Beilefonte, Pa., July 24, 1908. THE QUEST. We followed the Rainbow Road When the storm had grumbled by, d by the big east wood 3st the sky The rainbow » With its top ag Dot and the dog and [— The dog with the curly tail— And a spade to dig for the treasure big, A spade and a new tin pail, (She was the company, | la command, And the dog went along to guard the band.) The colors came down to the ground, Somebody told us so, And somebody told how a pot of gold Was hid at the and of the bow, We hurried along, a row, Ready to seek and find; I led the lot and next came Dot, With the curly tailed dog behind. (She was a girl, and so, in case Of danger, 1 gave her the safest place.) O, we were almost there, And we would have been rich, no doubt, But the wind came by with a dreadful ery, And the Beautiful Bow went cut, When we turned to look about . The great black dark had come— We ran so fast that Dot was lost, And the dog was the first one home. (And the rainbows come and the rainbows go, But Dot and the dog and I—we know!) — [Saint Nicholas. A PINSTRIPE DIMITY. ‘‘Have you beard the latest?’ quizzed Janet Robinson, elbowing a place for her- self among a group of hoys and girle in the bigh school yard at Masontown. A spirit- ed discussion as to whether the commence- ment exercises should be given in the op- era house or the armory was as pis tide, silk and Janet's query out short Moore's statement that the armory was out of the question. “That we can’t bave our olass pins in time,”’ answered Pauline Kaiser, ignoring Kenneth’s remark $0 present the doubt that lay closest to her heart at this partio- ular time. “That the almanac predicts snow for the twenty-eighth,’’ laughed Kenneth. “Or that Armour’s cornered the sheep market and our diplomas will be made of crepe paper,” suggested Willis Brown, with a drollish smile. “N—o0!" declared Janet with reflected disgust. ‘‘Frances Harrison's going to wear a dimity commencement dress !"’ ‘‘A dimisy ?'’ repeated Daisy Barlow, in unbelieving astonishment. ‘‘Yes ; she and her mother were in Caine’s fast nighs buying, or rather trad- ing in batter and eggs, for a pinstripe, twenty-five cente—"’ “Horrors!” in Daisy, whose cultivated taste placed dimity and oheese- oloth in the same category. ‘‘And she bas the second oration. Who ever heard of the like?” “0, that’s not so horrible,” declared Willis. “Kenneth confided to me this very morning that he was going to wear his duck trousers creased in a box-pleas.”’ ‘‘You boys won’s laugh whea the whole class disgraced,’ cried Janes in a tone that bespoke finality. ‘‘I can’ see why these country girls do not stay where they belong, or else not push themselves on the program.” “She did not push herself on,” flared Paaline. ‘‘She’s second by right of her marks, isn’t she, Keun?” “You bet! And its heen nip-and-tuck between us for the last three months,” vouched Kenneth, who had won class hon- ors by a small margin. ‘‘And sarely you can's hlame a girl for wanting to go throogh high, even though she lives in the country.” Verbal sparke of ‘‘Let her do as ber class does,” “Country Jake!" ‘‘Pare selfish- ness’ flashed from the group, with a final shot from the outskirts of ‘‘Let’s vote out her oration.” “Nixy!” blurted Kenneth, turning away from the girls to join Willis, who had deserted the group in disgust. ‘‘Maybe she'll look nicer in her twenty- five-cent pinstripe than we girls will in our laces,’’ deolared Pauline. ‘‘Is doesn's take much, you know, to make Frances look pretty.” Pauline’s tone shriveled where it touched. “Well,”” fumed Janet, ‘‘she ought to think of her class, and do as they do. She knows the seniors are making an extra ef- fort this year on account of the Mount Vie- tory sad Seiayeed vison. Guess the Harrisons could scrape enough together to buy Frances a decent dress if they tried.” “8—h!" cautioned Pauline, but the scathing words that rose above the sitter made Frances cheeks burn crimson as she flashed past. ‘‘She shan’t sit in the front row’’’ en- joined Janet, back of her band, as the group moved round the corner and up the Huplearspel main street toward the north where the opulent few of the Mason- town’s 5,000 inhabitants lived. The modest homes took on a more pre- tentious size as the blocks distanced the town square, but here and shere among the new homes nestled a misfit, time-worn oos- tage, a reminder of the early days and de- leted fortunes. Sach was the home of anet Robinson and her widowed mother, and from this outpoes on the horderland of aristocracy, Janes found much joy so com- fort her foolish pride, Ha rs. Harrison has been “You know ill,” reasoned Pauline as the girls Slopped at Janet's gate for a parting i er bas been out there aver so many times, and I heard him say last week that their bess horse was lamed the night their barn was struck by lightning.” ‘0, I don’t care a bit for that,” argued Janet. ‘‘Frances could have a silk dress if she'd just put her foot down. Why, mam- ma didn’t want me to have one,” she con- fided in a lower tone, *‘but I said I just must, and that ended it. Frances could, too, if she’d any spunk.” After waving a good-bye to Janet, the remnant of the party walked on slowly. Janet stood at the gate watobing them. At No Dest Surber was De. Raters bote, n, unpretentious roomy, but sug- gestive of the bappy, wholesome folks that lived within. Across the street stood Banker Barlow’s new home, a fantasy of eri eh gn losed anes ; e ng gate © with a rusty creak i her nerves. ‘“That must be fixed,’! she reflected. ‘“The house needs painting, and my ! how draggled those curtains look! We'll surely have to have a new pair—after comm ence- mens. She hurried through the narrow, dark ballway to the dining room beyond. The 3 room was empty. It seemed to Janet, now. that she really thought of it, that she could ou see | top vat recollect a single day since her father's death, five years ago, that her mother bad pot =at by the window sewing. “She's in the yard, perbaps. No, work is folded on the machine Janet dropped her books on the stand and a sheet of tablet paper fluttered so the floor. Her face flinched as she read the feehly serawled pote ; then, tossing it aside she picked up the new fashion paper and sank into a rocker to forget her aesthetio complaint in s profusion of new sleeves and lace- trimmed flonnoes. her It was a melting Jane day, hat Frances | Harrison trudged the san-baked pike, in- | sensible to the glare that made the top fence-1ail all zig-zaggy. Two miles of the rosd’s dusty length bad been covered with- out a pause. At the three mile post, the road dipped into a hollow and across a lazy creek that crept away to the thick, still woods. Here the air was cool and smelled of wild grapes and iree-bark and the miu- gled odors of unknown berbs and of the moist earth. But Frances did not slacken her steps, for ber eyes were on the little white farm home that capped the hilltop a half mile beyond, and her thoughts on mother. “A twenty-five cents dimity ! The class will be disgraced. She is selfish nos to think of us Vote out her oration.” Frances could hear again those decrying voices jnst outside the school-room win: dow. She bad tarried to change a para- graph in ber thesis and was happy in the thought that pow her oration was ready for the world, ber world of Masontown and the farm. To be enre, she had de- claimed it along the ou way to the birds aad the SWalwar} wees. And | even Sth er gestures mir n sleepy creek; for to be chosen second in a class, a class of filty, was something of which to be . and on that night of nights, with all Ma- sontown for an and she meant to make the class proud of her. Frances had not intended to listen, bus when those words in searing derision burst upon her, she bad felt stunned. ¢Q, it cannot be,’’ she muttered, ‘‘for my dimis, fo Deut eh I Soult lave 1m $; bot doctor's bill, and—and mother must have Belp. Dr. Kaiser said yesterday he'd try to as woman in town. If] silk I'm sure it would mean d wil § some- thing needed at home, and dimity will do as well. OI" she cried to she incessant heart-ache as she leaned against the fence, “O—ol” sod Taaaen SOV1A 0 wait $0 go round the way; it seemed a mile longer today; 80 she climbed the rail fence at the mead- ow aod wens ap she back lane. As she n the barn, she could hear voices off toward the house. ‘Company, or else Dr. Kaiser's found someone #6 help mother,”” she presued. “‘I hope it's a woman, for mother will do things io spite of me.” Frances steadied herself againet the barn door, looking off down the hill and across Jowa'd Mason town. On the far Susie wae the depot, a mere een farm fields, and still farther a factory m whoee chimney was trailing a emudge of black athwars the oloudiess sky. Hereand there among the mass of tree: on the near hillside towered a dormer window or a patch of roof, while on an posite hill stood the school with ite . Ra ‘‘How small it all seems from the bill !" she exclaimed, waviog a band to- ward the village, ‘and how beautiful! she farm! It’s a world all to iteclf, with she dear old lane, the orchard, the freckled hen and her chick« browsing in the garden. Whats if my dress is only a pinstripe?’ she laughed. Just then the talking indoors grew loud- er, and she heaid her mother’s langh. Frances suddenly fels choky. ‘‘I won't tell her. It'll bart her more thao it does me. No, she'll never know.” She tip-toed to the pump to dash away the tell-tale tears and drown the rankling lomp in her throat. When she reached the step she knew that the strange voice did not belong to company, for it came from the kitchen, accompanied by she thud and oliok of some ironing. “Why, you look as il you'd seen a ghost!" exclaimed Mis. Harrison, kissing ber daughter's cool cheeks. ‘‘It’s Mre. Rohinson come ont to’ ‘Yes, Dr. Kaiser hrought me out this morning,’ Jaoet's mother announced, ply- ing the iron over the wrinkled surface of Frances’ skirt, “and it has been likea holiday; for Sarah and I don’t see each other very often these days. We've heen talking over old times,’’ she continued, “‘for we were girls together, Frances, gradu- ated from the old log school on the Victory pike! Do you remember our dresses, Sarah? They were white lawn with a black ivy vine, and how we laughed when we found they were both off the same piece!"’ Frances stood agape. Mrs. Robinson’s tired face seemed to dissolve into one bright »mile. but that smile faded when she added with a smothered sigh: ‘‘Girls now-a-days have more fine olothes when they graduate thar we did when we got married. I tried to persuade Janet to do with dimity or a swiss,”’ she continued, “‘but she cried and =aid that all the olass were going to wear silk with val-trimmed flounces. I don’t know where its coming trom, Sarah, for the note was due on the mortgage last week, and I couldn’s pay even the interest.” It was a resolute Frances that faced her class the next morning and a more resolute one that waylaid Miss Ritter in the hall at recess “Why, Miss Harrison, your theme is beantiful—really.” “I'm tive in my decision, Mise Rit- ter. Take my name off the program, and say nothing about it— please.” When Frances raised her eyes from Miss Ritter's ed face, Kenneth Moore stood by the cloak-room door, looking straight at her. She turned to evade him, but he stoppel in her way. . bare, Bidives Harvinda, J0u1e ust going to get off thas way. n't w out by three marks for nothing.” “Yes, I am, Ken,” she answered, look- ing beyond him. ‘‘And if you've heard what I just said to Miss Ritter, do not speak of is. I really can’t.” “Yes, you can and you must. You've essed what the girls were talking about night, ’’ he blurted, searching her face for evidence. Frances turned on her heel into the Soke: rous, leavios Kuta to gaelim, th a fingers, ‘‘That’s a blamed shame!” Morning d into noon. A$ noon Fravoces ate her lunch in the shade of the koarry old apple trce in the school yard corner,and then wens to the library to read awaythe remaining twenty minutes. When she returned, the junior scholars had de. serted the bleaching yard for the cooler classroom, and the seniors were the Te Deum they were to sing at com. mencement. : Frances paused in the auditorium door- way, but before she had located a vacant Ra seat, Pauline Kaiser flirted her book and | edged over to indicate a place beside her, | “The fifth weasure,"’ she whispered ! Frances's olear soprano blended beauti- | fully with Pauline’s rich alto tones. The | girls bad nvever sung together but there | were a unison and a harmony that cansed | Miss Ritter to look in their direstion. { In the second part of the chorus there was a soprano and aito duet, but their be- | ing no two singers qualified to take the | part, it was sung in chorus. “Will Miss Frances aod Miss Paaline sing the aria on page twelve, beginning ‘0, | gracious Lord. cast down Thine eyes’ 2’ Both girls were natural singers and went | through their parts without hesitation. ‘““How well your voices blend I" Miss | Ritter declared. ‘‘You must sing the daet | at commencement.” ! Frances gave one appealing look at her | teacher, but Pauline’s vod of approval | sealed the answer and relaxed the frown | from Janet Robinson's face. | The afieinoon dragged on. It seemed endless to Frances, but at last the gong sounded. ‘I'll see Miss Ritter a minute,’ she re- solved, ‘for il my dress is vot fine enough for an oration, 1t certainly won't do to sing in.” Bat Miss Ritter had been called to the floor above, so Frances waited. Someone wae talkiog in the ball. She caught the word ‘‘dimity,” avd involun- tarily clapped hoth hands to her ears. “I will not hear another word,” she sobbed inwardly. *‘Ohb, why don’t they ",m py A hurriedly penciled a note to the teacher and gathered up ber books. was orying. Janet ? Then Kenneth Moore mumbled in an undertone. “Is ie too late ?'’ choked Janes. ‘‘Mam- ma— wanted —me—not—to—bave—-silk."’ It’s not too late for me,’’ assured Daisy. We've been waiting for samples.” Several announced that they did intend to fet theirs the last of the week. ‘I bought a dimity last night,” an- nounced Pauline. ‘‘A pinstripe, too !" Kenneth, who, if the truth be known could not tell a dimity from silk or sack- cloth flung his cap to the second-floor ceil- ing witha burst of ‘‘Now you're on the right track !| And, oracky ! I'll bave my trousers creased in a double box-pleas !" Franoes jabbed her batpin into her sailor and reached for ber books. “Why, here she is,” called Panline. “I thought you'd—'"' 's eyes were swimming as she reached for 's hand. “gy, girlie,” she sobbed, HI met? Bat Janet's entreaty was blended with, ‘‘Is wae wicked of us to say what we did, "" ‘You must give your oration,"’ sod “I'm there was one girl,” it sounded like Janet's voice, ‘‘in Masontown who bad spunk enough to stand for what wae right ; for silk commencements are a foolish, foolish extra .""-By Blanche Younug McNeal, In the Christian Advocate. Unique Postage Stamps. Japan is the only country which has given recognition to the floral kingdom in ibe fsenes of ite Sawpe. Trees ve been portrayed upon stamps by man countries, ly those situated in ‘he tropics, but it is only upon the stamps of Japan that a flower 3 oh or the national flower apan, ven a uous place upon all the postage stamps issued by he government, snd upon many of the de- nominations it ocoupies the central portion of the stamp. For nearly ten years (it ay be remark- ed by way of parenthesis)—from 1857 to 1866 —a ous feature of all the tage stamps of Newfoundland was a - quet of thistle blossoms within the centre of a delicately engraved background. This issue of etamps was exceedingly popular with greedy collectors and is known as the ‘‘thistle issne.’” Nervousness is a common feminine dis- ease. Women try all kinds of nerve quiet- ing potions which are offered as a cure for nervousness, in the form of ‘‘compounds’’ or ‘‘nervines.’” And yet nooure is effected. The relief is only temporary. The reason is that these ons are and par- cotics. They pus the nerves to sleep for a time, but when they wake again their con- dition is worse than before. Modern medicine recognizes the relation of this nervous condition in women to the forms of disease which affect she sensitive wom- anly organs. To oure the nervousness the cause must be removed. The use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will result in the cure of weakening drains, inflamma. tion, ulceration and bearing-down pains, the common causes of nervousness in wom- en. Nothing is just as good as *“‘Favorite Prescription,” becanse nothing else is as harmless or as sure. It contains no aleohol, and is absolutely free from opium, cocaine and other narcotics. : Anticipating Him. Night after night the exceedingly quiet and backward youth had called on a neighboring farmer's daughter, sitting perfectly mute beside her while she did all the entertaining. This night, however, the youth, wishing for a glass of water, suddenly surprised her by blurting out, “Say, Sal, will you" — “Don’t exert yourself, Reuben,” she interrupted. “I understand. Yes, Have you brought the ring?’ — Bohemian Meagazine, The Toast of an Irishman. Michael Meyers Shoemaker wrote “Wanderings in Ireland.” An old Irishman read a fragment of it that related to the reader's neighborhood. He asked the name of the author. “Mr. Shoemaker, is it?” he comment- ed. “A nice gentleman, I'll go bail 'Tis a fine country he chose to travel iz too. Asfay the heavens be for choosing it, and may every hair his Rouor’s head be a mold candle long as he lives. Secoad Let's out of this, No money here. He's every cent.—London Tit-Bits. At Last. “Ah, ba” exclaimed the great ex- plorer joyfully, “at last I have found the missing link! And, crawling from under his bed, he proceeded to put the small gold af- fair in his clean cuff.—New York Jour- nal. PASTIMES OF MADMEN. Cunning and Inccnuity Displayed by the Insane. | Some of the inventions of the insane | are of scientific value. A pitient at Villejuif invented a “pacification mn chine” by combining a bottle, a plank and small wetallic tubes, to which he had fitted faucets. Having set ap his machine, he produced loaves of bread the size of 21 wan’s head. The bread was good--so good that it was decided to make the machine known. One day | when it was in action the doctor sug- gested taking a photograph of it. The inventor watched him as If petrified i March, for a moment; then he fell upon the | machine, wrenched it apart and tram- | pled it underfoot. The invention, an exceedingly useful one, was lost, cause no one had seen him make it, and no one dares speak of it to him. To allude to it is to bring on a furious attack. Most lunatics, no matter how content- ed they may be, generally cherish a furtive longing to escape. They col- lect wax from the polished floors, take the impressions of locks and make keys from empty sardine boxes, spoon han- dles or anything to be found. Dr. Ma- rie’s museum includes a collection of knives of strange and unheard of shapes. Some of them have blades made from pleces of glass or slate and set in handles of corset steels. Objects barmiess in themselves become dan- gerous weapons through the ingenuity of madmen. Insane sculptors are as common as insane painters. The insane sculptor hews out coarse statuettes, fantastic animals, ferocious little horned and grimacing devils. An. ex-mechanic carves all his soup bon That his old trade is still in his memory is shown by the little screws that he makes out of the smaller pieces of bone. He works all day at his senseless and ridiculous task. Another lunatic, who believes he is the incarnation of the soul of Beelzebub, passes his time’ carving toy men out of wood. Each pair of his creations are joined to- gether, now at the necks, now at the shoulders.—Helen E. Meyer In Har per's Weekly. NATIONAL CONVENTIONS. They Succeeded the System of Nomi- nation by Caucus. Conventions have not always nomi nated our presidents and vice presi- dents, For more than thirty years presidential candidates were named by a caucus made up of members of the house and the senate, This system died when in 1824 the caucus insisted upon by Martin Van Buren and other friends of Willlam H. Crawford of Georgia defeated Crawford, which threw the election into the house on account of the scattering electoral vote caused by the entrance of Clay, Cal- houn, Jackson and John Quincy Adams in the race. This fracas elected Adams, The campaign of 1828 in consequence was somewhat demoralized, and In 1831 the Republicans followed the ex- ample the anti-Masonic party had set the year before and met in conven- tion in Baltimore to nominate Henry Clay. The Democrats held their first national convention in the same city the following year, nominating Martin Van Buren for vice president. The dominating figure of the party, Andrew Jackson, needed no indorsement of his candidacy for the presidency. The Democrats in 1835 and 1840 nominated Van Buren for the presi- dency in Baltimore, and the Whigs nominated Clay in the same place in 1844, when the Democrats named Polk. - In 1835 Romulus M. Saunders intro- duced the two-thirds rule to the Demo- cratic convention, and it was adopted. The customs installed at these earlier conventions which succeeded the tyran- ny of the caucus chamber have been continued and added to from time to time, and the conventions today are merely the descendants of those that nominated Clay and Van Buren.— Charles Wadsworth Camp in Metro- politan Magazine. Horizon. A man calls it the horizon where the earth and the sky seem to meet, but a woman's notion of the horizon is the families she can see moving in from behind her front window curtains. If, further, they hang out their washing in a spirit of candor, they are, of course, all the more so. The horizon is caused by a number of things, chief among them the gregarious Instinct. Only for this next door would mean as little as tariff revision or pure food or international arbitration. It takes a star or something of that sort to rise above the horizon, but a very ordinary woman may feel above it.—Life. The Cult of the Hotel. “Hotel” is a French word, but a thoroughly British institution. If its great hotels were suppressed London would no longer be London—that is to say, the London of society, the theater, literature, politics, art and fashion. The hotel is one of the essential factors of London life—Milan Corriere Delia Serra. A Comparison. Mrs. Giles (anxiously asking after rector’s health)—Well, sir, I be glad you says you be well, but there—you be one of these “bad doers,” as I calls ‘em (gie em the best o' vittels, and it don't do ’em no good)—there be pigs like thet!—London Punch. First Necessity. “How would you define a ‘crying need?” asked the teacher of the rhetoric class. “A handkerchief,” replied the solemn young man with the wicked eye.—Chi- cago Tribune. The great and the little have need of each other.—Shakespeare. be | A DISPLAY OF QUICK WIT. | The American Saved His Pride and Observed Russian Etiquette. The Yankee aud the Russian story is wgzin on its grand rounds, but as all attempts to name the original Yankee | have failed, says london M. A. P| it is safe to pin the anecdote to any prominent American who may have! visited St. Petersburg The Russian has heen identified as the Grand Duke Constantine, younger brother of the Czar Alexander 1., and the incident oceurred about 1810. The Yankee went ont for a walk in | when the snow was melting | efter sudden rain. The street was a maze of puddles, divided lato sections | i by narrow ledges of snow at the cross- | i Ings, over which pedestrians carefully | felt their way. i The Yankee was just in the middle | of such a snow bridge when he recog- nized the Grand Duke Constantine ap- | proaching in the opposite direction. | The path being too narrow for two | persons to pass, the grand duke being | accustomed to every one getting out of ! his way, the Yankee being too courte- | ous to turn his back on a brother of the czar to return whence he came and too proud to step servilely into the | slush for a mere prince of the royal blood—such was the contretemps. Quick as a flash our American whipped out his purse, presented it to Constantine and asked, “Even or odd?” “Even,” replied the astonished prince. “You win!" said the Yankee and stepped off into a puddle half a leg deep. Constantine, highly pleased by this peculiarly American proceeding, men- tioned it to the czar, and our Yankee was Invited to dine at the palace next day. HE LACKED TACT. Bad Breaks of the Man Who Was Trying to Sell Spectacles. “The meanest job of my lean days,” said a millionaire, “was spectacle ped- dling. 1 still see the sad and scornful looks, I still hear the reproachful oaths, which that work brought down on me. “It was at the seashore. 1 had a case of spectacles for every age from forty-five up. 1 paced the beach and the board walk. “Once 1 walked up to a lady and gentleman seated close together on the sand. “‘Sir and madam,” 1 said, ‘would these interest you? The best and cheapest brand of old age spectacles on the market. This pair would be your size, sir—forty-nine years. Lady, will you try these fifty-four year ones? “They reddened, and the man told me, with an oath, to move on. I remem- bered as I moved that he had been holding her hand. A seaside flirtation. Of course they hadn't liked their thoughts brought down from love to old age spectacles, “On the board walk I accosted a pretty girl leading an old man by the arm. “ ‘Would your grandpa be interested in these, miss? 1 said. ‘Best glass, warranted, eighty year size, price'— “ “Tell him to go, Billy,’ said the girl, “And as 1 went a hot corn man chuckled: “ ‘That, you dub, was Gobsa Golde and his young bride.’ "—Los Angeles Times. A Curious Army Toast. Of all the British regiments the Welsh fusileers have the most curious army toast. It forms part of the cere- mony of the grand dinner given annu- ally on St. David's day. After the din- ner the drum major, accompanied by the goat, the mascot of the fusileers, bedecked with rosettes of red and blue ribbon, marches around the table, car- rying a plate of leeks. Every officer or guest who has never eaten one before is obliged to do so, standing on his chair with one foot on the table, while the drummers beat a roll behind his chair. He is then considered a true Welshman. All the toasts are coupled with the name of St. David. It is in much this way that the toast with highland honors is drunk. Each guest stands with one foot on his chair and one on the table, and the pipers, a-pip- ing, parade the room. No Place Fer Dogs. Is it impossible in Japan to keep a good dog? 1 have twice had my dogs disappear in a seemingly miraculous way. As I am well aware that there is a great demand for dogskins, espe- clally those of young dogs, we have been careful in having our dog watco- ed. Nevertheless he disappeared this morning. Almost every foreigner has lost a dog or dogs, and even a sea cap- tain who was three days on shore had his dog poisoned the first day he put his feet on land.—Japan Chronicle. The World Is Learning. Briggs — Do you believe that the world is divided into two classes, those who borrow and those who lend? Griggs — No, sir. My experience is that two other classes are much more prevalent—those who want to borrow and those who won't lend.—Life. The Difference. “Pa, what's the difference between a rhyme and a poem?” “The person who makes a rhyme stands some chance of seeing ft printed, even if it is merely put on a card to be stuck up in an ‘L’ car’-— Chicago Record-Herald, Candor. “Pa, what's friend!y candor?’ “It is generally the first aid to en- mity.”—Chicago Record-Herald. * The good you do is not lost, though you forget it.—Fielding. | to a shallow hole | homelike. A DESERT PERIL. Yhe Deadly Clear Water of the Death Valley Pools. “One of the chief dangers to travel- ers in crossing such dreary and arid wastes as the far famed Death valley arises from ignorance as to the char- acter of the iufrequent pools of water along the route,” said a mining engi- ner of Denver. “The tenderfoot, growing faint un- der a blazing sun, will want to quench his intolerable thirst when he comes whose water, clear as crystal, seems absolutely pure. He can with difficulty be restrained from drinking it by some experienced com- panion, who knows that one draft will probably cause serious if not fatal illness. This water, for all its seeming purity and clearness, is loaded with arsenic, and many a man has lost his life by its use. Curiously enough, the only water in the desert that is safe to drink is foul looking and inhabited by bugs and snakes. When you come to a muddy pool on the surface of which insects are disporting themselves, however re- pulsive it may be, both to the eye and palate, you may drink it with im- punity, despite its looks, as a man will who is érazy with thirst produced by the burning sands and merciless sun.” ~Baltimore American, THE PALISADES. Their Counterpart Cannot Be Found in All the World, The edge of the world, if such a thing may be, lies hardly a rifle shot away from one of the centers of the world itself—the city of New York. The Palisades, those mighty walls whereon the annals of the centuries are graved—what an edge of the world their lip presents to him who comes, perhaps at night, to their rough hewn elevation! In no other place other than this near proximity to man and one of his greatest cities could a physical fea- ture so profoundly vast and impressive be so hidden from the world. Their counterpart cannot be found in all the world, and yet the Palisades are almost unexjpivited and unknown to the globe circling, sight hunting public that year- ly traverses the continents or seas to gaze at things less wonderful in some distant field of nature's marvelous achievements, for little does any one know of these titanic walls who has merely seen them from the Hudson. Were they somewhere off In a land comparatively inaccessible, reached by a transcontinental thread of steel, the guidebooks would be rich in their pic- tured grandeur and man would rove far to explore them.—Philip Verrill Mighels in Harper's Magazine. Superstitions of Stage Folk. A stock actor is apt to have a prejudice against decorating or fixing up his dressing room. He is certain to get his notice shortly after he puts his pictures on the wall and otherwise makes the place comfortable and Actors and managers both have a horror of the witch lines in “Macbeth,” and they never will allow them to be spoken, as it means a fire in the playhouse before the twelve- month is over. Sir Henry Irving was a firm believer in this superstitition, and he would never allow the fateful lines to be read when he was playing the tragedy. I know many players who fear to have any one pass them on a stairway when they are entering a theater. There are many actors who make the sign of the cross before they make an entrance.—Chicago Tribune. Where They Forgot. “Once, in the rooms of the Fabian society, overlooking the fresh green slopes of the Law Court gardens in London, I heard George Bernard Shaw °* express his thoughts about English public schools,” said a Chicago editor. “He attacked these schools. He said you learned nothing in them. He told of a young peer to whom a certain master at Eton said: “‘1 am ashamed of you, unable to work out so simple a problem! Your younger brother did it correctly an hour ago.’ “‘l am sorry, sir; the boy replied, ‘but you must remember that my brother hasn't been at Eton as long as I have.’ "—Washington Star. Got Full Weight. “Sir,” says the aggrieved customer, approaching the bookseller, “I have called to express my opinion of your business methods.” “What is wrong?” deferentially ask- ed the bookseller. “1 bought a set of Shakespeare from you last year. It weighed fourteen pounds. Yesterday I ordered a dupli- cate set for my son's library, and it only’ weighs thirteen pounds and nine ounces. I'd have you understand, sir, that there is a city ordinance against short weights.” Thoroughly humbled, the bookseller made up the shortage with seven ounces of miscellany.—Exchange. Anxious For More. An expert golfer had the misfortune to play a particularly vigorous stroke at the moment that a seedy wayfarer skulked across the edge of the course. The ball struck the trespasser and rendered him briefly insensible. When he recovered a five dollar bill was pressed into his hand by the grateful golfer. “Thanky, sir,” said the injured man after a kindling glance at the mouey, “an” when will you be playin’ again, sir?" —Argonaut, The Snake Bite. “So Wild Bill died of a snake bite? Whar did he git bit?” “Oh, th’ snake didn’t bite Bill. Th’ snake bit Tough Tompkins, an’ Tomp- kins drank two quarts o' th’ remedy an’ then shot Bill.”"—Judge's Library.