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VERMONT WA1CHMAN & STATE JOURNAL, THURSDW, JUNE 2. 1910 UNGONSIDERED TRIFLES Somo Fncls, Scrlons nud Frlrolous, o( Intcrcst lo Ihc l'cople of Montpelier iiml Vlclully. "I'd llke to joln," I keard a man uaylng to anothor, "lt's a good thlng anil 1 d Hlce to belong to It, but there are so many socletles I belong to now that the due3 aro gettlng burdensomo'.' When I looked Into tho matter a lit tle I found that Montpelier la a great lleld for tho "Jlner." Thero are nearly forty soclotles Usted In tho latest edl tion of the Montpelier Dlrectory, and tlils tnkos no account ot such organl Kattons aa Tho Club, tho Woman's ninh. thn hoanltal ald and varlous church organlzatlons. So there aro j between flfty and slxty such organlz atlons ln the plaeo and It la not easy to flx n meetlng nlght for a dozen mon whtch wlll not confllct wlth the regular engagemont8 of somo of them. And If the varlous whlat clubs, whlch are actlvo ln wlnter, were taken lnto account tho number of socletles would reach closo to a hundred. A gentlemau never parts ilils coat talls when he slt3 down, 1s a dlctum that was in voguo flfty years ago or so. Has the dlctum becn repealed or does tho Idea whlch prompted It apply only to oue sex? I notlco that wonien vvearlng long outer garmenta are very careful on sltting dowu to arrange them so that tho tall3 shall not be crumpled. When dld Camel's Httmp first re celve that deslgnation? And why? It 1s well known that tho mountaln was orlglnally called by the Freuoh Le Llon Couchant, the Crouchlng Llon, a better descrlptlve term than that by whlch It ls known today. In Thomp eon's Oazetteer publlshed ln 1824 It la referred to ln evcry Instance as Cam el'a Rump, but In one place (page 92) the author aska ln a foot note: "Why not Camel's Hump?" In tho later edttlon lt ls always called Camel's Hump and on page 44 of part III, Thompson says: "Thls mountaln 13 often erronously called Camel's Hump." Who made the change, and for what reason? Does tho mountaln look any piorc llke the hump than the rump of a camel? Or was lt orlglnally called the hump and dld Thompson err when he called lt rump? Or agaln, dld Thompson himself make the change whlch he had suggested in the early cdltion of his work? The Ignorant men who framed the constitution of Vermont declared: "A competent number of schools ought to be maintalned ln each town, tor the convenlent instructlon of youth (not poor youth) and oue,or more grammar schools to be Incor ported, and properly supported, in each county ln the State." They said not a word about the maintenance of poor houses. They ap pear to ihave bolieved that education was a duty of the State and a right of the citlzen. Now, more than a cen tury later, we are pointed to the Eng llsh Idea, that the people of famlly, thoso who can afford it, should send thelr chlldren to prlvate schools; that the instructlon afforded by the State is good enough for the common folks, for those who can't afford any thing better and ought to glve thanks for what they get, though they pay taxes in larger proportion to thelr holdlngs than t'-iose who can afford to patronlze the prlvate schools. Ono of the r Thursday nlg' ter of a site ( put forth thr- akers at the meetlng discussing the mat- a new Hlgh School proposltlon that the Hlgh School was for those whose par ents could not .fford to send them to an academy or college, whlch, carried to lts logical fonclusion, means that the public schools are an adjunct to CURE Slck Ileadacho and lellcvc all tho troubles Incl dent toa bllious Btate of tho Bysteni, euch aa Dlzzlnesi, Nausca, Drowslness, Ulstresa after rating, l'aln ln tho Side, &c Whllo thelr niost reiaaikable aucceea uaa bocn Bhown ln curlna , SICK Hcadaclic, yet Cartcr'8 Little Llver PilU are cqually valuabolnConstliatlon,curlngandpw vcnting thia annoyingcomplalnt, whlle they nlso correct all dlsonlcra of thoBtoniach, Btimulatctho Jlvcr and regulato thc boHcln. Evculftueyoiilj HEAD Acho tliey would bo almost nrlccles to thoso who Bufler from tlijs dlstrcsslng coinplalnt; but fortu. natoly thelr goodnceadoea notcnd here.and thoso who pnoo try them wlll tlnd thceo littlo iillls valu ablolnaomany waya that they wlll notlwwll. img to do wltuoutthcni, Butafter all alck hcad ACHE s tlio bano of bo many llven that liero l. whero womake our great boast. Our nllls curolt whllo othcrado not. Cartcr'a Littlo Llver rilla aro very nmall ana very easy to take. Onoor tmilllsmako a doso. They arestrictly wgelalilo and do nnt grtiio or pnrgo, bat by thelr gcntlo acllou iileafealiwUo cisies UDi:r.;& itett ijss. M ffl, H Doa. inaP hh FREE We glve one bottle of Port, Sherry or Angelica, absolutely free, to every new customcr buying 4 quarts of Old Marlow Whlskey at $3.00. Old Marlow Whiskey ls the cmoothest, cleanest.mellowest whlskey you ever tasted better than most $l-a-quart goods. We have spectalized it for yeari. We guarantee satisfactfon. 4 Full Quarts )$Q 00 "Old Marlow" 1 Bottle WineJ BDS Shlpped ln plaln'packaeea. Wrlte for com plete Prlce Llst. S. F. PETTS CO. THI HONCtT HAIL-ORDCn HOUtC 384 FRIEND 8TREET, DOSTON, MABS. CAKTER'S the poor-farm lnstltutlons for the poor, for those who can afford noth- Ing better. Belng a Now Englander, wlth more! than one gencratlon ot New England- ers bofore me, I totally and entlrely dlssent from tho proposltlon. Tho county grammar schools, whtch tho old Vermonters thought ought to be cstabllshed, and, for tho malnton auco of whlch they set aside lands ln evcry townshlp they granted, have be come the hlgh schools of today. They aro supported by a tax on all tho peo ple and are for tho uso of the people. If those who can afford to choose to soud thelr chlldren to other lnstltu tlons that la thelr prlvllege, but lt does not warrant an assumptlon on thelr part that the publlc schools are only for tho poor. Not only do tho towns malntalu thelr prlmary and secondary schools, but the Stato alds them ln dolng that and also alds ln the support of the col- leges. Norwich Unlverslty. Middle bury College and the Unlverslty of Vermont all recelve ald from the State, not for the poor nlone but for all. When one goes outstde of New England and New York tho Idea is carried to a logical concluslon. The State unlverslty ls a State lnstltlltlon ln fact as well as ln name. The best litotrnpMnn thn Stnto pnn nffnrd ls lopen to every chlld, rlch or poor, from the klndergarten to the college. THe unlverslty 13 as free as any other school. .... rtsr'f'-" Education ls galnlng. Culture ls ex pandlng. The tastes of the people are belng ralsed. If you have any doubt of that look at barber shop lltera turo for examplc. 25 years ago, even less the staple reading of the barber shop was tho Police Oazetto. There were a few patent mediclne almanacs, wlth stale jokes, that remalned untll they were worn out, sometlmes a weekly newspaper and an occaslonal copy of Puck. Today any well regu- lated barber shop wlll have at le'ast one dally paper, some hlgh class week ly llke Colller's or tho Saturday Ev- enlng Post, Puck, .Tudge or 1Ato, per haps all three, and one or moro of the popular magazlnes. Why wlll a man perslst In bring Ing a half smoked clgar lnto an as- setnblage where smoklng ls not per- mitted? I vlslted one of the niovlng picture theaters the other nlght and before I had been there flve mlnutes I became consclous of an offenslve smell. A smoker myself, lt took but a minute to identlfy it and a mlnute or two more to locate it. A man sat near me wlth a half smoked clgar ln fliis flngers. The celllngs ot these theaters are low and good ventllation is hardly possible, whlch makes the offensc of a dead clgar all the worse. Ooes a man hang on to such a stub and endure the foul smell of it and offend his neighbors for the sake of economy? If not, why does he do lt? "What is thc correct word. to de scrlbe he dltections for nnkitig a ple or a rjunoh," asked a friea l, 'r: celpt or reciie? "Receipt," I ans wered. ' Parhaps so," sald iiu, "but I notica Ihat most people use reoi ie' in convprsntiou. and I flnd that fonn more liequently used in the Iioiisp hold celumns cf newspapera. Of course newspaper usage ought to settle the questlon, but to satisfy myself I looked up what Eliezer Ed wards, that well known authority on the use of words, had to say, and found thls:: "A 'receipt' ls a wrltten or prlnted directlon for mixlng or compoundlns ccrtain materials wlth a view to the I.rodurtlon of somethlng; lt may be an artlcie of food a compound for personal or household use, or a medi cine. The word 'recelpc ls only pro 'jer)y used niedically and it means dliectlcns for taking." This appears to settle tho questlon brtwepn those two words, but noither of lliem is Just what ls requlred and t':e I.ngllsh language ought to fur nlsh a better one. Our great trouble wlth the ordinary use of English ls that we try to makc one vord perform too many dutles. Dlckens called attentlon tb that when he satlrized the American use of the word "flx." The vocabulary of mot peoplo ls vory limitcd or they are too lazy montally to make use of it. Eng lish affords a rlch cholce of words of dellcato shades of meanlng and thero ls no need of twistlng a word out of lts power and origlnal senso where some other can be used to express one's meaniug. Though there are more than a hun dred associato members of the Brooks Grand Army post, only elght of them marched wlth tho post to St. Augus tine's church on Sttnday to llsten to the splendld and stlrrlng address of Father Walsh. Theso associates are wllllng to contrlbute of thelr means to ald the work of the post, but aro chary of thelr presence. That ls al ways tho dlfficule thlns to enlst thelr personal effort. Men nro wll llng enough to glve money to any oauso that lnterests them, but are dlslncllned to glve tho personal at tentlon that counts. "Who glveth htmself his gift feeds three, Hlmsolf, his hungerlng nelghbor and jne." gor and 1110." Why do peoplo porslst ln calllng it Momorial Day? It Isn't. It ls Decora tlon Day, formally and offlclally, lts orlglnul purposo was tho decoration of tho graves of fallon .solldors. Year by year the Idea has devoloped untll lt has becomo roally a momorial day, and tho memorlal sorvicos nro of grcator consequonco in tho day's pro gramme than tho scatterlng of flow ers on the grave. That ceremony ls not publlcly porformed as lt used to bo. The parado no longor marches to tho cenietory and halts whllo the soldlors' graves. aro coverod wlth tokens of remembrance. But tho day stlll romalns Decoration Day. The real Memorlal day ls May 10, and wns Instltuted as such ln tho South, whore It Is stlll observed. It ls a le gal hollday uudor that name In sev eral of tho Southern states. A Balvage corps ls at work on the North Dranch and tho nmount of llotsam and Jetsam they aro taking from the stream ls surprlslng. I saw a plle of 8everal hundred pounds of old lron they had recovered and a lot of rags, bottles and rubbers. Two youngsters, who mlght by Itoguo Itldorhood and Oaffer Hoxam, ln a homo made craft, wlth boards for oars and an lron rod wlth a hooked end, constltute tho corps and lts equlpment. They are maklng a sucCess ln thls llne, but an oxporlinent lu uatural hlstory they trled falled to work. They captured a blg frog and tylng a cord to one hlnd leg trled to make hm haul the boat, but the task was too much for the frog, so he- was dls- patched and ltls legs taken home for dlnner. Although Montpelier was not char tered ttntll after the Rcvoluttonary War was ended, thero are 12 Itevolu tlonary soldicrs bttrled ln the ceme terie3 of the town and slx more Just across the rlver in Berlin. The 18112 War camo on before Montpelier had taken on any conslderable growth, yet thefe are 40 soldters ot that war bttrled ln Montpelier cemeterles. There were- not many ablo bodled men ln those days who falled to see somethlng of mllltary servlce. , They say trout are 'blttng wett but I hear of no blg catches. I saw a youngster going home wlth a dozen young dobsons Saturday. Ho sald he was golng to let them grow up for bass halt. EARNEST TR1FLEU. I'lissincr of the Aliaiidoned Furm (Now York Sun.) A remarkablo exhlbit confronts us on page 11 ot "New Hampshlre Farms for Summer Homes," a handsomely lllitstrated and typographlcally excell ent publlcatlon for whlch the Stato Board of Agrlculture is sponsor. We 1 refer to the picture of an unpalnted 1 frame house wlth pent up door and broken wlndows under the shadow of a great elm and looklng out over a tumbledown stone fenco on a road untraveled. It mlght be taken for the place where Hawthorno wrote "The House of the Seven Gables," but it has a dlstlnction all lts own. Allne ot type under the picture tells us: "There are abandoned farms stlll. This is one ln Hopkinton, Merrimack county." Tweuty years ago abandoned farms were a drug on the market in New Hampshlre; in the boulder country there seemed to be no other klnd of farm. A tract ot 300 acres, wood and pasture, wlth a rambllng house and spring water plped lnto lt, to gether wlth a progeny of gray barns aud outhouses, could be bought for two or three thousand dollars. It was a nielancholy reproach to the old State. Sometlmes a forgotten graveyard was found by tho mustng stranger in a second growth of forest. The census taker had less and less to do. The bear lumbered through the orchards of decrepit trees. Then the Leglslature, In a brave attempt to stay tlie depop ulatlon of the back country, imposed upon the Board of Agrlculture the task of promoting lmmigration by uslng prlnter's ink; but tho remedy was not found untll lt occurred to some genlus that the honorable board was promot ing the wrong klnd of lmmigration,, and that lustead of husbandmen on her abandoned farms New Hampshlre wanted captalns of Industry, states men, lawyers, doctors and llterary men. In short, the right course was to advertlse the attractlons of New Hampshlre as a summer pleasure ground. The abandoned farms had 'been a scarecrow; lt was now to be a lure. We take off our hat also to the son of New Hampshlre who con colved tho fetchlng Idea of "Old Home Week." Don't tell us that he was a llourishlng exil ewhose heart untrav eled fondly turned to Hooksett or Boscawen. stlll to Coos or Carroll turned wlth ceaseless paln, and dragg ed at each remove a lengthenlng chain. Ho was one of the consplrators to turn the tide of mlgration from the clty to the country and sell the hlll ; pasture to men who were more ln- toressted ln the azure robe of the mountaln than in separators aud scanty hay crops. We see the perfect result ln the sumptuous publlcation already men tloned farm advertislng. In the pre face thero ls confesslon ln tho very flrst sentence ln fact: "The New Hampshlre State Board ot Agrlcul ture, charged by the Legislaturo of tho Commonwealth witli tho duty of promoting lmmigration to tho farm Ing sectlons of tho State, Issues here with tho eighth edltlon of lts annual publlcatlon, designed to further that end and called 'New Hampshlre Earms for Summer Homes." It ls llko look lng through a picture gallery of state ly and luxurious homes to turn over tho pages of thls liook. Tnke the MacVeagh estate at Dublln. for In stance. What cool and spaclous por ticos, what far stnoothed lnwns, what Itallan gardens, what entranclng vls tns ot doftly trlmmed woodland! Be tween them tho archltect and land scapo gardener have made n paradlse where onco was a senlle farmhouso (carted away to make room for tho pleasuro palaco) and a hlllsldo glven up to tho prodlgallty of nature. A most beauttful grottp ot plctures shows anothor Dublln estate, "Includlng It allan garden and nnclont theatro," wlth marble Venuses nnd nalads peep Ing nt ono anothor through tho shrub bory nnd dlsplnylng charms that wore only dreamed ot on abandoned farms by tho origlnal proprletor. Thero aro "surnmor homes" humblor by com- SLEUl'LESS NIGIITS. Many a nlght's rest Is spolled by fro quont flts of coughlng-sometlmes by a moro ttckllng in tho throat that Is so annoylng aa to provent sleop. Komp's pnlsam wlll curo coughB If any medl clno wlll and wlll rellovo tho lrrlta tlon In tho throat. For all throat and lung troubles take Komp's Balsara. Druggtsts sell lt nt 25c and GOc a bot-tln wo thlnk ot each Happy tonant as onp who "on honey dow hath fd, and drtink tho mllk of Paradlse." Vlewg of mountaln and lake are lo be secn from theso "summer homes" thdt per suade you to bellevo there Is no scen narlson In thls collectlon, imt the camera has transformed them sothnt ery ln the world llko New Hamp shlre's; and lt thero could bo any doubt on thls polnt there ls tho test Imony ot Ambassadora of thj great Powers who have sojourned among tho White Hllls, contnlncd lu lettors to thc odltor. Tho roll of dlstlugulshcd vlsltors, owncrs nnd tenants ls fttlly as lmpresslvo as tho plctured estates, If not more so. We do not mentlon theso thlngs ln crltlcism but ln prn'se and adinlratlon of tho genlus that has dlscovcred gold mlnea ln hllls where only bouldcrs were found before and who has transformed dlhp'datcd farm houses lnto pleasure doinw llke that of Xanndu, ' where Alph the sanrrd rlver ran." We cheei'fully grant thnt ln lts panoramas and delights Ne Hampshlre glves full measur to those who can aflord to solve thc abuudoued farm probltm: "Mavk how the statoiy tviva ubovc ua bend. And how the sunshlne gllmmor3 through tho leavos: A dream of beauty every one per- celves Who walks thls way wlth sweet- heart or wlth frleud." The llnes are from the worlcs of Moses Gage Shlrley, the Uustlc Bard of Shlrley Hlll, whose modost home appears as a foll to the great houses ln "Farms for Summer Homes." Tliere ls, inde.edz a. ghapter devoted lo tlllage for proflt, to save thc face of the abandoned farm, whlch ln the first analysls should he by the sweat of the brow; but the lllustratlons ofgolf llnks, lawn tenuls, canoelng, mountaln cllmblng and snowshoelng wlll not down ln thls part of the book. There ls also a display of fat potatoes and blue ribl)on apples, and a flock of arlstocratlc sheep; but In the maln thls ls exteuslve and not intenslve farmlng only mllk can be ralsed on the rock pastures. What we make of thls llne and very credltable pub llcatlon of the Board of Agrlculture is that the abandoned farm ls passing and giving place to homes of clty folk who spend $10,000,000 a year ln New Hampshlre. H03IF.S01' WIIiD CREATUISKS. Tlutt nf the liiilil Fntrlo -Host Slrlklni: Amotiir Birds A Bfiir'sSnow ilouse. (From St. Nlcholas.) There ls a pecullar charm nnd ln terest in the study of the homes of wild creatures. Thelr efforts and the result ln buildlng these, even If crude, appeal to our synipathles. We have admlred and to some ex tent have Investlgated the nests of the more famlllar blrds; we have seen the squlrrel make his home ln some dead tree or hollow limb; we have, perhaps, studled the muskrat and his pecullar, dome-shape house. Few people, how ever, have had the opportunity of giv ing the matter extended study. Among birds the homo of the bald eagle ls perhaps the most strlking posslbly because of the majesty of the blrd ltself. It appeals to the Imaglna tion. Built of huge stlcks loosely in terwovon and situated on some lofty and Inaccesslble ledge, wlth the bones of the eagle's 1ctims scattered round about, lt glves a proper settlng to the stern and savage charatter ot lts bulldor. Hero the eagle relgns snp reme, and here year after year ho and his mate rear thelr young. Thls ls the aery froin whlch he can scan the whole countryslde and llke the robberybarons of old levy toll on all who pass his door. Far ln the stlll, white North, where wlnter relgns supreine, ls the home of the polar bear. When the long arctlc nlght approaches the bear retlres to some shelter spot, such as the cleftof a rock or the foot of some preclpltous bank. In a very short tlmo he is effect ually concealed by the heavy snow drlfts. Sometlmes the bear walts un tll nftor a heavy fall of snow and then dlgs a white cavern of the requlslte form and slze. Such Is his home for slx long months. Our common littlo cottontail, or so called rabblt, does not llvo ln a burrow as does the English rabbit, but makes a sllght depresslon ln tho ground, ln whlch she lles so llatly pressed to the earth s to be scarcely dlstlngulsh able from the soll and the dried her bage ln which her abode Is situated. The rabblt ls strongly attached to lts home wherever It may be placed, and even lf driven to a great dlstance from it contrives to regaln lts little dom lcllo at the earllest opportunity. One of the most gruesome among anlmal homes Is the wolf's den. Thls is simply a holo duge in thc side of a bank or a small natural cave, gen erally situated on the sunny slde or a ridge and almost hldden by bushes and looso bouldcrs. Here the wolf lles snug; In and about his doorway lle the remalns of past feasts, whlch coltpled wlth his own odor, makes the wolf's den a not very lnvlting place. Never- theless tliere ls somethlng so dread and mysterious about this soft-footed mar auder that it even lcnds a fnscinntlon to his home. A "fly-by-night" sort of homo ls that of our friend the bob-whlte, yet it seems to servo the purposo very well. Under the broad, low bough of a small plne or ceder tree the ilock tako thelr nlght's reposc. Quall, ln retlring, al ways slts ln a clrcle wlth thelr heads outWard, and so they rest, presentlng a barrlcado of sharp eycs and sharper ears agnlnst posslblo danger. Tho homo of tho elegant little har vest mouso next clalms our attentlon. It is bullt upon threo or four rank grass stems and is situated a foot or so from tho ground. In form lt ls globular and nbout four lnches ln dl tmetor, It ls composed of thlu dry grass, ls ot nearly unlfonn substance and open nnd alry ln conBtructlon. It shows great cleverness ln thls little anlmnl, whlch Is the smnllest of mam mals. Tho wlnter homo ot tho American red deor Is vory Interestlng. Whon tho snow boglns to fly tho loador ot tho hord guldes thom to somo sheltor spot whero provendor ls plentlful. Here.as tho Buaw. 11118, they pack it down, tramplng out a consldorablo space, , whlle about them the snow mounts flilghor and hlghcr untll they cannot get out lt they would. From tho maln openlng or "yard," as lt ls called, tramped-out paths lead to the near by trees and shrubbery, whlch supply them wlth food. In thls way they lnanago to pasa tho wlnter ln com paratlve peaco and safety. One could go on enumeratlng blrd and nnlmal homes by tho scorc, and they would all be of lnterest. The present space, however, wlll not per mlt of golng further. The wrlter has therefote, slmply descrlbed somo of tho moro curlous of thc homes, as well as those presentlug tho wldest contrast. lUKUNMNGS OF ClVlfilZATION. Jlcsopoliiinln, thc 'Uc Vallpy, Wrecce nnd Itoine. (From Theodore Roo3evelt's Recent Addross at the Unlverslty ot Berlin.) The flrst clvlllzatlons whlch left be hind them clear records rose ln that hoary historic past whlch geologlcally ls part of tho immcdlatc present and whlch ls but a span's length from the present, even when compared only wlth the length of tlme that man has llved on thls planet. These flrst clv lllzatlons were those whlch rose ln Mesopotamla nnd the Nlle valley some slx or elght thousand years ago. As far as we can see, they wero well nlgh Independont centers of cultural development, and our knowledge ls not such at present as to cnable us to connoct elther wlth tho early cultural jnovements ln southwestern Europe on the one hand, or ln Indla on the other, or wlth that Chlnese clvlllzatlon whlch has been so profoundly nffected by Indlan lnlluences. Compared wlth tho clvlllzatlons wlth whlch we aro best ecqualnted, the strlking features In the Mesopo mnnian and Nilotic clvlllzatlons were the length of tlme they endured nnd thelr comparatlve changelessness. The klugs, priests and peoples who dwelt by the Nlle or Euphrates are found thinklng much the same thoughts, do lng much the same deeds, leaving at least very slmilar records, whlle tlme passes In tens of centuries. Ot course there was change; of course there was actlon and reactlon ln influence between them and rheir neighbors; and the movement of change, of de development, materlal, mental, splrlt ual, was much faster than anything that had occurred durlng the aeons of mere savagery. 'But ln contradlstluctlon to modern times the movement was very slow ludeed, and, moreover, ln each ca3e It was strongly localized; whlle the field of endeavor was narrow. There were certain conquests by man over Nature; there were certain conquests in the domaln of pure lntellect; there were certain extenslons whlch spread the area of clvllized mankind, But lt would be hard to speak of it as a "world movement" at all; for by far tho greater part of the habitable globe was not only unknown, but lts extstence unguessed at, so far as peoples wlth any clvllization whatso ever were concerned. Wlth the downfall of these anclent clvlllzatlons there sprang Into prom Inence those peoples wlth whom our own cultural hlstory may be sald to begln. Those Ideas and lnlluences In our llves whlch, we can conseiously track back at all are In the great ma jority of Instances to be traced to the Jew, the Greek, or the Roman; and the brdinary man, when he speaks of the nations of antiqulty, has In mind speclfically these three peoples al though, judged even by the hlstory of w(hlch we have record, thelrs ls a very modern antiqulty Indeed. Tho case of the Jew was qulte ex ceptlonal. His was a small nation, of little more consequence than tho slster nations of Moab and Damascus, untll all three, and the other petty States of the country, fell under the yoke of the alien. Then he survlved, FoscJSprains and lcindrcd achei and so ctfcctive as lohnson s burnj, scalJs, Inllaniniation, ctc, arc quickly relievcd by it. Talccn Internallvon sueuror In sweetencd watcrlt nromptljr checks bowel dlsordcrj, cannot exist where it ls 2SeanJBOe bottle: whlle all his fellows dled. In tho splr Itual domaln he contributed a rell- glon whlch has been the most potentj of all factors In lts effect on the sub sequent hlstory of mankind; but none ot his other contrlbutlons compare wlth the legactes let us by the Greek nnd tho Roman. The Graeco-Roman world saw a clvlllzatlon far more brllllant, far more varled and Intense, than any that had gone before lt, and oue that affected, a far larger share of the world's Btirface. For tho flrst tlme there began to be somethlng whlch at least foreshadowed a "world move ment" In the sense that It affected a conslderable portlon of the world's surface and that lt represented what was Incomparably the most Import ant ot all that was happenlng In world hsltory at tho tlme. In breadth and depth the fleld of Intellectual ln terest had greatly broadened at the same tlme that the physlcal area af fected by the clvlllzatlon had slnillar- ly extended. Instead of a clvlllzatlon affectlng only one rlver valley or one nook of the Medlterranean, there was a clvll lzatlon whtch dlrectly or lndlrectly lnflttenced mankind from the desert of Sahara to the Baltlc, from the At lantlc ocean to the westernmost mountaln chalns that spring from the Hlmalayas. Throughout most of thls reglon there began to work certain ln lluences whlch, though wlth wldely varylng Intenslty, dld nevertheless tend to affect a large portlon ot man kind. In many of the forms of science, ln almost all the forms of art, there was great actlvity. In addltlon to jrreat soldlers there were great ad mlnlstrators and statesmen whose concern was wlth the fundamental questlons of social and clvll llfe. Nothlng llke the wldth and varlety of intellectual achlevement aud un derstandlng had ever before been known; and for the flrst tlme we come acro3s great Intellectual lead ers, great philosophers and writers, whose works are a part of all that 13 hlghest In modern thought, whose wtitlngs are as allve today as when they were flrst ls3ited; and there were others of even more daring and orig lnal temper, a philosopher llke Dem ocrltus, a poet llke Lucretlus, whose mlnds leaped ahead through the centuries and saw, what none of thelr contemporarles saw, but who were so hampered by thelr surround lngs that it was physically impos slble for them to leare to the later world much concrete addltlon to knowledge. The clvlllzatlon was one of comparatlvely rapid change, vlew ed by the standard of Babylon and Memphls. There was Incessant move ment; and. moreover, the whole sys tem went down wlth a crash to seem Ing destruction after a period short compared wlth that covered by the relgns of a score of Egyptlan dynas ties, or wlth the tlme that elapsed be tween a Babylonlan defeat by Elam and a war 1G centuries later whlch fully avenged lt. This clvlllzatlon flourished wlth brilllant splendor. Then lt foll. In lts northern seats it was overwhelmed by a wave of barbarism from among those half-savago peoples from whom you and I, niy hearers, traco our des cent. In the South and East it was destroyed later, but far more thor- ili g&iSiM Porsons' PHIs IS O BjiMl cleaiue the syttem and th ISi'mm ,ualce yu feel rrh f lElaFI "l vigorom. The Vermont Watchman The Best Weekly in Washington County Subscription Price, $ 1 .00 a Year Payable in Advance pains there l no remedy Anodvne Llnimcnt. ISruiaei. colds, and many other ailments which used. The family doctor for 99 years, I. S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, M. JOHNSONS LlNIMENT oughly, by invadera of an utterly dlf- ferent type. Both conquests were of great Importance; but lt was tho northern conquest whlch ln lts ultl ntate effects was of by far the great- est Importance. Wlth the advent or the Dark Agen the movemet of course ceased and lt dld not begln anew for many cen tures; whlle a thousand years pasa ed before lt was once more ln full swlng, so far as European clvlllza tlon, so far as the world clvlllzatlon of today, ls concerned. Durlng all those centuries the c Ivlllzed world, In our acceptatlon ot the term, was occuplgd, as lts chlef task, In slowly cllmblng back to the poaitlon from whlch lt had fallen after the age of the Antonlnes. Of course a general statement llke thls must be accepted wlth quallflca Hons. There ls no hard and fasr llno between one age or period and an other, and in no age Is elther progres3 or retrogrWon unlversal ln all things. There were many polnts ln whlch the Middle Aages, because of the slmplo fact that the.v were Chrl3 tlou, surpass'ed tha brlillant pf-gan clvllization of thf past; and t.iere are soir.e po'nts in whlch thf clvll 'fnlon that succeeded them has sui:;c jt'iw tho level of the ages whlch saw such mlghty masterpleces ot poetry, of archltecttrre especlally cathedral archltecture and of serene splrltual and forceful lay leadershlp. But they were centuries of violence, raplne and cruel Injustlce; and truth was so lit tle heeded that the noble and daring splrlts who sought it especlally ln its sclontiflc form, did so ln deadly paril of the fagot and the halter. l'oinled I'iir.taraph'i. Even the honest pretzel ls crooked. It ls only the expected that failn to happen. Every body Is selfflsh wlth the ex ception of yourself. How people do like to ask questlonn you cannot answer! A compllment that Isn't exaggerat ed seldom makes a hlt. The uncertalntles ot the strenuous llfe tnake lt Interestlng. After burylng the hatchet some men go out and dlg up an axe. And many a polltician makes his mark only by throwlng mud. It keeps the wife of a self-mado man busy maklng alteration3. Occasionaly a liar tells the truth because hethlnks lt Isn't. How a woman does hato to be told that she ls "well preserved." If you would please your frtends, keep your troubles under cover. Never judgo people by thelr alms; lt's what they hlt that counts. The man wlth a noble alm in life isn't always shooting off his mouth. lt's a waste of tlme trying to talk to a woman with her flrst haby. A gosslp believes everythlng 3he hears, and takes the rest for granted. How many do you know includlng yourself who really understanda you? However, the blggest price ever pald for a pew in church would not buy standlng room in heaven. Chl cago News.