Exeter Advocate, 1908-04-09, Page 2CIIRL NT TONICS.
The eiit engineering scheme of tee
day tn the tunnel to cross the Detre.(
liver Unseen Canada and the Cnitee
Stats. Not only is the scheme big
but ee is novel also. No experience di
need leen drilling the rock uiay L.
used. The Detroit tunnel makes an en-
tire departure from methods used in
previous tunnel work. The river along
the w'n!er front of Detroit is abeul cnc-
half mite wide and the section of the
tum)el tinder the stream will be 2.622
feet long. The depth of the river vents"
trent twenty to ferlyeight feet, and the
Current is awiflt instead of the tunnel
icing bored through rock and clay and
sonny sand rraany feel Below the river
bet a wide end deep trench Ls being
excavated and the great steel tubes,
how Leing built up in sections, will be
lowered into the trench. The problems
to overcome, tho difficulties arising from
the intricate process of lowering and
adjusting the huge sections in exactly
the right position, the joining et the
sections so as to be absolutely water
tight, and the covering of the tubes with
eone-rotc are the principal features of
the undertaking. \\'teen it is completed
a new chapter in tunnel building will
have been written for (fling away fn
the archives of the engineering world.
• '}/lf1e: the tubes are adjusted to their
correct position there remains much
fine work for the divers to do. On Them
devolves the responsibility of the joints
which connote the twin tubes. Work-
ing in the depths of Tho open trench
with nearly eighty feet of water over
them, the divers crawl under the tubes
and examine carefully all bearings on
the beams of the piling and insert plates
where needed to produce the proper ex-
cel bearings. The next operation is to
bolt the huge sections together so that
the joints will be absolutely water tight.
The accomplishment of this means the
greatest skill. The tunnel will cost
*8,000,000.
, Twenty million dollars' worth of rib-
bons come from one French town. Thal
h town 1s St. Etienne, wtitch contains
about 73,000 ribbon looms. The number
e,t ribb,n manufactories is about 170,
y1nchrding those of the suburban dis-
tricts. Within the last few years elec•
iric motor power has been distributed
'snot only to Ilio largo ribbon factories
of the region, but also to evey weaver
who works at home. hitherto the
weavers, who generally possess from
two to three looms, did all the work
spy hand, but now -a -days hand -made
ribbons may be considered a work of
The pest. The output has consequently
increased and the wages are a little bet -
than some years ago. One reason
eater gt. Etienne Leing prominent as a
ribbon mnker Ls that its water Is che-
mically ically pure and excellent for dyeing
purposes, producing to perfection tho
delicate torts. The second reason is
that the weavers are artists in their
trade. (landed down from father to
se n. all the secrets of the Industry, the
delicate mnnipulatinn of the threads on
the looms. and the various conrbinatie,ns
cf the design lo obtain the most artis-
tic effects are mei will remain the dis-
theitiv'e features of the St. EUnenne. rib-
rl�c n making. The weavers are sober,
inte'ligent men; absorbed In their trade
and occupying ecceptionolly neat homes
with three rooms apiece, one big room
far three looms, one combination kikli-
en, dining room, and bei chamber,
and the third n bed chamber proper
fielding the choicest household effects.
AmYram
11 may be a paradox In mechanics,
but in philanthropies It seems to be
true that the heart expands under pres-
Ohre. At any rale that has leen (he
result In Engtand, where the sum) given
1•i charities and religious enterprises
hat increased considerably in the last
(kende. in this period the population
inerrneed 10 per cent; the sum given,
+ti per cent. in 1896 the Intal income
t the chief tnstilutione supported by
ere lunlary gifts was S10.000.000. It is
!now over $10.1100.000, Ilequeas to hog -
/Mali and missions me said to have
keeme far more ceenn. n and the grtiss
total t 1 tenementary gifts has increased
greatly.
'I lie :nese of this grow Ih and acCc!t'ra-
1 :+ • 1 the slrenn, of beneficence. which,
t• •,..', • r _ 1•nglan.Fs great wealth, has
• • ;, • ere helmin;t. ani; era•
erg. 11 r: ..el en) rii:eIhcr illustra-
t • n t r • •"\J►erlising pays...
1N
• - t4 met of chat•il:ea and
in .1 t11 ie,n1., have g•racpi',I
11.. 1 elm, naw: in 1•usinr.s pnye
1•i the le.s,neot e.dk of charily. Thee
1,nve nr erding'y organ:rc•1 Ilij'ir rc-
spe;.•►ive pml,agatele ami their mach:n•
cry ..f eppen', one They have Lunde use
♦ f the Herons of pi:hli, icy. Thr, hasten
weer pr.,rnpf rine subslnnlinl, It :>
iron Jelin Ruli has trgun 1•. gri m..i,'e•.
and there k ce.ne eeilit (lint "charity is
14;ng (wrt•11•;Ce.' Pell the udders c1 Lie.
nee -lento ere lr .ng m;1kc;1 1 ) 1'::.1.
A r'ae1:ver to predl.:htl, teeeciaity ns
gilt uieneese 11! textile 11 it a .h.leng fact.
PROGRESS OF SCIENCE, STORY OF THE ORANGE
NO11tt1.1: A(.ltl\'E\tENTS DIILING
THE PAST 1'EAIt.
Mostly Along Ihauticel Lincs—Engin-
eeriug, l'hy sics, Photography,
Chemistry.
There has been little sensational to
mark the progress of s^.ience during
the last twelve months. The attention
et the public has been chiefly. directed
towards principles, or, rather, to the
practical utilization of instruments al-
1eady designed.
Thus, considerable interest hos al -
Melted to Dr. Schtick's successful de-
rronstration of the steadying action
of a gyrosoofe on the rating of a ship
at sea; to Mr. Brannan's woreing rnod-
cl of a nwno-railway, which owes leo
stability attained in the cars to the pre-
sence senrevolving In
co of two gyros epos revel i g
gpposite directions; and to the success-
ful installation by !Marconi of a trans-
Atlantic wireless telegraphy tipparatus.
Among other notable instances of ap-
plied science are achievements such as
the wireless telephone, the new instru-
ment for transmitting pictures and
photographs Ly telegraphy, and tho
building of the Lusitunia and• Maure-
tanta. which have succeeded in reduc-
ing the tinio record of truus•AtlanUO
travel.
REVOLUTIONARY /Hee:m'EBIES.
in pure theory, the experiments of
Sir William Ramsay on raelum phee
ncmenr and his expressed belief that
he has succeedel in accomplishing the
translnutalton of elements have fascia -
Med those who are at all interested in
tho constitution of matter. The results
which are expected from the work that
Ls now being done on a comparatively
large amount of radium salt at Vienna
are being awaited with very greet in-
terest.
It will be remembered Ihnt nmong
other claims, Sir William Ramsay be-
lieves that he has succeeded in degrad-
ing the copper in a solution of copper
sulphate into the first member of Its
group, lithium, end also into sodium
by subjecting it to the Influence of ra-
dium emanation.
The question of atonic disintegra-
tion is receiving greater attention year
by year, end the results obtained from
a mass of laborious research are of
very great theoretical Importance. A
number of workers even urge that such
well-established doctrines as the inde-
structob!lity of matter and of energy
should be definitely abandoned.
BACTERIOLOGY.
The. bacteriologists can claim the
heartiest recognition for their valuable
work in Malta. The abandonment cf
gents' milk as an article of diet by all
Europeans has entirely eliminated
Maltese fever. anal made the island one
of the healthiest and most popular sta-
tions in the Mediterranean. \lore evi-
dence has been brought to show that
the rat flea is responsible for the dis-
semination of plague in India; know-
ledge has been accumulated on sleeping
sickness; advance has been made in its
early dlagmosis, and experiments are
being conducted in the hopes of discov-
ering a remedy.
Antimony Ls one of the latest drugs
that have been employed. 11 has been
shown that typhoid bacilli may remain
dc.rntnnt for several years in a person
who has sulfere1 from the disease, and
an epidemic may thus be started by an
Individual who has apparently long
leen cured. Anti -typhoid Inoculation's
being widely practised hi Germany.
BOTANY.
Botanists report the discovery of a
new natural order of flowering plants.
TWO 71U:ES IN .CA1.11.OR\Itt TIIF
l'AIiENIS 01' \111-1.10NS.
India is the Home of the Orange — •1 he
True Are Beurart.ably
Fruitful.
At U,e entrance to the tamed Mag-
nolia Avenue at Riverside, Cultfortuu,
aro to be seen two orange trees. Above
cif Trees these are honored, as the pros-
perity el a censelerubie portion of Cali•
fcrnia is largely due to these parent
trees. From those two marvellous trees
were produced directly or ind.rectty
the whole of the orange trees in !Bher-
e:de, trees which cover some thirty
acres of groves; in fact, the whole . 1
the Los Angeles district sends away
by rail each year 330,000 tons of or-
anges and lemons. These oranges are
thu famous seedless oranges, known
the world over.
Riverside owes its existence to or-
anges. Not much mere than a genera -
tem ago this town was simply the
haunt el cattle, and even as a grazing
ground it was poor owing to the ab-
sence of water. A number of progres-
sive men came along and thought that
the place could produce oranges. They
commenced digging irrigation cnnnls
and planting orange seedlings, but their
venture was a complete failure.
At this time, when things were at
their blackest, one of the planters re-
ceived a couple of orange trees which
had been imported from Brazil. Thee
trees grew and multiplied to a marvel-
lous extent. They were without pips
and of excellent size and quality.
Buds were taken from these trees and
grafted on the stock of erdinary orange
trees grown from seedlings, so that in
a short time there were a number of
trees at Riverside which produced the
seedless orange.
FIRES TO KEEP TiHE FRUIT WARM.
The culture has achieved the peeper -
liens of an exact science- Water chan-
nels lined with cement are to be found
ail over the groves, which are irrigaj-
e.l at staled periods the whole year
round. To such a degree is the culture
curried that the growers even go so
lar as to provide warm fires to keep
the groves at a good temperature when
the surrounding districts are at freez-
ing point.
Tho fruit Is picked during the win-
ter months mainly by Japanese. The
produce Is taken to the packing house,
where the oranges aro cleaned. separ-
ated into various classes, covered with
tissue -paper wrappers by means cif
ranr•ellous machinery, and packed into
cases.
The' Los Angeles neighborhood de-
spatches 200 truck loads of oranges
daily throughout the picking season.
Orange trees are remnrkably fruit-
ful. in fact, a tree 20 feet high, occu-
pying n spnce of little more Ihnn 12
feet in diameter, may yield from 3,0(10
to 4.000 oranges in n year. There is
one tree In Florida which has freluent-
!y yielde;l 10,000 oranges in a single
season. The tree lives to an age of
100 to 130 yenrs, and the young are
less productive than the old.
India is the borne of the orange, and
thence it spread into Western Asia and
Europe. it grows in all parts where
the climate is warm enough. thriving
lest in subtropical climates. The great
orange -growing districts of the world,
however, appear to be Florida, Louisi-
ana and California. .
AUSTRALIA'S LOST OPPORTUNITY.
It is grown to great perfection in
Queensland and South West Australia,
but for seine reason or other it is not
cultivated there on a cc.tnmcrcial scale
torr competition in the markets of the
world, and, of course, it Is extensively
grown in the South of Europe, the
the Jullaniacae, which was determined most common of alt oranges being the
by Mr. Hensley, of the Kew Herbarium. Peitugnl or Lisbon. orange.
1'rofeieer Bottomley has succeeded in
inocu;afing tomatoes and certain cere-
als with nitrogenizing bacteria slinger
to baso of leguminous plants, and has
thus discovered a fresh menus of ad-
ding nitrogen to the soil. 11 may well
be that this dt_senvery will prove as
important as that of the three -fold sys-
tem in agriculture. irnpro►ements .
Importance Have been made by hy'brld-
iznteon in the sugar cnne and 1n wheat.
rnYsles,
physicists and cbern!sls have little
cf popular interest to record beyond
the work done by Sir William Ramsay
anti others on radium phenomena. From
n prnctical standpoint, however, there
has been valuable research done on
the elasticity of Iron, on various new
experimental atoys, on the strength of
metals at vnrying temperatures. and so
ft:rlh. Dr. Emil Fis.•tier has synthe-
eised a fr+Csh number of proteins, and
a new doctrine of wnlency has been
suggested. There have been further
spe:ulntons on the censlitution of the
ether.
The carthqua!:es in Jamnlca, \lexioo,
Turkestan and Calm, is have added new
materinl for se:smolt-Teed research.
Photography con1innes to develop,
and Mr. Powric has t.mught cut a
eine color process, which enables a
colored phetograph to be Inken by n
s'ngle exposure. The use of the cad-
mium (ultra violet) spark• e111• it ap-
pears. wake it pn.sible to obtain ex-
act photograph of aura-nicuos. )lo
(objects,
The statement 'wide be Professors
rester and /.diel that radium emnna•
sen to present in The fire damp ct
1
cin ;three e•
inn n n at n
wheel it
11x to
Ini M
tight timet that which is found In the
onetime. air of tient alines wi11 prove
rf anent,. eoeciatly it it ie eonfirnlr,I
h)' subcerpteitt olserverQ. In that ease,
the go'd-'el N1ice:'•cope r;auld be -
c: men part t.t til.• (r,rinarw equipment
i of n mine, mei ►ixutd nt cnec reveal
the pree encs of danger.
NEW :\rilllNee
c. i.ent fi, npp,ianees are 51 imperl-
Tee te the rely inr,'ment tet science Met
►t, arekiey is ne•'r..ary for mention.
►ee c
in ter . seI of the then.
iridium
F
nut r 1 fisted sit 'lin that have leen
tnnnul:r•turtei in Great llritne) during
the last year.
Prehnbly the favorite oranges me
these frum Sn, Michael's and from Mat-
ta. though these oranges cannot com-
pare to the Mandarin from China, and
It, naval from South America; these
latter are nearly double the size of the
crdinory orange. Tire oranges intend-
ed for the export market are always
gathered bef.,re they arc ripe.
The China orange Is rece:v•ng more
end more ntlention; rl has a smooth,
thin rind, • and very abundant juts'.
Then there are rill manner et other
ornngee such es 1hc• egg, the bio: d, the
Ji,ffa. and the feedhise MnJorca orange.
The Mandnrin orange is a fruit which
rl much broader than long, and the
reel Is only very loosely altechcxl; it
la like the Tangerine.
A very curious description Is the
Kura-qunl. which ie obtained trent
Chinn, Japan. and Australia; this ciri-
mrs orange is little bigger than a goose -
hurry. The Sewille orange used for
tnnrtnalndre Ls well known.
There are uses iter every part e t the
orange tree. from ranking medulr:es' In
.eter d-doides.
F.wentcoratineg Ara
etre 5111011 ger• nress orangesf bwhich
lath from the Ines are not wnsted. 'these
nee corketed and drie•l. and used in
teak ng liqueurs.--i'earson•s \Weekly.
TIE GIIAziPCD 111E IDEA.
"T•.mmy." snid his Iencher. "the
Words 'e,rciimstintial CV 'msec' oc: ur in
the lesson. I)o you know w hat circum-
stantial evidence is'.'' Tommy replied
that ire did not.
"Well. I will explain it hi you Ly nn
iao, Yooarusk
againstuat•atieanting apupknle,w inowe sehherve a•I. Sup -
IA u, same morning 1 sheaf see you
year seal with a bele: h •!d up in
front of your Mee. 1 Any nothing. but
I,i... ntly 1 go muni to %%here yt,:1 are
co. ng'. 1•e'i nee lenity studying your
n, Liu' 1 find that ;'t:ur lace is
, 1, what un.lt-r the rine, t 1 year-
..,`• 1110 core of a freshly eaten
0p!, •-•
"I should ',new. jun ne eel as i1 1
hod caught yen al t1. that d ; 1 •
Nein feting en ripple. Hill,• , e
n,ur -• 1 (let net Acre you do tr. That
••r v 4 i 1 0 1 tee
r t h h e ret m i n int
e •i
ii
e.„ , n•. eta 3(1. you think ys,1)
- •1 d trot it is 114 w?''
1 ma'am," s:r:•1 Tenure. "lies
t eeng aptiles in schuel.'
HOW CAPTAIN GOON DIED
1115 RASIINI:.'S WAS TO DLAMI: FOR
TIIE TRAGEDY.
New Manuscript Ulster) Tells Star) 01
Ilis .usage \\canon 113
u Sailor.
There has recently been presented
k: the l4i t.s% Museum a manuscript
veiuiue eel tied "dept. (oak's Inst Voy-
age, 1?;,i-t'. ' It nus written be Janice
Law. who, served under the {(real dis-
coverer, and mentions ninny ,r►lerestine
details not given in other sources. In
particular is Law's account of (:apt.
C',ok's death interesting. Giving an ac-
couut of the days preceding the tragedy.
Law says:—
The excitement among the native:
was great. no fewer than ?00 or 1.00(4
canoes and other small craft surround-
ing the British we.ssel; but ut first no
thing in the nature of hostility was en-
countered. On the contrary, the sail-
ers readily acquired by trading such
CGmu),dities as hogs feir salting, call.
and vegetables, and an "Entooa.' or
priest, even gave (1,e commander a
sueking pig as a pence offering. With
the sucking pig ho brought a piece of
cloth, and after muttering Borne incan-
tations ho solemnly tied it round Cap-
tain Cook's neck,
TIIEi'fS 13Y SAVAGFS.
It was not long, however, before
trouble began. and it was brought
about in the first place by the irresis-
tible. propensity the savages had for
stealing, or, as Law quaintly puts It.
!nuking use of their fingers too frees
ly. They actually "conveyed" a wool-
en rail from the after hatchway of one
el the ships, together with Capt. Cook's
key.s, n small boat's rudder, and other
portable property. Some set to work
industriously to rub off the sheathing
of the Discovery. rind, being dLscover-
ed, seemed aggrieved on being told that
their conduct was not permissible.
The immediate cause of the final
cetast. ophe was the trumpery theft of
n pair of tangs and a chisel tern the
armerer's forge. The tithe made off
In a canoe, and a party of men in a
cutter started in pursuit, while many
muskets were flred at the canoe by the
men on board ship. After this Captain
Cook determined to secure the king us
a hostage, and the narrative henceforth
Li: the Captain's death had Lest be given
la Law's own words. simply modify-
ing the spelling somewhat.
COOK TOOK iNI'1•IATIVE.
"As soon as he (Captain Cook) 'andel
(from the pinnace) with n body of nine
mnrines, he went to the kings house
and asked hint to go on board, which
the latter very readily agreed. lo. The
people on shore were alarmed at Cap-
tain Cook coming with such a body
t•! invite Kin' Oboo aboard, and though
the old king had got down to the beach
they prevailed mein hhn to go back,
telling hire we wanted to hurt him.
One of his children stayed in the pin-
nace waiting for his father a long
lime till tie was afraid. While KIM
Oboo was hesitating whether he should
gd, on board or stay, a man, more of-
ficious than the rest In getting hire back
to his house, ayes exceeding saucy, and
behaved in a very insolent manner to
Captain Cook, who gave him n load of
small shot.
CAI'T. COOK` SHOOTS A NATIVE.
"At this the native look no kind of
notice, but laughed. which so enraged
the Captain that he shot him dead
with a ball thriving a double-barreled
gun). This accident made the natives
prepare with their daggers and spears
to revenge the death of the intim who.
i believe, was an Areen. Had Captain
Cook carne demon to the Coats directly,
as he was advised, it would most pro-
bably have hindered s•)rne bkodshei,
but he wrongly thought, as he said.
that the flash of n musket wont.] dts-
perse the whole Leland. Led on by these
Ideas, he harkened to no advice tall it
was too late. When he got down to
the beach n man mhh(nd hhn and
knocked him downen►ven lli ea club on els
knees.
DASHED ON ROCKS.
"lie Immediately got up and rashly
went alone Into the middle of the crenvd.
k•llmving the ninth who he bent with
the butt -end of his piece. Ile relurnei
and was standing on the rocks when
anther came behind him. and stabbed
hire in the small of the back. which
threw hitt into tete water, not being
nhle to swim. The rnlet)e. geeing lilts.
I11511e1 on with great (ngerness to the
merino. and killed heti •. the other five.
firing away (heir (.)rot. were forced to
swim off to the beide. leaving their
arr.1e behind Item.
'the natives pulled ('n;.loin (o•,k ung
ten choir. and dashed his head against
the rocks. and stnt•hc.f him in different
pinces. though nt the 'nme lime our
peep& were firing nt them from the
Lento Out of the five mar:nee thea
%went elf two were unhurt. The pert-
cnnnt rcreived a slight wound. either
with n stens or dagger. en the left
meander, the M'rgw•nnt iwo. one en the
Ihiµh enether un 1110 head.
"The left :The remaining mann was
H private who Muhl not swim. beside,
fleeing n fractured skull. and would
have suiik end net the lieulennnt jump.
el trait of the !tont and saved him. 11
veemn1 the nntivec were net Ign•rnnl
of our inlcnGons. as while the •,1,1 kine
e v
elht'r r ►► .1
wed 1 ,
was hesitating u Rd t.
en hoard or slaw n man made nn effe r
In Mme the lieutennnt of marine.: voile
en iron .pike, al which the latter. nt
f nptn:n C. eh s enters. reeled him
bathe'
Wee COOK TO ill. \Me ^
11 will 1 e cern that hew. w'' :^ show.
nc, eremite against Ca.l'1•.in (.reek.
,:nly ,-onvews the imnressi':n Ihnl
t .nd fate might haw: ream everted
1.. i he .liyelnved neer !net and r+nti-
. r • .
Whorl the writer e.,n?ec 1) ("Md.
. r the tneneuree of rrlali claim for
car man ut•re resew -4104e hr •1 ec Fee
he5ilnte le .IrannI '11 t "nest
brutal." and Ag me of the c1, r'e: he I, l'':
nor certainly of a most hatro'.win;
character..
THE MORAL OBLIGAT'ON
Tho Test of Any Act Is Its Fruitage on
Other Lives
For. nbri., e of tis livclh to hUnself.'—
Ib"n: xt►•7.
Not ellen do men gnestfon that eter-
nal "ought" each one finds within his
Lrcast; but we do question other au-
thorities which would legislate over our
conduct. Why should 1 do these things
that others hell me are the right things;
witat !eget have they to determine eon-
uuct fur meet
Sometimes our questionings go deep-
er Wo ask, \\'hat is this obligation
or, rno to do the right, to bo good and
true, to sacrifice and even suffer in or-
der to satisfy certain demands, either
written written or expressed without?
What Ls 'medley more titan conven-
tien? Iles it any greater authority than
that of custom?
Certainly the moral Imperative is not
due to authority vested in any code
which may express or specify forms of
its application. The tact that courses
of conduct may be set down in writ-
ing or may have the sanction 'of long
usuge and many indorsements does net
furnish sufficient guaranty that they are
binding on us.
TIIE TEN COMMANDMENTS
are to be obeyed not because they are
written nor even because they are sal:l
to havo been Inscribed by the finger
of the Almighty. They have been the
Ian' of life for millk,ns because the pro-
cess of living discovers them, because
they are written on our hearts and our
consciences answer back to them assert-
ing their eternal verity.
These laves are to be obeyed because
they are laws. principles, modes of ac-
tion which are essential to the welfare
of the human and the social order.
Morality does not grow out of them;
they do but give voice to the unchang-
ing principles of morality which exist-
ed long before them.
The moral obligation is on account of
the moral order of the universe. Ilene
w•c are in a world working out htgh
purposes. ends which cannot be achieved
at random. Life must kllow law or,
fighting against, it locomes extinct.
What the laws el pity -..s aro in 1440
natural vvorW, so in the wend that is
working out character ere an laws, this
principles of right, huruictldpus orderly
living.
Tho greatest foe of society Ls the man
who flgbsL.i against tide M . ial er.ler, not
the social order as it exi-sts, but the
socia! order or law of the universe.
wlto refuses to become 4 part of this
while, who says, I will so my way,
live my life, do as I please.
The great compulsions and persuas-
ions upon us aro those of society. The
great penalty hanging over the infrae-
tton of the eternal lows of right is that,
of soctal death. We are all so bound
together in this bundle of We that
NO MAN CAN SiN TO HIMSELF,
no man can be a law to himself; the
fact of the whole make% the law for
each.
1 Hurst do the right simply because
it is right, and it is right because 11
is that which will work out the highest
good for the greatest number. The
pharisee may live by rules; the right
life is guided by relations, by seeking
le live the life of harmony and helpful -
loss to all other lives,
\\'o are not so much answerable to
some great heavenly individual as we
are to the needy at our doors, to tho
weak by our waysides, to the faint and
the faltering, to the lonely and heart-
sick, to every ogler child of man. Wo
stand not so much in feat cf entries
made by a recording angel as of the
marks of our words and deeds on our
fellows.
Every other authority in religion or
in morals might vantsh and this still
remain, that I am a living part of this
great social organism. i am n part of
every othor being, determining every
other character and the character of the
whale;- therefore i roust be the best i
can be, must make of my life the best
possible, for the good of all, for the
gladness of making lite nicre and bet-
ter. I, loo. em come Imes the world
that men !night have lite and might
have it more ahunJanlly.
I YOUNG
FOLKS
c1
X000000 OOAoo00o0001
A MAGiC GARDEN.
Gertrude and Fannie played on one
side of the fence, and Jessie and Alice
lin the other side. It was a picket fence,
and so they could kok through it and
talk to each other between the pickets.
Jessie and Alice had a set of
paper dolls that came from the city.
'!'hey, were benuliful dolls, with dresses
and hats which could be taken off and
put on. One dress made the doll look
like an English girl holding a flag, and
another like an Irish girl, and the
Irish girl had the cumungcst fut pig
under her arm. Then there was a
dream that turned the same doll into
ail Indian, and still anther which
made her a Dutch girl with wooden
shoes, and a boeket on her arra. (erg
ti ude and Fannie's dolls were cut (nom
met/nines, and their dresses were 1501110
the gtrIs had made irnrn tissue -paper,
end geld lace which the grocer had
taken elf a raisin -box and given them.
Gertrude and Fannie liked Weir lolls
very much. and they had lots of fun
making cklties for them, but they
thought they never had seen any quite
se nice as Jessie arid Mice's. They
alt played happily together, but Ger-
trude end Fannie longed for something
that should be os wonderful as rho
dolls.
'They always have ulcer things than
we do," saki Gertrude one day.
"Yes,' answered Fannie. "Anil they
have such a smart kitten! Jcssio aald
that this morning, when they would
net kit it in, it climbed up on the out-
side of ble screen door and opened the
lei) with !Is paw, and squeezed through,
rad then climbed down on the inside.
That was pretty e-rnnrt. I think. but our
1't.ff ran sit up on her hind legs and
beg. and there are not many eats tent
wit: do that.,'
"N. , ide.ed'" an..wcred Gcttru,le.
"Rut 1 %%isIi.' she Added, 'that we could
have sem.•Ihing that would just rnake
them open their eye's," and she made
her own so thtg as etre said it that ran-
• %% n • Plunks' startled.
"1 tint wi.h vire could ostonielt them.'
They were not jeah its or cross over
11►e mailer. but they dkl love to surprise
peetple.
It was nal long atter this that Gcr•
Inuit. and Frannie recerv') a letter from
n cousin wbo 1 v r• 1 1-434 eral mires atony.
"i have been hawing sue:h ern." she
wroth\, "surprising people with magic
Cowers.'
Gertnt:le and Fannia put their bends
very close together at this. to rend what
followed, and then They clapped their
hands.
"Just the thing'" cxelnimed Clerinnle.
..\. �.►►• we wal have snmcih•ng 10 ewe,
J•ssir• nnI Alice, and won't they wen -
der abut Ili"
see they set nut to gather a bunch
. f the viler to which were 14 be found
µr..w;n;t in ribundnnco in a mnrshy
held they knew well.
About an hour Inter they rent nut to
the psie t fence and called to Jessie
anal .\l c•'.
"\\• uten t you like n bunch of v1n-
�e'%:'' u.k• d G•'rlrule, handing a few
thro::gh the fence.
"\\•yy• s,•' nn'nereel doses. in n
R rnr•whal eerprise'1 1. lee; and then she
5p1•I41 in gtrnit•r , i.rprise, for the
wt,ieh Gertrude handed her
w, re a nut.tu:.trade elf green.
st;e ex:Iaimed, "I never saw
green violets before! Where did you
get theni?"
"Oh, out in the field," answered Fan-
nie, quite as it green violets were a
mutter of course.
"Why! whyl" ejaculated Jessie, with
her eyes opened wide enough to sult
ev, ii Gertrude; and (hut was all she
scented able to say.
"They are magic violets,' Gertrude
answered, in a superior sort of tone;
and before Jessie and Alice could ask
any more questions they had turned
and run hack to the leers:). In the af-
ternoon they appeared at the fence
again and called, and this limo Fannie
gave Jessie and Alice each cluster
of lilac blossoms, and eacIMciuster
was shaded from the usual purple near
the stern to a dellcnle green al the lip,
while Gertrude gave Ihem each a spray
of yellow Rte's- 1-the•valky.
"1\'e ince started a magic garden.'
said Fannie, in an..wer to the questions
and exclamations of wonder.
"Please do tell us about 11!" coaxed
Alice. But Gertrude only answered,
"(h, is a secret.'
7'lic tent girls showed their magic blossoms
in the house, ton, and their Aunt Edith
thought the lilnes so beautiful end so
wonderful that she asked for a bunch
(u
weer. "Isn't it nlre," said Gertrude,
with an emphatic shake of her head,
'to have something that Jessie and Alice
wono."
B
Onder Uie otheutele H
end Altecabwerer talkinofg the earnesfencetly. Jr Andie
Then they called to Gertrude and Fan-
tle
",W 11 let you keep our paper dolls
all day if you'll tell us about your magic
garden;' they said.
Gertrude end Fnnnk looked at each
other's eyes a moment, and then they
turned and answered. "Ail right."
The pnper dolls were firelight. and
as they were handed through the tenet,
Gertrude Ari el. "We just dip the Llos-
swinw in ammonia. 1'ou cnn sere the
calor change. Our c•eucln wrote about
it. and we thought it would be such
fun.'
But almost before they had nnlcb.d.
Jessie and Alice were running t.,wttrit
the helm., to alert n mega- garden tl
their own.—Youth's (.,myenit,n.
\IIL.I.I\CRY NCJVEi.TIES.
B g black guts premise to be extremely
popular.
!',old oral silver pine ribbons can te
worn en taco gnrxlcn hats. •
Chrysanthemums, tulips, and dahlins
will be poplin:- in hat (rimming.
All It*e new opprr'ved French models
of hats are worn quite straight r,n the
Beed.
1Yereelein blue le a popular ,ring
strode for hale, sackings, milliner . end
even for gk,wes.
Some of the early hats aro ehrirming
in (their rombinntk•n ref eheeerfuhnesa and
warmth. A smell little Three cornered
arrangement in Brenn) ceiored cloth with
a knot el 'wow velvet at one side heels
In glare n hunch of snewdrrt'pe. violets,
end a high osprey of send") hyacinth
and jonquil..
lam dliammad•
t'\CEN'ORF.D.
"\Tarin," said Mr. Quigley. entering
his benne in some eecitement, ''I went
you to premise me lee 1e,r•k al the
puper.e for the nein lire nnonthcl''
"e\ hat for?' won:le►.ng)y nsked \lea.
Quigley.
I have just been numintl/ed Mr n
lentis (meO.' fr fnik"e1• "rent I don't
emit you 1.1 fin•! out Mite heel of e.
man I really are "