Pemoreatic:Aatcyuon Bellefonte, Pa., July 25, 1919. AS WE NEAR THE JOURNEY’S END. A little more tired at close of day; A little less eager to have our way; A little less ready to scold and blame; A little less anxious for things of fame; And so we are nearing the journey’s end Where time and eternity meet and blend. A little less care for bonds and gold; A little more zest in the days of old; A broader view and a saner mind, And a little more love for all mankind; A little more careful of what we say; And so we are faring a-down the way. A little more leisure to sit and dream, A little more real the things unseen; A little bit nearer to those ahead, With visions of those long-loved and dead; And so we are going where all must go, To the place the living may never know. A little more laughter, a little more tears, , And we shall have told our increasing years; The book is closed and the said, And we are a part of the countless dead. Thrice happy, then, if some soul can say; “1 live because he has passed my way.” prayers are THE PIN-PRICK. That? That’s one of pcor May Blissett’s things, the one she used to say she’d leave me in her will, be- cause, she said, she knew I'd be kind to her. Her reasons were always rather quaint. She spoke of it as if it were a live thing that could be hurt or made happy. I've tried to be kind to it. I’ve framed it as it ought to be framed, and hung it in not too bad a light. I —I've consented to live with it. You needn’t look at it 1 ze that. Of course I know it isn’t a bit alive in our sense. She couldn’t draw, she could only paint a little; her inspira- tion was reminiscent, and she got hung more than once in the Academy. She was like so many of them. But she had a sense of beauty, of color, of decoration, and, at her best, a sort of magic queerness that was suggest- ed irresistibly even when the things didn’t quite come off. That this hasn’t come off—not quite —is really, to me, what makes it so poignantly alive. It’s a bit of her, a little sensitive, palpitating shred, torn off from her and flung there—all that was left of her. It stands for her mystery, her queerness, her passion- ate persistence, and her pluck. To anybody who knew her the thing’s excrutiatingly alive. It’s so alive, so much her, that Frances Archdale wonders how I can bear to live with it, with the terrible reproach of it. She insisted that we —or, rather, that she—was responsi- ble for what happened. But that’s the sort of thing that Frances always did think. Certainly she was responsible for May’s coming here. She was with her when she was looking over the studio above mine, the one that Hanson had —it had been empty nearly a year— and she brought her in to me. I was to tell her whether the studio would do or not. I think, when it came to the point, Frances wanted to saddle me with the responsibility. There were no other women in the studios— never had been; they’re uncomforta- ble enough for a man who isn’t fas- tidious; there’s no service to speak of; and May Blissett proposed to live alone. I looked at her and decided instant- ly that it wouldn’t do. You had only to look at her to see that it wouldn't. She was small and presented what Frances called the illusion of fragil- ity—an exquisite little person in spite of her queerness. She had one of those broad-browed, broad-cheeked, and suddenly pointed faces,. with a rather prominent and intensely obsti- nate chin. The queerness was in her long eyes and in the way her delicate nose broadened at the nostrils and in the width of her fine mouth, so much too wide for the slenderly pointed face, and in the tiny scale of the whole phenomenon. She was swarthy, with lots of dark, crinkly hair. There was something subtle about her, and something that I felt, God forgive pe as mysteriously and secretly ma- ign. . Even if we had wanted women in the studios at all, I didn’t want that woman. So I told her that it would not do. She looked at me straight with her long, sad eyes, and said: “But it’s just what I'm hunting for. Why won’t it do?” I could have sworn that she knew what I was thinking. I said there would be nobody to look after her. And Frances cut in, to my horror, “There would be you, Roly.” It was only one of her inconsider- . ate impulses, but it annoyed me and I turned on her. I said, “Has your friend seen that studio next to yours?” I knew that it was to let, and Frances knew that I knew. I sus- pected her of concealing its existence from May Blissett. She didn’t want her near her; she didn’t like the re- sponsibility. I wished her to know that it was her responsibility, not mine. I wasn’t going to be saddled with it. Her face—the furtive guilt of it— confirmed my suspicion as we stared at each other across the embarrass- ment we had created. I ought to have been sorry for Frances. She was mutely imploring me to get her out of it, to see her through. And I wasn’t going to. And then May Blissett laughed, an odd little soft laugh that suggested some gentle but diavolical apprecia- tion of our agony. “That woudn’t do.” I was remorseless and said in my turn: “Why wouldn't it? You'd be near Miss_Archdale.” She said: “We don’t either of us want to be so near. We should get in each other's way most horribly—-just because we like each other. I should not be in your way, Mr. Simpson.” She was still exquisite, but at the same time a little sinister. I remember trying to say some- thing about the inference not being very flattering, but Frances got in first. “She doesn’t mean that she doesn’t RIG like you, Roly. What she means is wn “What I mean is that, as Frances knows me and likes me a little—vou said you did”—(It was as if she thought that Frances was going to say she didn’t. She flung her a logk that was not quite sinister, not sinis- ter at all—purely exquisite—exquis- itely incredulous, exquisitely shy. And she went on with her explana- tion)—*“I should be on her mind. And I couldn’t be on your mind, you know.” I said, “Oh, couldn’t you!” But she took no notice. She said, “No, if I come here—and I'm coming” — (She got up to go. She was abso- lutely determined, absolutely final— —“we must make a compact never”— (she was most impressive)-—“never to get in each other's way. It’s no use for Frances and me to make a compact. We couldn’t keep it for five minutes.” She had the air, under all her in- credulity, of paying high tribute to their mutual affection. “I'm coming here to work, and I want to be alone. What’s more, I want to feel alone.” “And you think,” I said, “I'll make you feel it.” She said, “I hope so.” She had put herself between Fran- ces and the door. She said: “You'd better stay and explain it if he does not understand. I'm going.” She went like a shot, and I gather- ed that her precipitance was to give me the measure of her capacity for withdrawal. Frances stayed. I could see her stiffening herself to meet my wrath. “Frances,” I said, “how could you?” Frances was humble and deprecat- | ing—for her. She said, “Roly, she re- | ally won’t be in your way.” “She will be in it,” I said, “most abominably. You know we are not supposed to have women here.” “I know; but she’s not like a wom- an. She was trying to tell you that she wasn’t. She isn’t. She isn’t— really—quite human. You won't have to do any of the usual things.” . I asked her what she meant by the usual things, and she became instant- ly luminous. She said, “Well—she won’t expect you to fall in love with her.” I’m afraid I said, Heaven only knew what she’d expect. But Frances walked over me with “And you need not expect her to fall in with you.” And she put it to me, if there’d been a chance of that sort of thing hap- pening, if May had been dangerous, would she have risked it? (We were engaged in those days). Would she have gone out of her way to plant her up there over my head? Would she have asked me to look after her if she had—well—required looking after? And she reminded me that she wasn’t a fool. As for May, that sort of thing was beyond her. “Ig it,” I said, “beyond any wom- an? I wouldn’t put it—" “Past her?” she snatched me up. “Perhaps not. But she’s past it. Gone through it all, my dear. She's utterly beyond. Immune.” I said: “Never. A face with that expression—that half-malign subtle- | ty. She might do things.” And Frances turned on me. You know how she can turn. Malign sub- tlety! Malign suffering. The ma- lignity was not in the things she’d do, | poor lamb, but in the things that had been done to her. And then she sat | down and told me 2 few of them— | told me what, in fact, May had gone | through. First of all, she had lost all her people—father, mother, brothers, and sisters. (She was the youngest of a | large family). That was years and years ago, and she was only thirty- two now, so you may judge the fran- tic pace of the havoc. And by way of pretty interlude her father had gone mad—mad as a hatter. May had looked after him. Then they lost ail their money. (That was a mere de- tail). Then she married a man who left her for another woman. Left her with a six months’ old baby to bring up. Then the child died and she di- vorced him—he dragged her through horrors. Then, as if that wasn’t enough, her lover—I beg her pardon, the man who loved her—was drown- ed before her eyes in a boating acci- dent. Nothing, Frances said, had happened since then. What could, when everything had happened? As for doing things, there was nothing poor May wanted to do except pic- tures. And if she thought she could do them better here over my head, wouldn’t I be a brute to try to stop her? Of course I said I shouldn’t dream of stopping her, and that it was very sad—it was, indeed, appalling. But it seemed to me that, though Frances had let out so much, she was still keeping something back. And a bru- tal instinct made me say to her: “What is it, then, that you dislike so much in her?” She took it quite simply, as if she had been prepared for it. She even smiled as she answered: “Nothing— except her obstinacy.” 1 asked her, wouldn’t that be pre- cisely what would get in my way? And she said, No; May’s obstinacy would consist in keeping out of it. Still, I objected, obstinate people were nearly always tactless. And Frances said, No, not always. She said—dear Frances!—“I’m not obstinate. But I'm tactless, if you like. Look at the horrid mess I got us both into just now. And look how she got us out. She saved us.” I admitted that she had. And Frances finished up, triumph- antly: “Can’t you trust her? Can’t you see that she’s beyond? That she really won’t be there? There never was a more effaced and self-effacing person, a person more completely self-contained. I assure you none of us exist for her. So she needn’t, re- ally, be on your mind.” And she wasn’t, not for a moment, from the day of her coming till the day—Though I must say, afterward— To begin with she chose a week-end for her installation—a Friday till Tuesday when I was away. 1 literal- ly didn’t know that she was there, so secrev and so silent was she in her movements overhead. I couldn’t have believed it possible for a woman to be so effacing and effaced. It was su- per-feminine; it was, as Frances said, hardly human. And yet she didn’t overdo it. I had to own that the most exquisite thing about this exquisite EER ERA CA SL TR RRR — and queer little person was her tact. | pact, I went away, going rather — By overdoing it the least bit, by in- | slowly, in the hope that she'd relent. sisting on her detachment, her isola- | I can’t tell you whether I realiy heard tion, she would have made us disa- | her open her door and come out on to greeably aware. When you met her | on the stairs (she used to run up and | down them incredibly soft-footed) ' she smiled and nodded at you (she had really a singularly intriguing | smile) as much as to say that she was | in an awful hurry, life being so full | of work, of a joyous activity, but still | it was lucky that we could meet like this, sometimes, on the stairs. And she used to come in to tea, sometimes, when I had a party. She took hardly any room in the studio, and hardly any part in the conversa- tion, but she would smile prettily! ! the hall porter and his , told me that Miss Blissett was not in when you spoke to her; the implica- tion being that it made her happy to be asked to tea, but it was not so nec- | essary to her happiness that you: would have to ask her often. She used to come a little late and go a lit- tle early—and yet not too early—on | the plea (it sounded somehow prepos- terous) that she was busy. Even the poor art that kept her so was tact- ful. It had no embarrassing preten- sions, it called for no criticism, you could look at it without sacrificing your sincerity to your politeness. And bred ever to refer to it. And it kept her. It got itself hung, as I've said, now and again. Supremely tactful, it spared your pity. In short, she made no claim on us, unless, indeed, her courage called to us to admire the spectacle it was. For, when you think of the horri- ble things that had happened to her, the wonder was how she ever contriv- ed to smile at all. But that was what she had effaced more than anything— the long trail of her tragedy. Her reticence was inspired by the purest, the most delicate sense of honor. It was as if she felt that it wouldn’t be playing the game, the high game of life, to appeal to us on that ground, when we couldn’t have resisted. Be- sides, it would have hurt, and she wouldn’t for the world have hurt us. Her subtlety, you see, was anything but malign. It was beneficent, ten- der, supernaturally lucid. It allowed for every motive, every shade. And we took her as she presented herself —detached, impersonal, and, as Fran- ces said, immune. I said to Frances: “We needn't have worried. You were right.” And Frances exulted: “Didn’t I tell you? She’s quite kind to us, but she doesn’t want us.” She had made us forget that we hadn’t wanted her. She had made me forget that I had ever said she’d do things. Even now I don’t know what on earth it was I thought she’d do. She had been living up in that stu- dio, I think, three years before happened. I can tell you just how it was. On the evening, rather late, Frances came to see me. She asked me if I had seer anything of May Blissett lately. I said: No. Had she? And she said, Yes, May had called that afternoon. I noticed something funny about Frances’s face—something that made , me say, “And you weren't very glad to see her?” She asked me how I knew she wasn’t, and I told her that her funny face betrayed her. Then, by way of extenuation, she told me the tale of May’s calling. I remember every word of it, because over it again and again—afterward. She told me that she was not really at home that afternoon to anybody but Daisy Valentine. Daisy had got something on her mind that she want- ed to talk about. I knew what those two were when they got together— they were as thick as thieves. And as I also knew that the something on Daisy’s mind was Reggie Cotterill, I understood that their communion would be private and intimate to the last degree. And it seemed that the servant had blundered and let May Blissett in up- on the mysteries before they had well begun, and that she’d stayed inter- minably. There they were, the two of them, snug together on the sofa; their very attitude must have shown May what Daisy was there for. They were just waiting for tea to come be- fore they settled down to it. Poor Daisy was quivering visibly with the things she’d got to say. Couldn’t I see her? I could. I gathered that the atmosphere was fairly tingling with suppressed confidence, and that May, obtuse to these vibrations, sat there and simply wouldn’t go. 1 remember I suggested that she, too, might have had something on her mind and have had things to say. But Frances said: .No, she never had things. She’d come for nothing— nothing in the world. She was in one of her silences, those fits which gave her so often the appearance of stu- pidity. (I knew them. They were formidable, exasperating; for you never could tell what she might be thinking of; and she had a way of smiling through them, a way that we knew now was all part of her high courage, of the web she had spun, that illusion of happiness she had covered herself up in, to spare us). Frances said she wouldn’t have mind- ed May’s immobility for herself. It was Daisy who sat palpitating with anxiety, wondering why on earth she didn’t go. I wondered, too. her. I said so. And Frances, who seemed to under- stand May through and through, said it wasn’t. It was most characteris- tic. It was just May’s obstinacy. If May had made up her mind to do a thing she did it quand meme. Gener- ally she made up her mind not to be a nuisance. She’d made it up that afternoon that she’d stay, and so she stayed. “I'm afraid,” Frances weren't very nice to her. see we didn’t want her.” “And then?” I asked. “Qh, then, of course, she went.” I must say I marveled at the obsti- nacy that could override a delicacy so consummate as May Blissett’s. And I thought that Frances’s imagination must have been playing her tricks. It did sometimes. That night, about nine o’clock, I ran up to May Blissett’s studio. I knocked at her door three or four times. I knew she was there. I'd heard her come in an hour or two be- It was so unlike said, “we We let her the stair-head after I'd got down to my own floor; whether I really thought that she leaned out over the banister to see what was there; or whether I tortured myself with the mere possibility—afterward. It must have been about six o’clock in the morning when they came to me, son. They her room and that they couldn’ get her studio door open. It wasn’t lock- ed, they said; it had given slightly, but it seemed stuck all over, and an uncommonly queer smell was coming through. They thought it was some sort of disinfectant. I went up with them. You could smell the disinfectant oozing steadi- ly through a chink in the studio door. We opened the big French windows opposite, and the windows of the bed- room and the stairs outside. Then we began to get the door open with knives, cutting through the paper that sealed it up inside. The reek of the sulphur was so strong that I sent the men out to open the studio windows— i they were sealed up, too—from the if it hadn’t been, May was too well ! door. outside, before we finished with the One of them came back and ‘ told me not to go into the room. it, . wasn’t long). But when the smoke cleared a little I went. Oh, it was all quite decent. Trust her for that. She was lying on the couch which she’d dragged into the middle of the great bare studio, all ready, dressed in her nightgown, with a sheet drawn up to her chin. the sulphur still burning. She had set the candles, one con each side, one | 1 at the head, and one at the foot. No, there’s nothing stately and cer- | emonial ahout a sulphur candle. Have you ever seen one? It's a little fat, yellow devil that squats in a sau- | cer. There’s a crimson ooze from it when it burns, as if the thing sweat- ed blood before it began its work. One of those stinking devils would ! have done what she wanted, there were four. white nightgown, lighting her can- dles, smiling her subtle and myster- ious smile? The ghost of it was still there. I am sure she was thinking how beautifully she had managed and how she had saved us all. The dear woman couldn’t have had any other thought. Hven Frances saw that. Frances nearly went off her head : Just as she did afterward | about it. about poor Dickinson. She declared that we, or rather she, was responsi- ble. She’d had a letter from May Blissett written that night. It’s stuck in my head ever since (it ping on like that. skinned of me when I saw you so dear and happy there together. But some- how I couldn’t help it. And you have , forgiven me.” ! entine away : would have been A perfectly sane letter. Not a word ' about what she meant to do. Evident- ly she didn’t want Frances to connect it with their reception of her. But of course she did. She insisted that if she had only sent Daisy Val- and kept May, May now. She had shown her that they i hadn’t wanted her, that she was in fore. Then, remembering our com- their way, and May had just gone and | jaken herself, once for all, out of it. we went, she and I—she made me go | 5 Se stow a I couldn’t do anything with her. I! couldn’t make her see that the two things couldn’t have had anything in the world to do with each other; that the affair of the visit, to May—after what she’d been through—would be a mere pin-prick; that you don’t through such things to be killed by a pin-prick. But Frances would have it that you do; that it was because of what May had been through that she was so vulnerable. Besides, she maintained that her responsibility went deeper and furth- er back. It was that from the first she had been afraid of May Blissett— afraid of something about her. No, not her queerness: her loneliness. She had been afraid that it would cling, that it would get in her way. She had compelled her to suppress it. She had driven it in, and the thing was poison- ous. I reminded her that May didn’t want us, and she wailed: “We tried to make ourselves think she didn’t. But she did. She did. She wanted us most awfully all the time.” If she had only known! And so on. I did all I could. I pointed out to her that poor May was insane. What she did proved it. In her right mind she would never have done it. She would have been incapable of that cruelty to us who cared for her. But Frances stuck to it that that was just it. She wouldn’t have done it if she’d known we did care. It was the very essence of her despair that she had thought we didn’t. And sometimes I wonder whether Frances wasn’t right. Whether, if I had run back that night and caught May Blissett on the staircase— But, you see, I wasn’t really sure that she was there. I mean, she may have lit her candles before that.—By May Sinclair, in Harper’s Monthly Magazine. The Low Cost of Health. We hear very much of the high cost of living, but we overlook the fact that many of the best things of life can be had for nothing. It costs nothing to stand up and walk and breathe properly. Fresh air in the home is free. No expense taking a few simple ex- ercises every morning. It costs nothing to chew the food thoroughly. It costs nothing to select the food best suited to the body. It costs nothing to clean the teeth twice a day. It costs no more to stop using pat- ent medicines. It costs no more to read good books than trashy literature. It costs nothing to have a cheerful, happy disposition, and stop having grouches. These things cost nothing, yet they will bring content and reduce the doc- tor’s bill to nothing a year—for you. ~——For high ciass job work come to the “Watchman” office. The | whole place was dim with the fog of | and | 2 Can’t you see her going softly round the couch in her “Forgive me for stop- | It was very thick- | living and happy ! DOGS ON THE FARM MAY BE MADE USEFUL. In Fact, if Gone About in the Right Way, They May be Converted Inte an Asset. The dog on the farm can be made a most useful acquisition, and he can be A nuisance and-a detriment. Much depends upon the training began in early life. It is hard to teach an old dog new tricks, and therefore his ed- ucation should start in puppyhood. Even a mongrel puppy can be taught to be useful. Some dogs show a great deal more good judgment and hard common sense than do some men. CHOOSING A FARM DOG. The most popular farm dog is the Scotch Collie. He is probably the most intelligent animal, and when properly trained is a companion ever ready to do one’s bidding. He is de- cidedly the most sagacious of the ca- nine race. As a rule he is always in good humor, a jolly good fellow, ready for a romp at any time, and never for a cross word or a blow. If the human face is a key to character, if expres- sion tells what is in the soul, truly it may be said that the face of the col- lie indicates his dispesition. His eyes, ears and nose seem to tell whether he is gentle or vicious, submissive or vin- dictive, kind or brutal, dull or intel- ligent. In purchasing a pup look at its physical condition; be sure he is in perfect health. Then look up its breeding—whether he comes from a line of ancestors noted for their size and intelligence. As a rule the timid dog is the brightest, and can be taught almost anything except to talk. SAMPLES OF DOG INTELLIGENCE. One year we lost a large number of young chickens by the daily visits of hawks. Our collie dog “Pat” noticed that whenever a hawk was about alighting we would pick up a stone {and throw it in the direction of the | bird. He seemed to grasp our inten- tion, and afterwards stood guard. . Whenever a hawk or any bird about | that size, would come down near the chickens, Pat would begin to run and bark, and thus scare it away. From the time he started to keep watch we never lost a chick. ; One day, however, while Pat was apparently asleep, a hawk descended within 50 feet of him and made a dive for the crest of one of our young Houdan chicks, and then the dog look- ed up. Quicker than it takes to tell denness of the alarm made the hawk loosen its grip, although it had its victim about five feet in the air, and down tumbled the poor chick. Then Pat sat down beside it, lapped the | blood from its head, and began bark- ing in the direction of the house until some one came out. The entire per- | formance was witnessed by one of the household. Noticing that we never permitted | fighting among the poultry, this same dog of his own accord always sepa- rated combatants. A neighboring . farmer owned a cock bird that made daily visits to our poultry yard, and . would fight our birds through the wire fencing. It kept Pat busy driv- ing him away, but the bird would per- gist in repeating his visits. At last Pat became vexed, and before the of- fender reached the fence the dog dashed after him. The bird was us- i ing all haste to get away, while the dog closely followed, barking all the while. He kept this up until the fowl reached home, when he returned to the farm, evidently pleased with his work, and the visits were never re- : peated. | THE COLLIES BECOME RATTERS. Being considerably annoyed with i o | Fats on the farm, and the collies not | being classed as ratters we purchased | a dog for that purpose. We had three | collies at the time—Pat, Colonel and ! Nellie. One day while the hired man { was feeding the stock, he saw several | large rats run under the pig pen. He { called Tip, the ratter, who came ac- companied by the collies. The pig pen was raised at one end, and out ran a rodent, which was dispatched by the ratter in quick order. While he shook the rat to death the collies stood around and watched the performance with the greatest interest. Putting some blocking under the pig pen we raised it a little higher so the rat dog could make further search. Presently out came another rat, and before it got very far Pat grabbed it and shook it to death in the very same way that Tip did. Then dropping it, he looked up as much as to say: “Did I do that right?” Out came two more rats, and Colonel made a good chase after one and caught it, while Nellie leaped over a three-foot fence and grabbed the other, just as it was about entering a hole in a building. They all followed Tip’s style in killing them. From that time on the occupation of Tip was gone, for the collies became ratters, and Tip had nothing to do but eat and sleep. BEGIN TRAINING IN PUPPYHOOD. While dogs are not human, they are not far from it. They are capable of reasoning, and even while yet a baby puppy can tell the mood of the master by the tone of voice and expression of face. If gentle, loving words and tone are used the puppy plays every antic known to him for expressing joy; but should the master be surly, the poor little animal will slink away, creep under the house, anywhere to be out of sight. _ Puppies are as susceptible to train- ing and correction as children. Use one word to express command, ex- pressing these when possible by a chasacteristic move of the arm, al- ways the same in both instances so they became a simultaneous thought. Then, too, always be near enough to the puppy when giving these early commands to enforce obedience. Use a collar now. If the puppy does not understand, go to it, take it gently by the collar and draw it to- ward what has been ordered done. Do not scold. Encourage it to do the bid- ding by kindness. No other animal is endowed with so affectionate a nature nor so great a desire to please. TEACHING WORDS OF COMMAND. The puppy must first be taught to lead, placing a string about his neck. He will soon learn not to try to get away, and to come on hearing the word “Here,” or whatever word is chosen, pulling on the string until he learns to come promptly. Lessons of it, he went to the rescue and the sud- | half an hour a day are enough, and | this first lesson should be learned very thoroughly, so that the dog will come from any part of the yard instantly on hearing the word. Next he is taught the meaning of the word “go” by using the word when sending him through an enclos- ure, continually repeating the lesson until he acts promptly. As a part of this lesson he should be taught to stop anywhere on the word “Halt,” empha- sizing at first by pulling on the string, which should still be attached to his neck. The word “Ho” is also used by some trainers to indicate the teacher is through with him for the time be- ing, and the dog soon learns to under- stand it. While driving sheep it is convenient to have the dog understand the word “speak,” which means that he is to begin barking, and he can be taught every word easily by holding up some- thing which he wants to eat and us- ing the word. The meaning of “out” is easily taught when the dog is in the house by opening the door and pronouncing the word. After this preliminary education he may go out with an old trained sheep- dog. By running with him the pup soon learns much of the business, and should be prevented from going to the heads of the cattle. After letting him try with the older dog for a few times he should be taken to the sheep or cattle without the other dog. _ If the cattle have been used to be- ing driven by dogs, they will not turn upon him, an occurrence which might injure his driving qualities for some time to come. He should learn the meaning of “steady,” when inclined to drive the cattle fast, and if this first training is well done will stop promptly when told to halt. The word “fetch” is commonly used when send- ing the dog to drive sheep, and the word “go” for cattle, and the dog will learn to understand which his master wants him to drive. He should be taught to know the left from the right, obeying the motion of the hand in iad direction.—Philadelphia Rec- ord. New Automobile Laws. Harrisburg.—Approval of the two automobile regulation bills was an- nounced from the Governor's office. One is a code governing the licensing and operation of all motor vehicles, and the other regulates the sale and transfer of second-hand cars. Both are effective at once. The code allows a speed of 30 miles an hour on open roads and 15 miles in built-up communities. Use of cut-outs is forbidden. The registration fees are to be 40 cents per horse power with a minimum of $10 for automo- biles. Motor trucks are licensed by classes according to weight from $20 to $150, the latter being for 10,000 pound classes. Truck lengths are limited to 28 feet, width to 90 inches and weight to 28,000 pounds. Trucks are also lim- ited to speed by classes, ranging from 10 miles per hour for heavy grades to 20 miles for lighter grades. Sworn statements that applicants for license are physically able to operate cars are required. The “second-hand-car” bill requires complete description with bills of sale statements as to ownership and changes made in the car, all to be sworn to. Another new feature is that all dealers in used cars must take out a state license at an annual fee of $100 and each dealer must be vouched for by two persons. Various other pro- visions for tracing cars are made. No one may have a car from which the identifying mark has been re- moved. Highway Commissioner Sadler gave notice that the State would re- quire observance of the act requiring lights on all moving vehicles at night, including farm wagons but not agri- cultural machinery, hay wagons, or wheelbarrows. He also called atten- tion to the operation of the law for- bidding the use cf traction or porta- ble engines within 300 feet of a build- ing unless equipped with spark ar- resters. : Shut Your Eyes ana Answer These. What are the exact words on a two- cent stamp? In which direction is the face turned? In what direction is turned the face on a cent? On a dime? On a quar- ter? What are the words on the face of your watch? What color are the eyes of your employer? Of the man at the next desk ? How many teeth have you? What are the words on a police- man’s shield ? How many buttons have you on your waistcoat ? How many toes has a cat on each forefoot, and each hindfoot? What is the name, signed in fac- simile, on any $1, $2, $5 or $10 bill you ever saw, Which way does the crescent moon turn—to the right or to the left ?— Cartoons Magazine. Cincinnati Sells Eggs by Weight. Cincinnati.—As a result of a con- troversy that has arisen in the Pro- duce Exchange of the Chamber of Commerce, classification of eggs has been changed. The term “prime firsts” has been discontinued and a new designation has been adopted— “fresh gathered extra firsts.” Weights will be enforced hereafter, which is an innovation here. “Fresh gathered extra frst” eggs must weigh forty-five pounds net, or (fifty-six pounds gross; firsts, forty-three pounds net, or fifty-four pounds gross; ordinary firsts, forty-one pounds net, or fifty-two pounds gross, and seconds, thirty-nine pounds net, or fifty pounds gross. .All of these weights are considered on crates. Of Infinite Variety. “My wife is a woman who always speaks her mind.” “Her conversation must be monot- onous.” “Not at all. She is continually changing her mind.” His Job. “Pa, what is it the censor does?” “Oh, just incense everybody, my son.” 0