CLEAN MINDS; CLEAN CITIES People Must Be Educated to the Necessity of Proper Appearance of Municipality. Tm as good as you are," said the dirty man to the well-dressed gentle man in the street car who had drawn away from; him, a bit Ton may be right," answered the clean one, "but you certainly don't smell as good." % . "Lord!" exclaimed a visitor to one of the most populous sections of Bos ton. "What smells there are here." "Yes," agreed the social worker of the party, "we've got to clean out a lot of minds.before we'll get rid of .this dirt" i "You haye to clean minds!" "Surely. Dirty minds make dirty people, and dirty people make a dirty town. The idea of cleanliness must be put in the minds of those whose present standards of cleanliness are elemental. 'The woman who will tolerate cob webs in the corner of her ceiling has 'cobwebs in the corners "of her mind. Disorder in a home is evidence of the presence of minds that are disorderly. Onr surroundings always reflect what we are within. To make these streets 'dean we must create in the people who live here a desire for clean streets." "Do you mean to say that the peo ple here are content with all this dirt around them?" the visitor asked with surprise. "The majority of them are. What the majority really and truly wants, the majority can have." The speaker .was silent for a few moments. When they reached the next corner, be said, 'Tf there was on this street one man Or woman who wanted more than any thing else to have this street cleaned , and made sweet-smelling, the work would be done." "The old story of Sodom and Gomor? rah, eh!" observed the cynic.-'-Ford Hall Folks. _ _'---."?.... ADDS TO CITY'S APPEARANCE -*." _ Form of Street Larrip That !. Coming into General Use Throughout 1 the Country, > - Besides forming a ?very attractive ?support for a street lamp, this re-en forced concrete post also offers a con venient place for displaying street signs. At the top of the pole is a 12 1 n c h frosted-glass globe in which there is a hiigll-candlepow er electric lamp. Surrounding the globe is a square framework in which four, strips of blue glass, carrying the street names in white letters, are held. During either the day or night, the name of the street and its inter secting thorough fare are thus plainly visible wben the pole Is placed at a corner.-Popular Mechanics. ?li?. Making the Rock Garden. The rock garden, to bs successful, must be along the lines approved by nature. It must not, in any point, ! resemble a piece of masonry or other iormal construction, says a writer in the Minneapolis Journal. The most satisfactory Iodation for it is at the foot of a gentle slope, where it can climb the declivity and the rocks be given the appearance of jutting out irom the hillside. But very excellent results may ?e achieved on flat sur faces if it is remembered to let the rocks appear to crop out on the sur face rather than appear to be placed there for a purpose. The rock garden should have its highest point or be ginning at some natural or artificial "boundary-a wall, or better still, a clump of trees and shrubbery which w