RERELGRT ~STYD . "Bellefonte, Pa., April 13, 1923. A — THE OLD STORY. The twilight falls, the night is near; I fold my work away, And kneel to One who bends to hear The story of the day. The old, old story; yet I kneel To tell it at Thy call; And cares grow lighter as I feel That Jesus knows them all. Yes, all! The morning and the night, The joy, the grief, the loss, The roughened path, the sunbeam bright, The hourly thorn and cross. Thou knowest all, I lean my head, My weary eyelids close; Content and glad a while to tread This path, since Jesus knows! So here I lay me down to rest, As nightly shadows fall, And lean confiding on His breast, Who knows and pities all! —Selected. BR NOEL. “Do you know,” remarked Pen after five minutes of perfect silence, during which the Strange Man smoked mo- rosely, “you remind me of George No- el Gordon, Lord Byron?” : The Strange Man, having finished smoking, threw the stub away, re- crossed his legs and favored Pen with quite a prolonged stare. Finally, “Why ?” he asked. “Qh, I don’t know,” murmured Pen- elope vaguely. RY a u're sort of gloomy, you know, and int’resting, and—and theatrical.” : “Well, upon my word!” said By- ron’s replica blankly, and then broke into a shout of laughter that made Pen jump. “How old are you, Miss Thornton ?” “Fourteen,” replied Penelope promptly, and Methuselah seemed ju- venile by the antiquity that was im- plied in her tone. “How old are you? “Guess,” suggested Byron, and it was Pen’s turn to scrutinize. : The man who confronted her, im- maculate in his trim evening suit, had none of Noel Gordon's classic beauty. Slender, yet compact, with tired gray eyes and wavy gray hair, and a rath- er tired gray face too, there was yet, in spite of the grayness, something startlingly youthful about him. It wasn’t a pleasant face; there were cynical lines about the heavy-lided eyes and a little sneering twist to the finely chiseled lips; but it was dis- tinctly a high-bred one. And breed- ing lay in the finger tips of the long hands and rang in the tones of the charmingly modulated voice. “You're hard to guess,” acknowledg- ed Pen with a slow sigh. “But 1 shouldn’t say that you were more than fifty.” L The man laughed softly. “Well, neither should I,” he murmured. “I'll be thirty come Michaelmas, though, Miss Thornton.” ; “Thirty,” breathed Pen. “That is not so dreadfully old!” : “Not so dreadfully,” acquiesced the Strange Man cheerfully. “And such being the case, we can talk with more freedom. Come up from the steps and sit by me. They were waiting on the veranda before dinner. The rest of the gay house party was off picnicking, but the Strange Man, otherwise known as Churchill Randolph, had pleaded a headache and stayed at home. ~~. Pen, dfter a heated discussion in the nursery, the arbitrary disposal of which had failed to render her popu- lar, had drifted onto the veranda in quest of diversion. At Randolph’s in- vitation she rose with alacrity and danced up the steps to the hassock at his feet. “Do you mind if I call you Byron ” she asked. “Madre says it’s disre- spectful to call grown people by their first names, but if theyre friends I couldn’t call them ‘mister,’ could 1? So I just have to give them names, you see.” “I see,” asserted Randolph gravely. “Supose you call me Noel. By a cur- ious coincidence that is my middle name. It’s a long time since any one called me Noel!” “Is it—is it a particular name?” asked Pen diffidently. ’ “A very particular name. I don’t think that half a dozen people have ever used it, Miss—but what shall I al, you? Miss Thornton will never o. “No, indeed,” acquiesced Pen. “But,” regretfully, “I don’t think that I'd like to be called after any of the ladies that Byron knew. They weren't very nice, were they ?” “Not very.” “I know! Oh, Noel, won’t you call me Augusta? You remember Augus- “In the desert a fountain is springing, In the wide waste there still is a tree-— And a bird in the wilderness singing, Which speaks to my spirit of thee, “She was his sister, and he loved her better than any one else in the world. Of course, you wouldn’t have to do that, but it would be so lovely.” “I think that Augusta is the very name for you,” declared Randolph. “And it strikes me that, unless you're careful I'll love you better than any one in the world; I feel it coming on.” Pen looked at him breathlessly. “Better than any one else? Oh, please! No one does that, and I'm tired of waiting for my fairy prince. But how can you—so soon?” “It’s not very difficult,” said the man dryly. “You're rather an enchanting young person, and just at present I don’t think of any one else that I love at all.” Pen tilted her little white, flower- like face and regarded him with wide eyes. “I do believe you're flirting with me,” she said reproachfully. “But then I s’pose you can’t help it. Byron couldn't.” “If you'll just lay all my faults to Byron, I'll be infinitely grateful. That will give me quite a wide margin, lit- { Have the wish I wish tonight.” tle sister. But what made you think that I was flirting, you worldly-wise fairy ?” “I s’pose that it was just feminine instinct,” explained Pen, vastly de- lighted at being termed worldly-wise. “A woman can always tell, Noel.” “Oh, Augusta, Augusta,” laughed Randolph,” thy name is Eve. But this woman's intuition betrayed her. I wasn’t flirting.” : “Qh, said Pen, vaguely disappoint- ed. “Then don’t you really love any one else, Noel 7” Noel smiled grimly. “I love my en- emies, Augusta. They form the larg- er portion of my acquaintances, heav- en bless ’em.” . “How good you are,” said Pen fer- vently. “Gracious, I wish that I did. I just loathe and detest them, Noel. Every time I even think of that horri- ble Antoinette I understand tyranni- cide and regicide and fratricide and patricide and just plain murder.” “Poor Augusta,” murmured Noel. “And, if you will permit me, poor An- toineite. Who is this monster?” “She’s madre’s maid, Noel, and the bane of my existence. Oh, quelle horreur, mes enfants!” Pen lifted di- minutive shoulders heavenward and relapsed into a gloomy silence. Perched on the hassock, a very Na- poleon for tragic meditation, her great eyes brooding darkly, her mouth tense with vengeance, even her hair a vin- dictive flame, she made a picture as startling as it was laughable. What a fire must burn in that tiny body, thought the man. It seemed actually to consume her before his eyes, and, smiling at his fancy, he touched her lightly on the shoulder. “Come, little maenad, I'm not your Orestes, nor have I the vaguest in- tention of flying from you. But I'll fly with you if you say the word. The thought of a dinner positively appalls me. What do you say to playing tru- ants?” In an instant Pen was all radiant delight. “Oh, dear Noel, what fun! Just wait until I get a cape. We'll have to hurry, because it’s most time for them to be back.” She flashed into the house and was back in less time than it takes to tell it, wrapped in a tan cape, the hood tied securely over her ruddy curls. “I have some peppermints—and some nuts and raisins. I was saving them for a feast with Don and Peg- gy,” she whispered gleefully. “Oh, la bonne aventure! I'm so glad I know you, Nael.” Randolph tucked in a flying curl with deft fingers and smiled down in- to the excited little face. “See, the evening star,” he said, and his face was curiously sweet. “It’s a fine sil- ver locket on Evening’s gray gown. Shall we wish on it, you and I, Au- gusta ?” Pen nodded. The poignant beauty of the twilight scene gave her the same strange lump in her throat that | she felt when she heard a wailing vio- | lin or saw the sea beating its heart out against the great cliffs. She felt very little and lonely suddenly, and clutched instinctively at Noel’s fingers, which closed over hers with reassur- | ing presure. i ‘ “Star light,” ’ said the man, with ! his face: turned steadily toward ihe : ly. evening star, “ ‘Star bright,’ “Very first star I've seen tonight; Wish I may, | Wish I might i - i | The quaint little rime sounded quainter than ever from those lips but Pen saw no incongruity. “What did you wish?” she queried breathlessly. “I wished that you might always be glad that you knew me, little Augus- ta” “Oh!” protested Pen earnestly, “you needn’t have wished that, because I always will. I always wish for some- thing that’s nearly impossible, but not quite, you know. That wouldn’t be fair.” And she too chanted “Star light” to the silver star. “I wished,” she said quickly, “that I might be as good as you are, Noel, and love all my enemies. That’s very hard, but I don’t think it’s quite impossible do you ?” A spasm of pain contracted the man’s face, leaving it a little grayer than before, but he only tightened his clasp on Pen’s fingers so that it was almost uncomfortable. “Not quite,” he replied slowly. “No, I should say that that was fair.” He stood smiling at her strangely for a minute, then he did a curious thing. He droped the warm little hand and pushed Pen from him, almost rough- ly. “Go in!” he commanded. “Go in! I'm not fit to touch you.” And then, more gently as Pen turned her great, frightened eyes on him: “Run in, child. I don’t feel like playing any more. I'm tired.” Pen turned and went slowly to the door. So it had just been play, then! And she had thought that he loved her. She bit her quivering lip and forced her hateful tears back, turn- ing, with her hand on the latch, to cast one last indignant, bewildered glance at the perfidious Noel. Ap- parently he, too, like his famous name- sake, could swear love for eternity and forswear it in an hour. He stood leaning against one of the great white pillars, staring out unseeing into the gathering dusk, all the buoyancy gone from his slender figure—and then Penelope saw his face. In an instant she was at his side. “Don’t send me away,” she pleaded. “Please let me love you, Noel. I'm sorry if I was naughty. I'll truly, tru- ly be good. Does your head ache? Has some one made you angry? Are you angry with me, Noel ?” The man looked down at her help- lessly. “Heaven help me, I can’t send you away,” he said finally. “Does it harm a saint to love a sinner, Augus- ta? Does he drag her down or does she lift him up 7” “I won’t hurt you, Noel,” protested Pen. “I'll be good; truly I will. Oh, Noel, they’re coming back. Garrick’s singing; he’s driving the coach, you know. Listen.” The music rang out, faint yet clear on the still night, Morton’s magnifi- cent voice leading, and the others catching up the swinging, mocking air; “We're poor little lambs who've lost our Way— ‘that he treasures most Ba-aa-aa! We're little black sheep who've gone givness before he died. It wasn't astray— Ba-aa-aa! Gentlemen rankers out on the spree, Damned from here to Eternity; Lord, ha’ mercy on such as we-e-e— Baa! Yah! Bah!” “What a horrid song,” observed Pen disapprovingly. Noel smiled a trifle grimly. “Very horrid,” he agreed. “Come, Augusta! Peccavi, peccavi; but we’ll have our spree, as Kipling so graphically puts it. Come.” They sped down the steps and across the moonlit lawn, Pen flitting ahead like a fugitive will-o’-the-wisp, darting through gaps and around trees, with steps as fleet as they were sure. « Down one hill and up another they raced, and once Randolph stumbled over a fallen tree and swore softly to himself. Pen laughed back at him over her shoulder elfishly. She turned off sud- denly, and it seemed to Randolph that the bushes had swallowed her. He sprang after her in quick panie, crash- ing through a thicket and nearly land- ing headlong at her feet in a little clearing. “Puck, Puck, have mercy,” he pant- ed laughingly. “Through brush, through briar, what a dance you’ve led me, you wicked elf.” Pen laughed gleefully. “Wasn’t it fun? Oh,” with quick compunction, “you said you were tired. I forgot. I’m so sorry, Noel. Are you very tired 7” “Not that way,” said Randolph gen- tly. “Just tired of living, Augusta. It’s a weary business, as my distin- guished namesake has remarked be- fore me, I think!” “Tired of living?” demanded Pen incredulously. “Oh, no, Noel, he was not really. He was tired of suffering, I s’pose, and fighting, and being wick- ed and unhappy, but not of living. Why, I get so tired myself sometimes that I just can’t wait to die, but when I think about it, I want to live harder than ever. Think of never being able to read any more, Noel, of never hear- ing music, or smelling flowers, or lov- ing people, or going to the circus and eating peanuts, and—and——" Randolph laughed, a real, boyish, joyous laugh. “Enough, enough, Au- gusta. That’s the most convincing ar- gument against suicide that I ever heard. I shall wear overshoes for the rest of my natural life, and never tempt Providence by so much as ven- turing out in a thunderstorm. Now are you content?” “If you'll laugh like that again. Oh, Noel, I didn’t know that you could laugh like that.” “No more did I. Augusta, you're the wisest person I know, and I'm going to tell you a story.” Pen gave a long sigh of utter con- tent. “May I come a little closer to you, Noel? I'm so glad that you think that I'm wise, and I'll just love a sto- ry. Does it end well 7” “I don’t know,” said the man slow- “It depends.” “Oh, then make it end well, Noel. That’s awfully easy.” 1 “Is it? Well, you shall end the sto- ry. Come closer, little sister—so! Once upon a time there was a little boy. He lived on a great plantation { somewhere in the South, and he was | dolch just about as spoiled a little boy as ever you saw. He had a good deal more money than was good for him, and a mother—a very sweet and love- ly lady, Augusta—who was much too good to him. On the plantation next to him lived a little girl, a real fairy princess little girl, whom he thought was the most wonderful person in the world. And on the plantation on the other side lived another little boy, who was his best friend. These three grew up together; the boys went to the same school and then to the same col- lege, and they were so inseparable that people who knew them used to call them. But heis a good hater. Do you fore the boy left college he told the girl, who was quite a big girl by then and more wonderful than ever, that he loved her; and she said that she loved him, and it seemed to the boy as though the earth was too small to con- tain all his happiness. And it was. He had more than his share, his cup was running over with joy, and it was natural that some of it should spill; but to have all of it dashed from his lips, Augusta—not one drop left for his dry lips and parched throat—that wasn’t quite fair, was it? The money went first and then the pretty mother, and then—and then, Augusta, one night his friend came to him, and said, quite quietly, that he had married the fairy princess. Not a drop left!” “Why,” cried Pen eagerly, “that’s like Lancelot and Guinevere, and Pa- olo and Francesca, and Tristan and Iseult. That’s not a very new story, Noel dear.” “Not a very new story,” acquiesced the man hardly, “but it was to him. Several years have passed since then, Augusta, and the boy has grown into a man. I do not think that the process has improved him. His chief diver- sion lay in trying to forget that he had ever been—well, a rather decent boy and not a bad fellow. He—he used rather unsavory means to attain his end, but he attained it. He forgot everything—except revenge. It sounds melodramatic, doesn’t it? He grew to think that the world was as vile as he was. Man, as the melancholy Dane remarked, delights him not, nor wom- an neither. Neither does he delight them. But he is a good hater. Do you remember that I said that I loved my enemies? Well, so does he. He treas- ures them dearly. They are his only consolation, I may say. And the one is the man whom they used to call Damon. He nursed the wrong that Damon had done him for years, and finally lis plans matured. The man was deliv- ered into his hand. He could have ru- ined him like so much dust under his heel; and then Fate played her last trump. Word was brought to him that he whom they called Damon lay dying—the doctors had given him a month to live—and that he begged to see his friend bfore he died. *“His friend,’ you understand, the man whom he had ruined and betrayed and worse than killed—he wished his for- * quite fair to ask for that, was it? How { should the story end? What should | the man do, wise little sister ?” i Pen looked at the strained, haggard | face wonderingly. “You're joking, :aren’t you, Noel? Why, there’s just one way that the story can end, of course. He must go back. Hasn’t he gone yet, Noel? Oh, tell him to hur- ry, hurry. That poor, wicked man, { Noel, waiting and waiting for him to come—oh, Noel, what if he should die before he came!” Noel looked at her for a moment in silence and then he rose slowly to his feet. “I’ll— tell him,” he replied un- steadily. “Yes, let's hurry. You're right, Augusta, there’s only one end- ing to the story. But the man—he’s a little blind, you see, and very dull. He had’ waited so long.” He stood still, his hands fumbling at his irre- proachable tie, staring out vacantly into the darkness. Pen looked at him searchingly, vaguely troubled. “You look tireder than ever,” she murmured; “and I thought you would be so beautifully rested. Yes, let’s go home. Was it the story that tired you, Noel? Was he a great friend of yours, the wicked man?” for a while. in the hedge!” Pen managed with infinite cunning, to let him beat her, and then pattered quietly along at his side, sore at heart for his trouble. Pen quickened her step unconscious- ly. She had a sudden uncontrollabie longing for lights, and madre mia’s soft warm arms about her, and ma- dre mit’s dear gentle voice scolding her for being out so late, and Gar- rick’s strong, fine hand upon her curls. But she wanted to take Noel with her. She didn’t want to leave poor Noel out in the cold and dark. “Let’s hurry faster,” she begged with a litle catch in her voice; and No- el obediently “hurried faster.” By the time they reached the veranda a very Babel of laughing comment greeted them. Penelope beamed on them gracious- ly, clinging securely to Randolph’s hand. “W’ve had a perfec’ly beautiful time,” she announced joyously, all her previous misery cast to the winds. I'll race you to the gap “Oh, madre, are you very cross? It wasn’t Noel's fault truly; I ——” “Noel!” “Listen to her, Anne!” “More progress in two hours than I’ve made in two years.” “Oh, Pen, you shameless flirt!” Pen’s eyes brimmed with indignant tears. “I don’t flirt,” she protested ve- hemently. “And I think you're all very impertinent.” “Miss Thornton called me Noel at my most urgent request,” interposed Randolph lightly, but there was an ominous ring in his voice. “And I agree with her in thinking you're all rather impertinent. Mrs. Morton, we've had a most delightful evening, for the truant part of which I am en- tirely responsible. And will you ex- cuse us for just five minutes more, so that I can say good-by? I—I’ve been afraid that if it’s not too inconvenient I'll have to leave tonight.” { “We shall be sorry to have you go,” | said madre mia graciously; “but I | shall make arrangements. { that it is not bad news, 0 Mr. 0 very urgent.” heart. Randolph god-by.” The gay company trooped in, scat- tering behind them a trail of laughter and smiles and light-hearted jests. And once more Pen and Randolph had the veranda alone. “Augusta,” said Noel, “I forgot to tell you the name of that man, the blind man in the story; do you re- member ?” my,” replied Pen, “so I don’t like him.” “He is my worst enemy,” said Ran- dolph. “His—his name is Noel, Au- gusta. Are you still glad that you know me?” Pen stepped back quickly, dropping his hand, and the man quivered as though he had received a blow. But he did not take his strained eyes from her, while the little set smile stayed on his lips. And then in a small rush Pen was on him, her arms fast about him, shutting out the bitterness and the wickedness and the pain, and “So glad, Noel!” cried the soft, vehement little voice, “So glad, so glad, Noel!” —By Frances Noyes Hart, in The La- dies’ Home Jurnal. Trying Times. The reconstruction period after the great war is characterized by what may be call- ed high pressure days. The demands of business, the wants of the family, the re- quirements of society, are more numerous now than ever before, The first effect of the praiseworthy ef- fort to keep up with all these things is commonly seen in a weakened or debili- tated condition of the nervous system, which results in dyspepsia, defective nu- trition of both body and brain, and, in ex- treme cases, in complete nervous prostra- tion. It is clearly seen that what is needed is what will sustain the system, give vigor and tone to the nerves, and keep the di- gestive and assimilative functions healthy and active. Many persons from their own experience recommend Hood’s Sarsaparil- la for this purpose. It acts on the vital organs, builds up the system, and fits men and women for these trying times. In cases where there is biliousness or constipation, it is well to take Hood's Pills, They are a thorough cathartic, a gentle laxative, 68-15 ——— fp Ap ssn A Sensitive Sole. Colored Rookie—“I'd lahk to have a new pair of shoes, suh.” Sergeant—“Are your shoes worn out!” : Colored Rookie—“Worn out! Man, the bottom of mah shoes are so thin that ah can step on a dime and tell whether it’s heads or tails,”—Dyecr- grams, “My worst enemy. Let’s forget him | called away rather suddenly; I'm | “You said he was your worst ene- | | | | i I trust Ran- | . I duced to the public of today. “I hardly know. But it is urgent, ° Ne ar Hay “I quite understand. Pennie, dear : kis me good night; I'm afraid that | you're rather tired and excited, sweet- | Just five minutes to bid Mr. i Public Ledger. ARES NA TN “EFFICIENCY” HARD TO BEAT CONQUERED THE WART HOG Boss of Ditch Diggers Evolved Novo Plan for Getting Results From Gang Under Him. Jethro Mills Boone, the efficiency expert, said in a lecture in Chicago: “The efliciency engineer studies men’s motions and at once puts his studies to practical use. Let me tell you a story that contains a grain of truth, “A gang of men were digging a ditct in a wet, sticky soil that was in con: tinual danger of flooding. “fAll cut!’ the efficient young bos: yelled one morning. “The mea were out like a flash. “‘All in!’ the boss then yelled, an¢ the men tumbled back into the ditch again, realizing that the call had beer a false alarm. “‘All out! came another yell. “Out tumbled the men, “All in! “And they disappeared once more h the hole, grumbling a little, “Well, after half a dozen repetitions of this business, the men got angry and asked the boss what the dickens he meant by it. “‘What’s yer game? they snarled ‘There’s no water coming.’ “The efficient young boss smiled. “‘T know there isn’t, he said, ‘but I find that you fellows take out more | dirt on your shoes than you do on your | shovels.’ “And then, lifting up his cheerily, he resumed the ola cry: “All in! “‘All out!?’” WILL PLEASE MUSIC LOVERS Wagner's “Liebesverbot,” Practically Forgotten, Is Soon to Be Issued by a Berlin Firm. voice Announcement that a Berlin firm of music publishers is about to issue the score of Wagner's “Liebesverbot” will be hailed with acclaim by music lovers throughout the world. “Prohibition of Love,” to translate the title, was written during the youth of the famous composer, and shows more plainly than do his other earlier works the period of transition through which he passed before he matured in- to the producer of the compositions which brought him fame and estab- lished his particular school of music. It is based on “Measure for Meas ure.” It is the only Wagnerian compo- sition in which the characters speak some of the lines. Ninety years ago the composition was given a perform- ance in Magdeburg. It proved a dis mal failure. It was never published, | and on Christmas, 1866, Wagner him: | self gave the score to Ludwig II of ! Bavaria. Since then, the manuscript: has been preserved among the Bava. | rian crown treasures, Though the text of the opera has been published, only fragments of the music have been available in the past, Preparations are being made through ! out music centers to give the offering ! an elaborate revival when it is intro ' Truck That Walks. A German engineer has constructed a motor truck which does not move on wheels, hut not unlike the Martians described by H. G. Wells in his “War of the Worlds,” can stride with the help of “legs” across deserts and swamps, can wade “knee-deep” through rivers, stamp through snowfields and step across ditches, and fell tree trunks and other obstacles In its path, says a European dispatch to the Philadelphia For this purpose it is furnished with two pairs of skids, one of which always rests on the ground, while the other is moving forward with the load. When “walking” normally its stride measures about four feet in length, but, like a human being, it can regulate it when walking uphill or, when stepping across an obstacle In its . way. With its skids, which are ten’ feet long, it strides along the roads at’ a pace of six miles per hour, or about twice as fast as an ordinary person’ can go. It can go backward, turn com- pletely around {its axles without mov- ing from the spot, and it even walks sideways if required. Revival of the Bicycle. There is a marked revival of cycling in England, and the cheapest known form of transport, which has never really waned in popularity, is finding additional support by reason of recent utterances by famous medicos. These gentlemen declare that the pursuit of cycling is healthier than any other; that muscular effort and regular breathing, which are the double-har- ness steeds of cycling, are more con- duclve to health than the remedial physic of the medical profession. The Olympia show reveals a magnificent range of British pedal cycles.—British Commercial News. Legless Radiator Support. By means of a new device, shown in Popular Mechanics Magazine, the bothersome legs of radiators, from around which dirt is removed with dif- fienlty, are done away with and the radiator supported from the pipe con- nections at the floor. Inconspicuous well braces prevent the radiator from tipping, and adjustable center rests are provided for long radiators. The attachments are adaptable to any size or make of radiator. Wouidn't Be Wasted. Father invested in a fancy shirt that proved to be much too short in the sleeves. ‘Never mind, papa; don't worry, I'll soon be big enough to wear it,” cried Bobby, coming to the rescue—-Ex- change, Sn. “Flivver” Proved Too Much for Pug- nacious South African Animal Who Objected to Its Presence. The wild animals of South Africa do not take kindly to such new-fangled ideas as “flivvers.” as the following incident. related by William McStay, historian of H. A. Snow's expedition, which has been hunting big game from a motor car, will show: “The wart hog, whose name fairly well describes his appearance, fought Snow’s machine to a standstill; to the beast, the ‘liv’ was a new form of ene- my. Snow encountered the wart hog one day in driving a path across the trackless waste. For amusement the explorer chased the hog quite a dis- tance, when, with suddenness and ferocity, the beast turned to attack. With slavering jowls and grunting de- fiance the wart hog hurled itself against the trusty flivver, the only car- rier not susceptible to the death bite of the tsetse fly. Its tusks ripped the tires. Its hard head battered the radiator. “Backward reeled the Tin Lizzie, trembling in every member. Forward she lunged again, thwacking the ani- mal in broad beam. The latter charged anew, again she retreated and again she lunged like a gasoline billygoat. Finally the wart hog gave up the struggle and went and sat down afar | off, watching the new enemy it could not conquer, The beat’s attitude of dejection was sufficient to cause laugh- ter.” LITTLE NOW GOES TO WASTE Science Has Discovered innumerable Methods for Turning Rubbish to Profitable Uses. One of the most remarkable features of modern life is that nothing need be wasted, Science has discovered ways of turn- ing every kind of rubbish into some- thing useful. Refuse is burned in specially constructed furnaces, and the heat produced is turned into steam which is used for driving the dynamos that produce electric light. Even the ashes are used to make cement. Soapsuds, which formerly polluted our rivers, are now strained, mixed with lime, and pressed into bricks, which, when burned, give three times the amount of heat that a similar quantity of coal gas would produce. A dead horse can be put to almost endless uses. The hair is turned in- to hair-cloth and stuffing for mat- tresses; the hide forms leather table coverings; the tendons are made into glue and gelatine; the flesh is used as food for cats and dogs, and the blood is manufactured into prussiate of potash and manure. The bones reappear as knifehandles. Jelly has been made from old boots { and whisky from old shirts. Sawdust can be made into quite eatable cakes, and fish-scales into artificial pearls. Superstitions of Thieves, A laundryman who for eleven years | used his coffin as a safe, was wise in his generation, for it is not believed that any thief would have meddled with such a receptacle. Certainly no professional burglar would have touched it. For the criminal classes, almost without exception, are steeped in queer beliefs in luck, omens and the like. The burglar carefully avoids any house where a death has recently taken place. Anything black is ana- thema to him. The black cat, which to some people is an omen of good fortune, to him is just the reverse. Should a black cat be seen sitting on the steps or sill of a house marked down for plunder he will avoid it An- other animal which terrifies him is a blind dog. Hudson's Bay Company. The Hudson's Bay company, incor- porated in 1670, connects, by uninter- rupted lineage, the North American wilds of the moving picture set with the stern realties of an earlier day. The first records of this stanch ex- ample of British emprise contain the following notation of a shipment made to the company’s posts shortly after the earllest expedition to Canada in 1668: Two hundred fowling pieces with powder and shot. Two hundred copper kettles. Twelve gross knives. One thousand hatchets, The copper kettles used today in these northernmost outposts of eivili- zation are practically identical In de- sign with those of two centuries or more ago. Antidote for Boredom. While prime minister of England Lloyd George devised an antidote for boredom. When he was entertaining or being entertained he arranged to have himself called on the telephone at cer- tain intervals. If the company was dull he discovered at the first ring that affairs of state demanded his attention. If the company was passable he waited for the second ring. If he found himself among kindred spirits, the calls were in regard to matters that his sec- retary could bring to a happy conclu- sion. None in Sight Now. Jack—Tom, I'm in a terrible fix, I'm engaged to three girls. Tom—Well, that's pot exactly a crime. Jack—No, that's the worst of it. If it were I could go to prison and have some peace.—Boston Evening Tran- script. !