THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1913. PAGE THREE Easter I wonder ii they know it, those little ones whoso days Aie spent where sadness hovers and beauty never strays; Whose childhood ceased the moment that they had strength to bear The burdens which were waiting, whose little aces care Has marred with cruel fingers, whose eyes have lost their glow, Whose hopes have withered early I wuids if they know? The bells ap ringing loudly, the splendid anthems rise. And hatted is forgotten and ruthless frenzy dies; The story of His glory we gladly hear again. And for a precious moment Love comes once more to reign; But they whose cheeks arc pallid, poor little heirs of woe, Who tit in darkened hovels I wonder if they know? Around the altars lilies in spotless white are set, That we may still remember, that no one may ' forget; The brave words that He uttered we solemnly repeat. We learn again the lesson and deem the learning sweet; His message to the children is reverently heard, But are the little toilers by glad emotion, stirred ? His promise is repeated where heads are gravely bowed, ' Men cease a while to covet, and women, fair and proud. Kneel piously end humbly and for His mercy pray, Their vanity forgotten, their envy put away;' We sing that he is risen, the lordly and the low, But, poor, wan little toilers, I wonder if they know? Ring out, O chimes of Easter, that all mankind may hear. That pride may be forgotten and love may reappear. That they who proudly covet and they who, foster creed May hear the saving message and, hearing, pause, to heed That they, poor little toilers, condemned to early woe. And cheated of their childhood, at last may gladly know I S.E.KISER HAVE SPECIAL EASTER DISH Gammon of Bacon and a Tansy Pud ding Are Features of the Si as on In English Country. In Dovonshlro, England, tho special Easter dish is a gammon of bacon and a tansy pudding, the latter being so well established a custom that it la celebrated in an old ballad: At stool-ball, Lucia, let us play For sugar, cakes and wlnoj Or for a tansy let us pay, Tha loss bo thine or mine. If thou, my dear, a winner be . At trundling ot the ball, The wages thou' shalt have, and me, And my misfortunes all. In Staffordshire the men lift tho women ot tho various villages on Eas ter Monday, and the women have to take a try at lifting tho men on Eas ter Tuesday. In Cheshire there is a lifting chair. In Chester Easter Mon day 1b celebrated by ball playing be tween the clergy and laity. In Dur ham tho men take off the women's shoes on Monday and have the unique courtesy returned in kind on Tues day. Nearly all theso customs of Eas ter havo been too closely associated with the place of their occurrence to suffer transplantation, although the whlp-lashlng of the Polish children bears a striking resemblance in ita turn-about-is-fair-play Idea to the Eng lish customs. Christ's Promise to the World. "Unto them that look for him shall tut appear the second time without Bin unto salvation." Hebrews 9:28. ffertttg FEEL in myself the future Ufa. ffl T am like a forest once cut down; (a the new shoots aro stronger and livelier than ever. I am rising, I know, toward the sky. The sun shine is on my head. The earth givea me Its generous sap, but heaven lights me with the reflection of unknown worlds. You say the soul is nothing hut the resultant of the bodily powers. Why, then, is my soul more luminous when my bodily powers begin to fail? Win ter is on my head, hut eternal spring Is in my heart. I breatho at this hour the fragrance of tho lilacs, the violets and the roses, as at twenty years. The nearer I approach the end the plainer I hear around mo tho immor tal symphonies of the worlds which Invito me. It is marvelous yet sim-. pie. It is a fairy talo, and it is his tory. For half a century I have been writing my thoughts in prose and In verse; history, philosophy, drama, ro mance, tradition, satire, ode and song; I have tried all. But I feel I, havo not said tho thousandth part of what is in me. When I go down to the grave I can say like many others, "I havo finished my day's work." But I cannot say, "I have finished my life." My day's work will begin again the next morning. The tomb is not a1 blind alloy; it is thoroughfare. It closes on the twilight, it opens on the dawn. Victor Hugo. WHY THE RABBIT AT EASTER Pretty Legend of Olden Times Con nects Bunny and the Eggs It Is Supposed to Lay. So many have asked, "Why Is the rabbit so closely associated with East-! er?" Each year at this season the cunning little bunny appears In the shop windows beside downy chicks and gayly-colored eggs. Tho legend of tho Easter rabbit is one of the most ancient in mythological loro and Is. closely related to the folk tales of, southern Germany. In tho beginning of things, It seems, the rabbit was a bird. As a great fa for the goddess Ostara, who was tha patron of spring, -gave it four legs, for which the rabbit was deeply gratefuL In remembrance of its former life as a bird, when tho spring or Easter season comes it lays eggs of gorgeous colors, and the egg has always been a symbol of the resurrection, and therefore used at Easter time when wo look for the life everlasting and all things mads new: It is a German custom for children to go to their godmothers at Easter for i the gift of colored eggs and a baked rabbit. Just before Easter the chil dren are sent to tho garden to build a nest for the expected rabbit, and early Easter morning they go with great er pectatlons, and aro never disappoint ed, to get the eggs which, the rabbit has laid for them. Even in Africa, among the heathen tribes, worship of the egg is common. No altar is com plete without its egg Uecoration, and most huts have at least one sacred egg. On all tho eggs devoted to the rites of worship a verso from the Koran is written at each end, while tho sides are ornamented by scenes from tho Nile. A rare specimen of these eggs Is to be seen in the Detroit Museum of Art. The etchings on the shell follow close ly the same general design as tfc paintings of men and women Oktf were recently found In Cairo. NAPSHOTS AT STATE NEWS All Pennsylvania Gleaned for Items of Interest. REPORTS ABOUT CROPS GOOD Farmers Busy In Every Locality Churches 'Ralislng Funds for Many Worthy Objects Items of Busi ness and Pleasure that Interest. Curtis Hill's baby suffered a broken arm when lifted, at Berwick. The Navigation Company's Panther Creek collieries closed for three days. Catawlssa's dog quarantine yields twenty-five killings of unmuzzled curs In a day, for fear of hydrophobia. Thirty infants are reported to havo died in Schuylkill county in a year through midwives' ignorance. His hand frozen on a recent cold night, Policeman J. P. Gro, of Lewis town, may lose it by amputation. A party of fifty students from State College spent a day in Allentown, visiting the city's industries. The Lebanon Valley division of the Heading Hallway transported 2,000 cars in a day, half of them loaded with soft coal. After firing at a fleeing burglar at his home at Chester, William P. Ma guire found a slouch hat in his yard with a bullet hole through the orown. Coatesvillo hotel keepers, Indignant over the activity of no license work ers, have "flagged" all license remon strants, some of whom have tried to buy drinks. The Town Council of Northampton has declined to grant franchises to allow the new electrical transmis sion line of the Lehigh Coal and Navi gation Company to enter the borough. George A. Stein, father of Landlord Charles E. Stein, of Weissp'ort, com mitted suicide by shooting when told by his son, for whrm he was tending bar, that he had another man in his place. J. H. Wilhelm, of Mauch Chunk, for many years paymaster for the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, recently celebrated his eighty-third birthday anniversary. He is still in the Tiest of health and Spirits. In a pen thirty by ten feet in ex tent, Samuel Miller, near Spring Grove, York county, will try to breed exclusively a black variety of skunks, the skins of which are worth ?5 apiece. Adam Gable, merchant, of Mount Carmel, already has a flock of spring chickens hatched. Mr. Gable is a great chicken fancier and has a spe cial room fitted with steam heat in which ho keeps the chicks. United States Secret Service men have been unable to locate or arrest the writers of anonymous letters to Hazloton officials. The writers either give the officials advice or else a se vere roasting. At Scranton, Viola Wells, a Titanic disaster waif, was orphaned again, when the man who adopted her, John A. Itady, was killed by machinery in tho Lackawanna mills, where ho was a foreman. Mayor Tyler believes that tho office of Alderman in cities like New Castle should be abolished and also that the Police Court business should be di vorced from the Mayor's duties. Ho believes that a number of Police Magistrates should supplant the Al dermen and also take the police work off the Mayor's shoulders In cities of the size of New Castle. He is taking the matter up with a view to having a bill Introduced in the State Legisla ture to provide for this change. Tho Itev. J. M. Prico is tho oldest minister In the United Evangelical Conference, in session at Milton, hav ing been born near Bloomsburg, Feb ruary 4, 1833. He learned tho printer's trade in the office of The Columbia Democrat. Not being ablt to endure the confinement, the physician or dered him to an outdoor life. It be ing in the days of the civil war, he enlisted In 1861 for a threo years' term In the service of tho United States. During his service he was wounded at Gettysburg nnd Fort Steadman. He returned in 11865, re stored to health. Ho was converted at Lime Ridge on February 4, 1866. An Allentown Bible class taught by Miss Sallle Heckrotte has secured handkerchiefs from Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Taft, which will bo notable ar ticles to be sold at a fair. John A. Wilson, of Franklin, a cou sin of President Woodrow Wilson, has offered to accompany twenty-live members of the senior class of tho High School of that place to Washing ton April 24. Ho will serve as guide and will endeavor to obtain an au dience for the seniors with the Presi Poetry and Prose of Easier Time By S. E. KISER THE BIRTH OF THE ROSE. A thistle onco grew '- near a lily, -. 1 A stately lily and fair. And the wind sway-i 1 1 9 i . eu mo one 10 mo imk .ot.her: ... v "ftc Ana ine spirit oi, wt lovo vraB there. Unto the lily and VIA. thlstlo f A sweet little floW' er was born, And the lily bent down to caress H, And her finger was pierced by a thorn. The rose that the, palo, pure lily In the Joy of her motherhood shed Gave tho sweet little) stranger Its color, x Gave the rose Its beautiful red. The rose thnt unto the lily And the wondering thistle was born By the lily was given its beauty, By the thistle was given its thorn. More Important Than Teeth. "Well, Willie, my boy, what makes, you so happy?" "I've Just had a piece of good, luck. You seo my front teeth. They're all gottln' decayed." "Yes. That's too bad. You ought to havo them filled at onco." "That's what the dentist said, and; he told pa it would cost $30." "Can't your father raise thol money?" "Ho had $30, but ma wanted it for. an Easter hat, so wo tossed a coin fon it and ma won. Now I'll not havo to get thorn filled." Wily Woman. "Does your husband ever complain about the cost of your Easter hats' and gowns?" "No. You seo I always keep a lot of old bills handy to show him when ho starts anything of that kind." "What good do old bills do?" "They show how much more my, first husband used to be able to pay for my Easter hats and gowns than this one can afford to." Nice Thing About It. "There's a nice thing about Easter that I've never heard anybody men tion." "What is that?" "It comes at a time when there's, no danger that people who haven't, any more sense than to do such things will not be likely to overcrowd excur sion boats." SUPREMELY HAPPY. Her look was very glad, Her heart was very light! The troubles she had had Wero all swept out of sight; She hummed a little song, And gladly free from care, Forgot that any wrong Existed anywhere. She gayly tripped 1 t Although the sky S'4) was gray; Her cares wero put to rout. Her troubles flung n WBV! The happy girl had wsn Tho finest Easter hat In church that Easter morn. A Sign. When a woman who has a new gown and an expensive now hat is able to seo her shadow on Easter It is a sign of fair weather for at least a few days, as far as she is concerned. Woman's Point of View. "Easter," ho said, "is a time when happiness should reign." "Yes," she replied, "but too often that isn't tho only kind of a rain wo' got on Easter." Man Never Knows. "A man never knows what there 13 In life until ho gets married." , 'No, nor in the dry goods stores,, either." ; If. A fine Easter outfit is all right if ono tries to live up to It 1 Easter Great Russian Feast. Easter Is pre-eminently tho great feast of Russia. In the old country at midnight on Easter ove the bells of tho great tower of tho Kremlin In Moscow pool out the tidings of tho resurrec tion, to be followed by the clamorous chords of every church bell in the em pire. Tho cities of the country blaze Into light Around every church, largo and small, are piles of Easter cakes. Processions of priests go through the streets In the towns. People bearing tapers follow them back to the Im pressive services. The Easter kiss, that special Russian custom of Easter' greeting, is everywhere exchangeo. i Tlio Kind You Havo Always in uso ior ovov 30 years, 1 . and has Been xnado under his por C0ffl?lt?7s sona supervision Ginco its infancy. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" aro hufc Experiments that trlllo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTO Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. 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