Bellefonte, Pa., June 21, 1907. smc _— WATERING THE ELEPHANT. Whenever 1 think of the farm of my chiid- hood And there let my fancy delightfully dwell, 1do not reeall witha bit of affection The old Oaken bucket that hung by the well, I never was stuck by fits moss covered beauty, Its creaking refrain never made my heart glad, And surely there wasn't a throb of excite- ment In drawing a bucket for mother or dad. But still do I cherish intond ratrospection, As memories sweet that shall ever be nurs. ed, The pailfuls of water I patiently carried For quenching the elephant’s marvellous thirst, I'll bet that old Sisphus, was, Would surely have filled the sieve up to the brim If only, as object and guerdon of labor, A seat at the circus was given to him. —MeLandburgh Wilson, in The Sun, hard as the job OVER HILLS AND FAR AWAY. Over the hills and far away An endless throng is going; Onward they press, and hand in hand They msrch as to a king's command, Their journey's end the shining strand That lights the edge of sunset land, Over the hills and far away, Their golden homeland glowing. Over the hills and far away, Beyond the furthest hollow, While twittering birds at twilight call, And evening shadows longer fall, Onward they march till one and all Are hid within a star wrought pall, Over the hills and far away Where every man must follow, —Wiiliam Adams Slade, THE FIRM STAND OF HANS, Hans Heckendorn drew from the oven the last loaf of his evening batch of bread; then he sat down heavily in his arm ohair. The bakeroom was stifling, but he was ac- customed to the heat, and clad as he was in a thin gauze shirt and a pair of cotton trousers, he did not mind it. In the dim light of the lamp he seemed like some huge monster, grim, portentious. Sitting there, with his great bare arms folded, he bent his head on hie breast and fell to thinking. “I suppose the children must learn the Eoglish,”” he said to himself in German. “And I dare not speak evil of the Presi. dent, or the officer will get me. But itis something in which I have still the say. The men in the fatherland do not fetch the wood and the coal for the women. I will no longer fetch the wood and the coal for Margaretta. I will take a firm stand. I—"' The door into the bakeroom opened sud- denly, and Hans paused in the midst of bis soliloquy. A little blue-eyed woman stood before him. ‘‘Hans,”’ she began, then she paused to sniff the air. A glance at the lamp be- trayed the source of the odor. She did not look toward her hushand, but, as one who realizes the futility of speech, crossed the room, and turned down the light. Her husband’s eyes followed her with terror. They were bent not upon her, but upou an object which she carried. in her hand--a of long shears, which she lifted mean- ls us she came toward him. *‘Come.’’ she said shortly in English. “But, Margaretta, it i= not yet time. It is only~--"’ His tongue twisted itsell un- comfortably about the English words. ‘‘8ball the children cry in the street at ou?’ she demavded. ‘‘Yon look this ong time as when yon came from the mountain down.” “But, Margaretta,it is plenty to do here. J She pointed to the great batch of brown loaves, i : i ‘‘You are done here, Come on.” When sbe Lad gone, he rose paiofolly ous of his chair and carried the lamp across the room to whereas little mirror hung against the wall. He saw reflected there a brown beard; a pair of frightened eyes set * in a white face, and a mop of thick hair. Yes, it was long. He put up a trembling hand and tried in vain to smooth it flat. He sighed, then his face brightened. ‘‘Margaretta,’’ he called almost joyous- ly, ‘I must go tonight to my lodge.” ‘Ernst paid this afternoon your dues,’ she answered grimly from the next room. The smile faded from Heckendorn’s face. ‘‘Ach, Margaretta,’’ he wailed, “‘let it be tomorrow !"’ ‘Come,’ said Margaretta, firmly. For an instant his eyes rolled helplessly. The little bare room, however, offered no escape from the terror which awaited him, and, wetting his dry lips with his tongue, he went slowly out to the sitting room. There the floor was half-covered by a white sheet,npon which stood an arm chair like the one he had just left. Fastened to, and projecting above, its back was a long, narrow stick. Heckendorn went toward it as the condemned approach the gallows. Margaretta gave him a little push as he sat down, and then took from the tablea Jong, white tape. Slipping it around his head, she fastened it behind the stick. ‘Now,’ she said gaily. Her hashand’s eyes opened wide for an instant. ‘‘Ach, Margaretta !"’ he wailed piteounsly. re gave the tape a , then, opened and closed her se to be sure t they moved smoothly,she began to cut her husband’s bair, His face, meanwhile, grew whiter and whiter until it became the color of his flour-sprinkled arms. Once more he said, ‘‘Ach Margaretta!” this time very faintly, then his eyes closed, and his bands d limply. He had fainted. Presently, little to the right, so that she might cut the back more easily, and alter a while she moved it a little to the left. She felt no alarm at his fainting. Ever since she had first known him, when they were children in Berlin, he always had fainted when he Lad his hair cut. It was no stranger than “the weakness of others at the sight of blood. He would not go to the barber's. He could i ne no worse disgrace than that the neighbors, the Maniagos at the corner, the Smiths next door,should discover his weak- ness, a3 they must certainly do if he went to the barber-shop around the corner. Nor did he dare to go farther away. He did not know how he would ever get back. The click, click of Margaretta’ scissors, tta moved his head a | Said which were apparently not as sharp as the | poued. Tue boat which wanted was a Yoo in she | ny bummed, did not awaken him; nor did Margaretta make the least effort to arouse him till Ler task was done. Then she bathed his face with cold water,still braced against the back of the chair as he was,and it was only a few seconds before he clasp- ed his bands before his breast, and with a long sigh opened his eyes. “Is it done ?"’ he gasped. “Yes.” As Margaretta untied the tape, he lifted up his voice in a lond “Gott sei Dank!’ and tottered somewhat weakly up the stairs sighing as he went. How many times bad be wished that be wight grow bald; yes, as the hour for his hair cutting drew near, even that be might die. It seemed as though he were sinking into some vast, bottomless ocean, and that Margaretta, the guardian angel of his happier hours, stoed over him, pushing him down, down. When Margaretta thought that it was time his hair should be cut, she wounld not wait an hour, a minate. She spread the covering on the floor, and fastened tbe support for his head to the back of the chair, and then she called him. Nor had he ever been able to invent an excuse that would serve. He did not believe that his bair needed cutting so badly this time. It might bave gone another week. He crept in under the gay bed.-covers, angry with himsell that he bad not refused, and still angrier with Margaretta that she bad insisted. There he lay wide awake. It was not near his usual bedtime, and though he fels too weak to be up and about, he could still think. Margaretta had acquired the ount- rageous American notions of the other women on the block; she thought that she was the head of the honse, she made bim do just what she said, she made him fetch the wood and coal, snd do a hundred other things which it was beneath his dignity to do. And it was all put on; she was stiong enough to fetch the wood and coal. It was all because she wanted to be American that she would no longer do it. He would have to teach her a lesson, not because he mind- | ed doing things for her,—what were they to a strong man like himself ?—baut becanse she must learn that even though she had the schools on her side in the matter of the ohildren’s English and the officerin the mat- ter of inveighing against the President, yet there were certain other things sacred be- tween husband and wife, in which vo one had the right to interfere, and which no one but himself had the right to manage. In consequence of his meditation, Mar- garetta, coming down staire hall an hour after the time when her husband got up to start the fires in the bakery, found neither the coal nor the wood with which she start ed her own fire awaiting her. Her first thought was to call to Hans to ges them for ber. Then remembering that he had had his bair cut the night before, she refrained. Perhaps he was not well. She brought the coal and wood from the cellar herself, and then opened the door softly into the bake- room. Her husband was bending to put a batch of bread into the oven, and singing “Ich weiss nicht was soll es bedeaten’’ the while. There was a certain defiant tone about it which set Margaretta’s eyes spark- ling. No, he had not forgotten. She went quietly back to the kitchen and stood there, her brow wrinkled. Was it possible that—well, she would see. She gave him auother chance at noon and another at night and another in the morn- ing. Still her coal bucket stood empty in ita place. Then Hans, coming hot and nongry from the bakery for his dinner, found a covered dish before his plate. Ite chill struck him before he lifted the lid. Margaretta always used that dish for sauner krant, but he could not remember having smelled any boiling sauer kraut that morn- ing. Suddenly the lid dropped from his hand. Within, neatly snrronnding a huge piece of succulent raw pork, lay a mass of uncooked cabbage. “Margaretta,” he stormed, “what does dis mean ?"’ “Jt means that I -bad uo coals,” said: Margaretta, while little Hans and Kail and Erust and Elsa stared wide-eyed. *Ican- not cook unless I have coals. Itisn’t fire unless you have coals.” For the fragment of a second her newly shorn hashand gazed at her while her blue eves gazed placidly back. i “I fetch no more coals, not today nor to: morrow nor any day,” he shoated. ‘‘Itis no coal-fetching for the men in the old country * it sha’n’t be any here.” iq Whereupon be went back to the bakery to eat the light bread which be baked, aod which his soul loathed. anid At supper-time the saner kraut was cook- ed and eaten. Afterward Heckendorn stood proudly at the door of his shop. It was easy to manage the women. - All one need- ed was a little firmness. Margaretta should never get the upper band n. He could think of a dozen differents directions in which he should assert his will. No longer should she read the Euglish Bible to the children, no longer should she sit on any other doorstep than her own in the even- ings. It was from the other women that she imbibed her revolutionary notions. Presently Margaretta herself came ont of ue door and stood for a moment beside im. “I go to Frau Maniago,’’ she said. “‘Margaretta,’”’ he began firmly, then paused. It would not do to insist upon too many changes at once. “It is all right this time,’ he said grand. ly, unaware of the flash of her hlne eyes ; “I go alter while to the Bakers’ Union.” When Margaretta came home, she found little Hans in charge of the shop, and she held no farther converse with his father that night. Early in the morning, how- ever, he wakened her to tell her of the ap- proaching picnic planned by the Union. “In Angust it will be. e willgo ina boat up the river on Sunday. We will all go, I and you, Havnschen and Karl, and Ernst and Elsa. We—" ‘‘You can go,’’ said Margaretta, sharply. “I and Hanschen and Karl and Ernst and Elsa will not go. It is not right to go on Sundays on exertions.” Heckendorn stared at her aghast. “We go in the morning in the church, like in the faderland, avd in the afternoon it is holiday.” “I and the children go in the afternoon in the Sunday School,’’ she said in the tone whioh indicated to Heckendorn's experi- enced mind that nothing more n Nor did he try to persuade her in the weeks which followed. It would be like old times to go out there without any wife and children to bother about. There he would see Balthasar Kleber, who had lived next door to them in Berlin, and who had no family , and Heinrich Heissman, with whom he himself bad learned the baker's trade ; and Milton Rapp and Gottlieb Wohlgemuth and a host of cthers whom he could mention, who still loved the father- land. Margaretta, with her New-World notions, would be a wet blanket on the festivities. Likely enough she would dis- grace him with some scornful remark. No, he was thankful for the chance to go alone. Then week by week the picnic was post. —— engaged, or some of their number wanted to go to the Turn Verein picnic, or else the Sangerband, to which some of the rest be- longed, bad its annoal boat-ride. Finally, however, the day was set for the first San- day of her. As the time drew near, Heckendorn’s satisfaction changed to dismay. Each day, when he combed bis bair ore the little mirror in the sitting room, he realized that it would have to be cat. He held his breath every time that Margaretta mentioned his name ; he scarcely dared to look at her when she came harriedly into the bakeroom or the shop, for fear that she should be carrying the scissors, cruel as those of At- Daal, however, said not a word. On Taesday evening before the excursion, when he had finished baking, he carried the little lamp, smoking as it was, over to the little mirror. His bair seemed to touch kis shoulders. It must be cut to-night. He would not go to the picnic with the feeling of nakedness which always followed a hair- cutting. His wile answered his tentative ‘‘Mar- garetta’’ only by ashort “Well 2’ without looking up fiom her sewing. The cloud which had gathered between them after the last hair canttiog had not yet been dispelled. “I guess my hair should be cut before Sanday,” be said weakly. “‘I guess it sbould be cat to-night. I guess—'’ There was already a dall horror in his eyes. Margaretta snipped off the thread with an audible click of her white teeth. “‘I cut no more hair, uot today, nor to- morrow, nor any day,’’ she said so placidly that he did not recognize the quotation from the sentence which he had shouted at her weeks before. “‘It is no work, hair-cutting, for women. It is man’s work.” ‘‘Buat, Margaretta,’’ he began. Then he realized that it would not do to show weak. ness before her. ‘‘All right. If it is right that we shonld waste the money, Igo in the barber's shop. If it—" only the eyes of little Hans on the other side of the table kept his voice steady,—‘‘it is all alike to me.” Margaretta regarded him for an instant from between a pair of hall-closed eyes. Then she folded little Eisa’s finished dress neatly together, and went to shut up the house for the night, singing softly to her- self, “Ich weiss nicht was soll es bed- euten.”” Afterward, when Hans slept be- side her, she cried berself to sleep. She watched him narrowly on Wednes- day, but he did not leave the shop. Several times he put on his collar aod coat and wen to the front door, ouly to hesitate on the sieps and finally to turn back. He was afraid; Margaretta Bo he was afraid. On Tharsday, when he started oat, she sent little Hans after him. At the corner, how- ever, Hans the elder climbed into a street car. An hour later he came home white and sick. There was no change in the mop of hair. Margaretta did not doubt that he bad tried and fainted. Her lips set them. selves firmly, partly in an effort to keep back the tears, and partly with renewed purpose to hold out. She would not go ck on her word. Little Hans bad heard her say that she wonld not cut his father’s bair today, nor tomorrow, nor any day,and little Hans must pot be allowed to think that bis mother did not teil the truth, When Heckendorn came to dinuer the next day, his family stared, and little Elsa cried alond, and would not let him touch her. The front of his hair had been cut straight acro-s, the back still hung to his shoulders. He bad meant to cat it all, but the straining upward of his arms, and the horrible click, click of Margaretta’s scissors, bad made him sit down heavily, gasping for breath. In the afternoon he went to the barber's shop at the corner. ‘I sometimes get a little sick when my hair gets cat,’’ he explained ; ‘‘but you shall not mind it. Margaretta she never minds it. You might tie me in."”’ ‘The barber, questioning him, discovered that the sickness was a faintiog spell. “Can’t take the responsibility, sir, with- ont you have a doctor. A man once died of heart disease when I was outtiog his hair. Icouldn’s think of it." qQ a Thercgpon bope died. He could not go to the Bakers' Union picnic, he could not go to church with Margaretta, he could not even go into his.own to sel! the bread which he bad baked. e would have to hide in the bakeroom and in the back of the house. Margarétta never took back her word, ' 1 2108 1333 It was almost supper-time when he re: tarned. There was the cheerfnl smell of frying sausage, but it seemed to make him sick. He ate only a little supper. Mar- garetta watched him with anxious eyes, bat said nothing. This was not the firet time. thas Margaretta bad lived throngh a domes- tic crisis, nor the first one which she bad solved to her own satisfaction. : Supper over, Hans sat down in the back of the shop, his face on his arms, which were folded oo the counter. When Mar garetta banked ber fire for the night, he heard the last few coals in the scottle rat- tle into the fire. Then, like a man walk- ing in his sleep, he went ont to the kitch- en, and carrying the scuttle down into the cellar, filled it, and brought it back. It was not because he wished to make amends —he knew Margaretta too well for that, — but because, in his misery, his mind pat- urally went back to its old tasks. He was thankful that there was something to do. He had forgotten that he bad said be would bring no more coal today, nor tomorrow, nor any day. In the morning he filled the bucket again in the same daze. He then made a final appeal to Margaretta. ‘‘But, Margaretta, I cannot go the Bak. ers’ Union pienie.”’ i closed her li dior 3 ly. tf, garetta, my children w afraid of their poor vater.” i “‘Shall I not be ashamed when my man looks like a Belsnickle [Santa Claus] ?"’ Jemasien Margaretta. ‘But I cannot elp it. e sadden helpless d of his broad shoulders, the tear which rolled down each cheek, made Margaretta go quickly from the room. She was not unmindfal of the fact that he had filled the coal-scuttle and had brought the wood. That, however, had nothing to do with the question. If Hans could go back on his word, there was all be | the more reason why she should hold to hers. And yet—she saw him before her with his bair banging to his shoulders, the laughing-stock of the Smiths, the Maa and the Goldsteins. They would y think it was some German custom. If any indacement could have moved Margaretta, it would have been that. Hans went to hed early that night. Usa. ally on Saturday evenings he sat on the doorstep talking with their neighbor, Mr. Smith, or with Officer O'Malley, or who ever might happen that way. The door- step was to a certain extent his clab, his recreation. Only Ma ’s heart knew the pride she felt in seeing him sitting there in his best clothes. To-night Mr. Smith came to the door to ask where he was, and Officer O'Malley asked whether be bad gone down-town. There was no doubt that Hans bad become a person of importance. Now, however, this importance was to cease, partly because he bad been rash avd partly becanse she bad been stubborn. It would have been bad enough for him to go to the picnic alone. She knew with what pride the Wohlgemuths displayed their children to all who would admire. Their own were #0 mach finer, how would Haus have felt withoat them ? When she got to bed she could not sleep. Heckendorn was hreathing heavily, and once or twice he moased, which was not uousval, but which to his wile’s ears as sumed a sadden pathetic siguificance. She lay aod listened, more troubled than she had ever been hefore. They had had other difficulties, but none #0 serious as this—pove which would make them the scorn of their neighbors And now snddenly Margaretta sat up- right. “1 said I woold not do it today, nor to- morrow, nor any day,’’ she said alond. “It isn’t today, or tomorrow ;it iz to-night.” Before the words were spoken she was out of bed. She slipped quietly downstairs for the scissors. She slowly opened and closed them as she came hack. Then, bringing the lamp close to the bed, «he set to work. Havs never wakened easily. He seemed entirely unaware of the busy shears which snipped away, now making even the rough edges above his forehead, now trimming close to his ear, which portion of the pro cess always made him deathly sick. He did not even open hi« eyes when Margar- etta shifted his bead from side to side. Her work finished, Margaretta went back to bed, and smiling, fell asleep. She was wakened in the morning hy Heckendorn's rapturous ‘“‘Ach, Marga. retta !'"' He touched his head first on one side, then oun the other. ‘‘Ach, Margaretta, the angels are not so good ! I fetch always the coal and the wood. I-" He paused to give room forthe smile which widened bis face. ‘‘Margaretta, will youn always cut it while I am sleeping ?"’ For an instant Margaretta hesitated. What fear could she hold over him now that he was no longer afraid to have his bair cat ? Then she realized that the new and painless method would be more than evera bribe or a reward, and its discon- tinuance a threat. “If Ishall cat bair like in the father- land,” she said firmly, ‘‘then that will be enough fatherland for me. The coal-fetch- ing and the wood-carrying shall be like the United States.”’—By Elsie Singmaster, in the Century Magazine. Woman and the College. Despite the many beantifal and prosper- ous colleges for women all over this coun- try, it is still a question in many parental miuds whether or not a college education is a woman's best preparation for life. There is a fairly prevalent idea that college women too often develop the intellect at the expense of the sympathies, that they set mental standards which are higher than their husbands have leisured to reach, or, worse, that, wantiog better bread than can be made out of wheat, they refrain from | marriage altogether. The higher education | too often leads them to choose a life of self- exploitation, and to pursue callings which ultimately may, and very likely will, play them false, and leave them lovely and em- bittered in a world where the fullest hap- piness is to be found in beneficent hnman relations. While all this is, on the face of it, pos- sible, there is a great deal to be said on the other side. It is true that a thorough edu- cation disciplines the emotions, If it dis. ciplines them away altogether it does an irremediable injary. If, however, it merely controls the sentimentality of youth hy training judgement, it is an effective force for good. Life will bring ont the sympa- thies of those who bave them sooner or later, and to be delivered from the senti- mental ebullitions of girlhood is uot so ap-: palling a matter afterall... 1 There veems to be nodoubt that the chief weakness of the feminine mind, as diffieren- | tiated from the masculine, is to see life rsonally. A ‘woman, more than a man, s encnmbered by hersell acd hedged by limitations. Bhe cannot, by the inherent nature of thiogs, take so many risks or lead so experimental a life as a man, and her education is therefore, a matter not of less but of greater mowent. She must have * | thorougbgoing knowledge, because, less’ than a man, can she afford a w reac tion. Her interests must be widened, even more carefully than a man’s, because she is less likely to be broadened by life. ‘College if it doeé nothing else should lay: the foundation for more abstract interests and intelligent indgments. If it bardens the sympathies it cannot be because it is too high or too thorough, but because it is too slight and too superficial. Any edaca- tion that puffs a person up about his own attainments is a poor education. Any edu- cation that allows a person to think he can really jain by another’s loss, or aggrandize himself by another’s fall, or in any way separate hie interests from the general in- terests of the race, is a superficial and in. adequate education, whether it be gotten at a finishing *chool or at a college. If col- leges turn out women of defective sympa- thies and selfish instincts it i< not their pursuit of learning that effects this. In- tellectnal training in and for itself cannot he other than beneficial. The freedom, the independence, the fact of being thrown upon her own resources at a critical age should all prepare a girl for wise govern. ment of her own household and intelligent civic helpfulness. It is difficult to believe that higher edu- catlon unfits a woman for household man- agewent or motherhood, since to these two functions the most highly trained faculties are uvecessary, especially in these days wheu social conditions are rapidly, and when the domestic problem isin a state of uncomfortable u val. It isnot less intelligence and training, but more and wiser, that is needed to meet the new conditions. It is, therefore, a cause for rejoicin rather than doubt, that the women’s col- leges of this country are to be multiplied and more heavily endowed.—[ Harper's Weekly. ——‘“Thongh he’s a literary man, he makes all his money by not writing a line.” ‘‘How is that?" ‘‘His friends chipped in and paid him to quit!” ~——Anxions Mother—How do you know that young man is in love with yon? Has he told yoo? Pretty Daughter--No, mamma, but I know he is [rom the way he looks at me when I am not looking at him. ~——''What a bright little thing!” ex- claimed the society woman, patronizingly cooing at a baby out for an a ring in the park. ‘“Whose little one is this? “Yours, ma’am,” replied the nurse “I'm the new nurse that kem yistherd’y” I | OLD TIME CALENDARS. The Saxon Clogg, Whence Comes the Name “Almanac.” In these days, when printed calendars are in evidence everywhere, the ques- tion as to what device the eider folk employed to help them mark the prog- tess of time is not uninteresting. “They,” says Verstegan, ailuding to the Saxons, “used to engrave upon eertaine squared sticks about a foot in length, or shorter or longer, as they pleased, the courses of the moones of the whole yeere, whereby they could nlwaies certainly tell when the new moones, full moones and changes should happen, as also their festivall dailies, and such a carved stick they called an al-mon-aght—that is to say, al-mon-heed, to wit, the record or ob- servation of all the moones, and hence is derived the name almanac.” An instrument of this kind was also called the clogg, from its form and matter, and had a ring on the upper end of it to hang on a nall somewhere about the house. On each of the four sides were three months, the days be- ing represented by notches. Every seventh notch, being of a larger size, represented Sunday. Issuing from the right side of the notches were in- scriptions and figures marking the festival days by some endowment of the saints or illustrating the season of the year by some work or sport char- acteristic of it. Thus against June 20, St. Peter's day, were carved his keys. On Feb. 14 a true lover's knot appeared, aud against the notch designating Christmas day was the old wasshalling or carcusal horn that the forefathers used to make merry with. The Danes, Swedes aud Norwegians used these almanacs under various names, such as Reinstocks, Runstocks, Runstaffs, Annales, Staves, Stakes, Cloggs, Runici, and so forth. Before printing was introduced and when manuscripts were rare and dear these Runic almanacs were made the instru- ments of Instruction and regularity. That they might be more serviceable they were ofteft carved on the tops of pligrims’ staves or stakes so as to regulate their time of assembling at particular places. They were also cut on sword scabbards and implements of husbandry. These cloggs are not en- tirely unlike the Egyptian obelisks, which have been called fingers of the sun and which may be regarded as a species of almanac. One of the first printed almanacs or calendars was that of John Muller, who opened a printing house and pub- lished his almanac at Guremburg in the year 1472. It gave not only the thirty years in advance, VIL gives the first recorded account of almanaca.—Chicago Record-Herald. Lightrning Superstition. - The ancient Romans avoided places struck by lightning. The houses it damagzed were pulled down or fenced in =o that no one could use the build. ing on which the gods had set the mark of their displeasure. This feeling was probably deepened by the fact that cer tain localities are visited by thunder storms more than others, the wrath of Jove descending in white flame time and again In the same spot, And it was the siilie superstition, lingering among Christians in a slightly different form, which made ‘it so difficult for Benjamin Franklin to introduce the lightning rod, for the pious Americans of that day declared that “it was as impious to erect rods to ward off heav- en's lightning as for a child to ward off the chastening rod of its father.” The Wood In Old Violins. : The woods most favored by the old masters for violin construction were pine, «pear, lemon, ‘ash, maple and sycamore, and by some of the later men apple was used. Boxwood was universally employed for marriage is as rare between violins and their bridges as it is between men and women.” He deplores the heart: less substitution of new bridges for old ones and insists that a new bridge will never mate perfectly with an old violin, and rather than resort to sub- stitution he advises patching and re- pairing the old one as long as it can be made to last.—Circle Magazine. A Homemade Weather Glass. A very reliable weather glass can be made out of such simple materials as an empty salad oil bottle and a quart fruit jar. Having procured these arti- cles, pour sufficient water into the jar so that it covers the mouth of the bot- tle when the latter Is inserted into the former. In fine weather it will be found that the water will rise into the bottle, but will fall back into the jar when wet weather Is due. Though the idea of this quaint homemade barome- ter is not new, it is quite reliable. A Poor Artist. Patience—Do you know Jules, the artist? Patrice—Yes, but I don’t like him, “Why not?” “Oh, I like a man who can isok you in the eye.” “Can't he?’ “Why, he can’t even paint a plcture of a person who can lock you in the eye!”—Yonkers Statesman. Characteristics. “Geniuses are eccentric. Some of Gem touch every post or tree they across.” “Most of ’em touch every friend they run across or almightily try to— Louisville Courier-Journal. No man can wear one face to self and another to the multitude - out finally getting bewildered as to [ which may be the true.—Hawthorne. characters of each year and of the! months, but foretold the eclipses for! In England the year book of Henry Haweis says, “A perfectly harmonious LAMARTINE’S PRESENT. Mow the French Author Got a Big Price For a Little Poem. Francois Buloz, the founder and edl- tor of the famous French journal, La Revue des Deux Mondes, was by no means celebrated for his generosity to contributors. One day shortly after the publication of Lamartine's “Les Girondins,” and while the Ii world was ringing with the fame great author, Buloz called on his asked him to write an article for hi magazine. Lamartine consented, but stated that he could not have {t ready for some weeks. Buloz, fearing that this was only an excuse and that he would never get the article, offered Lamartine an ad- vance. It so happened that the author was in need of 4,000 francs at that time, and he so informed the editor, who at once handed over the money. Three months later he called r- tine's attention to the fact that contribution had not yet been recel It was toward the end of 1847, and great author was devoting his entire time to politics. “While you are waiting for this ar- ticle wonld you care for a little poem I have here?’ he asked Buloz. He enthusiastically replied in the af- firmative. Months later, when Lamartine had become minister of foreign affairs, Bu- loz again called upon him to remind him of the promised contribution. “But you see my position,” answered the minister, “how busy I am!” Buloz frowned. “But, citizen minister, a certain amount of money was advanced, and the interests of my magazine do not permit me to"— “How much was it?" “Four thousand francs.” Lamartine took this amount of money from the drawer and laid it upon his desk. The editor, however, looked some: what embarrassed. “Well, what more can I do for you? You have your money.” “The fact is, I owe you for a small poem.” “Oh, that's not worth mentioning! I'll make you a present of it.” . Buloz drew himself up haughtily. “Citizen minister, La Revue des Deux Mondes does not accept pres- ents. How much do I owe you?” “Oh, well, If you Insist,” answered Lamartine dryly as he took up the 4,000 francs and replaced them in his drawer, “we will call it square!” ODD CUSTOMS. Every house must be decked with flowers on New Year's day in Japan. In Buenos Ayres the police alone have the right of whistling on the streets. Any other person whistling is at once arrested. In Ashanti many families are for- ptaden the use of certain meats. In lke manner otiers are forbidden to wear clothes of a certain color. If a carriage upsets or injures an- other carriage in the streets of St. Pe- tersburg or if a person is knocked down, the horses of the offending ve- hicle are seized and confiscated to the use of the fire brigade. It is the practice of the Ashantecs and Fantees to bury one-third of the property of a: dead.man, converted in- to gold dust, under-his head, and rifling. the grave of au.enemy is considered; the preper action for a warrior, Clapping the hands In various ways is ‘the polite method in central ‘Africa of saying “Allow me” “I beg par: don,” “Permit me to pass! :ando “Thanks.” It Is resorted to in respect: | tul introduction and leave taking. ., .,,, 3 ROO igshng Doves and Religion, . __ . “One thing I remarked and think worthy of notice Is that ever since Noah's. dove every religion seems tg. For. example, every mosque Swarms, with pigeons, and the same most Italian mrarket places. The Hin- doo pundits and the old Assyrian em- pire also have them, while Ca cs make it the emblem of the Holy Ghost.” Lady Burton in her account of the Mohammedan mystery play of “Has- san and Hossein” says: » “Then comes the bler with Hosseln's corpse and his son sitting upon it sor- rowing and embracing him and a beau- tiful white dove in the corner whose wings are dabbled with blood. The ef- fect upon the excited crowd is awful.” —“Life of Sir Richard F. Burton.” Where He Worshiped. As the new minister of the was on his way to evening service he met a rising young man of the place whom he was anxious to have become an active member of the church, “Good evening, my young friend,” he said solemnly. “Do you ever attend a place of worship?’ “Yes, indeed, sir, regularly e Sunday night,” replied the young low, with a smile. “I'm on my way to see her now.”—Ladles’ Home Jour- nal. The Mystic Number Five. Five is the great sacred Chinese number. There are five virtues, five colors (yellow, white, green, red and black), five household gods, five planets (Saturn, Venus, Jupiter, Mars and Mer- cury), five ranks of nobility, five tastes, five cardinal (the middle, south and north ea five tones. He Had to Stay. “You venture into Wall street ocea- sionally ?” said the lamb. “My case,” answered the maguate, “ig different from yours. “I don’t dare venture out of it for fear of what would do In my absence.”—Washin Star.