Bemore faan Belletonte, Pa., April 2, 1915. THE KINGDOM OF EASTERLAND. Do you know where the kingdom of Easterland lies? Is it north, is it south, little man? Scan the east and the west with your mischiecous eyes, Thrust your hands in your pockets and try to look wise, And tell where it is if you can. Do you know is this kingdom far off or quite near? Now, please tell me that, little maid. Can you see it at night when the moon’s shining clear? If youwere to sail there which way would you steer? Does it lie in the sunshine or shade? But, dear little men, little maids, this you know— "Tis the loveliest land ever seen. With fields full of rabbits and lillies like snow, And houses of sweetmeats wherever you go, With bridges of eggs in between. There are chimings of bells’ and music most sweet And sometimes most beautiful toys, New frocks and new bonnets trimmed so fine and neat And drums, swords and trumpets, an outfit complete— That is, if you're good girls and boys. And this wonderful land with such joy and such cheer, A land you would love to explore, That sends you remembrances once every year, Let me whisper a secret quite close to your ear— It lies at your very own door. —Edith Sessions Tupper in New York Herald. SELLING THEM OUT. [By H. M. Egbert.] When Allan Gray walked out of the office of Smith’s Weekly, after haw ing applied successfully in response to an advertisement for an assistant he thought that his future was as sured. Twenty-four, just out of col lege, with all the enthusiasm of a young man facing the struggle of life he appealed to Smith, although for different reasons than those which Smith outlined. “We're here to fight corruption in Bender,” said the middle-aged editor and proprietor, thumping his fist down on the table. “And we're going to clean up the rottenest town in the whole state. That is my purpose, and that’s what we are going to do—to gether, Mr. Gray.” There was a girl in Allan Gray's ' life. Her name was Mildred and she was twenty-two. She was earning a living in the metropolis two hundred miles away. Each of them was put ting by money toward the day—the great day when Allan would be able to earn an income for both of them. At the end of his first month of service Gray's salary was raised from fifteen dollars to twenty-five. Smith was rapidly handing over to him the charge of the Weekly. The young man’s stinging editorials in particular aroused the editor’s approbation. “Give it ’em hot!” said Smith. “Well done, young man! I see I made no mistake in taking you.” With more sophistication Allan might have suspected that something was wrong. Actually, he was delight. ed. He detailed the entire situation to his sweetheart in his twice-a-week letters. “It’s this way, dear,” he wrote. “We are putting hot shot into old Gregory, who has been boss of Bender for the last twenty years and has everyone in his power. We are exposing his graft in connection with the street fran chises, the departments of the city government. We are advocating the form of government by commission. And by heck! as Smith says, we are going to win,” Certainly the appearance of the new weekly created a prodigious sensation in a town of 100,000 inhabitants. To gether Smith and Allan assailed the boss with horsewhips of invective. What had he got for the franchise traction? Why was a convict mana- ger of the waterworks department? vault] ; = “I've Got a Lunch Appointment.” Who got the contract for the roads, and why? On the day following the appearance of the first issue a deputa- tion of local merchants made their appearance and announced that Smith need look for no advertisements from them. Smith was not counting on ad- vertisements. He laughed them out of his office. When the circulation ran up to 30,000 he guffawed. Smith's Weekly was a success beyond all doubt. Everyone bought it, from Boss Gregory to the high school boys. At the end of three months Allan ———— RRR EEE was writing nearly all the editorials, | But nobody ever suspected the integ- under Smith's guidance. The older man confessed that the youngster could beat him at his own game. Then Allan wrote gleefully to Mil dred: “The time is coming, dear. After the approaching elections we shall have a new government. Then busi- ness will flow our way, Gregory and his satellites will be consigned to the outer darkness, I shall be raised again, and we will be—married! Think of that! Married!” Four weeks before the elections, to his amazement, the young fellow was waited on by a deputation of citizens at his boarding-house. They wanted him to run for the office of sheriff, paying $2,500 yearly. “But I don’t know anything about the work!” exclaimed the boy, de- lighted. “I am afraid, Mr. Gray, there is very little chance of your election,” said the chief of the deputation can- didly. “The sheriff's post has always gone to a Gregory man. You know, Tom Vincent has an enormous fol- lowing of heelers. He has had the Position ten years now. Still, there must be a turn-over—there must. And you may get in. Let us put you on the ticket.” Gray accepted and told Mr. Smith enthusiastically next morning. To his surprise his employer was not overenthusiastic. To his greater sur- prise, that day Smith told him to “go slow” instead of to “ginger up.” “We mustn't overdo it,” he ex- plained lamely. “We don’t want to create a reaction.” While Allan stared at him, speech- less in surprise, Smith put on his coat and hat. “I've got a lunch appointment,” he said. “See here, young man, are you as stupid as you appear to be or—?” He got no further, for at that mo- ment he was struck down with apo- DPlexy. An ambulance was called and the doctor took the man away to the hospital. “He’ll probably get well,” he said. “But—it will be some time before he can uce his pen or do any work again.” Allan, left alone in the office, did not know what to do. Therefore, he started to do his work exactly as though the unexpected had not hap- pened. He was hard on a biting edi- torial when the shadow of a man in a silk hat fell across his desk and caused him to start round. Behind him, immaculately dressed, his heavy jowl set in a sneering smile, stood Gregory himself, “Well, sir!” said Allan, rising. “This is bad news about Mr. Smith,” said the boss. “I should hardly expect you to take it that way, sir,” suggested Allan. The old boss took a chair at his side. “So you are the young man that has been holding me up before the public gaze as a scoundrel!” he said. “I am, sir,” answered Allan, “and I believe conscientiously that—" The boss laid a hand on his arm. “Now, if I had a young man like you with me,” he said, “what wouldn't I be able to do?” “I can’t be bought, Mr. Gregory,” said Allan. “I don’t need to buy you, my boy,” answered the other. “At least, I don’t think I do. But Smith can’t talk, and what's the good of owning him?” “I don’t understand—" Allan began. “I know you don’t,” answered the other. “I never thought you did from the beginning. Your editorials had the ring of truth; his &idn’t. Well, then, my friend—Jim Smith started this pa- per to get bought out. that? I wouldn’t buy at his price. I didn’t believe he could hurt me. He could. I was wrong for once in my life. When I came up to his terms he went higher. So we played teeter till four weeks before election day. Yesterday we agreed on terms. And —this is my paper.” Allan listened in horror, and grad- ually he began to understand many things that had been mysteries to him. No wonder Smith had encour- aged him to write more stinging in- vective—till that same morning. “You will show me the agreement,” suggested Allan. “Mr. Gray,” said the boss, “I never bluff. It wasn’t signed by Mr. Smith. He was to have signed in my office today, after lunch.” “Then,” said Allan calmly, “I shall run the paper alone. I shall be true to what I believed my employer’s principles to be.” “Wait a minute,” said Gregory, pull- ing a letter out of his pocket. “Read this—not so close, young man. Do you think this letter, offering to ac- cept my terms, would read well in the newspapers? And this, you see, is signed.” Yes, that was Smith's signature. Allan sank back helplessly in his chair. He could say nothing more. “Now, my young friend,” Gregory continued, “how much influence do you suppose will remain to ‘Smith’s Weekly’ when this letter is published and you are jointly involved with our friend in what you would call ‘a shameless conspiracy’ ?” “None,” admitted Allan. “Then,” said the boss, “will you suspend publication or drag a dying man’s name down to infamy to gain a reputation for sincerity in which no one will believe?” Allan thought hard. Then, “I will suspend for that letter,” he answered. “Now you're talking sense,” an- swered the boss. And he placed the letter in Allan’s hands. He knew that he had not misjudged his man. There was a good deal of quiet talk abouc Smith during the period preced- ing the elections. The story of his dishonesty became gradually known. Understand | | rity of Allan Gray. That, doubtless, was why he secured ; the election as sheriff by a majority | of nearly four hundred votes. Ang ! that, too, was why he was enabled to write to Mildred just two days after- ward. “Come, dearest,” he said. And when he saw Gregory among the spectators at the wedding he did not feel anything but goodfellowship. He even took the boss’ hand. Ex-boss’, rather. For Gregory would ished. : (Copyright, 1914, by W. G. Chapman.) Extended Stopping Place. Pat was employed on an engineering job, a few miles out of the city, and was carried to his work by an express train, which accommodatingly slowed up near the scene of his 1~bors. morning, however, the train rushed speed, and the superintendent of the job looked in vain for Pat. At last he saw a much ittered Irishman limp- ing back down the ties, and called to him: “Hello, Pat! get off?” Pat turned stiffly, and wav- ing his hand toward the steep embank- ment. sighed: ‘“On—all along here!” Have a Definite Value Among African Natives and Are Treated Accordingly. ed as property, she has certain rights of these the most important is her right to marry whom she pleases, or rather to refuse to marry one who does not please her, the Southern Workman says. There are two grim reasons for this. First, women mar- ried against their wills have been known to commit suicide. Second, women married against their wills have murdered their unloved husbands, usually strangling them when asleep. women there is liability to a great loss —the loss of valuable property or of no less highly prized life. The young ly that she wishes to marry and have a good husband and children. Every father is anxious to have his daugh- ters marry well. must pay a dowry in cattle to the fa- ther, or, should the father be dead, to the nearest male relative. If a girl is paid part of the dowry the father may give consent to a provisional marriage and permit the couple to live together: ing the remainder of the dowry his wife is taken from him. Trial mar objects in marriage are mutual help- fulness and the perpetuation of the race. aati HAVE MANY FANCIFUL BELIEFS Bedouin Superstitions, Firmly Rooted, when a man dies of thirst his soul goes forth in the form of a green owl, desert a thousands years, screaming for water. If a fish leaps from the soon bear a son. They live in daily dread of the evil eye; the Arab moth- descend and blight its life. Some say 2 man so possessed has merely to ing, when the creature will fall to the earth stone dead. If an Arab woman finds the threads in her “nuttou”— loom—have become tangled, blames the meddlesome evil spirits. Many women have their limbs and bodies tattooed in fancy designs, as much as a charm to ward off disease as for beauty’s sake. Mesopotamian Arabs; the women col- lect and prepare it from the ground beneath certain hill trees, whence it drips. Yet the Arabs—and the Jews and Chaldeans as well—firmly believe that this sweet, whitish gumlike food is cast down from heaven; that it is the same manna which tradition says was cast down from heaven for the children of Israel.—Geographical Mag- azine. For Nervous Persons. No one can help feeling nervous ... times in .this age of rush and racket, but it is quite possible to put on the brake, as it were, and not let the nerves run away with us. Here are a few hints on the subject: “If people fret you, it is not neces. sary to be rude to them. Try, instead, to avoid them. Don’t read books that irritate you. Books are plentiful, there- fore put away the offending volume and choose another. If noise at night worries you, don’t let it continue to do so. Get up and see to the matter and put it right. “Don’t let yourself get into the habit of being bored. It is not worth while, When you feel it coming on plunge at once into some task that will take all your time and energy. It is better to run away from certain things than to let them irritate you. Such martyr- dom is usually unnecessary and bad for you all round.” Where did you ! WOMEN PRIZED AS PROPERTY | In the third or fourth century before which are seldom infringed upon, and er fears for her child, lest this curse | wife. ' after the mice, but it catches ’em just she ' Manna is still much eaten among 1 never hold power in Bender again, even though Smith’s Weekly had per- | Distance of Moon From Earth. Prosaically, the moon is distant : from the earth a littie less tnan 240,000 miles, or less than ten times tbe cir- | cumference of the earth. Thais is very close for a planetary neighbor, and especially one so powerfal as this er- : ratic satellite, the diameter of which > is 21,162 miles and its mass being much greater than that of any satellite of any other planet of our solar sys- tem; Mars having two, Jupiter seven, Saturn ten, Uranus four and Neptune one. re or er oe Explaining “Memory.” When you cpeak oi others as hav- ing a gocd memory, you do not mean that at all. Instead of meaning that the man with a “good memory” has One through the cut without reducing ' accurately perceived an event in the full ramifications of all its details, and recorded it in his whole numan texture ready for reproduction at will, what you really indicate is that he has good power of retention, irrespec- tive of detailed accuracy or faithful- ness of the full recollection.—Dr Leonard Keene Hirshberg. Iron in India in Epic Age. That iron was found in large quan- i tities in the epic age in India is evi- , denced by the fact that it was then employed in making massive statues. © Christ, the Hindus were apparently Although woman in Africa is regard- adepts in preparing steel. In the lit- erature of the times, one comes across elaborate descriptions of various sur- gical instruments for most delicate surgical operations. Whereis the Wheels? Two-year-old Harry had never seen a live lamb, his only knowledge of that animal being derived from a toy one on wheels. While visiting grand- father on the farm, he was taken to the sheep pen to see the lambs. Aft- er looking at them for a few minutes, he looked up at his grandfather with a puzzled expression, and asked: . “Where’s the wheels?” i — And to these reasons may be added the fear of marital unfaithfulness. So, | in forcing oneself upon one of these girls are well cared for, partly that they may be comdy and draw many | suitors. Every girl will tell you frank To secure a wife one | much sought after her father naturally | asks a larger dowry. When a man has . Should the husband be too slow in pay- riages are common and can be set | aside by either party. Their principal | : Are of the Most Peculiar Character. Some Bedouin superstitions are! fanciful indeed. They believe that ' fine quality are extensively grown in which flies about above the water into a boat where a woman is | riding, it is a sure sign that she will ! cast his baneful glance on a bird fly- | Deserving Crown of Patience. The crown of patience cannot begre- ceived where there has been no suf- fering. If thou refusest to suffer, thou refusest to be crowned; but ¥ thou wishest to be crowned, thou must fight manfully and suffer patiently. With- out labor none can obtain rest, and without contending there can be no conquest.—Thomas a Kempis. A Bit to Think About. | On the doorway of au Italian ca- thedral are three inscriptions. The first, beneath an arch of roses reads as follows: “All that pleases is but for a moment;” the second, beneath a cross, “All that troubles is but for a2 moment;” and under the main arch, “That only is important which is eter nal.” No Cause for Tears. | “We have naver had a president named Charlie,” remarks the Toledo Blade. Nor to the best of our knowl- edge have we ever had one who was called Reggie or Algernon, but we | can’t see that the fact is calculated to move any one to salty tears.—Phila- delphia Inquirer, Vegetables in Far North. | Potatoes, cabbage, caulifiower, cel- | ery, lettuce, carrots and turnips of Yukon Territory, Canada. Potatoes are the principal crop, retailing at five cents a pound. Trapped. They were quarreling. “Well, you can’t say I ran after you,” said the “Neither does a mousetrap run the same,” replied hubby. Uncle Eben. “Mebbe dar’d be a heap mo’ work done,” sald Uncle Eben, “if dey got ! out a new model of wheelbarrow every year an’ provided a horn so’s to make folks git out'n de way.” Try Thumb Tacks. A If thumb tacks instead of ordinary tacks are used to fasten white oilcloth to pantry and cupboard shelf, the oil- cloth may be easily removed when cleaned. ————————————————————— Achieving Importance. “Some men,” said Uncle Eben, ‘gets to be looked on as important because dey has to be hollered at all de time [Joh gittin’ in de way.” ——————————————————— True Definition of a Pessimist. “Pa, what is a pessimist?” “A pes- simist is a man who, no matter what he gets on Christmas, would rather have the money.” Ee ———————————————————— Daily Thought. Youth comes but once in a lifetime. therefore, let us so enjoy it as to be still young when we are old.—Longfel- low. —————————a Not How Many Books. It does not matter how many books you have. What does matter is what those books are.—Seneca. . Men and Religion. { Men will wrangle for religioh, write! for it, fight for it, die for it, anything but live for it.~Colton. HER GOLDENROD DYE ' By MURIEL CHANCE. It was the most wonderful experi- | ence that Nancy had ever had. For a long time after it happened she could , Dot make herself believe that it was . true. . She was weaving in the attic, mak- : ; ing the homespun rugs which had be- | come a village industry in the little Pennsylvania town. Her winter's work brought in enough money to buy a few luxuries for her bedridden mother and clothes for Nonie, at school. Suddenly a knock came below and, when Nancy went down, she saw a young man, a stranger, standing at the door. “I am told that you make the best , rugs in the village, Miss McLane,” he said. “May I see some of your work?” She showed him some. Certainly the contours were straight, and not higgle- dy-piggledy like those of most of the village rugs. However, the young man was interested in other details than that. “My name is Cyrus Brown, and 1 am from the rug factory at Altoona,” he said. “We want to buy the secret of your vegetable dye—the yellow one.” Nancy laughed. “There isn’t any se- cret about that,” she answered. “Everybody here knows that. It’s goldenrod. You steep the flowers in hot water and add a little alcohol and { =” And Nancy gave him the secret. “May I come another day when you | . are making the extract?” asked the! young man. “Yes, I reckon I'll be making some this day next week,” Nancy answered. “Seems to me, Nancy,” grumbled her mother, when he had gone, “you might have got hold of a young fellow like that instead of that good-for-nothing Jim Penny.” Nancy said nothing. But she sighed a little that night when Jim, out of work as usual, sat glumly at her side and asked, for the tenth time that year, when she would marry him. Nancy and Jim had been engaged for years. But he had never held a po- sition more than a week or two, and, while the girl felt the bond of old as- sociation, she had begun to think seri- ously of the future. When Mr. Brown called, a week la- ter, Nancy had a steaming pot of gold- enrod extract upon the table, and he was quickly initiated into the mystery oI dyeing the fabrics. “It seems too good to be true,” said the young man vegetable dyes had been forgotten long ago. I am authorized to pay you this in remuneration.” And he handed her a crisp bundle of bills. Nancy drew back. “Why, .Mr. Brown,” she. said, “everybody knows how to make goldenrod dye. It isn’t worth anything—really.” But he left the bills upon the table and, declining to stay for supper this time, departed. When he had gone Nancy looked at the money. There were five hundred dollars! Breathless, she ran after the visitor, but he was out of sight. And so she came back and wrote a letter to the rug factory explaining that a mistake | . had been made. Her mother, though inclined to agree with this view, was strongly against Nancy’s. posting the letter. That evening Nancy, radiant, ran to Jim with a cry of pleasure and told i him what had occurred, showing him the bills. ; To her amazement Jim became al most inarticulate with anger. “Five hundred dollars for a trade | secret!” he shouted. “Why, it's worth five thousand at the least.” “But, Jim, everybody knows how to make goldenrod dye,” Nancy protest: ed. “We'll tell them that we stipulated for five thousand,” he said, “and I'll take this lot, Nancy, to make a first payment on that cottage I spoke about.” : A few days later the young man called again. “We have received a letter from a Mr. Penny, threatening to bring suit on your behalf for five thousand dol lars—” he began. “The company sent me to investigate. Do you really make such a claim, Miss McLane?” “Mr. Brown, I don’t want to take a penny!” she cried. ‘Why, I—I gave you the secret and—” She brought the money and thrusi it into his hands. “That shows you what I feel about it!” she cried. And it took the whole afternoon until supper time, before Mr. Brown could convince Nancy of the value of a commercial secret. In fact, it took so long that Jim came in upon the couple unawares as Mr. Brown was ex plaining to Nancy after supper was over. “Hum! I guess I see where the nig ger lay,” remarked the young man, sur veying the couple with a cool stare “Nan, if you're going to let yourself be cheated out of your money by a swin dler like that, all I say is, I wash my hands of you.” Nancy got up with dignity. “Per haps you would like to talk to Mr Brown alone,” she said meaningly. But Jim Penny beat a hasty retreat Writing letters was more to his taste He wrote Nancy a long one after the engagement was announced. It con: tained a request for money. But the girl never knew that, because she put it in the fire unopened. She had left Jim Penny behind her now that the new life was at hand. “He’s just another trade secret be tween us, dear,” said her fiance, laugh- ing. (Copyright, by W. G. Chapman.) “We thought those | rere Carpet Knights. “Carpet knights,” quoth a writer once in the long ago, “are such as have studied law, physic, or other arts or sciences, whereby they have be- come famous, and seeing that they are not knighted as soldiers, they are not therefore to use the horseman’s title or spurs; they are only termed simply miles and milites, ‘knight,” or ‘knights of the carpetry,’ or ‘knights of the green cloth,’ to distinguish them from those knights that are dubbed as sol- diers in the field.” The Best Glory. I love and commend a true good fame, because it is the shadow .of vir- ture; not that it doth any good to the body which it accompanies, but it is an efficacious shadow, and, like that of St. Peter, cures the diseases of others. The best kind of glory, no’ doubt, is that which is reflected from honesty, such as was the glory of Cato and Aristides; but it was harmful to them both, and is seldom beneficial to any mar whilst he lives.—Abraham Cow- ley. Answered His Question. Prince George of Denmark was nick- named “Est-il-possible” by James II It is said that when the startling events of the revolution of 1688 suec- ceeded one another with breathless rapidity, the emotions of Prince George found vent in the repeated exclama- tion: “Est-il-possible?” King James, enumerating those who had forsaken him, said: “And est-il-possible has gone, too!” ————————————————— Indictment of the Cat. “Many an innocent hawk, skunk, owl or weasel,” says a government bureau, “has been shot for the deeds of that sleek highwayman, the house cat. It is safe to say that this ma- raudeg, which enjoys all the comforts and protection of the home, destroys in the aggregate more wild birds and young poultry than all their natural enemies combined.” “A Hungry Eye Sleeps Not.” The old adage, “A hungry eye sleeps not,” is a very truthful one, and many a sufferer from insomnia would be cured of the complaint if he drank a cup of hot milk, with a little nutmeg grated on top and sweetened, if de- sired. Hot malted milk is also ex- cellent, and hot milk toast has brought restful slumber to many a convalescent. | ————————— | Beautiful Unseen World. | There is a veil covering the unseen world which not the strongest man ' nor even the united strength of all the strongest men that ever lived could | tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, ' love, romance, can push aside that cur- tain and view and picture the super- ' nal beauty and wonder beyond.—Frank * P. Church, in New York Sun. | Where Loyalty Counts. | Loyalty to one’s employer is the ; first lesson that should be taught to | the aspirant for a place in the busi- {| ness world, says a circular sent out by the efficiency bureau of the New York university. The reason given is that loyalty means success to the employer and resultant prosperity to the employee. Sharpening a Worn File. “When a file gets dull,” said the master mechanic, “you can restore its effectiveness by pouring a little nitric acid over it. This roughens the raised’ parts and deepens the sunk parts so that it will again file your nails or cut a bar of iron.” Vinegar in Ink, Very often ink gets stringy or oily. This is caused by the action of the air. A few drops of vinegar put into the ink will make it usable again, but the better plan is to keep the ink bot- tle covered. Se ——————————————————— Game in California. California is one of the richest states of the Union in game. The varieties include deer, elk, moose, antelope, cari- bou, wild turkey, pheasant, duck, goose, brant, plover, snipe and rail. Man of His Word. “Is Bliggins ‘a man of his word?” “Unfortunately so. Whenever he sings ‘Landlord, Fill the Flowing Bowl!’ or TI Won't Go Home Till Morning!’ he absolutely insists on making good.” en eee ene. Look Ahead! The present moment is the worst; the lenient hand of Time is daily and hourly either lightening the bur- den, or making us insensible to the weight.—Robert Burns. ———————————————————— Drink Water for Health. Persons who wish to keep “up to the mark” should drink water systematic- ally regardless of the feeling of actual thirst—before breakfast, between meals, and at bedtime. Hard Command to Obey. Irate Sergeant (to unhappy recruit, who won’t “cut it short”)—Silence wid you!—whin you're sPakin’ to a h’officer!—London Opinion. Evidently a Reader. Teacher—“What is the elephant hunted for, Emerson?” Bright pupil— “Magazine articles!”’—Puck.