Bellefonte, Pa., December 9, 1910. 1h A WORD OF APPROVAL. Give me a word of approval. I've tried to be good and true. I am weary and sick of heart critics do. I've given my life for others, have always opnos- ed the wrong: | I've tried to lift up the fallen, | have cheered the | jostling throng. i Give me a word of approval, ere the setting of the sun. 1 have a sort of misgiving that my race is nearly | run; i Have felt the spirit of kindness and the thrill of glowing truth And love the good old honest way as I loved it in my youth. Give me a word of approval as my mother used to give When I was a bitof a boy just learning the way to live. My soul responds as readily to sweet words in kindness said As in early childhood days, to the prayer beside my bed. Give me a word of approval, for my eyes are | at the way my | For the way ismuch rougher now and I'm not so fleet of limb As in the hopeful boyhood days when I cleared the vaulting pole, For Iam in the final race with my eye upon the goal. Give me a word of approval: it may be the last to me, For the winter days are coming: the frost is strip- ping the tree And the chilly winds are blowing; the coms ripe in the ear: 1 await the house of quiet and the crossing must be near. D. A. Watters. AT THE FOOT OF THE MONUMENT. The worm of time has long been gnaw- ing at the names chiselled into the noble monument that stands before the ruined battlements of Trinidad da Granada. Time and weather have eaten little by little into the Andean stone, so that the record seems scarcely destined to outlast memory of those who are com- memorated there. Yet, when I mounted the crumbling steps I could decipher let- ters names, from El General g £ his captains, which began 3 no Fer. . i. a and ended with Juan Vidal y Vorres, still ble above the red-flow- ering creeper t clambers round the Trinidad was a proud when Drake sailed north to po she is al- ao and Val, 4 g i I: Fe be gs i: g | E 2k i it i zi i 4 | : g I gr is i : : 1H E52 H gE 7 ik 35 giE : 8 : & Ss ] EF g g : g § z I i g i : 2 2 s §L e i 7k Be 28 di Es Esk Ee i 51 i FE g chit creeper cover it. Higher than this it never climbs, but points its red trumpets at it, that all may read.” “Whose is the tomb?” | asked. “Here the rebels assaulted,” he con- tinue, leading me to a great mound from which wins ocks of masonry extruded. breach made, and so this that my father told living whe Jesus how much except parrot there, almost forgotten, it happened so long Ah, the tomb? Let his Excellency have patience, and I will tell him of the dead nun, whose lover went down into hell for her, and, having gained her, turned aside three times lost her.” I drew a Mexican dollar from By fucks | only makes your final | and laced which closed man began it in the claw-like "You must cast your mind back,Senor,” he said, “to the days when Trinidad da Granada was very different from what she is now. Then she wasone of Spain's : on it tightly. Then the old | officers —— ARR — 1 1 the Sigates $f Spal Jie fathoms deep be- thie had gained the onpily street that locks THE MYSTERY. neath the tides of Panama A FEE, the convent. ih Bursting Beart | — The Captain read laughed. ° drove steps toward gate. And, | When the ages of earth shall be ended lie, he answered, and drove the emissary | even as he pressed the lowest of the stairs, | And we from time's limits are free: I Lipid omg ny ie Su we § How wandrously all will be blended, the attack became relentless, and | among the nuns, clad in the novitiate’s!| we shall in eternity see. Was worse by far than. either. nunger or | ig 4nd Prone: her eves velscd heaven. | Why. often, the plessure we ofr was worse ar unger or i er eyes ven- | . , dread of . But still none spoke of | ward, | ,Becomesonly bitterest pain; surrender, there were no traitors “Thus, Senor, Fortune disclosed her. | And our effortsat doing our duty among that garrison, Senor—notone. | self. Here ends my father’s tale. He Are sooften blind and in vain. “Then came an emissary again; no com- | who had betrayed in to win what was | why the happy and useful are taken g y an y pDY mon soldier on this occasion, but none to be denied him, thinking himself exe- From their fields of usefulness here: other than the rebel leader himself, but | crated of all men, remained bereft of what while the sad and wemy still linger stripped of epaulets. And he spoke se- | he coveted and honored above all those In this vale to them 50 drear. cretly in the Captain's ear. whom he had cast into death's jaws. bh ; “ “Why do you fight hopelessly and | Afterward, when his past life had become Why the things which we seek are denicd us, fling your lives away?" he whi | remote and alien, he grew glad that hon- And the cares we seek not are ours, “Trinidad must fall, and your resistance | or remained by him and all his house, and | And the sunshine we fain would bask in more - | he came to believe that he it was, in- as you. paused here and scanned the Ca tain's face craftily. He had not A faces of men. One glance was all he ery, and in his first battle he turned cow- chief cities in the New World, and a stout fortress. But presently her ity prosper departed, for the whole land was at war, | from Mexico southward to the cold plains, | ple and Bolivar was wresting, one by one, n's fairest provinces away from her. et all derided him in Trinidad, for we knew that the sea was ours, and even Bolivar himself covid never cross the Andes to her assault. “There were rich merchants here in i i I 2 i i | | g ES i £ 4 Bs 7 § g : : 2 i "1 5 i : 55 ! 1 1 i He 1 : : sig! HE i A ii: if 4 i ER £ : ; sit : | EE i : -8 “: 2 ers remember my weary days beside him, or, he being dead, under aaule ood il the Cotivant here.’ £ + He i ; 8 & | 5 : ES 7 : ; ! g.8 i £ g dl i I i i i i 22 | 5 i h 3 : g is g FR 8 2 2E £f g g i i bi nl £ 5 gs : E i g E g 3 ¢ § Il 22 f J ! A i iE i § § i sgt i : : £ ] : ¢ i Gi : § i i 238% gf £ 1 g Ht and time, seeing that tain's company continually upon the walls, while upon him command had fallen, since the eral was incapacitated by reason of and sickness. "At first few died, for the were well guarded behind their f tions. But now came y the investment grew so close that ing could enter, and food began to Soon there were ha men enough i Bg i & 1 ¥ £ : . E 5 E 8 i gh §igies ing beneath the ground, pick strokes of their enefnice. Abia the rebel leader sent an emissary with a of truce, and he was brought to the Cap- n. . 0 | | “Before the attack ended he with-| * ‘Many a soldier fights under the Re- ward conscience drove I.im through many | publics ," he continued, ‘whom peo- lands, but he found no resting-place. sworn allegiance his bones would be whit- he had known was gone, and all that he | ening among the ant-heaps of the jungles. had loved rested at the short avenue of ! Nor need any men know. {your men to-morrow night to resist a mained in him, and the name liveson the feigned assault elsewhere, merely forsuch monument. Time cannot efface it nor ' a time as will enable us to lay our pow- creepers cover it. But the parrot remem- ‘ der-bags beneath the tower. Then strip bers.” ‘off your uniform and come tome in peas- © The bird awoke, and stretched its head ant’s guise, and you shall be conveyed to toward the old man, screeching malig- ta, where a regiment will acclaim nantly. He turned toward me. . © "A fine romance, Senor? [It warms the | "‘Wait!" muttered the Captain. and he heart as I foretold. Then the Senor will ; withdrew a short interval and sat down, pay another peseta’’—By Vicior Rous- his face between his hands. seau, in Harper's Weekly. “There, while the rebel leader fingered : his sword-hilt and smiled cunningly, he Raisin Bread as a Food. fought his battle out. For high command f——— he cared nothing. But he knew that, for The raisin grape is perhaps the most good or evil, the Senora Mendoza would popular variety with the growers in Cali- prove as clay between his palms, that he fornia, says the San Di co ent model her to his desires. And of the New York Sun. gra Laing: thi a full grave, white for a space trays upon the ground a beside the sea, then hidden beneath the the curing process goes on. round, weeds. At last he arose. full grape dries and shrivels and the “I will only ask this,’ he cried. ‘That. green, fresh stem withers and contracts whether you succeed or fail, or whether | until finally the grapes have ceased to ex- I live or die, henceforward I am forgot- | ist as in their place is a light ten, and my name shall never your . brownish bunch of capsules filled with a lips unless I come to you for the fulfill: | pulp many times sweeter than the origi- { ment of your promise.’ nal grape, the goodness and richness of | “The envoy swore, and wentaway. On the grape having been concentrated by the next afternoon a strong assault was , the sun’s rays and its sweetnes increased. made against a distant tower, and thither Before California learned the value of the Captain hastened with all his com- | the irrigating ditch and began to plant pany, who followed him, no word Spon grapes and cure raisins the United States their lips, nor any doubt questioning th- got its raisins from Spain and paid a fair- in their hearts. And there he fought till | ly good price for them. In course of time darkness, alone exposed above the but- | native raisins began to creep into the tresses, while bullets streamed Jet and | market and make their way into the fav- overhead, and left him unscathed. So! or of the public. then he knew that fate had resolved the | Of all the dried fruits none perhaps issue. equals the raisin in food value and ease digestion, and containing but 13 per drew and crept through the deserted | cent. of moisture and the balance almost streets under cover of twilight, and hid | wholly grape sugar (carbohydrates) it is himself in a small, empty house which he | on a par with the grape the dried fig had noted. He stri off his uniform | as an energy producer in the system, fig- dressed himself in | uring up over 1,200 units of fuel value. peasants guise, staining his face and | But the raisin grower has, because of pe- to the color of an Indian's. So he ' culiar market conditions, been forced to lurked in the shadows until he heard bu- | keep his nose to the grindstone of meagre blown and then the great noise of a | ts. the new raisins were in : shape to market the carried-over old stock ion 04 was field 4b int fron: of the grow. fer by the dealer and prices suffered. The : are laid in day after da wall. “Here, Senor, hard by this monument, the General fell, even as he hastened his sick-bed; for et i 5 i fi 2, g7 £ 7 : £ EESE : i : % i $ 22g 4 iil i Ji; ed i : i g : E : i g e 3 g I : | i : ; : : 5 i gE I g* i d 2 7 £E = g g : EE 4-83 I HH E i iH : fie i 7 :¥ ga Li eit i tf | ; | : i 7 I 2 ] i I g : i : 758 : g ft BZ E ; 1 il i i f : 33 E i : : 8 g ; f : 5 4 5 g i ; i g ; “ Hi i | | i & ; upon raisin bread made from a r rich in gluten. A laborer could per- form the ha on raisin bread 2 2 12 =< iE HE i | : iz 3 fv ——She (with newspaper)--"It says here that the ordinary housefly lays twenty thousand eggs in one season.” “He—*"Great Peter! Why don't they graft the housefly on the barnyard hen? g Et i { : : | g i | i— ate. And Bolivar has need of such brave deed, that died under the tower; for the : man had died more certainly than all his | company, and what remained was but the | t sepulchre of his remembrances. They | his way from Panama southward during | say that he went north to fight under Bol- ; five years of war without learning toread ! ivar. But courage endures not treach-' needed, and he pressed home his assault. ard and slunk out of the field. After- mourn in Spain. But had he net Years later, when he crept back, :)! that’ Only draw off tombs. But while she lived her pride re- ! bunches of ! kind of muscular work | has alone. Is so often hidden by showers. The Infinite Wisdom, controlling The mysteries through which we live, Knowth best the right way to lead us To offer the best we can give. Life, with its many illusions And the mystery of them ail, We shall know when the ages have vanished And time is beyond rec. 1, M. V. THOMAS, How Expert Farmers Are Made JTowa’s Small Boys. of Out in the State of lowa, where the flower of the Nation's great farming land lies, they have found a way to check the : tide, which, ever since the days following ! the Civil war, has been carrying the farm- | ers’ boys away from the soil and into the : cities and towns, there to grow up among ' the marts of trade far removed from the fields their forefathers tilled. The method used in the accomplish- I ment of that end is gradually coming ‘eastward. Already there are plans on foot in New York State to apply the meth. ! od here, and those who have looked deep- ly into the subject say there is small doubt that it will i uite as well in the East as in the Middle West. The method itself is simple enough in the telling. It is more or less than the arousing of enthusiasm in the country boy for t things which per- tain directly to farming—modern farmi —not the kind of farming their grand- ! fathers and their great-grandfathers did, but the kind of farming which pays, which places the farm upon a basis of mercantile establishment and makes of the farmer himself a keen business man, with all the acute perceptions of the city man of business. In lowa, especially some parts of it, they have the advantage of many object lessons to drive home the arguments of those upon whom the duty has devolved of arousing enthusiasm for the farmin the minds of the farmers’ sons. One does not have to travel far in certain sections to find model farms. Page county, for in- stance, is full of them. The vehicle used in arousing enthusi- asm in the sons of Jarmers is not alone a vehicle of verbal arguments. Nor is it alone the object lessons presented by those two model farms and model farm- ers. Both help it is true. another and even more important vehicle 1 i rivalry a the farmers’ sons, a rival- ry in the study of modern farming which puts them upon their nettle, drives al thought of the city from their minds and starts them along the trail of up-to-date agricuiture, which leads to success early n life. Perha, the keynote of this rivalry farmers’ lads of Iowa is to be found in the which have been fou there in recent 8” Starting with one small club in I est x: ganizations of country ve the State, have and have ~~ out I io | Ah : ged ; ie i; : 8 ; Es iz fe igfeis Ex e5g § a | time. ty intendent, is head of the club. At east she exercises a general suvervision over it. The ori ty Boys’ Agricultural Club was to encour- age the youngsters in their studies of modern farming. While its purpose is still that, the scope of the organization widened. It has come to be the po- litical “enthuser” of the farming youth of county, and, in the j nt of some of the most successful of Iowa's modern farmers, it has accomplished far mere than was ever anticipated. Regular meetings of the club are held. There are branches of the organization all in the Iowa method. It is the creation of ' boys’ tural clubs’ riginal purpose of the Page Coun- ' | most as important for the achieving of | large Yields as is the Selection of fertiliz- ers and the r rotation of crops on a certain field. There is always a State ‘trophy for the winning team of corn _ judgers from the boys’ agricultural clubs. It is usually » large silver cup or a vase, and those prizes are valued far more than their weight in gold by the winners. With such a State-wide interest among the farmers it is not strange that a keen rivalry exists among the various county clubs. To the boys that corn-judging prize is quite as important as the inter- national cup for which the yachting men contested some years ago, before Sir Thomas Lipton became tired of building cl judgi n the last corn-j ng event among the farmers’ boys of Iowa Mr. Brown played an interesting part. He wished the trophy to go to a county team. A little while before the State contest was scheduled to take place Mr. Brown sent the Page county team of three boys to the Ames Agricultural College for a short course. carried off the trophy. These lads were Edwin Sowhill, Bernard Hagglund, and Martin Johnson. The ye Jevera) Superian: 4 factors entering into t udging of corn. One is to determine just what ' kernel is best adapted for seed. It not be too flinty, nor too short. Nor should it be too round. Also the cob must ir, ge oo usually uce t grain cobs which are too small do not hold enough kernels of grain. But the P. county boys’ team knew all of that. Sy that they did was that they carried off the prize. The Rat and the Weasel. ~ Once a sawmill in a Western town was infested with rats, which, being unmolest- ed, became very numerous and bold, and Played round the mill among the men while they worked during the day. But one day there appeared upon the scene a weasel, which immediately declared war on the rodents. One by one the rats fell victims to the weasel's superior strength, until only one very large, pugnacious rat was left of the , once numerous colony. The weasel had | a go at the big rat several times, but on | each occasion the rodent proved more : than a match for his slender antagonist, i and chased the weasel to a hiding-place. Shortly thereafter the weasel was seen busily digging under a lumber pile near the mill. He was engaged for some time, but later appeared again in the mill, seek- , ing his old enemy. He soon found him, ‘and at once renewed hostilities. As usual, after a lively tussle the rat got the better of the argument, and the weasel Plysued closely by the rat, straight to the le under the limber pile. He ran in, still followed by the rat, al- fo Iumedistely feappeared the of the pile, a again godged into , the hole behind the rat. Neither was seen again for some time, but the weasel finally reappeared, looking no worse i i ' ed it as he until at the other to admit the rat, but had gradually taper- , proceeded end it barely allowed his own slender to i | sg . il z 2 2 i d i iF jt ul g | a3 iil ih 7st ¥E = i | g il fet iH 2 g | i : a 2 2 g °g i il i I ; 28 EB ; i constipated. Doctor Pierce's Pleasant . Pellets cure the causes of { and so cure billiousness, sick ! and other ailments resulting from con. stipated habit. | —1If you have a bad headache go out , upon the highway and get into a row with ' a cleverer man than yourself. In the ex- | Sitement of the fracas you may lose your ! head. Subscribe for the WATCHMAN.