Bellefonte, Pa., January, 6, 1911. A NEW YEARS WISH. A little tenderer each day To all who hold me dear; A little sweeter in my home, May I become this year. Oh, may my eyes, that plainly see My neighbor's faults, grow clear Tosins and errors in myself, As fades the passing year. As the chill winter frosts give way ‘To sunshine’s sweet appeal, May to the winter of my heart Love's gentle radiance steal. And thus upon life’s barrenness Shall flowers and fruit appear, Each season bringing heaven's giits To bless my happy year. 0 coarse but white linen sheet gapty hollow, urie’s brows drew together ina frown; he sat down on the lowest rung of the ladder and began to put on his shoes with sudden alacrity. “Little Master Max has done it!” he muttered to himself. “I wish I'd taken the gun with me upstilis last night,” a glance toward an empty space above & Shoes »8 8 mantel. being fastened with tongs of deerskin, Aurie slipped his arm into his heavy woolen jacket, donned his coonskin cap and then hurried from the house, first awakening sl Sukey and telling her to bolt bar Phe door behind him. For those were days when every precaution was necessary. Nevertheless, the scene that met the | fort. Dutch youth's eyes that morning seemed itself. Smiling in the soft, early fight, the valley lay steeped in silvery mist, and with purple haze of Indian winding river, and it was thither that Aurie wended his way. Now and then et a uti, Baws, the mink or muskrat; a pile of nibbled chi showed where beavers had been at and now and then a flutter of wi marked a wild fowl’s hasty hiding. Aurie's face grew ve. “Master Max Ea not to be so rash as to go this distance from the house!” he murmured over and over in. y a few rods away, was a puff of smoke—a loud report—and then a great bundle of bronze feathers fell fluttering near the edge of the stream, EE mos orp oi 13), boachey grasses near by, a curly, yel- low pate and a boyish face with health aad triumph. oy “Hurrah! I got a big wild turkey that time!"’ cried little Max Fonda, as he scrambled out to seize it. a the Sider) lad’s Jace ang voice were of grave pproval as he said, “Fie, Master Mas! Doss this poo feathered crea pay you for not keepi r word of honor? Did you not pis i I parents before they went away that you would not go beyond the orchard fence?” Max gave a rueful grin. “But Fritz Devendorf told me that a here . Ie got a one yesterday. It's fine For redskins as well as boys, maybe,” RA A on airs!” he 3 hat if my moth- er did tell you to see that no harm befell hurt, Sik He 2 5 i g Hl £1 gif ie # I i g3eiLE iy ge sis § F : i 283 “Aurie, what do you su ? Jean tchwork | LeaBart and Pierre en some . | the big boats carried the | pense, made its way down to the shore ngs | ed, * little lad and I crave permission he | he turned away, “you must decide what to be. : the da for the hearthstone far HH in the | = : i them gloomy. The few adjacent to tened | that the , of dusky | of strik- Ha settlers came flocking in with and 8 ie g id ii Montreal, but alas! messengers along the ers lay in ambush! So no sign of help seemed forthcomi and meanwhile winter was drawing nigh, food and ammunition were lack to, withstand a long siege, and the face of | the French commandant, Lieutenant Le- Fevre was very grave. Then, for several mornings, early, a muffled hammering was heard in one of the upper rooms of the fort, and Max, | who, after the manner of small boys gen- erally, had been prowling around, seeing what he could i soe. came rig pe who sat uge ace, ring hot lead into bullet molds, and imed: other men are building two large flat- bottomed boats, and they told me to keep my mouth shut about it and not to let even any of the Huron Indians know. It seems the fort is to be abandoned. Every- body is to slip away some dark night— that is, if the boats are finished before the river freezes up!” still veiled hill and hollow, lake and land, and though there were nights when the und gave forth the , iron ring of noonday warmth mel it. Meanwhile, work went on with the boats; soon they were in readiness, and now Lieutenant LeFevre only waited for the waning of the moon so that darkness might lend its aid to the flitting from the At last there came the night of the hazardous undertaking: Sentry and scout whispered that oe were feasting glut- tonously in the forest, and some of , filled to on, were “already slesplg trough sidewise, and then the little company in silent sus- the boats were launched as noiselessly as ble and the work of embarkation nd now it was that Aurie Van Wie plucked at the French lieutenants sleeve. “If you please, Monsieur,” he whisper- to our home. 1” exclaimed the officer. “You do not wish togo with us to Montrea?” “Twill be strange for us—we want our own home,” persisted the Dutch youth. Lieutenant LeFevre looked “Mon ami, we're running a f risk even now! But we are all together; we have weapons; we would do our best to to . But you two lads—what would you making your way alone through the forest?'’ “Monsieur, I am used to the step would Ah, the little lad, Max, is sick with long- ing for his home and his mother!” Frenchman's eyes grew moist; he, too, had a home—a home and a mother, far away in sunny France! But was no time to waste. “My lads,” Lieutenant LeFevre said, Ep is best for ves; I will not take g E 3i% hi i f° i gis § g 28 ; i g I 7 : g ti it gis : i : i : i §% i | | g i £3 55 : | g R 4 3 : : ; i i g g i i i iI | I ; i ’ i : : ig : al § 35 rE} MH & i 2 g never proceeded very woodland trail, for dusky watch- | and Fortunate it was that the autumnal | Boys’ World. t for the weak and feeble ones in our | by sudden hope that seemed to have leaped r true that | something familiar | in which they now found Thinning tree ' trunks, great open stretches beyond—a | the gleaming home candles! i hold of him in sudden ecstacy. : “Let us kneel down here and thank | God! he said, solemnly. “For listen, | Max dear, we're right here on the ‘Cl above our own valley? A half our more and we'll be home!" It was not only the cheerful gleam of | lights that brightened the valley when | the lads reached it, there was also the | sound of music and mirth, and then they : suddenly remembered that this was the | glad New Year's Eve—the time for fes-' tivity and rejoicing in every Dutch house. | hold. | Only in that of the Fondas were gloom | silence—a mourning prolonged for weeks—ever since the day the two lads | had disappeared. Can you imagine the | joy awakened by their return? Then a couple of hours later, after the excitement was over, and the neighbors who had hurried in with their gifts and’ their congratulations had gone, after the | New Year's cakes had been eaten, and! many other things, too—for the greater | 2 Dutchman's emotion is, the more hun- gry He beco Frau Fonda came | softly into the room where Aurie and | Max were snuggled down—oh, so com- fortably!-—in the big feather bed, and, after a caressing touch on each boyish | forehead, she said tenderly to Aurie; : “Dear lad, my husband and 1 have been talking it over—your faithfulness to our little Max, your bravery, your pa- tience, your courage! They must have | their reward. So you are no longer to be our bond-servant! Henceforth you are to be as our own son!” And this was the gitt of the New Year | to brave, plucky Aurie Van Wie!"—The . | Four-tooted Criminals. { Authorities seem to be agreed that crime is to be found among the lower animals as among human beings, there are evidently, in the lower orders | of creation, individuals which, like men, seem incapable of living and satisfying | their wants without doing harm to their | fellows. Lombroso and his disciples have | even gone so far as to assert that almost | every variety of human wrongdoing finds | its counterpart in the crimes committed | by animals. ! We constantly find among bees cases | of theft. These thieves of the hive, in | order to save themselves the trouble of | working, attack the workers in masses, kill them, rob the hives, and carry off the booty. Then, having scquired a taste Jor robbery ce, they form regular! colonies of bandit bees. Curiously enough, it has been ascer- tained that these little enemies to law and order may be artificially produced by | the simple process of giving working bees | a mixture of honey and brandy to drink. | and irritable and, | after a short course of the mixture, become hungry, they attack and plunder | the well supplied hives. ,| Owners of doves assert thatin almost every dove-cote there are birds that try | to obtain material for their nests ab- stracting straws that have been collected others. These amiable thieves are not only lazy, but untrustworthy as well. Murder is not uncommon among ani- | mals, murder in this case hi the term | surgeon tha ment of cavalry one may find horses which rebel against discipline, and let no escape them of doing harm to man or to their fellows. In dealing with these horses, it is always necessary to be on one’s guard, and it is often imperative to separate them from the others in the stable, as they try to steal their companions’ food. What is still more curious is that their skulls have an abnormal formation, the foreheads being narrow and retreating. WHEN TO MARRY. Marry when the year is new. Always loving, kind and true. When February birds do mate, You may wed, nor dread your fate. If you wed when March winds blow, Joy and sorrow both you'll know. Marry in April when you can, Joy for maiden and for man. Marry inthe month of May, You will surely rue the day. Marry when June roses blow, Over land and sea you'll go, Those who in July do wed Must labor always for their bread. Whoever wed in August be, Many a changé are sure to see, Marry in September's shine, Your living will be rich and fine. If in October you do marry, Love will come, but riches tarry. If you wed in bleak November, Only joy will come, remember, ‘When December snows fall fast, Marry, and true love will last, Home Notes. Your Opportunity. Persons suffering from chronic forms poy Hwited © consult Dr Pierce has for more than pany years been chief consulting the In. valids’ Hotel and Institute, Buf- fa Nt bY néatly a score of wi, Shida & thousands of jeises Of diseuse with a record of ninety-eight per cent. cures. Almost dil ihe Sats trated by Di. Maleate ox Hume eases. Many Rs Wilke have been up several . a gawd incurable. These people are almost always cured Dr. Pierce's treatment and advice. % ED ald and Surgical Institute, N. Y. All correspondence is absol pri- vale and confidential. Write without fear and without fee.§ Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. | The Curious Mistletoe. The story of how the mistletoe gets on the trees is a most interesting one. Covering the mistletoe twigs are peas- winter season, when food Is compare- tively scarce, and hence some birds eat them freely. Now. when a robin eats a cherry he swallows =imply the meat and flips the stone away. The seed of the mistletoe the bird cannot flip. passed by, | valley far down—the indistinct outline of | It Is sticky and holds to his bill. His with long- | buildings—and those dear earth stars— | only resource ix to wipe it off. and he does so, leaving it sticking to the were other things, | He ran back to little Max and caught | branches of the tree on which he Is sitting at the time. This seed sprouts after a time, and vor finding earth— which, indeed. its ancestral babit has made it cease wanting—it sinks its roots into the bark of the tree and hunts there for the pipex that carry the sap. Now, the sap in the bark Is the very richest in the tree. far richer than that in the wood. and the mistletoe gets from its host the choicest of food. With a strange forexight it does not | throw fits leaves away. asx do most parasites, but keeps them to use in winter, wken the tree is leafless, Already Planned. There were few persons who knew the Locke family even in a casual way who had not discovered that Mrs. Locke was in the habit of nagging het husband and children. She loved them dearly. but at times nobody would have surmised it. “What did Mr. Locke say when he found himself safe after those hours of danger?" some one asked a friend ; who had been in company with Mr. Locke on an ocean steaemr which met with an accident in mid-Atlantic. “lle never says the ordinary thing.” “No.” sald the friend, with a dry smile, “He didn't that time. I said tc him. ‘James, we ought to make some thing more of our lives from having them spared to us in this way.’ for 1 had felt pretty solemn, I can tell you. | I've no doubt James did. too. but what he said was, ‘Willlam; a good share ot the rest of my life will be spent in ex. plaining to Theodora how 1 happened to choose that steamer when there were dozens of others that reached home withont any accident.’ "—Youth's Companion. The Long Spoon. “Tomkyns™ recently heard the ex- pression “If you sup with the devil you will need a long spoon.” “Though I never heard it before,” he says, “it is evidently fairly well known. and what I shouid like to know is, What does it mean, und where does it come from ?"* It means that if you are going to sit down to a meal with his Satanic majesty you will need a long spoor to avoid the necessity of getting too near the old gentleman and, in its general sense, of course, it implies that if you have dealings with a dau- lose + erous or notorious person it behooves all desire to work, and, finally, when they | you to use great caution. It comes from one of the “Ingoldsby Legends." and the quotation reads: Who suppes with the Deville sholde have a long spoone. —London Answers. A Queer Diagnosis. A celebrated Dublin physician was Sir Dominic Corrigan, who was as | much famed for his brusqueness to- ward patients as for his skill. In the course of some reminiscences William Charles Scully told a story of the doc- tor which is quite well worth quoting. “lI was taken to see him,” says the writer, “several times, but he always treated me with the utmost kindness. However, a highly respectable maiden aunt of mine had a different experi- ence. She went to consult him. After sounding her—none too gently—and asking a few questions he gave a grunt and relapsed into silence. Then after a short pause of meditation he sald, ‘Well, ma'am, it's one of two things—either you drink or else you sit with your back to the fire.” Fining English Servants In 1680, Nan Newton, for breaking a teapot in Phil's chamber, 2s. 6d. Richard Knight, for pride and slighting, 2s. 6d. William Hetherington, for not being ready to go to church three Sundays, 10 shillings. Thomas Birdall, for being at Nunea- ton from morning to night, § shillings. Cook, dead drunk, 10 shillings. Anne Adams to be washmaid at Lady day. She went away the 29th of June for being wanton and careless. She lost five pairs of sheets and five pillowbeers, for which my wife made her pay £1.—Diary of Sir Richard Newdigate. Retribution. Young Father (in the future)—Great snakes! Can't you do something to quiet that baby? Its eternal squalling drives me frantic. Young Mother {calmly to servant)—Marie, bring in my husband's mother’s phonograph and put in the cylinder “At Ten Months.” I want him to hear how his voice sounded when he was young. Squaring Himself. Mrs. Henpecke—What do you mean. sir, by telling Mrs. Torker's husband you never ask my advice about any- thing? Henpecke—Well, Maria, 1 don’t. You don't wait to be asked. Showing the Way. Friend (to guider— Why does your wife always go round with the parties that you take over the custle? Guide— She always gives me a tip at the end s0 as to induce the others to follow suit.—London Answers. There never was a bad man that had ability for guvod service.—Burke. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Give thou thy jewels, O Life, to those Who have not lilies and the rose; Give thou thy wealth to those whose sweet Is town and trade and tumbling street; 1 have share when I have love, And the biue skies that bend above, And Little Child's hand in mine own When the dusk comes and day hath flown. Baltimore Sun. With the season that children must be shut indoors, mothers are beginning to { worry over amusing them. This is quite | needless, as the happiest child is she who ' is taught to amuse herself. , This does not mean putting the young- | ster on a chair with the command, “Be i good.” The mother shouid be sort of | amusement { chief. Up to her are suggestions, advice and | adiuiration. Except on rare occasions land as a treat the child shculd co the | rest herse:f. A rainy day need not be a terrorina i household so run. Mother's suggestions | should include variety. There may be | active sports, such as Puss in the Corner, | if there are several children, or dumb- | bell drills and wand exercises for mother | to admire while she darns the weekly stockings, will keep one nursery member happy for an hour. : There should be pleasures specially re- | served for rainy days. Among these could be the makingiof scrap books. This should be along the lines of a child's own tastes. | Thus the boy who is interested in rail- | roading and machinery may early begin | a collection from railway and technical | i magazines that will be invaluable later, | if properly directed. A little girl can be both amused and | her taste cultivated by a paper-doll scrap- | book, made from house furnishing cata- | logues. Lots of children delight to save | their favorite comics from Sunday maga- ; zines; others who are fond of animals or flowers can make most interesting scrap- books along those lines. A game which has found much favor promoter, not amuser-in- | and makes an evening's entertainment | very amusing is the travel e. Invite your young friends to make a trip around the world in an hour, and state on the invitations that the party will leave from your house on such an evening at such atime. When the guests arrive, tell them that you have provided diaries for such intelligent travelers, and hand each one a note-book to which a pencil is tied. Tell them that they are to write down in the note-book the name of each place they come to, and that the es are indicated all through the house y objects that are tied with a red rib- bon. At a given signal start them off and allow them the hour in which to travel. The one who at the end of that time has guessed correctly the largest number of places receives the prize, which should be a toy steamboat, automobile, or train of cars. The places may be represented in this way: A string of corals for Napiet; a bunch of cigars, Havana; a pan of drip- pings, Greece; a bit of rope, Manila; an orange, Florida; tulips or wooden shoes, Holland; a copy of the book The Eternal City, Rodns; ol own i Columbis, represent a copy of the song Hail, Columbia; a package of macaroni, Italy; a bottle of cologne, the city of that name; a cup and saucer, China; a toy mule, Missouri; and so on with as many as you please. The refreshments should be served from a long table to resemble a lunch- counter, and sandwiches, coffee, fruit, pie, and cakes of one kind and another should make up the menu. The young people will have a Selig. ful time, I am sure, and will appreciate all you wfll do for them. Apple parties, in ive and good fun, are Sy known and ap- precia but fewer entertainers appre- idle the possibilitles of an Orange So- In winter season, choosing a time when the fruit is at its best an t, a very i ad little entertainment may be The suggestions Youngsters ranging too, for a hirthday party “if yelow Tao und envelopes ts en can be obtained at the time, so much the Most large stores can furnish these from stock. As the children enter the room on the e today are for 5 or 6 to about : i i FE gs wr E g g : 7 i Es Eg £: 83 g 5 gE: 2 fl eg gs 8 5 g @ £ z : H 2 2 i | freq g 58257 Sr ooct i i * FARM NOTES. —Sheep are timid, nervous creatures, and all excitement and roughness should be avoided in handling them. —Charles W. Flickenger, a farmer near Sabetha, Kan., has a cow 6 years old, and she dropped 11 calves in four years— triplets three times and twins once. —To kill wild mustard in grain crops use 75 to 100 pounds of sulphate of iron to 52 gallons of water. e spraying should be done thoroughly with a fine mist. —Pennsylvania annually grows $16, 000.000 worth of vegetables. The K stone State ranks second to New York in commercial importance of garden pro- duce in the United States. —Luther Burbank has brought out a new Newton Pippin apple. Its color is reddish instead of the rich yellow, the color of the cld-time Pippin, and its fruit- ing season is much earlier. —A well-bred dairy cow will give about 8000 pounds of milk in a year. Some ex- ceptional cows are known to have given about 16,000 pounds. The proof of the amount of butterfat in such milk is in the testing. —Edward Drake, of Wichita, Kan., sowed some wheat last spring, which he had kept in his house for 28 years. It was from a crop raised by him, and he testifies that the crop this year is excel- lent. Nearly every grain sowed germi- nated promptly. —Some dairymen believe that if the food of their cows is changed it will have a bad effect upon the milk flow, but re- peated scientific experiments show that changing from one feed to another, with uent additions to the regular food, helps the milk flow. —Sows which are to farrow this fall should be amply provided with fresh, dry, clean, dustless bedding. Fine cut straw or shredded corn fodder is recommended by the University of Wisconsin Experi- ment Station. rley, straw or wood shavings should be avoided. . —Sheep are nervous animals and of | rather delicate constitutions, and suffer more from bad ventilation and over- crowding than any other animal on the farm. It is a mistake, therefore, to con- fine sheep during the winter in close quarters. If kept dry their fleeces will keep them warm. —Mutton sheep should never be of mixed breeds on one farm. Getone good mutton breed, stick to it, and develop it to the highest notch possible. A lot of mixed lambs never bring the highest ice on the market. It is those of one reed, uniform in size, shape and condi- tion, that get the big money. —Professor H. W. Howard, of the Washington State Experiment Station, has discovered that the common house fly multiplies and thrives in the alfalfa fields. is discovery has caused a great deal of interest in the west and investiga- tions by scientists are now being made to ascertain just how the fly breeds in alfalfa and how the pest may be overcome. —The Union Italian Colony of Fruit Growers, a Hammonton, N. J., society Shipped to commission men this year $86,000 worth of fruit. Of this 3 per cent., $2580, was returned to the colony and divided according to each man’s ship- ments after deducting $1.60 from each for running expenses. Besides, $50,000 were received for cash sales right at the Hammonton station. —Peaches need a reasonably loose soil, and will not thrive if grown in soil for any considerable length of time. The soil should be prepared in good tilth by plowing and harrowing. Peaches are so often injured by severe cold that in a majority of cases spring planting is pref- erable to fall, but it is an item to make all the preparation possible in advance, so that at the first favorable rtunity in the spring the planting can done. —Contrary to a widespread belief that hard woods give more heat in burning than soft Yariatios, the Scientists at Wash- ington are contending that the greatest heating power is possessed by the wood of the linden tree, which is very soft. Fir stands next to linden, and almost equal to it. Then comes pine, hardly in- ferior to Be and inde, Re hare — possesses 8 per cent. less capaci- 4 than linden, and red beech 10 per cent. ess. —Before a horticultural : i an peach grower said Michigan pean and had had it for years, and that he cut up and burn- at du BL owe rst le ed io remone the di as tar as root ted, e hole earth, and a tree would be plant- ed there the following year. In this way he kept his orchard intact and in a flour- ishing condition. ~The New York Cornell Experiment Station, actual tests, has estimated the cost of one house for try, with continuous cents per fowl, or $1.03 per fowl, includ. ing the cost of the feed room. In all cases four square feet is allowed per fowl. i : : 5 gE g i i ir g : 2 2 i : °F 8 : » i 8 g 7 3 i ! ! rs : g 2 f i ; : | 7 g i 1 g 8 8 ~