Business ciris TK . lnat Lack Staying OUalltieS Power By G. WELLESLEY BRABBIT OTS of girls have brilliant LI and so they work well I sfpvinrr nnuer jet J-"--" They can't stand by a proposition and sec it through to the finish. They work well when things go smoothly, but they are fair-wenther sailors. The least storm arising paralyzes their energies. In the same office there wero two girls who started work the same week. The first one was enthusiastically referred to by her employer as "a find." She was eager-eyed, buoyant and as quick to strive under approval as quicksilver to rise with a flame below it. The click-click of the machines seemed to act as a stimulant to her. How novel and inspiring it all was this great, new game of business! More absorbing than any drama. When others were around to tell her what to do and watch her she put through her work with zest and ability. But one day the boss staid away; there was no one to approve and commend her, and the work simply didn't get done. Neglected tasks piled up as they have a way of doing. Then along came a crowded rush week when the whole office was asked to stay overtime. But Miss Quick silver had other plans and could not think of breaking them. The other girl, who took up her work and finished it that night, was just a quiet, little mouse. The manager had barely noticed her before that occasion. She did her work quietly and with no effervescence of brilliancy, but with a certain bulldog persistency. When her work was finally done and the report in the manager's hands he was looking at her with a new interest. For he had learned that among all his girls there was one who wasn't a wonder, but who had staying power. That girl is now his private secretary, handling the most important correspondence. Mis3 Quicksilver is still copying form letters in the outer office at $8 a week and likely to stay at that figure. She wonders why at limea and speaks bitterly of "pull," but she will never recognize herself if she reads this, and no body is likely to tell her. Faults of Our Technical Training Schools By JAMES T. SMITH was secured and the school opened to pu pils February 1, 1897. The corps of instructors was drawn mainly from the graduates of our higher polytechnic schools largely from the Mas sachusetts institute and these were familiar with instruction methods which we could hardly expect to improve upon. With these were associ ated some experts from the mills and shops. The school is a business school and not an eleemosynary institute. These great institutions should have more liberal annual provision from the state treasury for maintenance. A boarding house or hotel could not depend for its menu on the supplies sent in by its friends. Grants to such institutions should be regard ed as investments, to be returned many fold to the commonwealth, am not as expenditures. Little Tots . . mem uui-Kcn uie uoor oi a place or Jcarn- tjent tO I ing until the age of eizht. School Too Soon By DR. LEONARD B. NILAND girl has reached eight years the results are far better. When they are started at such a tender age there is bound to be physical harm done, nor is there enough intellectual gain to warrant the other course. A bright boy who does not begin school until he is eight, by the time he is 10 will be fully the mental equal of the comrade who made his start at six, while in point of health the one whose schooling was deferred should be far in the lead. Loath to Think Them Thieves By CAM. THOMAS R. BRACKEN Cklcifo DittcUrt those near to them by blood ties were in deed the culprits. A man whose brother-in-law robbed him of $1,50C could not be convinced until the tlrit f was made to confess his rascality. Such affairs are more numen ut than one would imagine, but tlw pride of the party despoiled usual! operates to prevent notoriety and i prosecution in the courts. qualities they know a eood deal. up to a certain point, but they lack Citing as a fact that many of the fore men of our New England mills and facto ries are of European training, it is asked, "What is wrong with American technical training, and what are its most serious de fects?" The condition is mainly due to the fact that until the Lowell textile school was established and developed there was no provision here for complete, scientific tech nical training for the superintendencies of our mills. An act authorizing the incorporation of the trustees of the Iwell textile school 0 0 Instead of sending little tots of six years to school, as is the custom all over this country, it were far better to never let j-1 .1 I iV - 1 m i The child at aix is entirely too young to undertake the systematic curriculum of the public schools, it matters not how 6hort the hours of attendance. I have been studying this matter for years and have come to what I deem the sure conclusion that if the beginning of scholastic life is delayed until the boy or Of all baffling things in the world thefts committed in a household where no out sider could have entered take the lead. I have often been summoned in such cases and they present big difficulties. First and foremost, the one who has had his property purloined is loath to sus pect that his own son or brother or othei near relative might have taken it, and usu ally the loser is ready to fight tho detcctivt who insinuates such a solution. I have more than onco had the unpleas ant duty of proving to such people that CONUNDRUMS. What burns to keep a secret? Seal ing; wax. When is a ship like a tailor? When sheering off. What Is that of which the common sort is the best? Sense. What animal would you like to be on a cold day? A little 'otter. Why are hay and straw like specta cles? Ilecause they are for-age. What is that which is full of holes and yet holds water? A sponge. When does a farmer bend his sheep without hurting them? When he folds them. When Is the soup likely to run out of the saucepan? When there's a leak In It. What Is that from which the whole may be taken, and yet some will re main? The word wholesome. Which Is easier to spell fiddle-de-dee or flddlo-de-dum? The former, be cause it is spelled with more e's. What is that which is black, white and red all over, which shows some people to be green, and makes others look blue? A newspaper. What is the best advice to give a Justice of the peace? Peace. Who commits the greatest abomina tions? Nations. Who is the greatest terrifler? Fire. What is the best way of making a coat last? Make the trousers and waistcoat first. If you drive a nnll in a board and clinch it on the other side, why is it like a sick man? Because it is in Arm. Why is a game of tennis like a party of children? There is always a racket. What sweetmeat Is like a person pro posed for some office? The candied date (candidate ). Why is the printer like the post man? Because he distributes letters. What is the difference between a sun-bonnet and a Sunday bonnet? A day's difference. Why are an artist's colors, used in painting, like a piece of pork being sent home for dinner? It is pigment for the palate. Why is a sword like the moon? Be cause it is the knight's chief orna ment and glory. Why Is coal the most curious arti cle known in commerce? Because when purchased, instead of going to the buyer, it goes to the cellar. IS WATER REALLY POROUS? Experiment Tends to Show That Two Portions of Matter Occupy Same Space at Same Time. Is water porous? Our belief that two portions of mat ter cannot occupy the same space at the same time is almost shaken by this experiment. If we introduce slowly some fine powdered sugar Into a tumblerful of Experimenting. warm water a considerable quantity may be dissolved in the water without Increasing its bulk. It is thought that the atoms of the water are so disposed as to receive the sugar between them, as a scuttle filled with coal might accommodate a quantity of sand. "Sit" and "Set." Some one who believes in teaching by example has concocted a lesson in the use of two little words which have been a source of mortification and trouble to many well-meaning per sons. A man, or woman either, can set a hen, although they cannot sit her; neither can they set on her, although '.he hen might sit on them by the hour, if they would allow it. A man cannot set on the wash jench, but he could set the basin on t, and neither the basin nor the gram narlans would object. He could sit on the dog's tail, if the log were willing, or he might set his 'oot on it. But if he should set on he aforesaid tall, or sit his foot here, the grammarians as well as the log would howlmetaphorically at east. And yet the man might set the tail islde and sit down, and be assailed lelther by the dog nor by the gram narlans. Christmas In Norway. One of tho prettiest of Christmas ustoms is the practice, in Norway, of ivlng a Christmas dinner to the lrds. On Christmas morning every ateway, gable or barndoor Is deco ated with a sheaf of corn, fixed upon he top of a tall pole, from which it s intended that the birds should make their Christmas dinner. CIRCULARITIES. The Circle Children's Circle Cat U very nice and good. She never quarrel, but behave Exactly uh die should. And with the Circle dog and pig She plays for day and day, Ami hIiowr her Clr-culnr-l-ty In very many way. BETSY ROSS PAPER TRICK Cutting Five-Pointed Star of Freedom with One Clip of a Pair of Self sort Best Way of Solving. As the Betsy Ross trick of cutting five pointed star with one clip of a pair of sclHsors has never been Intelligent ly presented, I will endeavor to show how it was explained to me In my early youth, sayB a writer in People's Home Journal. I wish it to be known that I was born in close proximity to that little house on Arch Htreet in Philadelphia whero Betsy Ross showed George Washington and Rob ert Morris how to design the five pointed star of freedom. There are several ways of perform lng the feat, but I consider the follow ing to be, the best and most easily Betsy Ross Trick. described. Take a rectangular piece of paper, say five by three and a half Inches, and first fold it double as shown In Fig. 1. Then fold on a line from the center A to the two cor ners, folding the corner marked B forward and the corner C backward, as shown in Fig. 2. Now fold the pa per on on a line from C to the center point A, so as to bring the edge D parallel with the line B as shown in Fig. 3. Then fold the end E. back ward, bonding it on the line from B to the center point A so the paper will be folded as shown in Fig. 4. Now cutting a straight clip from F to G, it will produce a five-pointed star when unfolded. QUAINT STORY WITH MORAL Wise Pupil Who Profits by Instruc tion Is Delight of the Master Unique Test. The far east abounds in quaint little stories, each leading up to one of those moral epigrams which seem so to de light the hearts of all races. Here is the story of the "Two Pupils," whose moral, which you will read again when you have finished the story, is, "A wise pupil who profits by instruction is the delight of the master." In a certain great city there dwelt an aged phllopsopher who had two fa vorite pupils. The day came at last when he was to part with them, for, as young men will, they were deter mined to travel and see something of the world. In order to settle a doubt In his mind as to which had most prof ited under his instruction, the sage gave to each youth a sum of money. "Go buy with this money something that shall fill a whole room," he said. One pupil hied him to the market, where he purchased a quantity of straw. This he had taken to his room, which it nearly filled. Next morning, he invited his master to call and see what he had done. "Not bad! Not bad!" commented the wise man, when he had glanced In at the door. Then, turning to the other pupil, who had accompanied him, he asked: "And what have you bought with your money?" "Master, if it please you, I have got only a small lamp and somo oil. The light of this lamp, however, will fill the room In the dark evening hours. By this means we may continue our studies after the day 1b done, when we wish to do so." "Bravo! Bravo!" cried the delighted sage. "Now, Indeed, art thou fit to go Into the world! And he Judged that the purchase of the second pupil was the wiser. Flower Tells Church Time. Flowers are frequently put to fanci ful and pretty uses, but one of the prettiest is to be found in the FIJI islands, where a flower tells the peo ple when to go to church. Try to Imagine a sweely smelling blossom (it is called the Bauhnla), which expands Its petals In the early morning, whilst It is cool and pleas ant, before the sun's rays become powerful. The missionary watches this flower, and Just as It opens, instead of ring ing a bell he beats a wooden drum, and presently by twos and threes and in quiet groups the islanders are seen coming to church. 7 (T Midnight s Mistletoe Bough By Dcltr.a Martccn Eugones OOD inawnin', Mist' Robert! Fine Christmas weather, sah! Fine Chris line " Cameron bluntly lgnorod the cheerful greeting and , the newspaper which Mid night, tho colored newsboy, hold out for him, and walked on briskly down the street, his gazo directed toward tho pavement. Mldinght tumbled back against his news-stand, a queer expression of be wilderment and sadness spreading over his face. "Dat's de firs' time dat Mist' Cam'ron cvah done buy a pupah from somebody else," he soliloquized, a lump gathering in bis throat. "Dat's de ilrs' time ho cvah pass mah place wldout saytn' 'Good mawnln'.' He ain't nevah got no kick an' no com plaint t' make t' me. Dat'a de firs' time Ah evah see hlin go bustln' by like dat an' so cogltatln' ho ain't lookln' whar he gwlne. Dah am sholy somethin' de muttah." All the rest of the day Midnight was In a sort of a trance. He watched the elevated stairway from early after noon for the return of Cameron. His fitful vigil was rewarded when the young lawyer walked wearily down the steps. Midnight watched his every move Jealously to see whether he purchased an afternoon papor from his rivals. Cameron stopped at the little negro's stand. "Good evening, Mldrlght," he said, languidly. "Merry Chrlstmus, Mist' Cam'ron. De world am treat In' me fine as silk, an' Ah ain't got no complaint f make t' no one," returned the boy, bravely, Half Unconsciously the Two Young Persons Reached for tht Bough. concealing the anxiety that had been overshadowing him all day. "Yas, sah," said the lad aloud to himself after Cameron had passed on toward his home, "dah am sholy some thin' do mattah but it ain't me!" Midnight closed his shop that night in a happy frame of mind and wan dered off toward his home, whistling. He was around bright and early the next day, and when Cameron came along on his way to his office made it a particular point to see that he was not overlooked. Hours later, when the flying snow was painting the dusk a speckled black, Cameron came back along the sidewalk more slowly and uncertain ly than ever. It was Christmas eve, and Midnight felt at peace with all tho world. People were flying past, their arms laden with presents, and all anxious to be home. As he stood in a sheltered corner of his booth, counting up his profits of the day, he called to Cameron: "Mist' Cam'ron, Ah got a Chrls'mus present fo' yo' motha. Ah wan's t ax you ef you will como 'roun' in de mawnln' an' be de firs' pussen t' buy a Chrls'mas paper it's good luck fo' me, you know.- Why, Mist' Cam'ron!" suddenly exclaimed the lad as the young man came tinder the light, "am you sick? Yo' face am white as a ghos' an' you wa'k like you done git dls grip what ev'ryone ta'kin' bout Mist' Brown, 'cross do street hyar, he git it; Mist' Slmpklns, up at de cor nah Lordy, he git de misery so he sta? in de house an' dat lobely Miss Willoughby you know de one Ah mean Miss Helen Wil loughby not dat sister she come 'long dls ebenln' an' dough she smllln' on' happy like. Ah know ehe mus' git It, too dat mus' be why she ain't wa'k down de street wid you t'day an' yes tlddy." Yes f I I guess she must be feelln? a little under the weather," said Cameron, as ho turned away. "Merry Christmas, Midnight!" ex claimed a musical voice. "Why why good ebenln', Miss Willoughby. Merry Christmas. Skuse uie ro' not soein you, but ah done fo'got my mannahs, Ah guess, fo' de time beln'. Ah was Jus' thlnkin' 'bout de fo'ks ob mah fanibly. "Why, Midnight, you never told us about your folks as long as you hare been serving papers at our house. Are your folks alive?" "Jus' mah ole gran'mammy, an' she lib wid some ole fr'ena ob de fambly, an' Ah sen's her de money dat she need t lib on. Ah aln' had no daddy an' no mammy fo' de longes' time, 'cause dey bofe froze f def In de blur sard what come 'long 'bout six year ago." "How did you ever happen to coma here?" "Mist' Cam'ron done brought me hyar. You see, mah mammy been a cook an' mah mammy's sister a nurse In Mist' Cam'ron's fambly fo near 30 year, an' when Mist' Cam'ron com hyar mammy ax him f git me a Job some day an' den he sen' fo' me. He try me fo' a cook, but Ah guesa Ah'm a pretty bad cook ennyway Mist' Cam'ron he say one day why not staht a news-stan' an' he give me de money an' dat's all de hlst'ry what la 'bout mo but, Miss Willoughby, Ah'm glad you come long to-night, 'cause Ah got a Chrismus present fo' you some mistletoe, a fine big branch what mah granmammy sen's up from Marylan' git It offen de trees right in de swamp back o' de shanty. Ah wan'a f ax you ef yo' will please be so good an' kin' as t' come 'roun' in nde mawnln' an' buy de firs' paper, 'cause, it means good luck, you know." Hardly had the Christmas horns blown their first greetings of the day when Midnight saw two figures com ing down the street from different di rections. One was Cameron, walking slowly along the main thoroughfare, and the other was Miss Willoughby. "Merry Chrismus!" called Midnight, even before the young lawyer had reached the stand. "Ah hopes you la feelln' bettah dls mawnln'." "Thank you, Midnight; I feel all right. Here, hurry up with that mis tletoe and give me that first paper you wanted me to buy," he added, quickly, as he glanced up the street and saw Miss Willoughby approach ing briskly. "Ah Ah Ah doan know Jet' wha Ah did wid dot mlstlemtoe aln' Ab one fool nlggah? Ah put It right hyar, un der dls shelf Jes two mlnutea ago, but Ah can't And it," he replied, rum maging nervously among a pile of pa pers underneath the top shelf. "Merry Christmas!" called another voice, and Midnight raised his head and smiled Into the face of Mlsa Wil loughby, who stood at the other end of the stand, taking great pains not to see Cameron, who was striving equally to avoid her. "Where Is that mistletoe you want-, ed me to have. Midnight? You aee, t got up very early to be the first one' here, and you know you promised it to me." "Well, ef dat aln' de funnies' thing." replied Midnight, laughing mlschler-. ously. "Ah sholy had two fine pieces ob dat mlslemtoe right hyar, but Ah can't fin' 'era f save mah soul. Ah done promise dis f you, Mlsa Willoughby. an' deed Ah done promise it t' you, Mist' Cam'ron. fo' yo' motha, an' Ah sholy doan know what t' do 'bout it. Ah can't bus' it in two." Half unconsciously the two young persons reached for the bough, then hesitated. "Why, of course, let Mr. Cameron have it for his mother," spoke up Miss Willoughby. "Give it to Miss Willoughby," said Cameron. "Perhaps you will find the other piece after awhile." "Ah'11 give it V Miss Willoughby ef Mist' Cam'ron'U tote it home fo' de lady." The girl glanced at Cameron, and In another moment the young couple were walking away from the stand carrying the bunch of mistletoe be tween them. Midnlgnt grinned as he leaned against his stand and com mented: "Ah guess' Ah'll take dis otha piece right straight up f Mrs. Cam'ron mah self, 'cause Ah know dat piece ob mls tlemtoe aln' nevah gwlne t' leave Mlsa Wllloughby's house ef Mist' Cam'roa kin he'p it." v