OaAWAKENIN STRENGTH Ifl HEELS NBA ,J-. Coiled Springs That Are of Much Use to Wearer. f V V V IV T OS 'M'- iVil"' ' I Bkomzc Lion at ONE ot the most striking Illus trations, to the stranger, of the awakening of China Is seen in the contrast between the fine new buildings of the University of Nanking and the old ex amination halls, in ruins. For many generations these halls represented to the Chinese their high est culture. They are located In the old part of the city and cover a large space. They were built In the four teenth century, by the Ming emperor Hong Wu, a great patron of learning. He codified the laws, and established schools in all the chief cities and towns, write Dr. Vachel T. and Cath erine F. Lindsay in the Illinois State Register. These halls, in general appearance made us think of stalls for animals on some county fair grounds, only there were more of them. They were in long brick sheds, the cells separated by partitions, and about five feet square, the slanting roofs being made of tile. They were intended to accom modate about thirty thousand students. Each line of cells was open to the south. A narrow board on the floor of the cell, answered for a bed at night, two boards across at proper heights for seat and desk, niches In the wall for food baskot and caudle. Each student was expected to pre pare an essay on the books of Confu cius, Mencius and their disciples and commentators. No original ideas or personal experiences were to be in troduced. There Is a high tower near the cen ter of this Enclosure from which the long lines of tile slied roofs are seen, many of them in ruins, alpjvergrown with high weeds, wild vines and moss. In looking through "A Guide to Nan king" we found one mention of these honored halls in the descriptions of "Most Noted Places," formerly the equivalent in China of all the univer sities In our East combined. On the same page of the catalogue there were mentioned 48 modem Bchools for all purposes one could well think of military, commercial, surveying, draw ing, naval, police, polytechnic, prison reform, law, normal, language, silk worm and mulberry, theological, Bibli cal, with many that Indicated special Btudles and Industries for girls. MoBt of these are established In good modern buildings in parklike In closures, with lawn grass, trees and flowers, and rooms equipped and set apart for their especial work. The Chinese are given to vocational train ing. They have an elaborate system of division of labor. They do not be lieve in a "man of all work." Confucianism and Idols. We hear a great deal about the superstition and Idolatry of the Chi nese. We were astonished to find In Nanking, and indeed everywhere we went, the Buddhist temples, either grown up in weeds, the idols In many places covered with dust and broken, or the idols thrown away and the buildings transformed into modern schoolhouses. Idolatry in China is largely a growth through centuries that has gradually developed from Buddhism, Just as we see all manner of fungi attached to a dying tree. Confucianism is not idol worship. In Us principles it is purely a code of ethical laws. Its fundamental laws are strikingly similar to the laws of Moses. Consequently a person may be a Confuclanlst in a general Bense. and at the same time a Christian. It is quite worth while Just here to call attention to the fact that Confucius lived about five hundred years before Christ, more than a century after the Fishes Which Carry Lights. Certainly among the most remark able of fishes are those which are pro vided with lanterns of their own and which swim around the dark recesses of the bottom of the deep ocean where no ray of natural light from above can penetrate. A model of one of these fish, notable for their phosphorescent organs, is on exhibition In the United States National museum. The Bides of the fish are regularly dotted with luminous spots, while, in addition, there 1b a large luminous area, like a lantern, on the top of the head. This extraordinary creature muBt present a singular appearance when swimming in the dark abysses of the ocean. In the model the luminous spots on the sides are represented by buttons of glass, connected with the interior by tubes. Firs Lasted Five Years. ! Perhaps the most remarkable be ginning and ending to a colliery fire was in the case of a mine near Stir ling, Scotland, belonging to the Sauchle Colliery company. The first shaft they sank was abandoned In favor ot an " " " 'ir- P&kino Gate Israelites of the ten northern tribes were carried as slaves to Assyria. We saw Assyrian art of that same period in the "Forbidden City," the part of Peking reserved for the rulers, in closed by a strong wall, and into which ordinary people are not allowed to en ter. We had a special permit and guides from the American embassy. These art treasures must have been brought by caravans, necessarily con veyed by slaves under overseers. These slaves must have been Israel ites. The Confucian temples In Nanking are preserved, often repaired. They contain no Idols. There Is a large up right tablet, inscribed with the "Laws of Confucius," standing on the back of a turtle, symbolizing calmness, strength and longevity. On certain days, set apart for' this purpose, in cenBe is burned on a table in front of this tablet, In Bomewhnt the Bame Bpirlt, among Intelligent Chinese, as we on anniversary days place floral offerings on the tomb of Lincoln, or the graves of our honored dead. Tomb of Tal Dzu. To most visitors In Nanking, the place of greatest historical interest In the tomb of the Ming emperor, Tal Dzw, a greatly honored ruler on ac count of his forceful character and the many reforms he inaugurated for the benefit of the masses of the common people. Nanking was his capital, This great Ming tomb is situated at the foot of Purple mountain. It Is out side the city wall, perhaps a mile, It is surrounded by red-painted walls which Inclose an area of about five hundred square foet. The visitor passes through three gates of peculiar Chinese architecture before coming to the Mnb. After passing through the st.oond gate he comes to a templelike building, high ly ornamental, In which is a large tab lot inscribed with a record of Tal Dzu and his achievements, an Inscription comparing him with his most distin guished predecessors. This tablet was erected by one of his greatest of Chi nese rulers, Kang list, when he vis ited Nanking, some time near the close of the seventeenth century. He caused the entire surroundings to be made magnificent. Up to the time of the Tai-Plng re bellion these handsome buildings and beautiful parks remained, but the" Tal Ping vandals destroyed almost the en tire tomb. Recently the viceroy of Nanking made some repairs, yet only a few traces remain of the former grandeur. After the vlBltor has passed through the third gate he sees a large struc ture with one opening In the middle. This leads to the edge of the tomb, which Is now covered by a hill of deep soil on which 1b a thick growth of trees. The ascent is steep. From the summit is a fine view of the city and surrounding country. Among the accessories to this tomb the most Interesting still remaining are five pairs of stone statues of animals, standing on either side of tho great road leading from the entrance gate of the park, perhaps twenty feet in height; pairs of elephants, camels lions, soldiers and priests, as the last pair of guards. Near the gate is a temple or tower with four openings, situated on a low bill. Within is a stone tablet, erected upright, on the back of a turtle. It 1b covered with Inscriptions of the great deeds of this emperor, Tal Dzu. It Is said tn Chi nese history, "This tablet was erected there as a Blgn of reverence to one of the greatest emperors that China ever produced. other in a better position. The riisimari shaft became the Becret headquar ters or a gang of Illicit whisky distil lers. In the abandoned mine works tney set up their still, and turned I out tnousanils of "drops of Scotch that nad never paid duty. One day, ho ow ever, the lire from their furnn set the coal seam ablaze and th ev hurt to fly for their lives. In a verv short tl me flames were pouring from tho cracks In the ground, liRhtinu un the whnlp countryside. Tho tire was walled in with mud. It took five years to build this wall, at a cost of JSO.OOO, and then It waB useloss. Finally they sealed up the mine, pumped carbonic acid gas Into it and the fire that had taken live yearB to fight was put out Klrklng. "Very gratifying!" said a young and conceited novelist. "A gentleman writes me that ho took a copy of my last work to read during a railway Journey, and as a result suddenly dis covered he had gone 20 miles beyond his destination." "Dear me!" com mented the young author's friend, "sleeping in trains is bad habit!" Invention of Kansan Scem to Prom ise to Add Much to the Gayety of Coming Social Affairs for the Young. The latest spring-heel effect U em bodied In the invention of a man from Kansas and consists essentially of a colled spring within the heel of a shoe. This may be covered with some flexible material to give the appear ance of the ordinary old-fashioned shoe. The effect Is to turn people into Jumping Jacks, and very happy looking ones, too, for it is Impossible not to smile with the wave-like move ment and think of bygone days In a swing, a hammock or a small boat, just large enough for two, gliding down current In the moonlight. At a recent social affair six young ladies were observed smilingly bob bing up and down like fishing corks where the fish are plentiful; and the Ish were plentiful, too, and quite ra- The Spilng in MCtlon. enous. Young men gazed wonder ngly at the bewildering scene, for .lystery always attracts, and it was mpossible at first sight to discover lie secret spring of enjoyment. Old jachelors who had courted three gen rations looked upon the scene and nid that nothing like It had occurred ince tlicy first made a study of the pposlte Eex. Finally, however, one f the maidens admitted that her .trength was In her heels, and the nyslery was revealed. Hardening Molasses. Solidified molasses, says the Louis ana Sugar I'lunter and Manufacturer, a attracting the attention of a goodly unibtr of scientists. In experiments nade It has been discovered that in he concentration of molaBses a con siderable loss of dry substance takes ilace. lu Java experiments were car ried on that showed that through the lllution of the product the Inversion of the sucrose was hastened percepti bly. When thickened to certain den sity it will not invert when heated to 134 centigrade so long as it is neutral or alkaline. It only caramelizes all ihe sugar and gradually diminishes ft'ltJi a consequent loss ot dry sub stance. The process of hardening mo lasses can be divided into two periods, before and after reaching the limit of concentration. During the first, in version only takes place with no loss ot the dry substance while in the laBt period sucrose and reducing sugars are replaced by pure caramellzation losses. German Colors. The German flag would he a rain bow if it Included all the colors of the various kingdoms, principalities or states of the German empire. The black and white and the eagle in the Qerman flag are Prussian, and in the staff-head corner is the canton, black white and red, representative of the North German Confederacy, which was established In 1867. The colors of Bavaria are blue and white; Han over, yellow and white; Saxony, white and green; Wurttemberg, black and red; Mecklenburg-Strelitz, red and yel low and blue; Brunswick, blue and yellow; Saxe-Coburg, Gotua green and white; Schaumburg-Llppe, blue, red aud white. The colors of Waldeck are black, red and yellow; Pomeranla blue and white; Daden, red and yel low; Hesse, red and white; Hanover, yellow and white. Sweat ef the Farmer's Brow. When It comes to reserving grand stand seats in the sun, the kaiser can not have a monopoly. The American farmer is entitled to a place in the front row. At the present moment our farmers are feeding 100,000,000 foreigners, They have all other aiders backed off the emergency map by the immensity ot their work. It takes about 1,600,- 000 bushels of wheat to Bupply waste ful Americans with their own dally bread. In some recent weeks we have exported Just about that much more to frugal Europeans. Aa easy sum in arithmetic shows that by the sweat of our farmer's brows last summer 100,000,000 hungry folks beyond the Atlantic are now eating their bread. I should say that nearly breaks a record for foreign mis sion work. Philadelphia Ledger. The Result. "Russia has done away with vodka, France has done away with absinthe and England thinks about doing away with beer for tho duration of the war. English beer, you know, Is almost as powerful as absinthe or vodka, any way." The speaker was an English pur chasing agent now visiting New York "Hut England Is very much attached to her potent beer," he went on, "and It will be very, very hard for her to give It up. At tho Marble Arch before 1 came away I heard a tub thumper shout: " 'Ah, friends, If all our beer saloons were at the bottom of the sea what would be the result?' " 'Lots of us,' a heckler shouted back, 'would get drowned.' " Concerned. Old Lady (to nephew on leave from the front) Good-by, my dear boy, and try and tind time to send a post card to let me know you are safely back in toe trencues! iMncn. heraBBERiJNTRY " Floating rubber Rafts T HAS rarely been my privilege to penetrate into more primitive re gions than the headwaters of the Orinoco, or into a land of greater promise than Is found along the upper reaches of the Gy Parana, bet ter known as the Rio Machado, writes Leo E. Miller in an interesting article on the rubber regions of South Amer ica, in the India Rubber World. The Gy Parana, it might be well to state, is one of the largest affluents ot the Madeira. For many years its lower course has been known to adventur ous seekers of orchids, rubber, and other natural products, all of which have been yielded in abundance; but It is only within the last few years that the course of the upper river has been thrown open to navigation of any kind. Even now only an occa sional dugout . ventures beyond the zone of pestilence and rapids into the land of hostile Indian tribes; but the way has nevertheless been opened, and within a comparatively short time this region will be giving up its fair quota of the natural riches that He hidden in the vast, untrodden wilder ness. The Orinoco is, no doubt, better known by name than the Machada, and at present It must suffice to give merely a vague Idea of the remoteness of its hinterlands by citing that It re quires approximately three months of travel from Cludad Bolivar, 240 miles from the mouth of the mighty river, to reach the rapids of Guajarlbo, far above the mouth of the Casslqualre; beyond that point the river is wholly unknown. At Senor Paraquete's Barraca. On February 28, 1913, I stopped at the barraca of one Senor Paraquete, far up on the Orinoco, beyond the mouth of the Ventuarl. The main building Btood on a high bank 30 feet above the river, and was occupied by Senor Paraquete and his assistants. Several large rooms were used as a venta or store and a fair stock of provisions and merchandise was car ried. On one side was the camp of the full-blooded Indian employees, Maqulrltares from the regions of the Cunacunuma, who lived in small palm leaf huts with their families. On the other side stood long, thatched build ings, open all around, with scores of hammocka strung from the posts and beams; these were the quarters of the natives Venezuelans and Zambos. In the rear, and some distance away, stood the smokehouses, completely In closed with palm leaves except for one small door opening. Trails led Into the forest from a number of points, and numerous dugouts tied to the landing indicated that work was also prosecuted on the other side of the river. Often, especially In the case of the Indians, man and wife worked together. Old-fashioned methods aro employed entirely. The trees are girded with strips of palm pitch at the baso which Intercept the latex and deflect it into a folded leaf placed underneath This system is rather wasteful and inju rious to the trees. There Is no fixed rule or custom for tapping the trees, the men hacking Into the bark at ran dom, but occasionally tho herringbone pattern of cut is used. Each mar. has two routes, and endeavors to have from 300 to BOO trees on each, teldom more, often less, according to the abundance of the rubber trees in the locality. He takes one trail one day, and the other the next, thus permit ting the trees to rest on alternate days. If It rains, the day's catch is spoiled, as latex mixed with water is worthless. The milk was weighed as brought In by each man at midday and cred ited to his account; In the afternoon the whole force repaired to the smoke house to work up the day's catch. A kind of wood called Mazarandul is used exclusively for the smudge, The cost of transportation between the Upper Orinoco and Cludad Bolivar One of Nature's Mysteries. Whence came the first globule of sap? And why? How has it pro duced all of the marvelous forms? Of all the curiosities and mysteries of nature this is one from which all things are Inherent and all things in explicable". Let's not call It protozoa or protophyta or by any other of the learned names but simply "snp" which mysteriously assembles its composi tion from the grossest ingredients of earth and blossoms forth at the be ginning of the real advent of the year In multitudinous phenomena of beauty, to the glory of nature. Sleep Very Like Death. All sleep is said to be the closest re semblance to death in life that is pos sible with healthy persons, but the win ter sleep of certain warm-blooded ani mals approaches far nearer the simili tude of death than any other descrip tion of sleep. Nearly every vital func tion is suspended. Heartbeats are hardly to be discerned. tsDlgestlon is practically ended. The temperature ot Ui blood Is reduced. Breathing is down the rio machado is enormouB. In the first place, the distance is very great and the river is full of rapids, necessitating long over land portages; all provisions have to be brought up, and the crude product has to be taken back down; there Is always a great loss both ways from theft and wreckage, and as there Is no regular system of navigation be yond the mouth of the Apure, the diffi culties encountered In securing boats and crews are tremendous. The headquarters of the Orinoco rubber gatherers is San Fernando de AtabapQ, containing about 100 huts, which is the only settlement above the Cataract of Malpures. In Febru ary the town was almost deserted. In May It was full of life. Numbers of people were arriving daily; there was dancing and gaming, eating and drink ing, day and night, and many a man spent his entire season's earnings in a few evenings. The sight was not unlike that formerly seen in the west ern mining camps of our own country, Representatives of the big houses in Cludad Bolivar, which had made ad vances to the concessioners, were there to see that they received all the rubber collected by their debtors. The governor of the department (Alto Orinoco) made his home farther down the river, on the Rio Catanlapo, near the Rapids of Atures. On the Machado the rubber camps are not abandoned during the rainy season but aB the floods advance stand Isolated above the muddy water, crowded with their human inhabit ants, chickens, pigs and dogs. Many of the houses are built on piles, and the water comes up until It touches the floor. Cooking and washing are done on the front porch and canoes are tied to the posts in readlnest for Instant flight If necessary, or to use In gathering wood or visiting the neighbors. Behind the huts, banana palms bend and bow gracefully as the current tugs at their bases, and a few vultures are usually perched on the roof. Happy, Busy People. The whole presents a scene of de vastation, but the people seem per fectly happy. If there is any high country within reach, the men may cut timber and collect copaiba oil or hunt for various kinds of gums. The gathering of Brazil nuts forms one of the chief occupations, and thousands of tons are brought down the various rivers annually. CanoeB are hollowed out, palm leaves and poles for new huts are brought In, and everything is made shipshape bo that there may be no delay In beginning the rubber sea son when the water recedes. There are invariably a few men in each camp who are famed for their prow ess with gun and harpoon, and it has been my pleasure on several occasions to accompany these nimrods of the tropical jungles on their long rambles In search of meat. At Calama on the Madeira, Just op posite the mouth of the Machado, are located the headquarters of one of the best organized rubber companies 1 have found anywhere during my tour years of explorations. It 1b the estab lishment of Asensi & Co., who started business 18 years ago with eight men; today they employ 3,500 men all told, and produce 700 tons of rubber an nually, besides large quantities of copaiba oil, tobacco, lumber, and other natural products. Their concessions cover the entire country bordering the Machado and Commemoraclon, extend ing Inland a distance of 30 kilometers on each Bide of the water. In addi tion, the concern controls large tracts on the Madeira. The building at Calama are large and comfortable, and besides living quarters include mod ernly equipped offices, storerooms, warehouses, carpenter and machine shops, and cattle barns. A resident physician is retained for the care of the employees, who are brought down from the camps and cared for when in need of treatment. hardly noticeable and, perhaps, the most Interesting of all these winter sleepers is the woodchuck, alias the marmot, alias the groundhog, which goes to sleep in its hole when It Is roll Ing in fat and while there Is yet plenty to eat. Then It wakes and often comes out In the cold of the spring, but If it be too cold It holes up again, and this gave rise to the myth. Disappearing Island. The most famous disappearing island In the middle ages was the island of St. Brendan. The saint for whom it was named was an Irish worthy, who Is said to have sailed, with a number of monks, In search of a fabled para dise and to have landed on an island in mldocean. St. Brendan's was be lieved to be visible at times from the west coast of Ireland, but it always disappeared w hen explorers were sent out in search of it. When one of the Portuguese kings ceded the Canary islands to the Castillan crown the treaty was reported to have included St. Brendan's, which was described as the island that has not yet been found. LIFE at a cable relay station on the westward course of empire Is loneliness sublime. There one watches day and night the swing back and forth of the siphon re corder of the Morse code, which brings to the cable hut the news of the world, Its policies, its pulse of commerce, and every dot which comes In from the Orient must be relayed for its next leap to the waiting Occident, and every western dash must be sped on ward as an eastern dash that the world may go ahead. That is Midway, a station on the Commercial Pacific cable. Few have ever heard of this remote outpost. Out at Midway is a vedette of civi lization, two dozen men and women. The sun glare Is over them; they all go goggled lest their eyes be burned in their sockets. Even variety has gone from their lives in the lonely exile; there is neither variableness nor shadow of turning. Also the wind is not fitful; all day long for months on end it blows from just the same corner of the horizon and the sand which whirled In yesterday's blast will dance the same endless whirl to day and again tomorrow. The rains will come on their appointed days; just so many gallons will pelt down as this day a year ago and the clouds 5 4. 7V- CABLE STATION will roll aside with strict observance of the calendar, Life is monotony; monotony stereo typed. Four times in the year comes a break. Once every ninety days the supply schooner comes rom Honolulu, with mall from home, papers and fresh food; once In so often a new op erator comes to take his trick at send ing; once In so often comes the chance for weariness to get back to land where things happen and rules havo exceptions. Here In picture and in text Is Mid way, outpost of empire, relay station of news, wind-blasted sunburnt home of three and twenty pioneers, But there Is no lack of those who would pioneer in the midst of the sea. At the executive offices of the cable com pany they will tell you that they have more applications for a Midway billet than they can fill. There is a five- year contract into which the operators on this distant post enter, but if the solitude proves too much for anvone on the island there are so many on i the waiting list that relief is always granted. Part of Great Bird Preserve. Way back in 1867 the tiny group, then known as Brooks' islands from their supposed discoverer, was an nexed by the U. S. S. Lackawanna be cause the Pacific Mall comnanv thought It wanted It for a coaling sta tion. The islands lie some fifteen hundred miles northwest of Honolulu and between them and the Hawaiian group Is a string of uninhabited islets that, together with Midway, have been set aside as a national seabird pre serve patroled by a revenue cutter to keep oft the poachers, Of the Midway group, Brooks Island Is a roughly pear shaped lagoon atoll entirely surrounded by a barrier reef of coral, with two passages sufficient ly wide to permit vessels of consider able draft to enter the lagoon. The atoll Is about two and a half miles long and varies in width from half a mile to two and a half miles, the greatest breadth being toward the southwest. The passages through the Children's Plays Changing. Watching the youngsters in the parks during holiday time, I have been struck by the change that has taken place in children's games. I hope I am not unduly pessimistic, but it does not seem a change for the better. Boys play cricket, girls seem to have no recognized games at all, and the Impression given the onlooker is one of aimlessness and monotony. Why is It that our boys no longer play "over buckle," "prisoners' base," "weak horse," "widdy-wlddy-way" and other like strenuous games which some of us enjoyed Immensely no more than a decade ago? And why have the girls forgotten "tag" and "ee" and "rlng-a-rine-a-roses" ? London Chron icle. Most Famous Spot In France. The guide books tell us that the Place de la Concorde is the most ex tensive and strikingly handsome "place" in Paris. This is entirely true, but it is only another way of saying that U is the most beautiful and impressive open square pos sessed by any city in the world. And TIKI .y,',ar-vj reef lie on tbe west and northweBt sides. The lagoon Is fully a pills afli a half wide at its widest and complete-' ly surrounds what little land there Is; it Is thickly sown with patches Of coral, which in many large masses! reaches close to the surface, but boalj channels may be found by Careful steering and there is no danger, since the water is always still. ! The land is found at the east side) of the lagoon, two islands each little more than a mile long. Middle Brooks, or Eastern island, rises to a height ot about fifteen feet, coral sand thinly covered with grass and low bushes. Lower Brooks, Sand island, about a quarter of a mile west, rises to the comparatively Imposing height of fifty-five feet; but what it makes up in altitude it loses in vegetation, its ooverlng of grass being much thinner. It is a mile and a half long, three quarters of a mile wide. Water is nowhere vlBlble, in fact there can be said to be no supply ot fresh water at all. Pits along the beach will yield water at a depth of about four feet and this is potable. As is so commonly the case In the Line Islands nearer the equator, this water Is sea water, filtered and sweet ened by percolation through the coral sand. One such pit will be found serv- JPX $6&?m' "'(7 ON MIDWAY ISLAND lceable in general for about a month, a brief life for a well, but matter of no great moment, Bince another pit may be dug to a fresh supply within a few feet Plenty of Birds and Fish. If the land is of little worth, the sea and the air bear an inordinate share of the burden of food for man. Small as the islets are, the number of birds passes all reckoning; one may mention a million merely as a con venient unit of measure. The albatross grudges mankind the room to walk about In, the booby Is as absurd and foolish and altogether well named on Midway as wherever found, the Sandwich tern is under foot and an excellent table bird, the bos'n bird and the frigate are found at cer tain seasons on their nests, and the plover and the curlew are in sufficient quantity to find their way to the bill ot fare. In the lagoon Is abundance of fish, cod, sea perch, the always toothsome mullet, mackerel and the gaudy coryphenaB, so brilliant in their varied coloring that to put them into the pan seems almost to desecrate the rainbow by cooking it. The tre pang, or beche-de-mer, may be had with no more exertion than that of picking its dark ugliness from the clear bottoms of the tide pools, and those who have had oriental table ev perience recognize that it may be made Into the most savory of soups. A delicious cockle is somewhat sparse ly found and many univalve mollusks afford a plentiful supply of palatable foods. In the crevices of the sea reefs which skirt the lagoon lie hidden many large crustaceans. These aw rarely seen, for their habit is secre. tive; but a pot baited overnight with somewhat high fragments of fish is usually found well filled in the morn ing and the size of the crustaceans runs rather higher than our best lob sters. They lack the strong claws of the lobster; they are more of the squilla type, but the meat is very fine eating and abundantly wholesome. this is not all. Within Its bounds more great events have taken place, more history has been written In blood than within any other similar compass. Here, January 21, 1793 the head of Louis XVI fell under the knife of the guillotine, the beginning of that long procession that ended only when the revolution had finished "eating its own children." Little Sermon for All Time This Is from Charles Dudley War ner's "My Summer in a Garden:" "The love of dirt is among the earliest of passions, as it is the latest. Mud pies gratify one of our first and best Instincts. . . . Fondness for the ground comes back to a man after he has run the round of pleasure and business, eaten dirt, and Bown wild oata, drifted about the world and taken the wind In all its moods. The love of digging is sure to come back to him. ... To own a bit of ground, to scratch It with a hoe, to plant seeds and watch their renewal of life this is the commonest delight of the race, the most satisfactory thing a man can do."