Bellefonte, Pa., August 19, 1910, THE LAND OF YESTERDAY. Would you not seek the country town Amid green meadows nestled down If youcould only find the way Into the Land of Yesterday? How you would thrust the miles aside, Rush up the dear old lane, and then, Just where her roses laughed in pride. Find her among the flowers again! You'd slip in quietly and wait. Until she saw you by the gate, Andthen * * * read through a blur of tears Quick pardon for the selfish years. This time, this time, you would not wait For that brief wire that said, “Too late!”— If you could only find the way Into the Land of Yesterday. You wonder if her roses yet Lift up their heads and laugh with pride, And if her phlox and mignonette Have heart to bloom thereby their side; You wonder if the dear old lane Still chirps with robins after rain, And if the birds and banded bees Still rob her early cherry trees. You wonder if you went back now How everything wood seem, and how— But no! not now; there isno way Back to the Land of Yesterday. —Don Marquis, in Putnam's Magazine. THE DEVELOPMENT OF AUGUSTUS. Blair was the assistant Mr. Augustus the Paxson Company. It is per. Company. cause when office- suddenly peared at the side of Tie desk Augustin la Ng ne i : { g § { i : i E 3 } = g g E g H f gd 8 ft 2E8 : 3 was buil 1 ts general manager, but t your personal affairs in the city here Jade it impossible for you toleave at that me.” “Yes, sir,” said Augustus, and he blush- ed a little. “When we built our mill on ht Note e we again offered you a on as mill manager and again you pleaded your inability to get away.” And as for the assistant secretary of Paper Company, he blushed a “We sent Drake up to run that Canada mill, and he can’t keep it running up to its capacity because of the difficulty in ting labor. There are plenty of French nadians up there, but first they work a week and then lay off for two weeks, and instead of turning out one hundred tons of ‘news’ a day they are making less than fifty. Drake writes that he is hopeless— that he has tried eyorything he knows. He wants us to send him two hundred men from the States so he can d d on them. If we did that we would have to build houses and furnish them. We might very well get into trouble with the Canada government, too, to say nothing of the time it would take. SoI'm going to send you up there, Blair. You under- stand?” ga = “Yes, sir.” said poor Augustus. “You know how to talk to those people in their own language; Drake doesn’t. I leave to-morrow to make a tour of our es. I shall arrive at the Notre emill in a month, and when I get there I expect to find it on full time. Do anything you want, and spend anything u want. Build a gymnasium or shower- ths or—or anythi You have the fullest authority, and I expect you to act upon your own initiative entirely.” He drew a letter-head from his drawer and wrote: “Mr. Augustus Blair has full authority in the matter of keeping the Notre Dame mill on full time. “Any instructions that he may give are to be followed without question. SiLAs J. Paxson.” “You will start at once,” said he. “Yes, sir;"” said Augustus. But he spoke without enthusiasm and as one who is resigned to his fate. “Or, as you may have some important matters to finish up, let us say to-mor- row.” “Yes, sir!" said Augustus. And this time he spoke with an enthusi- asm that was almost infectious, and he hurried back to his desk and took up in his interrupted work on those . ines 10 K.1L.C” lhe ale of a hasty poet who is not only ng against time, but against tempo as well. “I'll tell you the trouble, Blair,” said the Mr. Drake. “There ere, but they won't work and that’s all there is to it. “I see,” said Augustus. come till the money's gone, don’t care much whether come nek then.” they it g ET PE g # ! sf : ? fi £ i 3 4 if 3 : ? 3d will 1.” i M'sieur.” i plexioned cavalier was wheeling rolls of paper on and off | we ?" said Augustus. r name i TI" | do you work?” to buy “He was a “Something of a shame!” fy... its Soulething of a shame to at ”» For a ne Mr. Drake couldn't | Mere Thery was knitting a pair of woolen stockings when A Suzanne, Celeste, and Louise-~were mak- | ing butter under their mother’s directions. Suzanne was sixteen and had brown eyes. Celeste was seventeen and had a figure like Diana. Louise was nineteen and was blessed with blue eyes, a pug nose, and a complexion like lillies and “It is evident,” said Augustus,” that I have come to the right place." “And why, M'sieur?” asked Mere Thery, answering his smile. ¢ use I am a poet, and a poet al- ways needs his inspiration. These are Madame's daughters? I could tell it from looking at Madame.” She told him their names and they curtsied in simple fashion, but Augustus saw that their eyes were fastened on the brocade of his waistcoat and the weave of his silk cravat. “Suzanne,” he said, “I shall write you a ballad. For Celeste I shall write a Bunting song. For Louise I shall write a chanson. We will sing it together, and when I return home I will sing it to my friends and tell them all about Suzanne and Celeste and Louise and make them insanely jealous!” “M’sieur is from Quebec?” asked Mere. “From New York.” “Mon Dieu, M’sieur! Tell us about NT York! id A filled | “lit is” ugustus, “a city with beautiful ladies. I will not say that they are more beautiful than those of Notre Dame, but their dresses—ah, their it might bore you. They have horseless wagons—" “No, no; tell us about their dresses, M'sieur!” “They have, then,” said Augustus, grand feathers on their hats—feathers of the ostrich. White they are, and lavender and blue and other colors to match the dresses that are worn with them. Suzanne would look magnificent with Apreal black feather swaying in her hat. t is your favorite color,Celeste?” al is blue, NM slour.” feel t “Then two large sweeping plumes o blue would most become you, and for Louise I would select a white and a charming shade of pink. Their dresses,” continued A “are of silk and are trimmed wi ornaments, particularly with gold braid at the present time. Their stockingsare of silk and their little wish you could see them!" And it is difficult to say who looked at him the most intently, Mlle. Suzanne, Mile. Celeste, Mlle. Louise, or Madame Thery herself. “But 300) You it able to fee do yourselves,” ugustus at last, * this afternoon I leave for New York, and when I return I shall have a very beauti- ful lady with me. It is on that matter that I have called to see Madame. They say that sometimes Madame has a room or two to spare. Could she let me have two rooms upon my return?” Mo hl impose Va Cari m ‘welcome, Mlle. Mile. elests, Mile. Louise, or Madame “And Madame will have them aired snd 8 great fire burning if the day is With what assuredness! “And I wish you'd have the show-win- dows of the company’s store cleaned out while I am away,” said to the more than ever Mr. Drake. prea shame to it, isn’t it?” asked embittered general manager. “What's a shame?” “Why, tc do anything to make them “Drake, old man,” said slow- assure you that I never felt more ly, “© guilty in all my | Besides, Mr. Paxson there is a dance : said ugustus rapped upon the door. Her three daughters— ly dresses! I will not describe them because | the a = window ooking over the great city that softly around her. It was here that Augustus situation, and could do it just like kindly give me room enough ' such a carte blanche as Mr. | with. | he may gi : Why, Kit, it wouldn't hap- i out question. this way again in B dndreq Yeors “ said Katherine, thought- fully, “if you were to give me instruc- | tions—" “That's it!" cried Augustus; "Ido! I instruct you to do this! “Then, of course, I couldn't { n to do | it," said Katherine. “I should like to see | myself!" : “Any one would like to see you, dear. i ve me to under- stand that I stand or fall by this. I have | he added, | is | ie to show what I am worth, but in order to do | but if I cannot ; have your help until I have shown my | worth—dear me! Katherine!" “Augustus!" i | “Why won't you go?” ! “I haven't said 1 Bona, have I? But Lent Sink you have pleaded enough; u “ a you will Jove te Das, too," ugustus, cunn eading. “Who are the Therysi~ 8 a man, and like a queen. has flashing eyes." | ‘They seem te be rather accomplished | - ise. She has tha . e that sau you know. Dear Katherine! i” “Of course I would have to get a whole lot of things—" “Katherine!” “And it is romantic—rather.” “Katherine!” She turned to him—a little unsteadily ! per! nd though her head was bend- ed low, she held him very ti htly to her. love you,” she trembled, raising her face at last. | “I love you,” repeated Augustus, sober- | “Now and always.” “Now and always." “Until death do us part.” “Until death—do us part.” A bright fire was burning in Madame Thery’s spare room, but brighter yet was the fire that burned in the eyes of Mes- demoiselles Suzanne, Celeste, and Louise as they helped Katherine unpack the six great trunks that had accompanied her to Notre Dame. “Regardes-tu les bas de soie!” exclaim- | ed Suzanne in an undertone to Celeste. “Do you like them?” asked Katherine. She pulled one of them over her long | white arm. Of a ravishing design they were—these bas de soie—and ravishing were the cries of delight of the three Mesdemoiselles. “And the shoes!” cried Celeste. There were slippers of blue and of bronze and the darkest of green—there were slippers of kid and patent leather and suede—exquisite little shoes with the most coquettish little toes and heels imaginable. “These,” said Katherine, picking up a pair of the blues, "are for dances and parties. Do you ever go to | Sarces Celeste? Would you like to wear | them?" | “There is,” said Celeste, breathlessly, - dance—tomorrow night—at St. Quen- n—" i: “I must find, then, for you," said Kath- erine, “that blue silk dress with the blue Silke lace, and Celeste shall be the belle of Deep sighs burst from the breast of Milles. Suzanne and Louise as the blue silk dress was unwrapped from the tissue paper. “We will “and see wha joy. with pleasure when the blue silk was fitted on her, and two pink Spots sudden ly appeared on Suzanne's when she saw the white net dress with es. | ii : £ ft i § 8 g 3 iF Jeist g¥e E E 7 g i ? : : g i £ i : i : i gs ; it g j z f | i ; : E § made, | ture? Back to 8 Con igh re | the hardest post you can i they found Augustus trimming the window with rolls of silks and satins. “Tomorrow,” said Mr. Drake to Au- as they walked from the store to | the mill a fortnight later, “our esteemed president,” said Augus- tus, “will find his mill running on full time.” Madame Disiere aproached on the other side of the street. t00, wore a new hat, and in her hand she carried a new hand-bag. She met Madame Barthou chatted for a moment, studying each ot As she talked buttoning her swung her little hand-bag to and fro. “Full time and running over,” said Mr. Drake. “We turned out one hundred and twelve tons of ‘news’ yesterday, and that, il hou fi I wish to say, is going some. ademoiselle Dupont smiled at them as they passed. Mademoiselle was dress- ed in a new plaid gown with gold buttons. Her shoes were the work of the local cob- bler and she tried to hide them with her dress. “Do you notice,” said Augustus, “that there is not a man in sight?’ Three little gitle walked past. One wore 2 scarlet silk hzir-ribbon and the other two were devouring it with hungry “A good reason why,” said Mr. Drake; They turned in at the mill. Drake en- tered the office, but Augustus went to the finishing room and smiled pleasantly at n. “At work again, Leon?” he asked. "At work again, M'sieur. “There are no dances this week?” “It is ek that, Meier, ou I need the money—ah, so m money!” » why do you need so much money, I need new clothes, M'sieur, and shirts with collars and those neckties of red. My Marie wishes that I have new clothes to dance with her when she wears her een said 4 "And you, Jules,” ugustus, stop- ping in the grinding-room by the side of the ueeyed giant, “you are still at wor “Yes, M'sieur.” "And your new gun—you have not used ijt?’ “I have not bought it.” “And why have you not bought it, Jules?” “It is my wife, M'sieur—my Jeannette. She a new cape and a new dress." “But it is a pleasant day in the woods, Jules, and the salmon, I hear, are leaping in the falls.” “Ah!” sighed Jules. He looked out of the window and over the woods. “But not today, M'sieur," he sighed again. “Nor ever again, I fear,” thought Au. gustus, sadly. He watched the pensive giant at the grindstone. “I wonder—" said Jules, hesitating. A tus waited. ‘ “—if tonight—" “Yes, Jules?” “I wonder if tonight I might overtime, M'sieur.” Mr. Paxson had never looked so much like Santa Claus as on the next day when he listened to his assistant secretary's re- | “they're all at work.” “So you woke them up, Blair, did you?” “Yes, sir,” said Augustus. He walked to the window and looked over to where St. Quentin’s snowy top stood out in majesty over the woods. “Introduced a few complexities into their simple life—what?” “Yes, sir,” said Augustus. “It was somewhat expensive, as my assistant had to buy a lot of things. There's a list on the desk there.” “Mmm!” read the president. “One blue silk dress, one white net ditto, one peach blossom ditto, one dozen pairs slip- pers, one travelling dress, two dozen pairs silk—Mimm!—one dozen assorted Wy one -colored velvet dress, one wine- colored ditto—trust a woman to get up a list like this—one dozen pairs shoes, one wedding-ring— Hello! One wedding-ring! What was that for?” “That,” said Augustus, “was a com- plexity that I have introduced into my own simple life.” “M: rr" uranyl “Blair, I congratulate you. It was the one thing you needed.” They shook hands with a grasp that was very near to affection. “And what are r plans for the fu- again?” “Mr. Paxson,” said Augustus, “I want the most money," he and in his heart he gently, sternl led a rhyme to death.—By George Wes. ton, in Harper's Weekly. i : 53 I 2 = ! #2 ; i g g gs iy i bt and Madame Disiere | © a anecdote of one of the poaching ancedoss of gue lost his part hecause he had grown too old to it adequa “Sad as was the pv of the committee, it was plain—and they so explained it to Mayr—that he was no longer enough for the part; that the strea with gray was no longer suited to the youthfui Jesus; that the face which had hitherto borne the lofty, almost su- perhuman expression of the Divine had now become too seamed with the fur- rows of years to show the sacredness of sorrow without its scars in one whose earthly life measured only a span of 30, s millinery intently the while. |” Madame i ears. “Mayr broke down and wept like a hild “I know,” he said, ‘that I am too old for the part; but I had so hoped that you might still have left me Christus.’ “As some compensation he was given the role of Prologist, created expressly for ind i a a Sele | later he was u t i $ but he never recovered the he vio; Christus. Three years later, when or- dered to Munich for a surgical operation, he spent his last hours before leaving home out at the theater building, alone. He never returned from Munich hospital. Into the beyond he carried the wound in his heart still unhealed.” The Judas of 1910 is now 69 years old, but he does not look, feel, or act his age. On account of his years, however, he had hardly to be chosen again; but his remarkable impersonation of the be- trayer the committee that none other than the ter Johann Z should fill the role. As Judas his personality becomes that of the JDatray. er. An American woman once me: “‘I wouldn't meet that man for any- thing! I don't ever want to see him again. That he is a ly sure. It is all so real!’ Do You Know. What the name of Ohio signifies?— ' Beautiful River. What the name of Missouri signifies?— MySay Wer f Michigan signifies? t the name o gan —Great Lake. What the mane of Florida signifies?— | Blooming. What the name of lowa signifies?— Drowsy Ones. What the name of Wisconsin signifies? —Gathering of Waters. What the name Minnesota signifies? — Cloudy Water. wat the name Oregon signifies—Wild ram. t the name of Kansas signifies?— Smoky Water. What the name of Nebraska signifies? —Water Valley. What the name of Vermont signifies? ~—Green Mountain. What the name of Kentucky signifies? —Dark and Bloody Ground. High Prices. One of these days an aviator will es- tablish a world's record by soaring six inches higher than the cost of living. There is only one thing lacking to make the summer of 1910 a lifelong memory, and that is an ice famine. While the high cost of living is not re- ceiving much public attention just at present, the man who pays the bills has not forgotten it. slanThe Covernment Somatee | that Fi one do damage to crops, ns, and other things to the amount of $100,- 000,000 a year. A Weary Celebrity. When Mrs. Roger A. Pryor was a Va., visiting authors seldom reached the beautiful university town. “Thack- eray, Dickens and Miss Martineau passed us by,” says Mrs. Pryor in her book entitled “My Day—Reminiscences of a Long Life.” But Frederika Brem- er condescended to spend a night with her compatriot, Baron Schele de Vere of the university faculty, on her way to the south. Schele de Vere invited a choice com- pany to spend the one evening Miss Bremer granted him. Her works were extremely popular with the unversity circle, and every one was on tiptoe of pleased anticipation. While the waiting company eagerly expected her the door opened—not for Miss Bremer, but for her companion, who announced: “Miss Bremer, she beg excuse. She ver’ tired and must sleep. If she come she gape in your noses.” Funerals In England. At the time of Queen Victoria's fu- neral a writer in the Undertakers' Journal complained that, while royal burals were still conducted in an im- pressive manner, a sad lack of cere- monial distinguished the funerals of the nobility. “Item after item has been abandoned, idea after idea has been dropped, each meaning a distin: t loss to our business. An undertaker in the west end, referring to the re- cent death of a noble iord, confided to me: ‘Forty years ago I buried a mem- of that family, and the funeral bill to £1,250 (£6,250). Ten years buried another, when it came over £700 ($3,500). Fifteen ago I buried a third, at a cost of but the bill for this one £75 ($375, Ig” Origin of a Famous Saying. Euclid, who is sometimes called the mathematics, taught this the famous school at Alex- Being asked one day by the Egypt (Ptolemy Soter) whether him the science in way, Euclid answered in that have been memorable ever is no royal rcad to Not many scraps of conver- sation have lived, as this reply has, for 4 later to Judas t am perfect- young woman living in Charlotteville, | mult, as he indi, : {i ® , Harry, and “Hush,” answered an egg.” y with us.” arry, "I'm laying Cleanliness of Ants. No creature is more tidy than an ant, who cannot tolerate the presence of dirt , on her body. These little creatures act. ‘ually use a number of real toilet articles in keeping themselves clean. A well- known authority says their toilet articles consist of coarse and fine-toothed combs, hair brushes, sponges, and even washes and soap. Their saliva is their liquid soap, and their soft are the gen- uine article and differ from ours mainly in that they are fastened to their legs. The ants have no set time for their toi- let operations, but stop and clean up WHeneyer they get soiled.—St. Nicholas. | Training of Dogs. | Whatever may be the merits o spirited controversy between the fish game £ommiseioners on the one many hundred owners on the hh law to restrain dogs from running large in this there are ‘' mental facts - , strong and as ineradicable as the | Keep him under close restraint and the i brute in him will be uppermost. Allow him | reasonable liberty and discipline him sen- | sibly and justly and the human in him will appear. For freedom is the soil, in which all virtues, both human and canine, thrive best.—Boston Globe. |" The poor dog, in life the irmest friend ! The first to welcome, the foremost to defend: Whose honest heart is still his master’s own, Who labors, fights, lives, breathes for him alone. Byron. Milking in Porto Rico. i An American civil ineer who had . been for some time in 0 Rico tells a | story of the way cows are milked on that lisland. The native cow is small, docile | and humble, with very little spirit. The i engineer computed that their was more | mischief in one Porto Rican goat than in | two dozen of the cows. His tale is re- | ported in the Chicago News.” | It was just as their creat-grandfathers todo. The cow was driven up to a | post, and a rope thirty feet long was used | to tie her head so that she could not move it an inch. Then each leg was { made fast to another post, and then the poor cow was so hard and fast that she | could only switch her tail and flap her j ears. When the man finally sat down to imik he used only cne hand. After observing the performance to the end I asked: “Does your cow kick?” "Not that I know of, senor,” he re- {| “Did you ever try "to milk her without | tying her up.” | ba, no!” | “Well let me try the American way on this other cow.” | The second cow was loose, and I sat ! down and milked two-handed and had | her finished in seven or eight minutes. She stood like a rock. When I had fin- | ished there were a dozen people around, | and as I handed over the pail they raised | their voices and cried out in chorus: “Ha! Isit any wonder that the Ameri- canos licked Spain! But as I passed the place again the next evening the cows were tied up as before. | Their way was a hundred years old, and i mine entirely new to them. Wedding Superstitions. Though popular superstitions may lack reason or reasonable explanation, they must have an origin, and this has formed the basis of quite an interesting book by T. Sharper a says the London Daily Mah question of the wedding sing and why it should be placed on the fourth finger of the left hand he traces back to a writer in the Britisi: Apollo (1708.) “There is nothing more in this,” it is down oat 3 t from ml to ar the left hand more convenient for such ornaments than Height, in that it is ever less employed;