Bowral fati Bellefonte, Pa., June 26. 1908. HUMAN NATURE. If all that hate would love us and all our loves were true, The stars that swing above us would brighten in the blue; If cruel words were kisses and every scowl a smile, A better world than this is, would hardly be worth while, If purses would untighten to meet a brother's need, The load we bear would lighten above the grave of greed. If those who whine would whistle and those who languish, laugh, The rose would rout the thistle, the grain outrun the chaff, If hearts were only jolly, if grieving were for- got, And tears and melancholy were things that now are Dot Then Love would kneel to duty and all the world would seem A bridal bower of beauty, a dream within a dream, w= Unidentified. MOTHERHOOD. It is now ten years since the five oil drill. ers left Pennsylvania for Mbaog Island, on the Burman cone, and little Shweyma (she gold maid) is eight Jeare old bappy, which shows that she was born under a lucky star. Old George wae not really a driller, for be was a refioer, skilled in the uses of sulphuric acid and bleaching sodas, and his part of the toil was to turn the black pe- trolenm into water-white kerosene when the drillers bad woo it from the shale dephia of Mhaog Island. t was September when the little pars of white men landed from a steam laanoc! on Mbang. The long rainy season bad ceased, and ite fastening moisture had clothed the giaunttel trees, and the pin- gadoes,and the banyans, and the uds notil they stood a wall of green verdure that was the jungle. Burmese workmen bad built a» loag bungalow on the sandy beach of Beogal Ba The bungalow stood on high posts, and the incoming tide lapped at the wooden leas of the structare, and beat against she low wall of rocks that held the land side of the bamboo house. The vegetations breath of Mbaog carried the deadly of jungle lever, and the Burra Sahib, who was an Arglo-Indian, bad conceived an idea that the waters of the ocean would keep this evil from the dwellers in the house above the brine swept sands. There were no other Europeans on the island, and the five men toiled through the daye of fierce heat and sat in big Hindoo chairs on the broad veranda at night. In Diam, or stripped to thin ootton-ganze nisps, they sat acd smoked strong Bur- mese cheroots, and looked out across the mounlis ocean toward the land that held their wives and their mothers, and talked of the beyond; of the time that had gone, with ite slight recoupense, and of the time that was to come with its rich reward ; of the land that lay golden-hued ander the sun that bad sunk behind the arched back of the ocean, a huge blistering ball of fire. Always of the beyond they spoke; of time to come, or of space in which was not the accursed island of desolation, Mhang. But to the endeavor of toil they stuck steadfast; for three years they had come to labor for their masters, and they were men—men phosen because of their keeping of faith, chosen from mwaong many. The fever stole like a soft-padded panther —a8 silently down out of the jungle, and bit at their blood —it hurued it to acid ; the everlasting sameness of the food cloyed their desire sill it was but an automatic replenishing of streugth. Sometimes let- ters came to them,and sometimes for weeks there was udthing but toil and the heat and the warfare of quinine against malaria, and the hours of waiting for oblivion in sleep on the veranda, heneath which the wash of the Indian Ocean sonnded like the weeping of past centuries. One day a dozen ironwood posts stood Sromily had led together a hundred yards rom the hig bungalow. In a week a roof, thatched by the sword like leaves of the toddy palm, topped the ironwood poate; then a split bamboo wall hid them, and it was a hungalow —a tov house for animate dolls. The next day the end room in the bungalow on the sande wae empty, and Sowmere ate his curry and rice in the toy house “1 knowed as how it was comin’,”’ old George said to Billy. *‘I've been a watch. in’ thas peg fly long ernough. Dave Som- mers 'e’s took ap wi’ a ’eathen. My word ! I knows the little yeller pagan— Yetso they calls ’er. She's from the vil- a over the "ill." Id George had been born at Spitalfields in England, and across seas to America, and care ol ie tats 2 e language of the toilers elde, aud would be buried in it, please God, he said. He was tall and gaunt and massive; hie binge feet and bands and head bad sug- gested to the natives a desoriptive name of anim ble applicability. and he bad shouldered it with large good hamor, ‘The Hathi Sahib” —the Elepbant Sahib—he was to them. The four that still eat on the veranda drew their obaire oloser in the moonlight after the going of Sommers. It was as if the jungle bad orept down nearer to the bungalow, and the sensuous Burmese night air weighed heavier on their hearts. Then the native workmen who had built the doll’s house for Sommers brought more ironwood posts from the jungle and roofed them. And when the last bamboo mat bad been laid on the floor, Stanton’s ser- vant carried his eabib’s trunk and his bed the three silent men. At last Billy from his room and on poete, like a bird's cage, and with him lived Syngee, who was the daughter of the village myook. “Gawd ! Billy, I can’t eat,” Old George said, shoving the curry from bim with beavy band; “‘it’s orful ! The jungle reeks wi’ the fever—the sea stinks of it. Come out an’ let's smoke, boy. If me ol’ oman an’ the kide was ’ere—no, it's a Gawd’s blessin’ they ain’s. "Tain’s fis for no white man—it's a nigger land, an’ just fis for the black ope. If I was as big a fool as I've seen in my time, I'd lush into the drink tonighs, Billy. Bat there's tomorrer to be thoughts on, an’ even the ’eathen ’ere knows better’t to take to the drink.” In the morning the Hathi Sabib was hroken. Some evil night spirit of the jungle bad poured bot sand in bis joints ; fever had melted the fine temper of his sinews until they were flabby and of no avail. A eanllen fire burned in the massive citadel of his mind; erratically his thought traversed many pathe, always at a tangent. “They’re a-’ammerin’ my neck, Billy— ‘ere at the back of me ’ead,’”’ he cried Deportes nighe, og from ung . devils; ’it ‘em, boy—'it 'em wi’ a club an drive 'em ous.” For hours Billy kept wet, cool cloths on the long, gaunt neck, and piled all the blankets in the bungalow on top of the Hathi Sahib, aud when the perspiration stood ous on the broad forehead, and washed it white from the red fever stain, the sick man’s eyelide drooped heavily, the ng breath slid into a longer cadence, and sleep bushed the tongue that bad babbled inoes- santly for hours of the ‘‘ol' 'oman at ‘ome io Titusville, and the hig glass pitcher that stood on his dioner table filled alter- nately ».:h iced lemonade, and cool lager, and sweet milk, aod epriog water—and not . Por is votk Billy Bo h le i or & wee t the jungle im that bomed in oak ie grb] ge, on then the Elephant Sahib stood up on weak, groggy legs, and cursed the nigger country, and the imbeoility tbat bad broughs him to it, and prayed for to go baok to his work, for she bungalow was purgatory. Day iv and day out the sun scorched the island from a flats blue sky with never a cloud; the leaves died and fell from the bleached trees, till they stood white, ghost. like skeletons risen fiom a forest graveyard ; the grass browned, burned to brittleness, and broke away from the roots. Of living things all but those of toil and torment seemed to have fled before the anger of the sun. The humans, toiling, woke at day- break with the rasping treble of the tree- locusts in their ears, and until the gray skirte of evening blurred she fierce shim- mer of the glassed sea, the undraped jingle rang with a sibilant note. Sometimes a die- cordant-voiced bornbill, screeching petu. lantly, fluffed on weak, insufficient wing, from the hare limbs of a padouk tree to the arme of a peepul. Even the snakes had burrowed io the earth. In June the southwest monecons drove weeping clouds up out of the west; the 1ains came, and the dry earth dravk to sa- tiety, and when ite thiret was quenched the vomited waters tore down in torrents (rom between the hills, and where the yellow stubble had needled rice fields was now a myriad of little equaie lakes. These things rounded out one year, and there were yet two written in the contracts of the five men. Loug dreary evenings the two, Billy and George, who were antitheses in age and scheme of physical architecture, and tui- tion, and temperament, sat on the veranda, and related verbal dreams that were imag- ived out of the future; the past seemed so far away tbat it was like something dead, and the ogi e-headed present was a totem to drape out of its ugliness with the purple and fine linen of a fusarity in God’s own country —the land that lay beyond the mil- lion-etarred night curtain that balked their eyes as they sat with their faces forever to the weat. Sometimes the moonlight turned to sil- ver the waters that broke %ver the long, low-lying coral reef, and the hoy, Billy, would ory out in ecstasy that 1t was beaati- ful, and Old George would answer: ‘‘Gawd’s truth, Billy ! there ain’s nothink beautiful an’ good in this blarsted ’eathen land. The poison of it has got into me eyes an’ I don’t see nothink bus bellery—rank, bloomin’ sin.” One day a rope broke and the merciless iron pulley crushed two fingers of Billy's band, and when the steam launch came, thiee days later, he was taken to Phrang where was a civil surgeon. Billy was gone a month, and when he came back to the is- land a new solemnity bad thrown ite shad- ow over the Hathi Sahib. As the two tramped side hy side up from the little lauding, Billy asked : **What'e that new buogalow--has another sahib come to ae?" ‘f expect as ow some blarsted fool built it,”’ Old George replied, and shen he spoke othe injured band that still rested in a sling. a to dinner time the hig man aud the little man sat in the old seats on the veran- da; and George, olearing bin throat, said : “Billy, I don’t know 'ow yoa'll make ont eatin’ alone.” “Why-—are you sick, George—won's you have dinner with me?’ “Billy —'ere, give us yer’ ‘acd while I tells yer romethink. [t's worritin’ me— yer comin’ back 'as worrit me orfal, But ou wuatn’s think "ard of Old George, Bil- y. Gawd, lad, I got that lonesome a-sithin’ ‘ere fightin’ ekeeters, an’ smokin’, smokin’ —I got to 'earin’ voices, Billy, Ouve night I 'ears some ove callin’ oat on the reef. I gets a dugout, an’ paddles out to em ‘ere breakers; an’ there was nothink, I'd lieon my hed there tossin’ about an’ I'd ’ear bloomin’ voices talkin’ under the bunga- low; 4 yo dows, habia fie: Bub it was nothin n. I tells yer, ,» I was go- in’ off me ’ead. All ‘ammerin’ there in the sun, drivin’ the lazy soors of Bur- mans, an’ then sit ’ere all alone for hours waitin’ to get leaps, an’ all the time wider awake nor ever, I could ‘a, read some- think; but I never got no chanst of schoolin’ at ome. It was all right when you was ‘ere, Billy—wos wi’ she readin’ you did, an’ me a-listenin’, an’ wos wi’ yer monkey trioks; but I was alone wi’ the bloomin’ thinkin’ sill my ‘ead got queer.’ “That's your bungalow, the new one, is it, George?’ Billy asked, when the big gaunt sahib launched into silence. “I's a blarsted fool’s 'ouse, Billy. Gawd! I wishs I was ‘ome. What'll my ol’ 'oman say? Why, ain’s is right fer a man to slit 'is own throat when 'e’s woree’n hein’ no comes caws a-sayin’: ‘You ol’ fool ol’ swine. Leastwise I'ears em that Vay, Billy. An’ Nimbah, she’s ol i 's & memsa- Hl a en wr of emia 8 up, an a ee the new honor ae is come to the fambly. Wi’ 'em it's a ; Nimbah's 'eathen it seems all right—il s man one wife er #ix, don’t make no differ- ence, But wot about me, as olaimes to be a Christian? An’ wos about the ol’ oman at ‘ome? When the jungle fever keels me over again, Billy, you just les is I ain’s 6s so live, I ain’s.” At the end of the two years a little dangh- ter came to Nimhah and Old Sennge; then-~bus bow can one describe : i i : Shongin that little Sbweyma would bind she white man was wakened hy a key turning ios The door opeved ; bis wife came Sbe kissed him on the massive fore. so’ thought, an’ worrit over wot you've done, 'usbhand, an’ I've prayed, too. An’ I don’t know wots come over me, but I ain’t asgry no more. When you was out in that ’eatben land I just used to ask God to send you back alive, an’ I didn’s care for money nor pothink, just as long as you'd come your- sell. An’ I'm glad you told me, George, 'eanse there ain’t never been nothink 'id between us all our lives. Bat we can’s pever be ’ wot’s your child, George, an’ of the same { blood —part though it be—as oar children, lives there an’ up a 'eathen. You've got to send for she listle thing, George, an’ bring 'er "ome ’ere. I conldn’: stand to think of one of 'em ’eathen mothers bring- in’ up a child a= wae of the same blood of my children. You've got to send for little Seweyma, George, an’ I'll he ’er mother, an’ won's never speak of that ’eathen country again as loug as we live.” to ber. It was pleasant to have the nice | The man reached down and kissed the bungalow, and food without stint, and the rolled goldleaf earrings that bad been part | Je toaloliivy of eternity, and the men who thirsted in their souls for the western rim of the sea that laved the shores of Mbaog Island still toiled on at the win- ning of the oil that now held the allure. | Prospect ment of discovery. A white painted pillar of teakwood bigh up on the hill stood sentinel, throwing a black shadow across a deep grave wherein rested Sommers. And over bis going from the islana of desolation to the land of con- jecture hung a shadow blacker, more im- penetrable, than the sun-obliterated trans. verse of the teakwood monument. It was whispered in the Madrassi coolie lines that the sahib had been given datura by Yetso, because he had talked of going to the land of his own people, and thas now he came in spirits and talked with Yetso, and sat with her, and would so long as she lived. Bat Old George and the others said the san and the poisoned breath of the jungle bad killed Sommers. . For two years more George the Refiner waited with his huge iron still for the green black flood of oil that he was to cleanse water-white. Then Fate drew aside the cur- tin and she Burra Sahih read failure in large letters on the wall. The juogle laughed when the sabibs went down for the last time over the pink ribbon of road they had ous into its heart, and the elephant keeper thrust a long strong arm across the path as their heels. The steam launch bore the beaten toilers back to Phrang, and the ie- and was left to the growers of rice and plantains, even as is had been before the coming of the sabibs. Old George lefs with the Deputy Com- missioner in Phrang sufficient rupees to feed and cloth Nimbah until she married again (which surely woald not be long) aod for listle Shweyma until she came of age. Is was not a large enm, for rice is cheap and the clothing of great simplioi- ty. Y Then he and Billy and the others jour- neyed ak to Atierie and reclamation from their paganish lapse. At the door of Titusville George said to Billy: “You come 'ome wi’ me, lad, for it’s got to be all told; shere ain't nothiok pever been 'id 'twixt me an’ my o' 'om- an.” “I can’s do it, George,” Billy avswered; ‘‘a man aud his wile can settle such mat- ters better between themselves.”” ‘‘You come 'ome with me, lad,” George reiterated, resting a huge hand on the oth- et’s shoulder; ‘‘come an’ testerly as 'ow I forgot I was a Christian, an’ tell my ol’ ‘oman of the Gawd forsaken lonesomeness of thas ’eathen ole. You've "ad book larn. in’, Billy, and you can word it. I can see it wi’ me eyes shat, but I can’t tell it as it’s writ in books. You come wi’ me, lad. The ol’ 'oman’ll ave a Jeg o' mutton for dinner—she knows wot George likes—an’ I’ve been an’ sent ’er a telegram as ‘ow I was a-comin’. An’ when the youngsters is put to bed we'll tell the wife about sittin’ there on the veranda night in an’ night out a-listenin® to the ory of em waves agin the coral reel, an’ the pie fever 'ammerin’ at the back of our ’eads until we was pugla (toolish."") So Billy, dreading the dramatic, fearing the anger of a woman hetrayed, crept at the side of the giant to the little cottage that waited, draped in expectancy, for the home coming of its lord and master. And, leaning on the slighter man's mentality, she huge sinner walked with leaden fees. “Why do you not pus it off for a little time?’ Billy asked. The big man shook hie massive head. “‘Gawd’s truth, I counldn’s do thas, Billy; it’d be worse than sittin’ there a-watohin the empty waters a-bringin’ nothink but themselves to the shore. I counldn’s stand it—I'd drink; there's never been nothink %id, I tells you, lad—I'd talk in my sleep— 1'd forget an’ call one of the kids Shweyma. It "as got to be did, an’ 'ave it hover with. My ol’ oman she'll look on that 'ere pagan life just ae [ did when I wens there fust; but when she ’ears you tell on it, Billy, some’at ahout 'ow the others went on, an’ 'ow it ain't agin the Burman law to ‘ave J more’n ove wile, it'll ’elp. An’ when you goes away to-night I'll sell "er the rath, an’ I'll feel better. Gawd don’t stand fer a deceitful man nohow, Billy; it’s the worstest kind of a sin." With a shiver in his heart Billy sat in his friend’s cottage home thas night, and looked out of eyes of apprehension upon a soene that was like something out of a Christmas story by Dickens. For an hour, with strong of color, Billy painted the dead life of that island of solitude; the setlanting , lap, lap of the Indian Ocean against the bw, where Old George had lived the eyes of the red-oheeked into the night. When children bad to their a a res be saying over over, a ohild of slow wit : *‘I coulda’ ’elp it, .wife; Gawd’s truth, I was that lonesome I was ! orazy. I'd sit there on that an’ the servant 'd come sayin’ as ‘ow I'd called ’im, as ‘ow I'd told 'im to put more sulphuric in the oil. You see, wife, T was refinin’ in my mind. I was they | sin’ loony. It I'd ad a cat or anythink a8 was alive to talk to, bat I 'adn’s.” The woman without a turned away from her husband. | went inewibes iowa rats and logit tie Gout. dining-room ill midn knooked on the looked door and called : “Wife! for Gawd’s sake, come out an’ speak to me I” the looked But there was no anewer ; At midnight he threw bimeelf upon a door, and beyond —silence. . ofa and slept fitfully till morning. t-bearted woman op the eyes, and ran gaunt band over her hrown hair with the gentle caress of a lover.—~By W. A. into the incom. | Fraser, in Collier's. Weed Pulp from Saw Dast. A puolpmill with every sawmill is the from a new idea that is being worked out in Canada. A company with $1,000,000 capital hae been incorporated for operations near Vancouver, British Co- lumbia, and the work of building a plant has begun. The company already has a small mill that is rf to he making pulp for . and the method is to be merely applied on a larger scale, to nse up some 3,000 tons of sawdust that is made in that vicinity each month. The company is building its plant where there is plenty of water power and water to nse for cleans- ing the pulp. The process is somewhat different for making palp from sawdust, and there is more to do than is required to make paper of spruce selected for the pur- pose, bus the work can be done cheaper where there is plenty of water and power. It makes little difference what kind of tim- ber the dust is from, and thas suggests the possibility of making paper out of anything which bas a fiber or can be made to pro- duce a fiber hy chemical process. As the large lumber companies are now baroing their sawdust at more expense than it is worth for fuel, the making of paper from it promises an economy that should be of interest all over the world. The Vancouver company bas laid plans to sell its paper, made from the sawdust palp, in the United States and Australia, which gives an im- Previn that it is to make a great deal. e prospectus olaims that it will make 360 tons of paper a week, 200 tons of is be- ing for newspaper print and 160 tons ma- pila or wavpiie paper. Millions of tons of sawdust are practical. 3 wasted in the United States annually, ough it is tarned into commercial prod- ucts now munch more than in the past. There are various by-products to look after, a8 the different kinds of wood make combi- nations, and a sweet substance will be one of them. The prospects are that pa- per for news print will be made within the year of other materials than the fresh spruce and other evergreen trees of the forest. The flax straw that has been burned for years is good for that pu , 88 is also the waste from other materials, and the fibers of the tropics are being experimented upon for the same purpose. But sawdust has evidently made a strong stars for the leading place in this important economy. Congress may yet be asked to adjust a tariff duty on saw- dust to protect a new American industry against Cavadian hustle. Titled Workers. Many princess and other ladies of the royal houses of Europe would be capable of earning good incomes as skilled workers were they suddenly deprived of their titles, rack and accompanying possessions. Prin: cess Hermine of Renss, for example, a sis- ter of the reigning Prince Henry XXIV, is a skilled watchmaker who has frequens- ly shown her work at various German ex- hibitions. Princess Arnulf of Bavaria, when still Princess Therese of Liechtenstein, was one of the stanchest patrons of charis, bazaars in Vienna. The beautiful lace which she then made is still often seen in the Austrian capital, and the Kaiserin’s favorite collar, a birthday present from Prinvess Arnulf, is a beautiful piece of work, which took the royal lacemaker, three and a balf years to complete. The Arobdnchess Fried of Austria, who wae born Princess Isabelle of Croy, has a remarkable hobby—the making of beautifully scented wax candl which she moulds and prepares with her own fingers. Quite a storm ina teacup wae recently raised in Austrian court circles by the Princess characterizing as ‘‘preposter- ous extravagance’’ a time-honored custom observed in all Austrian palaces, that a candle which has been once extinguished may nos, under any circumstances, be re- lighted. As the Arohduchess Friedrich is greatly admired by the Emperor Fravois , her pronouncement on the subject of this extravagance in candles resulted in an order going forth that the ocustom—at all events where the handiwork of the Arohduchess was concerned—should be forthwith abandoned. The Duchess of Guise (who was Princess Isabel of Bourbon Orleans) is a skilful milliner and maker of 1 flowers. The Duchess, who is considered one of the best dressed women in Europe, invariably has ber dresses trimmed with her own bandiwork. Princess Carl of Sweden, a daoghter of King Frederick VIIL of Den- mark, bas since her early days been an extremely olever maker of children’s toys. In the Swedish capital Princess Inge 's pame is synonymous in this conn with skilled workmanship. Finally, the Duchess Philip of Wartem who is one of the most lar gen many’s ou Indies, bas she curious bobby pany.— The robbing of hives by foreign bees serious matter. Il a gIEEEice Ho alr fos hi if that Jistle one, Shweyma, |. WHEN 1 HAVE When | have time, so many things I'll do To make life happier and more fair For those whose lives are crowded now with care ; I'll help to lift them from their low despair, When I have time. When I have iime, the friend I love so well Shall know no more the many tolling days ; III lead her feet in pleasant paths always, And cheer her heart with words of sweetest praise, When I have time, TIME. When you have time, the friend you hold so dear May be beyond the reach of all your sweet intent ; Msy vever know that you so kindly mean To fill her life with sweet content, When you have time. Now isthe time. Ah, friend, no longer wait To scatter loving smiles and words of cheer To those around whose lives are now so drear; They may not meet you in the coming year. Now i« the time, Symbolism of Creation, After our brief consideration of the Gar- den of Eden, vou exacted the ise that I should briefly explain the spiritual mean- ing of the days of creation, as told in Gene- sis, and if you are still of the same desire I shall now fulfill my pledge. Thus prelaciog hie introduction to the subject, Herr 8. continued : **Fruitfal as the discoveries of astronomy are, in soggestions calonlated to awaken adoration, gratitude and humility, we can- nos conceal from ourselves thas they take us to countemplations of spaces and dis- tances, quite inconsistent with the age of the universe, as drawn from the literal ao- count in Genesis. Astronomy teaches ue that many of the heavenly bodies are so distant that it would require bundreds of thousands of yeare for light to come from them to us. The light from these distant spheres has indeed reached us, else we could not see them, and because of this Shey mast have existed for so long a time, therefore did nos begin to exist on the fourth day of a week some 6,000 years ago. This is the first fact, my son, I desire you not to forget. “‘Geology, also has been found to teach lessons widening our conce| of the Creator's grandear. Bat with this sister science we are equally anable to be recon. oiled with the first chapter of Genesis, con- sidered as an exact divine account of natu- ral creation. : “‘Geology, my son, shows that the crust of the earth for several miles, has been the accumulation of plan and animals, which have lived sud died, and left their remains, as a proof of their existence, in ages long gone by. Beds of rocks lie one over anoth- er, with immense masses of shells, which show the ocean lay long there; then with remains of plants indicating dry land and periods of coutinued growth; again come masses of sea remains avd these followed by immense layers of land growth; and thus in succession to such a number and amount, that the time to form them ocan- not bave been less than millions of years. ‘““And, wy son, do you not see that dar- ing all these periods the sun must have ex- isted, as without its heat the water would have been all ice, and fish could neither move, nor live in it? Plants could not grow without heas, nor lighs, nor air, and, therefore, the same general laws of vature which prevail now, must have prevailed then, daring the enormous peri hetore any traces of man announce that he bad been created. ‘‘Even though I cannot consider tonight this sublime theme as it deserves, permit me, my son, to speak of that long live of animal races whioh bave left remains and whioh kave heen restored pars to part and from complete skeleton frames, with eyes sod every portion of the animal constitu. tion, indicating thas light existed, and in face, that all these wise arrangements, which infinite goodness and unerring wie- dom sustain now for human happiness, were sustained then—in those far-off ages, when the earth was being prepared by a loving and all wise Provider, for she resi- dence, after millions of years, of beings in Y | the full image of Himself, with all the re. quirements of civilized lite. These prepara. tions, in the remote ages of the world’s youth, of these incaloulable forests, which afterward became our coal fields, of those accumulated remains of shells, which afser- ward formed our mountains of limestone, marble and chalk, in all their varieties— these all speak of laws producing then, as now, beneficent results, of wisdom framing and directing the laws of love, from which such wisdom flowed. Is this, then, not all irreconcilable with Genesis in its ordinary interpretation ? “My son, tue reasor why the divine narrative in Genesis is not a ly ao- curate desoription of natural creation is, that it wae never intended to be so uuder- stood. It is written in the divine style, and is a description of a spiritual creation, as it took place in the earliest ages of man’s existence. This divine style is peculiar to the word of God and underlies it every- where. As [ have reminded you before, the outer universe is a grand symbol of an inner universe in the minds of men. Each mind is a heaven and earth in miniature. The development of the principles which oonduoce to the perfection of the soul is sh actly portrayed by the creation of a world. Creation is the symbol of regeneration. When the restoration of a heavenly state is the subjeot of prophecy, it is spoken of as the formation of a new universe. Such is the divine style ; she outer world is the of the inner one. The ruin of a arch, or of a soul, is represented by the wreok of a a, i restoration of io telligenoce, order, teousnees, purity an peace are symbolized by a new creation.” ad A. WARREN, in the Pittsburg New Treatment of Consumption. ‘Are women fond of jokes, I won. der.” ““They must be.” - “Why ” “Just look at the sort of man some of them marry." —Son—"Fasher, what fs the rest of the quotation ‘Man and—'" Father (sadly )—"Woman seldom re- fuses.’ Race of Great Violin Makers, tis oo ce oy ed within com a bho y years. They ope their woods from a few great timbers felled in she South Tyrol, and floated down in rafts, pine aud maple, syo- amore, pear and ash. They examined these to find wreaks and veine and freckles, valuable superficially when out by varnishing. They learned to tell she den- sity of the pieces of wood by touching them; they weighed them; they struck, and listened to judge how fast, or how slow, or bow resovantly they would vibrate in answer 10 strings. Some portions of the wood must he por- ous and soft, some of close fiber. Juss the right beam was bard to find. When it was found, it can be traced all through the vio- line of some great master, and after his death in those of bis pupils. The piece of wood was taken home and seasoned, dried in the hot Brescia and Cremona sun. The house of Stradiva- rine, the great master of all, is described as baving been as hot as an oven. One was soaked through and through with sunshine. In thie great bess the oils thinned and sim- mered slowly, and penetrated far into the wood, until! the varnishes became a part of the wood iwelf. The old violin makers were acoustomed to ave every bit of the wood when they bad found what they liked, to mend and patch and inlay wish is. So vibrant and #0 resonant is the wood of good old violins that they murmur and echo avd sing in an- swer to any sound when a number of them hang together on the wall, just as if they were rehearsing the old music that onoe they knew. It was doubtless owing to this fact that when the le could not account for Pa- ganini’s wonderful playing, they declared that be bad a human soul imprisoned in hie violin: for his violin sang and whispered ever when the strings were off. There bave been experiments made with all sorts of woode by the varions makers. An Earl of Pembroke had one made of the wood of the cedars of Lebanon, but the wond was so dense that vibration was deadened and the violin was a poor one. The Demand for Trained Men. The demand for efficient men trained at our best agricultural colleges exceeds the supply. Organizations of breeders, dairy- men, frait growers and others in many of our States solicit special investigation to be andertaken by station scientists. There is public demand for official tests of foods, animal feeding stoffs and commercial fer- tilizers. There is continuoal increase in the number of high schools shat give instroo- tion 1 agriculture and which necesearily find need of agricultural scientists as capa- ble teachers. There are also many farms employing Sgticuivamal college graduates as superin ents, The salaries paid to such men exceed those paid to scientists of similar rank in other lines, because there are not enough men to do the work. Our agricultural colleges canuot compete in the matter of salary with commercial concerns that need men trained in agriculture. An illustra: tion is found in the instance of our i cultural college in Penneylvania. Within the last year or two one member of the faculsy of this school of agriculture has withdrawn to accept a position with a com- mercial concern producing high grade milk, and he is now getting five thousand dollars a year. A scientist in the Depart- ment of Animal Husbandry has been se- cared by China at a salary three times as great as the Pennsylvania School of Agri- culture was ahle to pay him. He leaves for Mukden, Manchuria, the last of June to assist in establishing an experiment station there. Another member of the agricultural faculty, Prof. John W. Gil- more, has heen chosen President of the College of Hawaii at Houoluln, and the salary paid him will he nearly douhle that weich be has heen receiving at State Col- lege. Another young man in this faculty left to become a farm manager at $1600 a year. At middle life a man should he at his beat physically avd mentally. He would if he followed ‘‘houest nature's rule’ and lived a more even life, Middle life sees the average man prematurely old. He is gray or bald, his face wrinkled, his eyes blarred, his hands tremulous. He bas overdrawn his account with Nature and she is staving off the total hankruptoy of the body as long as she can. How long she can do this depends upon the man himself. He can aid Nature greatly. The best aid to Nature is the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It supplies the material by which the physicial defi- ciencies can be made good. It increases she quantity of the blood avd purifies it. The use of the ‘‘Discovery’” with proper attention to general hygine will insure a sturdy old age. ——He pocketed the bard boiled egg gratefally. “Ah, madam,” be eaid, ‘‘believe me, I would not be begging my bread from door to door if it were possible for me to jravgse work io my chosen calling. Bat the day will come—"" “Poor fellow,” said the woman, ‘‘what is your calling, anyhow ?"’ “I,” he answered, proudly, ‘am an able-bodied aeroplane sailor.” ——Mother (in a very low voice)— “Tommy, your grandfather is very sick. Can’t you say something nice to cheer him up a his ?"’ Tommy (in an earnest voice) —'‘Grand- father, wouldn't you like to bave soldiers at your funeral ?"’ ——“The poor old miser has passed away. He hated to go.” **Was be afraid to die ?"’ “Nos that eo much, bus he did bate to pay the debt of nature.” ans isa wan of high ideals." “I shought so. “Did you, indeed ? Why ?" “I noticed that he did not appear to have mach money." pti ei told to cast our bread upon waters, a young wife. ‘Bat don’s you do is,” replied her bue- band. ‘‘A vessel might run against it and get wrecked.” ——Knicker—A man olsims to bave a formula for making diamonds. OT That's nothing. Can he make a pitcher? ‘He's engaged to a widow.” “‘How did he meet her?” “He didn’t meet her; .she overtook him.” —When the bair on the horse drops out in patohes wash with tar soap, then appl a of she dips or disinfectants ns