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Show V : SCIENCE twr Philosophical : Observations nt. WheW wich observations of this star led to Unloading Wagons. The invention shown in the accomthe most disapj ointing results in Of panying Illustration has been designed spite of the fact that thp observations 4 by James Baker of Carroll, Neb., to themselves were very precise. Airy last provide means for supporting a shovel sougjt vainly for the canse of the aer, A Breath Image. clothing as is necessary has been ruth or other similar implement in such a obviously erroneous i alues of the tda. trienner as to materially assist a work- aberration and a P!ece of cardboard and with lessly torn from the little girl's dress that were the the !karp penknife cut some kind of The life of a doll like tills is in man in raising and delivering the ma- outcome of the parallax Greenwich work since oe When it is cut out lay the evitabiy brief, but this matters little, terial from the box of a wagon. The 1857 and tbe observations were finally ass as a new doll can be made device consists of a couple of sockets discontinued in 1882. Dr. Chandlers board from which you cut the and daily left? a well cleaned piece of glass in a few minutes, as long as the popvalues for the variation of the latitude an; or Gieenwlen. when breathe on it. Leave the card- - pies remain In bloom. The only drawintroduced into e " resting on the glass until the back is that the mothers are apt to tbe crude results of observation, bring Ms- on it has evapor- - become wrathful when the The tb first blown little girls everythirg imo good older. IQd return home in the evening with tatThen carefully lift the card-,original work is proved to have been and breathe again over the tered dresses, for well they know that excellent, and tbe values of the where the figure lay and you the dresses have been torn to etc., sought for are Pis , the image appear on the clothing for the dolls. The reflex zenith tube is iat again to be put to use at Greenwich, nd Alien the breath Is blown on the Clever who have recently Cats. let the gont!-me6r. been complaining of the unproductivetime it covers, besides the flg-. ness of scientific research in Amerii portion of the glass not touched ca as compared wita European re'jure, and, since the spot where the :r. stands was twice breathed search, take note of this instance. ctur ' If they will look attentively they will has a greater density than it B) ju Thus the see many others of like significance. vs surrounding portion. New Yoik Sun. re stands out clearly by contrast. Spring Relieves Weight, secured in the corners cf the box, hi IS, Conundrums. t.Electricity in Horticulture. which supports are placed in such a The effect of electricity on seeds Kthere are five birds on a tree and manner as to bring a horizontal bar hunter kills two of them and they over the center of the load. From and plants has been tried by Mr. a are left in the lis this bar is suspended a coiled spring Plowman, of the Harvard Botanic jl down, how many flew away. rest the if A. None of such tension and strength as will Gardens. Currents of from one-hali Which was the largest island, before a movement of the shovel at- to 500 volts were sent through the lt-permit A. Aus-nliluitraha was discovered? tached to the lower end when force soil between carbon or metal plates. id is applied by the man unloading the Seeds planted near the anode or posiat contents of the wagon. An ordinary tively electrified plate were killed by ffhy is spring a dangerous season? w An English boy has trained his cats scoop or fork may be used, arrange- currents of 0.003 ampere, or more, if The trees are shooting, the flowers ir is out to do many amusing feats, among ment being made to clamp the imple- continued for twenty hours or longer. ire pistils and the bull-rusment to a bar as shown in the draw- Seeds near the cathode or negatively which is the onahere illustrated. be bull rushes out). s. What most resembles the half of a ing. The central portion of this bar electrified plate were but little affectd A. The other half. has a number of perforations, which ed. The author concludes that negaBlindfolded. jeese? Eating la f a divin-ask doctor of can is a you Here How little party pastime that permit of the attachment of the spring tive charges stimulate, while positive x A. will make everybody roar with laugh- connection in several different posi- charges paralyze the embryonic proin one word to play a violin? id ter. tions, thus supporting a greater or less toplasm of plants. Seedlings grow in a more widows are on a the floor and seat portion of the load. It is Intended by soil or in a water "culture, through dangerous Why Spread sheet h the inventor that the manipulator of which a weak current flows, turn the fork or shovel shall bring a por- their roots toward the anode, apparFLAGS OF ALL NATIONS. tion of bis weight to bear on it when ently beiause tae negative electricity inserting it in the material to be un- of ions from the cathode is more loaded, and on elevating the load the stimulating than the positive ions spring will exert Its strength to re- from the anode. duce the amount of force required to Portable Irrigator. be put forth by the man. A portable irrigator especially adapted for treating tbe roots of a plant Problem for Scientists. In connection with the terrific cy- with fertilizing liquid is here shown, clone which recently passed over the cut being taken from the Scientific Sicily, it is reported that througaout American. The general shape of the the day, when the storm was at its irrigator is similar to that of a pitch-forthe tines and, handle of whicl$ worst, "Mount Etna sent up a thick column of steam from the vicinity of are hollow. A piston is adapted to be opeiated with the hollow handle, servthe scene of the eruption of 1892. (GERMAN. COMMERCIAL) ( GERMAN WAR FLAG)) This could hardly be due to the tor- ing as a pump to draw the fertilizing rential rains that fell, because most liquid from a supply pipe entering at likely the crater was above the cloud the top of the fork head and to force level in such a storm. More probably it out through the openings in the the tines are the issue of steam and- other gases tines. In operation may be ascribed to the diminution of atmospheric pressure. Ordinary air pressure is about fifteen pounds per square inch, with the barometer, at thirty inches. A fall to 29.5 or a rea drop of duction in the weight of the atmosphere of one pound for every four On a single square square inches. mile this would amount to over one thousand million pounds, or rather (DANISH MANor-VWless than 500,000 tons. There is good ( DANISH. COMMERCIAL) reason to believe that the outrush of steam and gas from volcanoes depends, as in coal mines, to a large exThe handsome flag in the upper left The Danish flag i3 the oldest in ex- tent on air pressure, and such a fall in hand corner is the German war flag. istence. There is a legend that in the the weight of over every square mile The Prussian colors and the Prussian year 1213, at a critical time. King of surface might conceivably produce Waldmar of Denmark saw in the sky, large effects in the deep caverns of eagle are very prominent, as is natural considering the large part that which he took as a signal of celestial Etna. Prussia plays in the empire. aid. He led his troops through a 4 . " 7. The ground of the flag is white, the successful battle and forthwith adoptThe Hands and the Brain. a t, broad horizontal and vertical bands, ed the cross as the flag of his country. In a recent lecture Prof. Cunningbuiied into the ground with their lower s black, outlined with lines of black. In It was called Dannebrog, the strength ham took for his subject, ends In proximity to the roots to be tbe upper lefthand corner are the of Denmark. So far and can then be forced three strips of black, white and red. As a definite fact, apart from the as evidence goes it seems probable treated. The liquid out in a fine spray at the point where The cross is of black, outlined was a characwith story, the Danish flag does date back that it will do the most good. black, and the eagle also Is black, the to the thirteenth century. teristic of man at a very early period. r crown on his head- being the outline. and commerBoth the It is an inherited quality in the same Atmospheric Nucleation. The commercial flag of Germany Is cial flags show white crosses on a red sense that the potential quality of ar Carl Barus recently read to Prof. r made up of three stripes, black, white shows also a ticulate speech in man and of song ground. The the American Physical Society a paper Inand red. The white stripe in the midin outlined black. are the inherited birds in Paint square possessions. on the vaiiation of atmospheric nucledle, with black above and red below. vestigation shows that picture. ation and its dependent e on weather is due to a ti ansmttted functional conditions. His method consists in left the and of brain, A. Because girls two closely blindfolded boys on it. than young girls? producing condensation by sudden exan of escalation s are looking out for number one, facing each other. Give each boy a this factor prevents one side to the pansion and in observing the size of saucer of cracker crumbs, to be held the condition from are satisfied with number two. in the resulting in those curious cases in which the corona formed How do we know that Caesar was in his left hand, and a teaspoon or a other mist. Previous of his investigations of the body the right and left sides acquainted with the Irish? A. When dessert spoon, to be held in his right own enable Dr. Barus to calculate the thoracic and the and reversed are he crossed the Rhine he came back to Now' give a signal and tell them to ' diameter of the individual droplets bridg-it- . feed each other, and you will have abdominal viscera transposed. of The when the diameter of the corona is not the if the whole, greater part, I have more if you would like to fun enough to make all the chairs in motor incitations which lead to articu- known. A measurement of the weight have them. the room laugh. late speech go out from the speech of the mist formed in a given space center in the left cerebral hemisphere. thus makes it possible to calculate the Ping-PonSet for Nine Cents. Young Pilot. people speak from the number of droplets and therefore of Seeing some readers would like to Harry Herrington, son of Captain nuclei. Dr. Barus has made extended brain. right Austin Herrington of Chicago, is one make a ping pong set, I will tell you observations of this kind and the deof the youngest pilots on the great Hat-Pipendence of the number of nuclei upon Retainer. lakes. He is twelve years old, and A device for the purpose described, various weather conditions was clearstood at the Haring last summer For details a refeience portion ly shown. provided with a funnel-shapewhich wheel of the Harvey Watson, to be attached to a hat and must be made to his punted paper. adapted runs as a ferry from Masatawa Park for a hat pin, having a to Ottawa Beach. He is hardly big and said device also provided with Northern Lights in the Laboratory. enough tb look over the wheel that he The aurora borealis is imitated on a two clamp-arm- s extending across said turns. Although the boat during the and one clamp-arprovided small scale by Prof. W. Ramsay, aperture summer carried more than 200,000 with ,a lateral finger secured to the w hose' experiment has been exhibited an passengers, the' boy never had to the London Royal society. A powaccident. He takes his boat alongerful electromagnet, placed vertically, side the dock with the skill of a vethas pole pieces extending horizontally eran. from both the upper and the lower ends, and between these pole pieces is Roman Ball Game. an exhausted glass globe containing in The favorite ball game of the Roits upper part a metallic ring. A powmans was the follis, which was played erful alternating current passed through the ring produces an annular glow discharge. On passing a current through the coils of the magnet the glow discharge is deflected downward, producing streamers closely resembling those of the sky, and highly how I made mine lor nine cents, says rarefied air in the globe gave the lines a correspondent. of krypton that appear In the spectFirst, take two new shingles and rum of the aurora. draw the outline of the rackets on them, about seven inches long and other clamp-arm-. Clarence E. Stubbs Velocity of the live and a half Inches wide, with a of Baltimore, Md is the Inventor. After several years devoted to the handle. Jewelers' Circular. study of the question of the velocity Next, procure a large cotton spool, traverse space, with which the such as is used in large shoe factories, Terrestrial Latitudes. M. Blondlot contrived a method of exand saw off the two ends, and insert The discovery by Prof. S. C. Chandtwo round sticks, about eight Inches ler of Cambridge that terrestrial lati- perimentation depending on a prinone employed by Roohigh, In the lfoles in the center of the tudes constantly vary by small but ciple like the mer to determine the velocity of light. spool, which will serve to fasten the quantities has been was utilized to deterThe net to. the means of explaining many results mine principle or no the velocity ot whether firm Like To make these take a piece of hitherto regarded as anomalous. with a hall Inflated with air. The ball was comparable with that the wasnt blown tightly, like our football wire and bend it around the posts, every other Important advance in sci- of c waves and the rebut was so soft it would hurt no one. and from there under the side of the ence it brings a host of minor discovthe two Velocities that indicate sults Us train. in table. eries and enlightenments of the same order as the To make the net procure a piece of One of the most interesting of these is are certainly Doll a Poppy Flower. waves. Hertzian in anomalies the of inches wide the explanation In certain parts ot Hungary many mosquito netting, eight little girls spend much time taking and as long as the width of the table the results of observations with tbe The Professor. reflex zenith tube of the Roal Obcare of large flocks of geese, and (ail hemmed) and fasten to the sticks. It seems to me. observed the docInstruTnis Greenwich. ball rai be bought for servatory of A ping-ponwhile thus engaged they frequently too northerly a latitude ment was erected by Sir George Airy tor. "thats amuse themselves by making dolls five cents. All summed up costs only for a fishing trip this time of year." purthe for Rojal. Astronomer late cents. out of flowers, sticks and other obnine I don't care anything about the latof the pose of determining the values nuta- itude. jects. said the professor, busily of " and constants of aberration A doll was made Rich Soil of China. All I recently by a little his fishing tackle. Gamma of packing tbe s also parallax and in tion mile A square the rich Magyar girl out of a poppy. The Ik that the mushailongitwie is know selected star Di aeon is. the bright whole of tbe brilliant flower has been of Clrra will support 3,840 just right. A long series of Green tilized for this purpose, and such TIoue , -- n 1 trust-woith- q " HE New York World thus describes a night in one of the famous gambling houses of that tity. Passing in the door ajar, the visitor is confronted by another set of closed doors. At one side is the button of an electric hell. Press the button. A slide In the door is cautiously opened. A negro In full evening dress peers forth. There is a light behind him that shines full in the visitors face. If he recognizes the visitor the heavy iron bar is raised and the door is opened. Even then the visitor finds himself confrontonly in the vestibule. He is ed by another set of closed doors. The lf V "Right-handednes- man-of-wa- - man-of-wa- wld-ovi- KfmrA.1 FOP THE TUBtf AT CABO doorman who has admitted him carefully closes the outer door and shoots an iron bolt into place. he calls out All right, William, softly. The inner door is opened by another negro in full dress. In all the gambling houses in New York now anyone either entering or leaving must pass two doorkeepers. Most houses require that the visitor must be known to both before he can be admitted. Just within the Inside door is an innovation that has come with raids with axes and sledges. It is a folding iron bars. On ten door of half-incseconds notice it can be slammed shut and locked and then reinforced by a bar of iron fully an inch thick. , While this may not make the gambling house impregnable, it serves its purpose. It will delay a raiding party long enough tor the manager to get the money out of the drawer, to pack and the faro up the roulette layouts, to secrete the chips, to set up some beds and otherwise make the place look like an innocent lodging house. In this particular place the gambling is all on the second floor. Only roulete and faro are played in this house. There aie gambling houses where they have also hazard and craps and poker, "but this is not one of them. The roulette outfit used in New York is a long, narrow table, covered with felt. Around it are placed high 8 tools for such players as prefer to sit, though most of them stand up to play. In the center of .the table is a depressed circle with slanting sides. In the middle of this a wheel revolves, in small vhirh there are thirty-eigh- t compartments, numbered from 1 to 36, vith also 0 and 00, or single O and double O. The numbered compartments are either red or black, and the Os are green. An ivory ball is bpun around the tilde in the opposite direction to which tne wheel revolves. In whatever compartment it falls is the numh ber that wins. On either side of the table are num- bered squares, corresponding to the numbers on the wheel and with corresponding colors. There are strips of red and black oilcloth, on which bets n e gray-haire- d - ' j 4 ' 1 Have you watched a crowd of men in the rotunda they walk about peering Into each others faces, watching eacnV always hoping and looking for some fatfi among the countless strange ones? Ther Friendship words of the captain in "DomUey and S of Man J mind: For His Like. Walr, my boy, replied the captaf Proverbs of Solomon you will find the following words: Maj want a friend in need, nor a bottle to give him! When four e note of. . Above all things, above the love of money, or even the for woman, is the loie of man for man. Like seeks like and content without it. The fellowship, the understanding, the soclr men have for men, is everywhere noticed. In the old famiUat may forget or grow careless, or be cloyed on this association, man go from those he knows to a foreign city, and his eye will I search the passing faces for a familiar physiognomy. He may' whom at home he liked little and the meeting will be as of the trl They talk of the home folks, the home events, each hoping tv the other news he himself does not possess. They become ) "Two Inends, two bodies with one soul inspired! zm zoascxrr. foul, The reformatory is him. It is 4 o'clock in the morning. The largest loss has been SS00; the largest winning $300. Nearly all the players have gone. The faro layout is at last deserted. Around the roulette tables are gathered a few losers striving desperately with their few remaining dollars to win back what they "have lost. The manager looks them over. There probably is not $20 among them all. Last three rolls,, he announces decisively. The players grow more desperate. They plunge madly in an effort to recoup in these last three rolls. Fortune Is against them. With the last roll of the hall all their chips are swept away. t Lets all have a drink, Have says the manager cordially. all you hoys got car fare? None of them have. They have a drink. The manager doles out a dollar or two to tire three or four men standing about. 0 He can afford to. The house is ahead on the days play, and that is doing pretty well. . Sunday His Best Day. With the introduction of the first Sunday newspapers, considerable opposition was aioused by the contemporary press. Charles A. Dana of the New York Sun thought he sound the newsboys on the subject. Approaching a hardy lad one Sabbath laden heavily with newspapers, he asked: v My boy, if there were no Sunday newspapers this would be a holiday for you, wouldnt it? Yes, sir, answered the boy readily, but I would lose my best holiday. d river-valley- j vagn- The greenhorn was timid when he left the great ut ui to go, but he didnt know how to get there. He realise 0 of way that a policeman car stre , 2 a cab would take him there. The have cost him 5 cents; the cab money t spen . .fions t greenhorn In Chicago always Ignorance of conditions s w way. ,e wind money. He was left at the elevated loop and inquired jay. d 1 while the crowd fussed at his heels to get past bmMscl$ . his nickel he said to the woman, "Ticket, please." ticket . take a swoop and rung It up, and while he was waiting crowd caught him and hurled him onto the platform. n going this way or that way to get to Sheridafa Paik. ' . who was too busy to answer. indlviau i They only go one way, laughed a second crowd pi J red. enough to notice liis predicament. Once more the over seven Thiity, red. in the thirty dozen time inside the car. It was crowded and he fell the dealer calls. feet and lauded in a fat ladys lap as the elevated tram swj He has won. He leaves the dollar, snake curve. He apologized, bis face very red and his boD with the dollar he has won, on red. ward poise. Then he noted the straps and caught one, wrj. .He wins again. He now has $4. a stalwart grip as the curves lashed him like a to put ty He puts $2 on the second dozen," expected every minute to hear the conductor coming Seventeen, black, odd In the seche had no ticket, and he wondered If he hadnt already p8 guard. ond dozen Is called. He let go of the stiap to walk to the end of the car and goftly 4 The boy has won again four dolaverage The corns. on an average citizens tt stepped after a lars for his two. I continued to read his paper. The greenhorn took to the p 0p He keeps on till he has $20. It Is ' and set his down on the opposite side from where ana he p more money than he has ever had to last. At the grips next stop the gates opened on bis side t spend, without accounting to anyone. while he moved again. He was woefully uncomfortable , , He quits. He watches Ills friends. the and hit $ next the at stop gate swung open unexpectedly He tells them he will wait for them ever he if mart forever ,J ' J? he was ready to quit the maddening S outside. He heard the guards calling out, Local train! Local trath. I He is afraid if he stays there he train! not unde did he other and things Split express! will be tempted to bet again and may a wa It destination. all hope of ever reaching his Ji lose. He goes out. He waits on the gave up in Niles pandemonium, and then some. He wished hlmselfback corner. He comes back again. . hundredth time. He does not Intend to bet again. He the reached the station whic be when a was visible relief There decides to risk just $5 more. He bet j assured him was where he wanted to go. He didnt know; he hadicn and wins. Scon he has $40. He quits j , j wV on the out paper he a street of dim brought lamp By the light again. . he sought. Then he began to wonder which way to 8tar It is too fascinating. It is too easy. addresswho neighwr the in a wrho was man a stranger a didnt know, boy He cannot resist the temptation. He a suburbanite who told him In a general way to go south and to might as well have $100. Already he He knew which J way straight up was, and he wa3 almost prepared is beginning to plan how he will spend f It a In was he and quandary. for as north south, but way, it. He begins again. Luck is against He set out by Instinct, dark and he must find that number. him. He leaves the place penniless. w'alked until he wastiT and to its returns nest, carrier pigeon one of He has to borrow carfare from nnmber He rappmn found the he and set him a right policeman ' his companions. stone place and he wonderhd if hk New Yorks great army of gamblers came to the door. It was a big he noticed a card With thehy has been recruited by one. The next owned it all. He rapped again. Then bell. Still he the and nobody came. He heard a rang the hallway time he gets any money he will forget sounded sepulchral, as though It came L that he came away penniless. He will ask who was there and it Could his friends live in the bA1' recesses of the earth. uttermost won $40 from only remember that he came down the stairway aad ask a maid at and last He rang again He will come again and again. $2. He told he wanted. When he cannot get money to gamble through the closed glass door what to leave was He stairs. back getting ready up just It by with by fair means he wjll get friend hove In sight, grasped him by the hand and cried: "Why didnt you answer the tube, Hank? The women, of burglars, you know. Hank was so glad to find his friend he forgot his trouble at enjoy city life at once. It is always thus when the greenhorn " Chicago. $2,-60- h g g Dry(jn. Oscar Wylie lives In Davenport He is a steeple painter, a steeple painter, one who ascends aerial heights and wields v daintily, Osc" s something of a humorist. Re he clambered feet high, a mere knoll to him standing on the cross of St. Josephs church- he laughed boisterously besides singing a r' song. The pedestrians were 'amazed. jThete humorist worthy of cap and bells. Even Mark Twain, who is Ixcrm-- i church funny at times, never shinned up a C athollc steeplei and aloft on the tip of the cross waving his arms In a sort of chaimcK gadocio, while he warbled bis wiL Artemus Ward, Josh Bill life' Perkins have not done as much. For something that titillates tW and makes a man fall In a fit like the unfortunate butler of thelitf who having killed his senant says "And since that time I never I write as funny as I can, Oscar gets the,bun. To make the thing and to perpetuate the dashing wit of this man, a photographer hurrie scene, pointed his camera at the tiny humorist away up there on ti To Davenport yield the I top, pinched the bulb and cried All over. having the funniest man extant. For the sake of the mothers an( hearts at home, however, this "fool k umorousness should stop belr ' body falls and lights hard. good-nigh- Do electro-magneti- 1. ' Left-hande- d five-inc- with awe, hl' g guide-apertur- The betting on the colors is even. The betting on the dozens Is 2 to 1. For a bet that Is split between two numbers 17 to 1 is paid. It is a motley group that Is gathered around the roulette wheel. There are men there, but most of the under are thirty, some of them players mere boys. As you look at their faces you see that they are all possessed of the gambling fever. A college boy comes in with some older friends. He is a boy of 17, living with his parents. All the money he has is 2, his weeks allowance. He watches his friends gamble for a while. He ventures a dollar on the to Long stood the enoble youth oppress'd saw. And stupid at the wondrous things he nature s common faith, transgressing Sin pass-n- p h - By BYRON WILLIAMS on red or black may be placed. There are similar strips labelled Odd and Even. There are sections marked off and labelled First Dozen, "Second Dozen and Third Dozen. At the end of each of the three columns in which the figures are arranged are compartments on which may be placed bets that the winning number will be In a certain column. There are a dozen ways in which roulette may be played. There are thirty-eigh- t compartments into which the ball may fall. Foi a let placed on a winning number tbe house pays 35 Investigating Mummy Caves. Prof. Edmund S. Meany of the Smithsonian institute, is the first scientist to visit the mummy caves of the Aleuts of Alaska. Many mummies, to be sure, have been 6ent from Alaska from time to time, but no man of learping has ever examined the caves The report which the themselves. professor will doubtless prepare will be looked for with some Interest. Novel to Deal With California. Fanne Varzi, tie noted Italian novelist, is in California gathering material for a novel dealing with life and social rend if ii is In that region. She is the wife of one of the most eminent journalists in Italy. We never see a man playing solitaire but we are sorry for hIln, the last alternative, turns to this game, demands sympathy J is a vacuum and he needs a rose to blooin in 1 rose may he a woman or a yacht, an automo Why Should a new jag of brains he needs it. Ilia soul cries Man Do It? his heart bleeds for it There is no "other I reason why he should be playing need building blocks next, If he doesnt watch out, or a set ol 4 With books and papers so cheap he can buy them for a pittance Holy Bible In the house and a play at the temple around the corner, with progress and activity, sorrow and joy, all a with messages galore to be carried to Garcia and back again, how t piay solitaire? We pause for a reply! w'ho, as solit-alre- S -- i A Chicago judge, in giving his decision in a well known ca cited the fact that man may do some things and escape censure, w for the same act, is condemned by soeiet1 s. to feel an outcast. In other wprdST Society t ' vs. In making t naughty, but Josle musntf judge did not attempt to shield the n Immorality. termed as immoral as. the woman. Ha niented ppon an existing evil of American society, Billy may pot j and pure ones provided they will stand for It. all in the same or the samq hour It he can make the exchange thus the other hjnd Josie. having fallen, must stay under the exped ban.) good society or in really good society. ShvA accepted in no less moral than the man. Verily the ways although she is . , society passeth understanding. s we-da- y ) , - There Is much of error In this world, but so much more of trut Some men see the error and become zealots; others choose to Joe good and are optimists. Each has hisn-are prone to belittling the former and lat.er. The zealous man, the reformer, pi. his magnifying of evils. We refuse to ? glass darkly, and because of this we lodk him, sniff. .at him or disregard him wholly. This man has a Dlac The great throbbing machinery of life needs alternating devices liver of We we might term alternating currents. leal in mirable and while we do that in our zeal we would not do ments, yet to overdo Is often better than to do not at all. DontFl mental hricj.l. ts at the zeaot. He may be a balance wlieej to r . |