Hemingford herald. (Hemingford, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1895-190?, May 06, 1898, Image 3
i 1 UV . i "A " TO MAKE A MAN LOVE YOU. The Rev. H. n. Hawks, the most pop ular writer and preacher In the Church of England, author of "Music and Morals," has now written a highly In terestlng and very useful book called "Ideals for Girls," In which he tells them how they can best make them selves loved by man. TO TUB MUSICAL, GIRL. You have a llrst, second or third class musical faculty. The cultivation of sec ond and third class faculties Is the hope of the musical world. In these days, when there are thou sand" of nice girls who are lost In the crow of our surplus female population hardly "getting a chance" anything which makes a girl stand out and shine, as It were, ngalnst a background, any thing distinctive which draws atten tion to her Individuality, gives her a distinct Boelal advantage. This Is the explanation of all dress peculiarity, the wearing of bright colors, flowers, Jew els the passion for the stage the rage for a vocation skill in horsemanship or shooting or palmistry, or anything, in short, which makes a girl agreeably or UBefully or even oddly exceptional, and picks her out of the crowd; and the easiest way to acompllsh this is, un doubtedly, to stand up and sing, or, better, still, play the violin. Better? I had better have said worse. The violin mania hus reached propor tions which call for a protest. I have always said a beautiful woman, with musical sensibility, playing a beauti ful violin as some women can play It, Is one of the most beautiful things In the world. But you, my dear Constance, will never play the violin. You only began It at fifteen (that Is too old), and then not because you had a good arm or a suitable hand, or were particularly musical, but because you had a pretty face and nice flossy-silky yellow hair. That Is of no use for playing. Why Immolate the violin to your hair? It makes a musician wild to hear you; he even trets to hate your hair. The enforced attention a violin girl or a singing girl receives conceals from her that she Is a nuisance. She creates attention that Is enough yea, verily, and often too much. But Ethel, unlike Constance, Is not only pretty, but a musical sensitive music shakes and thrills her nervous system as the wind smites upon an Aeolian harp. She feelB spiritual analo gies in sound, and thinks she can utter only through sound. She dreams In spheres unknown to those who have not within them tho secret of sound, which is so close akin to soul vibra tions. No doubt, Emily, you have attained a degree of excellence which Is seldom found In this country. Your snare Is the "Sturm und Drang" school, Don't be the slave to technique It Is ruining music. It Is easier to be a fast than a feeling player. The great masters, like Liszt, Thalberg, Rubinstein, excelled in expression as well as In peace, but their followers imitate too frequently what, In fact, they are alone capable of copying the technique forgetting that technique is nothing but a means to an end. Study the "Songs Without Words," and the Mendelssohn concertos, now too seldom heard; but above all, seek to play In concerted music, string quintet, and quartet, and with the orchestra whenever you can. No virtually, my dear Emily, should make you too grand to be kind and good-natured. TO THE TIDY GIRL The grease spot on your bonnet rib bon has been there for a week, two buttons are oft your gloves, and one Is off your left boot, there Is a tear Just above the fringe of your skirt, and as to the lining of your dress Jenny. . women's eyes are quick, but men's eyes are critical. To many a man little danger-signals like a grease spot, or (dare I say) a smile disclosing two side teeth not quite clean, or an unstitched glove, or a hook without an eye, or an eye without a hook my dear, the re sults are positively fatal; for men are not all fools even when they are In love, and they know that a sloven be fore marriage Is a sloven after mar riage. ONE ENGAGED GIRL. Oh, that conservatory, that easy chair, the Intoxicating scent of those heavy big lilies, and those fairy lights! Could you not notice anything wild about his eyes? Oh, yes! you thought It was love. No, It was want of sleep and and wine but not want of wine, the results of too much; but he only smoke of cigarettes, "all men do," you said. That was nothing; he taught you how to smoke one It wasn't half bad. So, Jessie, as he was not a bit shy, and seemed very determined poor little fluttering bird you lay very still and very close to his let us say waistcoat, and listened to the honeyed words; and when you held your breath, and It came the proposal you cried, and laughed, and said, "Oh, Captain Checkham!" "Say Jack!" he whispered; and his hot breath was close to your cheek and made your head swim, and you said, "Tack," and your fate was culled. TO THE BIKING GIRL. What are becoming and unbecoming pursuits, and the reasons why? Lawn tennis? Why, excellent. It has everything to recommend It graceful exercise, skill, charming attitudes, curves of beauty, and (a pleasing and by no means a sup erfluous consideration) the employment and enjoyment of both sexes. And football? Detestable for girls. And biking? That depends. Nothing can be more grotesque than to see girls ape the grasshopper Btyle of the highroad "scortcher." The knlckerbocker Pari sian male style of dress has been so debased by caricatures In more than doubtful taste and suggestive compro mises, that I never wish to meet any knlckerbocker girl in whom I am In terested on a bike. Floppy and volum inous or carelessly worn skirts are also objectionable; but a tight-fitting bodice and short, spare, tailor-made skirt, an upright but easy gait, a graceful seat, and a good knee and ankle action, not too high, and you have at once a com bination of ease, celerity and charm, which no male bicyclists can rival or approach. On the other hand, Clarlsse, the manners of ladles on the road are apt to become horsey and brusque. What do I think of the rubbish talked about girls Injuring themselves by rid ing bikes? Why, I mean the unwholesome bik ing all comes from this chronic mania, hleh, I confess, seems to me to have seized upon you, Clarlsse the passion for aping and even outbidding men. Is it not enough for women to bike? Why must they bike like men, or as much as men? Any man may do on a bike with impunity what a woman can't or ought not' to do. A man can often overtlre himself without serious harm, not bo always with a woman. A man can "scorch uphill." and half the wo men who injure themselves with bik ing do so frequently from trying to Bcorch uphill the strain of the up hill action Is disastrous to the woman; but the man goes up before her, she Is not going to be outdone, and up she goes after him, concealing her agonies or exhaustion, and the damage Is done. I daresay, my dear Clarlsse, you would not care for me to give you my opinion about golf, fishing, riding, bow-and-arrow shooting far preferable and more graceful for lad'es, by the way than rifle practice; but let me urge upon you, my dear young lady, not to coarsen yourself by aping the men, and thinking that you score points by un sexlng klndB of sport, manly buttons, coats, boots, shirts, hata and above all, manly language. Men laugh with this sort of ,-;lrls, and at them but they don't marry them, unless they are bullied or forced Into It. The brn-tado of n cigar In the bllllard room only lowers you In the eyes of those who Induce you to smoke It; and the free use of knickerbockers, rifles, cricket balls, and manly coats do tho same. TO THE AFFECTIONATE GIRL. That vague dreaminess, that ardent Imagination, that warm but shyly af fectionate temperament which gives you away when you least know it, and reveals secrets which you would most wish to keep; the tell-tale color that comes and goes beyond your control, the quick scorn or melting tenderness, the little broken sentence that slips out and half reveals and half conceals your meaning, and the sensitive expressions which flit across your face like tho shine and shadow upon upland hills, and make It a very tell-tale dial of the soul that lcaus ond flutters beneath this and a great deal more, Eleanor, bears witness to character gifts and psychological peculiarities which are the sources of your power, but which are now like diffused steam wasted In mere vapor. Ah, Eleanor, If you only knew It, what lovely conquests what happy, aye, blessed conquests you could go through the world making, by placing that rare, sensitive, Intuitive nature of yours at tho disposal of others, In stead of allowing It to dissipate In vague and perhaps not very whole some day dreams. Yours, too, Is a presence whom the sick would learn to bless. You have, perhaps, never discovered what Guin evere found out so late too late In her wild and tragic life 'the gentle power of ministration" In you. You are not partial to sick rooms or to suffering probably not. Well, you will get to love them when you feel by the smile on the pale face as you enter, the grateful tear when you depart, that the sound of your feet Is as the soft tread of an angel o nthe threshold of the allllcted, and the touch of your cool, magnetic hand like the balsam of God upon the feverish brow. THEY NEVER CROW OLD. (From Freedom.) There are enoromous quantltes of liv ing beings swarming in the wnters about us, whose bodies do not die any more than our souls do. Human bodies die, of course, and return to the dust whence they sprang. But away down In the animal scale we And a host of minute and lowly organized beings which never grow old. They never die except by accident. Some of them have lived since the beginning of the world, and If they have plenty of food and are left alone by larger and stronger or ganisms which usually prey upon them they will live until the end of the world. All living bodies are composed of a highly complex chemical compound called protoplasm. This protoplasm ex ists In form, more or less, of tiny spher ules, which, according to their arrange ment and function, make up the var ious tissues muscle, nrve, skin, con nective, bone and cartilage. These lit tle spherules are called cells and may be considered as the unltB of which a living body Is composed. Now, when a body Is composed of more than one cell It is said to be multi-cellular. Such are the anISials which are familiar to us. But there Is a great group of anl- mnls which are no more than single cells or unicellular animals and which are so small that It requires a micro scope to see them. These are the an'. mals which scientists say are Immortal. When the earth had whirled around through space for ages and ages as an Immense molten ball of lire and had then cooled for ages, so that Anally a crust was formed all over It. Just then was the time, our scientists say, that certain chemical element carbon, hy drogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulphur and phosphorus were so wonderfully com bined as to make living matter or pro toplasm. It Is not necessary to suppose that much protoplasm was made then. Enough to cover the tiniest pin point would be sufllclent to have evolved every animal and plant which has ever lived. From this first bit of proto plasm, after millions of years, have come all that variety of land and sea life which we know at the present day. It 1b hard to realize that the elephant and whale began In this diminutive way, but there Is little doubt now that they did. But how could the speck of proto plasm perform such miracles? At first It was wholly unspeclallzed It had no organs at all. It got ltB food merely by absorption from the water In which It lived. Later a little body appeared In the center of It a sort of "kernal" which Is called the nucleus. This nucleus Is for some unknown reason an essential part of the cell, for no cell can live without It. At this Btage. then, the primitive organism looked like the first figure in the column. This Is a figure of a microscopic animal, which can be found In almost any body of fresh water, and Is the most primitive organism known. It moves about very slowly, not by real feet, but by Im provising feet now In one part of its body, now In another, out of the flnger llke processes. Into such a "false foot" It draws Its whole body; and then the foot becomes the body. Thus It con tinues, putting out new feet and draw ing Us body Into them. One can hardly imagine a lazier way of walking. WThen we see how this prlmitve organ propagates its kind we at once recog nize why It is that it is called im mortal. It propagates by simply divid ing Itself Into two. It almost literally cuts Itself In half. And by that process arise two new Individuals. These new Individuals each divide, giving rise to four. Each of these four divides again, making the total eight, and so on. They multiply so fast that before many days there are millions upon millions of them, and In a month the progeny of one lndlldual, if allowed to go un checked, would weigh as much as the lun. Now when the parent divides to form two daughters, as they are called, there Is no death. Nothing Is destroyed but the Individuality of the parent. Here the mother literally lives In her chil dren. The same Identical protoplasm which constructed the mother goes on Increasing and dividing, so that when it has produced a million or ten million new organisms In every one of these there is a portion of the original ani malcule which first began to divide. Roentgen rays have been found to act on vegetation like very weak light In experiments by Slgnor G. Tolemel. SCIENTIFIC JOTTINQS. A bar of lend cooled to about 800 decrees below zero, according to an experiment of M. I'letet, gives out when struck a pure musical tone. A bar of soft metal Is used on Dres den electric lines Insteud of tho trolley wheel, and Is claimed to wear the wlro less and to bo more convenient. Corks are being made for medicine bottles which will drop the liquid In stead of pouring It, nn air Inlet pas ngu and liquid outlet passage being cut In opposite sides of the cork with a bulb over the air Inlet to control the air inside the bottle. Typewriters are being manufactured which will write on books, this ma chine being mounted on n frame with an open space In tho center, through which the type levers are driven down on the page by the keys on the top of the machine. Tumblers resembling In shape and di mensions those employed today have been found In great numbers In Pom pell. They were made of gold, silver, glass, marble, agate and of precious stones. A writer on the eight says that wear ing veils permanently weakens many naturnlly good eyes on account of the endeavors of the eye to adjust itself to the ceaseless vibrations of that too common article of dress. At the pure food congress, held In Washington recently, It was Btated that one child In six dies from Impure milk, nnd that more persons die of typhoid fever from drinking Impure water than from alcoholic stimulants. The destruction of forests not only lessens the amount of water In a sec tion of country, but also permits of the Increase of Insects, due to the fact that as the forests disappear the con ditions favorable to bird life go with them. It Is stated that the grave of Themlst ocles has been discovered by a Greek archaeologist on Cape Kiakari. Its au thenticity Is, however!! open to doubt, although the site fits In with the de scriptions given by Plutarch and Dlo dorus Slculus. Dr. Rumbold, sr., says that the func tions of the middle ear muscles are to select and amplify such noises na the listener desires to hear distinctly; mak ing It appear that the ears have mus- cles of accommodation quite analogous) to those of the eye. With an appliance called the myo phone a French scientist has proved that the nerves may live many hours after the death of the body. The sec ond In the Instrument shows that a nerve may act on a muscle, In n stato of electrical excitability, without pro ducing more than simple molecular vi bration. A unique forest of Immense palm-llko stalagmites has been discovered by M. Mnrtel In a natural pit In tho lime stone of the Lozere, France. They are ut the end of an Immense sloping chnrm, reached by descending a per pendicular shaft about 200 feet, and many are very beautiful, while one Is over ninety feet high, nearly touching the vault of the cavern. Tea Is often mixed with other leaves, metallic substances such as Iron, man ganese or sand to Increase their weight, or "facing" coating the leaves with Indigo or Prussian blue to make them green. Soak the leaves In water nnd unroll on a glass and examine with a microscope. The construction of a tea leaf Is so different from any other leaf It may readily be distinguished. Bruise some tea and cut up, then pass a magnet over It. Particles of metal will cling' to the magnet. If n teaspoon ful of tea which Is colored Is thrown In water which is warm particles of In dltro. If It has been upu, will Blnk to the bottom of the gloss. Housekeepers will appreciate a new bowl holder, which la formed of n clamp to screw on the table, with nn adjustable three-screw clamp to grasp the top of the bowl nnd hold It so that eggs can be beaten or dough mixed without holding the receptacle with one .hand. Emll Kunz, a resident of Sacramento, Cal., Is said to have Invented a three- ounce electric storage battery. ThlR battery, so the Inventor claims, will operate as many as fifty lights for ten hours. If this battery can accomplish what Is claimed for it, which, Judging from the present stnte of the art, would seem unquestionable, the problem of propelling homeless carriages la solved. The Smlth&onlan Institution Is go.ng to do a unique thing with the talking machine. Its directors have engaged representa'ves of the various Indian tribes In this country to give conver sations, In their own tongues, to phono graph machines. They will then be translated Into English, so that the dialects of these dying races may be accurately preserved for posterity. Per haps the most remarkable use of these machines Is by doctors and surgeons In studying diseases by means of records. Every malady of the throat, nose, chest, lungs, heart, and even a patient's cough, have been registered In this way. The patient describes to the machine the features of the case, nnd, by mak ing records In different stages, the phy sician ascertains the condition of the patient. A remarkable library of rec ords Is kept by Dr. J. Mount Bleyer of New York. He has about 1,000 of such records, each marked, dated and described; and If a patient has a relapse the doctor takes down the former cylin ders and can at once recall the circum stances of the case. An Improved ma chine, called the mlcrophonogrnph. la used by some of these doctors In study ing the feeble sounds given out by the organs of the body. By means of this Invention many deaf persons are be ing benefitted. Aural messages In the form of screeching noise, caused by cylinders with rough surface, Is applied to their ears for two hours dally, and this so stimulates the nerves as to pro vide some substance for the paralyzed organs. Egypt continues to be the land of wonderful discoveries. The news has Just come that Mr. V. Loret, the suc cessor of Mr. J. de Morgan, nnd the son-in-law of our distinguished visitor, Alexander Gullmant, the celebrated French organist, has discovered near Thebes, In upper Egypt, the tomb of King Thothmes HI. of the eighteenth dynasty. The paintings that decorate this sepulcher are In a perfect state of preservation. The sarcophagus, mad of a stone unique In Its kind, Is nearly Intact. In other rooms were found other coffins, probably those of the wife and daughter of Thothmes III, The mummy, of course, was not met with; u.s3n.in ! poJOAonuip asou.) ;o euo B ij Boy at Delr-el-Bahri in July, 1881. while Mr. Maspew was In Europe. The mum my of Thothmes III., the great Egyp tian conqueror, one of the curiosities of the GIzeh museum, was found In the se cret vault where the priests had hid den It with many others In order to proserve them from plunder. The mummies of all those kings were car ried away by the Theban priests who had charge of them. In order to save them from profanation. At the time of the Syrian dynasty the priests had to fly to Ethiopia, and not being able to carry with them the sacred remains of the Egypltans former rulers, gath ered them In an out-of-reach place, where they remained untouched until ur days. AN AUTHOR'S MAIL. Few American writers have been more bothered and amused and liar- rowed nnd exasperated by an admiring public than Mrs. Burton Harrison, whoso stories have gone as far as a magazine can travel, nnd brought her Into close relations with people of every grade, since they treat of the most ir resistible combination on earth, a man nnd a woman. "You have no Idea what a constant drain there Is on a writer's sympa thies," she says. "No one can help be- Ing moved by the pitiful letters ol ure that come In nil tho time. These struggle and disappointment and fall- ure that come In nil the time. These writers want everything advice, crlt- lclnm, Influence, money, social position, advertlslngnnd nn author Is supposed to have all these up her sleeve for their especial benefit. BecaUBe she has solved the dllllculties of her heroine, she Is expected to play oracle to the public at la,rge and bring them all out happy ever after. It's u dllllcult thing for a busy New York woman to guide an ardent young soul In Kansas. Yet when the npepal comes In good faith, 1 can't ignore it. "Of course, n large part of the letters I get are not In good faith they are written simply to show off. First come the usual cheap phrasi's about 'your delightful books,' nnd then tho wrltet proceeds to make an lmi'-"slon. to cut a literary dash for your benefit, to prove that she Is a kindred soul and understands you perfectly all under a thin pretext of asking your opinion on some trumped up point. ! "Then there arc the autogtuph lot- ters. Once In a while I do answer onoi of them, when It comes from a pathe- tic old maid, or a llttlo boy with hip disease oh, the little boy with hip dls- ease always gets one! I can't resist him. I even add u sentiment to his. But the average autogrnph fiend, with sound limbs, and people to love him, and no earthly claim to pity, I have This fact Is not a wild statement born no scruples about him. . of the Imagination, hut a demonstrated "I have had numberless experiences fact of physical science. A fact so with young writers, some irritating, mighty and far-reaching In Its Import some really gratifying. I remember that I verily believe If the first dls once a girl sent me an Illustrated poem, coverers of It had dreamed of the con begging for my opinion of It, and hop- elusions to which It might lead they Ing I could place It for her. Mann- would have been nfrald to make the script pushrlng Is utterly ugulnst my assertions concerning It which they principles, but there was a certain have made. Namely, that the brain promise In this work, and I goaded my- cells arc exhausted and weakened, do Belf Into doing something about It. So pleted or vacuated by the generation of 1 took It to three of the most promt thought until they become flabby nnd nent critics I knew nnd got their frank weak, and must stop their work until opinions on It opinions that would be food nnd sleep have rested them so worth dollars nnd dollnrs to any young that they can go on generating more struggler. Then I wrote out my opinion thought. In detail, praising nnd criticising spe- Mnu himself Is the laboratory of this clflcally, and sent the whole back, with force which moves the world today, the poem. I Tho bread he ate for diner yesterday "I had given nn unusual amout of has become In passing through his of fline and attention to the thing, nnd gaulsm a factor of Irrestlble Intelll felt very complacent. But the fervent gence whoso building power no man little note of grntltude and appreciation which I expected never came. There was a long silence, then 1 received a most hurt, angry, offended letter. She. had sent me a poem to place In n maga- zlne, nnd I had not only returned It, but had said unpleasant tilings about' It. She couldn't understand such con- a more rarlfled, and I may add more duct. Of course It wns funny, but I powerful form than the brain, even aa could not help wishing that the effort steam Is more powerful than water, had been spent on somebody who would I am absorbed In my writing nnd un appreclate It. I der the full sway of my own thought "I never received a letter from an a person enters my room whom I unknown that pleased me more than neither see nor hear; presently my own one that came to my publishers from thought flags; I feel an Interruption; an a big prison, Inclosing a small sum of Impediment; I turn nnd see the visitor money and asking for a certain one of whose presence I had recognized by my books. The prison copy of it had feeling IiIb thought. Could I feel his been read to pieces, and the poor fel- i thought If it were an Intangible noth low wanted a whole one. Another thing ing? Any thinker will know that this that gratified me Immensely wns hear- ' is Impossible. His brain mingled with Ing that one of my stories, battered my own thoughts and deflected them and torn, formed the main body of from the track they had been pursuing, the library on a far western cattle His thought had changed the vibration ranch. 'We lend it to the boys, but of my current of thought nnd compelled you bet they bring It back,' said the my eyes to follow In thfc wako my owner. 'They know they'll get Bhot If thoughts had taken until they rested they don't.' There's nothing so grntl- on him. fylng as to feel that you have come No man can observe his own nc close to the people of an utterly dlf-1 Hve thoughts without perceiving the ferent realm, for It means that you have Incessant vitality of UiIb fine, Bubtle, put a touch of real life Into your work. brain-generated, body-generuted fluid. You can please a small set with artl- , He must nlso see how little of It Is flclal means, but nothing ie universal applied to any purpose whatever; It Is excent truth, "Those who write coldly Intellectual and abstruse theses miss a great pleas. ure, and that Is the warm bond of if it can be sent thousands of miles human sympathy that grows up be- away charged t.lth messages that tween the people and the writer who chunge the belief and condition of the treats of human relntlons. I have railed person receiving them what other won against the annoying and ludicrous as-I ,er8 may it not perform? pects of this bond, but It has a very I i nHk this question simply to awaken beautiful and satisfying side that has interest. It cannot be answered yet meant i. crcnt deal lv my life. I place To me thought Itself as an Intelligent grent value on the friendship thnt haB come to me through wnat i nave writ ten. To find again In the heart of a friend something that has come from one's own heart that 1b one of the sweetest experiences of a writer's life." Some eight or ten years ago there ap- nanrorl In fin Austrlnn nnvnnntur fin advertlsemnt with the heading: "Sure Cure for Red Noses." The prescription would be mailed to any address on the receipt of ten florins. Johann Hans- burger, a poor fellow afflicted In that way, concluded to give the cure a chance and mailed his ten florins. Promptly the answer came and was couched in these terms: "Your remit tance has been duly received and cred ited. We take great pleasure In for warding the prescription, which Is very Blmple. Keep right on drinking and the nose will turn blue." HE GOT HIS RECEIPT An Irishman, having paid a fine In a police court, stood waiting before the Judge. The rest or tne story is best torn by himself: " 'What are ye waltln' for?" says hlB honor. 'For me receipt,' says Ol. 'But we don't give receipts,' says , '.n vo muBt nv m 'What tnr-v says he. 'Well.Olil tell ye, yer honor. When Ol die Ol expect to go to heaven, an' whin Ol get to the golden gates Saint Peter will say, "Have ye paid all . ... .. . Att am yer mils, aicaianus:- urn say, -ui have," and thin he'll ask me for the re calpls, an Ol'U take them out of me pocket all done up In a nate little elas tic "Hnvn vr nfilfl nil ver fnlnes?" hoil say thin. "Ol have." "An" where are the recalpts?" An' thin Olil have to go huntln' all over h 1 to folnd yer honor. Ol got me recalpt." The chameleon is a little lizard, who possesses the wonderful power of changing his color to suit his own con- enlence. Florida produces several spe- cies or tnese itzarus in nuunuance. up to the present day no one has under- stood the process by which the llttlo lizard effects his changes. Now It is known. Certain colors through the medium of the optic nerve produce a contraction or expansion of the pigment or color cells. The result Is a protective tint or one which resembles tl-at upon which the animal i resting. The eye receives the stlmulas or Impression, which passes from the optic nerve to the sympathetic nerve, so reaching the various series of the lizard's little color cells under the skin. The pigment cells are distributed all over the body with more or less regu larity, and upon their contraction and expansion depends the prevailing color of the animal. The scientist discovered this by blind Holding a lUard, and found that when It couldn't see the color of the sur rounding fodage it ceased to change Its own color. POWER OF THOUGHT. (Helen Wllmons In "Freedom.") That a thought can be sent from one brain to another brain thousands of miles away and leave Its Impress In tho most undeniable effects seems mar velous. But who has measured tin power of thought, or who has Investigated III functions? With regard to thought we ure as Ignorant as we were con cerning electricity n hundred years ago. Who then Imagined e'ther the powet or function of this mighty fluid so fat back as one century or even half of It? And now Hee to what uses we have dl- rected It. Has the reader observed that In the growth and progress of the race It con- stnntly discovers forces each of which Is finer, more subtle nnd more powerful than nil those which preceded? Once It was water; then It was steam; now It Is electricity; In a short time It will be thought. Thought Is not only the mont potent force In the world, but It pos- scsses something Hint no other force docd; It possesses Intelligence, The time Ih coming when thought, charged with the Intelligent will, Ih going to accomplish more nnd greater things than all the other motor puw- era ever applied to the uses of the race, How Is It going to be done? I cannot answer this question now any more than my grandfather could have an- swered the same question If nsked of electricity Instead of thought; but the first question Is answcicd now, and the other one will be. A faint conception of the amount of thought which the brnln generates may be gained by watching your own thoughts as they flock from your brain to become lost to you, nnd to waste your bodily powers In tho losing. Just as the steam l a part of the wnter so thought Is a part of the brain; is, and In passing olT from the brain It, and In passing off from the brain it uses the brain up, or exhausts It and no race of men can measure. Could thought exhaust the brain cells If It were not a substantial entlty7 Could steam exhaust the water If It were a mere nothing? As the steam Ib the water In a finer, more subtle form, so Is the thought the brain In left to the unbridled range of free vagabondage and has never been thought under the direction of the will (Mrs. Burton Marrlson, in the Puritan.) greatest of all things that await In vestigation at this time. W. H. Grow and Llvo. (C. C. Post, in Freedom.) Life Is growth and growth Is life. Where growth ceases decay begins. When a tree ceases to grow, when In springtime It falls to put forth new leaves and to form buds that give promise of becoming, first twigs and then branches, when the tree fulls to Clve evidence of an Intention to grow more It has begun to die. And the same with men. Life finds expression only In change. You say an egg is without life. You break the shell, you devour ltB con entB without thought of destroying life. Why? Because you can perceive no evidence of growth or change taking place In the egg. One of my neighbors put 300 such J lifeless thlngB In an Incubator a few weeks ago and what resulted? At first nothing resulted. The eggs lay where they were placed, without change or evmunce us. me, unu my neignuor . turned them over by hand every day. Then on the third day he noticed a change in some of them and he said, "there is life In these for a change ! within the shell Is taking place," und of nlhaiHi tin udlH "rnara lu tnn stVifi ntra ."""-; " - v" , .., v....0.. lliciciuiv HW bVllli Ul 1IIC DUtll XLO & hoped." And those others he laid aside, but these remained where they were In the i Incubator. And there followed further change and the hange continued show- Ing forth life through growth until there came a day when we all went to see the miracle of life which change had wrought. Lo, a bouquet of over 250 animated pansles; life active, beautiful, Intelli gent life. Rather more beautiful than active perhaps, and decidedly more ac- iv ttmn intin.rnt l.nt iir in.iivMimi ze , chickens life through growth; nut. me man win cease to oe inaiviu uallzed In any chicken that cease to gain more life through change, by growth. If a chicken does not change by growth he becomes a dead chicken; he must obey the law of life by which he came and continued to grow or he cannot command the law of change and live; the law of change commands him nnd he dies, and through further change his body will be transformed Into some thing that will grow. As with chickens so with men and things. If men refuse to enter into life by the door of change called growth they must enter through the door called death, for it Is Impossible that change cease to be continuous. "Grow or die" Is the edict of the law, written everywhere In nature, In obe dience to which all forms of organiza tion must bow. RIP VAN WINKLE AT HOME. (Ladles Home Journal.) Perched on a high bluff and looking down on the waters of Buttermilk Bay, stands CrowH Nest, the beautiful sum mer home of Joseph Jefferson, In which he spends so many happy dayB. It Is a beautiful home, nnd around It, hero und there, nre a number ol smaller cottages that seem to look up to the big one as tiny fluffy chickens that seek protection by coming ns neni as possible to tho mother hen, Thli comparison, made by a bright woman Is a good one, when It Is known thai In these cottages live tho sons and rela tives of tho head of tho Jefferson fam. iiy. When Mr. Jefferson first made hit home there It was suggested thnt th name of the nearest station be changed from Buzzard's Bay to Jcffersonvlllm but with his characteristic modesty and his appreciation of suitability Mr. Jof. fcrson did not ngrec, ond so tho placi has its quaint nnd country-like tltla He who Is fortunate enough to b asked to visit ut Crow'B Nest drlvci through woods of sweet-smelling plnci and cedars, between wonderful foliage, and then arrives nt the back of tin house, for the house Itself fronts on the water. This home is n vnrv nun one, having been built In 1S34 Thera had been another home equally beauti ful, and containing much that wns val. uable In the way of paintings, ran curios, bric-a-brac and all the family sllver, but the fire-god envied "Rip Van Inkle ' his possessions, and touched it with his direful finger, so that soon there was no home, and all the prized belongings had gone. But Mr Jefferson, with characteristic quickness, ordered another villa very much like the old one to be built, and one and all began to collect more lovely things to make n veritable house beautiful. "Rip Van Winkle" was more fortun atu than most people, for though o house had been burned there was still another house way down In the South land nn old-fnnhloned homestead In New Iberia, Louisiana, from which was brought quaint old bits such ns can only be found south of Macun and Dlx oh'b line. j In July, lSlk "Rip Van Winkle" and "all his fnnflly" went Into the new homo, which Is perfectly appointed, beautifully furnished, nnd, If nnythlng, dnlnter than the old one. The housa Is essentlnlly comfortable looking. Tha lower pnrt of It Is built of stone that waB quarried near by, and the uppei portion Is all dark red, unburncd brick, while the gable roof In of coppor. Fol lowing tho fashion the chimneys nr tiled and are surrounded by curloui fluted copings, which Invariably excite the curiosity of whoever may be In specting tho place. In reality, they ara common brown Seltzer bottles. In fact, It was nn original Idea which placed them there, The most remarkable quality In Jo- soph Jeffcrson'B character Is his won derful energy. No time In his life la wasted. While acting is of the greatesl Interest to him, still he Is a fine pnlntcr. He understands art In Its many branches nnd throws his whole soul Into whatever he may bo doing. His paint ings, mostly lundscapea, are many In number and can with truth be pro nounced good. When good-by Is sold to the home, and Mr. Jefferson becomes the rollicking "Rip" or boisterous "Bob" the easel, the canvases and all the painting outfit are taken, for thers will be times in between when tha painter will rise superior to the actor. The actor claims that while painting he Is rested, for then he forgets tha excitement and worry of his profession ns he depicts his Ideas of the beautiful. Next to painting he loves best to flsh, nnd Sir Iznak Walton himself would, Indeed, have found a most congenial companion ih him, as, dressdd in his corduroy Ashing clothes, he goes oft In his little yacht on a long happy day of the engrossing sport. A happier family of a more congen. lal colony could not be Imagined than that at Buzzard's Bay. All are Inter ested In everything that Is artistic and beautiful, Many of them paint; all are good readers, can talk well, and every ono loves, In a reverential way, the head of the household. He Is con sulted about everything. All confidence Is given him, nnd "what father ap proves of," or "what father thinks" decides any vexed question. The home life Is the Ideal one of Joseph Jefferson. It Is full of whole some happiness, and It keeps every one in it growing younger Instead of older each year. By-the-by, on Mr. Chariea Jefferson's grounds there Is a wonder ful bnathouse, wonderful in so much that It can be turned, at a moment's notice, Into a comfortable little theater or a pretty ballroom, and when "ie evenings are cool Just for themselves and their friends, the family do a llttlo bit of acting. Mr. Jefferson Is first of all hospitable, and to have his friends around him make part of his household, means happiness to him. Can you paint the picture? Use the brush of Imagina tion on the canvas of your thought. Then you see Joseph Jefferson, the great artist, the dignified mnn, the lov ing husband and father, the good friend and pleasant acquaintance seated on the veranda of his home, surrounded by all those he loves who bear or have borne his name, the friends who are nearest to his heart, fondling tha youngest member of the Jefferson fam ily, his one great-grandchild, now leas than a year old. Can you help admir ing that picture? Is it not good for such a man to have lived? All tho world Is better for It, and truly we can say for him, as he said so many thou sand times for us, "May you live long and prosper." On a plantation, the property of a wealthy Charlestonlan, dwelt a queer character, Pompey by nnme. When ever Pompey was 111, which occurred with alarming frequency, he was wont to Inaugurate a limited revival meeting on his own behalf, the burden of which was: "Oh, may de good Lawd God Al mighty take poor Pompey home!" This became so monotonous, and the lamentations so vociferous that a band of neighbors determined to test Pom pey, and Incidentally effect a cure. Ac cordingly, one evening, when his plain tive lament had been more clamorous than usual, they stealthily repaired to Pompey's habitation, where he was ac customed to lock hltTjself In. Suddenly a low rat-a-tat-tat was heard upon tho cabin door. "Who's dah?" came from within. Receiving no response, Pom pey was about to resume operations, when another knock was heard, "Who's dah?" called Pompey In a thoroughly frightened quaver. "De good Lawd God Almighty, come to take Pompey home!" "No slch name heah, sah," ho cried excitedly; "Pompey done gone an moved tree week ago, sah, shuah!" . Ex-Secretary William M. Evarts was for a long time the most skilled pf all public men In polite and pointed repartee. At a reception in Washing ton he was drawn itno a discussion between two ladles. "Mr. Evarts," said one, "do you not think I am right in saying that a wo man Is always the best Judge of another woman's character?" "Madam," replied Mr. Evarts, "ah is not only the best Judge, but the best executioner." ry&m - . ti