, Pa., Chairman. (Session at State College) 9:30 10:30 Section A. Rev: J. D. Detrich, “The Dairy Cow” (illustrated by sketches. Section B Prof. R. L: Watts, ** dening.” 10:30-11:30. Section A, Mr. T. I. Mairs, “The Care of Milk and Butter.” Section B. Prof. H. A. Surface, “Insect Pre- ventives."” Round Tables. 11:30-12:35 Section A. Rev. J. D. Detrich and Mr. T: I Mairs. Section B. Prof. R. L. Watts and Prof. H. A Surface. . arket Gar- Thursday Afternoon, Oct. 13. Cedar Springs, Pa., Chairman, Session at State College) 2:30 Music—Mrs. H. A. Surface, 2:30-3:30 General Session, Dr. Leonard Pear- son, “Breeding in Relation to Disease.” 3:30-4:30 Section A. Prof Wells W. Cooke, “The Beets of Feeds on the Quality and Quantity of Section B. Mr. Alva Agee, “Potato Culture.” Round Tables. 4:30-5:00 Section A. Prof. Wells W. Cooke. Section B. Mr. Alva Agee. 5:00-5:30 General session. Dr. Leonard Pear- son. Joel A. i : Thursday Evening, Oct. 13. Hon. Wm. H. Brosius, Dromore, Pa., Chairman. (Session at Bellefonte) 7:30—Music, Mrs. H. A. Surface. Dr. D. J. Crosby, of the U. 8. Department of Agriculture, “Nature Study and Agriculture in the Public Schools,” {iliustiated.) Prof. H. A. Surface, Penn’a State, Zoologist, “Qur Insect Friends,’ (illustrated.) Friday Morning, Oct. 14, Dr. M. E. Conard, Westgrove, Pa., Chairman. (Session at State College) Call to order at 9:30. Music. 9:30-10:30 General session. Prof. Franklin Menges, ‘Methods of Cultivating Hay and Leg- uminous Crops.” 10:30-11:30 Section A. Mr. J. T. Campbell, “Egg Production.” Section B. Mr. R. D. Barclay, Special Round Tables. 11:30-12:00 Section A. Mr. J. T. Campbell. Section B. Mr. R. D. Barclay. General Round Table. 12:00-12:30—Prof. Franklin Menges. Friday Afternoon, Oct. 14 M. N. Clark, Claridge, Pa., Chairman. (Session at State College, unless otherwise an- nounced) 2:30 General session, on “The County and Local Management of Farmers’ Institutes.” Hon, Jason Sexton, “The County Chairman.” H. W. Northup, “Institute Committees.” Geo. A. Woodside, “Advertisement of Insti- ” ( Five minute discussions, open to all.) Nore.—A competent person will be in charge of the Question Box toc whom all written questions ill ve referred and answers given at round table v. is expected to be present I ie a of the Sotto Arrangements have heen made with the leading railroads of the State for the sale of tickets at excursion rates. Such tickete can be obtained from the local ticket agents by the presentation of orders that can be seoured by application to either of the un- dersigned. Traveling and hotel expenses of county chairman of institutes and institute lectur- ers engaged for the coming season, wiil be borne by the department. : All farmers’ organizations within the State, including agriculture and horticul- tural societies, nurserymen’s association, bee-keeper’s association, dairymen’s Union, farmers’ clubs, granges, farmers’ alliances, eto., are requested to send properly anthor- ized representatives or delegates to the meeting, who will be accorded the privi- lege of participation in all the discuesions. N. B. CRITCHFIELD, Sec’y. ‘“Bee-keeping.”’ ——F. Potts Green says: I am very much gratified with the results Vin-te-na is bringing about. = Every day some one comes in and speaks a kindly word for the | [¥ great tonic. Bankers, lawyers, ministers and others, whose work is constant- ly draining their nerve supply, tell me thas Vin-te-na is the one remedy which brings sound and refreshing sleep and makes them feel that life’s worth living. Come in and talk with me about is. Cats and Dogs. The Enmity that Exists Between Them and the Reason of It. Why does the dog hate the cat? Sci- entists have been investigating the en- mity between these animals, and they believe that the instinctive Imtred which certain beasts feel for each other is “due to inheritance from ancient times when the animals met in a wild state and preyed on each other. The enmity between cats and dogs seems to be due more to hatred on the part of the dog than of the cat. The latter animal apparently hates dogs because dogs chase her, while the dog hates the cat because she is a cat. A cat will feed at a place where a dog has been without betraying any signs of anger, but a dog generally be- comes excited and wild if he scents the trail of a cat anywhere near his food or sleeping place. Now this enmity js not to be ex- plained by anything that happens be- tween dogs and cats in domesticity or anything that ever happened between them as long ago as human history goes. In all these thousands of years dogs and cats have been kept as pets, and of all animals they are the two which should be the most friendly. But th& reverse is the case. One nat- uralist, Dr. Zell, seeks it in the fact that the common cat net only looks like, but smells like, the great cats of prey. And of those cats of prey there is one, much like a domestic cat in many ways, which hunts dogs by pref- erence. This big cat is the leopard. The domestic cat and her larger rela- tive, the wildcat, have never harmed the race of dogs, but their great spec- kled cousin is and always has been the most ferocious of dog murderers, and the cat must pay for it. Authorities agree that there is no animal that the leopard would rather eat than the dog. As a result there are many villages in the districts in which leopards are plentiful where nobody can keep a dog. The great cats will not hesitate to break into the houses to seize their favorite dish. But, says the doubter, the modern dog certainly could not have known leopards in many thousands of years. He has been a domestic pet in regions where there have been no leopards since man first appeared. That is true, says Dr. Zell. But be points to the fact that dogs have a habit of turning around several times before they lie down. This, he says, is due to the fact that when they were in a wild state they had to do this to press down leaves and twigs in order to prepare a bed for themselves, and as they have not overcome this habit in all their years of domesticity it is quite natural that they should still inHberit fierce hatred of any creature that smells like a leopard. Dogs and cats are not the only ani- mals that still show inherited fear or hatred of other beasts which theyshave never seen themselves. Thus the rhi- noceros is frantically in fear of any- thing white, and naturalists say that this is because once upon a time some big white animal hunted him. But that must have been long ago, for there are no big white animals now where ithe rhinoceros dwells. Chickens that have never seen a fox will cackle and run in fear if they come across the place where the ani- mal has passed or where his carcass has been dragged. If a fox has been anywhere near a cat's drinking dish the cat will not approach it.—New York Press. : A Spoiled Dinner. Mme. de Mazarin certainly was ec- centric and unfortunate, according to the memoirs of Marquise de Crequy. She never gave a reception without some accident happening. When she had a supper party the kitchen was certain to catch on fire. She gave a grand fete champeter and in order to make it more realistic sent for a flock of real sheep, a heifer and a shepherd’s dog. The flock was to pass behind a glass screen. An unruly buck smashed the glass, and the entire flock, with the heifer and dog, rushed in upon the au- dience and scattered it. Some of the sheep got access to the supper table, and so there were no refreshments to speak of. The Prince of Waterloo. After the battle of Waterloo the Duke of Wellington was created Prince of Waterloo, and four pensions were conferred on him and his descendants. A Belgian paper states ‘thet in the great book of the Belgiam publie debt ‘there are féur entmes every year of payments to the Prince of Waterloo. They are 80,106 francs 14 centimes, 492 francs, 85 francs 80 gentimes and 3 francs 47 centimes, or a total of more than £3;060. He Does Go Round Buttin’. At a dinner recently given in Lon- don an American actor proposed the conundrum, “What. goes round a but- ton?’ After the problem had been giv- en up by the party he gave the an- swer, “A goat.” There was a mo- ment's silince. Einally one of the women spoke up. “Why,” she said in a p@zzled tone, “I didn’t know they ate buttons.”’— Harper's Weekly. ¢ His Point of View. “Do you think the world is growing better?” “No, confound it! I dropped the nick- el the conductor gave me in change this morning, and it rolled off the car.”— Chicago Record-Herald. Changed It. The Lady—That isn’t the same story ou told me before. The Beggar—No, lady; you didn’t believe the other one. —Philadelphia Telegraph. E The greedy eye always misses more jthan ‘a generous one.—Chicago Trib- une. Venetian Glass, Marco Polo Gave the First Great Impetus to Its Manufacture. it was Marco Polo who gave the first great impetus to the glags industry at Venice. The great traveler encourhged his countrymen to manufacture and to export large quantities of glass to the orient to satisfy the growing demand there. It is difficult to determine when the first glass factories were establish- ed in Venice, says the Chicago News. Some historians have attempted to prove that it was as early as the fifth century. The most ancient existing document relating to #his industry is an article in a treaty concluded in 1287 between Bohemond, prince of Antioch, and Jacobo Contarini, doge of Venice. This time stained parchment refers to the purchase of broken glass—a most necessary ingredient for the production of good glass—by the Venetian mer- chants in Syria. In 1289 the great council of the republic prohibited the establishment of glass furnaces in the city proper, as they were frequent causes of serious fires, and finally rele- gated the glassblowers to the island of Murano (1292), where the industry has flourished down to the present day. Murano’s glass manufacturers pos- sessed many political and other privi- leges. Their daughters could even mar- ry into the families of the proud Vene- tian patricians. In the seventeenth cen- tury the glassblowers of Venice were recognized as the best in Europe. This fact caused the Duke of Buckingham to employ Venetian workmen in the glass manufactory which he opened in 1670 for the purpose of making imita- tions of the fine Venetian drinking glasses. Evelyn, the diarist, writing in 1641, says: “I passed over to Murano, fa- mous for the best glasses of the world, where, having viewed their furnaces, I made a collection of divers curiosities. ’Tis the white flints which they have from Pavia, which they pound and sift exceedingly small and mix with ashes made of a seaweed brought out of Syr- fa, and a white sand that cause the manufacture to excel.” Pointed Paragraphs, It is not much trouble for the wolves to find fault with the sheep. Always remember that a good deal may be said on the other side. ‘When a husband is mean io his wife he almost always outlives her. Patience is one of those things of which we don’t get enough and every one else gets too much. Some people say that the cemetery widowers take notice a good deal quicker than the courthouse widowers. ‘When a girl is as cross as two sticks ‘at home and smiling and pleasant downtown old fashioned women call her a “street angel.” One of the marvels of the age is the little indignation a girl will show at her father’s great wrongs and the great indignation she will show at her lover's little ones.—Atchison Globe. Invention of the Steam Engine. The Marquis of Worcester, while im- prisoned in the Tower of London in 1656, invented and constructed the first steam engine of which we have any authentic record and had it publicly exhibited the same year in Vauxhall in successful operation. In 1690 Dr. Papin invented and made a piston, and in 1698 Captain Savary devised and built a steam engine on a slightly mod- ified plan, while in 1706 Newcomb, Cawley and Savary constructed their atmospheric engine complete in every detail. James Watt, who today en- joys the distinction of being the verita- ble author of this most useful contriv- ance, did not appear upon the scene until 1765, just sixty years later.— Pearson’s Weekly. Natural Cure For Rheumatism. There is a wonderful grotto at Mon- summano, Italy, called the Grotto Gi- usti, where the natural vapor is stated to be an infallible cure for rheuma- tism. Fifty years ago some workmen were quarrying for lime when they dis- covered the grotto, and its healing pow- ers were first made known some little time later. In the lowest portion, ap- propriately named the Inferno, the tem- perature is about 95 degrees F., and here the victims from rheumatism sit and perspire for an hour at a time. Such a vapor bath is said to be of much ‘greater service than a Turkish bath. No Premeditation. Justice of Peace—-What do mean by saying it was not premeditated, Ras- tus? You acknowledge that you broke into the plaintiff’s hardware store and stole a bunch of keys. Rastus—Yas- sub, yassuh. But dat wuzn't mah fault, jedge. Mistah Smiff done put locks on his chicken coop dat mone ob mah keys ‘would fit, an’ dere wuzn't no udder way ter git in widout his heahin’ me *ceptin’ by borrerin’ dem keys. Yas- suh; dat’s de truf.—Judge. His Voice. “What would you do if you had a voice like mine?” “Have it operated on.” “Have it operated on? Why, I'll have you to understand that I made my fortune through my voice.” “Yes. I heard you proposed to your wife with it.” Wages, Forsooth! Mrs. Annex—TI'll tell you what I'll do, Bridget. If you'll consent to stay I'll raise your wages. Bridget—Listen to her, wud ye? Raise me wages, in- dade! Ye’'ll increase me salary, that’s phwat ye’ll do.—Brooklyn Life, hs The Modern Way. He—And so they got married? She— Yes, they got married, were separated again in a week’s time and have lived happily ever since.—Philadelphia Bul- letin. :