Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 30, Ligonier, Noble County, 14 October 1909 — Page 2
g ‘ By o wh e I ! | JAMES DRISTOLGREEN —~_ . — : = ; -;;::_,,:,_.,ff;w‘ ‘ :.e Y @ ‘;\if ‘ | : i i < 'A | ~ il t e dp I] S A A s . ‘ .‘ ® r o / & L ) : ' W ; | ;‘ : ; : ¢y 22 ) l ' I/ f//) d 6 | “1 ‘ # :’/ / o L . L e Rt A s s s
g ————_ i 1 :!: thm pes f: v g ¢ £ P foir ¥ : # pluerimd i Mnnatity 3 o ek flusnre ¢ 'y - - Erent el Ok S ) o‘i‘:.f‘ “g“‘ B Ao SRI W £ L il : Ie 4 T TRy R 3 ¥ sows ¥ oo } i d \vgaf‘} : Ehe sveitiv ,:. R ¢ +3 $ : - h*tb i . = S £l g, g i - "4: i ¥ o FH¥ 3 : i ® i ¥ & 2 £ P { £ § i 3 3 § 5 f ‘r, Fhey § § P = . - f 2 S Yoo teird 4y 5 4 ot PO ! TERL I fliT4 ¥ ! &2 ST i ? : i i ' 4 £ % t 4
SNy e s : vifih‘?::fi'fi‘__l:;':"'"»i‘»Q' 3")‘ TRt s Boe S R BRI Lot sisced on the paper be ’%’fi“‘“r e : Tt ff;%i‘f shich Honus is 1o sy, ""”mfi’“ i ‘” . ’f*i;.giu, ;fix:??{fi¥¢il£fiihlor Hane lx mfi&fi&miflu‘r ] D "‘fti{%f*&* _SOuIPAEt, 8 few months mmw‘;‘ifi . nicknan of eBB o signed up for $35 8 el o I e 7it SR e ant s who e makee nbt v: (sl *.“: ‘fifyfwtfl&fih?tfibffiw fl{q e!“ “hfiflfigw b ‘ g %m«»z« Lad po thouxht of becomisg anything bu ssioher il G R, 121 00 theo uf the Stegbussille ehib in b ’hfi‘;zttaifimm«‘d Wagner, Claude Hischey and Fra tffl?:“: ‘k?gfflii‘} Durltg a slunip the | [hige: pent - e ffiww“h i bmfimg e : 'Hi Y"%{i‘mfi}fi:&!fis(*m{uf‘m \m.sg fis}fih%fiygj\; : i o ropet MG o i fio pasencer train (S L iwa un! ::?_m » .’.‘;n} i 5“’)%!,\@;”% {4B sk be apeisv B o'clock eoSR [0 e v ii i : " e ro R e following evmsing, avd s Tep e ;éwhfiimf ot table wenring his gwfifl@; Brother A ';‘Ab L a ;!_“z:,w;:iimhf%?m& 33“&?;3}:&&9?} }mmd H*,!u w;;fg:g»i l;;;g;y‘uz RIS ot iwi ebl Ehat was 50 SWlft 1L went vyes ”’W*“ > :nm*«*”wgsm DUt Moreland was o short handed he it 10 xS eTlke 1 eat and slecp wirn - ”“fi/ - the hrthgt 8 8 hine 1o the Job of shortstop and Beeas to practice e Earlhwi:idnat start quick eno ugh he dig Boles in the by ’gg,%%m%{g chased for spoiling the dinmond and had gt et mwfiigg};‘ifim couid field all HEhL, but was wkwar n A BRI oLsup i dacins o 200 N Bl o we ‘"‘* ut hid made such an unfavorable Impee iDfosxion with Moreian tne MR 10 T raron S tor oihen £ e e agmed « e IR L S s o s . ’“f»\m - - - § & 7*“}"”0"4‘? rewained with the Culun?%w;g the shift that took B SREEMAIE ¥ae made. s Barney Dreyfuss hus moncy -~ Al mswfl‘fimfiw om i oney . m?«fmtflma“fimws in the coufteat O yria sac i brient ot of the Ameriean league. i ??u;snim;m son he made A new . . He stole 29 bases in 1908, but last geason he n
record, nearly doubling his former mark. At the beginning of the season the Georglan sald he would be fortunate if he got a total of 50 for this vear. : There is probably no runner in the history of baseball, and this list includes “King” Kelly and “Bijl” Lange and “Billy” Hamilton and “Tom" Brown and.- George Browne and all the others who could compare with Cobb. ~ Cobb’s purpose is to outguess the other fellow. He glides where they are not expecting him to siide. He has nine different methods of reaching a bag and he employs all of them. : . = . The Georgian ‘can slide head first or feet first; he can dive or he ¢an go into the bag from any direction. He has reached a bag many times this year where he was not credited with a stolen base. Coob's force when coming into a sack makes him a difficult man to get. He may be -touched out. but the hand that holds the ball will be . unsteady, and should it linger on any part. of the Georgian’s body the ball stands little chance of remaining in the hand. , " When Cobb plays baseball he calls forth everythiug he possesses—strength, energy, speed and mind. He works them all {0 the limit. . Before the -beginning of the season “Lou” Criger, veterunn cateher, who was then with the Browns in training, made the declaration that “Cobb is a snap and I'll get his goat” s Criger may have made the remark in an unguarded momwent, &s men often dafand he may not have meant it just as it sounded, but Cobb heard about it and began to formulate plans immediately. . Cobb’s pride was hurt and his reputation insulted. He went in to get revenge and he got it. Criger's arm
EVILS OF THE TELEPHONE
That Instrument Has Accelerated Bad Habit of Cossip Can Not Be Denind.
Minna Thomas Antrim wants to know what is to be done with the “telephone fiend,” the wonderful “call-er-up” at any old time and place. The telephone, she declares, has become the faverits pastime of the woman with nothing to do. It accel
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18 a good throwing arm and has caught many good men, bt Cobb beat “lou's" throws several times this yvear and Cobb made Criger a lsughing stock on several oceasions : : : The prime of Cobb’s life still remaing to be reached. He has sprinted against. the fastest throwers in the American league and. he has beaten them. In 1807 Johnpy Kling's arm stopped Tyrus, but last vear Cobb stole bases on Kling. Cobb is half way to a base before MOSt rununers get a start and the pitcher unwinds himself, and he is into a bag before the throw from an aver age cateher reaches the baseman's hands. . . Tyrus Raymond Cobb is baseball's uml!n'e%. . Lajoie is still the king of all second sackers, at least ‘SO sa¥s a prominent St. Louis baseball critic, ~ Recently a baseball fan of the Mound City wrote Billy Murphy of St. Louis, asking who was the greatest second basemsan of the men now playing the bag. Following is the Interesling answer; i : . "hLajoie. Johnnie Evers and Jimmy Willlams are the ‘three greatest sécond basemen in the major leagues. “Williains was not at his best last season and Lajoie lacked a few points of traveling at his top speed at times, while Evers, coming slowly each year, showed more brilliancy than either during the race and lacked but a small margin of reaching the high-water mark of thie phenomenal performances by Napoleon Lajoie, who, withont doabt, to my way of figuring, has a shade on all second basemen and should be given the palm, with Johnnie Ehers as a close second. . ~ "The most really brilliant player of the three is Johnnle Kters. 1 belicve he can go back into the field
erates gossip as well as busiress. It has saved lives and helped pile up fortunes, but jt has also ruined lives, cursed some women. She goes on to remark: : s
“Telephoning from a babit finally becomes a vice and a menacs to the courtesies. Jt has destroyed the fine art of social correspondemce. It has crowned Haste with Ocurtesy's lauats -
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“Another phase of the telephone madness, and one of the most audacious, is the impertinence it makes possible against the party ‘called up. Impulsive women say things to men and to each other over the telephone that they would never say face to face. To be rude to an acquaintance is at all times shocking to the gentle, therefore to have to answer the long-drawn-out ‘call’ of an idler, who wishes fo kill time at your expense, is out--lageous. Nevertheless, seemingly it must be done and very graciously,
and get balls better than the others, while both Williams and Lajoie can outplay him on fast ground balis 'fi-fl'.‘.*'n playing in ciose. All three mep are wonders it holding thrown balls to get & runher at second. Lajole takes a ball and gots it nway o shade quicker than the uzhv!’fi “1 believe that Williams can outplay either Lajole or Evers on & very rough diamond, equaling old John ‘Burdock in this respect. Al are clever onehanded piayers. T __ “Either Lajote or Williams could throw off his glove and play just as well as ever, the true test of a bail player. : : n “Oh, tempora! O mores! 'O mama! : “*Ze Grande Napoleon La-wah!' He is the greatest second baseman of ali time. The brightest jewel in the baseball diadem—gee! that sounds like diamond. *“Lajoie has the best pair of hands 1 ever saw in baseball; right or left, high or low, the most difficult ball is taken with ease, making the play look simple and giving the impression of indifference; nota move wasted, and a perfect knowledge of time and distance; never Lurried, but ever working into a position to get the ball away; saving wild throws from short; and Lajoie continues to make the most difficult plays look so dead eusy that one sometimes feels that he has no love for .the great game. A ball Is hit like a shot out of a gun; with little exertion a hand darts out like the head of a snapping turtle, and the ball is hooked in by the big Frenchman, the king of ball players, Mr. Lajoie of Cleveland. ; : L “The crowd howls with delight, but Larry smiles and murmurs: “That's nothing; you should see me at my
with ‘thank you added, or—you become a target for ire. Sometimes you pay the price of discomfort to your entire family. If you protest verbally, forthwith you are a crank, disagreeable, unfeeling. and what not. Again if you fail to ‘call up’ in turn you are ‘queer.” If you do it is a signal for renewed mortgages upon your time. patience and quiet. Busy men whose women-folk, friends or sweethearts call them up inopportunely are beginning to lie diligently in order to save tbeir day. il
beet® Them you fes! ke opening on the great dall diayer with & Gutiing gun Blied with daseballs to see him Jump ] fully believe. however. be would beat the gun” = Hot with all the applause padd the brilllast diamond art iat, baseball famme i pevertbeirss freting. The boro of today may be a dead ope tomorrow. 1 i ol whal you wers yes terday. s what you are todar, apd the plaver who Is a member of & championalip cish cne year may be back in the misors before & FOar of 6 has passed. : Of the (hirage White Box who won the Amorican league pesnent in 1860 only one mwan, Frank Isbell, plared with Ot Cage thin yeuar. ' The otber champions of the Hrat year of the wagoe were: Denper, Katall, Phber and Palterson. pllchers; Bugden, Buckley and Wood, catehers; Padden. Hartman, Shy £t and Chatley Olesry, aficiders; Hos, Dillard, MoFariand, Brigdie and Bheapes, ouifelders OFf thewe, Charley Oleary of ke Tigete b the n&?’! gee Rin the Ametican leagoe The following zear the While Box wore made up a 8 ol fows. Pistt, Grifik Callaban. Pattersan and Katoll pitchers: Rugden ard Sullivad, catobers . labell Merdes, Nbupsrt, Burke sad Martman infelders Jloe Fieides Jones MeFarland and Foater outßeldurs. OF Ihe 1y lebell an Sullivan are the only Bareiviey vitoer or be '&*e"!g‘%‘w Eox roaler or g the AWmericas '-'"'*Afi'&t.’ {larke Goifth wae fol ot B 2 New York iast suminer and had charge of Ibe Uincinpat ';e}mn' thin wenass. whils
srs; Davis, Castro. Bonper, Man phy. Monte {ross, Lave Cross, in fislders: Harizei, Puilz and Bewbald, outticlduers Many of these Rres new o aither in o the mihne
lengues or out of the game sltogether. the hig teagun mrv@vou being Wuldell. Plank, Davis, Murphy snd Harigel - : © Boston took Hs turn at winsing the pesnant in 1967 with a feam compoxed of Young Dineen, Hughes Winters and Gibson, pitchers: Criger. Far rell ang ). Stgml..'_m't.gfh«»m; La Chanee, Forris, Parent and Collins, iufielders; Dougherty, U, Stabl, Freeman and O'Brien cutfielders. : Perbaps that bundh have pot scattered. Of the pitchera, Young is in Cleveland, Criger and Dineen are ip St Louis, Winters in Detroit, Hughes in Washingten, while Gibson is 8 coach at Notre Dame. AMer having been s member of three other clubs Jake Stabl is back again 1o play fira base : : 2 Forris s a Brown, Jimmy Cotling belongs to Minneapolis
and Parent is one of the White 84x. Chick Stahl is desd. Dougherty is a Chicagoan and Freeman is in the A, A, The only changes in the makeup of the team that won the pennant for Boston in 1904 were the substitytion of Jesse Tunnehill for Tom Hughes and “"Kip” Selk bach for Dougberty ip the outfleld. Tafinehill is now with Washington, while Selbach is a minor leaguwr. Philadelphia won the pennant again in 1995 with practically its same (lpe-up as in 1902 The pew men -were: Henley, Coakley and Bender, pitchers: Knight, infielder; Lord and Hoffman. outfielders. Of the six newcomers Bender is the only one who is still one of the Athietics. Coakley bas a semipro team in New York Hoffman is with the Browns. Although the White Sox won the pennant as late as 1906, several members of that world's championship team falled to stick. Several have gone back to the minor leagues, while others have been traded. ~ Pitchers Slever and Eubanks, Catcher Payne and Infielders Coughlin and Lowe are the only members of the 1907 Tigers who failed to last the present season. “Dutch” Schaefer is with Washington, Rossman with St Louis, Archer with the Cubs. : : X © A resume of the above shows that of the first two pennant-winning teams there are only three men left in the league, while there are only 22 chawmpions of the first five years still remaining in the circuit. eI ‘A Chicago judge has decreed that a husband can le gally come home drunk and swear at his wife. If we were that wife we would beat the olé family poker to a white heat and burn some cute little red stripes on mis worthless carcass. .
“A telephone in a residence should be for the convenience of the user, for imprative needs, for exceptional social emergencies, where writing, sending or going is quite imposible—for unavoidable delays, for trains or service of any sort. For these things it is indispensable, but for the exchanges of twaddle between foolish women, communications between the prowling wolf and the unsuspecting lamb, it has become an unmitigated domestic curse.” : : i
CHEGREAT T Y €OBB
Didn’t Forget Himself. : A three-year-old waif in a deaconnesses’ home offered up tHis prayer, says the Delineator: “Oh, God bless all in this home (mentioning each by name), “and all the sallors in the sea, that the ships won't run over them, and all the poor boys and girls that they may get bread and candy, and bless Alfred Warren Randall”— (bimself)—a hesitation, then added, “the one what's got the nightgown on.” e
The Marriage Vow NO BA® ES OR LOTS OF THEM?
A guestion arcee sy 10 wial would’ o 0 the special fuxury in which each person present would indulge bad she gnltmited means The duswers wore varicus. some ®aring ravel oibers en terinining. of¥ers Bumersus pioiores. books and bßrie a brac (ne womas | who Bad sald little durify the copo troversy . was 8t las! sddrviacd, and repiled by saying Ihat £s+ bzd Bot ) spoken befure, as she. knew none of | thoss prescnt would agres =ith bes. . | “For” she sald usbing «Evir “my desire would Be for & lsrge famolv 6 ehiidren whom [ €ouid have Sneiyriad | geated Bpd to whom §ocoold wive aft the sdvantarek | would want my oy | anel girts i Newe™ o Her resark wer groeted with & meTlear . ol BArpride anid dldwent o VoD yon resdly smesn tßatse w.z.k.'tw}, pre womas, laeredninoniy 0 T, A “indeed | A 0 wan e chlg N“.;:?)' To my way of thinking theie 1 o Ereater Bappitess Ihdn Tora wlanas W be surronnded by 4 namter of sl dren wilth The toeass to ¢o lhems 108 tice.” - S - Ab, there's Phe b Ruirels Ctie R ity that the dodiar mark noust n¥iTe hrough eYe Fihing as 11 dovd AS HRiY binlhy w{a}" oy thi ficn »-,’ B& i, P Son } Toar ] In wany rases howeter 1t fe mat tha thodghs A ahae Z*?"""‘M.“flf o 4 v.,x'g'fggvflt of chideon of fhe thidght of whal they =it cust during the first Tew Foars of thelr Hie, tha! Canw o peaphe to wizh fo Bave small fanstice I i rather the dread lewt. when - fhe young penpls are sid enouel 10 :;N;z‘f coilege thove will ot be the Sninoes. o iu{k,a 'a:'fs:;-,;azuz.u{r; of z?zg-;f'i": eduration. 18 wosld be wall for thowe sho argae thus 1o remember that In this vountry of ours fewx peopiz Rave: during the Bret yeare o oarriage. the woney that b Iheirs 20 years. Lates s Co 7 I woulld mot Rave atyore nsaging that &mi%&;fifi_lhé: Hringing info the worid of wore Ble suee than . one enn, Bt the thie feed and clothe Put I do hold o Enmt when o parente omre whatdshtly abie o provide e bl ehildron daripg ohildbond Hox make a mistake % insieting thar ar bipsh thire must BB 68 hand he mimes with whieh 6 gend (Beir new bhorn baby throngh college and ot him up in the businces or profession he may ohouse « ' s T Lot us look :ie matter slalaly in
ONE LOAF OF BREAD BY G, F wm'c.?;’r, LL 0. F. G 5. A
Until receonily the vig '.i,' le prosduaet whieh suprertedt {he AT vl ®onint of humap Ufa was plew, bul now i probable fhat e peaule depend Lupon wheat fur their ‘s;—.. 5 st A 1 o o natriment (has upon any o’her singhe grain. The whes! crop of the world tor 15992 the lirge WL then e ctibed was 11Z4420.000 busbels, of which TE A 0 800 were prostuned toihe DRI ed Siatis We may therelors presyms that the al of bread which Lieg upon £ 5 5-;§::Es' of the ave ‘f:z‘;;’»' Teaier (R & waf of wheat bread, and do we will cistisider it ’ L . Wheat s m‘; new dincovery 1t fs found in the early tombs of Frypt angd Rlnoeg the remalts of the lake dwed Cjerw ih Bwitrerlund whiere the clarred kernels Bad lain burieqd for soveral - thossand ftfzim before the Chiristiaf &rs P !?’.e‘*, fact. Ihat the ward “tor wheat is rommon (o most. of the Aryan 'i;{ngz.s,&:f-x, §is rightiy inferred that it was eultivated in gentral Asia Adn probistoric tmes and " disiributed throughoul the easivrn "% atitds nent with the emigration which early radiated from the bome of the Aryan races in western Turkesran Hut it gid not reach America until alter the discovery by Columbus = __ The varteties of wheat sre very ng merous, thus adapting it 1o a wider rmange of conditions than ‘any othef fereal. It ripens eqimlly well in 8beria and Alaska and India and Sodth Americad. Some varieties are sown in automn and a_u‘n.trq in the spring, but if winter wheat is sown. in the capring or spring wheat sown ‘in. autumn, while very few plants will come to maturity, a 8 few will do so. “There- - fore, by saving thése few heads that ripen one can transform at-his pleas ure & winter -wheat Into a spring wheat, and vice versa. Great results have likewise been produced by cross- ' ing varieties with each other In - which case there is often a great ‘im. provement in both the quality and the . quantity of the product. - i i The great value of wheat as a food consists in its possession of a large - amount of albuminoid matter, which
THE CHILDREN OF JAPAN
They Are Gentie and Cheerful Little Creatures and Have Many Pets. :
Children bave a good time in Japan, They are blessed by inheritance with a gentle and cheerful nature; they are dressed loosely yet warmly; they are out of doors as much as possibie, and inside their homes there is so little {urniture they never stumble over it, and are never warned against crawling up on satin-brocaded chairs or not handling the bric-a-brac. The houses are always open to sun and air, even in cold weather. They are built dovetailed together, no nails being used, and are mounted on wooden pillars so that when an earthquake occurs they will not tumble down, but ‘merely shake and settle again. ;
- Every Japanese house. of pretenslons has in its principal room -a raised platform or dats upon which the mikado, should he by chance ever visit the house, would sit. It is a law that no subject may look down upom
the fare und amnouboe (hat parents Bave so more rightl W indulges ia pambers of chlldrepocronding inte the safsery more motey thap the par ents have making the payment of 08l debls fmpossibie. and sapping the courage o! the f{ather, and the sirengis of the’ mother--than they bave fn porchase hooses and landas ter whish ey canßot pay: But When parrs's can buy huxuries that &r¢ mot neeogsilics and fan indulge thelr parsonal whims and wishes, #urely eliidren have 3 fight to be To vesr and year children is one of the cHa! nime of woman's suiatence, ahd until she bas ewe a hild she Tax ot lived up to the purpore of b eing, and hets i aet s full round e And thr Americosn Bgsband. noted t¥ee e wiorld for his odnsideration for, bis i » wiskvg deciares 15at sbe #hasl Bdve her gen wmary i ihis mab ey ) “Yiewed froam A praslival standpoind, few nifer usistmenls pay 55 0o vhib dres I Wosien trus Thal fodr chiidren Fre Utle mote actual tronble (han dre two mod thal the addigonal thosbie in -rz’;z:';yr-;?htm%fp} for in the pessute they bring He Thelr compantenabip In thety ehilihond and thelr peotection ns well da vompabiousbip G othe . yeuts 9 e when (he parents begin to feed that they Gesd SIPOBE - FOUDK ArMS abarst thew i Fou would Roow what a ohildiess loape mredtie-imagine the Christniss sesson wilbeut the lHitle ares’ CAnd loak for 38at one sad @oe went &1 (he hiupe from wWhick an oply child haw Lol (kR ald toen sak W ené chill s ssTe A bleyring than fany '?‘:"}a’, o 5 xsaw @hxt 1= R Bt ’tra?‘:f. n sEich IBE armua tuoust b‘ e ply gEd (he hearts past ad fake * Y¥ew thers in something woree-in ffiw ¥ cmarag 5 thome . whao h?mfl wbat ta Feally worth BHie, than . a A‘!;»‘;zmiy ot 'Mu Batle dmos oand taat %8 fnsmiiy withoul ARy ohildeen H e mot Yees pitiable Betmase the parents are wwnorant 8f wEAT ey s VWhen oid. &ge and onelindEs approsch, fhey will knpw, H God bas desied them ,g';v'g'gay fee s'esz&:fs.:;fr-' :.’:"'Kf' i 1y biindly deny fhetsdeives God's -gi%m&’;f@i' fGeadinge-—tmay he ol pity them, for thes Koow pot what thep gl i ; CiCepvrigtt by Jodeph B Diwics)
RS Mo baEh SMEeI lUSIRETIANL violient iln Fthe bLlresd, and enters ints the prosd ges tien of he auscles And Hzaments of canimal bedieg - - i i Upnder high eultivation w)eat has éb*"*:!’t kpown 2o ¥ield 686 Buahels P ;A re, esch hughal WEIRLInE 60 pounds, { while the average yvield may easily be i made 47 bushels to the gere. The low { everage of the ¥ield 8o general in the .Zj_s‘z_:.- - Biatin s due 16 hmperfaoct egk Ptivation an® to ap unskilisl use of - fertilizers. The power of increase in : s grain of wheat i 3 astonishing. since i:‘\ lrge number of ather stalke spring §a<;s' from the gingle shool that first Uromes: out of (e ground ) There is no doubt Ihat wheat Hread ‘ with good batter on it more fully supi plies the wants of the human system 1 Ihan. any other single article of food { dbes. The need of Butter or some éu';'z«.' fat’ la pecasioned by the lack Vof that elemenl 2o necessalry to Ihe fh‘em:m} sysiem in most of the cereals, gu‘s;s*zg‘n carn &nd oats contain it to 8 ‘ considerable extent. A good: five-cent tHoaf of bread contains as much nutrii ment as would be found {n any of the ¢ vdrious breakfast foods now so popu- | lar, costing three times as much. P ik | i Here is a good recipe for white ; bread: - | Sift together 5% cups flour, one %mblequun SUZAr, one teasnoon salt o oTwo cups milk’ scalded and cooled. l Add one-half cup yeast to the milk | Stir the liquid, temperature 75 de i grees, into the dry with a knife. ! Knead until there are air bubbles at ; the edge of the dough. Cover in a tem- . perature of 75 degrees and let stand {3y hours. " It should be twice as large {as at first. . Pass a knife around the dish and cut down to get out the air bubbles. Shape and allow to rise again to twice the size. " Biscuit should be baked in an oven ‘that will brown' a spoonful of flour in two minutes, bread in five minutes. " Biscuit bakes in 15 to 20 minutes. Bread bakes in 35 to 40 minutes. . . {Copyright, by Joseph B. Bowles)
the mikado. A pretty Japanese custom is tbat of making excursions to the country when ‘the :rees are in bloom to see them. The Japanese are great flower lovers, and are most fond of the blossoms which grow on trees, Their love for cherry biossoms is well known. In February they visit the plum trees; the cherry in April: the lotus in July; azaleas during the long summer months, and in the autumn is the great chrysanthemum festival Japanese children have pets as wel. as their occidental brothers and sisters. Tiey rabbits and an odd kind of cat with white fur, black and yel. low spots and no tail, divide their affections. In many houses are also found aquariums stocked with Leauti. ful and rarely colored fish. The katy. did is likewise a great pet, and specie mens are kept-in little bamboo cages. Butterflies are another favorite. In Japan all animals, birds and insects seem to know they are gsafe, for even the wild ones will"alight¢ on one’s hand occasionaliy.
