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22J 'fr,fw rf&Tjittei EVENING- LBDGBBPHlIiABBLPHIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1914. -1 -t AMERICA'S DEBT TO GERMANY TOLD BY CHARLES I. ELIOT President Emeritus of Har yard Details Our Obliga tions for Scientific and Lit erary Knowledge Acquired From Teutonic Sources. By CHABLES W. ELIOT Tit$Ant Emeritus of Harvard University. The educational obligations of America to Germany ore Indeed wide nnd deep. They, relate to literature, science, art, education and religion. The Gorman gifts were first communicated through a. few jerso'iSi young pioneers from America who', after having received a partial edu cation here, went oyer to Germany to itudy more deeply flnd Intensively. They j,sve also been communicated directly from German to American Institutions. The German universities to which the first American students resorted In the early part of the nineteenth century were In part recent creations, and In part re constructions on old foundations; but how rich they were, how free, and how strong! I recall a small group of young men who went In the first fifth of the nine teenth century from the neighborhood of Boston to German universities. Ono of them was George Tlcknor, who subse quently becamo the historian of Spanish literature and author of a book which Is etlll the best book In English on that iubleet. Another was George Bancroft, who returned homo to become flrBt a tc&chcr, and then the writer of an elabo rate history of the United States, nnd later In life wn the American Minister at Berlin. Another was Frederic Henry Hedge, also from New England, who, after his student days In Germany, be camo first n teacher, then an author on religious themes, and then a professor of German literature In Harvard Univer sity. This was a characteristic group of young Americans going over to Germany, full of Intellectual enterprise, to nee what they could learn there of letters, sclenco and art; to study the educational Institutions of Germany In the hope of bringing homo good educational seed which might be planted here In this com paratlVfly undeveloped, commercial land, where a scanty border of civilization was clinging to the edgo of an unmeasured wilderness. All threo of theso men In fluenced for good the policies of Harvard University. The American pioneers In Germany dur ing the first half of tlio 19th cen tury brought back various knowledges, various skills and many pregnant doc tllnes. The variety of knowledge and skill which could be procured at tho Ger man universities at that early day was something astounding to these American youths, something Indescribably rich nnd various. With their own personal ex periences and gains they brought back also to Amerloa the structuro of the modern German university, then young In Germany and In America not yet con ceived or. Tney nau, moreover, absorbed that noble German policy of ncademlo freedom, freedom for tho student and tho teacher alike. This academic free dom meant emancipation from tradition nnd prejudice, and from authority, whether governmental or ecclesiastical. They saw, also, how two great doctrines which had sprung from . the German Protcstnnt Reformation had been devel oped by Germans from seed then planted In Germany. The first was the doctrine of universal education, developed from tho Protcstnnt conception of Individual responsibility; nnd tho second was tho grcnt doctrlno of civic liberty, liberty In Industries. In society, In government, liberty with order under law. These two principles took their rise In Protestant Germany; nnd America has been tho greatest beneficiary of that noblo teach ing. Tho pioneers from Now England In the first half of tho 19th century have been followed by a Btream of American youth, going over to enlarge their experiences, to make now observations, to put In practice the inductive method of arriv ing at truth, and to learn to think pro foundly and accurately In the German Universities. That stream has flowed backward all over this country, fertiliz ing It with German thought and airman methods. Theso thousands of American students have absorbed In German:' that splendid spirit of scientific, research now devoloped In all fields of knowledge on the same method and In the same spirit. Scientific research has been lesrned through practlco In Germany by thou sands of American students and teach ers. It Is Impossible to describe or wen Imagine what an Immense Intel! sctual gift this has been from Germany to America. It is, of course, true that America Is Indebted not only to Germany but also to England, Scandinavia, France, Italy, and of late to Russia, for this psr fected spirit and method of research, b'H America Is more Indebted to Germany than to any other nation, because the range of German research has been wider nnd deeper than has been seen In any other of tho nations mentioned. There Is another bond of union be tween Germany and America which way come some day to tho stago of practical efficacy. To be sure, It Is nothing but a sentiment or feeling: but sentiments often supply tho motive power for vigor ous notion. Tho Teutonic peoples set n higher value on truth In speech, thought and action than any other peoples. Ger many and America, England, Scandi navia and Holland nro ono In this re spect. They all lovo truth; they seek It; they woo It. They respect the man who speaks and nets tho truth even to his own Injury. Tho English Bacon said of truth: "It Is tho sovereign good of hu man nature." That Is what all tho Teu tonic peoples believe. They want to found their action on fact, not fancy; on tho truth, the demonstrated truth, not on Imaginations. I say that hero Is a fine bond of union, a real likeness of spirit, a community In devotion and wor ship among all tho Teutonic peoples. Let us hope that at no distant day this com mon worship, this common devotion, will result In common beneficent action. WHO WILL FINANCE THIS NEW "EDEN"? Tho "Mittgart Bund" Seeks an "Angel" If Qermany Cannot Supply Site America May Bo Honored. New York leaves Vera Cruz Today VERA CRUZ, Sept. 17.-Tho United States battleship Now York has been ordered homo and will sail northward today. BERLIN,. Sept. 16. Is there In Amer ican millionaire with the beauty of an Apollo, the Intellect of a Socrates, tho strength of a Samson, tho restless energy of a Kaiser Wllhclm, the Idealism of a Bryan, who wants to help Improve the human race by becoming tho financial founder of a now "Garden of Eden"? Dr. Wllltbald Hcntschel, head of the "Mittgart Bund," of Germany, Is looking for such a man. Aflldo from the reward In Heaven and tho niche In the Hall of Fame hereafter, such a superman Is also to have his reward In this llfei He can be ono of tho first "Adams" In tho new "Eden" with ten or moro "Eves." Matrimony one long series of "trial marrlagcsl" Each "marriage" to last from three months to ono year! This, In short, Is the scheme for tho "human garden" planned by the Mittgart Bund and Dr. Hentschol for which a philan thropist and a suitable location are being sought. If the financier wants to g(,vo the new Eden a start out of purely philanthropic motives there Is no objec tion. It Is estimated that $50,000 would be sufficient to establish and maintain tho proposed Eden for somo years. Tho "bund" also is looking for a site for tho "human garden" where It can rear a race of children unsurpassed for beauty, strength, Intellect nnd wisdom, and who are to becomo the regenerating elements of tho human raco and tho hope of tho world. Dr. Hentschel created somewhat of a sensation ubout a year ago at a con vention of the "Mittgart Bund" by his plan for "rearing noble human bolngs." Tho schome called for what he. charac terized a "human garden" with 100 men the elect of Germany and :000 women. It Is Dr. Hentschel's idea that places must be established where by a course of selectivity a serious and earnest scien tific attempt must be made to rer noble human beings as regenerating and renew ing elements which alone can chain what he declares to be the steady deterioration and degeneration of the human race. As originally planned, It was prsposjd to have tho site of the new "Eden" some where In Germany, the founders being patriotic enjjpn to want to fur.ilsh the first "regenerating elements" to tho Ger man race. But the Germans apparently do not want to be regenerated. Ill a letter to The Sun correspondent, Dr. Hentschel writes that two things are holding back the realization of the "hu man garden" and Its benefits mon'-y aid women. Men, ho says, can roidlly be had In sufficient number to start tho "garden." Falling to find a suitable site In Ger many and as the foreign pro has treated the scheme- with far more dig nity and seriousness than had tho Ger man press, Dr. Hontschel said that the "bund" was looking abroad for n sultyblo placo In which to start tho now "Eden." whero tho unhapplncss "of married Ufa Is to find a solution In a long series of brief "trial marriages." A tepresen'a tlvo of the "bund" was sent to the Ar gentine nnd nnother to Sweden, but they wore not much Impressed by tho prospects there. A site somewhere In the United States would bo far preferable. The "bund" Is still open to tho consideration of land grants or propositions for a sult nble location for the "human garden." Dr. Hentschel nUo would like to have some of tho wealthy Americans who frco y clvj their money away for various purposes finance the "Eden," According to "Mittgart" Ideon, two curses rest upon modern society modern marriage nnd modern city life. Tho first, us shown by tho Insane asylums, prisons and Idle rich, brings Into life much that is worthless, useless and destructive and hinders tho race from reaching Its high cut development. City life Is the "cal dron" and "furnace" which devours tho best that comes from the farming com munities. "A crime against humanity Immoral through and through," U tho way modern wedlock Is characterized. In tho last analysis, assert the Mittgart Bund and Its founder, the greater part of the misery on earth Is traceable to modern married life, The "degoneraUon of honor, morals, duty, modesty, self-control, co-operation, truthfulness and fidelity" In declared to bo evidence of racial decline. Doctor Hentschel's scheme for checking this condition of the human race far out docs the "Eugenics." That Is, temporary, short term or trial marriages between women who want to becomo "mothers of the new race" and "superior men," It Is the theory of Doctor Hentschel, In proof of which history and analogy are cited, that all the superior qualities come from the father and seldom from the mother. To regenerate the race It Is necessary, therefore, according to Doctor Hentschel and tho Mittgart Bund, that "superior men," that Is, men of superior morals, in tellect and physique In short, great men In any line should have the opportunity to become fathers of many children. The children will bo raised ana edu cated by the society until the time comes when tho Stato will do that. The wlfo Uovotes herself to her child for three years before sue is auowea to marry again. Tho husband In tho meantime takes another wife. Much attention to physical training de velopment In children will bo given In the "Garden." Little Btrcss Is laid on "higher education." Boys nnd girls nro to be reared In "Spartan simplicity." Boys are to be taught f,clf-control and to becomo accustomed to pain that they may bo como courageous. Ftom ten ypars on boys are to carry small swords, In the use of which they will be trnlned. Ar bitration, courts of honor and unwritten law will deal out Justice In the new Eden. When they fall, the sword In the hands of tho best man, according to nnclent knightly custom, will decide. "Lack of necessary finances," said Dr. Hcntchcl, "hns so far prevented the prac tical carrying out of the Mittgart plans. Wo have about 100 members, but mostly persons of bmall means. There Is no lacit of men with great qualifications. The problem Is the money question and to find some one or more who will flnanco such a colony as wo plan. More difficult Is th'e woman question. Only a fow, cour ageous and Independent of view and Judg ment, havo Joined us." SUJHXUflLATIIS t But Captain. Diamond Chafes At Being ThottghtrKealiy' Indisposed n Out at the Crocker Old Pcdplo's Hontc).f Pine nnd Pierce streets, San Francisco, Captain Goddard Ezcklel bod"ge DlaV mond Is chafing1 because ho hart, beejfi confined to his bed for the last few days, Ho fears that hprnp of his friends may think his' indlsposltldif Js all Indication of Infirmity. But Captain Diamond In sists that Inasmuch as fie Is only Just turned 118 years, such a supposition is nb surd. Ho Insists that ho is as hale and hearty as any ono less than half his age. Ho makes no secret of the method by which one may attain and pass .tho .cenf tury mllo post. His scheme of life con slsts largely of "don'ts." Don't tiso to bacco, don't use stimulants and don't tra't sweets. Captain Diamond has abstained from all thepo, and he has not touched meat since 1852. Captain Diamond says he was born In, Plymouth, Mass., May 1, 1796, In the ad ministration of President Adams, second chief executive of tho United Slates, He tells vivid stories of pioneer days In tlm Maine woods and how ho provided -forn his mother whlln. his father was ser'vlugj, In the war of 1612, , Ho says ho was first thrust Into the t world at tlm ago of 0, when ho went to Boston, being unable to read or wrlto and not even knowing tho alphabet. Dur- Ing the civil war h served four years , in the qilnrtermuster's department at St. Louis, notwithstanding the fact that he whs 65 years old at the outbreak of libs . tilltlea. ' Ho came to California In 1877. He has never married, and today has the ap pearance of a man in vigorous health. His blue eyes nro clar, his hand clasp strong and his face unwrlnkled by" 1110" passage of years. Banquet of 11 O'clock Council , , PORTLAND, Me., Sept. 17. At tho an nual bntiquet last night of the Elovoh O'clock Council of the Red Mori of tho United States the following officers wcii elected: Chief rover, V. V. LTghth'older, ' of Missouri; secretary, Thomas 'JV Mo1 Keen, of Minnesota; treasurer, Henry C. Hart, of Idaho. anthi KNOWLEDGE SOUGHT BY INDIAN PRINCES THROUGH EDUCATION Sfudents Are Vitally Inter :sted in People and Condi tions Throughout United States ahd Europe rayma I iSrii 3M I I ff tail Ms io.?ifh:'tt,. ww a " i I i 1 1 . .dm oXKa -tirl-Mft CJ Wart . As ft I wfSilif )JiPt piiill p? Jill MML x JilL JfeKi GattHMMlttMl GMaaaMMoJ fauwaaj tioM, 4aaMHH3 SSL ill JS&fsk Aj tho progress and prosperity of the Tirlous native f tates of India depend so much upon the character, education and ability of the native hereditary rulers, and as the question of their proper prep aration for the great responsibilities they ars to assume over tho lives and prop arty of their subjects Is of such vital Im portance, it was deemed of Interest, in connection with Tny commercial Investi gations through India, to stop for a day at AJmer, in Rajputana, the site of Mayo College, tho leading educational centre for the princes and nobility of India, says the Dally Consular and Trade Reports. Mayo College was founded In 1873, through the Influence of Lord Mayo, at that time Viceroy of India. Aj monument to hlj memory erected Just In front of the main building of tho college mentions that "It was his hope that the collcgo of which he first suggested the foundation mlsht promote among tho youth of Raj Putana the cardinal virtues of fortitude, temperance, Justico and benevolence of hlch his own life gave a splendid ex ample," In general, It was intended that this "118-. should have a civilizing and pro f'alva Influence in India, and by begln-nl- at the top stratum of Indian society, HCfvCate,eenerally the Principles of mor tw.'i . turo nnd enomIo usefulness. oia intention has been splendidly car ,1,out' and the visible effects of It , 7 "Parent in the high Ideals lhVnaM8reSSlVe government ot many of uni.,1 ; .'" "4 "uih iio nave erna mVrom th,s Institution, among whom w .1? m.entlned the Maharaja of Al ,i i I1 Maharao of Kotah, the Mnhara ixr nt TDlJn&"Pur, the Maharaja of Hol RiL iore, tho Raja of Dowas nnd thq 2' Ra,wanii also Maharaja Bhalron Horn. .,a.1a the Malmraj of Bikaner. ef ilf. "I0 rnost Promising future rulers cation have aIso received their edu 7 "?. Including the Crown Prince . Y'lrl who has already attained stiwLi avorable reputation because of lv entimar'llneSS cuIture and Proeres- nUitM?0l,e5e U managed by a com- IthiS n ?aHve rulers- moal'y ' States tti "?-n.Vputlln' Including the maha thi LA lw.ar- the eaekwar of Raroda, BclndVr f0t..Dlkaner' tne Maharaja Oalnnr .' fallr. the maharaja of naharnn maharaja of Klshangarh. the the mX f Kotal1' the raja of Sallana, th, , r- thmaharajadhlraj of Slrohi, Sewaii e, Dhar' Qna the maharaja of cillv lnce 1S93 the coeee has espe wter?ei1 ana Prospered with C. alio It. !.nBton aa Principal. The school butniV,flve Jther English masters and Brw)trs,,.nn9 I"d'an assistants, a l cmcer. ''?V,S ". two medl taftnoW lns ,na8tr and a super- Th ii samej W Inrt .te ls co"str"cted of white mar tulldimr nnS arc'"ecturo of the main dwelling if d ubary buildings and -eiiing houses is of r.i im.i.. r,,i th. .Pe buildings Include, besides ngg Include, besides sanitarium, the mnail m .: T"s. a'm annexes, a at ir7,.. " iauium. a sanitarium, ' houw!' E?Vn ,nastera' and guard- houi M uuuainiT flnd nnnAvu c flra - . . " - v-w, ftb ,... 'ana stadium, a sanltari vnoes. also a. niimh,, 9 imotni. House- ii,i.t ""'" ui uuarumB aUV St?.6 h were erected by different obiin .!!?" ?f thflr young prints and Ui i.Jn.r s lh" ''"'l'7- Tl-e i"?'- wvum covet a a cricket pavilion in tho middle. Tho cost of tho buildings and grounds has approximated moro than $1,000,000. COLLEGE CONTRIBUTIONS. This college now has an endowment fund of about J3M.O0O. contributed chiefly by native rulers. It receives about $10,000 annual contributions from natlvo States and private persona and also nearly ?I0, 000 subsidy a year from tho British Gov ernment. Its total receipts, including tui tion fees, amount to more than $50,000 per year. At present there are 202 students at tho school, of whom 163 are princes and nobility of the different States of Rajputana, and the remainder ore from Baroda, the United Provinces, Nepal, Orlssa, Hyderabad, Kashmir and central India. The college Is what would be known In the United States as a preparatory school, such as Andovor or Exeter, or as Eton In England. After graduation from this college students may take post-graduate courses at the same Institution If they do slre, which would correspond to univer sity courses In the United States, or they may then go to universities In England or In the United States for further train ing. Tho educational courses are given In Ungllsh, Hindu, Urdu nnd Sanskrit and Persian, Tho Include a range of sub jects such as English and Indian history, georgraphy, arithmetic, English prose and poetry, physics and chemistry, political economy, geometry, algebra, revenue, the oietlcal surveying, and law, as well as special attention to certain practical gov ernmental administration problems, as famine relief and management of Stato finances, civil and criminal codes, etc. Large attention Is paid to lessons In horseback riding and military drill, also to the encouragement and regulations of such outdoor sports as polo, cricket, foot ball, etc. Tha college has a large library which Is much used, but the only American liter ature I found there were several of Mark Twain's books. I would suggest that as most of the prospective rulers of native States who are being educated here, will In the future bo obliged to take much practical interest in such subjects as irri gation, well-boring, pumps, agricultural Implements and other articles required for tne prosperity or tneir people, any con tributions from manufacturing, commer cial or educational organizations In the Unltedo States concerning Ameilcan methods and appliances might have con siderable value In this library. In a private discussion I had with ono student of this school, who is soon to ba the ruling chief of about 50 village com munities In Rajputana, with life and death power over his subjects and with almost absolute power In administrative matters nffcctlng the prosperity of his people. I found he was particularly Interested In the use of artesian wells In the United States, and he thought that If deep bor ings could be made in Rajputana at com paratively small cost, It would solve the most pressing economic problem of tho country, tha land being very dry and thero being no rivers conveniently at hand to Irrigate from. Some of the examination papers for ob taining matriculation diplomas, which I examined at tho college, show the all round character of knowledge expected from these future rulers of India. A few of the questions were as follows: A FEW QUESTIONS. What do 'you know of Lord Kitchener. Theodore Roosevelt. Marconi and Lloyd GeorgeT Mnntlon a great event that has hap pened, during the last year in Portugal, cam a ana Kngiana. Whit an eay on the Delhi durbar Can y'l explain why DelhA 1 iro-h THE TURKISH BLEND CIGARETTE As you enjoy your cigarette this evening after dinner itv may please you to think of the widely distant places named here for they have a close relation to the pleasure you get from your Fatima. At these strangely named towns on the other side of the world, perhaps at the very moment when you are drawing.dli m the fragrant smoke of your Fatima, expert tobacco buyers are going over bale after bale of choice Turkish leaf, selecting here and there tobacco which they consider worthy to enter into the famous Fatima Turkish Blend. These resident Liggett C& Myers buyers know the slightest variation in quality. And it is largely due to their judgment that Fatimas are always so uniformly good ini t .$ , ifiMMVi m trr.inti v Samsoun f-jfeJo0ico: 'Sfc.w . BWKIi If Colombo almost as hot In January as In June? Why is Simla much cooler than Lahore? Prom what parts of India are the fol lowing products obtained: Tea, gold, teak, coal. Jute, cotton, petroleum, mica, wheat, rubles, coffee? Whero are tho following places, and what Is their chief Importance: Belfast, Sydney, Glasgow, Vancouver, Panama, Toklo, Montreal, Nairobi, Oxford, Pekin, Auckland, Durban? State briefly what you know of the peti tion of right, the navigation acts, the origin of party government In England. Which do you consider the greatest of tho iMogul emperors, and why? Classify the following substances as ele ments or compounds, giving a short rea son In eaech case; Sugar, steel, brass, coal, kerosene oil, red phosphorus. Describe any arrangement for produc ing ele-ctrlo currents. What do you understand by the law of contract and of tort? Since a sovereign government has no legal rights agulnst Its own subjects nor Us subjects against tho sovereign, how la It that we daily find a sovereign suing or being sued In courts of law? The students of this school annear to show remarkable proficiency In arithme tic, especially In sums which they flguro out mentally. The multiplication table as taught at Mayo College does not end with IS times 12, as taught in the schools of the United States, but with 23 times 25. Moreover, the students commit to memory multiplication figures covering fractions as well as Integers. There Is a liberal so-stern of awarding prizes for competitive merit, ana for general schol arship and deportment. Prizes are even awarded for killing snakes. 106 prizes hav ing been granted last year for snakes de stroyed In the vicinity of the college. The general discipline of the school is rigid. For small offenses extra hours of study are prescribed, and In case of -rlous moral offense the younger students may receive some moderate physical chastisement, while the older students would be summarily expelled. A good many of the students have special guard ians with them. They aro all allowed to have every legitimate amusement, and a few of them have private motorcars Generally speaking, their life at the col lege Is wholesome and comfortable, al though not approaching In luxury the fine palaces they may later occupy. The ex cellent manners, politeness, courtesy, etc., of tho boys Is very noticeable; aud their philanthropic spirit is shown every year by their largo personal donations for purchase of food and blankets to the poorest people In AJmer and for glv- ng sweetmeats to cmiuren of the poor & Cavalla p Yfc 111 W m dressed In white, except ored native turbans. for brlght-col- t .' a -J.LXCJ, wllu cgolor in Jiuuiaty Uuui June? Wiiy la schools, Tha bo a wX tb college aro all AN INTERESTING CITT The city of AJmer, whero the school is located. Is an interesting place, and Is a most Important city of Rajputana, It ls some 2000 feet above sea level, and has a distinction of being the highest city on the plains of India. It has & population of about Sfl.OOO. There are many beauti ful lakei and hills about, and Interesting relics of ancient art and architecture. There ls an Important American Methodist mission Bchool here. Rajputana covers a very large area In northwestern India between the provinces of Slnd and the Punjab, and Is composed of IS native States, the most important of which are Bikaner, Jaipur and Udal pur. As a particular Instance of how education acquired at this college has benefited these native States, I may men tion the remarkable development which has occurred In Bikaner under its pro gressive maharaja, who was one of tha early graduates and ono of tho most gener ous patrons of this college. In the M.tyo College magazine, a monthly publication Issued from this college, recently ap peared an account of the silver Jubilee of the maharaja of Bikaner, at which an interesting tribute was paid to his high ness" progressiva qualities by the Viceroy of India. There ire three other colleges In India for Indian princes and nobility, though they are not so Important or so well en dowed as the Mayo College at AJmer. They Include the Daly College at Indore. central India; the Altchlson College at Lahore, Punjab, and the Rajkumar Col lege at Rajkot, Kathlawar. At present in India, with the growth of nationalistic spirit, a reaction Is notice able In many Influents! native quarters against tne education of the native youth of the country In Christian schools and colleges, and there has been an agitation for the erection of a large Hindu univer sity at Benares, the sacred city of India. This movement has culminated In the or ganization of a number of district com mittees, which have been raising money for the proposed new Hindu university. The subscriptions thus far received havo reached the large total of $1,230,000. The erection of the new university at Benares wlt'-'n th" near future therefore seim assured. o Dfstfnctfvey Indmidual AR0UT BLOTTING PAPER Peculiarities of a Much-used Acces sory of Writers, Few people realize the true inwardness of blotting paper, particularly peoplo who live in mg towns and should know better. It is, for Instance, a reaj pleatura to sit down to a large clean sheet of new pink blotting paper, and Instead of its soiling one, to be the first to soil it. White blot ting paper has to be very thick and ub sorbing to hold Its own. while green blot ting papr is only suggestne of banks and business, and little soiled ends which are used for the week's books. The blotting paper connoisseur changes ma muiiing parer with absolute reckless ness. It becomes tn him like the paper target which, once marked with his prow ess, has fulfilled Its function. It la a, de light to teur the corner off a sheet of thick pink, and pick up as much as pos slble of the blot made by an overflowing pen. But the corner once away, the sheet loses its charm and should be, replaced by another. Blotting paper and blotting pad are in dices ot the household psychology. There Is. for instanoe. the Dad which. hr,,,.M, - o through the writing of many black and dashlus notes. Th,ro Is tho neat pad which is always carefutly gilded and which suggests that the sooner all trace of writing be removed the better, and there Is the blotting book, with lis vholce of half-dlrtled leaves and Its surface which by no losslble means can ever bu as level as blotting paper should be. The Ideal way of using blotting paper ls to have two or three loose sheets of thlcklsh white or pink, which can tw ......,. . uu, vr aioien with im punity. It is useful to be able to blot w... nwuvv, a.nu wie Bini?4nft.a VlAAf r.aV.l.e Ik,. - V- j " -"" MIC not very much used, has grown shiny coiuly An it n....T. . mo5t emca" with use and Its acquired sWe Zl Uou,' scruples asTwaVt? "LTt" lutely refuses to pick up any Ink at all the writer to write NtraUht !,. e,nab ' Thre h the Pid that has been over. I .v.-nf-,,. inii j l. st.rar't ahead with . . . . -fc awjui r"3 U4 d has lest iu aiuofbciit Boww j,aKU, to avoid Uw ata S WofiS C Whs A MA 15 ;WS mPxo Of I"1 i - :M sT ' . ! ; fjt.r.pT HI- h