Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 18, 1913, Image 2

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    Belletonte, Pa., July 18, 1913.
If Eyes Were Always Glowing.
If eyes were always glowing
And hearts were always gay,
With shadows never showing
That grief would have its day.
I'd wish a life of joy for you,
Without grief's dark alloy for you,
Without one trace of pain for you,
With everything a gain for you,
If eyes were always glowing
And hearts were always gay.
Eyes are not always glowing,
Hearts are not always gay,
For shadows still keep growing
That grief does have its day.
1 pray, then, joy be sent to you,
That grief be only lent to you,
The two be blended so for you
That life will ever show for you
That happy eyes keep glowing,
That loving hearts are gay.
—S. Jean Walker.
THE PICCANINNY AND THE CZAR.
[Concluded from last week.)
Douglas was not certain what the
Tsarskoye-Selo was, but suspected that
he was being sentto a dungeon for life
and fled more madly than he had done
from the sound of the supposed bomb to
the shelter of Miss Angela's dressing
wn. That lady was in a humor
t whacked him 5 ns bring
him to his senses and a condition of co-
. When he blubbered forth his
fears, while the other piccaninnies look-
ed at Bim as 8 He wate a murderer, Miss
Ange a rang for manager.
“What's this here sarkysola stuff I'm
best Senne
“Ah, Mademoiselle! It is avery t
honor. Itis the Czar who ——
your boy dance at his smoking party. It
is indeed extaordinaire. It is a high
compliment.”
"High compliment be ! Why
Sidut the old guy send for me I'm this
ow y little nigger can’t go unless
do. See? You tell Bim 80.”
Poor Douglas could not understand
why all the following day she snarled at
him on the slightest provocation and slap-
ped him when he wanted to go out on
the street with the other piccaninnies.
He could not fathom why he was told
that he was “gettin’ too fresh.” He could
not define professional jealousy. The
utmost he wanted was to escape this
tyrant and get back to Baltimore where
he could dance and shuffle in the road.
way, and wear old clothes that could not
be soiled by a fight or a frolic; back to
where his mammy was kindly and cud-
dled his little woolly head to her ample
bosom if he so much as stubbed his toe.
But Miss Angela was in a country
where her dictum was of little avail. As
if she were the merest atom in the world,
she was overruled in her decision that
Douglas should not dance before royalty
unless she danced with him—and inci
dentally absorbed all of the spot. It was
foredoomed that she was not to have
the honor nor the opportunity to gloat
over her prominence when she returned
to London or New York. “Mademoiselle,”
the manager said to her through the
crack of her Sressiig Foun door on the
following evening, after her number was
completed and she was changing her
somewhat ornate evening dress for street
clothes, “send forth the young negro,
Douglas. The droshky waits.”
“You git out of that! Didn't I say as
how he couldn't go unless | went? Who's
the boss here—you or me?”
The manager hurried away in pertur-
bation. In another instant the door was
thrust back with a smashing impact. A
man in a gold laced uniform stood in the
doorway. “By the order of the Czar!"
he declaimed in good English. “Madame
will at once submis to Car's invita.
tion for her employee or passports
will be held and she may not leave Rus-
sia until she has satisfied the courts as
to who she should disobey. An invita.
tion from His Imperial Majesty is an
order. If Madam still further objects
she shall be arrested. The theater will
be closed until the manager can make
roper explanations, and Madame will
po that the law is beyond her whim.”
For once the combative Miss Angela |
was overawed. She hastened to turn
Douglas Fairfax over to the officer who
took him down through the narrow alley
of the stage entrance. He turned him
over to a driver who at once lashed his
horses to a run, and the droshky tore
away for the railway station. Douglas
was too surprised to the conquering of
his mistress to do more than sit and
wonder and to obey when told to get into
a carriage that was to take him to the
outlying palace.
A frowning mat, immaculately dressed,
sat in a corner; but Douglas did not
know he was a famous Russian actor.
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and at the head of the stem sat a tired
looking man with a beard. Stretchi
away on all sides were officers in is
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—-—
Dear Home Folk:
Juans, Jury 3rd.
The rain clouds, for which we have
been so long waiting have come, but only
brought us thunder in terrifying claps
and rolls. The heat is so intense that
although we had some hail this afternoon,
apprehension. ybe they were mock- |
ing him! He tried to run but could not. |
He was in a nightmare. They laughed
and applauded more loudly at this new
manifestation and fairly shrieked with
delight when he gave way to a blind im. | the earth, as I walked over from the hos-
pulse and succeeded in darting off the | pital, felt like a green-house, into which
stage, intent only on finding a door and | the hose had just been turned. If you
running anywhere out into the arctic, . 14 see me sitting under the great
night. A man ed him up in the -
wings and carried him, striking and kick- “punkah” being pulled over my head and
ing, through a side door down into the | the “kustas tatti” saturated every fifteen
hall. : ‘ , | minutes with water to keep what air the
Leming Sot & pa Lene goss “punkah” makes a trifle cooler. Even
reassured him and stood him down by | With it all, the streams of perspiration
the blonde go who ing Jom y hand are trickling merrily from every pore,
and drew him tow: m. uglas rdl f the fact of itti
a at ont lly ox | regardless of the fact of my. sitting. aby
of the gray eyes that here was solutely quiet. This heat simply cannot
a friend. He dove to shelter. He | be described. Even the natives in the
clutched She Bie sute man frantically ow hospital are feeling it now more than IL
snuggled ace against t cordons of The monsoon has not come yet and
fhe union RE fash: | those who know, say we need not expect
sobbed against Aunt Mandy's breast. | it before the middle of August; itis very
The 50 seemed 3s Stand. He late this year and as the long, hard rains
A s heaving back and said, “There! | jt always brings are the only ones that
frs Sidi Dons be frightened. Noth- | really cool off the earth and rocks about
the piccaninny regained his com- Jhansi, I suppose we will simply have to
re and sctublen Racieto Nis feet. bear it until that relief comes.
were crowding arou im—grim | The hospital is filled just now with
lace ag fellows ; Dearnid, Buse looking : poor sick souls, suffering intensely from
background but looked their sympathy, | these torid, murky days. The natives
A huge ash tay sod in the center o | about the streets have discarded all sem-
e stem of the table. man with | plance of dress, save the loose loin cloth;
She beard heckored Re BE | even these are laid aside at the well,
The bearded man threw yellow pieces of | Where the men have their baths, pouring
money into it. Others did likewise. It! water over each other and splashing
filled! R Svirtidwed) There Be more | about to cleanse and cool themselves a
That is Fo wnt ge ley man ' bit:
said. "Just for you. Now don't be Women don't bathe at the public
frightened any more. Go back and dance | baths and they wear plenty of cloth to
jor us again, men hey. will send Jou | cover them—simply swathed asit were
HoT A Tg hers. OU in yards and yards of “stuff.” Only the
The encore he gave was rapturous. | high-class women, whom one never sees
Fear had gone, and emotion and turmoil | walking, wear the thin sauri; as trans
centered themselves on doing something | parent as gauze. The only women one
money. He danced as if there were brains | ever sees walking are the “coolie” class,
in his feet. And as he left the palace a | and they have their “sauri” made into
man came and handed him a roll of | regular skirts, with a draw string three
parchment, a diploma, which he could | inches from the ground. They have
not read, announcing that he had been i 5 ;
a ted a. dancer 8 the Imperial court | beautiful little feet, high arched, with
of Russia. The other artists on the train = dainty ankles which are usually spoiled
looked at him enviousiy and explained | by the ugly “anklets” which all wear.
ie Je was 3 fval court Sancer They That reminds me, the other day a
ya in ues the Tuohy aby heavy for | young girl of ten came to have her toe
him to carry, and finally one of the acro- | ring removed as she had been wearing it
bats advised him, “That cld ham you're! for some time and it could not be gotten
NOK 10 Sell) cop al that hie Se 6e8 | off. The ring, unfortunately, was not a
got no right to grab that away from you, | ring, but a strip of metal fastened
kid. I'll tellyou how to hide it. You'll about the toe and the ends pressed down.
want} whey you get bak gy | These had embedded themselves in the
30 YOu-a,. reckon LC back to | ynder part of the toe and it took chloro-
Baltimo’ wid dat? the boy asked. | form and quite a bit of manipulation to
“Sure you could!" ! ]
The homesickness that had tugged at | get results without breaking the toe.
his heart-strings in all the weary months | Ear rings frequently have to be filed off
surged up until he blubbered a little, for | , 4 many times the holes closed up.
he was but a piccaninny after all. And |
the kindly performer, an exile himself,| !must say I have never seen so many
understood the feeling and came to his | kinds of disease as one finds here; like
EE
Suddenly the man with |
aid.
It is to be feared that Douglas Fairfax
! had some inherent trait of what might
be styled either deceit or diplomacy; but’
he had been in a hard and cruel school
i where ali he earned, with the exception
of the comparatively niggardly amount
sent Aunt Mandy, had been confiscated,
and hope to escape from Miss Angela
{ia grown dima a candle burned to the
p.
Al oT a
who, y eyed, met him w
he reached Ee house in St.
Petersburg. What she said can scarcely
be told in full. .
“Stingy lot of pikers,” she declared,
taking every cent of the money Douglas
gave her.
Computing from rubles to dollars and
cents she arrived at the conclusion that
had given him less than twenty-five
ars. :
“] always heard that this Czar was
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A month later, out in the dust of the
road in front of a cabin on the
of Baltimore—a cabin that had just been
ted blue and low and
jpainte chief interior decoration was a
BE arPointment from
a small, black piccaninny. Several other
envious but admiring piccaninnies patted
and on the
3h the gals Dost lounged won,
f
:
| the ones at home, and many more, most-
| ly arising from extreme neglect, and be-
! cause these people have little or no pow-
er of resistence, they come to us in their
worst form.
This morning, in the dispensary, »
girl was brought to me swathed head,
| face and neck in yards of dirty, bloody
rags. | wondered, while having her
placed on the table, what could have
blood, and on unwrapping the miles of
bandage, found merely a bad sore which
had been bleeding for several days and
her people had merely applied more rags
as the blood came through, never think-
| ing of uncovering the wound or cleans-
| ing either it or the girl. She was in a
| frightful condition to be sure, but one
which water and some attention could
vastly relieve.
The natives here use a sort of shoe-
maker's wax—black as ink— for sores of
all kinds, on top of which they tie or
bind a “neme” leaf, which is a bad com-
bination for the sore, but as the “neme”
leaf is sacred, and has been used here
for ages I can’t hope to change the su-
perstition during my short stay. Itis all
on a par with the “garb” of the little
Hindu children; they wear absolutely
nothing, save a brown string tied about
the place where the waist is supposed to
be, and woe betide any one who mis-
places or breaks that string. One pities
the “kiddies” here; although they seem
happy, playing with mud pies, etc, just
as our home children love to do; the dif-
ference is, the childhood of the Indian
| girl is so pathetically short—married,
usually at three years of age; a mother
at twelve or thirteen; an old woman at
eighteen, and at thirty a wrinkled old
“hag.” In the meantime, she never de-
velops past ten years, mentally, and at
eighteen has to be handled just like a
j child; she will cry and sulk from the
most trivial causes, just as a child at
home, and I am convinced that wife-beat-
ing in India is almost a necessity, for of
course it all results from the “purdah”
system and early marriages. No one at
home can understand the conditions here.
happened to cause the loss of so much | YOU
be Presi- | quite worth reading, is—"“The West in
the East,” from an American point of
view. I have been studying “high class”
native life close at hand, these days, as
| a wee, fat pudgy woman, not as tall as |
And Douglas Fairfax, happy and fairly | but twice as broad, came to the dispen-
| sary for treatment.
She is a “begum,” her husband a strik-
| ingly handsome chap,—Major in one of
| the native regiments here. The “lady”
has all the hall marks of an Eastern
beauty; long, oval eyes, very fair com-
plexion, long silky hair, as black as any
crow India can produce. She wears no
nose ring, but did have a few very ele-
gant ear rings; she is a Musselman, and
would that you all could have seen her,
for of course they wear tight flitting
“pajamas” and hers were of silk; above
this she wore a thin shirt, rain-bow
striped, at least three inches in width,
the tail of the shirt spanning her volu-
minous hips in true hobble fashion. Over
this was thrown a “ghuda,” a thin, yard-
square piece of silk, drawn about her
shoulders and face when any one ap-
proached her. She, of course, brought
her own furniture with her, but while
using a chair sat with both feet drawn
up on the seat.
She has already asked me to a tea par-
ty at her home, which I will surely at-
tend, on the hope of seeing something
new in entertaining and also in cleanli-
ness, for so far my experience at native
parties has been anything but satisfying
as to the sanitary conditions.
This woman has her servant with her
so of coursc we may only prescribe; the
“personal touch” is left to her own ser-
vants. She was only here a few days
and on our advice went home and is now
trying to get thin, which job I am glad
is not to be accomplished by me, for l
fear the undertaking a hopeless one.
(Continued next week.)
Cruising for Homesteads.
BY WiLL TRUCKENMILLER.
In June, 1897, I went with a party of
Indiana people cruising for Homesteads
on the vast stretches of government land
then remaining in northeast North
Leaving the settled country at the east
end of the Sweetwater lakes, with its big
lawns and houses, groves and grain
fields, we passed through township one
hundred and fifty-six, and entered into a
vast extent of public domain.
Here, unoccupied and unused, lay town:
ship after township of the most fertile
land on earth, to be had for the taking;
but my party of land hunters were hard
to please, and the more land we looked
at the more they wanted to see.
Evening found us far up the middle
fork of the Sweetwater, and here we
made camp.
“Come, Smith,you put up the tent; Beck,
look after the horses; Doctor, go over in
that post hole and cut dead grass for
fuel; while Amziah and I get supper,” I
can smell that bacon frying yet; and
then under the twinkling stars we crept
into our tent and went to sleep.
Now Smith was an indolent man, and
to save work improperly pitched the
tent; in the night a cold wind came up,
and he becoming chilly reached over and
took my fur coat; when the uproar was
over, we put Smith on the windward
side of the tent as punishment.
For one week we wandered up and
down the government lands; traveling
over four counties; and in the end my
land hunters located in Rolette county,
four miles west of Perth; fifty miles from
the first land we looked at. On this trip
I also located my father and brother
Arthur, on land six miles west of Bisbee.
Flourishing towns and prosperous farms
now occupy that government land, rail
road trains and automobiles have driven
out its old inhabitants; the wild goose,
ay Hie sandhill crow; the coyote and
0X.
“The Ten Demandments.”
“These Ten Cemandments’’ are hanging in the
rooms of a certain factory:
1. Don’t lie. It wastes my time and
rs. Iam sure to catch you in the
end, and that is the wrong end.
2. Watch your work, not the clock. A
's work makes a long day short;
FARM NOTES.
—Soil is not a dead, inert substance, as
many suppose. It is an active, virile
force, full of energy and power, and the
farmer should know his soil if he would
maintain its productiveness.
—It is a good plan to write to your
commission merchant in advance of
shipment, and ask his advice as to the
best method of packing, as he knows his
market much better than you do.
—Buttermilk is a Very. Felatanie and
wholesome drink for ren. Those
who make butter on the farm have the
advantage of pure, wholesome butter-
milk, which is no small item in the cost
of living.
—Cream separators and silos are good
indications of progressin farming. Dairy-
ing is sure to be recognized more as a
profitable line of farming because it is a
means of producing f with the least
loss in plant food constituents and at a
minimum cost in marketing farm pro-
ducts.
—Let no man imagine because the
tariff will likely be taken from the wool
that there will no longer be profit in rais-
ling a few sheep to supply the local
market with mutton and the wool clip
trade occasionally. The smail farmer
has the opportunity. Let him make good |
use of it. i
—A well graded barnyard, on soil with
good natural drainage, is very desirable
as a site for a stable, and, will, in addi-
tion to furnishing good conditions for a
winter exercising yard, save much labor
in cleaning cows when compared with
the quagmires one sometimes sees mas-
querading under the name of barnyards.
—Twenty-five or thirty years ago the
hog was rather affectionately referred to
as “The M ge-Lifter” by the farmers
of the corn belt. Since then the name
has fallen into disuse, not for want of
hogs, but for want of m to be |
lifted. Having successfully removed the
Mortgage, the hog did notgo out of busi-
ness. He is still on the job.
But these days he might more proper-
ly be called “The Bank-Account Builder,
“The Other-Farm Buyer,” or “The Au-
tomobile-Buyer,” or “The Ready-Cash
Provider.” In all these capacities the
hog is still working for the benefit of the
farmer, turning more than seventy-five
million dollars a Jeu into the pockets of
the farmers of Iowa alone. Forty mii-
lions more into the pockets of Illinois farm.-
ers. There is probably no State whose hog
crop falls below a million dollars a year.
And this is in the face of a scourge
that has destroyed more than half a bil-
lion dollars’ worth of hogs in the half-
century that has elapsed since it was in-
troduced into this country. While it is
true that these figures are beyond any
man's comprehension, they serveto show
the stupendous money cost of the scourge
variously known as swine-plague or hog- |
cholera and to impress on the reader's |
mind the money value of any method or
mode of treatment that will stop the
ravages of the disease.
It is my purpose to sketch bnefly the
nature of hog-cholera and to outline the!
campaign which most of the States are
now waging against it, and most impor- |
tant of all to put Farm and Fireside read-
ers in a position to take up the study of
the subject further by giving the address
of the proper official in each State to!
whom the reader is u to apply for
further information and necessary sup-
plies.
For want of space, we shall not de-
scribe hog-cholera in detail. Itis enough
to say that it is a deadly and highly con- |
tagious germ disease that is likely to |
break out anywhere at any time, because |
there are so many ways in which the |
erm may be carried from to place place. |
t may be in the reader's own herd next |
{ veek! i
| As will here be seen nearly three]
| fourths of the States have gone into a
| systematic campaign to fight hog-cholera
| by what is known as the “serum treat-
| ment.” i
It has been found that hog cholera be- |
longs to the same class diseases as |
smallpox, rabies, typhoid and other germ
diseases which may be prevented and
often cured by giving the patient the dis-
ease in a light form, which it is found
defends the system against the later at-
tack of the disease itself.
If you will take a glass tumbler full of
fresh blood and set it away in a moder-
ate temperature for a few days, you will
find a thick red clot floating in a light
straw-colored liquid. :
This liquid is called “serum” and is an
essential part of every kind of blood. It
seems to be the part of the blood in
which the fant between life and death
is constantly going on.
Within its current the white corpuscles
: at 4 in your life.”
s5f He
lien
z
furrow while another man covered
them up. When they dug them in the
fall they were simply allowed to roll
to the bottom of the hill before any
attempt was made to pick them up.
Now Comes the Golf Faker.
A ball played by a golfer at Weston.
super-Mare struck a skylark, so we
read, and cut the bird's head off. You
should hear us tell our story of the
golf ball which stuck in a bird's beak
in the middle of its flight The bird
flew off with the ball to its nest. For
tunately for the player, the bird had
made its nest in the next hole.—~Lon-
don Globe.
Where She Went.
Mater (at the Alpine resort)—We're
back again, count; we've had a splen.
did day; we've been up the mountain,
you know. Count—Ah, you English
mothers, you are always as young as
your daughters. Mater—You flatter
me, count; it was only my girls who
climbed. I went up in the vernacular.
-Punch.
Philanthropic Penology.
“What is that open-iir structure you
have inclosed with mosquito netting?”
“That,” replied Farmer Corntossel, “is
our village jail.” “But you want iron
bars for a jail?” “Not here. Any.
body we put in there will be so thank:
ful to get away from the mosquitoes
that he wouldn't think of leaving.”
"Twill Be Different With the Lady.
A Cincinnati man has married @
woman because he fell in love with
her voice when he heard it in a talk
ing machine. The case is not a re
markable one. He could stop the talk
ing machine whenever he pleased.
Quite Another Thing.
“What makes you so sleepy today,
old man?” “I was up at 4 this morn
ing?’ “Come cff! You never got up
“1 didn't say I got
up; I said I was up.”—Boston Evening
Transcript.
Yes.
The most difficult thing for a bride
of two months to understand is that
her husband may occasionally want tc
leave her to spend an hour or two with
an old college friend. —Philadelphia In
quirer.
Not at All
Because this country spends some
thing like $10,000,000 a year for ume
brellas, isn't it to be taken as conclu
sive evidence that our people don't
know enough to go in when it rains?—
Browning's Magazine.
i Put One Over.
| Wife—What a wretch that Mrs. Get
| taway is. When she found I was de
: ascended from King Lunky III. she goes
to a genealogist and gets descended
| from King Lunky I.
1
Unofficial Notice.
|" Hibernian in front of unfinished
| ‘building to fellow workmen at fifty:
long da may be obtained from the serum of a, window: “Mulcahy, go to the
pri: Jo day's work makes my face sich hog, and by injecting them in very i tube. I want to tell yes to
long. small quantities into healthy hogs the oo oq on
3. Give me more than I expect and I | |atter may be given just enough of the |:
will give you more than you expect. I| disease to make them safe against the
can afford to increase your pay if you in- | disease itself. Perfectly Proper.
4. Hiding much to If ere Ee phi Heston. Mm peg ve i
ui ies thew ol ng er—think your father would care
cannot afford to owe anybody else. Keep hogs for cholera, as it is carried out bY | 7 called you Minnie?” Lovely Girl—
out of debt of keep out of my shops. | the various States, “Certainly not; he calls me that him
5. Dishonesty is never an accident. | [t was first worked out by the United self!” ’
Good men like good women never see | States Department of Agriculture and is
temptation when they meet it. now in use in nearly all the States, each
6. Mind your business, and in time State acting for itself. u ivable.
you will have a business of your own to | When an inventor has produced a ma- bl —— io gith
mind. chine intended to be used by all kinds of | _Blobbs— 0 those
7 Don’t do anything here which hurts | people, his work is not more than half both hate you so?’ Slobbs—"I once
your self-respect. An employee who i8 | done unless he has made it what inven- | ‘innocently remarked that they looked
willing to steal for me is willing to steal | tors call “fool-proof;” that is, made it so 'alike.”—Philadelphia Record.
from me. that anybody can use it and nobody can
8. tis font of my business what you | make it go wrong.
do at night. But if dissipation affects Now the serum treatment for hog- Health Hint.
what you do the next day, and you do | cholera is far from being fool-proof, and | If you wish to preserve yourself iz
half as much as I demand you'll last half | it would be a great mistake for ‘health and safety, avold serious cares
a u hoped. ' to get the idea from what we have and do not give way to passion.—
9, t tell me what I'd like to hear, | that all he needs to do, in case of hog- Latin Proverb
but what Jought to hear. I don’t want | cholera, is to draw a little blood from a | Lat ver.
a valet to my vanity, but one for my | gick hog and squirt it into the healthy
money. ones.
10. Don’t kick if I kick. If you're |" Properly used m treatment is Still Have to Be Caught.
worth correcting your worth while arpa sad, the STU Henman: of There are as good fish in the sea as
ing. [don't waste time cutting hogs, ns used | ever were caught, but few of them are
out of rotten apples. the last condition o treated hogs will be | likely to try to crawl up into your lap
————————————————— worse rst.
~——For high class Job Work come t0| ~ And right here we have the main rea-
the WATCHMAN Office. son why the States are going into the Small Eggs of Silkworm.
estes man and distribution of the| he egg from which the silkworm
th SE WOE JT nish = presarve [semedy: folder state supesvision i comes is so small that it takes one
on w ul dependen plain greater care in dred weigh a grain
will find certain help in Dr. Pierce's | is to be expected, since the process is an hun of them to a
Favorite Prescription. It cures irregu- | intricate as well as expensive one. g
larities, and prevents the functional de-| Applied in actual use, however, the Unwilling to Disturb Her.
raugemants n which womanly ill-health | remedy itself is not expensive. Write to A majority of the men are willing
unhappiness so often have their | the officer for your State, as th nish girl to be her
origin. “Favorite Prescription” is es- (shown in the accompanying list, for | to permit the man
pecially to be recom as a temper- | further information. own man.
EK ets 1
um, ne, nor an ? your -house so you
narcotic. There is nothing “Just as | not lose the address. You may need it “Finds Tongues in Trees—"
good.” A man writes well only what he hat
But after a few generations are educatad ! ——Have your Job Work done here.
Whar: ordering serum, state number
and weight of hogs to be treated.
| seen or suffered—De Goncourt,