SIN te, Pa., April 19, 1912. WHEN THE MASTER COMES. Slowly the dusky curtains of night Are silently lifted-softly the light Is glimmering over the eastern sky, Brightening dark places where shadows lie: While the dawn is creeping over the hills, The waking earth, to life and joy serene, Comes with noiseless footfall, a guest unseen, Whispering to man, who fain would flee : “The Master is come and calleth for thee.” The reapers sing with a glad refrain, As they bind the sheaves of ripened grain ; In the rumble and stir of the city's din ‘The toilers are striving fresh laurels to win : Each weaving a woof in the noontide hours Of families bright, where no storm-cloud low ers. Ere the brilliant pictures have faded and flown, Comes into each circle a guest unknown, And to one of its numbers sayeth he : *“The Master is come and calleth for thee.” Twilight is trailing her mantle of gray, O'er land and sea at the close of day, For the day is spent, and its burdens of care, With all by-gone things, oblivion share. There's a hush in the air that betokens rest; The tired bird secks its downy nest; And man craves repose, for his labor is done, In the tranquil eve comes unbidden, one Who tenderly says: “Weary child, list to me “The Master is come and calleth for thee." Not with trumpet’s blast, nor with roll of drum, But unheralded doth the Master come. From the lowly vale and the mountain tall, From the humble cot and the stately hall, From the busy loom and the workshop's glare, From the giddy dance and the house of praver, From the battle's smoke and the ocean's foam, From the haunts of vice and the happy home, From the ice-bound poles and the torrid line, From the broad plain's sheen and the gloomy mine, From the Bedouin's tent and the purpled |i throne, From the jungle wild and the desert lone, From the infant's cradle, the couch of age, From the peasant’s plow and the desk of sage Each answers the summons, and then alone, He crosses over to realms unknown, And that voice floats on through eternity; “The Master is come and calleth for thee.” —Fanny Alricks Shugert. A GUEST IN SODOM. Yes that was Benjamin Rice. He has heen that way ever since the affair of the automobile. His mind was run over and killed by that machine, if minds can be run over and killed, and sometimes I they can. I have known Benjamin Rice ever sifice we were boys together, and he was smart enough, but he never quite got through his head the wicked- Base of the world he had Seen born into. e thought everybody was as good and honest as he was, and when he found out he was mistaken, it was too much for him. His wife feels justas I do about it. apn: Teh Jo pa,” sl says. * pa make a of his money, but he knew, the worth of it, through he and his father before him workin’ so hard to get a little laid by, and losin’ so much was an awful shock to him; but that wasn't the worst of it. Findin’ out what an awful wicked place this world he was livin’ in was, and what kind of folks there was in it, just broke his heart.” Benjamin's daughter Lizzie says the same thing. “Yes, that car just broke poor pa's heart,’” says she. Lizzie calls it car in- stead of automobile. Sometimes she calls it motor-car. Lizzie has had advantages. Her father didn’t Share money where she was concerned. went to the Means money yet, and I don't to, but she may, if she don’t get married young; for she favors her father's folks, | lene nd don’t like to spend and nothin’ back. et I don't know whether it was mostly on Lizzie's account that Benjamin got that car (guess I will call it car, like her; it's easier) or on his own. For quite a while Benjamin had been sayin’ to me sort of us: “One of these Billy, 3 g ® 8. g i i bought the car, he got a fur coat. I don’t know what kind of critter it come from, but Benjamin he looked real funny in it. My wile Said shod Beard of wolves in sheep's clothin’, Benjamin Rice was a Seepih Wives Sotnin. Benjamin's wie didn’t have any fur coat, wrapped herself up in all the old shawls in the house,—but Lizzie had a real pretty blue coat lined with gray fur. loi some yoars ago tat Benjamin sold the nine-acre lot the car. He used that money. He the land to a real-estate man from the city, and that 3s Whete Suma of the trouble came in. That night Benjamin came to my house and showed me the check he'd got for ‘the land. He looked real excited. There were red spots on his cheeks, and his blue eyes were shinin’. Qutss JOU slever saw. a chieck as big as that, Billy,” says he, and he was right. Big checks have never come inmy way, though I've made a fair livin.’ I a8 iid kilt a i] i? i I i : i! 5g - gs 5 g i Bs g : i : f : something 1 day i. says “What for?” says g says he: “to go ridin’ round and get a little pleasure out of livin.’ Look at here, Billy,” says he, “I'm gettin’ on in years, and I ain't never had much except my board and lodgin’ for my hard work. Now I'm goin’ to take this money, and I'm goin to buy an automobile, and I'm goin’ to have a little fun, and my wife is goin 0; Ed Lizzie i gyi ' to before she gets “What kind of an automobile are you goin’ to buy?” says I, sort of feeble. "I am goin’ to an automobile off the Verity Automobile Advance Company of Landsville, Kentucky. says he. iy don’t you buy nearer home?” sa amily Emerson is agent for them | automobiles, and he says they are the best to be had for the money, and he knows all about them, and he’s goin’ to show me how to run it, and maybe Liz- zie can learn, and he's goin’ to keep it in order,” says he. “Have you got a guaranty?” says I. “Lord! yes,” says he; “I'm dealin’ with real square and above-board If the first car don’t work to t me, they'll send me another, and they'll sup- ply all the parts that get broken for nothin’; but Sammy says nothin’ is goin’ to get broken. He says that machine is built to last fifty years.” an, Sammy Emerson ought to know,” says L Sammy Emerson we all think is a us. We shouldn't be surprised if he id anything. He is a real mechanical genius. We found it out when he stole the works of the Baptist church organ when he was only a boy. That organ be- gan to act queer, and it acted queerer and Juesrer, 3 one Sunday Ledge] Jones, the organist, couldn't get a solitary squea out of it, though little Tommy Adkins was blowin’ till he almost dropped. Then they found out what the trouble was. The works were gone, and Sammy Emer- son had another organ most rigged up in his ma’s barn. There was an awful fussabout it. That set up the organ again, though he offer- ed. But after that we all felt that he was a genius, though we were rather scared. My wife said she didn’t know but Sammy would try to steal her sewin’ machine and make a flyin’ machine out of it; but Sammy didn't do much harm after that. He just tinkered away, and almost did pretty wonderful things. His ma had money, and she let him have the barn to tinker in, and she let him buy lots of old junk that he thought he could male some- thing of. Sammy had almost made an automobile himself. Everybody thought it would go if he could once get it start. ed; but he never quite fetched the start- in". Then he took the Verity agency. I dare say his ma begun to think he was spendin’ too much, and had better try to earn a little to exercise his genius on. “Well,” says I to Benjamin, "I suppose Sammy Emerson knows about it. He ought to.” Of course he does,” says Benjamin. “He says it's the best car on the market, and there's millions back of it.” “Who is back of it?" says I. Tea-Kettle Corporation of Vermont,” says Benjamin. - to me rather queer that a tea. kettle concern should take to making automobiles,” says 1. Benjamin never got very mad, but he did look a little riled. “Don’t see anything queer about it,” says he. "Anybody knows what the ob- servation of boilin’ tea-kettles led to, and everybody that has seen one dancin’ on the stove at full boil can figure out for himself that if it had wheels and tires it might get somewhere. Accordin’ to my way of thinkin’,” says he, "a tea-kettle jest naturally leads up to an automobile.” “Does it run by steam?” says I, a little sul u you think me and ma and Lizzie is goin’ to take any chances of bein’ bu'st by a steam-engine?” says Benjamin. course it ruas by » “Where be you goin’ to get your gaso- “I'm gol to buy it in Rockland,” says Benjamin. “You'll have to cart it,” “Can't I run the automobile over there, in?” Benjamin. “And I've cleared 7 g £ fpif il i : dy g it : g fi ft | : i Ee is g dH f EL HH sii i §EE gFEREE i i : g=gade et fh gesf 5 it —it’s only ten miles,—and have it put | would he. she fetches you an a uf blow; and, be since that pleurisy I can’t ever crank her, Billy.” and he i nk i ie: says sense or that, he thinks,” says he. Abel was Ben- jamin’'s hired man, and none too bright. thing that needed a knack,” says I. was just like a baby with a rattle over except he happened hand was too used up, he could crank with the other; for he never did learn the knack of it, and the car always hit him a crack before he could get clear enough to know how lame he was, and much of the time. came. That evenin’ poor Ben down to my house, limpin' and lookin’ dreadful cast-down. “What is the matter?” says I. “She broke down in Rockland,” says he “and ma and Lizzie had to come home by train, and I walked. It is going to cost so much to keep that car that I must be- gin to save somewhere. I walked all the way, and my corns are bad, and the bunion on my right foot, and I had n't ought to have come down here to-night, but ma and Lizzie keep askin’ me if | think I have got a good car, and I wanted to get away from it. Women mean well, but they don’t know when to talk. Oh, Billy,” says poor Benjamin, "I am dread- ful’ afraid I have n't got a good car, and I have sunk all that money into it! The man over in the automobile place in Rockland says the drivin’-shaft is bent, by | and he says it is made of tin, when it ought to be steel. Oh, Billy, should you think they would have sold me tin in- stead of steel?” Of course I knew better than that. "Could n't have been tin,” says I “Mighty r steel, then,” says Benja- min, dreadful’ mournful. “I'm afraid I've thrown my money away, and, worse than that, I 'm afraid there is more wick- edness in the world than I've ever dreamed of. I paid them for good steel, Billy. It don't make much difference whether it is tin or poor steel, unyway; it 's bent, and something else they call the traditional is twisted soit won’t work. I'm afraid it ’s a pretty bad business, Billy, and they are goin’ to put up twenty little, cheap houses on the nine-acre lot, ard ma and Lizzie say only cheap people will live in them, and it will spoil our place. Should you have thought that a man could do such a thing as that, Billy?” I pitied Benjamin that night, but I agreed with him that he had made a Py bad bargain, and we were both right. Once in a while, after Sammy Emerson had done an extra lot of tinkerin', the car would run real nice a day and a half or two days, but she never run over two. I went out in her once, and I was so sorry for Benjamin that I chipped in and helped him pay a man with a team to drag her to Rockland, then we walked home. That settled me. I was glad to have poor Ben- jamin come and tell me his troubles, but did n't want to walk home. Well, thin, went on from bad to worse. Finally Lizzie Rice wrote a real nice, ladylike letter to the Variable Tea- Kettle Company, and asked for the mon- ey back; but they did n't take a mite of notice of it. Then Benjamin got a law- yer to look at the contract, and the law- yer said it was so open that an elephant could walk between every word without jostlin’ mew. She Beal gave up gettin’ ri y the tea. e concern, but he was real charitable. He said that said he didn’t doubt they meant It was a Beautiful fall hat year, not a mite of snow splendid wea up to Christmas. broken steel “I pi them up in the barn, Billy,” says he; “I don't know what be.” evenin’ he came to my house and “and a new one will cost fi uit Li ji fikei! § : gS 2 Es Ez f ; i fll i je fhegtt Epos i gif FREE i sit 2. < Ri 1 jr Es fi 2 gF 57 = 25d gsi RT g i E Ie E 1 g : g i E te EE ; | : 8 “What folks generally buy ‘em for,” | never can crank her.” He showed me his . and had her tinkered there by a man who hand all bruised. “Tt 's a knack,” says said he had been born and brought up in eaou have to let go of her jest so,or | an automobile school, but after he was | they were six hours and a half max came. Benjamin i i i { sides, I never was quite right in my side | runnin’ her home. Then Benjamin and | ear’ wv, My | Samm 5 uess | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN DAILY THOUGHT. When we look into the long avenue of the fu, y tinkered again, and finally the | ture and see the good there is for each one of us j Rice had | to do, we realize after all what a beautiful thing - never lost his patience within the mem- | it isto work, and to live, and be happy. ow be you goin’ to manage?” says I. | that car. Well, Abel did learn to crank ! it, but I don’t think he ever could have | tional, or the tin drivinshaft, or the | to use both hands | transgression that's bu'st,” alike: he was left handed. When one | “damn, damn, damn!” ory of man. Folks had always said he | to live; bat he was tried e and Sammy were out in the was too too far. — Robert Louis Stevenson Linen blouses in champagne or white car, and they had only got half a mile in | are being beautifully decorated in punch- . an hour, when something went off like a | life. | Sammy Emerson he was so scared that he slid out of the car and stood gapin’ up I was there. | | ed work for this season's wearing. “I should n't think Abel could do any- pistol, and the car would n't budge. It! | was right in front of the store, too, and a i oa’ Says, BUUjanin | lot of Toles same rome. Loves in, but he did seem kind o - jamin he just st up in that car : : cause he could n't crank it himself. He and he damned for the first time in his | Dutton pique or cape glove in tan or gray For spring wear with tailored suits of | | whipcords, mohair, serge, etc., the one- | 1 shades obtain. “I don’t care whether it's the tradi- | — Some of the new princess petticoats says he— | have the upper portion made of spun i silk, with a ribbon across the shoulder | \ instead of the customary strap. | at him, and Abel, who had his right hand | tied up,—sat in the back seat and shook ! from her. Then, too, he was n't bright | all over, Benjamin went on, and it was | terial in evening dress. Chiffons, voiles, Transparencies are freely used for ma- something sort of solemn and awful and | and nets are in favor and a large propor- say he would n't crank; and, too, the car | made you think of the Psalms. was n't in shape to run, let alone crank, | ; my whole life have I taken the name of The trouble began the Tuesday after it | the Lord in vain, but now I am pushed jamin came | on beyond my strength by the devil and his work. These things"—and he pointed | ) ¢ down at the car, which was smoking up | are usually worn high; they end withtwo in his face—"are the work of the evil one Or three large buttons, a rosette, sash I have lived a decent, honest end, a uate how or a large flower—at life, I have never wronged my fellow-man, , the left front is | and now it has come to me in my old age | is the favorite silken belt. me. | - — himself. to see evil and have it worked u I have spent for this worthless thing, the ! work of dishonest hands and dishonest hearts, money which was earned by hon- est labor, in the fear of the Lord.” which did make us stare. Itseemed that Lizzie Rice had lost in the first car a little gold breastpin, and she had found it that very mornin’ slipped into a little hole in the linin' of one of the one painted up, and I su they chang- ed the numbers and ix ey Folks thought either. had his same old car back knew it. So he keeps on, after tellin’ us that. "I will have nothin’ more to do with this, so help me God!” says he. man who dares face the father of all lies and tamper with his works can take this automobile and welcome. As for me, I am done with it. I would not five it away: I should the receiver. t I leave it here to be disposed of as any man among you may wish. It is the work of iniquity, which I would have died rather than seen with my old eyes. Oh, if I could have died before I lost my faith in my fellow-men, and seen the wicked- ness of the world!” With that Benjamin gets down sort of stiff and majestic, and walks away, and aves the cay saris’ tue with is two eyes. But poor Benjamin not gone far before he began to r, and then down he went as if he hit on the head. He had a stroke, and they (IL was one of them) got him into the orekeeper's wagon, and carried him home, and got the doctor. It was all dreadful. It meant a good deal more than an automobile, as the doctor said. He put it just the wayit was. Says he, “that good, simple man has encountered the deadly juggernaut of progress of the times, and has gone down before it.” But Benjamin didn't die, of course, be- cause you just saw him. That automo- bile stood right there in the road several days while he was so dreadful sick. The horses shied at it, and the women drag- ged their children past for fear it might start up of its own accord. Then one mornin’ comes the doctor, and says that Belijanun had game Jo iE Riis as he ever would, and cou Bot vary plain. "And he wants this con- fou rattle any use for automobiles, but drove good horses till he quit doe- So that car was towed back to Ben- jamin’s, and it has set there in his since. Benjamin's wife and made a waterproof cover g g i i I § g i : i g 8 Hi 1 i & af i 5 Fei Es gf if 23 : E 7 : American youth has been freel7 offered upon our country’s altar, that the nation might live. It has indeed been a trying hour for the Republic; but I see in the near future a crisis approaching that un. nerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. “As a result of the war, corporations moment, more anxiety for the safety of my country than ever before, even in the midst of the war. God grant that | my suspicions may be groundless.” Anyway, the point was that Benjamin | n, and he | | tion of the toiletts are in veiled effect, “I am an old man,” says he; “never in | the chiffon or tulle taking the form of i | overdresses, tunics, draperies and scarfs, i Silken belts are of the crush order, and ront is the flower. Black satin | Have you noticed how everything in | dress is dominated by the triangle? It | seems to be an all-pervading notion, and Then he goes on to tell us something | all draperies and materials are coaxed | into something which is three-sided. One | of the most popular forms of the tunic is a triangle, the apex placed at one side of the figure and the sides draping up to the kets; and Ben- | waist on the other side. jamin knew by that that the company | — had not sent him a new car, but his old | One of the newest models for evening | bodices means a triangle of material drap- ing one side of the front and another tri- they must have, but maybe poor Benjamin | angle draping one side of the back, the never thought about the numbers, any- | two HHiaugles way, and as for Sammy Emerson, he was | square of the material. The favorite ra- brighter about mechanics than about | bat is just a triangle of lace, and the tri- some other things, and maybe he never corner hat is anot equalling, of course, a r triangle. The color schemes are “curiouser and ! curiouser,” as “Alice in Wonderland” de- clares. The idea of the milliner is appar- ently to put together the most daring contrasts, the description of which sounds much worse than they really are. As a matter of yy are quite pleasing to the eye, and one finds oneself contemplating complacently a chic little hat of purple and cerise; and Siotier of a greeny bronze straw turned sharply o the face with a purple underbrim. "Then a harmony in blue and green attracted attention and a deep shade of rich brown with Nattier and pink. Ostrich plumes in white are in great Jemand they rest gracefully round the hat or stand boldly erect, towering to an exceptional height. These feathers are being used in such profusion, in white chiefly, but a great deal in gray, black and color that we who wear them should feel shy of meeting with the unfortunate bird whom we have thus ruthlessly plun- dered for our own adornment. | “What are the one-piece frocks like? is the question of today. One might ans- wer that whatever has been invented in a skirt or in a blouse may be put togeth- er in a frock. The majority of them are fastened down the front, which is a convenience and does not take away from the le, as every one su it would. e skirt remains sti to the blouse in most gowns, and yet it is quite correct to have the garments te with the skirt hooked on to the boned lining of the waist. There is no advantage in this. It ne- cessitates keeping a keen watch over these hooks and eyes, and it does not improve the fit around the waist line. The simplest thing is certainly the stitch- ng together of the bodice skirt and fastening both down the middle front or the left side. What is known as the “slip-on” comes near being the most convenient frock PEFEREE Hi siofgel : i : dl gs. 85% ull dugaks RE | I z § E g § sii Hi Eye Es i 1] hie BRed HE Hi iit H { : 55% HE iff iH Bi 5 2g ig I g is g i i covered glass and replace with a one. Cover the board that fits behind the glass with a piece of flowered or cretonne FARM NOTES. —To rid flower pots of earth worms water with lime water. —Pots and boxes of stevia should be ‘moved around occasionally to prevent them rooting through too much, also any chrysanthemums or other strong rooting | subjects. —After all the grape vine is one of the | surest bearers, as it fruits on new wood | entirely, and even if some of the new | vines are neglected it puts out fresh wood which bears some fruit. | —Remember that there is no fertilizer | for the garden that compares with well- | rotted barnyard manure. Application ; may be made any time during the fall, | even if the ground is not to be plowed | tl late. —All flowers kept in bloom much { longer, and the flowers are larger, if not | allowed to form seeds. Pinch off every | flower as soon as it begins to fade. This is especially true of sweet peas and pansies. —A Chester county correspondent sent | some specimens of peach leaves to Pro- | fessor H. A. Surface, State Zoologist, | Harrisburg, Pa., and asked for informa- tion concerning the presence or absence | of peach-tree borers. To this inquiry Prolestor Surface gave the following re- ply: “Leaves of trees will not give any evi- | dence as to whether borers are present or not. You can tell this by looking | around the base of each tree, and see if | there is gum there that contains fine par- | ticles or grains like sawdust. If you find saw-dust-like material there present, the borers are there. The gum, either clear or brown, may be present without bor- ers. It the fine castings mixed in the gum show the presence of borers, you should go after them at once with a knife and wire, avoid cutting across the trunks of the trees any more than is ab- solutely necessary, but cut up and down, or lengthwise of the trunk, and get the pests out. Loosening the ground as you ve done would tend to permit the bor- ers to go deeper, but after they are once under the bark they will work down dur- ing warm and dry weather and for win- tering, and will work upward when its wet, “After you remove the borers from trees you can leave the roots exposed in the fall or early spring after the adults have quit laying their eggs, and before they commence again in June. In two or three weeks after the first process of removal, go over the trees again and re- move any borers that were left after the first operation. Then mound the trees to a height of one-half foot each, and ki them mounded. “You can prevent the adults from lay- ing their by spraying the base of the trunk with lime-sulphur solution, either home-boiled or commercial, made the same as you would for San Jose scale. To be effective the first coat should be applied about the middle of June, and this should be repeated about the first to the middle of August. If this is done each r, you will have very little loss from rers. Remember it is only preventive, and will not destroy them after they enter. It should be about the same strength as for San Jose scale when trees are dormant, although it is used when they are in leaf, although not applied to the leaves. Some sediment or some free powdered sulphur mixed in the solution will be effective in helping to prevent them from laying their eggs. “The sun will not injure the trees by removal of earth for searching for borers. If you examine the trees for these pests again in the spring, it should be done as early as possible, because the peach tree borers remain dormant during the winter, and commence to feed again in the spring. “A quart of wood ashes close around the base of each tree will do some good and will do no harm, yet I prefer not to place the strong wood ashes directly over the roots. I should put some earth on the roots, and start the mound, then finish the earth around the trunk, and make a mound of ashes or lime. This will hel greatly in preventing the borers. will t better results from your wood ashes f you will scatter them around the tree just a little farther than the branches ex- tend. In this case they will be acting as a fertilizer, whereas in the previous case they will act chiefly as an insect prevent. ive. followi i l i I g ils tos g gies I LH 8 icf iis 8 i it gESSZE i i 5s 1 4 is if 8 | g 3 5 fe i: i i # : i 55 £ i § : Fd 72 4 | : z 8 £ i i £2 ® e 2% iz 7 g E < oi lid 2 i } : : 3 i ; 3 fil SR