Lh BSE 1 safety. The inmates had either escaped | draught beasts; in consequence it was So they drank boisterously, ing | our and even then made a fair FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN > on horseback, abandoning their vehicle, | imperative that frest meat should be ob- | themselves, but with their eyes Dr ner ay Br tay oor — w : or with it. tained. Since it was clear that the buffalo | from where the woman sat by them, fill- | of the little garden plot that belongs to DAILY THOUGHT tly. Er. ad but water, it he Dov at Mig for Re ed Eph TF Jot, 20 This Jans a 2 everybody as == == | cently. , it was 0 more,” to raim, | vacant lot so we might tof N : Bellefonte, Pa., May 20, 1910. a few days, for the hides still to | should stalk them from a range of low | as his brother's head lolled on his breast. sais all the Sof we Jop- So dom fancy you are uniaue in having things Feta a eS nd 3s the others hills ue taking ed the they ol do ls drum. he be trains a i ais GB 0 But up with and fight against. We are here one 80 " he m we i our ci to le : ’ ETEE SptaM. |e emmeven fe. hone” of igh pico he rina they asses |__ You gt, oo. Bogue wat hi | cusumrs ntl ne Sink F am gfe” 2 2 o_o : nau- ; he covets we a large part Livia Gastuva sie isthe wun, Dunas ich, Rie i he al started dway at sunsets butowioen | Ld ln a i oui a tree I wel Mouth of flowers Vis, ‘an Safe in the porch, and the little drops run paces, th you is, y of From the icicles under the eaves so fast, their wings to gain momentum, rose | he had seen his brother posted to await | then and divide the gold with you. have several large candy stores on our | the foulard frocks for the sum- For the bright spring snn shines warm at last. With Siow ashy and Winged tieis wa the Soumifig of the herd at dawn, Eptuaim “Yes, yes,” he tiered, rising ad fist 40d 10 each of them we deliver twice Te have Sue Their appeatance in the upward soared in-points | made a detour rned to camp | staggering toward hi “When a A points about popcorn | streets during ew Shant- Aud Pad save Custava. in the blue sky. pe ET at ID | es 1 walk IT Tile Sw hae | io haying Trosh, ung, deservedly popular as it 1, will, one She wears a quaint little scarlet cap, Caleb was startled by a loud cry from | woman alone. He had come by some smile at Caleb as she plied him with | “Besides being fresh the popcorn should | foresees, have to yield place to foulard as And a little green bowl she holds in her lap, Ephraim. His brother came runn blind force of compulsion which was not | brandy, and with the last remnants of his | be as nearly white as it can be the fashionable fabric of the season, for Filled with bread and milk to the brim: toward him, t his arm, and clear; butnow at length he understood | fugitive consciousness he drew his knife | There are some makers who use a if the foulard frocks, with their short, And a wreath of marigolds round the rim ; him to the There both men | the cause of that mighty torrent of hatred | from his belt and placed it inside his | whitening but we depend on the variety | straight skirts bordered by wide bands of “Ha! Ha!” laughs little Gustava. stood lost in astonishment. that sundered Caleb from him. Heglanced | shirt over his heart. Then he groped | of corn and puick popping over the right | charmeuse, their seamless shoulders, and Up comes herlittle gray. coaxing cat Upon the mattress in the interior lay | round him. The golden sun hung like a | round until he found his sleeping-place | degree of heat. It is easy enough to tell | quaint baby frills at neck and wrists, With her little pink nose, as she mews, “What's the of a woman. The eyes were | ball on the horizon, rising into the amber | and lay down. when the corn has been artificially whit- | looked charming on the stands in the that 2" closed, face Seily emaciated by | sky, gilding the sandsto its own coloring. , When he aroused himself from his stu- | ened, as it is almost tasteless. showrooms, they became absolutely irre- Gustava feeds her—she begs for more ; famine, and a wealth golden hair of | There was gold everywhere. It fired his | por the camp-fire had gone out and all| "We do all the work of raising the corn | sistible when worn with a picturesque And 2 Tittle brown Jen walks in at the door ; dazzling hue and softest texture fell over | brain; it frenzied him with its exaltation. | was silent. He was laying upon the | after the ground is prepared in the spring. | wide-brimmed hat and smart shoes and “Good day !" cries little Gustava. : her shoulders and coiled itself high upon| She came out of her wagon, black SIowna, salied by the skin fiom the fast- | My twosisters and I do all the tivat- | stockings donning with the dress. the floor. She seemed almost alive. against the sunlight, her long shadow falling rain, and his teeth chattered with | ing with our hoes and one wheel .| Of course, the use of foulard is by no She scatters crumbs for the little brown hen, “She is alive !” cried Caleb. "Look !" her, stretched out inordinately cold. He felt for his blankets but they | We do not find the work either hard or | means restricted to this type of gown. ‘There comes a rush and a flutter, and then A came from her lips. She stir- | against n. She had been had gone; the place where he lay seemed | disagreeable and never enough to be te- | Elegant visiting toilettes, veiled with chif- Down fly her little white doves so sweet, red; very slowly, her lids unclosed, | her gold , and it hung to the *gintamiiiar; yet, stretching out hand, | dious. fon embellished with fine lace, have ‘With their snowy wings and their crimson feet; | revealing two eyes of golden brown. as she moved in ing he could feel the wheels at his head and| “As my two sisters and I pian to be | foulard as their basis, and the tailor is “Welcome !" cries little Gustava. The brothers, each overpowered with | waves of t. Ephraim flung himself the wooden body of the vehicle over him; | either farmers or farmers’ wives, this | pressing the same all-popular material So dainty and eager they pick up the crumbs— novel and inexplicable emotions, watched | upon the ground before her, seized her he could hear, too, his brother's light of our business is most interesting. | into service for the lining of coats and But who is this through the Soorway comes? her in silence. At last, averting their | hands and pressed them to his lips. breathing overhead. As he lay there, r parents agree that they had rather | skirts of cloth and heavy Shan Smart- Little Scotch terrier, little dog Rags, : #yes each from the other's, they carried| “I love you," he stammered in broken gathering his wits for the accomplishment | see us working on a farm than going into | ly-tailored coats and skirts i Yaoksin her face, and his funny tall wags : stranger to their own wagon and re- | accents. “I love your eyes and hair of something terrible, and yet forgotten, | an office or shop, so as soon as we finish | are also being made. “Ha! Ha!" laughs little Gustave. vived her. more than my river . that lay like a leaden weight upon his | the high school we are each going to take | The foulards that appeal to the tailor Three days after she told them her| She looked at him inscrutably, her red brain, he saw a shaft of li t Diorce a course in practical farming, one of us | are those with pin spats, rings and geo- Waiting without stood sparrow and crow, story in broken English. She was of | lips parted in a thirsty smi through the east. Slowly ning remaining && home to calry on the pop- | metrical designs , but the fash- Cooling their feet in the melting snow. French parentage, she said, the wife of a| “Do you love me more than your broth- sickle of the golden moon passed into the | corn ness, so we will not only have | ionable are concen- “Won't you come in, good folk ?" she cried. Spanish settler, who had moved north | er?” she asked. sky, harried by drifting clouds. to pay for the course, but maybe | trating their attention on the softly-blend- But they were too bashful, and stayed outside, | from Texas to find gold, of which ru-| “I hate him,” Ephraim cried, vehement- i i - 1 Consciousness rushed back. Fool! To | something to makea first payment on the | ed Paisley patterns which somehow make f had spread throughout Mexico. |ly. “All my life I have hated him, for he lie there drunken when there was work | farm.” So thelast abe threw. anid knslt on the mat has always followed me like a shadow. to be done. Three times his brother had ———— . . e sure. But—what was it —— Aid Jt OCheE Sure 10 £6 vpn hse dove | handed, had carried on a running fight | now he stands between you and me, and about Beulah? With the thought a mad | Comets, (the name “comet” is derived | foulards are simply exquisite. My merry little Gustava 1” | they } ant You the fo nok for rt Bn vey Jam 8 5 oa ing hit) ae a Sona Jo Paisley pu m ve same as ours. ot! ts away. Fear- n wholly differen mousselines Kitty and terrier, biddy and doves, weuld have been massacred ; as it ne . gud chiflons, of JE hi i si1 £is : g : : i 5 g § on Come with me. Leave him under the fully he his hand to his heart; | others known, and, in some points, are | and some delectable toilettes are 5 All things harmless Gustava loves, had eluded them, riding by n sands, to guard our treasure store, and thank ! There, stirring softly to the | enveloped in mysteries that science has “The shy, kind creatures "tis joy to feed, jut ling bv day within the hollows of | we will go south together to Texas; we rhythm of its pulsing, was his little friend | yet to penetrate. And, O ! her breakfast is sweet indeed the hills, unti they Jost their way. Their | will carve out a kingdom there, and you | his knife. He drew it forth, kissed it,| It has been affirmed that the heavenly To happy little Gustava ! food became usted, her husband | shall be my queen.” | and pricked his thumb with the sharp is as full of comets as the sea is of | designs are fresher. ~——Saint Nicholas. | wandered away in his delirium and must Wat will Yea dotolim7 she whisper - , edge of it. Then, nerving himself to his Orig the test of these, how have petished. A - pressing in red mouth to his and deed, Re crept hosel ces) toward the | ever, are ble e se of a stupor knew no more until | then rawing it. | wagon and pul ide canvas cov- giod These easily vi ones rthest indergartens sho svi instituted for the missi TE MH ie anaried. LN rfully, hearing hi 0 ele SOT ne, Sno a ll be en I next ‘sum a was institu or m “To-night?" i e ea , i is broth- ree parts— : “It is there !"” said Ephraim, rising by | man, but no trace of him could be f “With my knife, while he sleeps,” he | er's light breathing, So mly he lay, the nucleus, the coma and the tail: The ie Boston promuan will Se i charge. and Pointing west over the | It was determined that the woman should | hissed; and saw her white teeth gleam. | 50 gently be slept, it might have been a |nucleus is the t, starlike tip ; the |; Bae Lasley, f has been share their fortunes, keep camp and cook | “Ah! but it has failed you twice." she | girl that respired evenly before him in- | coma as a bit of luminous vapor A ore will take almost ten for them, finally returning east, whence | said. | stead of Caleb. He saw the dim outline | surrounding the nucleus; while the tail TA » take ship shortly she could take ship for Spanish America. | “Because he looks at me. Idare not of the figure under the blankets. He |trails away from the coma, always in a | Ui" Poston for Bt Johns, and from there ! washing | face his eyes. If he should stand up de- | veiled his face with his arm; he poised | direction away from the sun, and gradu- | {77 Procect on another vessel to Battle low hills, which emerged | out the sand in their assaying- the | fenceless, looking at me, I should fall at | the knife; forone short second he held gly fades away into the sky, like long | per en or BC touch Commane brothers soon came upon Then | his feet. And he never sleeps. His eyes | it aloft, weighing his doubts and scatter- | hair blown out in the wind. GY irs) bu ou, louh YEA Sivikza. a Joa iy Toi neh YY Shaws phrai I will h I Te ee nd Sst ta |, oe 2 ki Be poi? tle Harbor Mi ey wh t was \ m. Iwi im : then, bereft of | inous Heads ‘under the yokes, Bk) | inccmpic, Mario. Dope Tan ibe athe, | WI ak oe eh. ET Fae re DE oa can a or 2 ay saan Sd ind wo St. Ahthony, 3d there ort. had | and still they labored on, amassing_their | ingly. Do not sleep; and when the moon | his arm wearied and the inanimate thing | through it with telescopes. ‘The | Vill establish, among the half-wi ow | golden hoard, which was soon sufficient | shines through the back of the wagon | had long since ceased to writhe and great come: uf J was computed by 8 stock them farms in the best sections | crawl up, cover your eyes, and strike hard | out its life beneath him. Then he flung | Sir hen , and swiftly." the red reeking blade away and sprang to Cambridge. Later in the day Caleb returned, drag the ground. the temperature of red hot iron—a tem- . He Four Juek in shooting. and only a few ging with him a buffalo shoulder At that moment a moonbeam, filtering | perature sufficient to turn to gas any p— and 2 havi ob powder remained. ed fiediy at Epheai, and, with gh ough the clouds, pointed straight as a | substance known to man Leng ago the wise woman learned that . | pressed began to cut thin 0 at the dead. barely food enough to take us De ., t was the woman's face, framed in its | raw material from which the planets were | And of all the ge ; Carolinas Our oxen are fat at evening their long silence was | hideous gold, no longer beautiful, but like | made, and to have wandered through |can equal the dresses a woman wears roken. a devil's in its i A well-thumbed book. It was | return next year. What will be the use They were sitting beside the pool, still | Ephraim ? wal of each other, alert as cats, with | throa : : § £ F 2 BY SANDS OF GOLD. g ( i ! 4 of gs £8 * 5% I i I | 3 GE ; ! i 2 111 iy 2 g : i E5 i i ged ir £7 i bi Zs g : 3 7 g : 3 : E g 5 : i i i n ! £ : : : 3 g f f EEpERE hips | 5 LE z =f 5% 4 g £2, s8 E i & pulling at his | system. One by one they are attracted| Do you i t. ly he began to shriek. toward the sun. Revol around the | are you wil to work yourself to always he ." | taut muscles and tense nerves. They | “Caleb! Caleb!” he screamed. sun in a curved path, r momentum it its ? ; labored on at | rose and walked side by side up the steep | He was as a child awakened from some | carries them again into space, whence cl which you wear in the morning Che date upon the title page | his brother's side. The next day they |bank. Then Caleb turned, faced Eph- | intolerable dream. Out of the darkness | they may not return to encircle the sun | when youare busy about the home duties, was 1632 ; the volume had been found | killed one of their oxen; afterward |raim, and said: he saw Caleb hestening toward him, He [for years. Sometimes the influence of | indicate these characteristics of yours the Great Desert, between the hands | another. y shall Yoke up tise oxen. ut dawn and | threw himself at his feet. some of the planets may so attract the | most plainly. Today there is no excuse v . You are mad, raim: “Kill me, for Beulah’s sake and yours,” | comet that, instead of its path being a | for a woman not to look neatly and taste- skeleton horse. except at night, when they drank heavily. | I have known it a long time. gold | he cried. "I tried to murder you while | “closed” curve or “eclipse” (which, you | fully dressed in the morning. There are Eph ] tched you. If you stay here we ! you t and I have killed her instead.” know, is a kind of elongated circle), al- | so many materials for her to choose from Il divide our dust food and I will| But b's arms were around him, and | lowing it to make its regular trips around | which launder to perfection and wear ; v i him to his breaat and wept | the sun over and over again, it is made | well, too. And there are so many ey f oxen. Choose; will you remain or come | over him. to leave its closed path, or orbit, and is | specially created for clothes for Seminoles, until they reached the Desert | They could not cease; they knew that | with us?” “She told me to stab you to the heart | forced into a different path after going | wear that she need have no difficulty suit- where nothing lives, and thence on to the | there was none of the old love between| “‘Us’'?" snarled Ephraim, and flung | while you were sleeping so that we might | around the sun, and driven off into |ing her own individual preference. Tobacco River, which never runs dry, | them; and, staring at each other dubious- | himself at his s throat. divide your gold,” said Ephraim. “I was | space, absolutely never to return. The i, od for morning wear are except toward the end of the rainless | |y, they would remain long absorbed in [ Caleb red under the impetus of | bewitched by her. But for God's mercy | opposite thing sometimes happens, that | quite as much the vogue as the one-piece Then, if one shall dig silent speculation, unable to understand | the attack. he grappled with his | in misdi my drunken footsteps, 1|is to say, a comet that is traveling a nt Many of them, however, have the the sands between he youls, he will find | what had befallen them. Then they would | brother with scarcely less fury. They | should ey am path that would naturally send it off into | princesse effect, though they consist of a old, But they met fair women there, of | seize their spades and renew their work | had been bathing, and their hunting-knives | “She asked me to kill you,” said Caleb. | space forever, after going around the belt made of ribbon or elastic n, who besought them that | feverishly against the declining sun, two | lay with their pans some distance away, | "That was why I watched you. We were | sun, may be so influenced by the at- in a contrasting shade from the they renounce the debonair Sav- | black and lonely figures in that immensity | but neither sought for his. They tore at | both mad, Ephraim. Do you remember | traction of planets that its orbit, or path, good style as it used jour, and so they would show them |of land and sky. a nnensity each other like wild beasts, striving to ' what you read to me that day about the | becomes a closed path or eclipse, and so rtwaist suit the wealth in great quantities as t ran. |as if by a simultaneous impulse, each | rend the flesh from the throat and reach | devils of the stream? Now I know what | causes the comet to at regular and, | 1 ! 5% i ; g g 1 : § 3 : i : : i t i i i 3 £ z i 2 fi i : i i jit ig som all Christian captives of So and | would throw down his spade and gather | the channels of the blood beneath: : they were. She is one of them, and she | intervals of many years, for its excursion Some, then, remained ; but the | up his pan, and they would go up to the | growling incoherently, they rocked back- | has lain in the sands waiting for us per- | to the sun, around it and back. : rest, escaping by night secretly, bore wit- | wagon, where the woman, as t as|ward and forward, fighting with limbs | haps a thousand years. The wanted our | (ne of the most remarkable periodic ness to what they had seen. o i : a blood | souls.” comets we are acquainted with, and the “That is the Tobacco River,” said| Under the enormous moon, which filled | spurted from deep furrows in their necks | “If we had killed each other we should Sly ne visible to the unaided is Es Te Tore waa ried an | Jie 1and with 3 cold fight, they would |and faces apd oe A and- | play , At round abd | dering. “It was the gold in this accursed eastern morning sky tter of Carolina tobacco, and lit it with a | for the game; afterward, by a muttered seeping into the And, suddenly, | land clogged hearts. pat of Apel ahd Surly May, sting the had saved, shielding the flame | understanding, for stakes of dust. But |in the midst of it, both became aware of | Let us leave it and escape to freedom. | Sun on May 19. Je may im seen in Youbalises if those devils ?” he | lives had always been singularly even,and ing upon im curiously. . ing Ephraim cu i there was no change now. Perhaps was as For Mooction Fp bei Me JE Sern Sri ip -four now and Beulah is twenty, | his feet and struck at fave i mani Pai " he Blow. Cale man, glanci his brother's arm affec- | slit vs for ny = sake that you | raim’s hand. h is we gave up | silence fi ought farms in ey wel lo : in Tennessee, where they | away and cra for a few pence the | the where he o ii " 9 £ | i § TB hE i | g HH Baa:f gids f : z i 2 2 : : : E E gE E : : g i : z g : : : E i ihe g i : i IH HEH i § | 3E sgl ih i: | : ; 3 | : i : g i if i BE i a 5 i i jit BEd i g8i i | i i i: i F i F gs g J i f i 553 ft; $ ah Ha she g i i i | : iE = is fe "i 8 i BE ; i i g £ g i : : i i i +} : | 1 g i B | 2 i 7 ¥ i | i Fi its reappearance on |}! " bo My I This comet has since been known by his name, and rn Tegulasly appears about on time, but 4s it requires about seventy-six years to com- $100 a Month Popcorn. its orbit, very few of us will see it f 2 E § g : i S& 38 H g i 4 738 g A £3 22 4 55d ¥ £ it ik 5 i i i i £ : it : £5 3 fi Ed i 3 i i 258 # i i I Pe ] 32 : g 8 : i Hs B53 f i I : i g € | % : g : i : i H, i Z z fi A It 1 oi § i ? : : i : : g ji i : : g g oh E i 7 : i i bs 5 ; g £ ; BE i | : : RE ! § : ; & i : | i f : z ; : : 3 : E : i 8g : ; 4 i 3! i ; g i : 5 8 : 2 { oh g g : 27 £ g= fi 2 £ i : z 3 + : 3 5 xg; i a Ee -3 : | : 3 £ : : oh i : : 58 £3 § E : : t & . Er i i § i g i i ig gg g i iF £ j : 5 £ z& Es 1 i! ie i 1] § 2 8 § 2 | E my 8 : : g i g E F £ E It big £8 1] i in if 4 i 3 h it g : z | : j : ; £ | Tt 8 gi 1 | is 2 i § if : § { : g g it ty i 85 i: | i ) i ! hi gE ; 3 g 2 g 8 § 2 : ®| E fe FE g 3 i § H il i Sg i i % £8 i i E £ i Es 2 ot i F y g E g I endless ature and Science” in June St. : g i IH How a Famous Hymn was Written. Fruit Punch.—Peel a pineapple and : ji the . ; then appeared clumps of thickets | brother stood up to follow; then, turn- e land, between the dry | ing, he saw that a rattlesnake lay, ready of little _ Finally the vo itor Sy where he had been. _ Caleb look. sand, still sharply scarred with the im- ing, press of the of the buffaloherd that | Another time, when Caleb was cleaning his musket, having first made sure that 238828 § § g ! i | : As Tenn 's nurse was sitti one gay at his ide, sharing to a egree ra ou have writtena t man; sir, but I have never a iy that there is a hymn among them all. I wish, sir, you would write a hymn while oh fy 2% F | gE : : 1 g | : : : ; : : : : z g : FE § A F i : #8 g 5 2 3 i 1562 3 | if } ; i : Biss : : z 5 i i : | { : | ELL i 5 £3 TF : : : : 7% g E 8 5 g E E 2 3 i § x 11 { ; : { H H : : i 2h i g g g : fs 2H 8 i i : g : 8 | ! Hi i R iy i | : 25 : | | : i i i : i : h i | s : i g : 3 § : : g i : ? 7 E red Les ih ; 1] ii H Fa if | : Hl il Fike Eis is i di ni I: iH ikon tic i i's {pe E fhe Ji if a £ 8 = els be pill i is I i ize! 1 was ome, the ~—An advertisement in the WATCH- one hundred yards from | gone; they dared not kill another of their | let us drink to it." ¢ “The year of our start we bought ail | MAN always pays. = : : y ht ig fi gE : i §
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