NASH Bellefonte, Pa. August 10, 1906. EE ———————————————————————————V—— Just for a Change. I'm sort of tired of things that is; They'r lackin’ somewhat as to fizz. There ain't no ginger io life's jar With things a-goin’ as they are. The fault may be with me, and, then, It may be otherwise again, 1 ain't a-tryin’ to fix no blame Because all tastes about the same. Howe'er it is, I wish it might Have things turned round a bit some night, So that instead of as they be, They'd work towards the contrary. I'd like to see some mountain rill Have spunk enough to flow up hill, So that old Nature might be shown It had opinions of its own. I'd like to see the settin’ san Out inthe east when day is dove, Just as a hiot, when goin’ to bed, To prove it wasn't bigoted, 1'd like to hear a bull-frog sing Like nightingales upon the wing. Instead of that eternal ‘‘clunk™ With which he seeks his swampy bunk. A cat that barks ; a dog that meows, And when it comes to milkin’ cows, 'T would cheer me up to get a pail Of lemonade or ginger ale ; And if the bucket in the well Would give up water for a spell, And bring me up some fresh root beer, There'd be no kick a-comia’ here. 'T ain't discontent that's vexin' me With life so everlastin’ly, But just a sort of parchin’ thirst To get a peek at things reversed. They've been the same so very long A change would strike me pretty strong, And, though I'm makin’ no complaint, Foronce I'd like "em as they ain't. ~John Kendrick Bangs, in MeClure's for August, When the Editor “Puffed” By DONALD ALLEN Copyright, 1908, by M. M. Cunningham There was just one reason why the Widow Bidwell refused the matrimo- nial offer tendered her by Editor Flint of the Weekly Clarion and Fergus County Advertiser. Editor Flint had owned and edited the Clarion for many years. He had never married because he had been too busy making up and working off his edition of 600 coples, getting up and printing auction bills, | writing thrilling local notices of wood | ‘wanted on subscription and other mat- | ters connected with a weekly journal | of twenty years ago. Some of his es- | teemed contemporaries sneeringly re- | marked now and then that he stole his | editorials, but when it came down to | writing out an auction bill they yielded him the palm, i “Avection! Auction! Auction!” read | the average blll. “Take notice that on | the 14th of September George Styles, | farmer, will sell at public vendue all | the live stock and other personal prop- erty on his farm on the Red Bridge | road. Said stock consists of horses, | cows, sheep and hogs and about 100 | hens and geese. le to begin at 10 | a. m,, and all will to the highest | bidder.” i There was no doubt about the suc | cess of the Clarion as a newspaper or | ‘about the success of Editor Flint as an | editor. When he finally made up his | mind to marry the Widow Bidwell, | | her husband's death, and she did not | rank with the Four Hundred of i village, but she was a lover of poetry | and she had dreams of poets. While | terfered considerably with her out orders on time, and she calculated | ‘that one about offset the other, : The poetry loving widow had had | fifty different poetic effusions pub- lished in the Clarion over the nom de | plume of Flossie, but Mr. Flint had | received the copy with a grunt, and | ‘the public had recovered from the shock each time within twenty-four | | i The “poems” had been published to | save carrying dead advertising. Mrs. | Bidwell was rather surprised when the editor dropped in on her one even- ing and proceeded to say that he want. | ed her for the mistress of his house, ‘but she soon rallied and answered that there was an insurmountable uo Hy i : Igeifl 3g gg g [ gs HL oe gg g E F if gE £ 2 z 3 HE : § £ 7 i uid it wanted a few pointers. day from Mr, Harold De Lisle, who has just made a million dollars out of Pennsylvania oil. We understand that he may remain in our village for some days. Indeed, Dame Rumor Is con pecting his name with that of a rich and prominent widow on Chestnut street.” Mr. De Lisle was duly introduced to the Widow Bidwell. She had no sooner get eyes on him than her heart began to palpitate. The poet had come. He looked and dressed the part. He also acted it. Nothing was sald of her dressmaking on the one hand nor of his oat business on the other. They talked of sonnets ard poems and idyls, and the widow was not in the hotel dining room to note the quantity of corned beef and cabbage he got away with at dinner, There was a fourth notice in the Clarion. The spurned editor hadn't much to do with auction bills just then, and he had time to keep track of affairs on Chestnut street. He bad been told that Mr. Harold De Lisle was only a traveling agent for a gang of eastern swindlers, but he wasn't going to say so. On the contrary, what lie said was: “The wealthy and distinguished Mr. De Lisle is still with us, and if be has not won the heart of a Reed City lady then rumor has gone far astray. The wedding will probably be a quiet af- fair, and bride and groom may make a honeymoon trip to Europe.” : The Bohemian oats man who looked like a poet and the widow dressmaker who really wrote rhymes were not ex- actly frank with each other. He never asked the name of her brother or what disease he died of. He never asked if that fortune had come or when it might be expected. On her part, she didn't ask in what part of the Keystone State his oil well was situated or what national bank he bonored with his deposits. They read the Clarion and trusted in each other, There were more farmers waiting to buy Bohemian oats and find a crop of | weeds, but still Harold De Lisle lin- gered. There were dresses that cus- | tomers were waiting for, but still the widow's sewing machine was silent. The languiduess and lethargy of look- i ing like a poet and being a poet beat sliding down hill all hollow. The fifth “puff” in the Clarion was a send-off. “The event of the season occurred at i the Methodist church two days since,” it read. “As we have all along pre- dicted, we have lost our fairest flower. In other words, Mr. Harold De Lisle prevailed upon the charming Widow Bidwell to give him her hand and heart, and the Rev. Mr. Peters made them man and wife in a very impressive cer- emony. The happy couple left for Chi. cago immediately after, but may re stand. Ten days later in a distant state the bridegroom was talking up Bohemian oats. They had come to an understand- § § i Ef EgE Ee E § i i HH I don’t know. I don’t seem te have so much ache under my vest as I did. I shouldn't wonder if I recovered from the blow in time.” He Changed. SLIPS OF NOVELISTS LEGAL MISTAKES THAT HAVE BEEN MADE BY GREAT AUTHORS. Dickens and the Famous Case of Bardell Versus Plckwick~The Trial Scene In Reade's “Hard Cash.” Trolliope/s Dip Into the Law, “Legzl fictions,” says one of Gfibert's gondoliers, “are solemn things.” Yet it is curious how seldom a novelist ventures into a law court without driv- ing his quill through acts of parliament and rules of law alike. That Dickens’ knowledge of law, like Mr. Weller's of London, was “exten- sive and peculiar” is amply demon- strated by the famous case of Bardell versus Pickwick. Students of that re- port may have been struck by the fact that neither plaintiff nor defendant ap- peared in the witness box. The ex- planation is that at that time parties “upon the record” were not competent witnesses, their interest in the case be- ing regarded as too strong a tempta- tion to, shall we say, inaccuracy. But had Dickens been a lawyer Mr. Winkle and his friends might also have been spared the ordeal of cross examination and their friends and admirers de- prived of many merry moments. In his anxiety to satirize the abuses of cross examination Dickens over- looked the legal rule that the counsel who calls a witness is not permitted to cross examine him at all, but, on the contrary, is bound by his answers; therefore had Serjeant Buzfuz permit- ted the Pickwickians to be called as witnesses fo; the pfaintiff (which he would have known better than to do) their version of the words heard through the door “on the jar” must have been accepted, and at the first at- tempt to badger either of them it would have been the learned counsel for the plaintiff who received his lordship’s in- junction “to be careful.” But all lovers of Dickens will rejoice at his ignorance of the rule which forces counsel never to call a hostile witness, Who could bear to be depriv- ed of the evidence of Mr. Samuel Wel- ler? Exactly the same mistake is made by Anthony Trollope in his well known novel, “The Three Clerks.” There the Lero, Alaric Tudor, is placed upon his trial for misappropriating trust money and defendad by that famous leader, Mr. Chaffanbrass of the Old Balley. Tudor's Mephistopheles, the Hon. Un- decimus Scott, is called, much against his will, as a witness for the defense, cross examined by the celebrated Chaf- fanbrass, forced to confess his mis deeds and dismissed covered with ignominy, to be subsequently expelled from his club—poetic justice which would have been defeated even by a chairman of quarter sessions. The great theoretical and practical knowledge of law possessed by Charles Reade saved him from this error, as from many others. Yet the famous trial scene in “Hard Cash” would have been ruthlessly deprived of its most dramatic moment by any judge of the high court. When the hapless Alfred Hardy, who has been wrongfully im- prisoned in an asylum by his wicked father, comes at last to establish his sanity before a jury, his case is closed by the reading of a letter from his dead sister. Writing at the point of death, she solemnly denies his insanity and begs him to show her words to his accusers when she is no more. Read aloud by the judge himself, her letter reduces a crowded court to tears and goes far to secure her brother a trium- phant verdict, with heavy damages. “Hard Cash” is termed “a matter or fact romance;” but, as a matter of fact and law, no such letter could have been received in evidence. Knowing that, under ordinary clrcumstances, such iil; EEEE il fea za} i : : 3 defamation of him, and, though der and libel alike may expose an action for damages, it is libel that can bring you within the the criminal law. this It is regarded as Hi | spe gif sex 3 : i i Hi £83f I 7g 3 : ; § By ih i i ie i | ih I | 8 WOMEN CHESS PLAYERS. Why None of Them Is Mentioned In the Annals of the Game. Ladies’ chess clubs are being estab- 4shed In various parts of the country; special inducements are held out for their patronage by the promoters of national and international tournaments, snd articles on the game appear regu- larly in journals which cater specially to them. Women have always played and taken part in the game, though probably never to the same extent as now. It is, therefore, remarkable that in the whole of its enormous literature there does not appear the name of any woman among the stars of the first, second or third magnitude. One may go through volume after volume containing thousands of games and not find a single one played by women which any editor thought worthy of a permanent record, When the on has been raised before, it has invol with that of the intellectual supe of one sex over the other. Togy the answer to this would be totally Inadequate and inconsequential. There are men in the front rank of players at the pres- ent moment who by no stretch of the imagination or the term can be said to occupy their position on account of ex- ceptionally intellectual endowments. While the game always appeals to in- tellectual men and women, intellect is not the only factor which makes the great player. A careful examination of the games of players whom the world recognizes as great reveals the fact that the fac- ulties and qualities of concentration, comprehensiveness, impartiality and, above all, a spark of originality, are to be found in combination and in va- rying degrees. The absence of these qualities in woman explains why no member of the feminine sex has occu- pled any high position as a chess player, There are many women who are ear- nest students of chess whose knowl- edge of the theory, principles and all the accouterments of the game is phe- nomenal. But mere knowledge can make nobody great. Taking results, good judgment is much superior to knowledge imperfectly appiied.—Lon- | don Saturday Review, A WONDERFUL CALENDAR. The Four Ages From the Theosoph- feal Point of View. There is nothing more wonderful in the chronological and time keeping line than the “Theosophical Calendar, Ac- cording to the Secret Doctrine.” From the theosophical point of view the four ages are as follows: Sata yuga (golden age), 1,728,000 years; tresta yuga (sil- ver age), 1,200,000 years; dwapara yuga (copper age), 864,000 years; kali yuga (iron age), 432,000 years. The total of these four ages makes one mala yuga, or great age, of 4,320,000 years. One thousand maha yugas make one kalpa, or day of Brahma, equal to 1,000 times 4,320,000 years. After the expiration of that unthink- able period of time the night of Brah- ma, equal in duration to the length of the day, comes on, and the earth van- ishes from the plane of existence. Three bundred and sixty days and nights of Brahma make one year of Brahma, and 100 years of Brahma make the great kalpa, a period of 311, 040,000,000,000 years, after which the sun and the entise solar system plunge into impenetrable night and every- thing on the “objective plane” is de- stroyed. Then comes the period known as the great night, which is equal In length to the great kalpa. After the great night has lifted its sable mantle a new solar system Is formed and evo- lution begins anew. According to the doctrine of the the- osophists, we are now living in the kall yuga, the last of the four ages, and it began nearly 5,000 years ago, with the death of Krishna, who died 3,102 years before our era began, The first minor cycle of kall yuga ended in the years 1897-98, but we still have something like 427,000 before we ar- rive at the end of the present age. Kall yuga is also known to the the. osophists as the black age. It is an age of spiritual darkness, in which the buman race pays for the misdeeds which are recorded against them in the previous ages. His Prescription. Boerhaave, the greatest doctor of his time, was anxious that it should go forth that even the most eminent doc- tor is somewhat of a “humbug.” He carefully handed the key of a small diary to his executor, bade him open it immediately after bis decease and let contents go forth to the world at large. When the notebook was opened all its pages but the last were blank, and on that final one there was writ- ten in large letters: “Directions to pa- tients: Keep your feet warm and your head cool and trust for the rest to Providence.” Very Like It. His mother tucked four-year-old John- ny away in the top berth of the sleep- ing car, says a writer in Youth. Hear- night, she called softly: “iounby, 98: y0% /kuow ‘where you are “Tourse I do,” he returned sturdily. “I'm in the top drawer!” A Wise Man, Hewitt—How did you come to marry typewriter? Jewett—Well, you see, 1 got a good wife and got rid of a poor stenogra L LIGHTHOUSE REPAIR SHOP. labor, and in addition to this the gov- ernment has never seen fit to sufficient money on the plant to fit it out with such machinery. In a stroll throagh the workrooms one can see men turning out the delicate brasswork that keeps the flashlights on a gas buoy going for three months at a time, the curious brass cylinders that make the walling cry of a fog siren, tiny floating stops that serve to keep the ofl from overflowing in the lamps after the manner of a student lamp, and the clockwork that keeps revolving lights turning around hour after bour through the long nights. The only thing they don't make in this department store are the lenses, which are imported from Paris or Lon- don. These are “assembled” in these shops, however, and one can see lan- terns of all sizes in the course of prep- aration, from the smallest size used in the service to ones of the power sufil- clent to go in lighthouses of the first or- der. Of course the department has to be ready for emergencies in the way of breakdowns of lights, as well as of lightships, and so they not only keep two light vessels at the wharf always ready for Instant service, but they also have in this storehouse an emergency light that can be put up anywhere and fitted to take the place of any light of any description, whether it be fixed or revolving, red and white or all red.— New York Press. SOME FIRST OCCASIONS. Cannon and small arms were intro duced in 1390. Spinning wheels came to the rescue of women in 1530. The first stereotyping was done in 1813 in New York. Shirts resembling those now worn were in use in 1830. Phrenology, “discovered” by Franz Joseph Gall, a Viennese physician, in 1796, became a 80 called science in 1805, The first submarine telegraph wire in this country was from Governors island to the Battery In New York, iaid in 1842, Double entry bookkeeping was first used in the mercantile cities of Italy, notably Venice and Florence, in the fifteenth century. Schwartz invented gunpowder In 1328. But Roger Bacon, a thirteenth century alchemist, gives a recipe for it in a work of his in 1270. Natural Wells In Yueatan. Since Yucatan, where the Mayas built their strange cities, is a coral limestone formation, it would, says a writer In Records of the Past, have been a barren desert but for its sub- terranean rivers and the cenotes, or water caverns, which give access to them. The Mayas noted the courses of the underground streams and built their towns round the cenotes. Many cenotes are now found surrounded by rulns and give indications of the meth- ods employed by the Mayas to reach their cool waters. In Uxmal a cenote about forty feet deep Is Inhabited by a peculiar species of fish. At Bolan- chen there Is a cenote having five open- ings in the rocks at the bottom of the cavern. Ladders made by tying tree trunks together lead down a total dis- tance of 1,400 feet, but the perpendic- ular depth from’ the surface to the wa- ter is not over 500 feet. The Mixture In Roumania. Roumania Is inhabited by a bewilder- ing variety of races, but whether of Greek, Slav or Teutonic lineage, the modern Roumanian makes it a point of honor to clalm descent from the colo- nists whom Trajan planted in the con- quered province of Dacia A, D. 107. Calling theinselves Romuni and their language Romunle, the proud citizens seldom draw out a legal document without some allusion to their founder, whom they style “the divine Trajan.” if i 21 ih : 2 g n LIVING FOR THE FLAG. to “Whatever you do, boys, don't gi our flag: save that at an an instant the flag was staff and cut and torn into hu of small fragments, each piece being hidden about the person of some one of its brave defenders. The survivors of the regiment, about 500 in number, were sent to a prison camp, where most of them remained until the end of the war, each cherish- ing his mite of the regimental colors. Through long months of imprisonment many died, and in all such cases the scraps of bunting guarded by the poor unfortunates were Intrusted to the care of some surviving comrade. At the end of the war when the pris- oners returned to their homes a meet- ing of the survivors was held, and all the priceless fragments of the flag were sewed together. But a very few pieces had been lost, so that the re- stored emblem was made nearly com- plete. That flag, patched and tattered as it is, forms one of the proudest posses- sions of Connecticut today and is pre- served in the state capitol at Hartford, bearing mute testimony to the devo- tion of the brave men who were not alone ready and willing to die for it on the field of battle, but to live for it through long years of Imprisonment in order that they might bring it back whole to the state that gave it into their hands to honor and defend.—St. Nicholas. NAIL CHARACTERISTICS. They Are an Ald In Diagnosis of Dis- eases and Traits. It is said that the moon at the base of the nail is simply an indication of good health and excellent circulation, while the white spots are always the accompaniment of an impaired nerv- ous system. The common idea that an external application of vaseline will cure the white spots is erroneous, and those afflicted with the little “story tellers” would far better turn their at- tention to securing perfect physical health in the assurance that the spots will disappear with improved circula- tion. It is not possible to create moons at the base of the nails, Frequently the moon Is there, but through negligence it Is covered by skin, which without attention will grow upward over the base of the nail. It is not generally understood that the shape and appearance of the finger nails are carefully considered and form an important factor in the diagnosis of fe i ji and across. Where the nails are long and bluish they Indicate bad circula- tion. This same type of nail, shorter, denotes tendency to throa Short, small nails indicate heart : ¥ 5 5 E gigEE =f fi gE i 1 HH i: siieke: ih: : : sk : 2 ih ; : Uk said Pickaninny Jim as