Bellefonte, Pa., August 21, 1908. THE SONG OF THE ROVING SONS Just beyond the sunset’s barriers just across the Farthest Sea, Lies the Land of Lost Illusions, lies the Isle of Used to Be. Lies the harbor that we sailed from when the world was all atane To the key of Life's full flower, in the Sym- phony ot June. How they begged that we should tarry ere we launched our daring bark, ’ Setting sail from Southern sunlight to the realms of winter dark! How they pleaded we should never brave the breakers and the foam, But should bide beside the heart stone and should live a life at home! “No,” we answered, “we must hurry, for the Roving Sons are we; We must make the great adventure; we must sail the Seventh Sea; We have done with sloth and safety and the Little People's ways: Better bitterness than languor; better Life than length of days!’ And we sailed—and still neath a starless sky, Over wastes of waves uncharted, where we know not how nor why; Certain only we can never more recross the Farthest Sea To the Land of Lost lilusions, to the Isle of Used to Be, —R.W, Kauftman. SS IN AUGUST. Weston toiled ap the long stairs of the boaiding-bhouse through halls whose dingy twilight seemed like benevolence after the torrid street. Several open doors gave limpees of gay, untidy rooms ; past these ‘eston cautiously, morosely skulked. He was afraid of being bailed in to rest and cheer, and he bad no stomach for the indif- ferent, kindly pity of strange actors—aotors who bad work, actresses who were and well and not married to unsocoessful, worthless husbands. When he reached the threshold of that fourth floor-hack where his wife would be smiling to bim from the sofa, he stopped outside the door, got his breath, wiped his face, and called upa nervous, aneonvincing cheeriness of aspect. But she was, alter all, asleep. He as sured himeelf of this by a second glance ; noticing that the sun from the open win- dow was beating on her face, he crossed the room and palled the blind a little lower before he dropped into a chair, aud sat star- ing at her as if she had heen incarnate fate. It seemed to him that she looked pot so much ill as thoroughly and absolately tired of the world. This fatigue, this indifler- ence, made him almost afraid of her. He told himself shat she had no grasp of life, that she would let it slip from hetween her fingers with as listle interest as she had the open letter which bad fallen beside her loange. He felt bimesell shiver in the hot room ; then he felt she fever, the stifled threatening of the day, more appallingly than before. Iu a passsion ol uureason he cursed the house and the inhuman orea- tures in it who bad let her lie there so near the window in the streaming heat ; his glance strayed from the d letter to the envelope which lay farther along the carpet in front of the door ; he thought that probably a breeze had blown away the envelope as it closed she door, and he cars: ed them that they bad let her lie there in a draft. The whole miserable universe was conspiring to take her from him! He had heen all dav at the agencies. His conscience, sinoe they had heguo to owe the landlady, had made rather a point of his not heing at home for lanch ; bat he bad forgotten his appetite, at any rate, in that search for work. He had heen search ing for itso long ! He bad worn out the whole summer climbing those stairs, hang- ing in those doorways. trying to orack jokes across the damnable wire fences behind which sat enthroned those oracles of life and death who held close behind their com- placens lips the secrets and the favors of the managerial gods. He had been prowl ing there in the early spring when the gaily dressed crowds were threaded every now and then by brisk celebrities ; he had seen the crowds melt and vanish in the summer heat, gone to Europe after clothes to farmhouses to economize, to summer stock companies, not one of whiob wanted Weston though they seemed to want plenty of other people a good deal liké bim, ex- cept that they were apt to be less oom- petent and could not be had so cheap. He saw the time when, during the long faint- ing days, almost nobody came into the of. and he was lefs face to face with the relaxed awefulness of the agents, who took to cigars and newspapers or to tasting, ac: cording to their sex. And now the time had come when the crowds were back again and once more the managers threw their handkerchiefs,and once more Weston stood unchosen in the mob. It was the last stage aod the worst. He had been welcome for his company in July's SHIA oifives where, as he told his wile, he consistently practiced that engaging motto for the shy : ‘Assume ap easy and familiar maoner, es- pecially with ladies.” But pow with the advance of the autumn business, the rush and sug of managers who wanted actors aod aotors who were wanted, Weston was forgotten ; when he endeavored to recall himself he became something of a bore. In the twentieth century even oracles must eas, and, though you may have the friend- liest wishes toward bim, there is no profi to anybody in sending a man to see mana- gers whom managers do not want to eee | He and Grace had not foreseen quite such a future when, five years ago, she had flown in the face of Providence and mar- ried him. It was ber father (who had kept a candy store in Milwaukee, nexs doortoa theatrical boarding-house) who bad shown himself astonishingly alive to the sitna- tion, and had acourately and enthusi- astioally pointed out to her the disad- van of marrying an actor. What! one of that idle, extravagant, shiftiesss los, a man who would lie in bed late and want his breakfast brought up to him, who would bring beer into the house in a pitoh- er and play pinooble for ! Had he anything to support a wifeon? Now that Soy TR Tle » y not around out of work half she time ot Ban pect ber to support him, yes, or take her money, as like as not, and spend is on oth- er women ! At least wait till she are salling under- that did for you on the stage ! e tired figure gave a twitoh; he seemed to feel his son’s little body crowding on his heart, the bits of fingers creeping and searching over his face. They had had to send the child back to Grace's family when sypboid had ravaged the mother in the winter that was past ; Wes- ton could not bat suppose that it would have found ber a less easy victim if she bad ever been really well since she haby came. Her e bad been very kind shout the baby ; they could wot blame Weston for the necessity of partiog him from his mother since other persons beside married actresses are subject to typhoid ; at the same time it all seemed to them only another mesh in thas web of dreari- ness and failore in whiob they felt he bad entangled her. Up to the very present Weston had never failed to send back a lis- tle money for the boy's expenses, but that was no longer po-sible. The child was al- most nothing to him as yet, ip comparison with she mother, but be could not have known for nearly two years that helpless life of bis first son and vot feel the sting of ceasing to be its provider. Justly or unjustly, be saw himsell with she eyes of men who could at least pay their families’ board bills ; he thought of one fellow in particular who used to bang around Grace in Milwankee, but who had married since then and whoee wife, from her new auto- mobile, had nodded condescendingly to Grace the lass time they bad met. He wondered if Grace sometimes remembered whose automobile that might have been ; he bimsell remembered very well how he used to guy the fellow toher !| His heart sank now with shame,and yes with a tench of the old stupid jealousy, and he had such a sense of batefulness in himsell that there seemed no distance great enongh to divide bim from her. He moved his chair a little closer to the conch. The band of the dollar clock on the mantelpiece pointed to five. Tomorrow would be Saturday, and most of she offices would close at noon. Practically another week was gone, and at this time of year that meant another week nearer to the gull. He went over to himself the mava- gers he had seen lately : Fellows, the romantic «tar who had thought Weaton too tall to play with him ; Hopkins, who had really wanted him for ‘Captain Bryce’ if only he bad been large enough for a guards- man; Lorenzo, who saw him in reference to the juvenile with Mrs. Erskine, but who had confided to a friend that he would make her look like his grandmother ; the Einalers, who had been favorably impress- ed with him, but who bad hedged on hear- ing bim ask a small salary and feared to trust him with the part : and Phillips, whe had sent for him, bus who, baviog employ- ed him when he first went on the stage, re- fased with indignation to pay him any- thing beyond she meagre salary of that time. He had gone hack to Phillips the next day, but the part was filled. He would never have les the miserable chance slip in the fires pias: if he bad not been fill- ed with hope of Ted Chesney’s negotiations with Joseph Lemuel, if Ches had nut en- couraged him by the wild fantasia of get- ting him a job in shese exalted regions. “If be comes to my terms,’ Ches had de- olared, *‘I shall have cbaige of the whole show, of every pail they drive on this side of the footlights. It’s that for me or noth- iog.”” What a fool he had been to suppose that a good fellow like Chesney would ever get any such terms, that Fellows would endure tall men about him, that Hopkins would prefer art to weight in the presenta- tion of a goardeman ! Chesney’s contingent offer bad been his dearest hope; he took ont of his pooket, reread and tore into bits yes terday’s note which told him thas the deal with Lemuel was off. Well, one thing was olear, chance after chance, they had all slipped ont of his hands like water. It was all very well to make exonses for each individual instance, but if he dared look in the fave the testimony of the whole sam mer one thing was certain ; whatever elee he was, he was not desirable. But why ? That was what he oould vot help tormenting himself with—why? What was it? He pas acide at once all question of bis ability. He did nos doubt himself, and if be did be bad only to ob- serve the work of other men in higher places to know that it was not their abili- sy which put thew there. Was there some- thing wiong with him shen, personally ? Was there something distasteful in his ap pearance, iu his manper, differentiating him from acceptable heroes aud lovers? For a long time now he had eearohed his face, observed his carriage, hated his own smile, his own voice, suspected in every stirring of his personality some peculiar and invidious distinction. And yet if that were 80 it was ove in which Grace also shared. She too, when she was able to go ous, bad looked for work and uvavailingly —ghe who was sweet $0 see and of so pealing a delicacy and charm ! Or had he grown incapable of judging her, and was she, 100, mysteriously marked for failare ? Were they cat off from the rest of man- kind, they two, and left standing upon some mysterious plague-splt? He told himself thas shis was a deliriom of weari- ness, but the delirium remained. The strangeness of it was not so much that they could get nothing good to do as thas they could get nothing at all. It bad not always been so, and yet they did nos ask for so much now as they used to do; their fine spirit about not taking engage- ments exoept in the same cowpany bad been broken, and be remembered old sora- ples, fastidious standards of independence or loyalty which had sometimes stood in their way and which now seemed to him like silly, sentimental dreams. He remem- bered a big chance which he bad once given up because she star he was shen playing th would not release him. She had bad no contract to hold him br and now be moved bie lips in a sick derision of that honesty. In the future, if there were such a thing, he and Grace would take what they could get and bang ou to is like other people. If there came to be something lost ween them in a mutual faith and pride, at least they would know where their next meal was coming from. He sold himself, looking, looking dryly with his hot upon the thinness is wile's hat he was willing to pay any price, then he saw that he was already payiog all he bad. He realized witha sickness than before that in his desperate determi- nations he was no more powerful than a child determining to be a pirate, and that whatever he might do he was no more able to buy a little ease, a breath of peace for her shan to go back and leave her ou the pleasavt path where he bad found her. He started up with a restless shadder, and going over to the farther window leaned frowning down into the dreary litter of the far-away backyards. He asked himeell if be were an admitted failore iu this business ; come now, what was the next move ? Was there any other business shat he knew, any trade which he understood, any chance which, if it were offered him, he would know how to take Somewhere in the neighborhood peopl thrift and foresight were getting in coal Would anybody truss him to drive a ocoal- wagon ? His whole soul sickened after manual success, and cried out against gen- ~Re-e gr teeler accomplishments, the stmagly art of pleasing—in which, he must suddenly remember, he bad wholly failed to please. But along middling lives shen, in shops sod offices, was he capable of nothing? Well, fairly capable of a good deal—per- haps, with a listle time, a little opportuni- ty and direction, all the things most lack- ing io shie crisis. Bat to put out his band securely and seize somethiog—no, nothing in the world. The world, be saw, was t00 hig and bard for him and Grace, for life or death they did not count init. The gorg- ing, struggling wasses of success, the whole blind, opulent, and crushing earth rolled down apon them, rolled over them, and he had no strength at all to shield her. He had now for some time heen absently gazing at she letter which had dropped from Grace's haod, but it was only at this moment that be perceived it to be a single sheet of paper with some kind of business heading. ith an agonizing pang of hope he picked it ap. *‘The Elmeide Dairy—21 quts..”’—It was the milk bill, and it bad vot been paid for three weeks ! He recall- ed the dootor’s words : ‘At least a quart a day, Mrs. Weston, il you are to gain as we wish.” Three weeks! A dollar and sixty-eight cents ! He had still four dol lars from hie watob, which was the last thing they had bad to pawn. A dollar and sixiy-eight cents out of four dollare—he would have tc stop she milk! Bat that was impossible ! She needed is. Was it really tine that she, Grace, could not have what she needed when it cost only fifty-six cents a week, and that rich concern was dealing it away day after day. to multi- tudes? It was quite true. They had cut out their evening oar ndes a long while ago ; last week shey bad decided to indulge in no more breaths of air on the ferry—he caught sight of her last hottle of medicine on the washstand ; it had cost sixty cents only a few days ago, and it was almost gone! Weston felts himsell beginning to grapple with a mingled fright and anger at the absurdity of their affairs. Why, she must give up everything ; alter all that he had contrived for her she must slip back again and get worse, and this time nothing could be done to help her, though she should actually suffer! It seemed nobe- lievable. He had pitied such things often enough when he bad heard them about other people vaguely called ‘‘the poor,” but about themselves it was a thing that stopped his breath. He saw clearly, for the first time, to the actual end of bis four dollars, and realized that sum to he all that remained between them and want. Not another penny in the world—What were they to do then ? My God! What wae to become of them ? The blank horizon gaped at him. Ou the instant he was shaken by one of those waves of panio which summer in the city sends upon human nerves to break and drown them. His spirit was ground and beaten to pieces in that fierce rush of hor- ror ; his sense cf common life deserted him ; he was blind with fear ; sick and shaking, his whole being one shrieking pandemonium of hysteria, he sat staring at his wife and knocking with bis knuckles on his open mouth. “‘Oh! oh! ob!" kept on the alternate pound aod flutter of his heart, ‘‘what is to hecome of us ? What is to become of us? What shall I do? What shall I tell her? When the time comes that the money is all gone what «hall I say to her? Where shall we gc? What will they do with us?’ Strugzle as he would there was no way out, nothing that he could see between them and a misery beyond death. Death, indeed, bow easily people talked about that,as if it were quick and reliable and mes with overnight! It was not death he feared, but the length of its approach which was—impraocticable. There muss be something to be done— something—there must be—other people did things mponey was made—but oh,bow, how ? What to try ? Where to turn? What next? His heart was gasping open and shat like the gills of a dying fish, hut she dollar clock ticked on, indifferent, like fate, and no other answer sonuded through the frenzied whimper of his brain. He hegan to crave some sigral of human near- ness, he felt as if he must go mad indeed if some one did not speak to him and prove him still capable at least of communication with his kind. And suddenly he wonder- ed at Grace's sleeping so soundly #0 long. He bad heen at home wow for some time, and she had not moved ; it seemed to him as if she bad not breathed. All she jang- ling nerves in him were stricken quiet by a single fear. If she—He put out bis band and touched her ; her skin was moist and warm, she sighed and stirred a little. And as that he ios all grip opon bappiness or unhappiness, submerged in a kind of ter- rible relief. He remained bent forward, shuddering, and after a time, when he be- gan to recover consciousness, to rise to the surface, be found himself holding desperate- ly to some idea, some plank of safety. This idea turned out to be that he bad been making a fool of himeell for nothing, that no matter what happened Grace was provided for, thas she could alwaye go back to her people. It wasan abhorrent thought, bus he clung to is, still quakiog, it was true, but reassuring, quieting himself. Why, what a fuss he bad been making ! What was all this deathly fear he bad been drowning in? She was not going to die, she was not going & want, whas bad he been thinking of? She was not going to sink here with him, vo, no ; she could go home to decency, security. He began to breathe evenly, he sat up and wiped his face and head that were all cold and drench- ed with the sweat of nightmare. Why, thas was it, that was the way | He would write to-night to Grace's lather and ask for money for ber ticket home, and as soon as she wae gone he would give np the room. A man alone could always manage some- how uatil—Well, he would try; there might be something somewhere that he could do. He got slowly to his feet and to walk up and down gravely and with judicial calm, sobered from having touched the d God knew it would be hard to tell her thas she must 60 boms, That was a thing she had always kept out of her mind. Poor Grace! poor girl! They would give her enough to eat and a giace 30 stay in in the bustling, strident ittle but they would her very un . He knew the family oirole well, its its sound, comfortless comtort, ite their sentiments about him so Grace she would still hear them confiding in the neighborhood, and she would have to go to them for car fare, for posiays His ohild, soo, and his ! No er peo- e were contemptuous of him. Contempt bimself had long Leen in him likea poison and yet within him, too, Soetiing rose to combat that contem He done his best. he would do bests still. She would understand. He looked long at her pale face and told himeell shat he had loved ber ae faithfully and given her as true a joy as if he had been able to serve her better. He took a little comfort, bus Lie was too tired and too sad for hope. He saw her whole nature shrink from she bit- ter which was growing in his hears, and he said aloud, “‘I can’t help you.” Ashe spoke his glance fell agein upon the envelope which lay face down. ward oo she floor, and shis time be saw that it was nos au eavelope only, but an unopened letter, He read the signature first, and then in a kind of apathy the whole note, from which presently particular phrases began to stab through him in flashes of great joy—'‘As the eleventh hoar. ali O. BK. . . Lemuel perfectly agreeahle. to sign contracts. . office ten to-morrow. . . Chesney.” The twilighs 4d ned and deepened in the qoiet room. eston sat down oon the floor heside the sofa and nestled a» hand among the folds of his wife's dress. She stirred again, opened her eyes, and smiled drowsily down at bim. With a long, light hreath she moved her band io a little gesture of welcome, and reassured hy his presence she let her lashes droop again. He continued to sit there in the soft even- ing silently waiting to give her his news when he shoanld wake her, and rested his cheek against her ekirt—By Virginia Tracy, in Collier's Playing = Poor Hand, To every emall-«alaried man or wage- earner th-re comes a fighting chance ; not one whiob has to he waited for darirg long years, or which involves tireless struggle against competitors, hut a fighsing chance which comes every week—uvay, every day— which may. every day, shew ite victory. It is a =mall and homely chauvoe, hut it calls for a fight as bard, often, as the tight for greater things ; a fights which, heng won, leaves the man bigger and stronger and better fitted for larger chances ; which, heing lost, leaver him weaker, smaller in his own opinion and less confident. Read what one hundred dollars did for one small-salaried wan. He was a olerk in a hig corporation office and had worked for six years without gesting a dollar shead. In fact, he said on one occasion : ‘‘There never was a moment in those first years when | was not in debt for my week's pay hefore it was earned.’ One day he received fiom his chief a scathing lecture for some poor work, and the terms need were such as to show him that he was considered of no value to him- self or to any one. He was told that be was just a poor ten dollar mao, and would never be anything else. Bitterly mortified and humiliated, he was unable to assert himeell by an immediate resignation. He hadn't a dollar ahead—indeed, he was owing for a week's hoard and several other emall debts. In his disgust at himself he formed the resolution to get his feet upon solid ground. He clung to every cent of his wages with a pertinacity as determined as his former improvidence had been. It was springtime, snd he rented a small camp in some woods two miles from the works, where he cooked his own meals at an expense which did not average one dol- lar per week. At the end of the summer he was one hondred dollars ahead, and had a chance, by paying that sum down, to porshase a neat cottage on the outekirts. mall cottages were exceedingly scarce in that factory town, and he easily found a young couple as tenants for his house, who agreed to board bim for the rent. This was equivalent to $22 per month for a cos- tage which he bad bought for $1700. Four years later he had cleared his title, sold his cottage for $2100 and, getting married himself, paid that amount toward a $3400 two-tenement house. In addition to this excellent financial start he had gained the respect of his fellow-clerke and his chief and won a promotion which, under his old course, would undoubtedly have gone to some one else. The other case: an old railroad olerk once informed his chief that he was going to stop work and Jive upon his savings. The chief was somewhat surprised, since the salary had never been higher than six: teen dollars a week, and a family had been raised. ‘‘Have youn got enough?’’ he inquired. “Well,” answered the old pen-driver witha laugh, ‘‘I guess I can worry through. I've got rents coming io that total up to over a month. “Is began twenty-six years when I was married. I was gesting twelve dollars a week then, and both my wife aud I bad mighty little show for ever owning a home, but we put adollar into a hank. In four years we'd got $200, and then my ohanoe came. Out near Sixteenth Strees the rail- road company bad decided to double the tracks, and hed to buy an extra strip of of land. There were a few houses to be torn down or moved, and I got a fairly good six-roomed cottage for $150. I bought a nearby lot for $600, on which I paid $25, and gos my honse moved and set on cedar posts for the balance of my cash and anoth- er hundred, which I borrowed. When I moved in I owed just $675 on a cottage much better than the one I had been pay- ing $18 a month for. It didn’t take long to clear that, and shen I repeated the ope- ratios when I bad the chance, sometimes borrowing a little on mortgage to carry the trade through. There are always houses $0 be moved in this town. Now I own twelve—large and small.”’— Saturday Even- ing Post. The March of Mexico. Was it not in Constantinople, long ago, that the grand vizier formed bie judgment of the popularity of the government's measures by counting ap how many bakers had been ne over night? By some means the attitude of a people toward their government must express itself. A small insurrection in Mexico calls attention to the exceeding rarity, in later years, of such events in a country where they were once a staple occurrence —publishable in set form, like the base- ball scores and receipts of wheat at Chica- That Diaz's thirty-year rule—albeit not patterned to our taste—is satisfactory 39 dhe bagy of his subjects seems a fair con- In government revenue aud foreign trade ee es tS e is two- . Jureige more miles: of railway and sele- than Italy. is important industrial position is al- most altogether a creation of Diaz's gov- ernment. Under his beneficent regime, our merchandise trade with Mexico has in- creased elevenfold The United States’ trade with Mexico is a8 great as with China and Japan combined ; sixty per cent. as great as with Canada; very nearly as great as with France; five times as great as with Spain. Excepting England, Germany and France, there is no country with which we bave as » trade as with Mexico. bow far Mexicans have ad vanced toward liberty under Diaz ie a diffionlt question. That he has pnt their hoose in order and vastly inoreased material pros: pusiey are patent and not unimportant —8aturday Evening Post. — "‘Flattery is like a fairy tale. Even though one doee not believe it, one listens willingly to it.” Where Brides are dold at Auction, The mercenary side of matrimony has supplied numerous novelists with themes for sensational fission. Ouvee again, how- ever, it is possible to assert that ‘‘trush is stranger than fiotion.’’ Witness the follow- ing account a Russian correspondent gives of the state of affairs prevailing in outlying parts of his dismal and disordered ocoan- try. ‘ The anunal marriage avctions are, he says, now being held in the towns of Guchatsk and Lystcheffka. The first vamed town is the more wm t place, and possesses a onthedral. More than 300 would-be brides have arrived there from the surrounding country oo sleighs., Most of them are accompanied by their parents and relatives. At 9 o'clock sharp ‘‘the bride show’’ is hell in frovt of the cathe dral. The girls are diawn upina line reaching from that haildiog to the city hall. All are dressed up specially for the ocoasion, wearing their best olothes, the picturesque head-dresses, necklaces, ear- | rings and other jewel and ornaments which it is the greatest desire of Russian girls to amass, They have all taken & hot bath in preparation for this great occasion, aod consequently they look much prettier {and more attractive than at ordinary times, | The men paes along the line, examining | the buman goods with interest and vary- ing degrees of emotion. The middle aged and well-to-do customers usually regard the girle with critical aod business-like attention, while some of the young fellows exhibit considerable bashlaluess. The carelul customer looke all along the line before he begins to pay any astention to individoals. Then be stops before an article that bas taken hie fancy and exam. ines her points thoroughly. He runs his fingers through her hair, to see if it is her own, of good quantity, and well kept. He opens her mouth and looks at her teeth. e taps her chest to see if it is firm and solid. He looks carefully at her limbs to see if they are straight and strong, and capable of doing the extremely bard work he will reqnire of her on his farm. Having satisfied himself regarding all these points, be mentions to the girl the rice he 18 willing to pay. This will vary rom 5 rubles ($250) up 10200 rubles ($100), or even more. Jt is scarcely neces- saiy to say that one does not get a very showy bride for $2.50. If the price is not high enough the girl shakes her bead and the man may offer more or pass on in search of something cheaper. Il the price is satisfactory she consulte with her brother, who is her particular goardiav, or with some other member of her family. The money paid goes to the family, but when they are good-natured they give it to the bride to belp her start housekeeping. Some- times there is & lively competition between swo oi more men who aie seeking the same attractive bride. It then becomes praotio- ally an auction. The marriage market 18 likely to last as long as a week. Daring this time there is a good deal of merrymaking, cften degener- ating into debanches, in the course of which the prospective brides sustain more or less damage. Those who are left at the end of the marriage fair are mostly un. attractive, and bring nexs ro nothing. When the Roesian countryman has se- cured a wife be carries her away to his lonely house in the thinly-peopled ocoun- try. It isa mere hus, if he is a peasant. There she has to labor as hard as a mau, or even harder, rising at dawn, milking the oows, carrying wood to the hoase and doing all the hardest kind of work. It her hus- band is too poor to afford a horse she may be harnessed to a oars or plow with a big dog or donkey, But before this stage of domesticity is reached there is 8 wedding, which is ove of the most gorgeous and picturesque fea: tures of Rus«ian lite. The betrothal ceremony takes place a week and a day before the marriage oere- mony. Daring shese days the bride muss weep and wail and lament loudly over her cowivg marriage and separation from her parents, although really she desires these events more anxiously than anything else in the world. In Russia, as in China, the bride's girl friends devote themselves to consoling and cheering her during these days of lamenta- tion. They recite stories to her and sing songs, and the harden of each song aod of every story is the joy and bappiness of matrimony. On the day before her mar- she unbraide ber long plait of bair divides Sopp bet maiden comrades the flowers and ri that escape from her loosened tresses. Then they lead her to the bath. As she bathes they sing to her. They spend hours dressing and re- dressing her long hair, and while they brush and twist they sing to her songe of love and happiness. Upon the wedding day the bridegroom comes to her parents’ house and olaims his bride. Then comes a touching bit of cere- mony. The maiden kneels before her par- ents and aske them to pardon her for soy offense of which she may have been guilty. They lift ber up and kiss her. Then they offer her bread acd salt, which signifies shat while they live they will notsee her lack the necessaries cf life. When she leaves the house its door is left open, to sigvily that she may return when she will—that her girlhood home is still hers, The Russian people have many interest- ing proverbs about women, one of whiob is that “There is one soul only between 10 women.’ —Baltimore Sun. Orrin spete. There are some women who have “‘ory- ing spells,” whiob seem $0 be entirely un- scoountable, and are generally attributed in a vague way to ‘‘nerves.’”’ A man hates to see a woman ory under any oiroumstan- hii he gi listle sym o him. ey wou ie fg fh weakness and misery that lie behind she tears. Dr. Pierce's Favorite gl has brightened many a home, given smiles for tears to many a woman just because it removes the cause of these nervous outbreaks. Disease of the delicate womaniy organs will surely affect the entire nervous system.’ ‘“‘Fa- vorite Presori " cures these d and builds up a condition of sound health. For nervous, b women there is no medicine to compare with ‘‘Favorite Pre- soription.” i — De you find great wealth a bur- en “Sometimes,”’ answered Mr. Comrox. “There's never any telling when mother and the girle are going to invest in a tour- ing oar or a steam yacht or a foreign noble- man or some such form of worriment and responsibility.” ——'‘Yee, he makes a big bit with her. He has a green automobile, and it matohes her dress.” “Well, why don't you take ber driv. "mm “I ain’t gos no green borse.” Mind in Brutes. ““The elepbant is the mechanical en- giveer among avimals,” said Dr. Frank Baker, superintendent of the Washington Zoo. ‘No other mewber of the brute orea- t100 possesses any such mechanical dexter- ity. One is almost tempted to say dexter- isy of manipulation, inasmuch as the trunk is used like a band. An slephans will learn not only to carry lumber (a par- pose for which the pachyderm is frequently employed in the Orient), bat to do man things shat require delicacy of touch, i A a+ untying koots I bave known ove of these animals to spend many hours night after night iu trying to remove the holding- pin from bis shackle. ‘‘Here is one point wherein the ‘ntelli- gence of the elephants differs strikingly from that of a monkey. He is extraordin- arily persistent, purening a single idea with a patient determination rarely found even in homan beings. The monkey, on the other hand, is always the brute described by Kipling, with no continuity of thought or purpose. His special aed unequaled accomplishment is that of an equilibrist. Respecting the quality of his thinking we do not really know very moch, many of his actions that seem most intelligent and human like being mere imitation. ‘It bas been asserted by a recent writer that domestication causes the braine of animals to deteriorate. In support of which statement it is arged thas horses which have ran wild in Australia have be- come remarkably intelligent through being ohliged to think for themeelves and get a liviog for themselves, though what they gain in this way is acquired at the expense of beauty and other qualities which make hoiees valuable to man. Horses that give up thinking aod submit to their masters’ orders, it is argued, are the most useful, and therefore most likely to be encouraged to perpetuate their species under condi. tions of domestication. *‘All of this may he true, but I confess that my own observation does not indorse it. The dog undeniably is much more in- telligent than the wolf from which it sprang. As for the horse, ite mind seems rather to he developed than otherwise through intimate contact with man, its ideas and interests heing modified thereby. I have seen, at the Zoological Park in New York, the famous wild horses from the steppes of Western Mongolia, and it did not strike me that they were partiounlarly olever. Yet these horses have never been domesticated hitherto, the first ones known to civilization heing captured, fifty-two in pamber, by Khiigiz rough riders, and forwarded, in 1900, to Hamburg, where twenty-three of them were delivered alive. “Unquestionably, however. domesti- cation does affect unfavorably the intelli- gence of some animals—notahly that of birds. The farmyard goose is a stupid oreature compared with the wild goore, which i* a noble fowl, and hardly to be recognized as the same creature.’ —Safur- day Evening Post. Sparing the Rod. ‘“Take him home and thrash him sound- ly. What most bad boys need nowadays is to he licked as we were when we were hoys.”” So a judge sapiently conoseled the father of a fifteen-year old ‘“‘incvrrigible.”” But the judge forgot, or had never learn- ed, that this fifteen-year-old delingnent ie not at all the hoy that he was ut fifteen, when he robbed the neighbors orchard and meekly suffered she retributive trank- strap. This boy is filty years older as the clock marke time, and mach more than that in the march of civilization. There is no more intelligence in punishing a fifteen. vear-old as such lads were punished fifty and a hendred years ago than there would he in punishing a fifty. vear-old as men were then ponished. The boy no less than the man bad ab- sorbed the feeling of hie own time. Tom Jones, as we recollect it, was considerably more than fifteen when he was hoisted to the butler’s back and virtuonsly fostigated hy the tutor. He submitted himself— though with many mental reservations—to the band of Established Order operating in that conventional manner. A male person of Tom's years and inches nowadays who would take a heating from hie tutor with- out putting up the beat fight there was in him would bardly serve ar a model fora young gentleman of high spirit. The world’s view of cudgels has chang- ed. A fifteen-year-old hoy isa citizen of the world even as a sixty-year-old man. Or even more 80.—Saturday Evening Post. Only a Mask. Many are not being beuefited by the summer vacation as they should be. Now, notwithstanding much outdoor life, they are little if any stronger than they were. The tan on their faces is darker and makes them look healthier, bus it is only a mask. They are still nervous, easily tired, upset by trifies, and they do not eat nor sleep well. Wiis Shey need is what tones tae nerves, perfects digestion, oreates appetite, and makes sleep refreshing, and that is Hood's Sarsaparilla. Pupils and teachers generally will find the ohief purpose of the vacation best suhserved by this great medicine which, as we know, ‘‘builds up the whole system." Almost every home bas a dictionary in whioh the meaning of words can be found. It is far more important for every home to have a reference book in which the mean- ing of symptoms of ill health is explained. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Ad- viser is a dictionary of the body. It answers the questions which are ed in every family concerning health and disease. Other diotionaries are costly. This is sens Jree on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 ope-cent stamps for the book bound in paper, or 31 stamps for cloth binding, to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. —Politician—*‘You said in your last issue that I wasn’t fis so sleep with the hoge. I want you to retract it.” Editor—*'Very well Jimmy, put in our next issue that Mr. Smith is fis to sleep with the hogs.” — Don't try to take up all the room in the middle of the road. fe are nom- erous travelers on the highway who need a little room themselves. The story of Tantalus mooked by the food he could lt fui She dauptaio be could nos taste, story of every dys- ptio. Life to him must be ao endless Sp ceaseless mortification of the flesh. Dy» oan be cured. It is being cured olay ay by the use of Dr. Pierce's Gold- en Medical Discovery. Cases of the most complicated character and of long standing have yielded to this medicine, when every other means had been tried in vain. “Golden Medical " cures 98 per cent, of all those who give ita fair and faithiul trial.