Bellefonte, Pa., September 11, 1914. HUMAN. There are none of us just quite perfect, There is something wrong in the best; We're all so mortal and human, And none more so than the rest. When it’s all summed up at the finish, And the Lord strikes balance that day, If we only just cry we are human, It will be about all we should say. There is nothing so common as fault is, And mistakes and errors all make; And why should we rail at a brother Or lift a finger to shake In the face of some stumbler? It’s human To take a misstep now and then; We scoff at the weakness of woman But the weakest of all are the men. This thing af revenge, getting, Of laying for some one. Ah, me! What fools we all are in our weakness, What pity it is we can’t see! Stain character, smear reputation? What you throw vengeful brother, is mud; But look where your own heart’s corroded, And that stain on your hand is of blood! There are none of us faultless in this world, So why should it be worth while To trouble our hearts with this hatred, To envy some brother his smile! We're human, so awfully human, And why should we think it would pay To go round creating obstructions To place in some poor fellow’s way? The Story oi Waitstill Baxter By KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN Copyright, 1913. by Kate Douglas Wiggin SYNOPSIS Waitstill Baxter and her sister, Patience Patty), keep house for their widowed, ean father. Ivory Boynton, whose fa~ ther disappeared, is interested in Waitstill. He takes care of his daft mother. Mrs. Boynton expects her husband to urn. Rodman, a young boy, is a mem- of the Boynton household. Ivory’s father abandoned his family to follow Jacob Cochrane, a mystic. Pa~ tience chafes under her father’s stern rule. Patty has two admirers—Mark Wilson, an educated young man, and Cephas Cole, who is unlearned. Mark kisses her. Waitstill is spending her life in loving care of Patience. Aunt Abby and Uncle Bart Cole are friends of the whole com- munity. proposes to Patty and is rejected. In his agitation he lets the molasses run all over the store floor. | | { Peter Morrill's opinion. “If things was a little wite dif'rent all round 1 could prognosticate who | Waitstill could keep house for.” was | kind of a certif'’cate of Aaron's death “You mean Ivory Boxnton? Well, if : , the deacon was asked he'd never give | his consent. that’s certain. an’ Ivory | ain’t in no position to keep a wife anyways. What was it you heerd hout Aaron Boynton up to New Hamp- | shire, Peter?” asked Abel Day. “Consid’able. one way an’ another. an’ none of it would ‘a’ been any com- | fort to Ivory. | guess Aaron 'n' Jake i , Cochrane was both of ‘em more Inter- * . ested in savin’ the sisters’ souls than : : the brothers’. Aaron was a fine ap- | pearin’ man, and so was Jake for that ! . thy? | | | | i { light complected, fat an’ lean, tall an’ » | short, twins an’ singles—Jed Morrill matter, 'n’ they both had the gift o | gab. There's nothin’ like a limber tongue if you want to please the wo- men folks. If report says true. Aaron died of a fever out in Ohio some- wheres. Cortland’s the place, I b’lieve. Seems ’s if he hid his trail all the way from New Hampshire somehow, for as a usual thing a man o’ book learnin’ like him would be remembered wher- ever he went. Wouldn't you call Aaron Boynton a turrible 'arned man, Timo- Timothy Grant. the parish clerk, had just entered the store on an errand; ' i but, being directly addressed and judg- | ing that the subject under discussion | was a discreet one and that it was too | : early in the evening for drinking to begin, he joined the group by the fire- | side. He had preached in Vermont for ' several years as an itinerant Metho- dist minister before settling down to farming in Edgewood. only giving up his profession because his quiver was so full of little Grants that a wander- ing life was difficult and undesirable. When Uncle Bart Cole had remarked that Mis’ Grant had a little of every- , thing in the way of baby stock now— | black, red an’ yaller haired. dark and ' had observed dryly, “Yes, Mis' Grant | Jed. kind o' reminds me of charity.” “How's that?” inquired Uncle Bart. | “She beareth all things.” chuckled “Aaron Boyton was indeed a man of most adhesive larnin’,” agreed Tim-' othy. who had the reputation of the largest and most unusual vocabulary in Edgewood. ‘Next to Jacob Coch- : rane 1 should say Aaron had more grandeloquence as an orator than any man we've ever had in these parts. It’ don’t seem ’s if Ivory was goin’ to take after his father that way. The little | feller, now, is smart ’s a whip an’ could talk the tail off a brass monkey.” | “Yes, but Rodman ain’t no kin to the | Boyntons.” Abel reminded him. “He inhails from the other side o the | house.” : “That's so. Well, Ivory does for cer- tain, an’ takes after his mother, right ! ‘enough, for she hain’t spoken a doz- Cephas Cole, tending store for Baxter, | Although they love each other, Waitstill and Ivory suppress their affection because of their household cares. Patty and Waitstill go to church, al- : though their father is too mean to give them fitting garments. Waitstill sings in the choir. . A strange young woman in the Wilson pew, a visitor from Boston, makes Patty Jealous. Haying time arrives. Waitstill decides to disobey her father by paying a visit to Mrs. Boynton. Uncle Bart discourses to Cephas on woman's ways. Mrs. Boynton confides in Waitstill, tell- : ing the girl she believes Rodman is not her sister’s child, but she cannot be sure. To punish Waitstill for disobedience Deacon Baxter locks her out all night. : Bbe spends the night in the barn. Pa- tlence sympathizes. Patience Baxter is embarrassed amid a multitude of suitors. She thinks Mark is fickle. Trying to trace his father, Ivory writes to Waitstill a long account of Boynton's following of Cochrane, with which Mrs. Boynton was not in full sympathy. The village gossips are busy with the names of Waitstill and Ivory, but in a friendly and sympathetic manner. In Ivory’s absence young Rodman min- isters to Mrs. Boynton. She is ill and sends Rodman for Ivory. Ivory receives proof of his father’s death and succeeds in convincing his mother of it. Waitstill volunteers her help in the Boynton housekeeping. [Continued from last week.] nobody else had gone,” said Rish Bix- by. “When his wife died he refused to come into the house till the last min- ute. He stayed to work in the barn till all the folks had assembled and even the men were all settin’ down on benches in the kitchen. The parson sent me out for him. and I'm blest if = = — ==! 7h A ream | Vy ney 12. RL Less Z|! j | 2) Bw == = = i 4 8 J a | safes x = I ! “} remember that i well.” en words in as many years. 1 guess. Ivory’s got a sight 0’ book knowledge. | though, an’ they do say he could talk | ; Greek an’ Latin both, if we had any of the old skunk didn’t come in through | the crowd with his sleeves rolled up— went to the sink and washed. and then set down in the room where the coffin was, as cool as a cowcumber.” “I remember that funeral well,” cor- roborated Abel Day. *An’ Mis’ Day heerd Levi say to his daughter. as soon as they'd put poor old Mrs. Bax- ter int’ the grave, ‘Come on, Marthy; there’s no use cryin’ over spilt milk; we'd better go home an’ busk out the rest o’ that corn.’ Old Foxy could have inherited plenty o' meanness from his father, that’s certain, an’ he’s added to his inheritance right along. like the thrifty man he is. I hate to think o’ them two fine girls wearin’ their fin vers to the bone for his benefit.” “Oh, well, ’twon’t last forever,” said Rish Bixby. “They're the han’somest couple 0’ girls on the river. an’ they'll get husbands afore many years. Pa- tience ll have one pretty soon, by the looks. She never budges an inch but Mark Wilson or Phil Perry are follerin® - behind, with Cephas Cole watchin® his chance right along too. Waitstill don’t seem to have no beaux; what with fly in’ around to keep up with the deacon an’ bein’ a mother io Patience, her tends is full, 1 guess.” em in the community to converse with, | I've never paid no intention to the “’Twould ’a’ served old Levi right if dead languages, bein’ so ockerpied with other studies.” “Why ‘do they call ’em the dead lan- guages. Tim?" asked Rish Bixby. “Because all them that ever spoke | ’em has perished off the face ¢’ the land,” Timothy answered oracularly, “Dead an’ gone they be, lock, stock and barrel; yet there was a time when | Latins an’ Crustaceans an’ Hebrews | an’ Prooshians an’ Australians an’ 8i- mesians was chatterin’ away in their | own tongues, an’ so pow’ful that they was wallopin® the whole earth, you | might say.” “I bet yer they never tried to wallop | these here United States,” interpolated ; Bill Dunham from the dark corner by the molasses hogshead. “Is Ivory in here?’ The door opened and Rodman Boynton appeared on the threshold. “No, sonny, Ivory ain't been in this evenin',” replied Ezra Simms. *l1 hope there ain’t nothin’ the matter over to’ your house?” *“No, nothing particular.” the boy an- swered, ‘only Aunt Boynton don't’ seem so weil as common, and I can’t! find Ivory anywhere.” “Come along with me, I'll help you look for him, an’ then I'll go as fur as! the lane with yer if we don’t find him.” | And kindly Rish Bisby took the boy's’ hand and left the store. “Mis' Boynton's had a spell, I guess!” | suggested the storekeeper, peering i ard in my small way. Day. “Uncle Bart sees consid'able of Ivory, an’ he says his mother is as quiet as a lamb. Couldn't you git no out o' that Enfield feller. Peter? Seems ‘s if that poor woman oughter be stop- ped watchin’ for a dead man: tucker- in’ herself all out an’ keepin’ Ivory an’ the boy all nerved up.” “I’ve told Ivory everything 1 could i gather up in the way of information and give him the names of the folks in Ohio that had writ back to New Hampshire. [ didn’t dilate on Aaron's goin’s on in Effingham and Portsmouth, ‘cause I dassay 'twas nothin® but scan- dal. Them as hates the Cochranites ’ll never allow there's any good in ‘em, whereas I've met some as is servin’ the Lord good an’ constant an’ indulg- in’ in no kind of foolishness an’ devil- try whatsoever.” “Speakin’ o' Husshons,” Dunham from his corner, ber’— said Bill *1 remem- “We wa’'n't alludin® to no Husshons.” | retorted Timothy Grant. “We was dealin’ with the misfortunes of Aaron Boynton. who never fit valorously on the field o° battle, but perished out in Ohio of scarlit fever, if what they say in. Enfield is true.” “Tis an easy death.” remarked Bill argumentatively “Scarlit fever don’t seem like nothin’ to me! Many's the time I've been close enough to fire at ‘the eyeball of a Husshon an’ run the resk 0° bein’ blown to smithereens!— calm and cool [ allers was too! Scarlit fever is an easy death from a warriors p’int 0" view!" “Speakin’ of easy death.” continued Timothy. “vou know [I'm a great one for words. bein’ something of a schol- ticed that Elder Boone used a strange word in his sermon last Sunday? Words air cur'ous things sometimes, as I know, hevin’ had consid’able leis- ure time to read when 1 was joggin’ ’bout the country an’ bein’ brought ! into contack with men o® learnin’. The way I worked it out, not wishin’ to ask Parson any more questions, bein’ some- | thing of a scholard myself, is this: | | The youth in Ashy is a peculiar kind 0’ youth. ’n’ their religion disposes ‘em to lay no kind o' stress on huming life. When anything goes wrong with ‘em an’ they get a set back in war or busi- ness. or affairs with women folks, they want to die right off, so they take a sword an’ stan’ it straight up wher- ever they happen to be. in the shed or the barn or the henhouse, an’ they ' p’int the sharp end right to their waist line, where the bowels an’ other vital organisms is lowcated, an' then they fall on to it. It runs ‘em right through to tie back an’ kills ‘em like a shot. and y that's the way I cal'late the youth in ; Ashy dies, if my entomology is correct, as it gen’ally is.” “Don’t seem an easy death to me,” argued Ezra, “but I ain’t no scholard. | What college did you attend to, Tim ?”’ “I don’t hold no diaploma,” responded : Pimothy. “though I attended the Ware- : ham academy quite a spell, the same time as your sister was goin’ to Ware- ham seminary where eddication is still bein’ disseminated though of an awful poor kind compared to the old times.” “It’s live an’ larn.,” said the store- keeper respectfully. “I never thought of a seminary bein’ a place of dissemi- nation before, but you can see the two words is near kin.” “You can’t allers tell by the sound,” said Timothy instructively. “Some- times two words ’ll start from the same root an’ branch out diff’rent, like ‘crit- ter’ an’ ‘hypocritter.’ A ‘hypocritter’ must natcherally start by bein’ a ‘crit- ter.’ but a critter ain't obliged to be a ‘hypocritter’ ’thout he wants to.” “1 should hope not.” interpolated Abel Day piously. “Entomology must be an awful interestin study, though I never thought of observin' words my- self, ‘cept to avoid vulgar language an’ profa; ity.” “Hi sshon’s a cur'ous word for a man.’ interjected Bill Dunham with a | last despairing effort. *“I remember seein’ a Husshon once that”— “Perhaps you ain’t one to observe closely, Abel.” said Timothy, not tak- Ing note of any interruption, simply | using the time to direct a stream of to- bacco juice to an incredible distance, but landing it neatly in the exact spot he had intended. . self. you might say. observin’ is. an’ there’s another sing’lar corraption! The Whigs in foreign parts. so they say. build stone towers to observe the evil machinations of the Tories. an’ so the word ‘observatory’ rome into gen- eral use! All entomology; nothin’ but entomology.” ; “lI don’t see where in thunder you picked up so much larnin’, Timothy!” It was Abel Day’s exclamation, but. every one agreed with him. CHAPTER XVIII. The Rod That Blossomed. VORY BOYNTON had takea the . horse and gone to the village on an errand, a rare thing for him to do after dark, so Rod was thinking as he sat in the living room ' learning his Sunday school lesson on the same evening that the men were gossiping at the brick store. His aunt | had required him from the time when he was proficient enough to do so to read at least a part of a chapter in the Bible every night. Beginning with | Genesis, be bad reached Leviticus and had made up his mind that the Bible | was a much more difficult book than “Scottish Chiefs" notwithstanding the | fact that Ivory helped him over most of the bard places. At the present | Juncture he was vastly interested in | | the subject of *‘rods” us unfolded 'm the book of Exodus, which was beir g | studied by his Sunday school class. What added to the excitement was the fact that his uncle’s Christian name, | Mebbe yon no “It’s a trade by it-' ing rods of Moses and Aaron that had a strange effect upon the boy's ear when he read them aloud, as he loved to do whenever he was left alone for a time. When his aunt was in the room his instinct kept him from doing this. for the mere mention of the name of Aaron, he feared. might sadden bis aunt and provoke inher that danger- ous vein of reminiscence that made Ivory so anxious. “It kind o’ makes me nervous to be named Rod. Aunt Boynton.” said the boy. looking up from the Bible. “All the rods in these Exodus chapters do such dreadful things! They become serpents. and one of them swallows up all the others, and Moses smites the waters with a rod. and they become blood. and the peuple can't drink the water and the fish die! Then they stretch a rod across the streams and ponds und bring a plague of frogs over the land. with swarms of flies und hor- rible insects.” “That was to show God's power to Pharaoh and me!t his hard heart to obedience and reverence.” explained Mrs. Boynton, who had known the Bible from cover to cover in her youth end could stili give chapter and verse for hundreds of her favorite passages. “It took an awful tot of melting, Pha faob’s heart!” exclaimed the hoy. “Pharaoh must have been worse than Deacon Baxter! | wonder if they ever tried ‘to make him good by being kind to him: [I've read and read, hut 1 can't tind they used anything on him but plagues and famines and boils and pestilences and thunder and hail and fire! Have | got a middle name, Aunt Boynton. for | don’t like Rod very much?" “I never heard that you had a widdle ‘name: von mast ask Ivory.” sa’d his aunt abstractedly “Did my father name me Rod, or my mother?” “I don’t really know. Perhaps it was your mother, but don’t ask questions. | please.” “I forgot, Aunt Boynton! Yes, I think perhaps my mother named me. Mothers ‘most always name their ba- | bies, don’t they? My mother wasn't ‘ like you, she looked just like the pic- | ture of Pocahontas in my history. She never knew about these Bible rods, I guess.” “When you go a little further you will find pleasanter things about rods,” said his aunt, knitting, knitting in- tensely, as was her habit, and talking as if her mind were 1,000 miles away. “You know they were just little branches of trees, and it was only God's power that made them wonder- ful in any way.” “Oh! T thought they were like the singing teacher's stick he keeps time i with.” “No; if you look at your concordance ' you'll find it gives you a chapter in Numbers where there’s something beautiful about rods. I have forgotten the place. It has been ‘many years since I looked at it. Find it and read it aloud to me.” The boy searched his concordance and readily found the ref- erence in the 17th chapter of Numbers. “Stand near me and read,” said Mrs, i Boynton. “I like to hear the Bible read aloud!” Rodman took his Bible and read, slowly and haltingly, but with clear- | ness and -understanding: “1. And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, *2. Speak unto the children of Israel, and take of every one of them a rod according to the house of their fathers, of all their princes according to the house of their fathers twelve rods: , write thou every man’s name upon his rod.” Through the boy’s mind there darted the flash of a thought, a sad thought. He himself was a Rod on whom no man's name seemed to be written, or- . phan that he was. with no knowledge of his parents! i Suddenly he hesitated, for he had caught sight of the name of Aaron in the verse that he was about to read and did not wish to pronounce it in his aunt's hearing. “This chapter is most too hard far me to read out loud, Aunt Boynton,” he stammered. “Can I study it by my- self and read it to Ivory first?" “Go on, go on, you read very sweet- ly. I cannot remember what comes and I wish to hear it.” The boy continued, but without rais ing his eyes from the Bible: “3. And thou shalt write Aaron’s name upon.the rod of Levi: for one rod shall be for the head of the house of . their fathers. i “4, And thou shalt lay them up in - the tabernacle of the congregation be- fore the testimony. where I will meet | with you. “5. And it shall come to pass that | the man’s red. whom I shall choose, i shall blossom: and 1 will make to cease from me the murmurings of the chil- _ dren of Israel. whereby they murmur against you.” Rodman had read on. absorbed in the story and the picture it presented to his imagination. He liked the idea of all the princes having a rod accord- ing to the house of their fathers. He | liked to think of the little branches being laid on the altar in the taber- ' nacle, and above all he thought of the ' longing of each of the princes to have his own rod chosen for the blossom- ing. “6. And Moses spoke unto the chil- dren of Israel. and every one of their "princes gave him a rod apiece, for each prince one, according to their father’s houses, even twelve rods; and the rod ‘of Aaron was among their rods.” i Oh! how the boy hoped that Aaron’s ‘branch would be the one chosen to ‘blossom! He felt that his aunt would ! 'be pleased, too. but he read on steadily, through the door into the darkness. | Aaron, kept appearing in the chronicle | with eyes that glowed and breath that *“’Tain’t like Ivory to be out mights and leave her to Rod.” “She don’t have no spells,” said Abel, many verses about the wonder work- \ - as frequently as that of the great law- | ! giver Moses himself, and there were came and went in a very palpitation of interest: [Continued on page 7. Col. 11 AISI | | AGE NEEDED TO GIVE CHARM Hew Buildings, Clean and Freshly Painicd, Are Unattractive and Seem to Lack Dignity. A new building, clean and freshly painted is cne of the most unattrac- tive th.ags in the world. Take a shining cw house, set in a treeless lot, without shrubbery or vines. It looks as harsh and bumptious and obtrusive as a fresh young agent who sets his foot inside the door the mo- ment it is opened to keep it from be- ing shut in his face. Age i3 needed to give charm and dignity to buildings, to make them a part of the landscape. A new piece of stonework or brick or stucco stands up like a sore thumb. It does not fit in with the rest of things. The planet is somewhat weathered by the winds and rains of millions of years, and a permanent addition to it needs at least a little weathering to har- monize. The gray of the great cathedrals which have accumulated the smoke and dust and grime of centuries is one great source of charm. To clean Westminster Abbey’s hoary walls would ruin them. An example of tho cheapening effect of newness is con- spicuous in Kansas City in the partly cleaned walls .of the new station. The gray stonework is wonderfully impressive in its massive dignity. But where the walls have been cleaned and whitened they give the impression of staring artificiality and primness wholly out of keeping with the general scheme of a monumental city entrance. of the station the devastation wrought by the cleaning will be repaired with- in a few years. Meanwhile it may stand as a horrible example. New things generally are more or less distressing—new shoes, new clothes, new houses. They all have to be lived with awhile before they get humanized.—Kansas City Star. SENTIMENT STILL RULES Us. CANARY POPULAR i Every Street in French Capital Echos Thought and Science Kept Much in Background, Notwithstanding All Our Prctending. Notwithstanding all our pretending that we are of an age which lives and thinks scientifically, we are still, for Happily, in the case . the most part, not creatures of thought ! but creatures of sentiment. With most | of us, for instance, the relationship of i the sexes is still a matter to be re- garded sentimentally. We still ignore as much as possible the physical and social faets back of that relationship. We still, too, for the most part, have sentimental political affiliations with glorious ideals, but little conception of the facts which condition their real- ization, with much of unreasoning loyalty to parties or persons. We still are apt to have and desire a senti- mental sort of education for our chil- dren, on a cultural basis which ig- nores at once the necessity of knowl- edge of the facts of real life and the vulgar necessity of our children’s earning a living. We still speak, with pathetic dignity, in terms of a senti- mental economics based on life as a sentimentalist would have it rather than on life as it is. We still enjoy sentimental literature. We still pat- ronize sentimental drama.—Bernard I. Bell in the Atlantic. Two Meanings. The different meanings that a sim- ple turn of expression can give a word ! are often curious and sometimes amus- | ing. An anecdote of Charles Lamb, the famous English author, illustrates this very pleasantly. On a wet, miserable, foggy day, in London, he was accosted by a beggar with: “Please, sir, bestow a little charity upon a poor, destitute woman. Be- lieve me, sir, I have seen better days.” “So have I,” said Lamb, handing the poor creature a shilling, “so have I. it’s a miserable day, even for Lon- don.” A similar illustration is of the man who saw some mischievous boys car- rying off fruit from his orchard. “What are you about?” he called, lustily. “About going!” called one of them, as the marauders disappeared over the fence.—Youth’s Companion. Genius Required. A kind-faced Bostonian, while wait- ing on a corner for a car recently, was attracted by a melodious piano which a young Italian was grinding. “It must be somewhat difficult to turn that crank as steadily as you do and keep such good time,” said the Bostonian, as he dropped a coin into the performer’s hat. “Not soa deeficult,” replied the Ital ian, his face becoming illuminated with a smile. “You see, I no gotta da monk. To turn da crank dees way stead’ keepa da tim’. But turna da crank an’ watcha da monk sam’ tim’; ah! That taka da arteest—da true arteest. Eet ees da monk, signor, that demands de genius!”—Buffalo En- quirer. Where Dickens Lurks. “Dickensy” names are to be discov- ered in the most unlikely localities, as those whose travels take them to Bur- gundy may have discovered. In Macon there is a Rue Dombey, which, apart from its name, is worth exploring for the sake of one or two fifteenth cen- tury timber houses with most quaintly carved fronts. And by a strange coin- | cidence, on the banks of the Saone, about seven miles out of Macon, there | FACTS ABOUT COMMON WORDS Peck at First Meant Any Grain Basket—Corpse, a Body Alive or Dead. Equivocation, a word now applied to any evasion, was once understood to mean the calling of diverse things by; the same name. Peck at first meant a basket or re- ceptacle for grain or other substances. The expression at first had no refer ence to size. Starve was once to die any manner. of death. Wycliffe’s sermons tell how: “Christ starved on the cross for the redemption of men.” Tariff was the name of the Moorish: chieftain, Abou al Tarifa, who had a fortress near the Straits of Gibraltar and levied toll on ships and merchan. dise passing through. Corpse once meant a body, whether living or dead. Many old writs are extant in which the sheriff or his deputy is commanded to bring the corpse of such a man into court. Saturnine is an astrological term. It was once used to describe the char- acter of an individual born under the influence of the planet Saturn, a malevolent deity. To prose once signified to write in prose rather than in verse, and a prosy man was one who preferred to clothe his ideas in prosaic rather than in metrical form. A sycophant was once a person who watched the frontiers of Attica to see that no figs were brought in or car- ried out without the payment of the proper duty. Prejudice was originally nothing more than a judgment formed before- hand, the cl.aracter of such judgments being best indicated by the present meaning of the word. A saunterer is believed by some : etymologists to have originally sig- nified a man without lands, such a person naturally wandering to and fro in search of employment.—New York Tribune. IN PARIS With the Song of That Tune- ful Bird. The Parisian has an amiable weak- ness for the canary. Every street echoes with the song of this bird, and during holiday times when families are away there are concierges whose more or less restricted quarters are positively cumbered with cages of canaries. But in or out of the sea- son the bird market is held every Sun- ‘day of the year in the City Island, and there is always a lively trade in canaries. One venerable crnitholo- gist who dwells near the market has spent his life in teaching canaries to sing, and he has, after years of effort, produced a pure white canary with a song as powerful and sweet as any yellow or green bird ever sold. The supply of the white canaries be- ing at present very limited, those sold at the Paris market have brought com- paratively high prices. These birds are as white as any dove and with- out a speck on their plumage. The Parisian has his own special way of transporting his canaries to the cage that awaits them at his home. The bird is placed in a small paper bag and pinned to the lapel of his coat. Record of New Race. Although four Americans have won the Epsom derby, only one American bred horse has ever captured it—Iro- quois, owned by the late Pierre Lor- illard, in 1881. The classic was won, this year by Herman B. Duryea, an! American, who raced the French -bred| horse, Durbar II. The Kentucky: jockey, MacGee, rode the winner. The late William C. Whitney won the great) English turf classic with Volodyovskl: in 1901. Mr. Whitney had leased the racing services of the horse. In 1907, Richard Croker won the derby With, Orby, bred in Ireland. Sir Martin, an! American-bred horse, owned by Mr. Walter Winans, was winning the great event a few years ago when he fell at the famous Tottenham corner, and with him fell the hopes of America’ . for that year. Ticklish Bridge Work. The most interesting and dangerous- looking stage in the construction of suspension bridge is the building of the floor. In this work the builders have nothing to rest their work on and must build out each way from the towers, securing the floor, piece by piece, to the heavy steel bars sus pended from the main calles far above. The work is done with (lerricks that are equipped with booms long enough, to reach out ahead c¢? the finished : structure and hoid the girders sus- . pended while they are being riveted in place. As each section of the floor is completed, the derricks are moved ahead and the construction of the next section is begun. Earning’ Her Living. Miss Curley kept a private school, and one morning was interviewing a new pupil, “What does your father do to earn i his living?” the teacher asked of the little girl. “Please, ma’am,” was the prompt re- ply, “he doesn’t live with us. My mother supports us.” “Well, then,” asked the teacher, how does your mother earn her liv- ing?” : “Why,” replied the little girl in an, irtless manner, “she gets paid for: s a village called Boz.~—London Chron- | staying away from father.” — New, cle. | York Timee, : En tS re