Show 1 a I 1 1 16 I 1 I 1 i 11 ai 1 0 t apple pie when our cook sh naf makes a rl you tou oughter see her flegm nil 1 1 she sits lt nn an holds a yeller bos bol I 1 an so no fast she keeps a aln holn down through the middle of the stu aluff ift milk an egg nn flour elou enough gr and maybe other things but I 1 1 forget erect just juat till that makes a ale when our cook she mak maks a pie pic she rolls th dough that by and by 1 two round bLink blinkers ets then her slice some borne evenly plump into bed she makes ern em hop an cuts some peepholes peep holes through the top so they won I 1 smother m vihn hen n they its all warm nil an sugared in the pie pic then our cook phe nhe makes a pie she balances the plate up aich and with sith a pleasant snippy sound she it ni nicely c ely aa all 1 around andusen and shea thumbed lumb d the edges tight the apples apple cant get eel up at night but 1 hes baked it then oh my you you never et such apple pie alel burgea B roes johnson in harpers weekly fun with a comb every boy and girl using a comb to smooth out their tangled locks on a cold morning has heard and wondered at tho the electricity that cookie cackles as the comb passes through the hair this property ot of the comb can be used in an interesting experiment cut out a lot of 0 little paper figures on the next cold day when your hair begins to snap and baand on end in its effort to follow the comb hold the comb oer 0 er the figures the the puppets immediately appear to be endowed with life they commence to jump and donee dance or stick to each other and the comb as it if fastened with sith glue often a figure will stand on lla its head another fixing filing himself by one liand hand hold his bis tiny form upright in a comical fashion sometimes they will form themselves into long lone strings and go through all manner of seemingly lotell intelligent tell igent movements minko minko Is a game played by the japanese boys asb two boys play it one throws a red disk face down on the ground and the other tries to strike f 7 1 M 4 I 1 I 1 J N va 1 J it 11 I 1 1 1 I 1 I A 9 F 4 1117 1 1 te 7 N 4 N J 1 I A X I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 V rb I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 it so bard with big grechi disk that be turns it over and thus wins the red one the bells of japan one of the sweetest of them rings out many times every day into the waiting air in a faraway far tar away little city its ton tone a Is intensely inte neely thrilling and the bells are not sounded by a clapper but are struck from the outside by a sort of wooden arm being withdrawn to the proper distance and released it strikes the bell once the strokes tire allowed to succeed one abnot another h or ony with dignified and stately tradition says that tile the finest driest bells alls have much silver in their composition which may account tor for their deep and wonderful sweetness whether this be not the bells make a profound imbres impression upon all sensitive and musical persons heretofore accustomed to the more discordant bells of 0 our western civilization st sr Nic nickelas belas up helly A up holly A one ot of the tow few ancient british customs which survives 13 still kept as a carnival by the galze gulden r or the shetland isles at the end of january janitor at lerwick shirli thirty squads of from a six to twenty persons persona each are formed a and nil every squad has a distinctive fancy dress dregs A fine model of a nor norsa se galley la Is built gilded and decked with glitter lug ins shields and norse ra raven v banners sometimes there are two or three thre small galleys early on up helly day pu an immense poster attested by the sign manual of the worthy chief dulzer Is placed at the market cross declaring the tha route ot at the procession in the afternoon the children parado parade tho the streets drawing pretty little models ot of galleys and dancing round little bonfires in which the galleys are burnt in the evening there Is a Q torchlight procession of 0 Gui gutters the great galley with a crew of quaintly attired musicians is drawn through the he town the and afterwards burnt in the market close I 1 then bands ot at dulzer 5 still in fancy dress make visits in the town and eat drink and dance tar far into the night with ith their entertainers london AfIr mirror A trick with water it if a drop of water la Is lot let tall fall on a piece of 0 paper it spreads in n a large circle if however the be paper has been oiled or covered aith lampblack or some borne similar substance the drop of writer water ft sill roll upon it as a ball slightly flattened this tact fact may bo be made use of for the performance of a pretty trick take a band of rather strong paper about a toot foot wide and as long ions as possible sheets pasted together end to end will do admirably pass it over a smoking lamp or better suh still cover one side of it with graphite commonly called black blackhead lead or plumbago stand upright on the table several ev books decreasing regularly in I 1 I 1 |