AE Te Belletonte, Pa., April 4, 1913. LITTLE GIRL, DON'T CRY. There! little girl; don't cry! ‘They have broken your doll, I know; And your tea set blue, There! little girl; don't cry! There! little girl; don't cry! They have broken your slate, I know; And the glad, wild, wild ways Of your schoolgirl days Are things of the long ago; But life and love will soon come by— There! little girl; don't cry. There! little girl; don't cry! Are things of long ago; But heaven holds all for which you sigh. There! little girl; don't cry! THE DESERTER. On five days a week Mortimer Leggett decorousl went y to school, in a trim blue serge suit and a blue sailor but on Saturdays he shook the soil civiliza- tion from him and went beck to the him, so that it was nearly nine o'clock when he circled the back piazza and made trackless wilderness composed of three small tim- ber lots. He was still little. “How!” he ied, correctly. “I had a toothache this morning,” Mor- timer breathlessly. “I'm his muscles showed his rag- His vig scien Sirough bis ree “You are awful strong,” orti- more Leggett. “I had last year. I 1 ain’t so strong as you. “By and by when you get rested up a bit, we'll you are a big chief and I'm a settler, you can see if you can get me.” ou growled. “That's just like God and fathers, ain't t?” reflected Mortimer —_ -~ “Why, you looking after me and mak- ing me rest that's just like God—and : fathers. “I don't know. Is it?” “Of course. Tews thatz: curiously, man brought out a stubby old pipe and was puffing on it. How the two at home would enjoy these loved uneasily as he thought ait dirty brick 1 ! Hy FER i f th 44 ; i i £1 g § 3 te eS sk tf a g 7b i | : : i hd if 4 di : i 5 Pid g 8 i i 4] 3 g Ed; ih =F 8 ] 8 E i I i g k : | 4 i I § was to tell about the puppies— and fathers.” “Go ahead, then.” “One is brown and he's a black Rie, Julie voice remember till it was and I was Nauk Feber bend me “Shucks, what was for?” «Cause Tknew the’ puppies wes un. Bry. “Well, he went down and fed "em, didn't ; he?” ! So ——. —— | 5 § ; 1 i i i] 2 i ot i 2 °F g &f ; ge oF { i The other night we were invited to a | Tomasha party(Hindustani) by the nurs- i : 3 ed a dressing made of highly seasoned | chopped meats, etc. This had to be “Rested now, sonny?” he said, after a | rolled into a ball and eaten quickly else i more ran down one’s arms than any oth- |er place. This, with two kinds of hot and come on skulking after me. I'll ive | cakes, similar to our flannel cakes, one you a fair chace. If you catch me ‘you | crispy, hot, the other somewhat sad, can tomahawk me.” | made up the refreshments. Mortimer Leggett laughed out shrilly. We entertained ourselves as best we could, trying to keep spotless and yet Methods of the Prosecution In a Great | Criminal Case. In bis book "Courts, Criminals and the Camorra” Arthur Train, once an assistant district attorney in New York, tells how juries are drawn for a great criminal trial. member of the jury panel has been subjected to an unseen inquisitorial process. The district attorney knows . | show full appreciation of the food. We |a good deal about every prospective For a month be- | fore a trial, says Mr. Train, every | last he icti The white settler shut his eyes, and Big Chief Rain-in-the-Face took the slyly profiersd pocket-knife and boldly scalped m. After that they both sat down and “Wasn't that fun?’’ the boy sighed, quit and go on home and get your din- " i ner. It’s clear noon.” “Yes, sir. You'll come too?" “Me? Shucks, no. I got something to eat. “Oh, please,” Mortimer “1 want you to see my pu duck, too. It's lame. The man went, at last, half because he was curious, half because the boy was such a coaxer. begged. I got a had his | -| And noise! the most horrible, deafen- were handed beautiful bunches of roses | juror and perchance bas difficulty in grown by the Messman, and sent spead- restraining a smile when he meets ing on our home way in the early, warm | with deliberate equivocation in answer | thi : . ! sonal history: Sh Rig hee fs ny | “Are you acquainted with the accus- s | ed or his family?" mildly inquires the Today I made my first professional call | assistant prosecutor. on a Mohammedan woman; we—a nurse | “No. not at all,” the talesman may and myself—were kept waiting a full half | blandiy reply. hour before being received. We were| The answer perhaps is literally true, then ushered through place after place, pnd yet the prosecutor may be pardon- and across court yards and alleys until | #d for murmuring “Liar!” to himself we approached the sick woman's room. 28 he sees that his memorandum con- She never sees outside the place, which | cerning the juror's qualifications states is a little, low, box-like affair, probably i six feet high, no windows, mud walls and floors, with solid wooden doors; no chairs | hooks with the defendant's father. and stools to indicate occupancy, but “I think we will excuse Mr. Ana- with three native beds, one of which had | nias,” politely remarks the prosecutor. a solid wooden top, and it was on this | Then in an undertone he turns to his that my patient squatted, for none of ' chief and mutters: “The old rascal! these women sit as we do hence no He would have knifed us into a thou- | with the prisoner's uncle by marriage and carries an open account on his is hard to grow accustomed to the habits, | C2*2e"" but I am told, like everything else in In- dia, that too comes in time. or his family,” he was not accepted as On my way over here I noticed a flock | a juror. of great, black, hungry looking birds, and | was told they were crows. They were almost three feet long with beaks twice as long and thick as my first finger. | Dropping a Pheasant With a Twenty- four Pound Gun. observe with curious interest the ma- neuvers of native hunters, An English sportsman tells of an incident he witnessed at the well known Shaba, or lower barrier, of ing, rasping kind, for they seem to be constantly in a wrangle of some sort. Beside them the poor little robin red- breast is a make believe—a wee black | evening. It is strange to think of you as |t0 an Important question as to per- | | that he belongs to the same “lodge” , | sand pieces if we'd given him the chairs are ever seen in native homes. It And all this time the dis-| gruntled Mr. Ananias is wondering why, if he didn't “know the defendant | Foreign sportsmen in China always Have the Nerve to Interfere— | He Guiped, So Did Every. body Else, If the railway guard who held his by | train half a minute beyond schedule i time should be reprimanded at head- | a hundred passengers who know why he did it will sign a peti- tion for his pardon. Sentiment was back of it. Somebody wanted to kiss. i A lot of people want to do that. Women kiss each other, men kiss their wives, The guards have no : patience with sentiment of that kind. They flaunt their contempt by bawl- | ing, “Break away there; no time for that!” and refuse to hold the train . half a second for the tenderest salute, But this case was different. It was | easy to see how it was. A mother was giving her child away. The little fel- i low was in good hands. The couple | who had adopted him were whole- | some, kindly pecple; the mother was | wretchedly poor. No doubt it was best all around to give him away. | She and the boy stood the parting like majors up to the last minute, then the baby broke down. i “Mom—mom-—mom,” he blubbered from the car platform. i Before the guard could close the | door or give the signal she had | reached through the crowd and had snatched him from the man's arms. |! “I can't, I can't,” she said. | And then the kissing began. ! guard didn't even try to say “Break ' away!” He gulped; so did everybody | else, Presently the woman handed | the boy back, and the train started on amid the deepest silence that had ever hung over that subway station. First “Lightning Catcher.” Nearly everybody believes that Benjamin Franklin was the inventor and constructor of the first lightning- rod. In this particular they are mis- taken, as the first lightning catcher was invented by a poor monk of Bo- hemia, who put the first lightning-rod on the palace of the curator of Pre- ditz, Moravia, June 15, 1754. The apparatus was composed of a pole surmounted by an iron rod, support: | ing twelve curved branches and ter minating in as many metallic boxes filled with iron ore. The entire sys | tem of wires was united to the earth by a large chain. The enemies of the ! inventor, jealous of his success, ex: . cited the peasants of the locality 'WHY THE TRAIN WAS LATE Didn't e Nerve | Jayit ows sit still and rest first,” the man AK MY bh bird with the red on his tail and none on "| his breast at all. Then comes what they call here the “Seven Sisters,” gray in color and beau- tifully built, somewhat like our cat birds, but larger and noisy in the extreme as they always travel in flocks of seven, never seen singly. The vultures, both black and white abound in great num- bers, but their call is peculiarly weak in “My oldest boy’s only six, but he'd | comparison to their size, as they are about half again as large as our good sized chickens. There are no sweet song birds here at all. They tell me the climate is too se- vere. Cranes, large, white and black, long-legged things. Flamingos and pea- in , and had dinner with Mortimer | €°cks, which, by the way, are wild birds here, are in great numbers all about us. They say the brilliancy of the plumage “| and the number of birds quite make up for the lack of grass, which is so scarce collapse until he came that one journeys miles without seeing Mortimer Leggett Je Sal. hon he one blade. FEBRUARY 29th. ) Although the hot days are coming on lo dap CDG Kiiglhen, Ju twa’ h apace and bringing sand storms with them, hi He'll oH. IRE a lone © Dice tme we are kept so busy at the hospital that, Shank Fight have known that you until the intense heat arrives in its real a your own, even you | force, we are quite content. The plague Rad Dot od he Mrs Leggett sad, and a ae Le Sse consequence The man took it carefully. His face of Which the villagers are ordered back flushed. to their homes. Our dispensary has more patients than is convenient but being mostly babes, left orphans by the plague, we are glad to tuck them away, for later they are sent to good schools to become christianized, It is a curious fact here that, although the natives are so antagonistic to any medical aid, yet they will desert children of the nearest kin and leave them to die along the road, if the parents have “gone | with your wife—you fond ‘of the | °% before. | Cm i IT Jo Te ro, We go tomorrow to the “30th Punjabs” | this way—" (the native regiment under English com- “Thank you, man's mand) to vaccinate sixty-four women, all , his throat. ,“I—I think Kitty would like | of whom are in “Perda,” on whom no { it fine. We're both man may look, so you see a woman phy- pretty city. I'll talk it over with her.” sician is needed regim | A memory swept over him vividly of Ki Sietan fs us so fe reo in hes > y | he could do. man | whois hie could depend'upurt. alonnd the | and ihe Jhon Wore the Fg mn ie 1 § 1 § i . while the reveling is going on. “John his in answer; then, Sy Ud his arm, he | Barleycorn” seems to be high king at all toward city from which | feasts here and between the Mohammed and Hindu there feast Woodruff Newell, in Harper's Ba- ue oa i Sw PRES RERE® Ie : Rg | it ) : i : i : g ii i i i i this Hi i E fe : | g £3 I lis i { | i if : 1 i | Nadoo creek. in north China. A native | against him, and under the pretext shooter had his gingal with him—a | that his lightning-rod was the cause most uncanny looking weapon. That | of the excessive dry weather, had the there might be no question as to its | rod taken down and the inventor im- length, it was placed upright alongside the Briton. It exceeded his height by two feet two inches, making the plece of ordnance over eight feet in length. Englishmen sometimes complain of the weight of their own guns—six and a baif to seven and a half pounds. So it is astonishing to behold a Chinese banter carrying a twenty-four pound gun all day long. | This particular native was accom. | panied by a small, odd looking animal, which the foreigner was assured was a dog, Observation of the hunter and dog at work made a deep impression upon the stranger. A hen pheasant happened to drop into a furrowed fleld at feeding time. The native took her bearings, crept up as closely as he safely could, put down his gun on a bit of higher ground, and kept it trained on the bird. Meantime the dog lay down across the barrel of the gun, thus serving as a screen for his master. When the proper moment had arrived, the man fired, the bird was killed upon the ground, and the dog remained .on the barrel'until his master took up the gun to reload.— Youth's Companion. When Join Rimed With Vine, Some mispronounciations of today once enjoyed the highest standing. We must not think that Shakespeare was sinning when he rimed groin, swine. Indeed, ol, like long | (as in ice), sur- vived regularly through the eighteenth century. When a countrywoman of our time watches the kettle bile or jines the church she has behind her Cowley's join, vine; Gray's shine, join; Pope's join, divine: Dryden's join, de- sign: Addison's find, joined: Coleridge's | joined, mind; Wordsworth's joined, kind, and Byron's aisles, toils. Indeed, so late a writer as Bulwer gives us mind. enjoined, which sounds as dia- lectical as Gray's toil, smile. It is no wonder that Joel Barlow, the author of our own great typographical epic, “The Columbiad,” jined join and di- vine.— Yale Review. Absentminded La Fontaine. La Fontaine, whose fables are the Monday and the drums were going all | delight of adult Frenchmen and their children’s earliest task, was very ab- sentminded. He went to the court of Louis XVI. to present a copy of his fables to the king. And he forgot the book. Fortunately, the king knew La Fontaine, his fables and his foibles and gave him a thousand pistoles (about $250). Unfortunately, though, La Fon. taine left the money in his hired carriage on his way back to Paris, The Dear Friends, “You should not talk about that girl in that fashion.” “Why not? “The Bible says we should love our “She ain't no enemy; she’s a friend #f mine.”—~Houston Post. | Shakespeare on the Road. Hamlet bad just been hit by a cold whereupon be turned prisoned. Serbs Are a Peasant People. | “The inhabitants of the Balkan prov- | inces are not the warlike, ferocious people that popular imagination in this country is apt to picture them. | The Servians, for example, ae a | genuine simple peasant folk, whose | home life might be copied with ad- vantage by the populations living un- . der the rule of the great powers of | Europe. The Servian practices the art | of co-operation, while civilized people | are learning its elements. Every lit i tle homestead in Servia is a family | commune, while in some of the moun- | tain districts exists the zadriga, or | communal village, where everything is held in common, and where the old: est man is the guide and commander { and final authority as to the mating of | the people in his district. ! Founded Sect in Japan. | A forerunner of Mrs. Mary Baker | Eddy has been discovered. She was a Japanese woman who, long before Christian Science was heard of, founded in the Island Empire a very similar cult. According to a writer in the London Chronicle, about 4,000, 000 inhabitants of Japan are believ- ers in this system, which they call “Tenriqyo” and the “medical re ligion.” Few in England or America had heard of this religion until, not long ago, four missionaries from Japan settled for a time in London, talked of their faith to some whom they met and, departing, left behind them a little book written in English but printed in Osaka. Starting a Missouri Train, A drummer and a friend climbed aboard a ramshackle train in an iso- lated Missouri town. The train was a feeble, asthmatic piece of mechanism and the humane society should have prosecuted its owners for allowing it to run at all, It finally came to a dead stop just on the edge of the town and after a long interval of trying to make it go the engineer stuck his head in the door and bawled: “Say, you two gents'll have to git out till I git it started!”—Kansas City . Working for the Boss Easy. A man complains of being worked to death since he went into business for himself. Now all he can think about is getting down early and keep- ing on the job until everybody else goes, not even taking time out for luncheon. He had it easy when work- ing for the boss, because he had regular hours for starting in and leaving off, and at luncheon took an hour and a half or two hours out in the fresh air looking around, shop- ping or calling on friends. Don't Sleep In Cutaways. A fat man got aboard the cars and squeezed into an empty seat next to a sleepy man wearing a long-tailed cut- & —Colic in one form or another, 9 vou uss i gud or a large zum- Bef 9 them annually, 8 vai wenty-ounce apples that ex- ceeded the weight which gave the varie- ty its name were not uncommon, and puzzle an expert to classi them if he did not know that they = on Baldwin trees. The latter part of the season was highly favorable to the devel- opment of late winter fruit. —F experiments recently report- ed to the rtment of Agricul op that with the grape root-worm the use of a molasses-arsenate of lead mixture—six Jit the sweet, and also the insects are lead with Bordeaux mixture, is similar to of the root-worm. The use of with arsenate of lead in Bordeaux mi ture gave the same results as when ajsenate of lead and Bordeaux were used one. 8 HH | ments of Jaws and drops the food from mou This process is known and indicates that the ! | 8 8 Hl i i FE le 89a © of fis ii ii! i hit : ; i 8 §F { a) gt Eng i I £35EEEAE li i F LE enFesa8ifis g i gs EF i 13! ul g i oi il oe i tial t is essen ou Se en hay in y must ly masticated and well mixed saliva, and the better masticated more easily is it digested in the stomach. —Horses require from five to fifteen gal- lons of water a day, the quantity depend- ing upon the temperature and the amount BS he on as pure as appear- bdepusss pow Pure water is just as as it is to a man, and it ua with impuni water ty. obtained from or shallow wells, contaminated with surface drainage, or containing decom organic matter, frequently causes and general- ly predisposes to colic. 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