PAtfflMHT (MF THE BOASTFUL PUG. Savings lAJLU Iy ELIZABETH McCl'I.LEM t . p j Business Girl I ! I Reaps Hicncfit J? of Pennies (j JMffS U r- r V J1K START niiiv In- ii small fj I is a ci:irt. An.l ii is worth ..,... tl ,-, ,v , ., in. pin away. .ii.t so n the course of tiim, t!..'.'jh it i- u.-ii! ik. s.vin ,.., . a.':immlrtttl. Wish lins inr a foiiii.l.itioii a i i I can .lo siuijft hi mlt. .-" lia'l Mivr.l $(Hmi l.uih lur own homo. A iifil! l..t ti .... .... i :.. ..i i iii. !. v.,-.-.;,;r a n" uh-h 4 9 ,"'lt "1 1,10 l"'"'c' an'1 1,,-,,ll.v liou- is hers almost iWakSmJ (leal-. Ill :1 few ,ar m.u- J... ..Ill I.... M .....:..).. ..... r.i. Hill HUM' jrulU Jill H I'iUiriM. The monthly amount she jiai.l the hulhlin an.! loan a-.-oria-"o!i is far less than she won!, I have ai. as rent for smli a house. She lias had the joy of living in her own home an.l fixing it as it suited her laney and she now has a oo. inve.-tnu nt. Many a girl eonld do the same. Kvery city is surrounded with pretty "Uhurhan place. I'.y a careful study of them, of their train and trolley facilities, l.y a comparison of valuations .she can find a dc-irahlo lot at modest cost. A huildinfj and loan association" will furnish the major part of the money for ImiMinjr the house. This had hut i?30 in ash to pay on the house. One should jio carefully to make sure of a loteirahle location and of a house that will cither rent or sell if the need .oiiics, for one wants her mmiey invested where she can e.ct an adequate return for it. Another husiness woman who had saved a few hundred and wanted to jret more than the small per cent, the hank paid hou;hi an inexpen sive sea.-hore lot and put up a simple little house. Mie gets her. vacation there ipiite inexpensively and most enjoynhly. And so far she has always, hecn able to rent it for two or three months during the season at a prolH aUo rate. She takes jolly little week-end parties down in the spring ond fall and altogether nets tptile as much pleasure as she does financial profit out of her venture. To work for some special oliject puts a lot more zest in one's work. To .-ee one's savings materialize makes saving a far more pleasant 1a.sk than merely to hand so many dollars into a bank each week and have nothing more attractive lo show for them than some figures in a hank hook. This, of course, is the necessary start, and figures are enjoyable things t0 think .,1,0111 when one is sick and no salary coming in. l?ut nothing oolite equals the delight of treading the iloors of your own home, which you have paid for from your savings or which you are paying for while you live in it and which you plan to make more beautiful as the months go by. The first essential is to make the start. Make the start if it is only ".'j or 50 cents a week. Chinese Patient, Plodding Diligent By MARIE GORMAN s;gn. .1 to them and never satisfied unle.-s the result is perfect. Thev are ttiirl, attentive and orderly, never ghing indication that they have any thought of us save as their teachers. Thev show appreciation of truly good work, I'le.jueiitiy saying: "This is a good lesson."' or "I like this lesson." I classify my pupils whenever possible, regardless of nationality, trading them wording to their knowledge op Jack 0f knowledge of Knir lish. They are given !esons to prepare and miles. they reallv desire to learn the Knglish language they very soon drop out, as they find wc are (here to teach them and for nothing else. I never use individual work save when absolutely iicccssarv, as it occasionally is with pupils who are working and who come to school at irregular hours. I do not believe the results are nearly as ijuiik or as good as when the work is done in c-ln.c. 15ut the teachers in the mis--ions are very few of iheni trained teaehcis and have little knowledge of the science of teaching. I do not believe any Chinese intelligenf enough to desire to learn the English language will make advances to his teacher unless piv.u consid erable, encouragement by her. us they are altogether too conservative ami lautious. They have been taught from childhood to treat their teachers with every possible respect, as they have a theory thai the teachers do much for their country, in that they educate the young and that well taught boys wilj strengthen the nation. PrODCk I 110 U "li,t,( I' l'0,,l's''; if "iav be y j excusable in Voting people, but even hus- fVagCS j ''i,,,,s "iietimes act in the same way. r I .Pettier lUr I tioilill MS Mother By J. J. McGRATH and those of (he smaller children. She has no set sum for her own; father and (he earning children expect to retain a proportion of tbeiv earnings for pocket nioiiev, but mother has to satisfy all demands and lake what is left. That this is a true picture will be admitted by those who ponder the home conditions of many families, and among tho-e who doubt it there will be many who in after years will look hack and say that perhaps thev. even they, did i.ol api'ivtiatc mother at her true worth. Unselfish mother are apt to make their children dlih l,v being too Ulciitivc to them. In t!; ir own inieret the children should be made lo pay mother's wages, pay them to her in money and allei tiuiiJtte service. The laborer is worthy of her biro, even mother! Father and the bov:, urn! Kirld should sie to it thai her po-ition is not too hard and that die fins a ttity lumi ot money mat iicioiil-s to iter, work than anv oilier member of (In- t'amilv. one. oiilv oil ccnu i uv,.i- linf it making Perhaps ilu next year a a suouro. a iniiMinu ami loan mort- Having had an unusually wide and va ried experience in teaching foreigners, I wish the public to know what my experi ence has been relative to the Chinese. Dur ing the la-'t year my pupils have numbered ome ,1(it) and I have had representatives of at least ".'0 different nationalities and of the white, yellow ami black races. I can honestly say that none have been more sat isfactory as to their deportment and appli cation to studies than the Chinese. They are not brilliant, but patient and plodding, working hours to prepare anv lessons as- How infrequently mother's devotion is unrecognized. Her incessant work is taken notices tins indifference, uninten- il nine lie mi. I it I. ' ' IM'I Mil,,- dcr why she should be so lightly valued. How is she paid in actual money? She receive a certain sum weekly or monthly and that is expend (o (over all the sup plus for the home, nil repairs and renew als and frequently enough her own clothes She iiuallv . v dees 1 iv '. 1 X -Y S " ! A " .i . . . "FlOWM THAT DRCATHC AliO Those who ouly visit (lift country at weekends, or other intervals, cannot help being struck with the fact thut thero Is nearly always n dominating flower; thnt fa to Fay. ono which In full bloom takes posesr.lon of tho land scape and attains a temporary inas;tery over ull others. On a comparatively small but definite scale, this Is wit nessed In tho garden. "This Is daf fodil time," we exclaim ono day in our Joy at bcoIiik tho ground become yellow with the bloomr: of Ihla lldvver. Hut In a little while "we weep to seo yen lmsto nvvuy so soon." Tho life of a (lower has long been used as a metaphor for all that Is most fair and transient. For a llttlo while only does tho fresh purity of tho color re main. Sced poda are formed, tho pet als wither, tho beauty passes. It Is part of a procession, ond In the very act of breathing a Blah of regret that what Is so fair should bo so evanes cent, attention Is caught by a new set of florets that swell out till they oc cupy the place of those that have faded. The daffodil, cither Ir. the mass or the Individual, possesses a kind of wlstfulness such ns might come from gazing from the outside of some Im passable gate over those fabled plains whereon tho ancient dreamed It grew. Hut tho tulip when dominant Is of an opposite character. An emobldlment of color without fragrance, It com bines with tho butterfly to show gay ety unmixed with sentiment The daf fodil la u romantic maiden, tho tulip a tripping ballet girl, exquisitely dressed, satisfying the tasto for color, but touching no emotion. How differ ent with the rose. "Age cannot wither nor custom stale her Infinite variety." In the rosary of the rich. In tho gar den plot of the poor, embellishing a pergola or covering (ho cottage walls, it tells the same tale, and suggests the same old song, "Oh, my luve Is like a red, red rose that's newly sprung in June." Oder and color and form all unite, nnd when wo speak of what transcends llfo, there is no simile finer than that of tho "unfad ing" rose. No wonder that Rosa Mun (11 Is a name of highest honor. Its mention carries uh hack to the fields. A garden close Is well, but "a diviner and more pellucid air" hangs over tho wild thicket and hedge row where the dog rose Is In Its glory. The wind blowing over grass and half grown corn when the wild rose Is at Its height, dissipates fie garden senti ment. It Is a dominating flower In early July, and so we appear to be talcing our pageant backward almost. Hut. Indeed, tho beRt of a rrocesslon Is not always to be seen from a fl.ied point. Instead of watching all the lowers of a season file past In order, as though they were soldiers at a re view, it Is more Interesting to take n bit hero and a bit there according ns caprice or Interest may dictate. And the wild sweet summer, as Wordsworth says, "flaunts" nil Its beauty on the wild rose. It bursts out on the thicket, it takes possession of tho hedgerow, It blossoms on (he waste place. Liko n million small and happy faces its buds open, till the earth Is glowing with their beauty. Yet tho fragile bloom will scarcely bear to bo plucked, and Its stay with us Is as brief ns that of the daffodil. Hut a very little while nni tho petals flutter down nnd the rank grass and summer's dark green reassert them selves. Of wild flowering shrubs there is nono more dominating whllo it lasts than tho broom. Its rough predeces sor, the gorse, only gives a taste of the effect It produces. Tho gorse fa always throwing out blossoms, but even nt Its best H. Is as bronze to gold compared with the great yellow mass of the broom In flower. On the Surrey commons It mnkes a brave show, but Is not so commanding ns on the jsreat wastes of (ho north, where It Fptvndu out Into vast stretches of Mazing and shining gold. In tho days of our youth old men remembered, or (J thrm their fathers had told them, the huge fields of broom, the hushes of which were taller tha the tallest man. dial ftretcf. over what Is now a'cul'lvntcd fk I ( r v k s J OS? MMS. " ana of hedged fields and red-tiled farmhouses where tho Cheviots slopu to tho Till. Hut those noted agricul turists, the brothers Culley, had more appreciation of the homely turnip than "the burning bush," and It was their grubbing and plowing (hat transformed a region so wildly pictur esque Into a fruitful land. What It was like before their operations b; gan may be known from tho appear and.' of the land that has proved Ir reclaimable. How familiar and yet how Impressive the broom was may be Judged from the frequency with which It finds a place In tho old bal lads. Long after Its petal3 have fallen to the ground In the south It contin ues In Highland strath nnd glen what time the angler penetrates them In search of trout. There aro several white flowers that sweep past like visionary clouds in the procession. First, tho "wee mod est cilmson-tlpped" one that spreads over meadow and golf course till, In the sunny days of May when tho nightingale Is In full song, they rest llko sheets of snow on tlm warm ground. Following close upon them Is that truly English flower, the haw thorn. It Is unobtrusive In the thicket and well-trimmed hedge; bat when the bushes have been allowed to grow tall for (he sake of shelter, or where In dividual trees abound, it assumes for a brief period an unquestioned do minion. The garlands of pure soft white It hangs out make the color of the landscape while they last, nnd the fragrance It diffuses has no equal, save It be that of an orchard when the apple trees are In bloom and resonnnt with (he humming of Innum erable bees. With the decay of the hawthorn comes a feeling of sadness. It was with unmixed joy that wo hailed (he early figures in the long procession. Tho maids of January whitening (he woodland while the trees are bare are greeted as heralds, cowslips In the meadow and primroses on the steep sides of the deno are still but harbingers. We have no thought of the end when (ho marsh-marigold shines like firo on swamps and hol lows gray, nor when "tho faint sweet cuckoo-flower" spreads nodding over the low-lying meadows, till by force of numbers Its exqulsito and delicate shape and color master those of its companions. Hut the fading of tho hawthorn tells of spring's enrly ex piry, and when the wild rose has blos somed nnd faded wo know that anoth er "pretty ring time" has been added (o the past. No other occurrence In the year strikes an equal note of sad ness, especially among those or riper years. It Is tho enviable privilege of youth to live In the passing hour and enjoy the mystic "Now," and lo be ever looking forward to some new dis covery or adventure. Hut as we grow old and lose our Illusions, we gain the dismal knowledge that the flight of time Is much more likely to discover ,1... .ii... , .. i ui. uiHiigreeame man the pteasnt.and we also become more keenly nllvo to the transient character of most things. We know that we also are only fig uies In a long procession of men wending from one dark point to an other, appearing as miraculously ns tlm flowers, nnd at the end, passing like them once more to "the soft amis of earth" our Mother. And he who realizes what Is meant by ages and neons of time recognizes that the dif ference between tho lifetime of a flow er and of a man Is Imperceptible. When you aro facing eternity, n day "Is as a thousand years." The Gatun Dam. 'The engineers find Catun dam F.ile," read .Mr. Jones from Ms i ews paper headlines at the other hide of the table. "Well," nhc said, looking up over her ubiK-os In p.-.incd surprise, "I don't know anything about the safety of (iatun, hut 1 think a faml'y news paper oughtn't to use such language in print." Man wants Put I. tile here below, i -yept ihu ihleri lie l.i.ov.., he can t get- GARDENER USES NOVEL SIGN. Card Arrangod in a Unique Manner Gives All of toa Branches o( His Trade. A gardener placed this cu.l in his window and said; "You will find all the branches of my trade on It." Can you find flowers, bulbs, bushes, leaves, f V D R O S U Can You Figure It Out? root, clover, weeds, herbs'.' You may move any way you please, says the Philadelphia Ledger, but you must not skip. The same b tier may be used as olten as you please. fingers' "handy "calendar: Unique Method of Recalling the Num ber of Days in Each Month by Aid of Knuckleo. "Thirty days hath September, April, June and November," etc., and many oilier rhymes and devices art; used to aid the memory to decide how many days are in each mouth of the year, says a writer in Popular Me chanics. Herewith Is illustrated a very simple method to determine the Jutr fty Dm. Apr. Now Mar. Oct Vtb. 9pt. tlerv -'Aug. A Handy Calendar. number of days iu any month. 1'laee the first linger of your right band on (Iu; first knuckle of your left hand, calling that knuckle January; then drop your finger Info the depression between tho lirst and second knuckles, lalfing this felnuitry; then the second knuckle will bo .March, nnd so on, until you reach July on the knuckle of the 111 tie linger,, then begin ov er again with August 0:1 (be flist knuckle ai!r continue until December s readied. Kach month ns It falls upon a knuckle will have :tl days and thoe down between die knuckles "0 days with the exception of February which has only -X days. HOW QUAINT SAYING BEGAN. Expression, "You're a Brick," Came from a King in Reference to His Soldierc. No doubt you have olten heard one man say to another, when he Is very much phased. "You are a bilck, old fellow:" Perhaps you will think it is a very queer things to say, lint I will tell you how such a saying is said to have collie In use. Many, many years ego a famous kin;; sent an ambassador to another famous king. The ambassador was much surprised to find that the king whom he was visiting had no walls around his city. In those days, of course, in order to keep out enemies, nearly every city was surrounded by strong and high walls. So the surprised ambassador said, to Hip king: "Why, you have no walls for the city?" "We have," said the king. "Where, where?" asked the ambas sador, luoro surprisciLthan ever. The king then pointed to his large army, which was not far away, and mm, ivim a smile: i acre are ine walls of my city, livery man you see Is a brick!" I . The king meant that an enemy j would have to th'fi at those soldiers! before they that Is, the enemy could enter the city. Unwritable Sentence. There Is one sentence in the line i"h language vUileh cannot be writ- j t.n propel ly, though It Is correct when spoken. Here Is the sentence, though, of course there Is no rule for writing it; "There are three twos In the linglUh language." Hut the prob lem Is, how Is one io know which (wo I or to or too to write? We hav ! the ihree twos but, we must nel i each of the three differently, so the I senttnre cannot he written enrrectlv. i The Feather, llaviiq; ploMil'i.l ii kiii. ill, flossy liaih'T i he players sit Ii a circle as closely tngeth' I' lis po.-.-lhlc. one of the party Hun ihrov.v the !e;.':"r a hluh as possible Into the air and it 1 the duty of nil th players to pre v.iji It tuna alighting on them by Mewing at It whenever It comes their ti ti ilon. Any player whom It lulls .pen must pay a lorfHt. Tin- lioi: HI I'll! pun H mi lMiXillK-KlOVI'8, And III a l.iiiil tone n,ill lir: "I'm i Lampion of nil the lit 1 1 - iIok; Will anv en.' !!;ir with me?" And Hie Midlife rat. from u le.fn pluei" "To Hnr witli yon I'll uniw." "Conn' ilov n on I lie ni onml, Men," "ill.) tile .lli;. S:il.l tlie .ill: "Voil t'OtnP Up In 111 trV" GAME OF TALKING AROUND. Interesting and Instructive Pastime That Will Test Ingenuity of Dcys and Girls. Hole Is a game (o test your Ingenu ity. One player must stand In a circle of others and ask some one "What do jou know about the inootl?' He need not necessarily say the moon, he run choose any subject he wats to, bul wc will suppose, lo Illustrate (In game, that that is what he has t hosen. The first player answers, foi instance, "The moon Is made of green cheese." Whereupon the questioner Hhks the next person, "What do you know about gieen cheese?" "I know It Is eaten with crackers," that person answers. "What do you know about ( rat hers?" he asks (he next one. "1 know they are baked in nn oven," it the reply. "Win! do you know about ovens?" falls to the next. "I know that they are blackened with stove polhh," Is the answer. "And what do you know uboat stove polish?" con; tltiuos the quest loner. "I know it lb blacker than silver polish," Is the re rponse. Now we have probably come to the hint player and In his answer he must bring the conversation back to tho subject it started from, In this case the moon. If he cannot do this before the questioner counts ten he loses and must be questioner himself. In this particular case when asked what l.e knows about silver polish we hope he has pretence of mind enough to answer, "I know It makes things bright at' the moon." Willi the next round the questioner :-hould he.'Jn somewhere else In the' circle so that the same person need not finish the game. METHOD OF SECURING LEVEL ! Directions and Illustration Showing ! How It Can Be Done by Aid i of Square. The drawing shows bow to get a levd by aid of a simple square that every fanner usually has In his tool house. Saw a notch In oik entl of a T-l 1 I I I 1 I I I H3 Using a Square. hoard, driving the opposite end Into the soil. Put the square ns seen in the figure, and by using a piece ol string, having a light weight attached, the leve' is obtained. NUTS TO CRACK. What are the lightest hats made of? Ol material thut Is not felt. What case Is the easiest to get up even lor lawyers'.' -The staircase. Why can a drunken man never drown? Hecausc his head will bo tore (o swim. When has a man no room for his dinner? When be Is 'filled with emo tion." What pupil Is most to be pitied? the pupil cf the eyi because it Is nl wnys under (lie lash. What if lb:' difference between a hen and a ship? the hen lays nn egg, and the ship lays to. What Is that which a selfish man never falls or objects to pay? Atten tion lo bis own comfort. Why Is a lost article like the fog? lifcmise li s mist. Why tin tramps walk from town to town? -Ilecause they haven't a ultimo- Idles. What is it that has a tall like u cat, ami has the same language? A kitten. Tired of It. Small Kenneth was celebrating tho anniversary tf bis birth. "How old are you?" luked a neighbor. "I tun four." replied Kenneth, "and I am glr.il of It. I whs getting awfully (red of beinu three nil the tl:n."