Show I. I As A rule the tho men who are arc piling aP big fortunes are not really working for Cot themselves themselves' nor their families but for or tho the legal fraternity who manage manago In n various ways especially when tho money pliers ar aro dead de to gobble up I what ia left I i left 1 Tint THE TIE successful suc civilization l that has ba grown up in Australia is of oi I especial interest as a showing how hOv th taint o of criminal hereditary Influences t can mI a be educated out of a n race raco und under r favorable circumstances The Te original bal nal settlers setters of Australia were convicts sent senJi thither for their country's good good I children and grandchildren of ofte te convicts convict are not only rich rich but respectable end and nd law abiding S Australia is Ls i said sad to t average Dore more nore noreS nore'S S 'S wealth to t each inhabitant than thai any ny S other country In the tho world world though this thi country como come near it in i this S respect respect S S IT ITIS is quite quit plain that the less fa- fa fa 5 cored ored ford a childs child's cid's condition of life le the tho 5 5 greater the importance e of pl placing it 5 5 at mt aa a early age in artistic surround- surround S. S ings It is unfortunate that a 0 child childS S hould should be born into int circumstances of squalor it i is i superlatively foolish of ofa a community to allow it to a t v alo t grow gow up S. S without ethical culture When all al is isS f f 1 S S laid mid and done done the true tre aim of education euca Lion tion ton never has ha been ben better expressed S S I. I than by the Roman poet who two thousand years ago ao told his hi countrymen country- country j y men tho the study of the liberal arts softens mens men's manners neither does doesS l S It t permit them to become brutal To attain this end is the tho supreme end endS S of Df education tho the kindergarten makes makesS S the best beginning toward such an 1 end of any mode of juven juvenile e education l. l j yet devised 1 A LIE LI said Queen Elizabeth Eliabeth is simPly simply sunS sim sun S ply an intellectual device for meeting a a difficulty Some Somo lies les may be so but butt f t t S'S tot not ot all al When a child finds that a aI ar cV I certain ertin statement will vill vl accomplish a aSS acV 0 r much desired purpose he makes the i S 6 statement nt precisely as a a 0 grown man manI I r S uses a tool tol He is i at no moro more trouble to ask himself himsel whether the statement S Is l true or not than the man is i to read v the tho name of af the tho maker of the tool tool upon S its is blade blae This is especially true tro if i the statement promises escape escape from froma S a a. dreaded punishment punishment It I is very necessary therefore therefore for parents to t S remember that some somo children are I much more appalled by the prospect f of punishment than others also that S S tho te desires of some are much more i t I insistent than those of others others If these tese facts be not heeded discipline X f will wide of its in ia fly wl fy it purpose cork cor- cor S. S i reeling the i k t ki k- v 1 i C c tl 4 J S To resident S 'S nt of the United Stams Stas S t 5 S tere there is i nothing in the statement that the tho total wealth of the country is i estiS estimated est est- esti esti- S mated at more than that seems exaggerated exaggerated lib ha lb is familiar famil S with industrial d developments v an and with the increased value of real estate estat S resulting from the tho settlement and cultivation cul cal of the country Ho He is aware 5 5 also that stone or brick structures are not absolutely necessary for comfort S iu feet many prefer wooden house houses S even oven where they could prefer the move moe S expensive styles styles Outside of the cities S the tho area covered by a house is of small smal importance and ad why should not the theS S farmer farmer elect to use the tho money it would 1 take to erect a a small smal stone or brick brickS S structure in I n building a a comfortable J S S roomy house that will wi accommodate his hisS 5 family more mor easily In many parts part of 5 5 the union wooden houses are more suitable suitS suit suit- suit S able to t the tho climate than brick brck or stone S 1 VIEWED simply as a waterfall i it is isI I interesting to kno know that the newly S S discovered cataract catara t in Labrador LabradorS S eclipses our wonder of the world but S 1 it is unlikely ever to rival it as a D spectacle spectacle spec spec- spec for or humanity simply on acc account of its inaccessibility The Te story stor of the theS S 5 Bowdoin college explorers s show that S A falls fals were reached only by a boat voyS voyage voyage voy voy- 7 age of three hundred miles up the theS S S S Grand river and a march over a sterile ster ster- 5 S lie ile country of fifty mes miles The obstacles S cles des to reaching these falls fals are are likely S S to prove so insuperable that Niagara S S will wi remain as the great geat wonder in its it 5 line lino lne that is within the the reach of any save a f few fw w explorers The unknown character of the wilds of Labrador is isS i S illustrated illustrated-by by the tho fact that tha af after r it itS S has thus established it i has a 0 higher t fall fal than Niagara Niagara it still sti remains remais an anS a S unsettled qu question stion whether heth r it i does or goes does not contain a greater lake than I hike Superior A f 1 The Te magpie habit habit is isone one of the te most ost c unaccountable the historian historianS S te i S finds among animals aimas It is i not the resul re- re 10 suit sul sul of miserly covetousness Men MenS S and clogs have havo the habit of miserliness mierl- mierl 0 ness nes men of course coure more than tha do dogs s. s Among men this thi magpie habit is isS i S often strongly developed developed When Wen f it it itis is too much trouble to t find 5 the tho reason for this this and and there ro must certainly be a reas it m-it m it is i dismissed d S S by saying that such collectors are y cracked or are cranks cranks But they J S are not not Magpies Magpies are not cracked racked S S certainly for an individual who is isS i S f i unlike tho the rest and ad all al magpies are S. S alike aUke in i the magpie habit habit Natural historians trying to t find out a reason i S even even if i tho the reason be merely a shuffling shuffling shuf shuf- fling mg one say that tat these things are the tha E result result of checked development involving f r ing reversion to the traits and habits habil S S of remote ancestry But what could S S any anybody's remote ancestry haveS have havo have I S wanted with wih a e. u collection of beer labels S hangmen's en i f or ropes 0 S j 44 k t-i t i. i |