FSi Bewarratic; atc Bellefonte, Pa., January 9, 1914. A Southern Christmas. BY ELLA VAN WELCH. It was Dec. 15. That was before rail- roads had taken from the Mississippi river the great carrying trade of freight and passengers. and the steam- ers plying back and forth between St. Louis or Cincinnati and New Or- ance in the southwest. One might start from either of these cities early in December. when the ground was covered with snow. and reach New 1 i that er husband could not force him- self to tell her from the boy’s mother. ' who. frantic with grief. went to her to entreat her to do something to save her from being separated from her boy. . The blow was almost as severe upon the mistress as upon the slave. But : she kept her head and sent Susan away assuring her that if there was anything | she could do to prevent the calamity : she would do it. but, knowing her hus- band’s financial straits, she could give ! no hope, As soon as Sue had departed Mrs. St. ‘ Clair sent for her husband. The cus- tom of gambling was so prevalent { among the planters of that day that leans were the main means of convey- | Orleans for Christmas to find summer | still lingering. On this day of Dec. 15. when the steamer Tecumseh was passing Baton Rouge, in the cabin sat two men play- ing cards. sissippi gambling went on openly, either chips or money on the table without any pretense of concealment, and these two men were playing with | In those days on the Mis- | she did not reproach him. She could not but recognize that he had been weak to risk the happiness of a fam- ily whom both he and she considered committed to their charge by Provi- dence, but she knew nothing was to be gained by holding up to him his sin. and she knew he suffered keenly for i what he had done. She hegan at once to confer with him upon some plan by which a sum might be raised to buy i back the boy. In vain they went over everything they possessed that could i possibly be mortgaged. All such prop- i the principal currency of the period— { New Orleans was the nearest place the state bank bills. One of them was a professional gambler, the other a young sugar planter. whose home was in Louisiana, not far from New Orleans. The gambler was quietly | taking away from the planter what ' money he had with him: now permit- ting him to win a few dollars. and now forcing him to lose a great many. Presently he took the last of his op- ponent’s funds. Arthur St. Clair could not afford to lose this money. He owned a good plantation and the negroes to work it. but had no capital. Indeed. many of the planters of that day were in a con- tinual state of debt. usually borrowing on a new crop before having liquidat- ed their indebtedness for the old one. St. Clair was one of these. Besides working on the credit system in vogue at the time. he was a very kind mas- ter to his slaves and never denied them anything they wanted. no matter what the cost. Nevertheless, having lost some $800 to the gambler. he yielded to a temptation to risk separating one of the families he owned, for the pur- pose of making an attempt to recoup. “I have a negro boy. ten years old.” he said, “whom [I consider worth at least $400. Will you fend me $200 on him?" © “Certainly. suh; with pleasure. suh.” “I'll draw up a n»sts rfentaining a lien on the boy.” “It’s not necessary, I assure you, suh. Your word is quite enough, suh.” So they plaved on till the amount loaned was lost: then $200 more was borrowed. This also being lost, a bill of sale for the boy was made out for the property to be delivered ten days from the date. signed by St. Clair and handed to the gambler. “I would be happy to loan you more on other of your servants, suh,” said the gambler. “No,” said the other ruefully. *By what 1 have done 1 have separated a family. The boy I have lost at cards is the only child of the best man and the best woman I have on my planta- tion. It will break both the father’s and the mother’s hearts to part with him. I have done very wrong and will do no more.” St. Clair, with lowering brow. went out on the guard. as the deck outside the cabin was called. and. sitting him- self down in one of the wooden arm- chairs he found there. gare himself up te remorse at having yielded to temp- tation. He was not troubled at the money he had lost, for money in itself was of little value in his eves. But he had used his credit to the uttermost farthing, and he saw no way to pre- vent the boy he had lost, Billy, from being torn from his parents. In ten days a scene would be enacted that he dreaded. Ten days! Why, in ten days it would be Christmas. St. Clair arose from his chair and paced the guard feverishly. Of all the days in the year to take a boy from his parents and turn him over to strangers! Why had he not made the time twenty days—any other than on Christmas day? It had not occurred to him that the tenth day from the present would be the day on which all Christians tried to make all other Christians happy. How could he tell his man. Sam. that on Christmas day instead of being made happy by gifts his family was to be made miserable by the loss of one of its number? St. Clair carried his trouble home with him. but kept it to himself till the day before Christmas. He tried to nerve himself to tell his wife, that she might relieve him of the task of telling Sam and Susan, the parents of little Billy, that on Christmas day they must part with their best beloved. But his effort was a failure. Adelia St. Clair took as much interest in the welfare of her negroes as if they were a part of her own family. Her hushand could not nerve himself to confess how weal he had been. He knew that Sam was very fond of him_ though he was Sam’s master. He had often stood between Sam and harm and bad given him everything he wanted. He felt that he could impart the news to Sam with less pain to himself than to any one else and knew that by confessing the whole story Sam would blame him less than any one else. So the day before Christmas calling the slave aside where he would not be overheard by others, he made his confession. “Sam,” he added, when he had told that on Christmas the new owner of Billy would arrive to take the boy away, “this breaks my heart.” “Mars Arthur,” gasped Sam, “I for- give you, but I wouldn't forgive mo udder marster in de worl".” _Adelia St. Clair learned the secret . erty had been mortgaged already. Be- sides. there was no time to negotiate. where such a matter could be attended | to, and to go there. make a loan and return weuld require several days. Sam came in just as they had agreed that nothing could be done to save bis boy to him. He looked anxiously from one to the other to see if there was any hope. St. Clair nodded to his wife to speak for both. “There is no time in which to pre- vent the separation.” she said. “Your master has received a message that Billy will be called for tomorrow. We can only promise that if we can keep a knowledge of Billy's future where- abouts we will buy him back if it should be possible.” There was no comfort in this for Sam. He knew his master's proneness to drift financially and believed that he would get deeper and deeper in debt. With a moan he turned away to impart the sad tidings to his wife. The news that little Billy had been sold and was to be taken away on Christmas morning cast a gloom over all, white and black, on the plantation. “Dis won't be no Chris’'mas at all,” said one. *“Wha' mars go sell Billy fo’ to go | way on Chris'mas? He ought to had mo’ sense than dat.” said another. “Yo’' shet up. nigga.” said a third. “Mars wouldn't ’a’ done dat if he hadn't had to done it.” : These criticisms. though plentiful among the negroes. were not mingled with much blame. They all knew their master and had perfect confi- dence in his intentions. As soon as St. Clair had finished his breakfast—a cup of coffee—he left the plantation in order to avoid being pres- ent at Billy’s departure. About 10 o'clock a house. servant announced to Mrs. St. Clair that a man had come for Billy. Mrs. St. Clair went to a jewel box. where she found the re- mains of her jewels that had not beer pledged. Taking a mental inventory of them, she could not possibly make out their total worth at over $300. She sighed at not being able to find anything more. Taking the remnant of a property | that had been in her family for many generations, she went downstairs. She was surprised to find a well dressed man. not at all like one who might have been sent for a negro boy. He rose deferentially as she entered. “T am surprised.” she said. *‘at see- ing a gentleman. Are you the owner of the boy you have come for?" “Yes, madam.” “May I ask who you are?” she added curiously. “A gambler, madam.” “A gambler?" “Yes. madam. 1 am the gentleman who won the boy from your husband.” This looked hopeful. Mrs. St. Clair produced her jewels and was begin- ning a speech as to their value when the man interrupted her. “Is your husband at home, madam?" “No. 1 expect he went away to get rid of seeing this poor family lose their treasure.” “1 did not notice. madam. when I took a bill of sale from your husband that the property was to be delivered on Christmas day. I have come my- self to see Mr. St. Clair to impress upon him the folly of playing ecards for money with a professional gambler. I found him an easy prey.” Taking out a wallet. he handed the lady a roll of bills and paper. then added. “There is the amount, madam. I won from your husband. and there is the bill of sale for the boy.” The latter he tore into bits and threw them into a fire burning on the hearth. *I thought Christmas would be a proper day. madam. to give this advice to vour husband. 1 found him a very attrac- tive gentleman and am glad to have had an opportunity to show my appre- ciation of him. I hid you good morn- ing. madam.” But Mrs. St. Clair would not let him go. She sent negroes to scour the country for her husband. and when he was found and brought in Sam and Sue and Billy were also sent for. The latter were not told of what had hap- pened and came. supposing that they had been called for the parting. That Christmas which opened so gloomily turned out to be the merriest that had ever been known on the St. Clair plantation. Rebuttal Testimony. The Guest—Isn't your little boy rath- er nervous, Mrs. Bimm? Mrs. Bimm—No: 1 think not. Little Boy—Yes, 1 am, ma: when p2o- ple who come here stay too long it makes me wriggle and kick my chair. Significance of Little Things. We love little things. we hate little things, we fear little things. Our lives are knit up with little things from the time we are born to the day we die. Big things draw us up to heaven or crush us down to hades. Little things live beside us on the earth, eat and sleep with us, laugh and grumble with us. catch the early train with us or make us miss it. irritate and appease us— never leave us alove for a minute. That is why they are so much more important than the big things—the things that come only once in a way, at long intervals, and even then are nearly always the result of a hundred and one little things combined. To be crushed by a large misadven- ture is patural, but to fall a victim to a series of petty misfortunes is hu- miliating. There are many who would prefer to break their necks once and for all by falling off a mountain than to bruise their whole bodies and dis- locate their tempers Ly the daily stum- bling over a molehill. It is the little things that count. climbing Mount Olympus is a poor sort of attainment if the scores and scores of pleasant details which wait upon success be absent.— Atlantic. i A Vanished Ocean. In the tertiary period tlie geograph- ical configuration of the globe was steadily approaching that of the pres- ent day. The same holds true for the faunal aspect and the climate was verging on the glacial period. i | The satisfaction of | | It was at this time the great equatorial ocean. ' “Tethys.” existed still. and there is ev- idence that East Indian and Africa, Australia and Asia, north Europe and North. America were united by land connections. In the Iatter part of the period the ocean “Tethys” gave place to mountainous formations, such as the Alps. Himalayas and Carpathians. through the folding up of the crust ot the sea. At the same time there were enormous outpourings of volcanic ma- terials. Snakes and true birds ad- vanced rapidly toward their modern position in this period. which was characterized also by the maximum expansion of mammals taking the place of the great saurians.—New York Sun. An Old Time Scotch Sunday. The sixteenth century practice of the elders in Scotland of going the rounds ‘to pick up offenders against Sunday rules survived until the eighteenth cen- tury. Mr. Thomsan in his “Weavers Craft” gives details of the “bag: ; “The minister himself would make the rounds to spy with his own eyes the sins of the absentees. Here one man is found romping with his bairns. an- other detected kissing his wife, two men were found drinking ale, and one was found with his coat off, as if he . were going to work, and still another was seen eiatiug a hearty dinner. All were pulled up before the session of the kirk and ‘repentences’ enforced upon each.” And now one can under- stand the wherefore of the drawn blind on the Sabbath which struck , James Payn as astonishing in the | Edinburgh of the sixties. — London _ Chronicle. Ji A Medical View of Bathing. Whether or not we believe that cold baths have virtues which hot baths €an never possess, it is far better to preach the most advanced gospel of cleanliness than none at all. The per- son who bathes frequently is a clean- . er person both physically and mentally than he who does not. and if our de sire is today to bring about a higher morale among the people at large let | us not cavil at a soap because forsooth ' it may be a little too strong in alkali, or at large quantities of water, even though applied to the body oftener than once a day. For let no one think for a moment that human nature is so smitten with the idea to keep clean that it will ever have a maddening de- sire to use too much soap or water.— Dr. Philip Skrainka in Interstate Med- ica. Journal. His Growl. *A man ought to know when to say no." “You know when to say no, all right.” “Thank you; I think | do.” *Yes. vou said no when you felt sure I would ask you again. «nd you said yes when you saw me beginning to weaken.” —- Houston Post. India’s Light Winds, In over five-sixths of the territory of India the wind forces are not strong enough to specially encourage the use of windmills. Bonnets are almost unknown in Mex- ico, even among wealthy ladies. LIME AND LIMESTONE. The Victoria Cross. i England's prized Victoria Cross is only won under circumstances of the deadliest peril to its owner. The cross itself is of bronze. cast trom cannon taken at Sebastopol Inscribed with the words, “For Valour.” It is the proudest decoration a British subject can wegr The Duke of Newcastle. secretary of state for war in 1854-5. is credited with having originated the idea of the crosa after the Alma. being anxious to insti: tute an English order which att ranks might win and be proud to wear. like the French Legion of Honor. The cross confers on all below commis- sloned rank an annuity of $50 | Why He Didn’t Sleep. Doctor (to patient, a golfer. suffering from insomnia- Well, and how did . you sleep last night? Did yon follow my instructions and recall all the strokes of your last round? Patient— Yes. Doctor-- And then you fell asleep? Patient—No: then it was time to get ap! { Thy Mother's Love. One lamp. thy mother’s love, amid the stars shall lift its pure flame changeless, and before the throne of God burn through eternity, holy, as it was lit and lent thee here.— Willis. Vicious. Molly—So you are really engaged at last? I'm awfully glad to hear it. dear! Angeline—Yes. | was sure you would be: you may have a chance now! Truth may work mightily. though in the hand of the sorriest {nstrument.— Behiller. Needless. Wife- The doctor said right away that 1 needed a stimnlant. Then ue asked to see my tongne. Hub Heav | ens! | hope he didn't give you a stim- | ulant for that!” Boston Transcript. Woman’s Work. Guest— Is your wife always so busy with her fancy needlework? Host I should say so She embroiders mon ograms even on the Japanese paper | napkins.- New York Post. Cents and Sentiment. One of the strangest things in this world is why it is that even a stingy man would sometimes rather give his wife money than tel ker he loves her | —Galveston News i Here and there will be found a woman who has never been troubled by the femi- | nine disorders which vex so many of her , sex. She lives a happy, healthy life, and brings healthy children into the woffd | with hardly a pang. Every such woman ! proves what woman's health ought to be ! and what it can be. If many women suffer it is because many women neglect the drains, inflammations and weaknesses which surely undermine the strength, | make life a burden and motherhood a | sorrow. For all such women there is | help healing in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- | scription. The use of this remedy results | in the perfect healing of the diseases which effect the delicate organs. It im- parts to them vigor and vitality, and | makes motherhood a joy unalloyed by pain. | Medical. Heard in Bellefonte HOW BAD BACKS HAVE BEEN MADE STRONG—KIDNEY ILLS CORRECTED. All over Bellefonte you hear it. Doan’s Kidney Pills are keeping up the good work. Bellefonte people are telling about it—telling of bad backs made sound again. You can believe the testimony of your own townspeople. They tell it for the benefit of you who are suffering. If your back aches, if you feel lame, sore and miserable, if the kidneys act too frequent- ly, or passages are painful, scanty and off color, use Doan’s Kidney Pills, the rem- edy that has helped so many of your friends and neighbors. Follow this Belle- fonte citizen’s advice and give Doan’sa chance to do the same for you, William McClellan, 244 E. Lamb Street, Bellefonte, Pa., says: “I suffered for a long time from pain and lameness across my back and some mornings I could hard- ly get out of bed. My back ached con- stantly and the kidney secretions were irregular in passage. Hearing a great deal about Doan’s Kidney Pills, I decided to try them and procured a supply from Green's Pharmacy Co. They cured me and I am now enjoying good health. My advice to anyone afflicted with kidney complaint, is to take Doan’s Kidney Pills. You are welcome to publish my endorse- ment at any time you desire.” The above statement must carry con. viction to the mind of every reader. Don’t shupy, ask for a kidney remedy—ask di. rectly for Doan’s Kidney Pills, the same that Mr. McClellan had—the remedy backed by home testimony, 50c all stores. Foster Milbum Co., Props. Buffalo, “When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name.” 58-50 LIME. Lime and Limestone for all purposes. H-O Lime put up in 201b. paper bags LIME. 58-28-6m for use with drills or spreader, is the econom- ical form most careful farmers are using. High Calcium Central Pennsylvania Lime AMERICAN LIME & STONE COMPANY. Operations at Bellefonte, Tyrone, Union Furnace, Frankstown and Spring Meadows, Pa. General Office: TYRONE, PA. _ free on receipt of stamps to defray expense : of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps | Given Away Dr. R.V. Pierces author of the People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, offers | ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Hood’s Sars p-rilla. this valuable work as a gift to those who will pay the expense of mailing. This great : Impure Blood medical work contains 1008 pages, and over | fg unhealthy blood—blood that is not only 700 illustrations, and is full of the com-| laden with poisonous and effete mat, mon sense of a wide medical experience. | white corpuscles. The medicine to take It answers the unspoken questions of i for it is HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. young men and maidens. It meets the emergencies of the family with plain prac- ] tical advice. It is a book for every man boils, and other eruptions, Sczetha and and every woman to read and keep at {ET TIeUT BOCAS C8 es of ap. hand for reference. Its medical infor- petite, that tired ‘feeling, and general de- mation alone may save many a costly doc- bility; it exposes you to the danger of tor's bill This book will be sent to you Sonracting infectious and contagion theria, consumption. Thousands testify that Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla purifies, enriches and revitalizes the Impure blood shows itself in pimples, for paper covered book, or 31 stamps for di- cloth bound. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, | cine zet Homie Sammons oad mech 663 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. today. 58-50 Shoes. Clothing. Hats and Caps. Overcoats Now One-Third Off AMN COML ADVE CO. NY XX will not make a mistake in purchasing one of these Overcoats now. Protection from biting winds and bitter weather is assured in these warm and comfortable garments. The wealth of new style innovations and the substantial fabrics included in this offering, will make your purchase an excellent in- vestment. Reasonable at their original prices, they are doubly so now. The Pennsylvania State College. The : Pennsylvania : State : College EDWIN ERLE SPARKS, Ph.D., L.L. D., PRESIDENT. Established and maintained by the joint action of the United States Government and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania FIVE GREAT SCHOOLS—Agriculture, Engineering, Liberal Arts, Mining, and Natural Science, offering thirty-six courses of four years each—Also courses in Home Economics, Industrial Art and Physical Education—TUITION FREE to both sexes; incidental charges mod- erate. First semester begins middle of September; second semester the first of February; Summer Session for Teachers about the third Monday of June of each year. For catalogue, bulletins, announcements, etc., address 57-26 THE REGISTRAR, State College, Pennsylvania. VU Y YY UY UY UY UY UY Ww OY YY VY TY vv Vv . The World. Sin 73 The Thrice-a-Week Edition of E NEW YORK WORLD Practically a Daily at the Price of a Weekly. No other Newspaper in the world gives so much at so low a price. This is a time of great events, and you will want the news accurately and promptly. All the countries of the world steadily draw closer together, and the telegraph wires bring the happenings of every one. No other newspaper has a service equal to that of The World and it relates everything fully and promptly. : The World long since established a record for impartiality, and anybody can afford its Thrice-a-Week edition, which comes every other day in the week, except Sunday. It will be of particular value to you now. The Thrice-a-Week World also abounds in other strong features, serial stories, humor Harkets, cartoons; in fact, everything that is to be found in a first- class daily. The Thrice-a-Week World's regular subscription price is only $1.00 per year, and this pays for 156 papers. We offer this unequalled newspaper and The Democratic Watchman together for one papers is $2.00. year for $1.65. The regular subscription price of the two 58-46-tf