Se a Bellefonte, Pa., March 26, 1926. A A STA THE CRUCIFIX. Daniel Kerlin woke when the clock in the kitchen beneath him struck twelve. Close to the window a whip- poor-will sang his nervous, almost incessant song and in the brief inter- vals of his chanting an owl crooned softly and then gave a shrill cry. It was neither the bright light of the full moon nor the various noises which wakened Daniel; it was rest- lessness and grief. Yesterday his mother had been buried and he was now, at eighteen, alone in the world. They had always lived in this seclud- ed spot and here she had taught him to read and to till the garden and to make baskets. He knew little of his father, who had died soon after he was born. His mother had been beau- tiful and he had inherited her thick, light, bright hair and her blue eyes shadowed by dark lashes. He had in- herited also her shyness; she never went away from the house, and when pedestrians came up the lonely path she closed the door. Unaccustomed to his loss, Daniel turned his face into the pillow and cried with the blind woe of a child and the desperate, fully conscious grief of an adult. After a while he rose and went to the window. Night clothes were unheard of and he wore underwear fashioned by his mother to his strong young body. He had not attained his full growth, but he prom- ised to be six feet tall. The long oval valley upon which he gazed had a magical beauty in the June night. The sides were wooded but the bottom lands were partially cleared and there, now gleaming in the moonlight, now hidden by small stretches of woodland, wound a broad stream. Clustered in the center of the valley were dark solid masses— the buildings, most in ruin, of the ex- tensive and elaborate establishment of a colonial forge abandoned for fifty years. The huge house of the proprietor had become a tenement and the heavy rains penetrated down- ward to the first story where a few families of basket weavers lived wretchedly. The ancient furnace stack was a mass of tumbled bricks, and of forge and store and stables only their walls remained. The site of the row of workingmen’s houses could be recognized by small heaps of grass-grown stones, once the chimneys of log and plaster cabins. Though Daniel's house was far away, and though it was construct- ed not of logs but of substantial stone, it too had been built for a fur- naceman, his great-grandfather, Dan- iel La Roche, a Swiss who was a moulder. Young Daniel knew nothing of the elder Daniel’s history, not even his trade, and still less of his genius. As lonely and heartsick, he sat looking into the valley there came about a familiar change. The oval filled with mist, the stream disap- peared, then the faintly outlined masses of the buildings, then even the highest of the treetops. The moon remained the only object with corporeal form. Dainel lifted his hands and closed thumbs and fore- fingers as though he moulded the moon. The perfection of the bright circle hanging in the sky enchanted him; he breathed heavily and his warm, rapidly flowing blood dried the tears on his cheeks. Barefooted as he was, he crossed the room and went down the stairs. The house was constructed for more formal living than was common among artisans; there was a central hall and the doors were paneled. In the kitchen, the scene of his mother’s labors, tears came once more into his smarting eyes and his hands trembled as he lighted the lamp. The room was furnished with plain, sim- ple furniture and there were a few homewoven rugs on the floor. Among the cooking vessels and spoons were some which had been made before the Revolution. On a table lay the sim- ple tools of the basket-making trade by which his mother, and then he and his mother together, had made a liv- ing. The art was continued from colonial times; even when the forge business was at its height and wages were good, the old men and the wom- en made baskets. Imported osiers were still cultivated in the lowlands, soaked in the stream and peeled on tables in the shade of a thick ocak. Since he was ten years old Daniel had secured from Jim Scholl, the chief of the basket weavers, a supply for his mother’s work, and had car- ried back the finished product. The kitchen was not Daniel’s des- tination; it was not memorials of his mother which he sought for solace. He carried the lamp across to the parlor, which had not been opened for his mother’s funeral. Here the white walls were dingy and the woodwork yellowed by time. There were two dark objects, the iron frame of the cavernous fireplace and, hanging op- posite the fireplace on a strong nail, a crucifix, also of iron and about eighteen inches high. Before the fireplace Daniel set his lamp on the floor and knelt down. Top and sides were exquisitely wrought in a conventional pattern of arabesques and upon the back there was a fanciful design. Under a tree with delicate foliage knelt an old man building a fire, a bundle of fagots by his side. The wind ruffied his beard and fluttered the leaves above his head. In design and execution the fireplace was the work of an artist. When he had looked for a long time Daniel rose stiffiy and placed his lamp on a window sill and stood be- fore ‘the crucifix. Presently he took it - down, gazed at it, held it in his hands and followed with his fingers the curves of the body and the veined leaves of the clover which ended the trips of each beam. He carried lamp and crucifix at last across to the kitchen and took from the ‘table drawer a knife and a few half-carved sticks of soft wood. He was trying to réproduce the beauti- —— ful, agonized figure and his work was not bad though he believed it a fail- ure. He wished to create beautiful things, and he felt them taking shape under his hands, but he had neither technical knowledge nor plastic ma- terial. There was a kind of clay near the ore bank out of which he had tried to model his mother’s head, but it did not retain its form. He knew that iron castings were made by pressing a mold into wet, hard sand and let- ting the molten iron flow into the mold; but molten iron was as impos- sible of attainment as malleable clay. Depressed and discouraged, he blew out the light and went to his room, where he placed the crucifix on his pillow. His was no religious senti- ment; if his ancestors had been Ro- man Catholics they had so long had no religion that they had forgotten it. With the crucifix touching his cheek he fell asleep. ; When Daniel opened his eyes it was morning. Now he did not wish to see the crucifix; his longings seemed as hopeless as t.ey were vague. As he put on his shirt and trousdrs and shoes he looked into the valley. The mist had long been dissipated, the stream ran through beds of living green, the sea of treetops had still the ‘brightness of spring. He could see the upper story of the old man- sion and through an open space al- most the whole of the ruined stack. As he breakfasted he made sorrow- ful plans for his future. He would tend his garden and continue his bas- ket making. He had a desperate need for money; his mother had had but twenty dollars in her purse and the cost of her funeral was forty. She had impressed upon him her own horror of debt and, whatever happen- ed afterwards, he must first pay what he owed. He did the basket-making .with ease but he hated its monotony. If he could have shaped each basket differently from its fellows it would not have been so tiresome, but the dealer in Linchester would accept on- ly those which conformed to his pat- tern. Having finished his breakfast, he hung the crucifix on its nail and, lock- ing the doors of the parlor and of the house, went down the winding road. The road was almost overgrown; the wheels of the undertaker’s wagon which had carried his mother’s body had crushed tall weeds of this sea- son’s growth and small shrubs which were several years old. Beyond his house on the mountain lay a wild and beautiful region where the virgin woods were still untouched. There was a small cataract called Tumbling Run, the only fall for many miles, and round it in the spring was a wil- derness of flowers. To this section he was the only visitor. The few bas- ket makers in the valley were afraid of the quiet and loneliness and also of snakes. Daniel had seen but few poisonous snakes and he believed that one could easily get out of their way. His step slackened as he descended. He passed a deep pool which had gathered in the excavation of the mine; then, rounding a curve in the road, came out near the mansion and the ruined stack where a group of men sat around a rough table peeling the willow stems. His mother had hated and feared them; they were vicious and their speech was evil. They had often coaxed him to join them; he was no baby, they said, to sit all day at home with his mammy. He hated to speak to them, but other- wise he could get no osiers. He approached the table slowly; the hard faces seemed harder in the light of the beautiful morning. In the stream lay bundles of withes ready for peeling and all around for several acres there was a thick growth of osiers. He heard a muttered sentence, but he went on bravely. The chief ob- ject of his dislike was the speaker, Jim Scholl, a fat man with a porcine face and the tiniest eyes, who wore corduroy trousers and an ancient sweater, once white. “I want to buy some willows,” said Daniel, realizing with astonishment that it was difficult to frame his words. The men continued to stare; they had suffered Daniel’s pride while his mother lived, but they would tolerate it no longer. “We don’t sell no peeled stock,” said Scholl in a surly tone. “It’s easy to weave; peeling’s the hard part. Hereafter them that weaves, peels. Better start now.” Hateful tears came into Daniel’s eyes. His mother would let him have nothing to do with them, but his moher was dead, and he must have money. . One of the men slid along the bench to make room, another reached into the stream for a bundle of withes. “I can’t stop my hand bleeding,” he complained. ~ “Did you cut it?” asked Daniel, in the thick, sorrowful voice which was his own but which sounded so strange. “It’s the water,” explained the bas- ket maker. “You had the easy part. The hands get hard from weaving, then the water makes ’em sore.” He showed his hardened palm. “Feel of it. Daniel touched it gingerly. Bleed- ing fissures separated the callous spots. “You needn’t be afraid. Your own’ll get like it,” declared the man ill-naturedly. Daniel thought of the smooth sur- face of the crucifix, of the delicate foliage of the leaves, of the delicious malleability of clay under his fingers. His hands would be ruined! “If your going to work, then work,” said Scholl fiercely. Daniel’ sat with his mates at the rough table. The day was clear and the summer sun poured its heat into the valley. The heat did not pene- trate through the foliage of the oak, but was reflected upward from the hard-baked ground. The stream shimmered in the sun, a myriad in- sects hummed incessantly. He worked silently and with a burning unhappiness. His compan- ions did their best to replace his in- nocence with knowledge which, while it was not broad, was deep, like a foul well. In the shade round the huge'h First Telephone Talk Made Just 50 Years Ago by Bell. The original telephone invented by Alexander Graham Bell, shown here, ie in the possession of the Smithsonian Institution at Washington, D. C. On March 10, 1876, just half a cen- tury ago, the first sentence was spoken over a telephone line. Since then untold billions of sen- tences’ have been heard over the gigantic line interlacement in which our civilization virtually is cradled, comments the Pennsylvania Public Service Information Committee. In America today 50,000,000 con- versations are heard daily over the telephone wires. The historic sentence of fifty yrars ago was spoken by the inventor of the telephone. It was addressed to his assistant. “Mr. Watson,” said Alexander Gra. ham Bell, “come here; I want you.” Those words were spoken over crude device, later pronounced by so- called experts as “a clever contrap: -tion,” but. impracticable for business purposes.” -. Since then men have traveled vast distances to answer telephone calls, Wheels of industry revolve at the telephone’s commands. Thoughts, actions and development of nations, as well as individuals, to- day are influenced through utilization of the once “clever but impracticable contraption.” old house the women and children idled, their laughter carrying across the open space as they teased Scholl’s oldest daughter about Daniel. She pretended indifference, but last even- ing she had waited for him on the lonely track. Afraid of her to the depths of his soul, he had passed with bent head. It seemed to him that he was sinking in a slimy pit and he was tempted ‘hourly to lock his door and leave forever the place which had be- come fearful. But he must pay his debt. When he thought wildly of going | away he planned to take with him the iron crucifix. The fireback with the arabesques and the old man build- ing his little fire under the windy tree he would have to leave. Absorbed in their talk, the work- ers failed to hear and see a sound and sight new to their valley. When at last they looked up they assumed the attitude of paralyzed creatures. Be- fore them in the rozd stood a magnif- icent automobile, heavy and long and dark blue in color, with cushions of gray and trimmings which shone like silver. Two great lamps projected from the front like protruding eyes of an enormous, scintillating beetle. On the driver's seat was a man in livery and sitting alone in the rear was a little woman in a black dress. The inhabitants of the wNlley had seen a hundred times the ancient, dil- | apidated runabout of the dealer who! came from Linchester to fetch their baskets, but they had never seen such a vehicle as this. The men remained motionless, the women open-mouthed; some of the children ran to their mothers. The little woman leaned forward, looking this way and that—at the old stone building, at the roofless walls of barns and storehouses and, finally, at the stolid, almost bestial workers | and the slatternly women. Then the car moved away as quietly as it had come. It went, strange to see, not back on the hard road made of slag from the furnace, but up the over- grown, untraveled road on which Daniel Kerlin lived. An oath from Scholl expressed the amazement of the basket makers, who stared at each other, then toward the hillside and the leafy depths into which the car had vanished, then at the excited women trooping toward them. They still did not move or take up their osiers or their peeling knives, and the women surrounded them be- fore they looked at Daniel as one more closely concerned than they. “They've went to your house, Dan- ny.” Daniel grew pale. “They’ve got no call to go to my house.” “Well, that’s where they've went all the same.” Daniel flung his leg over the bench | and rose—though he had so carefully locked the door, they might get in and take his crucifix. He believed it to be the most beautiful object in the ! world. With deliberation Daniel crossed the open space but, once hidden by the trees, he quickened his step. The car could not have gone far, certain- 1y not beyond his house. He could hear it breathing heavily and ran on. When he paused again he heard noth- ing. Either it had stopped, or it had penetrated the woods in some magical | fashion. Coming upon his house at a turn: in the leafy road, he saw the car like a phantom. The little woman sat quietly, but the chauffer looked about uneasily, seeking a way of exit. Dan- iel stood gazing forbiddingly. Every- thing was perfectly still, the birds | were drowsing in the hot, scented air of noon. At sight of him the little woman | leaned forward and beckoned, and he went slowly to the side of the car. She was older than his mother, but | there was something similar in the two faces, perhaps in the shape and | expression of the eyes. Her hair was | white but her thick lashes gave her blue gaze a mysterious expression as his mother’s had had, and as he also had without being aware of it. Like | his mother’s, the flesh of her face had a firm texture and a purity of line Yhith suggested clay and a modeling and. : She spoke in a low tone which pleased his ear. “Is this your house?” “Yes,” answered Daniel. “What is your name?” “Daniel Kerlin.” The name, it was clear, signified nothing. The stranger laid her slen- der hand on the door of her car and leaned forward, speaking wih hesita- tion as though she were not sure of the boy’s interest. “When I was a little girl I lived at the forge with my grandfather. Thir- ty thousand acres of land belonged to him. Wagons brought the char- coal fiom the hillside and trains of mules took the iron away with the pigs bent so they would fit over their backs. We had parties and there was dancing, with coaches coming and go- ing. All the gentlefolk within a hun- dred miles visited us. We used :to come up this road to a place called Tumbling Run where there was a beautiful cataract. Do you know where it is?” «9 “Qh, yes,” said Daniel. © “Can I get nearer in my car?” “I don’t believe you can.” “Could you go with me and show me the place?” “Yes,” said Daniel. “Not to-day. Say a week from now ?” “Yes,” promised Daniel, unable to take his eyes away from her face. “My name is Mrs. Allen. I live near Linchester, but I’ve been away for many years. You'll meet me 27 “Yes,” promised Daniel again. “I'll stay home from work.” Daniel lay supine, his arms clasped behind his head. It was a warm night and his room was close with the un- stirring air of the woods and the heavy atmosphere of a man’s house- keeping. Near at hand, crickets chirped and katydids answered one another with monotonous regularity. Daniel re- joiced, believing them to be the harb- ingers of a dry day. To-morrow—no, it was to-day, Mrs. Allen was to re- turn. His life grew more intolerable, the speech of his mates more foul and insinuating, his longings for es- cape more desperate. Mrs. Allen had given him for a moment a sense of peace and security, as though he had seen his mother. He tried to recall the shape of her features and as he did so his fingers curved. But he could not succeed in visualizing her; he ' could think only of his mother. He had a wild intention to show her the crucifix and his carvings and to say, “He could make things like this, and hands and flowers and faces if I were taught,” and the bold inten- tion kept him awake. She was righ, she had seen the world, she might know how to advise him. He turned on his pillow and clasped his hands in a gesture of supplication. “If you would help me!” he said aloud. (Concluded next week.) Huguenot Was First New York Physician Dr. Johannes La Montagne was the drst educated man of medicine to set- tle down in the liftle Dutch town of what is now New York and hang out his shingle officially. He was a Huguenot gentleman of forty-two, a | man who had obtained a splendid med- fcal and general background at the University of Leyden. He had mar- riled a girl named Rachel DeForest, whose family had moved to this new country, and the letters home had told of such promise that he decided to try it for himself. So in 1637 he came. Almost imme- diately he assumed an important place in the commmunity life. His reputa- tion gave him professional as well as social position and he became one of the big men of the day. Governor Kieft appointed him to his council within a year after his arrival, and he was retained also by Governor Stuy- vesant when that slightly crusty Dutchman took the reins, Doctor La Montagne treated his first case in what are known as these parts as long ago as 1637.—New York HEvening Post. 4 neient Methods of Heating and Lighting The time when man’s curiosity and courage first enabled him to investi- gate the phenomena of fire was cer- tainly not less than 85,000 years ago. It probably happened in Europe during the Glacial age. One of the earliest methods was by twirling a pointed stick in a hole in dry wood, leading to the hearth fire. This was followed by the shell lamp— a shell filled with animal fats or fish oil, with grass or moss as the wick. The oldest bronze lamp known was | found in Cyprus, and is probably 4,000 years old. In Homer's Odyssey the use of three braziers in the palace to give light is mentioned—a method made possible by the fact that roofs were commonly open in those days. Coming to more recent times, the cresset, a species of cage filled with old rope smeared with pitch, was ip use. Candles were first introduced by the Phoenicians about 1000 years B. C., after which they became the regular indoor illuminant. About 400 B. OC. candles in all the chief countries of Europe were displaced by oil lamps of clay and bronze and did not returp to common use for a thousand years. The first friction match (the lucifer) was not invented until 1827, and a box of fifty cost half a crown (60 cents). The introduction of the Swedish safety match dates to about fifty years ago.— i London Tit-Bits. Winter Rains Stored for Time of Drought In southern California, where land without water is worth little, various means have to be adopted to conserve the winter rainfall for the dry sum- mer months. From May till October landowners depend on the underground water supply. A recent develonment has been the construction of a vast natural “sponge” destined to hold the flood waters from the great canyons in the district. The water from the melting snow or rains is distributed over nearly 800 acres of rock and sandy land, covered from end to end with sage bushes. This area has been intersected by specially con- structed ditches, with concrete distrib- uting gates, by means of which the water is kept circulating, instead of pouring away to waste. At the height of the season this won- derful “sponge” soaks up not less than 100,000 inches of rain, all of which can be pumped to the surface when re- quired. Official Sauerkraut A definition and standard for sauer- kraut has been adopted by the secre- | tary of agriculture as a guide for the officials of the department in the en- forcement of ‘thé federal ‘food and’ drugs act, upon the Tecommendation of the joint committee on definitions and standards, as follows: ‘Sauer- i kraut is the clean, sound product, of characteristic acid flavor, obtained by the full fermentation, chiefly lactic, of properly prepared and shredded cabbage in the presence of not less than 2 per cent nor more than 8 per cent of salt. It contains upon com- pletion of the fermentation, not less than 134 per cent of acid, expressed as lactic acid. Sauerkraut which has been rebrined in the process of can- ning or repacking contains not less than 1 per cent of acid expressed as lactic acid.” “Laborer” Was Right Getting one’s name on the voting list in an outlying town in Massachusetts for the first time is a serious ceremony, yet with touches of humor. For in- stance, one lady was asked what her occupation was and she replied “Housewife.” Whereupon the regis- trar volunteered this one: “I asked this question of one woman and she re- plied, ‘Laborer.’ ” The registrar, some- what puzzled, again queried, “What kind of labor’ The woman replied, “Well, I'm home all day.”—Christian Science Monitor. Another Diplomat Five-year-old William, the son of religious parents, has been taught that Sunday is not a day for play. One Sunday his mother was sur- prised and horrified to find him sall- ing his toy boat in the bathtub. “William!” she exclaimed. “Don’t you know it's wicked to sail boats on Sunday?” “Now don't get excited, mother,” was the calm reply. “This isn’t any pleasure excursion. This is a mission- ary boat going to darkest Africa.”— The Open Road. Suspicious of Columbus Oolumbus had returned to Spain pringing news of a wonderful new lang across the sea. “How much shall I write on it?’ queried the maritime reporter of the Cadiz Evening Bulletin. “Don't write anything,” replied the city editor. “Let Columbus pay for his advertising if he wants any. It's probably a real estate promotion scheme.”—New York University Med- ley. Probable Reason “Well! well! Look at that fellow running and turning his head first one way, then the other, as he flees!” exclaimed a guest. “What do you suppose he is doing that for?” “Not knowing the gent, can’t say for certain,” replied the landlord of the tavern at Peeweecuddyhump, “but probly it is b'cuz he ain’t able to turn it both ways at once.”-—Kansas City Times. FARM NOTES. —A great many vegetables re- spond to lime; in fact, many will not grow well in soil that is at all acid. This is particularly true of asparagus, spinach, celery, beets, onions, and lettuce. —Clean culture of corn crop is needed if the European corn borer is to be conquered. Cleaning up the refuse in fields and burning it is rec- ommended, by Pennsylvania State College specialists as a means of kill- ing the borers which have hibernated there through the winter. —Cutworms often cause serious damage to some small fruits, vege- tables and other crops. Because of reports of serious damage to straw- berries and blackberries in 1924, the entomologists of the New York State agricultural experiment station at Geneva gave directions for control- ling the insect. —~Cut alfalfa or clover hay makes a splendid litter for little chicks the | first week or so of their lives. It not | only affords a safe place to work but also supplies the chicks with ‘some green feed. Avoid dirty litter be- cause the chaff and barbs that are thrown up when the youngsters scratch get in the little fellow’s eyes and irritate the tissues, often caus- ing the eyes to go shut. —This is the time of year when many dairymen must watch the cool- ing of milk more carefully than they have during the past few months, Nature has helped all winter but now she will work the opposite way. Cool the milk over a cooler with running water or in a can set in a tank of ice and water. Stir with a clean stirring rod or spoon. Milk that is stirred cools five times as rapidly as milk standing still. —There are two asparagus beetles, the common asparagus beetle and the 12-spotted beetle that infest aspara- gus. The adults winter in rubbish or whatever shelter they can find near the asparagus patch. They become active about the time asparagus is first ready to cut, laying many eggs. Both the larvae and the adults feed, ' eating holes in the stalks. When the asparagus is being cut for market there will be little injury ! to the shoots for the eggs will not | have been on the shoots long enough for them to hatch or the larvae get to a size sufficient to do any damage. | If the patch is cut clean once in three to five days the grower will have little trouble. Leave a row or two along the side of the asparagus patch uncut as a trap crop, spraying these plants fre- quently with one pound of powdered arsenate of lead in forty gallons of | water, : As soon as cropping has been dis- ! continued, spray the whole planta- | tion with arsenate of lead as direct- ed above. The use of poultry has been advo- “cated for years. The field is enclosed and fifteen to twenty hens are placed on each acre. Spraying will proba- bly be unnecessary if hens or other poultry are used to control the beetle. i On small areas dusting the plants with air-slacked lime helps. It kills the larvae but does not injure the adults. If arsenate of lead is added to the dust then all will be killed. , Use five ounces of the powdered ar- ‘ senate of lead, by weight, in one peck, iby measure, of air-slacked lime or land plaster. Have it thoroughly mixed and apply in the early morn- ing while the dew is on. Do not use ! plants which have been dusted with poison for food. For information on the pests of garden crops send specimens of the insect or the work it does to the Penn- sylvania Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry, Harrisburg and information for the control of the trouble will be given. —One result of the recent European trip of Dr. L. O. Howard, chief of the bureau of entomology of th United States Department of Agriculture, was the discovery that there exist in Europe two parasites of the Euporean earwig which is at present a great nuisance in the vicinity of Seattle, Wash.; Portland, Ore.; and Newport, R. I. Arrangements were made by Doctor Howard to have the bureau’s laboratory at Hyeres, France, study the parasites and prepare shipments to this country at an early date. The European earwig in its several stages feeds on very tender green shoots of clover and grass, dahlia plants and blossoms, and the stamens and petals of various flowers. Mellow garden soil, lawns with a southern -exposure, or similar places make fer- tile breeding and hibernating grounds for the earwigs, which multiply rapid- ly, the female laying from 50 to $0 shiny white eggs each season. The adult earwig is rich reddish brown with the wing covers and legs dull yellow brown, and the wings three-fourths of an inch in length. In late summer the adults gather in large numbers in crevices or behind vines for mating. At other times during the day they hide in any crev- ice, folds of clothing, or even behind a convenient leaf which offers pro- tection. They may be found in large numbers on porches, behind chair cushions, under rugs, and in folds of awnings. The European earwig was first noticed at Newport in 1911, at Seattle in 1915, and at Portland shortly after. It was undoubtedly brought in from Europe, where it is very common, although not consider- ed of great economic importance. In this country, however, the earwig has multiplied rapidly in infested areas and has become a serious pest and caused much annoyance. It is pos- sible that it may spread to other sec- tions of the country if not checked. In addition to the parasites which have been discovered, there are other enemies of the earwig. Toads eat the larvae readily. Hens devour the adults ravenously, but the earwigs are so hidden during the day that fowls can hardly be considered as an important factor in controlling the insect. Poisoned baits and sprays furnish other means of control. i —Subseribe for the “Watchman.