Pemorvaiic; atc, Bellefonte, Pa., April 7. 1905. LE AS SE Ant, MAKE THIS A DAY. Make this a day. There is no gain In brooding over days to come ; The message of today is plain, The future’s lips are ever dumb. The work of yesterday is gone— For good or ill, let come what may ; But now we face another dawn. Make this a day. Though yesterday we failed to see The urging hand and earnest face That men call Opportunity. We failed to know the time or place For some great deed, what need to fret ? The dawn comes up a silvery gray, And golden moments must be met. Make this a day. This day is yours ; your work is yours ; The odds are not who pays your hire. The thing accomplished—that end ures, If it be what the days require. He who takes up his daily round, As one new armored for the fray, Tomorrow steps on solid ground. Make this a day. The day is this ; the time is now ; No better hour was ever here— Who waits upon the when and how Remains forever in the rear. Though yesterday were wasted stuff, Your feet may still seek out the way, Tomorrow is not soon enough— Make this a day. —W. D. N., in Chicago Tribune. LIBBY, THE UNLOVED. Libby Anderson hung the dishcloth on its accustomed nail, and stood there sur- veying it. It was plain, from the way she looked, that she was determined to speak. © Ma,’ she asked of the woman who was sitting before the little round stove, ‘‘what were those papers Dave put in his pocket as I came in ?”’ “Some things he was showin’ me.’ “‘Ma,” she asked, quiveringly, ‘‘you didn’t sign anything, did you ?”’ “I didn’t sign your name to anything.” And the needles clashed again. She knew her mother too well to press farther. ‘I just conuldn’t understand Dave com- ing here this time of year,’ she ventured ; “and I thought he acted queer.” The old woman was folding her knit- ting. “I’m going to bed, and you'd better come along, too,’’ was her reply. A week went by, and although Libby had twice forgotten to feed the chickens, and had several times let the kettle burn dry, she was beginning to feel more settled in her mind. She did up her work one morning and went to town. Her first call was at the solicitor’s, and there she heard the worst. Ma had as- signed their home to Dave. She did not make any fuss ; she was too old-fashioned for hysterics. It was not until the old place came in sight that she broke down. “Is not fair,’’ she cried out, ‘‘when I've stayed here and worked—it’s not fair!” And, for the first time in many years, she was arying—passionately crying. It was a feeling of outraged justice that made her speak, for she was just a woman —the daughter of pa. “‘Ma,”’ she said, ‘‘do you think pa would like to think of your assigning the place to Dave, when I’ve stayed here and kept it up the best I could for twenty years?’ The old woman put down her knitting. ‘La, vow, Libby,” she said, not un- kindly, ‘don’t take on. You'll never want for nothing !’’ Libby stood there looking at her. “I think you don’t realize what you've done,”’ she said ; and turned to the bed- room to take off her things. It was not until the next month, the blustering month of March, that all was made clear. It was early in the afternoon when Libby looked from the window and saw a man coming in at the big gate. “That friend of Dave’s from the city is coming, ma,’’ she said. *‘Gracious !"’ exclaimed Mrs. Anderson, ‘‘and such a day as tis !”’ The stranger warmed his hands, and dis- bursed a number of pleasantries. *‘Well, Mrs. Anderson,” he said finally, ‘‘your son wants me to make a little prop- osition to you.”’ Mrs. Anderson looked pleasantly ex- pectant. . ‘“‘Dave’s always making propositions,’’ she ehuokled. “He's been a good deal worried about you this winter—afraid you were not just comfortable out liere—you two, all alone.” ““Dave’s always thinking of his mother’s comfort,’ she asserted ; and looked tri- umphantly over to Libby. “Well,” he resumed, turning back to the older woman, *‘it worries Dave to think of your being oot bere alone now that you’re getting along in years, so he’s rented a nice little place in town, and he feels sare it would be better all around if you’d just go in and take is.” “If that ain’t for all the world like Dave !—always some new idea in his head. Bat you just tell him, Mr. Murray, not to be bothering. We don’t want to move to town—do we, Libby ?”’ ‘‘Not if we can help it,’ she replied. ‘‘Dave’s been away from the place so long that he don’t see just how ’tis,”’ ma explained. ‘Libby and me wouldn’t feel at home no place else.” “I's too bad you feel that way,’’ he went on persuasively, ‘‘for Dave was so sure you’d like the idea that he’s gone ahead and made all arrangements, and I'm afraid there might be a little trouble about unmaking them.”’ He turned to Libby. ‘‘How soon do you think you could move? By the 1st of May ?"’ ‘I suppose 80,’ she answered, in a dull voice. April came, and for the fiftieth time the old woman watched the white give way to the green on the bills that curved in and out around her old home. As long as she could, Libby let her have her dream. Her heart was not hard to- ward ma now. Ma had not understood. And Libby was glad she could have those few spring days before she was torn from the old home. *‘Ma,’’ she began one morning, ‘I think I will have to be packing up this week.” “Packing up what ?’’ : “Why, don’t you remember, ma ; we're going to town the 1st of May ?’’ “Oh, la, Libby. I've give that up long ago ! I’m going to die on the old place.” “But you know, ma, the arrangements bave all been made. I'm afraid we’ll have to go.” ? She turned to her clossly. i ““There’s no nse to argue wi’ me, Libby Anderson. I ain’t going !"’ “Bus what about Dave ?”’ ‘You can jest write Dave, and say his mother don’t want to leave the place. Dave won’t have nothing further to say.”’ She looked off at the meadowland as if it were all settled. Libby would have to tell ber. “Ma,” she said, ‘‘it’s no use to write to Dave.’ “Why not ?”’ she demanded, in a half- frightened, balf-aggreesive voice. ‘‘He’s sold the place, ma !”’ ‘‘What’s that yousay ? Something about Dave selling my place ? Are you gone crazy, Libby ?”? ‘You know you deeded it to him, ma. It was his after you did tbat. And he’s sold it, and we’ll have to move out.”’ Hearing no answer, she turned around, and it was then she coveted Dave's gilt of saying things smoothly. The old woman was crouched low in her chair, and her face was quivering, and looked sunken and gray. “J didn’s think he’d do that,’’ she fal- tered. ‘Never mind, ma,’”’ Libby said awk- wardly. ‘Poor ma !”’ It was the nearest to a caress that bad passed between them since Libby was a lit- tle girl. . Nothing more was said until after ma bad gone to bed. Libby supposed she was asleep, when she called quaveringly to her. ¢‘Libby,’”’ she said, ‘‘you mustn’s be thinking hard of Dave. He must have thought it for the bess.’’ Libby was used to caring for ma, and she needed care now. “Yes, ma,’’ she answered ; ‘‘I’m sure he must.” It was not until the morning of the fourth day that the silence between them was broken. Libby got up to take down the clock, when she heard a strange noise behind her, and,turning, she saw that ma’s head was down low in her hands, and she was rocking passionately back and forward, and crying as though her old heart bad broken. She put down the clock, and again she wished for a little of Dave's silkiness of speech. But she did not bave it, and the best she could do was to pull ma’s chair out from the barren room into the sun- shine of the porch. The hills, she thought, would still look like home. Ma did not get up at all next day. Per- bapa she was ill, or perhaps it was only that she did not want to go out in the sit- ting rcom and see how unlike home it look- ed. But the next day she did not get up either, and then Libby went to town for the doctor. He said the excitement had weakened her, and did not seem very cer- tain she would ever get up again. That night Libby wrote a letter to Dave, asking him again to let his mother die on the old place. A week passed, and an answer had not come, and still ma had not left her bed. The packing was all done, it was the 1st of May, and she was just waiting—she did not know for what. Her whole soul rose up against moving ma from the old place now, when her days were 80 surely nombered ; and so she sent a telegram to Dave, telling him his mother was ill, and asking leave to stay a little longer. There came a reply from his part- ner, saying that Dave was away,and would not be home for two weeks, That night the old woman raised herself and sobbed ont the truth. “It’s Dave that’s killing me! It’s to think Dave sold the place, and turned me out to die !”’ And then the way opened before Libby, and she saw her path. The disinherited child wrote a letter that night, and to it she signed ber brother’s pame. Oat in the world they might have applied to it an ugly word, but Libby was only caring for ma. She was a long time about it, for it was bard to put things in Dave’s round, bold hand, and it was hard to say them in his silky way. The doctor said next morning that it was a matter of but a few days at most, for ma was much worse. **It ain’ that I’m going to die,”’ she said, when Libby came in and found her crying ; “but I was thinking of Dave. I keep thinking and thinking of him when he was a little boy, and how he used to run about the place, and how pretty he used to look ; and then, just as I begin to takea little comfort in rememberin’ some of the smaré things be said, I have to think of what he bas done, and it does seem like he might have waited till—’’ But the words were too bitter to be spoken, and, with a hard, scraping sound in her throat, she turned her face to the wall. Libby pat her hand to something in her pocket, and thought of last night's work with thankfulness. About 11 o'clock she entered the room with the sheets of a letter in her hand. *‘Ma,’’ she said, tremulously, ‘‘bere’s a letter just come from Dave.’ | *‘I knew it’] come—I knew it!’ And tie old voice filled the room with its trinmphans ring. Then there crept into ber face an anxious look. ‘‘What does he say 2’ ‘‘He’s sorry abont selling the place, ma. He really thought you’d like it better in town. But he’s fixed it up for us to stay. He says you’ll never have to leave the place.” “I knowed it—I knowed it well enough ! You don’t know Dave like I do. But read me the letter.” - She did read it, and the old woman listened with tears—glad tears now—fall- ing over her withered cheeks. ‘You can just unpack our things,’”’ she cried, when it was finished, ‘‘and get this place straightened out. The idea of your packing up, and think we was going to move to town ! Nice mess yon’ve made of us leaving the place. I always knowed you’d never ’preciated Dave.’’ Before morning broke ma was dead. Happy, because she had back her old faith in Dave—the blind, beautiful faith of the mother in the son. And Libby—the home- less and unloved Libby—was happy, too, for she had finished well her work of car ing for ma.— London Answer. For a Fixed Easter. The awkwardness of a movable Easter has frequently attracted attention on the continent, and the discussion of the ques- tion has again been revived io Berlin, says the New York Journal. Professor Forster, director of the Berlin observatory, recently suggested that the pope should take in hand the settlement of the question. He also communicated with Signor Tondini and with the astronomers of the Vatican observatory. Their common propesal was to fix Easter on the third Sunday after the equinox—that is to say, after the 21st day of March, the moon no longer influencing the date. The festival would then only vary between April 4th and 11th instead of between March 22nd and April 25th, as now. - Proof Positive. ~ The Heiress—Don’t you think he is a sensible young man? Her Father—Ob, yes; he wants ‘to marry a nice girl whose father has lots of money. The Robin. BY CHARLES M’ILVAINE. Of all birds the robin is the cheeriest. If a vote were taken upon which among our outdoor birds is the favorite, the robin could get a big majority. He makes him- self a watter-of-conise near-by neighbor of the family, and everyone is glad. He helps himself to the ripest cherries and choicest raspberries without saying ‘By your leave,” but he very much more than pays for them in eating the insects which injure them and others of our eatables. Everything pretty has been written about this brave, strong, helpfal, industrious songster. Ishall be satisfied in telling about his, likewise Mrs. Robin’s life and habits. though I would very much like to say the pretty things I could of them. The American robin belongs to the thrush family; so does the bluebird. Al- together there are eight members of the thrash family which have from time to time been found in Pennsylvania. The robin is a great settler. It raises its young and has its homes from the Gull of Mexico to the Arctic coast; from the Atlantic Ocean to New Mexico, Alaska, and the eastern slopeof the Rocky Mountains. It does not bave to wait for turnpikes and railroads to carry it to far-off regions. It says, “I am going,’’ and it goes. And what is remarkable about itis that it goes and Comes every year. When autumn comes robins gather into flocks. In the evenings they leave their feeding places and seek low-lying thickets or swamps where the alder grows, or thick- ly wooded creek banks, and there roost with the purple blackbirds, cowbirds, and others. As the weather grows colder, and food becomes scarce, they go farther to the south where it is warm and there is more to eat. In the woods, swamps, fields of the Southern states they stay and feed until spring comes, then back they fly to their summer homes all over the land. A few strong, bardy birds stay in the north during the winter. These love cedar groves and low sheltered places where the green briar grows and bushes are thick. Every countiy boy knows where to find the robin in winter, and knows how quietly it will slip out of sight. With the first peep of spring the robin’s merry song is heard. It seems to fairly bounce on the air. It carries joy with is. The sight of the first spring robin startea new period of time. One thinks of plant- ing seeds and putting out the plants that have been housed all winter, and hunting up straw hate’ seeking for the precious ar- butus. Later this song grows richer and more frequent, as the bird calls his lady-love or challenges all rivals. The males have angry fights, but they do not hurt each other. The object appears to be to find out which can chase the other longess. Guineas quarrel in this way. One will chase the other at full speed for half an hour. Suddenly the chaser will stop, turn, and be chased. The one lasting longest is the best guinea. Su it is with the robins. After much singing by Mr. Robin and a great deal of shyness by Mrs. Robin the pair conclude to build a nest. Some pairs select the crotches of trees, others build on the branches, afew select bushes, occa- sionally they build directly on the ground. Often a joist under a porch or shed is chosen. I once knew a pair to build in the tin rain spout that caught the water from a porch roof. The nest was washed away three times before they gave up the situation, An apple tree is a favorite place. Both robins carry twigs, dead grass, strings, al- most everything they can get, and build a rough framework, twining the materials together so that they will hold. They carry mouthfuls of mad and fill the frame- work as it rises. This they add to by mix- ing grass, strings, and bair with mud un- til they have a structure which often weighs a pound. In the center is a bowl- nest, smoothly covered on the inside with mud. Here the female lays four or five bluish-green eggs a little over an inch long. In due time the eggs hatch, and four or five as ugly, bare, wabbly, big- mouthed youngsters appear as ever were geen come ont of shells. Now the real work of the parents begin. Nothing is hungrier, or eats more for its size, than a young robin. Until it is almost ready to fly it eats ite own weight of food each day! Think of the enormous number of insects and worms it takes tofeed four robins until they are grown. Several times I have had good chances to watch the feeding from daylight to sundown. I bave counted the number of visits the parents made to the nest, and noted what was fed each time. The parents carefully prepared the food. An eastworm is nipped and paralyzed by their beaks, hidden in some shaded moist place near by, and fed in small pieces about an hour. A cherry is stored in the same way, and fed nip by nip. Grass- hoppers and beetles have their legs and wings removed because they are too hard todigess. Caterpillars are rolled on gravel walks or other rough places until every hair disappears and they are as smooth as alate pencils. I have never seen more than two cherries apiece given to each young robin in one day. They are fed by turns. The old robin cautiously hops to the side of the nest. Three open months are held up. Into one of them the food is placed. The fourth bird appears to be asleep. The old bird waits a moment. It raises its head, passes up its throat and into its beak the food which is not digestible. This lozenge-shap- ed pellet the old bird takes in her beak and drops as she flies away. 1 am afraid to tell how often each robin is fed each day. Find a nest, sit quiet, have opera-glasses, keep count for your- self. It is very interesting. You will be much surprised. I saw one foundling robin, about a week before it became ready to fly, which I hung out in a cage, fed two hundred and dighty times in one day. The nest had been blown down in a storm, and all the young birds drowned hut one. ' Robins are the farmers’ good friends. We should not begrudge the robins the few cherries they eat.— [Sunday School Times. Beating of Dead Hearts. Hearts of cold-blooded animals will beat for a comparatively long time after death or removal from the body (if kept cool apd moist), because of powerful in- ternal coliections of nerves, known as ganglia, whose automatic impulses cause the regular contractions of the musoles. Similar ganglia exist in man and other warm-blooded animals, but their action is less prolonged. Scientists bave ascer- tained that a turtle’s heart will heat after removal, if put on a piece of glass, kept cool and moist, and covered with a bell- jar. I believe it bas been known to beat thirty-six or even forty-eight hours; twelve or fourteen hours is a common rec- ord.—From Nature and Science in April St. Nicholas. A Romance of Philanthropy. In some respects the most remarkable public benefactor of modern times was Mrs. Jane Lathrop Stanford, who died as Hono- Inlu on March 1st, poisoned by some im- placable enemy. She gave more money for public purposes than any other philan- thropist except Mr. Carnegie and Baron de Hirsch ; she gave it herself during ber life- time, without leaving it to be paid at the expense of her beirs, and, going beyond even the lavish givers just named, she be- stowed practically her entire fortune, tak- ing literally the injunction about not dying rich whichas yes Mr. Carnegie bas pus forth only as a theory. In the early eighties Leland Stanford and his associates, Crocker, Huntington, and Hopkins, were classed together in the public mind of California as ‘‘soulless plutocrats’” and tyrants. Stanford was nominated by the Governor as Regent of the State University. The Senate, con- trolled by the anti-monopoly Democracy, rejected the nomination. It is generally believed that but for this action there would have been no Stanford University, and eventually a great part, if not all, of the Stanford millions would bave gone to the University of California. The Stanfords had a son whom they idolized. He seems to have been really a remarkable boy, one of those fine souls op- pressed by the burden of the world. He wove plans for the benefit of other boys and girls, and on his deathbed be begged his parents to carry them out. He died in 1884 at sixteen, leaving his father and mother crushed by a loss whose magnitude almost unsettled their minds. The world was a blank to them; wealth had lost its savor, and they had no thought but to devote themselves and their fortune to the realization of their boy’s wishes and to the immortalization of his name. They canon- ized his memory, and when the Rev. Dr. Newman in his foneral sermon compared the dead boy to Christ among the doctors, the parallel which scandalized reverent strangers seemed to the bereaved parents only a just appreciation of his merits. THE MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY. The next year the Leland Stanford, Jr., University was born. Its queer name was a touching reminder of its real founder. In its museum, as in a shrine, were displayed odd little relics of the worshipped boy—his clothes, his intimate personal belongings— incongruous little things that made casual visitors laugh. The whole university was his monument. Its welfare became the ab- sorbing passion of the Stanfords’ life. A substantial endowment was deeded to it at the start, but for the bulk of its support it depended upon the continued generosity of its founders. Leland Stanford was elect- ed to the Senate and in 1893 he died. Al- though it had been understood that his fortune would ultimately go to the wuni- versity, the greater part of it was left un- reservedly to his widow. This marked no change in the original plans. The two bad worked out their ideas together, their de- sires wereone, and Stanford knew that there was no way in which their execution could beso thoroughly assured as by leav- ing everything in Mrs. Stanford’s uncheck- ed control. There had been a Board of Trustees from the beginning, but its funec- tions had been purely ornamental. As long as a Stanford remained alive there would be no other governing body. The Central Pacific railroad owed the government over $60,000,000. For many years the corporation, under the guidance of Collis P. Huntington, attempted to evade the payment of that debs. While this con- test was going on, it occurred to the gov- ernment that an advantage might be gained by bringing suit against the personal estates of the men who had incurred the debt, and by an inspiration of genius the estate se- lected for the test case was the particular one that had been devoted to public pur- poses. A suit for $15,000,000 was brought against the Stanford estate, the whole prop- erty was tied up in the courts, and Mis. Stanford was left to bear the entire expense of defending an action in which Hunting- ton and his partners were the chief parties in interest. The court allowed Mrs. Stanford $10,000 a month for her personal expenses. She told President Jordan that she could live on $100 a month, as she had done before, and that the university conld have all the rest. She shut up her great houses, dis- charged most of her servants, and lived in one wing of her Palo Alto home. The professors were asked to wait for part of their salariesand did so. They were still getting more than: the woman who fur- nished their money. The university scrap- ed along. Mrs. Stanford sold some per- sonal effects of her own to meet its deficit, and prepared to sell her valuable jewels and works of art. As last the suit was decided in her favor and times became easier. A FORTUNE RENOUNCED. Through all this period of stress and pinching economy it was necessary for the university to lay aside thousands of dol- lars a year to pay taxes levied on it by the State. Eventually its friends succeeded in securing the adoption of a constitutional amendment exempting it from this bur- den. In 1901 Mrs. Stanford formally trans- ferred to the university almoss all the prop- erty still remaining in her bands. This included interest-bearing bonds and stocks valued at $18,000,000, a hundred thousand acres of land, worth $12,000.000, and the Stanford residences in San Francisco and Palo Alto. Mrs. Stanford retained only a comparatively small income for life. Thus one of the richest women in the world voluntarily reduced herself to the position of a person of modest means. But in doing so she won a distinction all ber own. There are plenty of rich women, but there is none, nor any man either, who has deliberately given to others a fortune comparable with that sacrificed by Mis. Stanford. Of course, Mrs. Stanford’s peculiar rela- tious to the university furnished material for criticism. Cherishing it nexs her heart, as she did, she could not be indifferent to its management. Notwithstanding her confidencein President David Starr Jordan, who ordinarily exercised the powers of a dictator, she could not occasionally help interfering. The idea of a great university “‘run’’ by a woman, and not a highly edu- cated woman at that, was naturally dis- tastefal to the scholastic mind. The Ross case, in which a professor was removed be- cause his views on economic subjects were regarded as a reflection upon the methods by which Senator Stanford had gained his fortune, angered the friends of ‘‘academio freedom.” But these annoyances were only temporary. While the critics were complaining, Mrs. Stanford was laying deep and firm the foundations of the most amply endowed university in America, and she was giving it, along with her wealth, the inspiring memory of a sell- sacrificing devotion and a warmth of per- sonal affection to which the arid infancy of public institutions in general offers no patallel.— Colliers. ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. TRL Burbank and His Work. Carnegie Institute's @ist Will Benefit Science of Horticulture. In scientific circles much interest at- taches to the splendid gift made by the Carnegie Institute to Luther Burbank, the noted horticulturist, to enable him to continue his work. Prot. Wm. A. Setchell, head of the de- partment of botany of the University of California, has made no intimate study of the work done by Luther Burbank, bus he has followed his experiments enough to realize their tremendous bearing on the science of botany and the still broader field of biology. He has particularly in- terested himself in the experiments of Hugo de Vries, the famous Dutch scientist, whose work has been along the same lines as that of Burbank. During his recent European trip Professor Setchell studied the work of De Vries at Amsterdam, and was able to grasp the nature of the problems which he was attacking. Professor Setchell bas the following to say concerning the recent donation given Burbank by the Carnegie Institute: ‘Luther Burbank bas shown himself to be a wonderfully successful practical plant breeder—one man out of thousands. To the botanist his methods are of intense interest because they offer some data to- ward solving the baffling problem of how ancestral traits can be combined and ochanged—really transmuted — into new traits. The work he is doing has a bear- ing more particularly on the problem of heredity rather than on the wider problem of evolution. Burbank’s results can give invaluable suggestions for future work along similar lines, and they can give sug- gestions of the principles that underlie such notable botanical work at that of Prof. Hugo de Vries. NOTHING SHORT OF MARVELOUS. ‘‘Burbank’s results are nothing short of marvelous, bus, after all, they are valu- able principally because of their sugges- tiveness. He possesses extraordinary skill in detecting points in breeding and their value. His peculiar genius is his insight. He is able to select out of thousands of seedings, all apparently alike, those which have the potentialities for breeding new varieties. This instinct is something that the majority of gardeners donot ha at all. They are utterly unable to pi out subtle differences in plants until they have reached a certain stage of maturity, but Burbank can note these fine oddities in his plants and select those which will do the work he is after. His is a marvel- ously successful power of forecasting a result. It is something which I doubt that he can teach or transmit. He sees something in a plant that others cannot see, and the correctness of this insight is demonstrated in his results. He seems to know the very nature of a plant, and this knowledge has not come through study; but throught experimentation and close observation. ‘‘Now that Burbank has demonstrated this pronounced ability, he should goon. The Caivegie Institute, by its .generous donation, has made it possible for him to devote his entire time to the pursuit of these plant-breeding problems. Many of these investigations are unprofitable from a commercial standpoint, although of ex- treme value from a scientific standpoint. He can now follow out, untrammeled, cer- tain lines of crossing that are at present yielding astonishing resnlts. While these results are not necessarily of immediate value, they may ultimately prove of the greatest importance, for, by many exam- ples, we may get the underlying principles of plant breeding, of breeding in its widest sense, and in this way the very origin of species. DARING AND SUCCESSFUL CREATOR. ‘Although science knows little about the details as yet, she knows that there are some general principles governing the production of new varieties. Darwin's idea was that species cbanged through a long series of modifications, each too small to be distinguished. De Viies, in a later date, has found that there are many species that have arizen by sudden jumps. Now there is nothing inconsistent in these two theories, for the recent hypothesis is mere- ly an extension of the other. Burbank fits into the general scheme as a daring and successful creator. He stimulates plants to produce variations by leaps and bounds instead of by a steady and uniform in- crease. As to the laws underlying his results, he isas much in the dark as the rest of the scientific world. Breeding is something of which we know very little theoretically. In plant breeding we have worked by rule of thumb, relying on such little experience as bas heen gathered. Herein lies the true importance of Bar- bank’s experiments, for he will furnish abundant data in his investigations on which trained botanists and scientific thinkers can study in their search for the great governing principles at present un- known.” The Czar’s Day of Judgment. That the welfare of millions should hang upon the will, whim and word of a single individual-——and this individual walled away from all real knowledge of the people’s condition and natural wishes—is an anarchronism of tragic proportiong—an anarohronism which leads to deplcrable as sassination on the one side, and on the other to such hideous massacres of the con- fiding innocent as took place in St. Peters- burg on Sunday, the 22nd of January ,1905. In all the history of man no more preg- pant opportunity was ever offered toa sovereign than that offered to the Czar Nicholas when his people came to him, pot with swords and guns, but bearing a petition, carrying the sacred icons, and pictures of the Czar, and following a cross. The humblest Turk is protected in pre- senting a petition to his Sultan; but the White Czar, the beloved Little Father, al- lows his petitioning.subjects to be slanghs- ered like mad dogs! The psychologist and the philosopher can find a score of explanations of the con- duct of the troubled, perplexed and wrongly advised Czar on that day of judg- ment for him and for the exploded system of government which he represents. Yes it remains true that, strive as he may to undo the awful effects of his action ou that 220d of January, the doom of the Russian oligarchy was sealed. Through whatever slow or rapid processes, by means ‘of what- ever wise concessions or hysterical con- vulsions, Russia from now on will advance painfully, perbaps with pitiful reactions, toward some modern and rational form of government. The pew government may or may not retain imperial forms, asin Japan. The danger is that the blind, brutal, stupid measures of repression, the grinding system of imperial uniformity, may so inflame the people that fearful reprisals and chimerical schemes of reform will take the place of wise and orderly measures, and that the “man on horse- back’’ may, for a time, stand in the path of progress. — From an Editorial in the April Century. April Court Trial List. Jacob Test vs Geo. R, Mock, Adm's. appeal. J. H. Weber vs Geo Gentzel, appeal. Thos, E. Rickets & Son va T M. Mey- ers, appeal. Arthur C. Norris ys Henry Swank, appeal. L. W. Kimport vs Linden Hall Lum- ber Co., appeal. Morris Frank vs John G. Platt, appeal. John Harper ve vt * Peter Stont, vs 4 “ “ Hugh Best vs xs “ * Charles Stover o ot * Isaac Brown se .“ os Frank Stover bi ‘“ ul SECOND WEEK. Peter Smith ys Mary Slacks, Adm’s., appeal. Nellie Zeigler vs Barney Mendleman, slander. ; Mary J. Gates, et al, v8 Minnie G. Rowan, ejectment. Mary J. Gates, et al, v8 Daniel Mey- er, ejectment. College Hardware Co., vs T. D. Boal, assumpsit, B. F. Harris vs Huston Twp, as- sumpsit. David Moore vs Nora Moore, divorce. Mary A. Davidson, et al, vs Orvis Peters, assumpsit. Emma Swartz vs Annie K. Riddle, assumpsit. Dr. D. G. Woods vs B. F, Harris, as- sumpsit, Wilson Eoutz ys B. F. Harris, as- sumpsit. . Jonathan Harter vs A. F. Harter, debt. Jonathan Harter, vs A. F. Harter, debt. Osceo'a Lumber Co., v8 Mary Barrett debt. F. Hirsch vs Rush Twp., debt. Christian Reese vs Henry & William ‘Woomer, ejectment. Jas. C. Gilliland vs J. H. Ross. et al, trespass. 38RD WFEK SPECIAL TERM. Jane Herron, et al, va C. C. Loose, et al, trespass. The Farmer's Nursery Co.. ys H H Harshberger, appeal. Chas. F Schad. vs Milesburg Boro, trespass. Wm. E. Shope’s Adm’rs. va Jas. N. Shope, ejectment. Cyrus Brungart vs Mary Thomas, et al, debt. Clyde E Shuey vs Bellefonte Furnace trespass. Martin Daley, Sr., vs German Ameri- can Insurance Co., assumpsit. Geo. T. Brew, v8 W H Marcy, et al, trespass. E. S. Bennitt vs Frank McCoy, as- sumpsit. N H Yearick vs McNitt Bros. & Co., trespass. ‘Wm. D Rider vs Bellefonte Window Glass Co., assumpsit. Chas. Guisewhite, vs Bellefonte Win- dow Glass Co . assumpsit. J. D. Hunter Adm’rs. vs Bellefonte Window Glass Co., assumpsit. Wm. G Frant vs Rush Twp., appeal. H. B. Wright vs Joseph Diehl, * Kemp & Burpee Mfgz.,, Co.,, vs J. I Thompson, assumpsit. ‘Wilson G Frant vs Robt. Kelly, ap- peal. Com. of Pa., vs Ellen E. Bower et al, assumpsit. Com. of Pa vs Ellen E. Bower et al, assumpsit. W. H. Williams, Admrs. vs Ellen E. Bower, assumpsit. ( hristian Dale, Exe’rs. vs Clement Dale, assumpsit. W. Harrison Walker, guard, vs EIl- len E Bower, et al, assumpsit. A. Blanche Hoy’s, vs Ulement Dale assumpsit. Trend of American Forestry. One of the most vital of modern problems concerns itself with forests and waters, with the maintenance of our forests as sources of revenue and protectors of vas irrigation systems, and more especially with the duties of the National government toward American forestry. Fifteen years ago there was little interest felt in the subject, excepting among a few scientists and the workers of the Division of Forestry, who seemed to be entirely out of touch with the practical side of the problem. We had no foresters, no forest schools, no pub- lio leaders developing a new forest system, no young men full of strenuous and trained enthusiasm making themselves indispens- able, because of their knowledge, to great railroad aud lnmbering interests. Now all this has changed, and so swiftly that while the stupid are still plodding along with academic disonssions about European foreste, and appeals to ‘‘preserve all the forests’’ (as if they should be bot- tled up in formalin!) the vast interests whose life depends on a continnal supply of all the forest products have really orient- ed themselves along a new axis; they have faced the rising sun of American forestry. One brave, unselfish, and single-hearted man, Gifford Pinchot, has mainly done this; has come up year after year, step by step, with splendid and lovable persistence, uniting all the fighsing elements to use American forests intelligently, appealing to enlightened selfishness, writing admirable books, delivering trenchant addresses, ef- feotively organizing forest work in State after State, developing a moribund Division of Forestry into a Burean whose activities now reach into every part of America, and are modifying forestry principles in other countries also. And now he and all the American forest- ers stand at the turning of the tides. Hither- to they have had no actual power to shape nd to develop forestry here. They have had the priceless knowledge—but no forests. The National Parks and Reserves, some sixty in number, some 80,000,000 acres in area, have been wholly controlled by the ancient and honorable Land Office of the Department of the Interior. A few rangers patrol these wide areas, a little lumber has been sold, and much has been given to set- tlers. Bus there has not been nor can there be any true and systematio forestry or any intelligent utilization of the forestal re- sources of these Reserves until the Bureau of Forestry receives absolute control of them. This change has heen supported by irrigation conventions, lumbhermen’s asso- ciations, and all sorts of public hodies, and as last has been sanctioned by Congress.