Bellefonte, Pa., June 13, 1930. YOUTH AND OLD AGE. Graybeard is walking with Youth today, Down through the glen where the cattle run. Youth is enthused for the years to come, Graybeard is conning the cycles done. Boyhood is wishing for man’s estate, Age and the wisdom of Graybeard’s ken— Graybeard by, Innocent heart and the pulse of ten! is yearning for youth gone Graybeard is lagging behind a bit, Stopping to worship a tree he knew Back in the hours of the care-free lad, Back in the days of the barefoot crew. Soyhood is tugging with fervent haste: “Hurry now, grandpa, and let us go” ere is a path he has not explored, Down by the bridge where the riffies flow. Onward the rush of the boyish clan; Halting, the thump of the cane of Age-— “hus is the Volume of Life made up. Chapter on chapter and page on page. This is the tale of Life's magic span. This is the record of human flight— iiope with the sunrise, trailed low at dusk; Life in the Morning and Death at Night! Graybeard and Youth! Down the hill they plod, Youth forging on with an eager cry; Gran’daddy feeble and pulling back, Seeking his breath and a chance sigh; Sunrise for one and the Night for him Born of the years that have flown away— Youth and the shroud, Lay the fragrant bloom Here on the grave of Old Age today! to i= LAOCOON. Three years was the term of Ludwig Lessart’s scientific exile along the Grupuy in Brazil and the wild country that lay north and south of its banks. Two years had passed, Many thouands of speci- mens of birds, reptiles and insects had been sent to his chief—the di. rector of the Zoological Institute at Hamburg. Slowly and gently ap. proached the third year, looming silently, yet faintly, upon the tropic fastness like some condor dragging an enormous shadow. In that year the hunter became the hunted, but the arms and weapons used against him were infinitely subtle and phantasmal—delicate, silken snares for the soul and the instincts. It was a seduction planned by an ex- quisite, yet ironic, fate. It chanced one morning as he sat alone helpers being at a distance—it chanced that a rustling in the “brakes attracted his attention.. He ran toward the thickets and there saw a huge boa-constrictor swal. lowing a small crimson bird. Dr. Lessart’s hand flew to his modern repeating pistol, but the snake, hav- ing engorged the bird, merely stretch. ed itself and fixed its bleak and fe- line eyes upon him. Magnificent lay its length of brownish green, figured with sharp geometrical de- signs, brilliant lozenges and triangles. The glossy, tapering body was bent into the curve of a perfect ogre. It was one of the rarest of the species of the boa; it was the very same prophetic serpent once worshipped by the ancient peoples of Central America, the inspired snake that whispered awful mysteries to the priest. never seen 4a live Boa divinloquax, but he knew its markins well. Ere he had left Germany an offer had been made him by a rich private collector of Berlin for just such a boa—five hundred marks for every metre of the snake’s length if brought to Germany alive. Lessart’s hand fell from his pistol. He turned and ran for his three. looped lariat which he to throw with wonderful skill, As he again approached the spot where he had seen the boa, the reptile be- gun to creep away. He saw its ta- pering, glistening body writhing in long and sinuous curves through the underbrush of the forest. The scientist plunged after it, flanking it on = one side, then on the other, whenever an opening offered in the | brakes and ferns. He hoped the snake would coil about a tree or make for some open spot where he might rope it. Now he tracked it by the eye, now by the ear, Once the snake halted amidst a mass of colossal ferns and lifted its pointed head starred with its baleful spark. ling eyes. The two glowered at each other for a moment, then the boa went winding on. The zest of the chase, the price at stake and the enthusiasm of the scientist drove Lessart on. The path of the snake lay almost in a straight line, as though he were making for some goal. ‘Thus for two hours the man pursued the fleeing serpent. At last the forest thinned into a clearing of low shrubs and grass. Toward this the serpent glided swiftly. ‘Here,” said the man to himself —“here I must master divinloquax —or else goodby to him!” Lessart heard a peculiar call as he rushed forth between the trees of the jungle. In the centre of the clearing there stood a tall young native woman, her black smoulder- ing eyes bent in his direction, a look of alarmed defiance upon her face, her attitude aggressive and alert. The gigantic. snake was winding itself about her shapely body like some thick vine about a slender tree. It rested its oblong head upon her bare brown shoulder, The woman stroked it softly and murmurgd to it. The look she level. ed ' at the ' doctor as he advanced was cold and haughty; she frowned at the lariat he carried in his hand. The eyes of the snake glittered like in his camp, his two native : Dir. Lessart had had learned | as if a myriad needles of light broke superb and native Diana before him: the snake, for I thought it wild. How could I know you were its mistress? It is a beautiful snake and I would buy it for what you may ask.” This young native woman was comely and graceful. Her shad- owy features were regular and fine. A simple stateliness was in her up- right carriage, her expression was grave, her voice low and measuerd —modulated to the note and hush of the forest. The tall and stalwart doctor with his brown curls, tawny beard and clear blue eyes she an. swered thus, as he stood before her in his garments of white duck. “Ovada has known Xingu since he was very young. My father was chief of our tribe; my father gave him to me. I have fed him with my own hands. Therefore he is my comrade and my brother and dwells with: me.” “It is well,” said the German, smiling very pleasantly, “He is a very beautiful snake. I long to own him. I will not harm him, but keep him alive. He shall be well tended and fed. I will make pay- ment, Ovada, in aught you may wish. I have gold at my camp and the richest cloth, weapon, tools and many-colored jewels that will make you even more beautiful than you are Dow. Ovada, they will make you as beautiful as a queen.” I am the daughter of a chief and a princess,” said the young Indian, proudly. “I have no need of aught that may be given. Xingu is my comrade. I love Xingu beyond all living things since my father died. There is nothing I have seen more beautiful than Xingu.” “So be it then,” said the white man, bowing gravely. “Yet I have come very far,” he added, with a smile, “and am very thirsty.” The woman turned, with the great reptile still coiled about her lithe body, its blunt tail trailing behind her through the grass, and so vanished into a close circle of trees. Thence in a few moments she re. appeared, bearing a gourd that brimmed with the clearest water, The snake was no longer with her. The naturalist drained the cup and thanked her. Then he bade her farewell, saying with a gracious smile. “May peace be with you, Ovada, daughter of a chief.” He entered the jungle again and bent his steps toward the camp. But he aad not remarked the way of his coming, for his eyes had been bent upon the thin trail of the great serpent. He shaped his direction i by the sun, which was soon to set. At times he caught a gleam of his | crimson face between the dense hanging draperies and snarled leaf- tangled vegetation arose "in his path; here and there lay stretches of water and lagoons forced him to find a way around them. Soon it grew dusky and the greenish light of the jungle darkened with the brief warning of the twilight. At last he stood still, his whole bearing ‘expressed a helpless bewilderment; ‘he knew he was lost. Yet he was ‘ disturbed but little, scarcely shaken ‘out of his pensiveness. The face of the handsome native woman was | still before him, and the corruscat- ing eyes of her strange consort, Xingu. Lessart stood still in the darkness, thinking less of his plight than of them. The broken plots of sky between the jungle fronds grew dark and : brought forth their stars. Then, picking his way between ike deeper and the lesser shadows, between tree- trunks, intertwined tendrils and damp and thorny brush, he went slowly on. At length he stood once more within the grassy open space in which he had met with Ovada that afternoon, He gazed about him in silence for a moment, then called her name. He called it in a voice that surprised himself. Even so he had been wont to call another woman's name in a quaint Old World garden in which there was a marble group of the heathen priest Laocoon and his sons in the toils of the avenging serpents. This copy of the great classic -masterpiece was covered with fallen leaves and moss; it stood ' before -an ancient stone house in a sleepy, idyllic, arch-ducal town of Germany. Now Ovada appeared She came to meet him; some strange haste in his heart rorced him to hurry toward her. “I am lost, Ovada,” said he. “I have wandered in a ring May I find food and shelter here for the night 2” : She smiled and replied, “Ovada is glad to serve.” She led the way toward her hut, half_hidden in its enclosure of trees. She lit a splint of dry wood at the embers of a fire which lay curbed within: stones. She spread a mat upon the ground and bade him be seated. Then she brought a fish, covered it with a paste of powder. ed meal and baked it in the coals. This made his supper, this, with fruits, cocoa and the milk of the cocoanuts. Silently she sat beside him and seemed pleased to watch him still his hunger. Out of the shades beyond the fire two sharp and shifting eyes peered upon them from the crotch of a small dead tree. They were the eyes of Xingu. His great length festooned itself upon the white and sapless branches rubbed smooth with the passage of his coils. When Dr. Lessart had done with eating, and the fire began to fail, Ovada arose and went into her hut of cane and interwoven thatch. She emerged with-a large flat. basket of dried grass. This she dropped at the base of the dead tree, and, lo! the snake descended and coiled itself round upon round within his bed. lid fire, waxing and waning. Itwas yi age of the forest. Many barriers of “Ovada and Xingu will sleep in! g you shall have Ovada’s couch.” He refused it straightly, ‘to the hut to lie | aromatic grass. Beyond the frayed curtain of the low entrance the fire | still spread a glow of sinking red. { All about him the teeming and end- i less night life of the forest—bird, | beast and insect—made itself heard 'ag if from another world. Fitfully, | rising and "falling, now = dark and jnow alight, like fireflies in the woods, his thoughts flew about the beau- tiful brown woman and the ominous green serpent. Wonder and mystery invested this twain. She was like- some wild Lilith, he said to himself, or like some maiden Eve dwelling in her secluded Paradise with the great primal enemy. She was also like some forest goddess, a theme for poetry and romance, perchance some witch who had woven her black spells about him and led his feet to err in the mazes of the jungle. So ran his stirred and colored fancy. He gave no thought to his own camp upon the banks of the Guru. puy, nor to the two Brazilians who would find him missing. His scholarly mind, his disciplined soul, became peopled with strange and goblin thoughts, mingled monstrous- ly with what was human and what was bestial. The earth-ball revolved about him. He saw the face of Eu. rope in the moonlight, in particular a weedy garden with the mouldy statue of Laocoon, then into the circle of his vision swam the shadowy jungle-bower with this Indian nymph and her terrible comrade the sacred Boa divinoloquax. Long-forgotten in. cidents dressed themselves again as memories, ancient ghosts floated through his brain, and vague desires and fears he thought long dead awoke in every nerve and fibre like the tiny and rapacious life of the forest at night. Never had he felt so close to the majestic and terrify. ing inwardness of Nature. She seemed to be incarnated in this mystic woman, this chief's daughter, and in her serpent. He felt himself not only alone in the forest with her, but alone in the world, as though he were one or the primal pair. : Little he slept that night. In the morning Ovada led him to a small stream in the woods, where she left him to bathe. When he re- turned a savory meal awaited him. She: sat’ before him as he ate and then she began to speak. Her mild, sombre eyes held in them something of the tenderness of the fawn, a creature of many and inscrutable moods, soft of speech and serpen- tine of movement. She spoke the while her fingers stroked the head of the sluggish Xingu, his solid and scaly spirals rolled close in his bas- ket of wicker-ware. The snake blinked sluggishly at his mistress, and now, thought Ludwig Lessart as his own eyes sated themselve: with gazing on her face, her box of fellowship with Xingu seemed less strange and repulsive. Since her father, the Chief Caxias, had been slain, said Ovada, and his peo- ple conquered by another tribe, she chose to lie alone and in exile un. til her brothers might avenge him. “Then, Ovada,” said Lessart, with his boyish smile, “you will find a husband among the native chiefs and go dwell once more with your le.” “No was her reply; “though I do not always live here, yet I shall | always live alone—with Xingu—until i I die.” i “It is in truth very pleasant here, | Ovada,” said Lessart, looking about ‘him, “but it is very lonely and also {full of danger. I am a man and have two men with me, and yet there is a great loneliness in my camp.” “But I have Xingu,” said Ovada. Then suddenly her eyes fell, the while a flush arose in the tawny cheeks, driven there by something in the bright blue orbs of this white noble-featured stranger. After a while she said. “White man, you likewise must be of the blood of chiefs in your own land.” He bent toward her, smiling, and said, “Why do you say that, Ovada?” She made no answer, but the red stain in her cheeks deepened, and when she raised her eyes they were filled with a wistful shyness. Again he leaned forward and touched her hand and asked her the question. She answered at last that it was because he had a beautiful beard like the kings of his race. The splendid snake now aroused him. self, and his long flat head was reared a full yard above his firm, compact coils. Then the German, shaking off his perilous and insidious emotion, rose and prepared to depart. Ovada walked by his side for a long way to show him the proper path back to his camp. She pointed out odd trees or misshapen branches, large stones and other stones “whereby he might know this way again.” Finally she halted; they bade each other farewell once again; he kissed her hand with great ceremony. Then he set his face to the north, she hers to the south. At a certain distance he turned and saw her watching him from between the trees, For a moment he paused, then went on, slowly pondering, dragging at every step some in. visible chain that tugged at this feet like the prickly vines that lay up- on the ground. When less than a mile from his camp, he suddenly felt in his pocket and burst into an: exclamation. He had left his wallet in Ovada’s hut. In this wal. let there were things that were very precious. These were letters written, by one who dwelt in the crumbling” stone house half buried in’ the neglected ‘garden with the ruinous marble of the Laocoon group, one who had waited very long for him, like the pale princess eeping in the enchanted wood. He from those small eyes. Dr. Lessart he would sleep under the stars by! had mastered the native tongue. the fire. But this seemed to dis- came over him again, of her love- In these words he bespoke the ' please her, so he gave up and went in- liness likewise, -and her wild, yet down upon a low regal, womanhood. “I greet you, maiden. I followed settle covered with a soft and p frosty crysicls, beaming with a pal. the open tonight,” said she, “and 'tuurned at once toward the south and hurried back to the place where saying Ovada made her home. The thought of her loneliness It was very leasant in her little bower, with its air of sylvan peace and Edenic domesticity. Fair was Ovada, and young; she was savage, but nobly savage; her cooking and her ministra._ tions were grateful unto him. There was yet a whole year for him to spend in this reeking wilderness ere he had served the full time of his commission. Then, too, might she not be of great service to him with her knowledge of the region and her woodcraft? Hidden and lurking instincts sent these thoughts to his brain; here they caught form and fire; they sank again as temptations into his heart. Was he following her; was the old witchery at work, drawing, driving him on? Well, no; he was merely going for his pocketbook! He laughed to think of his falling in love with a brown savage girl, he whose milk white, blue-veined patrician dame with long tresses of palest amber await. ed him in that hoary German schloss. He recalled how they had plighted their vows—very romantic- ally, indeed—-by moonlight under the marble group of the tortured Laocoon. Quite as romantically he had said in that great and passion- ate moment. “If ever I forget you, Amalia, may I share the fate of Laocoon!” A glad cry came to his ears, He saw Ovada, lithe-limbed, vaulting like a fawn, bounding toward him through the sun and shadow of the jungle. She held aloft the red leather wallet he had left behind him. Her face was bright with joy that gave her wild beauty something still more wonderNul and vital. They stood amid the rank jungle foliage, face to face, a million-hearted life—animal and vegetable—teem- ing about them, all the feverish fertility of the soil, the golden mad. ness of the sun, the imperious will of Nature shackling all, and so looked into each other's eyes. Now they spoke very low, so that not even the leprous orchids and fan- tastic blooms dangling from the plaited branches heard aught of their speech. Alt last when the sun stood overhead, they went on, with slow, hesitant steps, but not, as be- fore, each a separate way. Hand in hand they went back to Ovada's dwelling in the forest. When they reached the grassy open space, the great boa lifted his head at sight of the man and swayed to and fro as if in rage or grief. He opened and shut his wide jaws with their thin and backward-slanting teeth. Ovada received Lessart as her lord and husband and went through the strange marriage ceremony of her tribe, chanting and dancing about him, kneeling at his feet, stroking his knees and hands and pressing these against her brow. He was deeply moved, and his bass | voice grew very soft and tender. He called her his little frau, his pretty weibchen, his brown gazelle. He summoned his two native helpers from his former camp. The work of collecting wenf lustily on, The trophies of birds, reptiles and strange animals which now fell to their guns and traps were more various and abundant than ever. Ovada knew: the native haunts of the creatures, where they nested, mated, or fed. She lured them into the springs with strange calls, she mimicked the males and the fe. males. Often she caught them un- aided with her hands. The doctor called her his darling witch, his en. chantress, that had power to lead captive man and beast. ; No longer was the great serpent permitted to spend the night within the hut—mnow always bedecked with flowers to please Lessart. Xingu had grown sullen and his cat’s eyes, when not dulled by the stupor fol- lowing his gorgings, would flicker with fury terrible to behold, be. cause, like that of a human thing, it fed on pain. For hours, often for days, he lay immovable, his striped and spotted body hanging from the polished fork of his dead- tree perch, or coiled in the sun. When Ovada and the brown.beard- ed doctor lavished endearments up- on each other the titanic reptile would sway his head rhythmically to and fro, until his whole body lashed and trembled and doubled like a whip that scourged itself. He is jealous of my lord, laughed his mistress, who seemed to find a strange, feline delight in the ani- mal’s distress, “but have no fear, for I shall not let Xingu harm you.” So the year crept toward its close. At intervals Dr. sent his men to transport small crates and boxes to the coast. There, once a month, a tiny freight. Steamer stopped on signal near the mouth of the Gurupuy and took them to the nearest port, whence they were laden for Hamburg. A change came over Ovada, a sweetness richer, more complex and benign, a mild, majestic grace touched with a pathos quite divine —Nature’s gift to a woman is ma- ternity. Then a child was born, a man.child, golden of skin and in feature perfect as its parents, Ovada was transported with joy, but, the tall Lessart stroked his beard gravely and felt a new and oppressive sense of his relation to the universe. All day long Ovada fondled her little son. Now her maddest caresses were his, although she still hung ardently upon her lord. But Xingu was utterly ne- glected. No longer the smooth hand of his mistress stroked his graceful arching neck, no longer she permitted him to embrace her in his bright, magnificent coils. When he came creeping to her as she sat nursing the babe, and nudg- ed her with his hard, cold head, she drove him off. The glittering eyes, the wide jaws, and long snout frightened the child when Xingu drew silently near and peered into Lessart. the baby’s face as if to do it hom- age. When Ovada chased the lan. guishing reptile away, Xingu would drag herself slowly off, moving lamely. Then he wound himself in_ to motionless coils that glistened in the sun like polished figured bronze of brownish green. But his dilating eyes were like livid flames, shifting with a haggard glare. Now he haa two rivals in the love of Ovada— which once he had held alone. The reptile brooded, and Lessart was aware that even under the wrinkled lids the round green eyes blazed with a quenchless hate of him. His commission for the direc. torof the Royal Zoological Institute at Hamburg. was almost fulfilled. Soon, if he chose, the period of his exile would be over. But now it was no longer exile. Lessart felt the shackles upon his heart: he re. solved to remain, he could not know for how long a time—perhaps an_ other year, The jungle had made his soul one with its own; the long hair and loving arms of Ovada, the tiny hands of his little son, were mighty and compelling bonds. One day his two servants, retur from the coast, brought him letters. One was written in a beautiful hand he knew well; the envelope bore a crest which was also sculptwred in the morselled stone at the entrance of an old, old garden in which he had often sat. The letter was a Summons; there was to be no an. sSwer to it save his presence. An. other letter was from the Director of the Zoological Institute, offering him an important post. Ludwig Lessart’s heart was torn within him; it was like a combat between the two halves of him, be. tween Opposed hemispheres, between passion and compassion, between two long-sundered fragments of his life. But part of his training had been military; the older duty and the older memories swayed him; he prepared to go. In three days he could reach the coast where the lit. tle steamer sent its boat ashore to gather up his goods and trophies. Then he held another sharp and drastic debate with himself, but re- solved at last that he must go in Secret. It was wiser that Ovada should not know, Carefully he pack. ed the remaining specimens which his two Brazilians were to carry to the coast. Then his eyes fell upon the lethargic spirals of the slumber- ing Xingu to Ovada, now that Ovada had a babe? The snake was even a constant menace to that babe. Th night while Ovada lay asleep, caught the snake in a stout basket, lashed it with ropes, and gave it to! his men to pack upon the back of a’ little donkey they had brought with them. The fellows were frightened, | but Lessart added a gold piece to their pay, and so they took with! them the writhing mass in the straining basket, : The next night he himself was | ready to follow, Ovada and the | lantern stood without, Fully dressed | and equipped with handaxe and re. volver in his belt, his rifie across his shoulder, a supply of food in his game-bag, he entered the hut. Talend thus, he was accustom. ed to go forth to hunt those : whose habits were nocturnal. ‘He hy down beside the couch and embraced | his mate, pressin his Ii Hs) g his lips upon Then he bent again and took the | awakened child in his arms, holding ' it close for a long time, then kiss. ed it and gave it back to Ovada. . When Ovada rose the next morn. Ing she knew her lord had left her. His instruments, his books-—all were gone. Xingu, too, had vanished, but t> this she gave little thought, knowing the habits of Xingu. She nursed the babe; then bound him in a sling upon her back in the man- ner of the women of her tribe. She hung a small, sharp axe in her girdle, took down the photograph he had left with her, put it in her boso:n, and so set forth to follow her lord to the sea. On the morning of the fourth day, with but short pauses for rest, Dr. Lessart reached the coast. Free and unbroken the blue, infinite waters lay unrolled. He who for three years had been imprisoned in the shadowy, poisonous tangles of the jungles, cried aloud as he beheld once more “the sublime, immense liberty of the ocean. He went at once to the little storehouse of corrugated iron which stood forth on the white and cury. ing beach. He found the key in the Spot where he had bidden his men to hide it. His boxes were safe within, but the basket in which Xingu Lal heen penned was burst open and the boa was gone, There was a small opening near the roof. The naturalist cursed the careless. ness of his Brazilians, and thought of the three and one.half metres the divinoloquax had measured and of the five hundred marks per metre offered by the amateur collector. He then ate what was left of his food and thought fondly of the little steamer that was to call on the morrow. Then he flung off his soiled white linen clothes and rushed gladly into the sea, shouting like a boy, rejoicing in the pure salt serge, laving in it his well_formed, athletic limbs, plung- ing and swimming like some happy dolphin. He came forth, dripping and glistening like some sea-god and rolled himself in the sand in the shadow of the storehouse. In sheer, unbridled joy he sang the tenderest German. ballads of his youth, drink. ing-songs of his student days; he chanted sword-songs of the Nibelun- gen. She, the ivory-pale gentlewo. man who dwelt in the half ruined house that stood in the ancient gar- den, must share this mood! He tore a leaf from his note_book and filled it with a message to her, rapt and wonderful lines that were al- most poetry. Then weariness overcame him, and the growing heat . as the store. house lost its shadow. Naked as Adam he walked up the slope of the white beach t> the fringe of trees that bordered it and lay down again in their shade. He fell asleep at once, heavily with the weight of his three days travel upon him. The solitude and silence were as of eternity, the sky was. void of a sin. gle flock, the sea as unmarred as the sky. In front of the sleeper the endless silver stretches of the beach lay unrolled; behind him stood the sullen forest. Near the base of a tall, slim mangrove Lessart lay ex. tended like some sculptured master. Place of manly strength and beau- y—marble of body and face and hands. y beouss, of In the leaves above him a light But there was breeze began to stir. also some else that stirred the leaves. ‘Soon the whole tree began to quiver and tremble. Then from the lowest branches €merged a shape, long and glistening, with a pointed head in which gleamed two radiant, greenish eyes. Slowly, si- lently, in a beautiful spiral the giant Serpent crept downward on the trunk and coiled itself beside the sleeping man. It was Xingu. He stretched forth his own arms as if to embrace Some one, amd slightly raised his body from the tallic eyes Bad darkened like unsteady Crponed As the man raised his arms, sudden} , Ihe snake dashed at him. An on W—lightning might have lagged that behim the invisible rush free and powe : less, crushing ro nand at the piti_ reptile, the doctor strugg] feet. Swifter than ig Pri is lashed another loop about his thighs straining till bone and sinew crack. ed. The man, foam bubbling from his lips, his face turned purple and his eyes swimming in darknes, stood for a moment, lashed in the con- vulsions of the snake, then swayed upon his helpless feet and fell to the ground. Xingu did not release him until the last flutter of life had passed. Then slowly and majestically he unwound his splendid rings, roll. ing the dead man upon his face. Gliding a little to one side, he made himself a cushion of his coils and went to sleep, A smile passed over Lessart’s face. He was dreaming. He stood beneath the moss.covered statue of Laocoon in the German baronial house. The white arms of his lady reached forth to enfold him, tightly, never to let him go again into the wild, adventurous world, arms eager as the marble coils of the serpents about the body of the Greek priest and his sons. When Ovada reached the beach it was almost evening. This was the place where she hoped to find her lord. And here, verily, she found him, lying upon his face, his body crushed and discolored as with the binding of thick girthed ropes. She threw herself upon him and wailed, and the ancient, infinite silence of sea and shore and sky was broken by an ancient and infinite grief. So she remained until the babe upon her back began to scream. Raising her eyes that lay like cold and lustrous stones under her streaminfi hair, she saw Xingu advancing upon her. He came fawningly; every wave-like motion was like a caress; his eyes held a light that spoke of joy and triumph, his head danced in an amorous rhythm on his lus- trous, erected neck. He bowed be. fore her and grovelled on the ground, awaiting the old, unforgotten fond- ling of her hand. Then Ovada cried out again, this time not in grief, but in awful and unutterable rage. Ovada drew the hatchet from her belt and’ with one blow sundered the head of Xingu from his body.—By Herman Scheffauer, in Harper's Weewly. ee @ @ rnen een. CHAIRMAN SUBMITS PROGRAM FOR FLAG DAY OBSERVANCE. The general program committee of the national organization of the American Flag day Association has appointed a Pittsburgh woman, Mrs. D. Edwin Miller chairman. As such, Mrs. Miller submitted a program for clubs and communities to prop- erly celebrate the anniversary of “Old Glory,” June 14. Her suggestions were as follows: Invite active citizens and patriotic organizations to co-operate with you. Have celebration in public hall, as. sembly room, schoo! or church— Se- lect presiding officer, chairman or chairwoman. Choose list of public spirited citizens as vice presidents from men and women interested in patriotic activities and particularly, with the youth of the community, Have music by band, orchestra or other musicians while audience is assembling. Have community singing or patri- otic songs from 10 to 15 minutes, directed or led by song_leader. Play or sing “The Star Spangled Banner,” audience to remain stand- ing while opening invocation is made by’ selected minister or chaplain. Short scripture reading relating to loyalty to country. Instrumental selections, patriotic airs; flag drill by boys and girls, patriotic tableaux, patriotic demonstration, such as Boy and Girl Scouts. The De Molay chapters of boys, drill corps, boy's citizen clubs, guards, ete. Patriotic recitations. Patriotic songs and anthems by quartette or choir. Patriotic addresses by se. lected speakers. Instrumental selec- tions. Present J the American flag by color guard, audience to stand and repeat pledge to the flag, led by song-leader while audience sings “America.” Concluding with bene- diction by selected minister or chap. lain. Have meeting place properly dec- orated with bunting. The American flag displayed on poles, not draped over table or desk. See that a gen. erous display of the flag is made by homes, schools, stores, offiecs, etc. —8Subscribe for the Watchman,