fon =a 2 “9 Denornaic Wada, ~TED Bellefonte, Pa., December 10, 1920. nm — THE CRY OF THE DREAMER. 1 am tired of planning and toiling In the crowded hives of men, Heart-weary of building and spoiling And spoliing and building again. And I long for the dear old river Where I dreamed my youth away, For a dreamer lives forever, And a toiler dies in a day. 1 am sick of the showy seeming Of life that is half a lie, Of the faces lined with scheming In the throng that hurries by, From the helpless thoughts endeavor I would go where the children play— For a dreamer lives forever, And a thinker dies in a day. I can feel no pride, but pity, For the burdens the rich endure; There is nothing sweet in the city But the patient lives of the poor. Oh, the little hands too skillful, And the child mind choked with weeds The daughter's heart grown willful, And the father's heart that bleeds. No, no; from the street's rude bustle, Trom the trophies from mart and stage I would fly to the wood’s low rustle And the meadow's kindly page. Let me dream as of yore by the river, And be loved for the dream alway, For the dreamer lives forever, But the toiler dies in a day. AN ALTAR ON LITTLE THUNDER. (Concluded from last week). At Couch’s first sentence the con- cealed man had quivered like a polled ox. 'Thenceforward, though no word that followed escaped his ears, he lay with his lips pressed to the earth. As this incredible, this monstrous drama went on beneath him—his wife listen- ing to another man’s words of love— he clenched and relaxed his hands, twisted his body from side to side, as if striving to free himself from a crushing weight. But his efforts came to naught, like the impotent struggles of one in a dream. All strength had gone out of him. To shoot the traitor, to leap down and by his mere pres- ence give the lie to Couch’s assertions —these thoughts came. But they al- so passed, as idle, futile as the fig- ments of a drugged brain. In prison Ash had never abandoned hope, or sunk in sullen despair, or hardened his heart against his kind, or become as a ravening wolf, like some of his cell-mates. But summoning a fortitude of which his commonplace exterior gave no hint, he had resolved that, hurt his body as they might, they should not destroy his soul. It was a noble resolution, but its complete execution was not humanly possible. Somewhere between his heart and his throat, in spite of him- self, there came a lump that would neither up nor down, that persisted from his waking in the morning, at the sullen boom of the cell-house gong, until the measured step of the guard at night on the cold, concrete floor of the corridor grew faint and remote in his consciousness and final- ly ceased. And that fetor, that noi- some emanation from caged things, be they men or animals, sickened lungs which had known only the pure, balsamic air of the mountain. When the warden and an assistant, on his reception at the prison, had searched and stripped him, they took more than his clothes, jack-knife, a few nickels and dimes, and his plug of tobacco. These they gave back when he was freed. But they had taken something they did not give back— could not give back. Society had said to him, through her agents of court and prison, “Be patient; wear these stripes for a few years for your own good, and then we will take them off.” But she had lied, for she had burned those stripes into him with hot and smoking irons—the 4x7 cell, the lock-step, the rock-pile, the shorn head; systematic humilia- tions and degredations, such as the stew-pan in which his food was flung like scraps for a dog, the prohibition to speak to his mates, the substitution of a number for his name. She had made these stripes as ineffaceable as the leopard’s spots or the sable skin of the Ethiop. And she had burned them deep as well as wide, searing his blithe spirit, drying up his youthful blood, making him old before his time. At first he had not realized his mu- tilation. In the days preceding his emancipation, indeed, he had forgot- ten it. But on the streets of the peni- tentiary city, at the station, on the train, at Pardeeville, he saw that he was a social leper. He looked for- ward, however, to the mountain, as a pious Mohammedan to Mecca, as a place of cleansing. He had shed the hated prison garments, as if the pol- lution lay in them. Alas! the words of a barefooted boy had disillusioned him, had made him fearful and dis- trustful of his former friends. But whoever might be for or against him, whatever opinion men might hold of his crime—yea, wheth- er guilty or innocent in the sight of Heaven itself—there was one upon whose fidelity he counted as upon the fidelity of his right hand to his left; whose steadfastness to him was like that of the magnetic needle for the pole; whose outstretched arms of wel- come he as certainly expected to find as the mountain itself upon which he had been born. Not that he was wor- thy of this supreme loyalty, not that he had been a good husband always, or had always’ eased her burden when opportunity offered, but because it was her nature to be true, because un- faithfulness was as unthinkable in her as lukewarmness in the sun; and he would as soon have expected to see the seasons fail in their appointed proces- sion, or the Great Bear cease to swing around the pole-star, as that Nance should swerve from her altar vows. Yet now even she— : He crawled slowly up the slope, like the wounded thing that he was, mak- ing for the fastnesses where no man might find him out. His fortitude had withstood every shock since the hour he entered that arched gate which | bl might well have borne the legend, | «T,eave hope behind all ye who enter here.” But soon he paused, exhaust- ed. Then, with the terrible, wrench- ing groan of the strong man in agony, he cast himself upon the ground and wept like a child. : It was morning before his mind ceased to stagger in the cataclysmic chaos. But peace came at last, and, lo! he who had always been so quick to avenge now forgave. More than that, he justified. He perceived that, on the whole, Rufus Couch had sum- med up the facts correctly; that Nance, in accepting Rufe’s hand, was only following the guidance of her maternal instincts. That she still loved him, but had laid her love upon a sacrificial altar, was plain to Ash. This idea of sacrifice, of vicarious suffering, grew upon him. Lately cer- tain high aspirations had settled up- on himself, like doves of heaven. He had resolved, for instance, never to drink another drop of whiskey, to work with might and main that he might ameliorate his poverty, never to leave Nance any unnecessary chores to do, never again to unbridle r ! out nails or glue. his tongue against her, never to deny her, as he had too often in the past, any of the trinkets dear to 2 woman’s heart. But these resolutions paled be- fore the great service which, it was now revealed to him, lay within his bestowal. This was nothing less than the obliteration of himself have cause to question the wisdom of her present course or plague herself with vain regrets. His renunciation did not spring full- fledged into being. It was born in travail, like all earthly things. Butit grew apace and waxed stronger with the days. Prudence counseled him to leave the mountain at once. But he cringed momentarily before the ter- rors of that unknown, hostile land called “Below,” where alone he could bury his identity beyond peradventure of discovery, and he persuaded him- self that it would be better to tarry until Nance’s marriage was a fact. However, in order to run no risk of beeing seen, he took up his habitation in the somber, boulder-strewn solitude of the Bald, where the noble arboreal growth of the side was replaced by an occasional stunted, deformed shrub, clinging to the crevice from which it sucked its scanty nourishment, scorch- ed by the summer sun, twisted and frozen and threshed about by winter’s furies; and where the swift shadow of an eagle or the gray streak of a star- tled lizard was the only sign of sen- tient life. Yet happiness found him out even here—a still, hushed, voiceless happi- ness, in keeping with the soundless void around. He daily grew thinner, his skin dried up like parchment, and a feverish light shone from his eyes; but when he lay on his back at night and looked up at the flaring stars— so near that in fancy he could hear the rush and roar of conflagration un- der the cosmic draughts of heaven— he felt God’s invisible but beatific smile, and caught the echo of His “Well done, thou good and faithful servant!” Nance’s wedding bells were to ring his knell—send him into exile scarce- ly less dreaded than death. Yet the preliminaries of her marriagé became of absorbing interest to him. He kept | the homes of Jethro Haws and Rufus Couch under constant surveillance, often tramping the four miles between the two several times a day. As blind- ness sharpens the ears, distance sharpened his perception and deduc- tion. He knew when Nance set out for her divorce, accompanied by her father and old ’Squire Galum, Little Thunder’s only legal luminary. He knew when she bought the stuff for her wedding-gown. He also saw the coming of the furniture for her new home. He saw the people flock in, by families and by wagon-loads, from far away, to see the new house with its twenty windows, kerosene lamps, and other marvels. Finally, when the maples were fling- ing out their scarlet banners and the nights were sharp with frost, an un- wonted activity about the Haws cab- in, and the arrival of three or four aunts and uncles of Nance’s who lived at a distance, left Ash in no doubt that the morrow would be the wed- ding-day. His excitement must at least have matched the bride’s. With the morbid self-depreciation which had now be- come habitual, he had no doubt that this marriage was regarded by Nance as of much more importance than her former one, for the first groom was a ne’er-do-well, but the present one the richest man on Little Thunder. He yearned to figure in it, however hum- bly. He wanted to make her a pres- ent anonymously. But, cut off from stores and his kind, what could he send ? As his eyes fell upon a clump of as- ters he remembered her love, almost her passion, for these beautiful, wild harbingers of the twilight of the year; remembered how, when they flung their nodding, delicate sprays from every fence-corner, she would fill her arms with the pretty ‘“blue- faces,” as she called them. So at midnight, bearing a great sheaf of the finest plants he could find, he stole down to her cabin, with a tumultuous heart, and set them in a piggin of rain-water, that they might keep fresh. Then from the dark shad- ow of a bush he gazed hungrily at the low window in the north loft, former- ly Nance’s room, and presumably now occupied by her. “Good-by, Nancy, whispered. He set out for his cabin for the first time since his return, trusting him- self, owing to the lateness of the hour, to the road. Before she and Couch should be made man and wife he ex- pected to be miles away. Where? He asked himself the question as he pre- pared for the journey, removing his beard and trimming his shaggy hair, laying the shears and razor away, and obliterating all traces of his visit. Be- low—but just where? At the sight of the bed—her bed— illuminated by the yellow flare of the “lightwood” on the hearth, a great weariness seized him. His limbs ached, and all the hardness of all the rocks on which he had been sleeping seemed to gather in the muscles of his good-by 1” he ack. - “Pll drap down hyer a couple of from ! Nance’s life, that she might never | CORRE : hours,” he said aloud to himself, as he had fallen into the habit of doing. “Lemme see! Ill rise in time to git as fer as Bone Gap by sunup. From the Gap I'll slip down to Pewee Val- ley. From thar I'll take the fust road I see a gray hoss on. A gray hoss is , a sign of luck ef no red-haired woman air nigh. Then I'll—I'll—" He slept. Tired was his body, and easy his couch. The tension was over, his interest gone. Henceforth he had but to drift like an autumn leaf be- fore November's gusts. slept, therefore; he overslept. he awoke he blinked in amazement. The door, which he had carefully clos- ed, was open, and 2a lusty sun was flooding the room with light and warmth. He rubbed his eyes, but the hallu- cination only deepened. Over a cheer- ful fire a bubbling pot hung from the crane. Jude, but bigger, played on the floor. Nance was sitting which he had once made for her on a | rainy day, with only a draw-knife, a saw, and an auger for tools, and with- It was her favorite chair, and she was in her favorite at- titude. With elbows upon knees, she smiled at him in quite her old way. “You've had a quite smart of a nap, honey,” said she. “What time is it?” he demanded, vacantly. “Nigh on to airly dinner-time.” She laughed a little with suppressed ex- citement at his bewilderment, and approached his bed. The shine in her eyes was unearthly bright, and he shrank a little. “I reckon you ain’t got the sleep outen your eyes yet,” she continued. “What did you think when you come home last night and didn’t find me hyer?” He stared at her intently and sus- piciously. “Nance, air that you a- talkin’, or air it your sperit?” “It’s me, Ash.” “Lemme feel your hand.” She slipped it into Lis. “Don’t you see it’s me!” she excleimed, playfui- ly. But her smiling face suddenly crinkled under a different emotion, and with a quick, sharp ery she flung her- self upon him. “My pore boy, you're so thin!” How long she remained there, with- | out speech, clinging to his neck, he, > > a a { dent, provision for amendments to the never knew. But at last she sat up and wiped her eyes. “You broke jail, honey ?” she asked, anxiously. “No. Payrolled out fer good be- havior. They give me a suit of clothes, a railroad ticket to Pardee- ville, and a five-dollar greenback.” He paused. What had brought her to the cabin he could not guess. He only knew that his treacherous sleep had betrayed him into her hands. “Not that suit you got on.” “No.” He paused again. There seemed no way of threading the maze except with the guiding lamp of truth. “Nance, I didn’t come back last night. I come back two months ago. I heerd you were goin’ to marry Rufe Couch. I heerd it from your lips and , his’n, layin’ by the spring, where I'd i sneaked down to see you alone if I could. Looked to me like it war the best thing fer both you and the boy, and I decided to clear out and never disturb you no more. I waited to make sure thar’d be no slip, and I war goin’ away last night, but that ovexr- powerin’ sleep ketehed me like a wea- sel in a trap. I'll go tonight. No- body but you knows I'm hayer.” “Nobody but me!” The old drollery came into her blue-black eyes. “Go, sugar-pie, and when you're tired of wanderin,’ make sure I'm right hyer waitin’ fer you.” “But little Jude thar—his eddica- tion!” he faltered. “Listen, Ash! Last night I never slept except once, and that little Jude there come to me in a dream; but he was a grown man, just back from school, and locked so fine and hand- some. But instead of kissin’ me he frowned and said: ‘Nance Whipple— fer that’s yer name—I've found my daddy. He was cold and hungry and dirty, and he said to me, “Jude, your mommy sold her soul fer 2 painted house and an ar’n stove.”’ Ash, I knew then I could never marry Rufe Couch. I got right up and called mom- my, and before sunup I was riding hyerwards, with Jude on one arm and a basket that mommy had packed fer me on the other. I weren’t going to give dad a chance to turn me out. And when I seen you layin’ on that bed, I knew that dream had been sent to me.” As feels a shipwrecked salior whe has long breasted wind and wave and finds sudden safety and repose on an unsuspected isle, so felt Ash Whipple as he sat with Jude in his arms and watched Nance set the table. But at last he broke the spell of contented si- lence. “Nance, I mought ride over to the Run and engage the pa’son when he comes, and go on down to Holly Tree fer a marriage license, and you and me be tied up ag’in tonight. Sich of your relaytives as want to come air welcome; sich as don’t kin face t’other way.” “Just as you please, Ash. No hur- ry so fer’s I'm concerned. My sleep won’t be no less sound tonight, mer- ridge or no merridge,” said Nance, sturdily, as she skilfully swung out the crane. “I never did feel as if that divorce unmarried me, and I'm think- in’ in the eyes of God it didn’t, no matter what the mounting might say.”—By Elmore Elliott Peake, in Harper’s Monthly Magazine. Mechanics. Clerk (selling modern lead pencil): Then you unscrew this cap, take out the small unused leads, put new leads in each slot, press down firmly until they meet grip of inside thread, then put in case, slide down flush with point, screw on top, and the pencil is ready to write. As simple as A B C! Young Lady (doubtfully): Is it as bord as learning to drive an automo- ile ? Why Called Epsom Salts. The name Epsom salts is derived from the sulphate of magnesia Springs in Epsom, : in Surrey, Eng- and. ee ——Subseribe for the “Watchman.” He not only When ! A child, like his own little in a rude rocker LESSONS IN CITIZENSHIP. SOCIALIST PARTY PLATFORM. Give an outline of the Socialist plat- form adopted in 1916. Answer: The Socialist platform stated: “The Socialist party calls upon the working class to take a determined stand on the question of militarism and war, and to embrace the opportu- nity furnished them by the great war to force disarmament, and thus furth- er the cause of industrial freedom.” It further states, “Socialism admits the private ownership and individual direction of all things, tools, economic processes and functions, which are in- dividualistic in character; but requires the collective ownership and demo- cratic control and direction of those things that are social or collectivistic in character.” The platform peace measures: “That all laws and appropriations for the increase of the military and naval forces of the United States be immediately repealed,” that the pow- er of fixing all foreign pelicies and conducting diplomatic negotiations be lodged in Congress, which should act publicly in all such matters; they also declared that the people of the coun- try should be able to order Congress, by a referendum vote at any time, to change its policy. That no war be declared or waged, at any time, without a referenduin vote of the entire people, except for the purpose of repelling invasion. Th2 abandonment of the Monroz Doctrine, immediate self-government for the Philippine Islands, the calling of a Congress of 2ll neutral nations by our Government, to mediate for a lasting peace, and to arrange for an International Congress, with power to adjust disputes between nations, and to guarantee equal rights to all op- pressed nations and races. The political demands in their plat- form were equal suffrage for men and women, the adoption of the Susan B. recommended as Anthony Amendment, the initiative, referendum and recall and proportion- al representation, national and local; | the election of the President and Vice- | President by the direct vote of the | people, abolition of the United States Senate and veto power of the Presi- National Constitution to be passed by a majority of the voters, a convention to revise the National Constitution; they would also abolish the power of the Supreme Court to pzss upon the Constitutionality of legislation enact- ed by Congress, having the only re- peal of such legislaticn to be by Con- gress itself, or referendum vote of the whole people. They would also take from the courts the power to issue injunctions. They declared themselves in favor of the election of judges for short terms, free administration of the law, suffrage for the District of Columbia, | with representation in Congress and a i democratic form of municipal govern- ment to all United States territory. Freedom of the press, speech and assemblage, increase of income and corporation taxes and extension of in- heritance tax, general educational measures and vocational education, health measures, abolition of monopo- ly ownership of patents in favor of collective ownership with direct roy- alty rewards to inventors. There were also a number of indus- trial demands: —A shortened work day, freedom of political and econom- ic organization and activities, a rest period of not less than a day and a half each week; more effective inspec- tion of work shops, factories and mines. They also demanded legisla- tion forbidding the employment of all under eighteen yeavs, and preventing the transportation bctween States of child labor products, or the products of any uninspected factory or mine. They also demanded legislation pro- viidng a minimum wage scale, old age pensions, mothers’ pensions, State in- surance against unemployment and sickness, compulsory insurance by em- ployers of their workers, without cost : to the latter, against industrial dis- eases, accidents and death. LESSON IX. Taxation. How are the vast expenses of the showmen, saloon-keepers and others. The license tax resembles the fran- chise tax. 10th. Fees and special assessments collected as a partial payment for services rendered by the government. The charge for issuing a marriage certificate is an example of a fee, while a charge made for connecting a private drain with a public sewer is an example of a special assesment. We hear often of people who believe in a single tax. What does this mean? Answer: The single tax is a very radical reform proposed. By it all Fed- eral, State and local taxes would be raised from a single tax placed upon the land. What is the underiying principle of the single tax? Answer: According to the theory of those who favor the single tax, per- sons should contribute to the support of the government not in proportion to what they produce or accumulate, but in proportion to the value of the natural opportunities they hold, and they contend that the land holder is the great monopolist of natural op- portunities. How would such a tax be levied? Answer: the improvements made upon the land —for example: The tax upon a va- cant lot, provided it were as favorably ! located, would be as heavy as the tax upon a similar lot improved by a mag- nificent structure. Why are taxes necessarly high in the United States? Answer: We have studied some- thing of the enormous expenditures of our Federal, State and city govern- ments; the Federal government with its army and navy, courts of law, high officials and thousands upon thousands of employees; the State governments with their numerous departments; the local governments with their school systems, charitable institutions, high- ways, improvements, police, firemen and sanitary service. What is the estimated expenditure of government in all the cities, States and territories during the year pre- ceding the great war? Answer: $1,750,000,000 (one bil- lion, seven hundred and fifty million). What was the average yearly ex- penditures of the Federal government before the war? Answer: $1,250,000,000 (one bil- lion, two hundred and fifty million). Can you tell what proportion this three billion of dollars bears to the combined annual earnings of every man, woman and child in the United States ? Answer: Yes, this three billion of dollars is about one-twelfth of the combined earnings of every man, woman and child in the country, show- ing that the people of the United State contribute every year about as much as they make in a month. Should people feel displeased at the necessity of paying taxes to their gov- ernment ? Answer: No, if people have faith in their government and are anxious for it to prosper, they should no more complain of paying their lawful tax- es than they should complain of pay- ing the bills incurred for the upkeep of their own homes. Do the majority of the people feel thus about the payment of taxes? Answer: Unfortunately, no, for many reasons—some are ignorant and do not appreciate how necessary it is for their country, State and city to have the neccesary fund to carry on the progressive reforms demanded in these days. Is there any other reason for a lack of proper spirit in the payment of taxes? Yes, Answer: very indifferent, many people are and do not take : The single tax would be laid upon land as such, and not upon | somo, | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. “The best portion of a good man’s life. His little, nameless, unremembered acts Of kindness and of love.” There seems to be a decided tend- ency this holiday season toward the buying of sensible gifts—that is, things that will be useful. Now, you well know that no woman ever had enough blouses, so if you are looking for a gift for your mother, sister or dearest friend—you are certain to please her if you select a blouse. One seldom errs in choosing some small article of mahogany for Christ- mas giving, for most of us can find 2 use for articles of this most decorative of woods. A pair of candlesticks makes a most acceptable gift. One can always find a place for another pair of condlesticks. Then there are trays, variously shaped—a gift which the woman who entertains a bit will appreciate. Any man who smokes would appreciate a humidor of mahog- any or a smoking stand or an ash tray. These are but a few sugges- i tions. A trim sports suit, a jaunty hat, | woolen stockings and brogues, a silk scarf to give the bright touch of col- i or and voila! one has achieved the per- fect sports costume. A scarf of green with gold-color stripes would be stunning with a green or brown suit. The brown-and-tan striped scarfs look very well on brown or blue. You'll ‘not have any trouble in selecting a ! scarf that will harmonize perfectly | with your costume, for there is a great variety of colors in the collec- ition. I can’t resist reminding you | that an allswhite muffler for wear in | the evening makes a most acceptable Christmas gift for a man. Silk stockings cost so much these | days that the care of them should be | very carefully studied by everyone | Who feels that they must wear them tevery day to be well dressed. Their | life can be prolonged a hundredfold | with care and thought. In the first | place it is better to buy two or three | at one time, all alike. Wear them in | rotation, washing them out each even- {ing and drying them carefully in a i cool, dark place. Then, when, as { sometimes happens, a run starts in one of them and goes the entire | length before you are able to stop it and the stocking is absolutely ruined, it doesn’t mean that you have to dis- i card the perfect one. Use one of the ' others with it. When one of this pair | wears out take the mate to that one { and you will find that they last really mucu longer. Don’t wait till a hole comes in the | stocking before mending it. Be on the | lookout for thin places and darn them carefully with silk that matches as : near as possible. Save the stocking with the run and use ravellings from it if you can. Instead of sewing up a tun in a stocking take a small steel crochet hook and catch up the threads as you would in crochet work. Did you ever notice at sales of stockings what beautiful quality you could get in the unusual colors that wouldn’t possibly match anything you had? You wished that you had some- thing that would go with them, but as you hadn’t you tried to content your- self by buying a pair of black ones that were very much thinner and in- ferior. Don’t do this. Buy the color- ed ones and color them black, brown or blue with the harmless vegetable dyes that are on the market today. i When they finally do wear out be- yond repair, cut off the feet, rip up the back and put away in your piece bag until needed. They make perfect dusters and polishers for mahogany furniture. : enough interest in their government to ; , know the necessity for these vast ex- ' penditures; and again, there is a feel- ing of distrust toward many of the of- ficials who handle the public money. i Is there any class who try to evade . the payment of taxes? Answer: Yes, there are many dis- ' honest people who always try to avoid meeting their just obligations. i What step on the part of our Fed- i eral Government would inspire more i confidence in the expenditures of the ! officials ? | Answer: If the National Govern- | The semi-annual meeting of the Na- , tional Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufac- | turers’ Association was attended by more than 300 delegates who discuss- : ed the new fashions for spring as dis- played by living models at the style i show last week. No very radical changes are shown i from the lines of fall and winter gar- ments. Skirts continue short and i straight. The slender silhouette pre- ' dominates and the youthful spirit was ' expressed in many garments shown. i “Individuality is the keynote of ear- city, State and National Government | ment would create an annual budget | ly spring apparel,” said Philip Frank- defrayed ? Answer: The expenses are defray- ed by means of taxation which is lev- ied by the law making body of the city, State or Nation. Is this taxation a voluntary contri- bution? there would be more of a feeling that ! our officials were spending the public ! funds wisely. | i ! Find Use for Waste Apples. i Thousands of inferior apples of in- : el, executive secretary of the associa- { tion. “Every woman will have oppor- | tunity to express her own personality | through selection of the variety of i models offered by the manufacturers | for 1921,” i Skirts are short with a suggestion Answer: It is not; once the Legis- ferior market grades, which now go to | of more fullness in some cases with lature passes a tax it is compulsory. Upon what are taxes levied? Answer: Taxes are levied upon persons, property and incomes. How many different kinds of taxes are there? Answer: There are ten different kinds of taxes, as follows: 1st. The general property tax, lev- ied on lands and buildings erected on land, and on personal property, which includes furniture, money, goods, bonds, stocks, mortgags, jewelry, horses, carriages, automobiles and farming implements. 2nd. The income tax levied upon all incomes whether received from wages, salary, profits from business or investments. 3rd. The inheritance tax, levied upon all property acquired by inher- itance or will. 4th. Corporation tax levied upon the capital stock of the corporation, and corporations also pay a tax in the form of income tax levied upon the corporation as in the case of an indi- vidual. 5th. The franchise tax levied for a privilege granted by government, as for instance, when a city council con- fers upon a corporation the right to operate trolleys upon certain streets. 6th. The poll tax levied as a per- sonal tax, ranging in income from 50 cents to $4.00 in various States. 7th. Custom duties levied upon ar- ticles imported from foreign coun- tries. 8th. Excises or internal revenue taxes, levied upon goods manufactur- ed within the country. These will be collected now upon tobacco, oleomar- garine and playing cards. 9th. License taxes, collected from merchants, peddlers, hack-drivers, | waste in the orchards, will soon be- i come the basis of a new and import- i ant industry, according to Burling- | | ton county, New Jersey fruit growers, ! who have been studying apple syrup manufacture in Oregon. Rivaling maple syrup in deliciousness, the syr- up is said to be assured of a great commercial future. The syrup is made without the ad- dition of sugar. The acid taste, which has heretofore interfered with efforts to produce a satisfactory commercial product, is eliminated by chemical means. The syrup is then clarified, but retains its pleasing apple flavor. About eight gallons of cider are re- duced in the process to one gallon of syrup. ——————— ese. Not Bad Cook But Bad Stomach. The word dyspepsia means literally bad cook, but it will not be fair for many peo- ple to lay the blame on the cook if they begin the Christmas dinner with little ap- petite and end it with distress or nausea. It may not be fair for any to do that— let us hope so for the sake of the cook! The disease, dyspepsia, indicates a bad stomach, that is a weak stomach, rather than a bad cook, and for a weak stomach we know of nothing else equal to Hood's Sarsaparilla. This digestive and tonic medicine helps the stomach, gives it vigor and tone, and relieves dyspepsia, creates an appetite, and makes eating the pleas- ure it should be. The biliousness and constipation found in so many cases of dyspepsia are gently and thoroughly relieved by Hood’s Pills, which aet in perfect harmony with Hood's Sarsaparilla. 65-49 “Watchman.” i houses. —If you want all the news you packground as a uniform for a kaleid- 'can get it in the | panels, tunics, hem trimmings and | pleatings. | Wrappy coats and capes will be { generally worn, slender shoulders | marking both in soft and delicate fab- | ries. | Trimmings include beading and | braiding, picot edgings and a new flat | floss embroidery. | The straw sailors with bright-col- j ored bands are very good-looking, and cherry-colored sailors are to be very much worn, they say. Silk sweaters iin tuxedo or slipover style come in brown, navy blue and white. To wear ! with them are dimity shirts with col- | lars edged with plaited frills. Sports skirts are trimly tailored. One is offered few tunics in the new frocks, although the idea has influ- enced the building of comfortable frocks which, being sleeveless, are slipped over straight slips of another fabric. Yet the tunic in its original state, sleeveless, knee length, orna- mented, remains in good repute. It is used in combination with the trousered skirt, which was catapult- ed back into fashion through the clev- er and artistic use made of it in the uniform worn by the manikins who exhibited the seasonal hats for the milliners’ fashion parade in New York on the roof of the Century Thea- tre. These black satin frocks with their Algerian hem and flowing Arabian sleeves, which dropped away from the shoulder to be caught again by the wrist, were designed and fashioned by one of the distinctive Fifth avenue They made an admirable ‘ oscope of colored hats.