<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>BIRDS AND ALL NATURE.</h1>
<p class="ac" style="margin-bottom:2em;"><span class="smaller">ILLUSTRATED BY</span>
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY.</p>
<div class="vlouter">
<div class="volumeline">
<div class="volumeleft"><span class="sc">Vol. V.</span></div>
<div class="volumeright"><span class="sc">No. 3.</span></div>
<div class="ac">MARCH, 1899.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<h2 style="margin-top:2em;"><SPAN name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></SPAN>CONTENTS.</h2>
<table class="toctable" id="TOC" summary="CONTENTS">
<tr>
<td class="c1"> </td>
<td class="c2"><span class="sc">Page</span></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_TUFTED_TITMOUSE">THE TUFTED TITMOUSE.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">97</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#EPITAPH_ON_THE_HARE">EPITAPH ON THE HARE.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">98</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#A_TRANSIENT_BOARDER">A TRANSIENT BOARDER.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">101</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_SQUIRRELS_USE_OF_HIS_TAIL">
THE SQUIRREL'S USE OF HIS TAIL.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">103</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_NORTHERN_PRAIRIE_HARE">THE NORTHERN PRAIRIE HARE.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">107</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#DESTRUCTION_OF_BIRD_LIFE">DESTRUCTION OF BIRD LIFE.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">109</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#WE_BELIEVE_IT">WE BELIEVE IT.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">109</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_PINEAPPLE">THE PINEAPPLE.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">110</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#LITTLE_BUSYBODIES">LITTLE BUSYBODIES.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">113</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_CHARITY_OF_BREAD_CRUMBS">THE CHARITY OF BREAD CRUMBS.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">115</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_HOODED_MERGANSER">THE HOODED MERGANSER.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">119</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_TRUMPETERS">THE TRUMPETERS.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">120</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#CLOVES">CLOVES.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">121</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#A_VEIN_OF_HUMOR">A VEIN OF HUMOR.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">125</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#TAMING_THE_SMALLER_WILD_ANIMALS">
TAMING THE SMALLER WILD ANIMALS.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">127</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_WOODCHUCK">THE WOODCHUCK.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">131</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#FLOWERS_WITH_HORNS_AND_CLAWS">
FLOWERS WITH HORNS AND CLAWS.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">132</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_COMMON_AMERICAN_MOLE">
THE COMMON AMERICAN MOLE.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">133</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_OAK">THE OAK.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">134</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#SKIN">SKIN.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">137</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#THE_AZALEA">THE AZALEA.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">143</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1"><SPAN href="#COMMENDABLE_BOOKS">COMMENDABLE BOOKS.</SPAN></td>
<td class="c2">143</td>
</tr>
</table>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_TUFTED_TITMOUSE" id="THE_TUFTED_TITMOUSE"></SPAN>THE TUFTED TITMOUSE.<br/> <span class="xx-smaller"><span style="font-weight:lighter;">(<i>Parus bicolor.</i>) </span></span></h2>
<p class="ac">LYNDS JONES.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_h.jpg" width-obs="64" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">HOW vividly a first meeting with
some interesting species rests
in the memory of the bird-lover!
It was at the evening
twilight of October 14, 1886, that a
strange whistle rang through that gem
of woods near Grinnell, Iowa, which
has witnessed the birth of more than
one passion for bird study. Soon
the busy gleaner came to inquire after
the intruder on his chosen feeding
grounds, evidently looking for a suitable
resting-place for the night while
taking his evening lunch. The voice,
the actions, the appearance, all were
new to me, and every movement was
watched with breathless interest lest
the next flight should take the bird
away beyond recall. At last he settled
in a green-briar tangle, carefully
stowed himself away beneath a huge
linden leaf, whistled once or twice, and
was ready for the coming darkness.</p>
<p>Never before nor since have I seen
the tufted tit in that Iowa grove, but
he is one of the common resident birds
at Oberlin, Ohio. Northern Ohio is
about the northern limit of his range,
which extends into northern New Jersey
and southern Iowa, possibly the
southern half of Iowa. He ranges
west to the eastern border of the
plains, occasionally found as far north
as Minnesota and well into Michigan,
and is found breeding even to the Gulf
of Mexico southward. He appears to
be resident wherever found, but no
doubt a few venturesome individuals
may wander farther north than the
usual range.</p>
<p>One can hardly mistake the tufted
tit for any other bird, for he is very
noisy the most of the year, the exceptions
being the coldest part of mid-winter
and during the breeding season,
for his songs or whistles are peculiar
to him. True, his chick-a-dee-dee
closely resembles the chickadee's song
to the uninitiated, but the clearly
whistled <i>pe-to</i>, <i>pe-to</i>, <i>pe-to</i>, or <i>ee-to</i>,
<i>ee-to</i>, <i>ee-to</i>, or <i>pe-ter</i>, <i>pe-ter</i>, <i>pe-ter</i>, or
<i>pe-ter</i>, <i>e-ter</i>, <i>e-ter</i> will at once discover
him. It is well worth one's while to
write out the many different variations
that may be heard proceeding from
one bird. Another favorite one, judging
from the frequency of its use, is:
<i>Pe-dl'</i>, <i>pe-dl'</i>, <i>pe-dl'</i>, or <i>te-dl'</i>, <i>e-dl'</i>
<i>e-dl'</i>, and occasionally this: <i>Chee-pa</i>,
<i>chee-pa</i>, <i>chee-pa</i>. In short, he seems
to have a song to suit every occasion.</p>
<p>Like the chickadee, he delights in
scrambling about the trees in the most
reckless fashion, hanging head down
as handily as a nuthatch. His crest
gives him a more stately air than any
of his cousins, but his inquisitiveness
is equal to all combined. One cannot
enter the woods but he will be sought
out by this active denizen and accompanied
hither and thither with not so
much as a "by your leave."</p>
<p>His habits seem to vary with locality,
or possibly more exactly, with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</SPAN></span>
abundance. In this part of northern
Ohio, where the species is not more
than fairly common, the birds rarely
enter the villages, and they nest almost
exclusively in the woods. I am informed
that farther south and west
they are often seen in villages, and
nest there in boxes provided, as well
as in the woods.</p>
<p>The nest is placed within a box or
hollow in a tree, a deserted woodpecker's
hole being preferred, where
leaves, strips of bark, feathers, hair, or
almost any soft, warm materials are
arranged carefully, the coarser material
outward, the finer and warmer inside.
The eggs range from five to eight in
number, and are creamy white, rather
coarsely and evenly marked with
shades of rufous brown. They average
about .73 × .54 of an inch. It is
said that the male bird never assists in
building the nest, but sings to cheer
his mate, thus revealing the whereabouts
of the nest.</p>
<p>While the northern Ohio woods are
incomplete without a company of these
cheerful birds, I have looked in vain
for them during the early summer
months in some years. In winter they
range the woods for food, penetrating
to every portion of it, stowing themselves
away in some warm hollow in a
tree at night, but in the nesting season
they are confined to the region of the
nest, and so are not readily seen.</p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50 p2" title="TUFTED TITMOUSE." summary="TUFTED TITMOUSE.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_008.jpg" id="i_008.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_008.jpg" width="446" height="600" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td> </tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">FROM COL. F. M. WOODRUFF.</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">TUFTED TITMOUSE.<br/>
10/11 Life-size.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">COPYRIGHT 1899,<br/>
NATURE STUDY PUB. CO., CHICAGO.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30"> </td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">CHICAGO COLORTYPE CO., CHIC. & NEW YORK.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30"> </td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="EPITAPH_ON_THE_HARE" id="EPITAPH_ON_THE_HARE"></SPAN>EPITAPH ON THE HARE.</h2>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Here lies, whom hound did ne'er pursue,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Nor swifter greyhound follow,</div>
<div class="verse">Whose foot ne'er tainted morning dew,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Nor ear heard huntsman's halloo.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Old Tiney, surliest of his kind,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Who, nursed with tender care,</div>
<div class="verse">And to domestic bounds confined,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Was still a wild Jack hare.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Though duly from my hand he took</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">His pittance every night,</div>
<div class="verse">He did it with a jealous look,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">And, when he could, would bite.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">His diet was of wheaten bread,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">And milk, and oats, and straw;</div>
<div class="verse">Thistles, or lettuces instead,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">With sand to scour his maw.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">On twigs of hawthorn he regaled,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">On pippin's russet peel,</div>
<div class="verse">And, when his juicy salads failed,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Sliced carrot pleased him well.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">A Turkey carpet was his lawn,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Whereon he loved to bound,</div>
<div class="verse">To skip and gambol like a fawn,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">And swing his rump around.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">His frisking was at evening hours,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">For then he lost his fear,</div>
<div class="verse">But most before approaching showers</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Or when a storm was near.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Eight years and five round rolling moons</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">He thus saw steal away,</div>
<div class="verse">Dozing out all his idle noons,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">And every night at play.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">I kept him for his humor's sake,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">For he would oft beguile</div>
<div class="verse">My heart of thoughts that made it ache</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">And force me to a smile.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">But now beneath his walnut shade</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">He finds his long last home,</div>
<div class="verse">And waits, in snug concealment laid,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Till gentler Puss shall come.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">He, still more aged, feels the shocks</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">From which no care can save,</div>
<div class="verse">And, partner once of Tiney's box,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Must soon partake his grave.</div>
<div class="verse ar">—<i>Cowper.</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="A_TRANSIENT_BOARDER" id="A_TRANSIENT_BOARDER"></SPAN>A TRANSIENT BOARDER.</h2>
<p class="ac">C. S. COOK.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_w.jpg" width-obs="66" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">WHEN I came down stairs in the
morning I found him in possession
of the premises. I
watched him for a few minutes
with much interest. I had not before
seen a California wren, and found him
very different in appearance and conduct
from the eastern wrens with which
I was acquainted. "Wrensie" was
very self-possessed, and did not appear
to resent my intrusion at all. In fact,
he seemed disposed to ignore my presence,
a fact which led me to judge it
best to adopt the same course toward
him.</p>
<p>I must explain our situation a little by
saying that, as the cottage in which I
was living was in a very unfinished condition,
the lower floor was not divided
by any partitions, the kitchen in the
L and the front room forming one large
room.</p>
<p>The weather being warm, and the
walls open, the flies were very numerous
in the room, a fact evidently keenly
appreciated by the little fellow, for, as I
proceeded to sweep the whole house
he did not allow his industry to be seriously
interfered with. While I was
busy in the attic he was not idle down
stairs; while I was regulating the front
room he was picking up things in the
kitchen. When I approached him too
closely he would quietly slip out of
doors through one of the numerous
openings about the floor, or perhaps go
up into the attic which was very accessible
to him. He rarely remained out
of doors more than a few minutes at a
time. A forenoon of house-cleaning
would seem more favorable to an
estrangement than to a rapprochement;
yet while I was at dinner I felt
something upon my foot. Looking under
the table I saw Wrensie perched
upon my shoe. While I watched him
he jumped up on a fold of my trousers,
apparently thinking it a better
point of observation. He was not disturbed
by my interest nor by my motions
at the table. He never seemed
to mind ordinary motions even when he
was very near. With other birds I have
considered entire quiet necessary under
such circumstances.</p>
<p>I maintained my policy of manifesting
no concern as to Wrensie's movements,
merely abstaining from making
any very sudden or rapid motions
which would be likely to startle him.
With this single exception I went about
all work freely. While I would have
been glad to cultivate his acquaintance,
quickly, I thought it better not to
try to do so. The universal method of
winning favor in the eyes of such strangers
is to feed them; but Wrensie would
have nothing but live game, and no
kitchen delicacy received a moment's
attention. Fortunately, however, there
was little need of studying to win his
confidence, as but little encouragement
was necessary. He was afraid of nothing;
not from innocent ignorance by
any means, but from complete self-confidence.
He was not defiant, but
intrepid. This confidence was not
gained by observing that he was not
molested, but had its source in the
spirit of the bird, as shown by the fact
that there was little difference in his
demeanor during the six days he was
with me.</p>
<p>The next day a mason came to the
ranch to see about a proposed fireplace
and chimney. As we stood talking
over the matter, one on each side of a
small table, my little boarder came and
made a thorough search for game
among the various articles on the table.
While working in the kitchen I often
found him at my feet, several times
even between them as I stood at the
stove or table. This was a position of
such danger to him that I felt obliged
to be very cautious in my movements.
Occasionally he would perch on my
shoulder or head, never staying very
long but never betraying any distrust.</p>
<p>It was most entertaining to watch him
in his pursuit of game. As a hunter
he was full of resources, untiring in his
efforts, insatiable in his appetite.
When he saw a fly on the floor or table
near him he would slowly and stealthily
approach, his little black eyes snapping,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</SPAN></span>
his frontal feathers depressed so as to
give him a vicious look, and often with
his wings trembling with excitement as
he held them slightly loosened at his
sides. When he judged himself near
enough he would make a little run and
try to snap up his victim. This method
of stalking, though much used, was the
least successful of his hunting expedients,
a large majority of the flies escaping.</p>
<p>When in a favorable locality he would
sometimes keep quiet for a time—that
is, relatively quiet—as quiet as a small
bird can be expected to remain, ready
to seize any impudent flies that came
within the reach of his bill, which would
snap on them with a loud sound. He
was most skillful at this, making the
quickest motions conceivable. Although
these snap shots were very successful,
the flies rarely came past in sufficient
numbers to satisfy him long, and he
would soon set out to hunt up his game.</p>
<p>Then there was the full chase. It
was not now a matter of a little dash on
foot, but a full flight after a big blue-bottle
fly which can dart through the
air like a bullet. Back and forth they
go with a great rush and much dodging.
When caught, these big flies
made a large mouthful for the victor.
He would light on the floor
and proceed to swallow his prey. This
usually required several efforts. Watching
him called to mind one's own experiences
with big gelatine capsules.
With the final and successful effort
Wrensie's eyes would close with a distressed
look as the fly went down his
throat.</p>
<p>Flies were often to be found floating
on the surface of the water in a large
water pail. This fact did not long escape
Wrensie's eye, and he made his
round to this trap with much regularity.
When the pail was well filled with water
he could reach the flies with comparative
ease; but when the water became
low this became a most difficult matter.
He did not fly down to get them, but
would reach down while hanging
to the edge of the pail. Often repeated
trials were necessary. It was
surprising to see to what a distance he
could stretch himself in these efforts.
Holding on to the edge always, he would
swing himself down, stretch his neck to
the utmost, and then, just as he was on
the point of falling into the water, with
a quick flutter of his wings he would
raise himself to the top again, never relinquishing
his hold on the rim. In
this way he would pick up flies at the
center of the pail when it was not half
filled with water, which, in view of the
small size of the bird, was an acrobatic
feat.</p>
<p>Then there was the battue. When he
approached a window thickly covered
with flies a scene of the wildest excitement
followed. Wrensie would dash
into the melee, afoot or a-wing as it
happened, his bill snapping faster than
a repeating rifle. The slaughter would
be continued until the remaining flies
were dispersed, which soon came to
pass.</p>
<p>Even the still hunt was not without
interest. No setter ever worked the
ground more faithfully. Every nook
and corner of the house was examined
for moths. Moreover, every article was
scrutinized, and, when possible, he
looked beneath and within. A pair of
working gloves lay upon the floor.
Wrensie unhesitatingly went in, disappearing
entirely and remaining long
enough to put his head into every
finger—which he may, or may not have
done. It interested me much to note
that in such explorations his assurance
was complete. In this kind of delving
I was prepared to see some hesitation
in my presence. It seemed to me that
when I was standing by him it would
be only reasonable caution on his part
to remain where he could keep his
eyes on me. But he never seemed to
watch me; and gave me numerous opportunities
to capture him, as he would
disappear in a dish or in some hole,
and remain for some time. He never
hesitated in this, nor did he seem to
scrutinize his surroundings before going
out of sight.</p>
<p>Wrensie was not only persistent and
thorough in his search for moths in dark
corners, but determined as well. He
would crowd himself into openings so
narrow that he would have to back out
after concluding the search. One day
he undertook to pass between two cans
on a shelf. He made a strong effort,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</SPAN></span>
but so narrow was the passage that he
could not push his way in; his wings
were too prominent. He backed away
a few steps and looked at the crack a
moment with his head cocked on one
side. Then quickly stepping up to it,
he stood on one leg, turned his body
up edgewise, and squeezed through.</p>
<p>Perhaps as good an example as I can
give of Wrensie's fearlessness is to describe
his behavior one day when I had
some work to do on the outside of a
window. I stood on a staging just in
front of the window, and was engaged
in driving nails in the window casing.
This hammering made a great noise,
shaking the loose sash sharply. Wrensie
was busily engaged catching flies on
the inside of the window, standing on
the top of the lower sash; that is, at the
middle of the window. All my motions,
all the noise and the jar failed to
frighten him away, although at times
he looked at me pretty sharply.</p>
<p>While so courageous in most ways,
still Wrensie had his ideas of caution.
Upon my return to the house after a
short absence he would usually leave
the room abruptly, either going out of
doors or up into the attic. Even if I
came in very quietly, taking precautions
not to disturb him, the result was
the same. This conduct always seemed
to me a curious fact, and an inconsistency
which I could not explain.</p>
<p>Clever and interesting as he was,
Wrensie had his shortcomings. His disposition
was not that of the typical
bird: "Sweetness and light" were not
his. In his spirit was none of the exuberant
joy of the great songsters, nor
any of the bonhommie of happy-go-lucky
sparrows. During the whole
term of our acquaintance not a sound
left his throat! In complete silence
did he pursue his vocation. A perfect
helpmate, but a faulty companion. A
very practical sort of bird he was, full
of activity, but without vivacity. Can
it be that the spirit of our industrial age
is so pervasive that even the birds are
unable to escape its influence? It
would seem that evolution has produced
the utilitarian and "strictly business"
type of character among them.</p>
<p>One day there was a noisy flutter of
wings at the door, and the harsh cry of
the butcher-bird was heard. On stepping
out I saw feathers floating in the
air. I concluded that I would see no
more of my little companion and helper.
The blue-bottle fly was avenged.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_SQUIRRELS_USE_OF_HIS_TAIL" id="THE_SQUIRRELS_USE_OF_HIS_TAIL"></SPAN> THE SQUIRREL'S USE OF HIS TAIL.</h2>
<p class="ac">BY JAMES NEWTON BASKETT, MEXICO, MO.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_o.jpg" width-obs="57" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">OF COURSE every one who has
had a pet squirrel has noticed
what an important thing his
tail seems to be to him. When
he makes his toilet he usually ends by
bringing the hairy brush around and
apparently wiping his face with it, as
though it were his towel. But I suspect
that he is as much concerned, even
here, about the care of his tail as about
the cleanliness of his features, for
Bunny's beauty, like that of some
others, lies as much in his train as in
his countenance. One use, therefore,
of the squirrel's tail is to make him
look pretty. I think, at least, no one
can see him put it into such graceful
curves along with his delightful postures
without feeling that he is posing
for esthetic effect.</p>
<p>Still, a little study of his ways may
make us think that there is a more practical
purpose even in this feature of his
tail's use. We had a pet squirrel in the
house recently—one of the western
fox species or variety. He had become
quite tame in his cage before he
was released in my study. At intervals
I had him brought in, and we
usually romped together at least once
a day.</p>
<p>At first everything was so new and
strange to him that he was very shy
and must go about investigating. I
noticed that, as he approached anything
which he feared might prove
dangerous, he always projected his tail
over his back far forward—sometimes
feeling the object with the extreme
hairs before touching it with his nose.
He annoyed me greatly by tearing the
wall paper from a certain angle. One
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</SPAN></span>
day I threw a pamphlet so as to strike
just above his nose while at his mischief.
It frightened him badly, and
he suspected that the scare had come
out of the wall. But he could not resist
the fascination of this sport, and it
was interesting to watch him approach
and try by all sorts of devices of his
tail to see if the enemy were within.</p>
<p>If he were walking past or around
anything that he feared he kept his
tail stretched at full length on the side
of his body that was next the object—sometimes
he held it many inches from
himself. If something moved suddenly
in front of him as he ran, his tail
shot over him away ahead of his nose,
as if projected there by his sudden
stop. But it was the natural instinct
of thrusting his tail at anything threatening
him too suddenly for flight.
Much of his play at times was a kind
of mock fright in which he seemed to
imagine himself pursued by all kinds
of enemies—even myself—and the
most familiar objects becoming terrible.
Then the use he made of his
tail was most exaggerated, having in
it perhaps some of the elements of terrifying
the enemy, as seen in the
swelled rails of cats, the bristles of
hogs, dogs, etc.</p>
<p>One could not resist the impression
that the tail was thrown out as a shield
or a screen, but this did not always
seem a satisfactory explanation, for it
was certainly a very frail thing and
very conspicuous. Besides, it would
seem to furnish the enemy a good handle
to catch hold of.</p>
<p>The theory has been advanced that
this last is the very purpose of this use
of the tail; and from my study of this
pet I became convinced that he thrust
out his tail when suddenly surprised in
the hope that <i>it</i> might be taken and his
body <i>left</i>. The skin on the tail of most
rodents (of which the squirrel is one)
slips easily from the bone, and leaves,
to a grasping enemy, often a little
bunch of "hide and hair." So Bunny
offers this—feeling that he would
rather leave his tail in jeopardy and go
into life whole otherwise. The glass-snake
(a lizard) in its efforts to escape,
frequently <i>breaks off</i> a portion of its
tail, which the pursuing enemy may
stop to capture while the body wriggles
into safety.</p>
<p>This, likewise, is doubtless one of the
reasons why the squirrel insists upon
the tail's being always curled up over
his back while he is absorbed in eating.
It is not always merely a beautiful
pose. As he thus sits in the trees his
greatest enemies are the various large
birds of prey which may dart down on
him from above. Now, this mass of
tail that is above him is apt to mislead
the aim of the enemy, and, like the
pioneer's cap thrust around the tree, is
intended to draw the fire into a harmless
medium.</p>
<p>There can be no doubt that a squirrel
uses his tail to steer him in a leap,
much as the tail steers the boy's common
kite. Perhaps, also, it acts slightly
as a balance, but in this respect its
greatest use must lie in its "up and
down" rudder effect—or rather parachute-like
effect—as he makes those
tremendous leaps from a tall treetop
to the earth.</p>
<p>Here it comes well into play in lessening
the shock of alighting, an emergency
enabling him to escape some
enemies—as a weasel or mink, perhaps—which
may chase him around in the
trees.</p>
<p>The arrangement of the long hairs,
projecting out sidewise on the bone, is
strikingly like that of the feathers on
the tail of the very earliest reptile-like
birds which had long bony tails, used
doubtless as the squirrel's, since they
were down-sailers rather than up-flutterers—if
I may be allowed to so compound
my words and ideas. Some
other downward-leaping mammals
have the hairs similarly arranged. Another
rodent, the anomalure, which
flies down, as a flying-squirrel, by thin
membranes, has special horny scales
on the under side of its tail either to
assist in climbing or to resist slipping
down when a tree trunk is grasped.</p>
<p>The squirrel's tail, therefore, is a factor
of his safety, as well as a feature of
his ornamentation.</p>
<p>Another use which he makes of it is
that when he "lies down to pleasant
dreams" it forms "the drapery of his
couch"—a coverlid for his head and
body.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</SPAN></span></p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50 p2" title="NORTHERN HARE." summary="NORTHERN HARE.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_021.jpg" id="i_021.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_021.jpg" width="600" height="449" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">FROM COL. CHI. ACAD. SCIENCES.</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">NORTHERN HARE.<br/>
⅓ Life-size.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">COPYRIGHT 1899,<br/>
NATURE STUDY PUB. CO., CHICAGO.</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_NORTHERN_PRAIRIE_HARE" id="THE_NORTHERN_PRAIRIE_HARE"></SPAN> THE NORTHERN PRAIRIE HARE.</h2>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="58" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THIS is the most northern species
of the group of hares (<i>Lepus
campestris</i>), familiarly known in
the United States as jack rabbits
because of their large size and
enormous ears. They are lively animals
of astounding jumping powers.
In America there is no such distinction
between the term "hare" and "rabbit"
as there is in Europe, where the large,
long-eared, stout varieties, living in
shallow "forms," are named hares, and
the smaller and more slender kind,
which digs a deep burrow, is the "rabbit."
In this country the authorities
say that no well-defined distinction
exists. Of the so-called jack rabbits
the northern prairie hare here depicted
may be taken as the type. It is one of
the largest species of hares, measuring
about twenty inches in length, and it
has long, strong, and vigorous limbs,
and such remarkably long ears that the
popular name it bears is fully justified.</p>
<p>This northern species is found on
the western prairies from British
America to Colorado. It undergoes a
winter change of coat, becoming nearly
white, but the blanching is never complete
and russet streaks or patches remain
through the winter. The habits
of this animal are those of hares in
general, and all the species known as
jack rabbits are famous for their great
speed and for the astounding leaps
they make in running. They are the
most fleet and agile of American mammals.
They are not much pursued for
the reason that they are difficult to
shoot, and their celerity of movement
enables them to elude four-footed foes
also. Pending the complete change
from the summer brown to the snowy-white
coat of winter, the animal presents
a very singular mottled appearance.</p>
<p>Hares are a very important article of
commerce and, during the winter season,
tons of them are daily shipped to
the principal markets from all quarters.
They are sold at cheap rates, and are
frequently peddled about the streets
by the cartload at surprisingly low
figures.</p>
<p>The methods of pursuit and capture
of these animals are numerous, but the
most common and successful are trailing
in the snow with dogs, hounding,
and coursing. To trail hares in the
winter one must have dogs of keen
scent and a light fall of from two to
four inches of snow must have been
deposited the night previous to an early
morning start. Two or more hunters
equipped with dogs and guns usually
start together. Thickets of elder and
blackberry are sought where the game
is known to lie. The hunters skirt the
border of a patch of these bushes and
the dogs are sent in. The dogs soon
drive the hares from cover when they
become a ready mark for the gunners.
Where the ground is rocky they will
try to hide by running into any hole or
crevice which may offer protection.
In hounding hares the hunters are
stationed at various points on the paths
as the hares, like deer and foxes, follow
regular beaten tracks. The hounds
start the game from belts of pine,
cedar, or hemlock. Each hunter waits
for the animals to pass his station and
fires at them as they go by at full run.
It is considered no mean accomplishment
to secure a hare under these circumstances.
Trapping and snaring are
also methods of capturing jack rabbits.
They are principally employed by pot
hunters, and many people make it their
sole business during the winter months.
Greyhounds are used in coursing hares,
but the jack rabbit frequently discomfits
both horse and hound. Hares do
not live in burrows, as is the case with
the rabbit, but lie in a form in bush or
thicket, a slight depression in the
ground serving for a nest, or sometimes
a hollow stump, or the under side of a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</SPAN></span>
ledge of rock is selected. The young,
when born, are covered with hair, their
eyes are open, and they are able almost
immediately to support themselves.
The rabbit, on the other hand, is born
with closed eyes, and requires the constant
attention of the mother for some
time. The hares are not so prolific as
the rabbits, the female bringing forth
but from three to five young at a
litter, the rabbits bearing from five to
eight.</p>
<p>Hares generally feed at night, lying
in their forms in some bush or copse
during the greater part of the day; rabbits,
on the contrary, generally remain
in the warmest corner of the burrow
during the dark hours. The food of
the hare consists of all kinds of vegetables
similar in nature to cabbage and
turnips, which are favorite dainties with
it; it is also especially fond of lettuce
and parsley.</p>
<p>The great speed of the hare in running
is chiefly due to the fact that the
hind legs are longer than the fore.
This is also the reason why it can run
better up hill than down. Generally it
utters a sound only when it sees itself
in danger. This cry resembles that of
a little child, being a shrill scream or
squeak.</p>
<p>Among the perceptive senses of the
hare, hearing is best developed; the
smell is fairly keen, but sight is rather
deficient. Prudence and vigilance are
its most prominent characteristics. The
slightest noise—the wind rustling in the
leaves, a falling leaf—suffices to excite
its attention and awaken it from sleep.
Dietrich Aus Dem Winckell says that
the greatest vice of the hare is its malice,
not because it expresses it in biting
and scratching, but because it often
proves its disposition in the most revolting
manner, the female by denying
her maternal love, and the male by his
cruelty to the little leverets.</p>
<p>It is said that captive hares are easily
tamed, become readily used to all kinds
of nourishment usually fed to rabbits,
but are very delicate and apt to die.
If they are fed only on hay, bread, oats,
and water, and never anything green,
they live longer. A tame hare, in the
possession of Mr. Fuchs in Wildenberg,
which slept and ate with his dogs,
ate vegetable food only in default of
meat—veal, pork, liver, and sausage
causing it to go into such raptures that
it would execute a regular dance to get
at these dainties.</p>
<p>Besides the flesh, which as food is
justly esteemed, the fur of the hare is
also put to account. The skin is deprived
of its hair, tanned and used in the manufacture
of shoes, of one kind of parchment,
and of glue; the hair is used in
the manufacture of felt.</p>
<p>Mark Twain, in his "Roughing It,"
gives this humorous and characteristic
description of the jack rabbit:</p>
<p>"As the sun was going down, we saw
the first specimen of an animal known
familiarly over two thousand miles of
mountain and desert—from Kansas
clear to the Pacific ocean—as the 'jackass-rabbit.'
He is well named. He is
just like any other rabbit, except that
he is from one-third to twice as large,
has longer legs in proportion to his
size, and has the most preposterous
ears that ever were mounted on any
creature but a jackass. When he is
sitting quiet, thinking about his sins, or
is absent-minded, or unapprehensive of
danger, his majestic ears project above
him conspicuously; but the breaking
of a twig will scare him nearly to death,
and then he tilts his ears back gently,
and starts for home. All you can see
then, for the next minute, is his long
form stretched out straight, and 'streaking
it' through the low sage-bushes,
head erect, eyes right, and ears just
canted to the rear, but showing you
just where the animal is, just the same
as if he carried a jib. When he is
frightened clear through, he lays his
long ears down on his back, straightens
himself out like a yardstick every
spring he makes, and scatters miles behind
him with an easy indifference that
is enchanting. Our party made this
specimen 'hump himself.' I commenced
spitting at him with my weapon, and
all at the same instant let go with a
rattling crash. He frantically dropped
his ears, set up his tail, and left for
San Francisco at lightning speed. Long
after he was out of sight we could hear
him whiz."</p>
<p class="ar">C. C. M.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="DESTRUCTION_OF_BIRD_LIFE" id="DESTRUCTION_OF_BIRD_LIFE"></SPAN> DESTRUCTION OF BIRD LIFE.</h2>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_s.jpg" width-obs="60" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">STEPS have been taken under the
direction of the New York zoölogical
society to ascertain, as
nearly as possible, to what extent
the destruction of bird life has
been carried in this country and the result
of the investigation is given in its
second annual report, recently published.
Replies to questions on the
subject were received from over two
hundred competent observers in the
different states and territories, and the
following table is believed to give a
fair, certainly not exaggerated, idea of
the loss of bird life within the past
decade and a half.</p>
<p>The following are the percentages of
decrease throughout the states mentioned,
during the last fifteen years, according
to the reports:</p>
<table id="DESTRUCTION_OF_BIRD_LIFE_TABLE" summary="DESTRUCTION OF BIRD LIFE">
<tr>
<td class="c1">Maine</td>
<td class="c2">52 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">New Hampshire</td>
<td class="c2">32 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Vermont</td>
<td class="c2">30 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Massachusetts</td>
<td class="c2">27 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Rhode Island</td>
<td class="c2">60 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Connecticut</td>
<td class="c2">75 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">New York</td>
<td class="c2">48 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">New Jersey</td>
<td class="c2">37 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Pennsylvania</td>
<td class="c2">51 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Ohio</td>
<td class="c2">38 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Indiana</td>
<td class="c2">60 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Illinois</td>
<td class="c2">38 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Michigan</td>
<td class="c2">28 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Wisconsin</td>
<td class="c2">40 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Iowa</td>
<td class="c2">37 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Missouri</td>
<td class="c2">36 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Nebraska</td>
<td class="c2">10 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">North Dakota</td>
<td class="c2">58 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">District of Columbia</td>
<td class="c2">33 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">South Carolina</td>
<td class="c2">32 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Georgia</td>
<td class="c2">65 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Florida</td>
<td class="c2">77 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Mississippi</td>
<td class="c2">37 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Louisiana</td>
<td class="c2">55 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Texas</td>
<td class="c2">67 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Arkansas</td>
<td class="c2">50 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Montana</td>
<td class="c2">75 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Idaho</td>
<td class="c2">40 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Colorado</td>
<td class="c2">28 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">Indian Territory</td>
<td class="c2">75 per cent.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="c1">General Average</td>
<td class="c2">46 per cent.</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>At least three-fifths of the total area
of the United States is represented by
the thirty states and territories above
named, and the general average of decrease
of bird life therein is 46 per cent.
These figures are startling indeed and
should arouse everyone to the gravity
of the situation which confronts us. It
requires but little calculation to show
that if the volume of bird life has suffered
a loss of 46 per cent. within fifteen
years, at this rate of destruction
practically all birds will be exterminated
in less than a score of years from
now.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="WE_BELIEVE_IT" id="WE_BELIEVE_IT"></SPAN>WE BELIEVE IT.</h2>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="58" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THERE is no being so homely, none
so venomous, none so encased
in slime or armed with sword-like
spines, none so sluggish or
so abrupt in behavior, that it cannot
win our favor and admiration—the
more, the better we know it. However
it may be in human society, with the
naturalist it is not familiarity which
breeds contempt. On the contrary, it
has been said, with every step of his advancing
knowledge he finds in what
was at first indifferent, unattractive, or
repulsive, some wonder of mechanism,
some exquisite beauty of detail, some
strangeness of habit. Shame he feels at
having so long had eyes which seeing
saw not; regret he feels that the limits
of his life should be continually contracting,
while the boundaries of his
science are always expanding; but so
long as he can study and examine, he
is so far contented and happy.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_PINEAPPLE" id="THE_PINEAPPLE"></SPAN>THE PINEAPPLE.</h2>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="58" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THIS tropical fruit is so-called
from its resemblance in form
and appearance to the cones of
some species of pine. Its
botanical name in most general use is
<i>Ananassa sativa</i>, but some botanists
who do not regard it as distinct from
<i>Bromelia</i>, call it <i>B. ananas</i>. <i>The Bromeliaceæ</i>,
to which it belongs, are a
small family of endogenous plants,
quite closely related to the canna,
ginger, and banana families, and differing
from them in having nearly
regular flowers and six stamens, all
perfect. As the pineapple has become
naturalized in parts of Asia and Africa,
its American origin has been disputed,
but there is little doubt that it is a
native of Brazil, and perhaps some of
the Antilles, now a part of the domain
of the United States. This fruit is a
biennial, with the habit of the Aloe,
but with much thinner leaves. In cultivation
it early produces seeds but, in
ripening, the whole flower cluster undergoes
a remarkable change; all parts
become enormously enlarged, and when
quite ripe, fleshy and very succulent,
being pervaded by a saccharine and
highly flavored juice. Instead of being
a fruit in the strict botanical sense of
the term, it is an aggregation of accessory
parts, of which the fruit proper
forms but a very small portion.</p>
<p>The first pineapples known in England
were sent as a present to Oliver
Cromwell; the first cultivated in that
country were raised in about 1715,
though they were grown in Holland in
the preceding century. The successful
cultivation of the fruit was early
considered one of the highest achievements
in horticulture, and the works
of a few years ago are tediously elaborate
in their instructions; but the matter
has been so much simplified that
anyone who can command the proper
temperature and moisture may expect
success.</p>
<p>For many years pineapples have
been taken from the West Indies to
England in considerable quantities,
but the fruit is so inferior to that raised
under glass that its cultivation for
market is prosecuted with success.
The largest fruit on record, as the produce
of the English pineries, weighed
fourteen pounds and twelve ounces.
Better West Indian pineapples are sold
in our markets than in those of England,
as we are nearer the places of growth.</p>
<p>The business of canning this fruit is
largely pursued at Nassau, New Providence,
whence many are also exported
whole. The business has grown greatly
within a few years, and now that
the United States is in possession of
the West Indian islands, exportations
may be expected to increase and the
demand satisfied.</p>
<p>More than fifty varieties of the pineapple
are enumerated. The plant is
evidently very variable, and when
South America was first visited by
Europeans, they found the natives
cultivating three distinct species. Some
varieties, with proper management,
will be in fruit in about eighteen
months from the time the suckers are
rooted. The juice of the pineapple is
largely used in flavoring ices and
syrups for soda-water; the expressed
juice is put into bottles heated through
by means of a water bath and securely
corked while hot. If stored in a cool
place it will preserve its flavor perfectly
for a year. The unripe fruit is
very acrid, and its juice in tropical
countries is used as a vermifuge. The
leaves contain an abundance of strong
and very fine fibers, which are sometimes
woven into fabrics of great delicacy
and lightness.</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">Nor is it every apple I desire;</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Nor that which pleases every palate best;</div>
<div class="verse">'Tis not the lasting pine that I require,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Nor yet the red-cheeked greening I request,</div>
<div class="verse">Nor that which first beshrewed the name of wife,</div>
<div class="verse">Nor that whose beauty caused the golden strife.</div>
<div class="verse">No, no! bring me an apple from the tree of life.</div>
<div class="verse ar">C. C. M.</div>
</div></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</SPAN></span></p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50 p2" title="PINEAPPLE." summary="PINEAPPLE.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_032.jpg" id="i_032.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_032.jpg" width="443" height="600" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">PRESENTED BY LOUIS G. KUNZE.</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">PINEAPPLE.<br/>
½ Life-size.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">COPYRIGHT 1899,<br/>
NATURE STUDY PUB. CO., CHICAGO.</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="LITTLE_BUSYBODIES" id="LITTLE_BUSYBODIES"></SPAN>LITTLE BUSYBODIES.</h2>
<p class="ac">BELLE P. DOWNEY.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_o.jpg" width-obs="57" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">ONE'S own observation tends to
confirm the wonderful stories
told by naturalists about ants.
They have a claim to rank next
to man in intelligence.</p>
<p>Seven or eight ants once attempted
to carry a wasp across the floor. In
the course of the journey they came to
a crevice in a plank caused by a splinter
which had been torn off. After repeated
attempts to cross this deep ravine
all the ants abandoned the task as
hopeless except one who seemed to be
the leader of the enterprise. He went
on a tour of investigation, and soon
found that the crevice did not extend
very far in length. He then went after
the retreated ants. They obeyed the
summons and returned, when all set
about helping to draw the wasp around
the crevice. This little incident proves
the ant is possessed of the power of
communicating its wishes to others.
Ants have been seen to bite off the legs
of a cockroach in order to get it into
the narrow door of their nest. The
brain of ants is larger in proportion to
their size than that of any other insect.
Naturalists think that they have memory,
judgment, experience, and feel
hatred and affection for their kind.
They are valorous, pugnacious, and rapacious,
but also inclined to be helpful
as they assist each other at their toilet.
They have a peculiarity among insects
of burying their dead. It is a curious
fact that the red ants, which are the masters,
never deposit their dead by the
side of their black slaves, thus seeming
to show some idea of caste.</p>
<p>Ants yawn, sleep, play, work, practice
gymnastics, and are fond of pets,
such as small beetles, crickets, and
cocci, which they entertain as guests in
their homes.</p>
<p>Indeed, ants are social, civilized, intelligent
citizens of successfully governed
cities. Even babies are claimed
by the state. Their government is a
happy democracy where the queen is
"mother" but not ruler, and where the
females have all the power. The queen
is highly honored and at death is buried
with magnificence. In her devotion
to her lot in life she pulls off her
glittering wings and becomes a willing
prisoner in the best room of a house of
many apartments. Here she is cared
for by devoted followers who polish
her eggs, carry them upward to the
warmth of the sun in daytime, and
back to the depths of the habitation to
protect them from the chill of night.
These eggs are so small as scarcely to
be seen by the eye alone. They are
bright and smooth, without any division.
It is very strange, but these eggs
will not develop into larvæ unless carefully
nursed. This is effected by licking
the surface of the eggs. Under the
influence of this process they mature
and produce larvæ. The larvæ are fed,
like young birds, from the mouths of
the nurses. When grown they spin
cocoons and at the proper time the
nurses help them out by biting the
cases. The next thing the nurses do is
to help them take off their little membranous
shirts. This is done very
gently. The youngsters are then
washed, brushed, and fed, after which
the teachers educate them as to their
proper duties.</p>
<p>It is astonishing how many occupations
are followed by these little busy-bodies
whose size and weakness are
made up for by their swiftness, their
fineness of touch, the number of their
eyes and a powerful acid which they
use in self-defense. Their jaws are so
much like teeth that they serve for cutting,
while their antennæ are useful for
measurement, and their front feet serve
as trowels with which to mix and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</SPAN></span>
spread mortar. Ants may be said to
have the following occupations: Housewives,
nurses, teachers, spinners, menials,
marauders, soldiers, undertakers,
hunters, gardeners, agriculturalists,
architects, sculptors, road makers, mineralogists,
and gold miners.</p>
<p>Ants keep cows—the aphides—for
which they sometimes build stables and
place in separate stalls from the cocci,
which they also use. They make granaries
where they store ant rice. If the
grain begins to sprout they are wise
enough to cut off the sprout. If it gets
wet they have often been seen carrying
it up to the sunshine to dry and
thus prevent sprouting. The honey-ant
is herself a storehouse of food in
case of famine. This kind of ant has
a distension of the abdomen in which
honey is stored by the workers for
cases of need. They inject the honey
into the mouth of the ant. When it is
needed she forces it up to her lips by
means of the muscles of the abdomen.
It is said that the Mexicans like to culture
honey ants and eat the honey
themselves.</p>
<p>The leaf-cutting ant is the gardener.
It is devoted to growing mushrooms or
at least a kind of fungi of which it is
fond. This accounts for the beds of
leaves it carries to its nest, on which
the fungi develop.</p>
<p>The Roman naturalist, Pliny, gives
an account of some ants in India which
extract gold from mines during the
winter. In the summer, when they retire
to their holes to escape the heat,
the people steal their gold. McCook
has found that we have ants who are
mineralogists, as they cover their hill
with small stones, bits of fossils and
minerals, for which they go down like
miners more than a yard deep into the
earth.</p>
<p>That some kinds of ants are architects
has been clearly proven, for an
observer saw an ant architect order his
workmen to alter a defective arch,
which they did, apparently to suit his
views of how arches should be constructed!</p>
<p>The ants who act as sculptors work
in wood. The red ants of the forest
build storied houses in trees with pillars
for support. There is a little
brown ant which makes a house forty
stories high; half the rooms are below
ground. There are pillars, buttresses,
galleries, and various rooms with arched
roofs. This ant works in clay. If her
material becomes too dry she is compelled
to wait for moisture.</p>
<p>The blind ant is a remarkable builder.
She makes long galleries above ground.
She does not use cement as some ants
do, so she builds rapidly and her structure
is flimsy.</p>
<p>The Saiiva ants of Brazil are skillful
masons. They construct chambers as
large as a man's head that have immense
domes, and outlets seventy
yards long. The Brazilians say that
the Indians, in cases of wounds, when
it was necessary to close them as with
stitching, used the jaws of the Saiiva
ant. The ant was seized by the body
and placed so that the mandibles were
one on each side of the cut. Then,
when pressed against the flesh, the ant
would close the mandibles and unite
the two sides of the cut as firmly as a
good stitch would do it. A quick twist
of the ant's body separated it from the
head. After a few days the heads were
removed with a knife and the operation
was complete.</p>
<p>In view of this we are tempted to
say that ants are also <i>surgeons</i>, but die
themselves instead of having their patients
do so!</p>
<p>A friend who has lived long in Brazil
tells me that the Saiiva ants are so
large the nuns in the convents use their
bodies to dress as dolls, making them
represent soldiers, brides and grooms,
and so forth.</p>
<p>One species of ants do nothing except
capture slaves. These are not
able to make their own nests, to feed
their larvæ, or even to feed themselves,
but are so helpless they would die if
neglected by their servants. There are
three species that keep slaves, but
these are not the only ones who go to
war, as the usually peaceful agricultural
ants sometimes get short of seed
and go forth to plunder each other's
nests.</p>
<p>It is stated that a thousand species
of ants are known. No doubt there is
much of interest about each kind. The
"Driver Ant" is so choice of time and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</SPAN></span>
labor that, when building its covered
roads, if a crevice in a rock or a shady
walk is reached, it utilizes these, then
continues arching its path as before.
If a flood comes these ants form into
large balls with the weak ones in the
middle, the stronger on the outside,
and so swim on the water.</p>
<p>The ant benefits man by acting as a
scavenger, by turning up the subsoil,
and in various other ways. But flowers
prefer the visits of moths and butterflies;
as ants are of no service to them
in scattering pollen, they do not wish
them to get their honey. Some of the
flowers have found out that ants,
though so industrious by reputation,
are lazy about getting out early in the
morning for they dislike the dew very
much. Hence by 9 o'clock these wary
flowers have closed their doors. Others
take the precaution to baffle ant visitors
by holding an extra quantity of
dew on the basins of their leaves, while
still others exude a sticky fluid from
their stems which glues the poor ants
to the spot.</p>
<p>Campanula secretes her honey in a
box with a lid. Cyclamen presents
curved surfaces, while narcissus makes
her tube top narrow. Other flowers
have hooks and hairs by which the
ants are warned to seek their honey
elsewhere.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_CHARITY_OF_BREAD_CRUMBS" id="THE_CHARITY_OF_BREAD_CRUMBS"></SPAN> THE CHARITY OF BREAD CRUMBS.</h2>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="58" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THE recent "cold wave," which
with its severity and length
has sorely tried the patience of
Denver's citizens, has had its
pleasant features. Perhaps chief of
these has been the presence in our
midst of scores of feathered visitors
driven in, doubtless, by pangs of hunger,
from the surrounding country.</p>
<p>Flocks of chickadees have flown
cheerily about our streets, chirping
and pecking industriously, as if to
shame those of us who lagged at home
because of zero temperature. They
were calling to one another as we
stood at the window watching them
last Saturday morning.</p>
<p>Suddenly, down the street with the
swiftness and fury of an Apache band,
tore a group of small savages, each
armed with a weapon in the shape of
a stick about two feet long.</p>
<p>"What can those boys be playing?"
inquired someone, and the answer to
the question was found immediately as
in horror she saw the sticks fly with
deadly exactness into a group of the
brave little snowbirds, and several of
them drop lifeless or flutter piteously
in the frozen street.</p>
<p>"How can boys be so heartless!" said
the lady, rising in righteous wrath to
reason with them.</p>
<p>"Thoughtless is nearer the truth," remarked
a friend who had witnessed the
scene. "Their hearts haven't been
awakened on the bird question and it
would be better to try and stir up their
mothers and teachers than to fuss at
the boys themselves."</p>
<p>But the Denver birds have plenty of
friends and this has been proved many
times during the past week.</p>
<p>At the surveyor-general's office Saturday
morning there was held a large
reception at which refreshments were
served and the guests were largely
house finches—small, brown birds with
red about their throats. For a number
of seasons the ladies and gentlemen
employed there have spread a liberal
repast several times each day upon the
broad window ledges for these denizens
of the air. The day being very
cold, someone suggested that perhaps
if the window were opened and seed
scattered inside also, the birds would
come in and get warm.</p>
<p>The feast was arranged with bits of
apple, small cups of water, and a liberal
supply of seed. And the invitation was
accepted with alacrity. A swarm of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</SPAN></span>
busy little brown bodies jostled and
twittered and ate ravenously of the
viands provided, while thankful heads
were raised over the water cups to let
that cool liquid trickle down thirsty
throats. It was a lovely sight and
everyone in the room kept breathlessly
still, but at last some noise outside
alarmed the timid visitors and they
whirred away in a small cloud, leaving
but a remnant of the plenteous repast
behind.</p>
<p>Several of the tiny creatures becoming
puzzled flew about the room in distress,
trying to get away, and one little
fellow bumped his head violently
against a glass and fell ignominiously
into a spittoon. He was rescued and
laid tenderly on the window sill to dry,
a very bedraggled and exhausted bit
of creation. It was interesting to watch
the effect of this disaster upon every
one in the office, including Mr. Finch
himself.</p>
<p>Gentlemen and ladies vied with each
other in showing attentive hospitality
to the injured guest. He had his head
rubbed and his wings lovingly stroked,
and being too ill to resent these familiarities,
he soon became accustomed to
them. He was finally domiciled in a
small basket and grew very chipper
and tame indeed before his departure,
which was after several days of such
luxury and petting as would quite turn
the head of anything less sensible than
a finch.</p>
<p>It is said the gentleman who makes
these birds his grateful pensioners buys
ten pounds of seed at a time, and another
gentleman and his wife, who reside
at the Metropole, deal out their
rations with so lavish a hand that their
windows are fairly besieged with feathered
beggars clamoring for food.</p>
<p>In a neighbor's yard I noticed always
a small bare spot of ground. No matter
how high the snow might drift
around it, this small brown patch of
earth lay dark and bare.</p>
<p>"Why do you keep that little corner
swept?" I inquired.</p>
<p>"Oh, that is the birds' dining-room,"
was the answer, and then I noticed
scraps of bread and meat and scattered
crumbs and seeds. And as many times
as I may look from my windows I
always see from one to five fluffy
bunches at work there stuffing vigorously.</p>
<p>Many of our teachers have made the
lot of our common birds their daily
study and delight. In the oldest kindergarten
in the city the window sills
are raised and the birds' food scattered
upon a level with the glass, so that
every action of the little creatures can
be watched with ease by the children
within.</p>
<p>In numbers of homes and in many of
our business offices the daily needs of
our little feathered brothers are
thoughtfully cared for.</p>
<p>Let this feeling grow and this interest
deepen in the hearts of Denverites,
especially in the children's hearts. It
will make this city a veritable paradise
as the summer approaches, "full of
the song of birds." It will make of it a
heaven in the course of time, for not
only the humble finch and snowbird,
but for nature's most beautiful and aristocratic
choristers.</p>
<p>"To-day is the day of salvation." To-day
is the very best day of the best
month in which to consider the needs
of these poor which, thank God, "we
have always with us."—<i>Anne C. Steele,
in Denver Evening Post, Feb. 3, 1899.</i></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</SPAN></span></p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50" title="HOODED MERGANSER." summary="HOODED MERGANSER.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_045.jpg" id="i_045.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_045.jpg" width="445" height="600" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">FROM COL. CHI. ACAD. SCIENCES.</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">HOODED MERGANSER.<br/>
3/7 Life-size.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">COPYRIGHT 1899,<br/>
NATURE STUDY PUB. CO., CHICAGO.</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_HOODED_MERGANSER" id="THE_HOODED_MERGANSER"></SPAN>THE HOODED MERGANSER.<br/> <span class="xx-smaller"><span style="font-weight:lighter;">(<i>Lophodytes cucullatus</i>.) </span></span></h2>
<p class="ac">LYNDS JONES.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_e.jpg" width-obs="56" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">EVEN the merest tyro in bird
study need have no fear of confusing
the male of this species
with any other bird, as a glance
at the picture will make evident. No
other bird can boast such a crest, and
few ducks a more striking pattern of
dress or a more stately manner. The
species inhabits the whole of North
America, including Cuba, occasionally
wandering to Europe and rarely to
Greenland. It is locally common and
even abundant, or used to be, in well
watered and well wooded regions where
fish are abundant, but seems to be growing
less numerous with the advance of
settlements in these regions. The food
consists of fish, mollusks, snails, and
fresh water insects which are obtained
by diving as well as by gleaning.</p>
<p>The winter range of this "fish duck"
is largely determined by the extent of
open water on our lakes and streams.
Thus it is regularly found in Minnesota
wherever there is open water, even during
the severest winters, but under
other conditions it may be absent from
regions much farther south. There can
be little doubt that a large proportion
of the individuals pass the winter well
south, only a few being able to find
subsistence about the springs and
mouths of streams in the northern
states.</p>
<p>Is it entirely due to individual taste,
or may it be a difference in the food
habits of these birds in different parts
of the country that their flesh is highly
esteemed in some regions but will
scarcely be eaten at all in others? If it
is true that the Michigan individuals
eat snails, crabs, and mollusks rather
than fish, and are therefore excellent
for the table, while the California ones
prefer fish and are therefore not fit for
food, why have we not here a clear case
of tendency to differentiation which
will ultimately result in a good sub-species?</p>
<p>The nesting of the hooded merganser
is even more erratic than its occurrence.
It has been found nesting in Florida as
well as in the more northern parts
of the country, and here and there
throughout its whole range, being apparently
absent from many regions during
the nesting season. It is unlike
the other "fish ducks" in preferring still
water and secluded streams, but resembles
the wood duck in building its nest
a short distance from the water in a
hollow tree or stump or on the flat side
of a leaning or fallen tree, often forty
or more feet from the ground. The
nest consists of weeds, leaves, and
grasses with a soft lining of feathers
and down. This warm nest must be intended
to act as an aid to incubation
rather than as a warm place for the
young ducks, since they, like other
ducks, are carried to the water in the
beak of the mother-bird shortly after
they are hatched. The nest complement
ranges from six to eighteen eggs,
the average being about ten. The eggs
are variously described by different authors,
both as regards color and size,
from pure white, pearly white, creamy
white, buffy white to buff-colored, and
from 1.75 × 1.35, to 2.25 × 1.75 inches.
The average size is probably nearly
2.10 × 1.72.</p>
<p>The downy ducklings are brown in
color and, as they skim over the water,
their pink feet churning up a spray behind,
they present a bewitching picture.
The male bird, like other ducks, assumes
no share of the labors of incubation,
but entertains himself hunting fish
in some solitary stream where food is
plentiful, and in proper season returns
to assume the duties of the head of his
lusty family.</p>
<p>The nesting season must necessarily
vary greatly with locality. In Minnesota
fresh eggs are found during the
third week of April, according to Dr.
P. L. Hatch. The date would probably
be much earlier with the Florida birds.
The locality selected for the nest is also
variable with the different parts of the
country.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The manner of flight of the different
species of ducks is usually characteristic
to the eye of the careful student.
Thus the hooded mergansers fly in a
compact flock of about a dozen birds
with a directness and velocity that is
wonderful. Dr. Hatch says, in his
"Birds of Minnesota:" "Once in January,
1874, when the mercury had descended
to 40 below zero, while a north
wind was blowing terrifically, I saw a
flock of six of this species flying directly
into the teeth of the blizzard at their
ordinary velocity of not less than ninety
miles an hour." This may sound rather
strong to some, but their flight is certainly
very rapid, as any gunner will
testify.</p>
<p>The "fish ducks," or mergansers, are
an interesting group of three American
species, of which the hooded is the
smallest. The long, slender, toothed
or serrated bill of this group provides a
field character which will serve to
identify them at a glance. It is to be
hoped that their habit of feeding
largely upon fish will prove a protection
from entire extermination.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_TRUMPETERS" id="THE_TRUMPETERS"></SPAN>THE TRUMPETERS.</h2>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">The winds of March are trumpeters,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">They blow with might and main,</div>
<div class="verse">And herald to the waiting earth</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">The Spring and all her train.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">They harbinger the April showers,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">With sunny smiles between,</div>
<div class="verse">That wake the blossoms in their beds,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">And make the meadows green.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">The South will send her spicy breath,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">The brook in music flow,</div>
<div class="verse">The orchard don a bloomy robe</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Of May's unmelting snow.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Then June will stretch her golden days,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Like harp-strings, bright and long,</div>
<div class="verse">And play a rich accompaniment</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">To every wild bird's song.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">The fair midsummer time, apace,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Shall bring us many a boon,</div>
<div class="verse">And ripened fruits, and yellow sheaves</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Beneath the harvest-moon.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">The golden-rod, a Grecian torch,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Will light the splendid scene,</div>
<div class="verse">When Autumn comes in all the pomp</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">And glory of a queen.</div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Her crimson sign shall flash and shine</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">On every wooded hill,</div>
<div class="verse">And Plenty's horn unto the brim</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">Her lavish bounty fill.</div>
<div class="verse ar">—<i>Andrew Downing.</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="CLOVES" id="CLOVES"></SPAN>CLOVES.<br/> <span class="xx-smaller"><span style="font-weight:lighter;"> (<i>Eugenia caryophyllata Thunberg.</i>)</span></span></h2>
<p class="ac">DR. ALBERT SCHNEIDER,<br/>
<span class="smaller">Northwestern University School of Pharmacy.</span></p>
<div class="smaller">
<span style="margin-left:40%;">Biron—A lemon.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left:40%;">Lang—Stuck with cloves.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left:60%;">—<i>Shakespeare, Love's Labor
Lost, V. 2.</i></span></div>
<div class="p2">
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_c.jpg" width-obs="54" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">CLOVES are among our favorite
spices, even more widely known
and more generally used than
ginger. They are the immature
fruit and flower-buds of a beautiful aromatic
evergreen tree of the tropics.
This tree reaches a height of from thirty
to forty feet. The branches are nearly
horizontal, quite smooth, of a yellowish
grey coloration, decreasing gradually
in length from base to the apex
of the tree, thus forming a pyramid.
The leaves are opposite, entire, smooth,
and of a beautiful green color. The
flowers are borne upon short stalks,
usually three in number, which extend
from the apex of short branches. The
calyx is about half an inch long, changing
from whitish to greenish, and
finally to crimson. The entire calyx
is rich in oil glands. The petals are
four in number, pink in color, and drop
off very readily. The stamens are very
numerous. All parts of the plant are aromatic,
the immature flowers most of all.</p>
<p>The clove-tree was native in the
Moluccas, or Clove Islands, and the
southern Philippines. We are informed
that in 1524 the Portuguese took possession
of these islands and controlled
the clove market. About 1600 the
Dutch drove out the Portuguese and
willfully destroyed all native and other
clove-trees not under Dutch protection.
The plan of the Dutch was to prevent
the establishment of clove plantations
outside of their own dominions, but in
spite of their great watchfulness other
nations secured seeds and young plants
and spread the cultivation of this valuable
spice very rapidly. Now cloves
are extensively cultivated in Sumatra,
the Moluccas, West Indies, Penang,
Mauritius, Bourbon, Amboyne, Guiana,
Brazil, and Zanzibar—in fact throughout
the tropical world. Zanzibar is
said to supply most of the cloves of
the market.</p>
<p>The cultivation of cloves in Zanzibar
is conducted somewhat as follows:
The seeds of the plant are soaked in
water for two or three days or until
germination begins, whereupon they
are planted in shaded beds about six
inches apart, usually two seeds together
to insure against failure. The
young germinating plants are shaded
by frameworks of sticks covered with
grass or leaves. This mat is sprinkled
with water every morning and evening.
The young plants are kept in these
covered beds for nine months or one
year, after which they are gradually
hardened by removing the mat from
time to time, and finally left in the
open entirely for a few months, after
which they are ready for transplanting.</p>
<p>Transplanting must be done carefully,
so as not to injure the roots.
The plant is dug up by a special hoe-like
tool, lifted up in the hand with as
much soil as possible, placed upon
crossed strips of banana fibres, which
are taken up by the ends and wrapped
and tied about the plant. The plant
is now carried to its new locality,
placed in a hole in the soil, the earth
filled in about it, and finally the banana
strips are cut and drawn out.</p>
<p>The transplanted clove plants are
now carefully tended and watered
for about one year, but they are not
shaded as during the first year of their
existence. Usually many of the transplanted
plants die, which makes replanting
necessary. This great mortality,
it is believed by some, might be
reduced very materially by shading
the recently transplanted clove-trees
for a time.</p>
<p>The clove-tree may attain an age of
from 60 to 70 years and some have been
noted which were 90 years old and
over. The average life of the plantation
clove-trees is, however, perhaps
not more than 20 years. The trees begin
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</SPAN></span>
to yield in about five years after
planting. The picking of the immature
flowers with the red calyx is begun
in August and lasts for about four
months. From two to four crops are
harvested each year. Each bud may
be picked singly by hand, but those
of the higher branches are more
generally knocked off by means of
bamboo sticks. After picking the
flowers are placed upon grass mats and
dried in the sun, this requiring from six
to seven days. In the night and during
rains they are placed under cover.
Drying changes the red color of the
calyx to a dark brown. The dried
cloves are packed in gunny bags and
carried to Zanzibar where an internal
revenue of 25 per cent. is paid in
cloves. From Zanzibar the cloves are
exported in mat bags.</p>
<p>We know that cloves were used by
the ancient Egyptians, for a mummy
has been found with a necklace of
them. The Chinese used them extensively,
226 B. C. Plinius briefly described
"Caryophyllon," which, according
to some commentators, referred to
cloves and according to others to cubebs.
Cloves appeared in Europe
about 314-335 A. D., evidently introduced
by way of Arabia. Emperor
Constantine, who ruled about that time
made Pope Sylvester of Rome, among
other things, a present of 150 pounds
of cloves. In Grecian literature cloves
are first mentioned about the Sixth
century. Trallianus recommended
them in stomach troubles and in gout.</p>
<p>The Germans designate cloves as
<i>Gewürznägelein</i>, which means spice
nails, because of their resemblance to
a nail, the corolla forming the head
and the calyx tube the nail. The aromatic
odor and pungent aromatic taste
is due to an ethereal oil present in large
quantities (18 per cent.) in the calyx
tube. This oil is used for various purposes;
as a clearing reagent in microtechnique,
for toothache, as an antiseptic,
stomachic, irritant. It destroys insects
and keeps them away. When
freshly extracted its color is pale amber
but it gradually assumes a reddish
brown coloration. It is one of the least
volatile of ethereal or essential oils. It is
also used by soapmakers and perfumers.</p>
<p>Cloves are variously used as a spice.
They are often stuck into pickled fruits,
as peaches, apples, apricots. The
opening quotation from Shakespeare
suggests such a use with lemons.
Some persons acquire an inelegant
and undesirable habit of chewing
cloves. The pungent oil deadens or
benumbs the nerves of taste and touch
and the persistent mastication of
cloves, is said to produce an excessive
development of fibrous tissue of the
liver, a condition akin to "nutmeg
liver" which shall be referred to in our
next paper.</p>
<p>Other parts of the clove-tree are also
used occasionally, as for instance the
flower stalks known as clove stalks.
They possess the odor and taste of
cloves but in a lesser degree. Formerly
the leaves were also used but it is said
that they do not now appear in commerce.
The dried fruit known as
mother of cloves is used more or less.
They contain far less oil than cloves
and are comparatively less valuable.
Even the wood of the tree has been
used as a spice. The dried and ground
flower stalk, the fruits and the wood
are often used to adulterate ground
cloves. We would therefore advise
housewives to purchase the cloves and
grind them at home. It is reported
that cloves have been adulterated with
false cloves made from starch pressed
into the form of cloves and roasted.
It is, however, not at all likely that such
a practice is carried on to any great
extent. Sometimes cloves are placed
on the market from which the oil has
been extracted.</p>
<p>The cultivated cloves are richer in
essential oil than the native cloves.
The Zanzibar cloves are quite large.
The principal market varieties are
English cloves, Amboyne cloves, Bourbon
cloves, Cayenne cloves, Zanzibar
cloves, and others.</p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50 p2" title="CLOVE." summary="CLOVE.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_056.jpg" id="i_056.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_056.jpg" width="468" height="600" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">FROM KŒHLER'S MEDIZINAL-PFLANZEN.</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">CLOVE.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30"> </td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p class="ac">EXPLANATION OF PLATE.</p>
<p><i>A</i>, flowering branch, nearly natural
size; 1, floral bud; 2, floral bud in
longitudinal section; 3, stamens; 4,
pollen grains; 5, ovary in transverse
section; 6, fruit, about natural size; 7,
fruit in transverse section; 8, embryo;
9, part of embryo.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="A_VEIN_OF_HUMOR" id="A_VEIN_OF_HUMOR"></SPAN>A VEIN OF HUMOR.</h2>
<p class="ac">ELANORA KINSLEY MARBLE.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_n.jpg" width-obs="56" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">NOT only human beings, it is
said, but all other animals of
earth, air, and water have their
play spells. To the question of
how man can know this, one can only
say that man being also animal, must
certainly understand something of the
nature of his lower brethren. Our
mental composition is of the same substance
as theirs, with a certain superstructure
of reasoning faculty, however,
which has enabled us to become their
masters. The various emotions and faculties,
such as love, fear, curiosity,
memory, imitation, jealousy, etc., of
which man boasts, are to be found,
often in a highly developed state, among
the lower animals, so that it is not at all
surprising that among both birds and
mammals we find individual species
possessing a more or less keen sense of
humor.</p>
<p>The question of why animals play is
by no means new to philosophical inquiry.
Herbert Spencer says animals
play in their early or youthful stage of
life because of their "surplus energy,"
the same reason that we ascribe to the
child, referring more particularly to
the strictly muscular plays, in contra-distinction
to vocal recreation. An
eminent philosopher, however, disagrees
with him in this, contending that
play in animals is not a mere frolicksome
display of surplus energy, but a
veritable instinct and a matter of serious
moment as well as necessity.</p>
<p>However that may be, the fact remains
that they do play and, as the
writer can aver, in a spirit not at all
serious, but with all the happy abandon
of a child.</p>
<p>Among the wags of the feathered
tribe the mockingbird and blue jay deserve
special mention, though the
raven, crow, catbird, jackdaw, and magpie
may, from the point of mischief, be
numbered in the list. In looking at
the ungainly pelican one would smile
to hear him called a "humorist," but as
the seal is the buffoon of the aquarium,
so the pelican plays the part of the
clown in the zoo. His specialty is
low comedy and generally the victims
of his jokes are the dignified storks
and the rather stupid gulls, companions
in captivity. The stork's singular
habit of standing on one leg affords the
pelican a rare chance for a little fun, so
he watches until a stork, in a meditative
mood, takes up his favorite attitude
beside the tank. Then up waddles the
pelican and, with a chuckle, jostles
against him, and sends him tumbling
into the water. It is a question whether
the stork enjoys the sport, but the pelican
evidently does, for he leaps about
evincing the utmost delight, flapping
his wings, and squawking, or laughing,
in triumph. The gulls he treats in a
different fashion. No sooner does he
see one seize a piece of bread, or some
dainty contributed by a spectator,
than up he rushes with a squawk and
prodigious flapping of wings, forcing
the gull to take refuge in the water,
while he with much satisfaction devours
the morsel.</p>
<p>"Our Animal Friends" tells of a pelican
who made friends with a tiny kitten.
When in a lively mood the pelican,
perhaps recalling how his parents,
or himself, in a wild state, were wont
to catch fish, would pick up the kitten,
toss it in the air, and stand with his
huge mouth wide open as if intending
to catch it as it came down. Puss
seemed to consider it excellent fun, as
with a quick motion she turned over in
the air, alighting every time uninjured
upon her feet; then off she would
scamper to the pelican, running about
his long legs as though seeking to
knock him down. Watching his opportunity
he would grasp her again, toss
her into the air, and thus the sport
would go on till the bird himself tired
of it.</p>
<p>The mockingbird, that prince of song
and mimics, possesses a sense of humor
highly diverting and very humanlike—the
male bird that is, for the female
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</SPAN></span>
views life from a more serious standpoint,
her domestic duties, it would
seem, weighing heavily upon her mind.
We speak of the "thieving" instinct of
this bird, as well as of the blue jay, and
other kindred species, because of that
mischievous spirit which leads them to
seize any small bright article which
comes in their way, and, when unobserved,
to secrete it. That they never
purloin or hide these objects when observed
is thought to be proof conclusive
that it is done from the pure love
of stealing and nothing else.</p>
<p>"I hide and you seek." In that childish
game does not the one who is to
secrete the article insist that the
"finder" close his eyes till the object
sought is carefully hidden? What
amusement would be afforded the jay,
or the mockingbird, should he attempt
to secrete an article while you are looking?
If we could only interpret the
sparkle in their bead-like eyes, as we
can that in a child's when engaged in
the same game, how much mischief we
would read there as the owner of these
secreted articles hunts "high and low"
for them in presence of the fun-loving
birds!</p>
<p>"Where did you hide it, Jay?"
pleaded a lady, who had left her silver
thimble upon a table, and after a few
minutes' absence returned to find it
gone. "There has been nobody in the
room since I left, so you must have
taken it."</p>
<p>Mr. Jay, the pet of the household,
hopped into his cage, and, standing
upon his perch, looked demurely at
the questioner.</p>
<p>"You are a naughty bird," said his
mistress, who had in remembrance
finger-rings, watch-keys, collar-buttons,
and similar articles, which, from time
to time, had as mysteriously disappeared,
"and I am going to shut you
in," which she did, fastening the insecure
door of his prison with a stout
piece of string.</p>
<p>Jay gave a shrill shriek, as of laughter,
when his mistress continued the
search, turning up the edge of the carpet,
searching the pockets of garments
hanging on the wall, anywhere, everywhere,
that articles, one-time missing,
had been secreted. But look where
she would the thimble could not be
found.</p>
<p>A month went by, and still Jay remained
an unwilling, if not a subdued,
prisoner. As his mistress one morning
sat sewing in the room, Jay gave a final
peck at the string which confined him,
and at once, without a word, hopped
to a chair from which one rung was
missing. His mistress was watching
him, and to her intense amusement saw
him very deftly extract from the hole
in the leg her lost thimble.</p>
<p>In the same household came, as
visitor, a little boy named Johnny, of a
very peevish and fretful disposition.
When refused anything he especially
desired, the whole house was made to
resound with shrieks of: "Ma, ma,
ma-a-a-a!"</p>
<p>Jay listened very attentively at first,
but in a few days had not only caught
the words but the very intonation.
Johnny never entered the room without
the bird crying in a peevish tone,
in a very ecstacy of mischief: "Ma,
ma, ma-a-a!"</p>
<p>"I hate that bird," said the boy one
day, when Jay had greeted him with
an unusually whining cry: "He ought
to be killed. He makes me nervous."</p>
<p>"Then I would stop whining if I were
you," suggested his mother, and Johnny
wisely concluded he would.</p>
<p>A mockingbird which frequented the
grounds of a gentleman in Virginia
was noted not only as a most mischievous
fellow, but as one of the most
divine songsters of his tribe. So
heavenly was his music, and so superior
to that of his fellows, that at eventide
in the general chorus his voice soared
above all the rest. Men, women, and
children gathered—for his fame had
traveled far and near—to hear him
sing, but in the very midst of his divine
strains, Jip—for so they named him—would
suddenly cease, and flying away,
conceal himself behind a chimney on
the housetop. Presently he would
sneak down to the eaves and peer cautiously
over, to see if his self-invited
audience had scattered. If they were
still there he would again hide himself,
returning shortly to peer over the
eaves again. As soon as the back of
his last auditor was visible down he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</SPAN></span>
would fly to his chosen perch and resume
his glorious song, tempting his
audience to return. This time he would
regale them with the choicest of his
trills, breaking off in the midst as before
and mischievously flying away to
hide himself. This little comedy he
would repeat three or four times during
an afternoon or a moonlight night.</p>
<p>A black cat of the household was a
recipient of his practical jokes. When
she was passing Jip found it exceedingly
amusing to spring upon her back,
give her a sharp dig with his beak, and
then spring nimbly to a low branch,
exulting over the cat's vain effort to
locate her tormentor.</p>
<p>A favorite joke of a mockingbird in
Richmond, Va., was, when espying a
dog, to utter a shrill whistle in exact
imitation of a man summoning that
animal. Thus peremptorily called, the
canine would suddenly halt, prick up
his ears, look up and down the street,
then, seeing no master, trot on his way.
Again the bird would whistle, but in a
more mandatory tone than before. The
dog would stop, gaze about in a puzzled
manner, then, in response to another
whistle, dash forward in the direction
of the sound. The mystification of the
dog appeared to afford the mockingbird
the most delight, more particularly
when not only one dog, but several
would collect under his cage, whining
and barking, vainly seeking to locate
their masters.</p>
<p>Among the mammals, the elephant,
in general estimation, possesses the
drollest sense of humor. The writer
never will forget the mischievous
pranks of a huge fellow among a herd
of elephants tethered in a pen in Central
Park, New York. Only those
beyond his reach escaped his teasing,
his sinuous trunk tickling those near,
now here, now there, his little pig-like
eyes twinkling with genuine humor.
His companions did not respond in
kind, not feeling perhaps in a playful
mood, which fact seemed in no way to
diminish the big fellow's amusement,
for he continued the sport at intervals
much to the edification of the spectators.</p>
<p>Even when engaged in piling up
huge slabs of lumber in the sawmills
in India, these huge animals while
away the tedious hours of labor by
many a little prank or joke at the expense
of their drivers. A favorite one
is, after disposing of one load and returning
for another, to fill their trunks
with odds and ends as they move leisurely
along, a stray nail, three or four
pebbles, a tuft of grass with a bit of
earth still clinging to its roots, a discarded
cheroot, or other small articles
which may lie in their paths. These
are collected, and when the trunk is
packed to their satisfaction, quietly
curled upward and the mass blown
against the naked stomachs of the
drivers dozing upon their backs.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="TAMING_THE_SMALLER_WILD_ANIMALS" id="TAMING_THE_SMALLER_WILD_ANIMALS"></SPAN> TAMING THE SMALLER WILD ANIMALS.</h2>
<p class="ac">ALDA M. MILLS.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="58" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THERE is a great difference in
the dispositions of the small
wild animals, some quickly responding
to care and petting,
while others seem incapable of being
tamed. It is the same with birds. I
have found owls, hawks, and other species
very easily tamed, while prairie
chickens and quail appear to be incapable
of domestication even in a small
degree. They will lose considerable
fear of human beings if left in their
freedom to become accustomed to
their near approach, but if placed in
captivity they pine away and die, or,
finding some avenue of escape, wander
away and are lost. The nearest approach
to domestication in the prairie
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</SPAN></span>
chicken tribe I ever noted, was that of
a young bird that grew up with a flock
of young turkeys. We noticed it
among the turkeys when they were
quite small. The prairie chicken must
have been considerably older than the
turkeys, as at first it was larger
than they were, but they rapidly gained
on it and were soon much the largest.
However, the little wildling clung to
its adopted family and in the fall, when
the turkeys came and roosted in the
plum trees near the buildings, it came
too and after a time lost most of its
shyness and, strangest of all, adopted
the turkeys' mode of roosting in the
trees. Later on, however, it disappeared,
probably joining a flock of its
own kind.</p>
<p>The common striped ground-squirrel
is very easily tamed if taken while
young and will soon learn to come if
called by name, and will learn many
little tricks. The gray squirrels, though
much prettier than the striped ones, are
naturally shyer and harder to tame.
Rabbits of the several species inhabiting
the United States are capable of
domestication in a degree, though of
all I ever owned but one would return
at my call when allowed its liberty
out-of-doors. Western jack-rabbits
when young make most interesting and
beautiful pets, and, while confined,
seem to lose all fear. Notwithstanding
their prettiness and their soft cuddling
ways, they are stupid little
things, all their knowledge seeming
to come through the calls of their
appetites.</p>
<p>Minks and weasels have too fierce a
nature to accept domestication, and, so
far as I have observed, show not the
slightest degree of affection for the
one who feeds them. That odorous
animal, the skunk, however, is very
susceptible to kindness, and will
become as tame and tractable as a pet
dog. One of the most interesting pets
I ever had was a skunk taken when
very young. It was allowed its full
freedom and would follow me around,
come at my call, do many little tricks
at command, and was as playful as a
kitten. Being thoroughly tamed it did
not make use of its objectionable
means of offense and defense, though
when frightened it often "threatened"
to. As in the case of the prairie
chicken, my pet skunk also disappeared
when it was nearly grown, thinking,
perhaps, that it could make a better
living for itself than I could furnish it.
Its favorite food was insects such as
May-beetles and their larvæ, grass-hoppers,
and almost every kind of
bug, worm, or beetle; even hairy caterpillars
were devoured after being
rolled or moulded with its paws to rub
off most of the hairs. This little pet
of mine was never troubled with dyspepsia
or indigestion and crammed its
capacious stomach with a vast amount
of food—mostly insects—though small
mammals, eggs, birds, and once a
young chicken were devoured with
relish. Mice of many species can be
tamed to some extent though I have
found one of the shyest species when
in a wild state to be the most readily
and thoroughly tamable. I refer to
the deer mice. They are pretty, yellowish
brown creatures, white underneath,
and have large, dark, brilliant
eyes and erect ears giving them a
very handsome expression. Their
hind legs are much longer and stronger
than those of the ordinary mouse and
they are capable of making extraordinary
leaps like the animals from which
they get their common name.</p>
<p>When tamed they will learn little
easy tricks such as sitting erect and
"begging" for food, coming when called
by name, etc., and are not so ready to
use their teeth on the slightest provocation,
as are their cousins, the blue
field mice.</p>
<p>By making pets of wild animals
much can be learned of their habits,
dispositions, and characteristics. Especially
their food habits, which, in the
wild state, exert so much influence in
the economy of nature as checks to
the undue increase of other species of
animals, insects, or plants.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</SPAN></span></p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50" title="COMMON GROUND HOG." summary="COMMON GROUND HOG.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_069.jpg" id="i_069.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_069.jpg" width="600" height="448" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">FROM COL. CHI. ACAD. SCIENCES.</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">COMMON GROUND HOG.<br/>
¼ Life-size.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">COPYRIGHT 1899,<br/>
NATURE STUDY PUB. CO., CHICAGO.</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_WOODCHUCK" id="THE_WOODCHUCK"></SPAN>THE WOODCHUCK.</h2>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_v.jpg" width-obs="57" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">VERY similar in its bodily structure
to the marmot, of which it
is said to be the nearest American
relative, is the woodchuck
or ground-hog (<i>Arctomys monax</i>). It
is about eighteen inches in length, including
the tail. The body is stout,
the head broad and flat, the legs short
and thick, the fur blackish or grizzled
on the upper portion and of a chestnut
red on the under surface of the body.</p>
<p>The ground-hog is found in all parts
of the region extending from the
Atlantic coast west to the Missouri,
Iowa, and Minnesota. It inhabits
woods, prairies, and meadows, lives on
roots, vegetables, and herbs, and is
especially fond of red clover. Its
burrows are large excavations, and in
the early autumn it busies itself in
storing provisions for its long winter
retreat. It is said to be one of the
first hibernating animals to retire to
winter quarters and one of the earliest
to come forth in the spring, the length
of its retirement varying with the
locality, and being shorter in the south
than in the north. In the northern
United States it usually retires about
the first of October and reappears
about the middle of March. A recent
writer and close observer says that
woodchucks hibernate in pairs, but he
never knew one of these proverbially
sleepy creatures to leave its hole until
warm weather came—in spite of the
alleged practice it has of coming out
invariably on the second day of February
to fix the weather for the rest of the
winter. He took the trouble once to
dig into a woodchuck's burrow on a
Candlemas day—and a warm, cloudy day
it was; just such a day as the ground-hog
is said to choose to come out of
his hole and stay out. He found two
woodchucks in the burrow, with no
more sign of life about them than if
they had been shot. From all outward
appearances he could have taken them
out and had a game of football with
them without their knowing it. When
the animal begins its hibernation it
carefully closes the entrance to its
burrow. Dr. Bachmann, who had
marked a burrow to which he knew
a pair of woodchucks had retired,
caused it to be opened early in November,
and found the two animals, perfectly
dormant, lying coiled up close
together in a nest of dry grass, twenty-five
feet from the entrance.</p>
<p>The young woodchucks, of which
there are from four to six in a litter, are
born about the end of April. The
mother takes tender care of them until
they are able to shift for themselves.</p>
<p>The woodchuck, when taken young,
is easily tamed, and becomes an interesting
pet. The little animal can be
taught to come when called, to run for
food when whistled to, and to answer to
a name. One called Chuck was very
fond of bread spread with butter and
sugar. If plain bread were offered to
him he would taste it, make a wry face,
spit out the bit in his mouth, and throw
away the piece he held, and then he
would straighten himself up and hold
out his shining black hands for bread
<i>with sugar</i> on it. He always sat up
stiffly on his hind legs when eating, and
it was a comical sight to see him holding
a long banana in his arms, until he
had eaten the whole of it, blinking his
bright black eyes with satisfaction.
Chuck was taught many tricks, to balance
a stick on his nose, swing in a
trapeze, draw a toy cart, and the like.
He was very affectionate and tractable.</p>
<p>Early in September Chuck began to
eat voraciously and soon became very
fat, but in the first week in October his
appetite failed; he ate at first once a
day, then once in two days, and after
awhile he became quite restless and
stupid. He was given his liberty, and
watched closely to learn his habits.
He began gnawing grass, gathering
dry leaves and tucking them in various
corners. At length he found a place
that suited him to dig, and then he
began making his nest. When the
excavation was complete Chuck disappeared
for several days. One evening
he tapped on the kitchen door.
When the door was opened he ran to
a basket of apples and ate one, then
ate a slice of bread and sugar. He appeared
crazy with haste, and as soon as
he was through eating he scampered
off, to be gone a long time. On the
first day of February Chuck crept out
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span>
of his hole, and sat for a moment in
the sun. Before he could be reached,
however, he had returned to it. In six
weeks and three days he again came
out, and what was surprising, he did
not appear to have forgotten any of
his friends, of whom he had many
among the cats, dogs, and rabbits of
the neighborhood, trotting about among
them on his hind legs. A cruel boy
and a savage dog ended the life of this
harmless little animal.</p>
<p class="ar">C. C. M.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="FLOWERS_WITH_HORNS_AND_CLAWS" id="FLOWERS_WITH_HORNS_AND_CLAWS"></SPAN> FLOWERS WITH HORNS AND CLAWS.</h2>
<p class="ac">E. F. MOSBY.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="58" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THE milkweed is best known to
most of us by its pods—long,
rough cases, packed close with
shining white silk attached to
little brown seeds. The lightest wind
that blows can carry these a stage or
two on their journey with such lovely
silken sails. But perhaps everyone has
not noticed one rather strange thing
about them. Almost always there are
two pods, one vigorous of growth,
large and full; the other stunted and
ill-formed. They are like the two
brothers or sisters of Fairy Tales, one
fair and well-favored and gracious, the
other ill-grown and dwarfish. But <i>why</i>
this is so, is one of the many secrets of
the milkweed.</p>
<p>It is quite a large family of flowers, or
weeds, as you may choose to call them.
There is the gorgeous orange-colored
butterfly weed, always surrounded by
hovering or fluttering butterflies, most
of them also orange or yellow in their
coloring; the fragrant, rose-colored
milkweed of June, the purple milkweed
and its cousin of the marsh.
But it is the common milkweed that is
called the horned herb. It was once
thought possessed of many healing
virtues when the business of gathering
and drying herbs was more important
than it is now. Yet one needs no idea
of this kind to look with interest
on this curiously formed plant which
grows in such profusion by the dusty
roadside or by our very doorstep. A
milky juice exudes from the stem whenever
a flower is gathered, and the pollen
is in such sticky masses that a feeble
insect is often caught and cannot
escape with its fatal treasure.</p>
<p>The blossom cluster, reflexed so
oddly, is pretty and quaint at first
sight, but as we look deeper we find
some unknown law of fives has ruled
its structure—the recurved calyx is five-parted,
so too the deeply recurved
corolla; five stamens there are surrounding,
like a circle of courtiers, a fairy
king and queen, the two pistils in the
center, above which hangs "a large five-angled
disk," an awning of state. But
oddest of all is the crown of five-hooded
nectaries above the corolla,
each nectary enclosing <i>an incurved horn</i>.
Is not this a strange honey-cup with
the horn concealed under the silky
flower-hood? The insects love the
banquet thus spread for their delight
and no doubt they know the secrets of
the blossom.</p>
<p>There is another family of wild flowers
that abounds in horns and claws, especially
the latter—the large crowfoot
family. The hook-beaked crowfoot
has little one-seeded fruits with long
and hooked beaks, like those of birds
of prey, collected into a head. The
wild columbine, nodding so merrily
from the high rocks, and the larkspur,
have hooked spurs and claws and the
larkspur hides its long spurs in its
calyx. But the monk's-hood is the
more interesting of all.</p>
<p>In early days, before stamens and
pistils are ready for open air and wandering
insects or pattering showers,
you may find a dark blue bud in the
meadow. The calyx is large and
showy and blue like a flower, and its
curved front sepals close the entrance
before while the hindmost sepal, like
a soldier's helmet, or a monk's hood,
comes down over all as a covering.
Then the sun shines and the blossom
ripens and it is time to open.</p>
<p>Wide fly the little doors, back falls
the blue hood, and the golden heart
of stamens and pistils is ready with a
welcome. But where are the petals?
Hidden under the hood are two tiny
hammer-like claws, the only petals this
flower possesses.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_COMMON_AMERICAN_MOLE" id="THE_COMMON_AMERICAN_MOLE"></SPAN> THE COMMON AMERICAN MOLE.</h2>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_t.jpg" width-obs="58" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THIS mole (<i>Scalops aquaticus</i>) is
the most common species in
the eastern portion of the
United States. Moles are considered
as animals of a fairly high
order, on account of their forelegs' being
developed into perfect scoops for
digging. They live almost entirely in
underground retreats, where they lead
a very peculiar life. They are found
over nearly all Europe, a great part of
Asia, southern Africa, and North
America, and their habits are in almost
every respect similar. Their varieties
are not numerous, but it is possible
that there are still a great many species
as yet unknown to naturalists.
They are all shaped and endowed, says
Brehm, in so striking a manner as to be
instantly recognizable. The body is
stout and of cylindrical shape, and
merges into a small head without the
intervention of a distinct neck. The
body is supported on short legs; the
forward pair appear to be relatively
gigantic digging tools, while the hind
limbs are longer and resemble those of
the rat. The teeth are from thirty-six
to forty-four in number.</p>
<p>Moles all delight in fertile plains,
though they are also found in mountains.
As the effect of light is painful
to them, they seldom come to the surface,
and even in the depth of the earth
they are more active by night than by
day. Their movements in their underground
passages are much more rapid
than when on the surface of the
ground, where they can scarcely walk.
They are also good swimmers when
compelled by necessity to resort to
the water.</p>
<p>Of the senses of the moles it is said
those of smell, hearing, and touch are
especially well developed, while that
of sight is deficient. All moles are
quarrelsome, are addicted to vicious
biting, and they take pleasure in devouring
their own kind. They eat
only animal food, all kinds of insects
living under ground, worms, and the
like, though they also feed on small
mammals and birds, frogs, and snails.
They are exceedingly voracious, and
as they can endure hunger only for a
very short time, they do not hibernate.
They are undoubtedly useful as exterminators
of insects, though on account
of their digging habits they are considered
a nuisance by the farmer.</p>
<p>It was long thought that moles were
blind, or had no eyes. The eyes, however,
are about the size of a small seed
lie midway between the tip of the
snout and the ears, and are completely
covered with the hair of the head.
They are protected by lids, and may
be projected or retracted at will.</p>
<p>Once or twice a year the female
mole gives birth to from three to five
young. They grow rapidly, and remain
with the mother for one or two
months. Then they begin digging on
their own account and require no further
attention. They have been found
to be very difficult to keep in captivity
by reason of their insatiable appetite.</p>
<p>As the mole is obliged constantly to
construct new hillocks in order to
secure its food, it cannot long hide
itself from its enemies. It digs horizontal
shafts at a slight depth from the
surface, and in order to remove the
earth it has dug up, it throws up the
well-known hillocks. Many a beautiful
lawn has been nearly ruined by the
handiwork of this little creature, who
likes to bore its snout into loose soil
and throw it backward with its powerful
forepaws. In a single night it can undo
much of the labor of the gardener.
In loose ground the animal is said to
work with really admirable rapidity.
Oken kept a mole in a box of sand for
three months, and observed the animal
work its way in it nearly as rapidly as
a fish glides through the water, snout
foremost, using the forepaws to throw
the sand to the side and the hind
limbs to push it backward. Lecourt,
wishing to investigate the speed of a
mole in its conduits, set up in a row a
number of heavy straws in the main
conduit, arranged so that the mole
could not run along the passages without
touching them. To the tops of
these straws he fastened small paper
flags, and when the mole was occupied
in its hunting ground, he frightened it
with the sound of a bugle, and thus
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span>
caused it to run into the main conduit.
Then the little flags fell down one
after another, the instant the mole
touched them, and the observer and
his assistants had an opportunity to
correctly record the speed of its course
for a short distance.</p>
<p class="ar">C. C. M.</p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50" title="COMMON MOLE." summary="COMMON MOLE.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_081.jpg" id="i_081.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_081.jpg" width="600" height="447" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">FROM COL. CHI. ACAD. SCIENCES.</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">COMMON MOLE.<br/>
¾ Life-size.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">COPYRIGHT 1899,<br/>
NATURE STUDY PUB. CO., CHICAGO.</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_OAK" id="THE_OAK"></SPAN>THE OAK.</h2>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">What gnarled stretch, what depth of shade is his!</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">There needs no crown to mark the forest's king;</div>
<div class="verse">How in his leaves outshines full summer's bliss!</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">Sun, storm, rain, dew, to him their tribute bring,</div>
<div class="verse">Which he, with such benignant royalty</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">Accepts, as overpayeth what is lent;</div>
<div class="verse">All nature seems his vassal proud to be,</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">And cunning only for his ornament.</div>
</div>
<div class="dots">• • • • • </div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">So, from oft converse with life's wintry gales,</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">Should man learn how to clasp with tougher roots</div>
<div class="verse">The inspiring earth—how otherwise avails</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">The leaf-creating sap that sunward shoots?</div>
<div class="verse">So every year that falls with noiseless flake,</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">Should fill old scars up on the stormward side,</div>
<div class="verse">And make hoar age revered for age's sake,</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">Not for traditions of earth's leafy pride.</div>
<div class="verse ar">—<i>Lowell.</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<hr class="small" />
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">"Had I wist," quoth Spring to the swallow,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">"That earth could forget me, kissed</div>
<div class="verse">By summer, and lured to follow</div>
<div class="verse">Down ways that I know not, I,</div>
<div class="verse">My heart should have waxed not high,</div>
<div class="verse">Mid-March would have seen me die,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Had I wist."</span></div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">"Had I wist, O Spring," said the swallow,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">"That hope was a sunlit mist,</div>
<div class="verse">And the faint, light heart of it hollow,</div>
<div class="verse">Thy woods had not heard me sing;</div>
<div class="verse">Thy winds had not known my wing;</div>
<div class="verse">It had faltered ere thine did, Spring,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Had I wist."</span></div>
<div class="verse ar">—<i>Swinburne.</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="SKIN" id="SKIN">SKIN.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="ac">W. E. WATT.</p>
<p class="smaller">One said he wondered that lether was not dearer than any other thing. Being
demanded a reason: because, saith he, it is more stood upon than any other thing in the
world.—<i>Hazlitt.</i></p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">What! is the jay more precious than the lark,</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">Because his feathers are more beautiful?</div>
<div class="verse">Or is the adder better than the eel,</div>
<div class="verse indent-1_5">Because his painted skin contents the eye?</div>
<div class="verse ar">—<i>Shakespeare.</i></div>
</div></div>
<div class="p2">
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_a.jpg" width-obs="58" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">A GILDED live pig is a sight
rarely seen. The rarity of
putting gold leaf all over a
living animal of any kind
comes from the fact that the animal
dies so soon after the operation. It
has been tried several times and always
with the same result.</p>
<p>The idea arose from an experiment
unfortunately performed upon a child
on the accession of Leo X. to the papal
chair. The child was gilded all over
to represent the Golden Age. The
people of Florence were delighted with
the idea, but the death of the child
took place so quickly that some
thought the brief duration of the
Golden Age was miraculously represented
as well as its great glory.</p>
<p>The experiment has never been repeated
upon a human subject, but men
of science cautiously tried to find out
the secret of the child's living but a
few hours after the operation, and so
gilded pigs and varnished rabbits and
other small animals. From such tests
of the value of an open skin to animal
life they found that all things that have
breath must have open skin pores in
order to maintain life.</p>
<p>Closing the pores of the skin causes
the temperature to fall directly and
the heart and lungs become gorged
with blood. The circulation of the
blood is seriously interfered with and
death follows with the usual symptoms
of asphyxiation.</p>
<p>Strange as it seemed to those who
first witnessed such experiments, the
life of an animal is more directly dependent
upon the action of the skin
than upon that of the stomach, the
liver, or even the brain. Monstrosities
have been born without brains; but
they have frequently lived for some
time, taking their food regularly and
having the appearance of as much comfort
as others of their kind with brains.
They died early, but their life was uniformly
longer than the time which
elapsed after the application of a coating
which stopped the skin of other
animals until death ensued.</p>
<p>A man will live much longer without
stomach action than without the proper
functions of the skin. In fact, the
skin may take the place of the stomach
in sustaining life for awhile, where the
act of swallowing has been prevented
by disease or accident. Feeding the
patient through the skin has been accomplished
with varying degrees of
success. A bath of warm water or
milk and water assuages thirst. Sailors
deprived of fresh water wet their
clothes with salt water, and the absorption
of moisture sustains them
where salt water taken into the stomach
might have resulted fatally.</p>
<p>The health of the skin is closely connected
with that of the whole system.
Its appearance and condition as to
moisture and dryness, as well as its
temperature and color are regularly
examined when the system is out of
order. Since the skin is so important
to the general health and its condition
is placed so completely within our control,
it is wise to care for it judiciously.
We often find other organs
of the body in an unsound condition
and begin to doctor them when the
whole trouble has arisen from bad
treatment of the skin. The skin needs
more care than the liver or the stomach,
and many of the troubles laid at the
door of one or both these organs may
be avoided by proper care of the one
organ over which we have entire control,
the skin. Where the skin is prevented
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</SPAN></span>
from doing its proper work
other organs try to carry it on, and the
result is that those organs which are
really beyond our control, and which
will work properly without any attention
from us, become diseased by our
bad treatment of the organ that comes
first in the natural order of attention.</p>
<p>The skin throws off waste matter
from the system. Two and one-half
pounds of watery vapor is poured out
daily from the average man. A clogged
skin retains certain salts in the system
supposed to have something to do with
such diseases as rheumatism and gout
if left in the blood by too little exercise
of perspiration.</p>
<p>Besides the sweat glands there are
glands which exude fatty substances
upon the skin, keeping it suitably lubricated
and somewhat impervious to water.
In some animals this secretion is so abundant
that the skin cannot become wet
in swimming. Beneath the skin are
frequently cushions of fat to protect the
soles of the feet and the outside of the
larger joints. The blubber of the whale,
the thickest skinned of all animals, is of
this sort, and is evidently intended to
make his tremendous weight less destructive
when brought in contact with
other objects. The hide of the swifter
ones is peculiarly fitted with large papillæ
of feeling which are supposed to
warn them of the presence of rocks and
other objects by the action of the water
while swimming near them.</p>
<p>Insects, not having lungs, receive air
into their bodies through holes in the
skin. These are called spiracles. They
are so protected by hairs within the
holes that water will not enter them.
This is why it is so difficult to drown
an insect. But if you touch the abdomen
of one of these skin-breathing
creatures, for instance the yellow part
of a wasp, with a drop of oil, the
minute openings become almost immediately
clogged and the insect falls
dead as if choked completely.</p>
<p>The skin consists of two layers, both
of which are exceedingly interesting.
The outer or scarf skin is called the
cuticle on the outside of the body,
while wherever the skin dips into the
body it is modified into what is called
mucous membrane. This outer skin is
not what is rubbed off the surface in a
Turkish bath manipulation or what is
brought off by the rubbing one gives
the body with a rough towel. These
rubbings bring off merely the dead
outer surface of the cuticle which
should be out of the way because no
longer useful. In man it continually
wears off, in serpents it is shed annually
in one slough.</p>
<p>The cuticle is the portion of the covering
of the body which may best be
noticed when a blister has been raised
in the skin. The blister is an accumulation
of fluid between the cuticle and
the true skin.</p>
<p>The cuticle, or epidermis, is modified
in many other ways than the one in
which it becomes mucous membrane.
Where the habits of the animal make
warmth desirable the epidermis dips
into the skin and without any break in
its connection rises in the form of
wool, which covers the body of the
sheep so effectually. Where the animal
is designed for flight there is the
same characteristic dip into the material
of the body, and out of the little
sac so formed rises the feather which
gives the bird its beauty and powers of
flight. The feather is a modification of
the scarf skin.</p>
<p>Where protection is needed for the
body beneath the surface of the water
this changeable substance covers the
true skin with hard scales that make
the friction of the water as slight as
possible, while giving a firm and light
resisting surface to prevent wounds.
Horns and hoofs are modifications of
the scarf skin. Where claws or talons
are needed in the business of fighting
or tearing food in bits or digging holes
in the ground or elsewhere, the scarf
skin changes itself at the extremities
of paws and feet and produces nails,
talons, and claws, whose powers are
both marvelous and varied. For the
protection of most mammals the whole
of the body is favored by this power of
the scarf skin to produce whatever
seems necessary for the comfort of the
individual, and the body is indented
with innumerable minute holes called
hair follicles into which the scarf skin
dips and rises again to the surface
transformed into hairs of varying degrees
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</SPAN></span>
of fineness and color, beautifully
arranged in order, and all pointing in
such directions as will add to the
beauty or comfort or terrifying aspect
of the animal.</p>
<p>Not only are our hairs numbered,
but each particular hair is furnished
with a little individual muscle of its
own running from the base of the follicle
to the inner surface of the true
skin, so that when the proper occasion
arises for erection of that individual
hair the muscle contracts apparently
of its own accord, and up stands the
hair along with its fellows, ready to
frighten the animal that dares to approach
in hostile attitude the owner of
the precious coat. Similar muscles
erect the feathers of the owl, and the
gorgeous tail of the peacock dazzles
us in the sunlight moved in like manner,
while to those more powerful dermal
appendages, the claws, talons, and
nails, are attached more powerful muscles
still, with proper nerve connections
for the most effective use of the weapons
nature has formed out of the soft
outer skin, which is usually so mild and
yielding as to have earned the name of
scarf skin.</p>
<p>This outer skin is formed of cells,
flat on the surface, but near the true
skin where they originate, rounded and
in many cases even tall and apparently
reaching out towards the surface. It
gives the color to the person by means
of pigment cells which lie in its midst.</p>
<p>The black man is dark because of
the abundance of pigment cells in his
scarf skin. The albino is light because
of their absence. The colors of hair
and feathers are due to these cells in
their receptacles, but white and iridescent
feathers are doubtless so partly
because of their absence and partly because
of hollow spaces which catch and
reflect or refract the light.</p>
<p>This arrangement of cells into scarf
skin has much to do with the healing
of wounds. In cases of old sores that
refuse to heal, or where the skin has
been extensively destroyed, the doctors
have found that good, healthy skin
may be grafted upon the sores in such a
manner as to invigorate and perfect
the process of healing. Small particles
of fresh skin taken from a healthy subject
or from some other part of the
patient's body are placed upon the sore,
the portions used being about the size
of a small pinhead, and new life seems
transplanted in the deadened part.
The skin of a black man grafted upon
that of a white man shows afterwards
no trace of its origin, but becomes the
same shade as that which it adjoins.</p>
<p>Several animals change their tints to
correspond with their surroundings.
This subject has been exaggerated by
observers of an imaginative turn of mind,
but the fact remains that there is a decided
change in the coloring of certain
crabs and shrimps as well as in soles,
chameleons, tree-frogs, and two kinds
of horned toads wherever they are found
against any well-defined shade or color.
Some have maintained that man takes
on a tint somewhat resembling the soil
of the territory where he abides in an
uncivilized condition, but Beddard considers
Schweinfurth's statement that
the Bongos have a reddish-brown skin
similar to the soil of their country, and
the Dinhas, their neighbors, are as
black as their alluvial ground, merely as
an account of what is purely accidental
in the instances given.</p>
<p>The coloring of most fish so that they
cannot readily be seen by looking down
into the water because of the blackness
of their backs, is highly protective. And
the fact is more apparent when we note
that an enemy looking at the same fish
from below is hindered in discovery because
the white under parts of the fish
are hard to distinguish against the light
of the sky above. Nearly all the protective
color markings of animals are
modifications of the scarf skin.</p>
<p>The true skin is of great interest both
because it is the seat of what is called
the sense of touch and because it is
used so extensively in the arts in the
form of leather.</p>
<p>Nerves of sensation expand over the
whole surface of the body, and their
minute branchings in the skin make
contact with other substances highly
discernible. But the sense of touch is
peculiarly developed in few of the lower
animals, and we may almost regard it
as an attribute of man alone. Our
ability to turn our fingers about things
and move our hands over their surface
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</SPAN></span>
gives us a power that is rare in nature.
We can tell whether things are hot or
cold, rough or smooth, sharp or blunt,
wet or dry, and gather many other items
of interest which the other senses are
incapable of compassing.</p>
<p>A monkey can wind his tail about a
nut and tell by the sense of touch
whether it is worth his while to crack
it. The elephant moves the tips of his
trunk carefully over the surface of what
he wishes to examine and gets knowledge
he can depend upon. But it is
the hand of man that shows the highest
order of development of touch. By it
blind men know their friends and read
their books, bank clerks detect the
qualities of the notes they handle, and
a thousand deft acts in the arts are accomplished.</p>
<p>The true skin is covered with minute
projections called papillæ. They may
be traced in the palm by the ridges of
the scarf skin. They are arranged there
in rows so that while the naked eye
does not discern the projections individually
the rows of them may be noticed
on the surface of the scarf skin.
Some of these papillæ contain blood
vessels and others corpuscles of touch.
Some papillæ are small and simple,
others compound. In one square inch
of the palm have been counted 8,100
compound and 20,000 smaller papillæ
arranged in regular rows. There seem
to be different end organs for different
sensations. There are different spots
which may be touched with a fine
pointed pencil of copper which is quite
hot and no feeling will result. Perhaps
the same identical spots touched by the
same point, after having been immersed
in ice water, will give sensations of cold.
Hot spots and cold spots may be found
and marked upon the skin. There are
more hot spots than cold ones. Either
of these when disturbed electrically
will give sensations of heat or cold
when neither heat nor cold is applied.</p>
<p>Ashe mentions an experiment which
shows that the body is not equipped
exactly alike on both sides, for when
both hands are placed in hot water the
heat seems greater to the left than to
the right hand. Aristotle wrote of the
peculiar feeling produced by placing
the ends of the first and second fingers
upon a small substance like a pea.
With the fingers in their natural position
you feel one small round body.
Place the same fingers upon the same
pea, but with one finger crossed over
the other so as to touch the pea on the
other side, and you distinctly feel two
peas. Another of the freaks of touch
may easily be tried by placing the
palms together so that fingers and
thumbs are against their fellows. Close
the hands partly and open them again
repeatedly and in a short time instead
of each finger's feeling another finger
there will seem to be an oiled pane of
glass between the hands keeping the
fingers about a quarter of an inch apart.
The delusion subsides when you look
at your hands.</p>
<p>Leather was very early known in
Egypt and Greece, and the thongs of
manufactured hides were used by all nations
for ropes, harness, and other instruments.
The renowned Gordian knot,
330 B. C., was of leather thongs. A
leather cannon was made in Edinburgh
at the time of the American revolution.
Although it was fired three times and
found to answer, and other firearms
were made of this material, it never became
common. Had it not been for
Mother Goose the leather gun might
have dropped from the memory of man.</p>
<p>Leather is made from the true skin
and tannic acid. The processes of tanning
have recently undergone such
changes and improvements that it is out
of the question to follow them briefly.
The union of the white fibres of gelatin,
gluten, and kindred substances with the
tannic acid, forms insoluble compounds
which have great resistance and
strength. This acid is found in oak
and hemlock bark, and also in that of
many other trees such as willow, ash,
larch, sumac, and terra japonica. Tea
is one-fourth tannic acid.</p>
<p>Deer skin makes the finer kinds of
morocco, while sheep and goat skin
make the grades that are used in book-binding.
Seal skin makes a superior
kind of enamelled leather for boots,
bags, dressing-cases, and ornamental
articles. Hog skin is so full of oil that
it resists the tannic acid, yet saddles are
made from it, and it has other uses.
The French glove makers produce a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</SPAN></span>
very good kid glove from rat skin which
can be distinguished from the real article
only with a microscope.</p>
<p>The tanner applies the term, skin, to
the smaller product taken from calves,
dogs, rats, cats, and small game, reserving
the dignified name of hide for that
of the full-grown ox or horse, while the
skin from a two-year-old steer is called
a kip.</p>
<p>The highest use of skins is in the form
of parchment and vellum on which are
printed and engrossed the most valuable
documents prepared by man.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<table class="sp2 mc w50" title="AZALEA." summary="AZALEA.">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_093.jpg" id="i_093.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_093.jpg" width="501" height="600" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30"> </td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">AZALEA.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">COPYRIGHT 1899,<br/>
DOUBLEDAY & McCLURE CO., NEW YORK.</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table></div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_AZALEA" id="THE_AZALEA"></SPAN>THE AZALEA.</h2>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">Fill soft and deep, O winter snow!</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">The sweet azalea's oaken dells,</div>
<div class="verse">And hide the bank where roses blow,</div>
<div class="verse indent-2">And swing the azure bells!</div>
<div class="verse ar">—<i>Whittier.</i></div>
</div></div>
<div class="p2">
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/initial_t_alt.jpg" width-obs="67" height-obs="70" alt="" /></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THE azalea is a genus of plants
belonging to the natural order
<i>Ericeæ</i> and to the sub-order
<i>Rhodoreæ</i> named in allusion to
the dry places in which many of the
species grow, and consists of upright
shrubs with large, handsome, fragrant
flowers, often cultivated in gardens.
The genus comprises more than a hundred
species, most of them natives of
China or North America, having profuse
clusters of white, orange, purple,
or variegated flowers, some of which
have long been the pride of the gardens
of Europe. The general characteristics
of the genus are a five-parted calyx,
a five-lobed funnel-form, slightly irregular
corolla, five stamens, a five-celled
pod, alternate, oblong, entire,
and ciliated leaves, furnished with a
glandular point. Most of the species
differ from the rhododendrons in having
thin, deciduous leaves. Some botanists
unite the genus azalea to rhododendron.
North America abounds in
azaleas as well as in rhododendrons,
and some of the species have long been
cultivated, particularly <i>A. nudiflora</i> and
<i>A. viscosa</i>, which have become the parents
of many hybrids. Both species
abound from Canada to the southern
parts of the United States. <i>A. calendulcea</i>,
a native of the South, is described
as frequently clothing the
mountains with a robe of living scarlet.
All the American species are deciduous.
In cultivation the azaleas love the
shade and a soil of sandy peat or loam.
Works on horticulture give specific and
elaborate direction for the cultivation
of the various species.</p>
<p class="ar">C. C. M.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
</div>
<h2><SPAN name="COMMENDABLE_BOOKS" id="COMMENDABLE_BOOKS"></SPAN>COMMENDABLE BOOKS.</h2>
<p class="ac">W. E. WATT.</p>
<p><b>Chapters on the Natural History of
the United States.</b> By Dr. R. W. Shufeldt.
Studer Brothers, Publishers,
114 Fifth avenue, New York.</p>
<div class="bq">
<p>The man who is able to go out into the
fields and see things is a good man to know.
Whether he has the gift of telling well what
he sees or not, we are glad to be with him,
for he is full of the things we desire much
to know, and we can get them out of him.
If he is a rare story-teller, with marked
powers of description, so much the better.
But if he combines these elements with the
practice of an expert photographer and uses
all his arts to get the secrets of nature down
exactly as they appear, he is a prince of
good fellows to all who worship at the
shrine of nature.</p>
<p>Dr. Shufeldt has done all this, and his
enterprising publishers have brought out
the matter in a large octavo volume of about
four hundred pages, solidly bound, with
gilt tops. The price is only $3.50, net, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</SPAN></span>
any lover of nature having the half tones
he gives would not part with them for ten
times the cost of the book.</p>
<p>Catching good negatives of live birds in
the open is not easy. One needs to know
photography and bird habits extremely
well, and then be satisfied with a thousand
failures along with a few successes. This
knowledge and patience have been remarkably
displayed by the author in the profusion
of full-page reproductions of his valuable
work.</p>
<p>The meadow lark's nest containing
young birds is a most artistic plate. The
tree toads clinging to their tree and the
mother spider caught in the act of carrying
her young in a silken ball are deserving of
special commendation. His pair of cedar
birds look particularly happy as they balance
upon their twigs and eye the camera as
if they knew all about it.</p>
<p>Horned toads and whales, dragon flies
and opossums, as well as many other forms
of life, both common and rare, have their
turn at entertaining the reader, and their
inmost thoughts seem to have been read by
this enthusiastic and peculiarly successful
scientist.</p>
<p>It is a good book for children of all ages,
but wherever it is introduced into any family
the younger children will uniformly
have to wait till their elders have enjoyed
it, for no age can be proof against its
charms.</p>
</div>
<p><b>Birds of North America.</b> Illustrated
Descriptive Manual to Beard's Natural
History Charts. Potter & Putnam
Company, 63 Fifth Ave., New York.</p>
<div class="bq">
<p>This convenient little pamphlet contains
brief descriptions of some of the most common
birds, the eagle, the owl, the parrot, the
crow, the turkey, the quail, the ostrich, the
heron, the swan, and the penguin. It is
closely printed with numerous illustrations
of the structure and forms of the typical
birds of each sort, and gives in language
that can well be understood by children, the
principal facts of interest.</p>
<p>It is sold at 20 cents, and will be found
valuable to a large class of teachers who are
in search of material to interest their pupils
in the common birds of our country.</p>
</div>
<p><b>Nests and Eggs of North American
Birds</b>, by Oliver Davie, author of
"Methods in the Art of Taxidermy,"
etc. The Landon Press, Columbus,
Ohio.</p>
<div class="bq">
<p>This is the fifth edition of an excellent
work that has already won wide recognition
as an exposition of how the birds build and
lay. It has been revised and enlarged considerably,
and now contains a profusion of
cuts that will be highly appreciated. Recognizing
the difficulty the mind has in grasping
the entire meaning of a written description,
the author has added to his text a large
number of well-executed drawings of the
birds most difficult to describe and has given
their nests and eggs the attention their importance
to the naturalist demands.</p>
<p>The book consists of over five hundred
pages octavo, closely printed, and arranged
so as to constitute a convenient and exhaustive
encyclopedia of the birds of this country
and their nests and eggs. Although the
title of the book would lead one to think the
matter does not pertain to the habits of the
birds, nor their appearance, it is more complete
in this respect than many books written
ostensibly to describe the birds themselves,
and in many of its articles almost complete
life histories are to be found. The nesting
habits and the hatching of the eggs have
led the author on till the work has become a
very readable one for those who are by no
means specialists on eggs and nests. The
writer has modestly disclaimed attempting
to cover so much ground and refers his readers
to the works of Coues and Ridgway for
further particulars.</p>
<p>The numbers of those who do not let a
summer pass without looking into the lives
of the birds which visit their country residences
are rapidly growing, and this growth
of interest on the part of thousands who do
not wish to become experts but desire to enjoy
their feathered neighbors and their
products most fully, has made room for a
large sale of this work. It has but to become
known to be possessed by all cultured
households where trips to the country are
annually made.</p>
<p>To know the birds of one's locality by
name and to be able to identify their nests
and watch their doings with some degree of
intelligence is an accomplishment which
many desire and are annually attaining.
With this work in one's possession few birds
can remain in the vicinity without being
identified. The gladness and loss of selfish
thoughts and motives that are the reward of
all those who lose their hearts to the birds
and their growing families do far more
good in the world than any amount of drugs
and dieting.</p>
<p>Few people go to the country without having
something they wish to gain in the way
of health. A prescription of bird life taken
regularly before meals has been found one
of the greatest cure-alls the world has produced.
There is no work in existence better
calculated to promote this sort of convalescence
than this one on the nests and eggs
that we so often run past in our ignorance of
the joy a bush or stump or tree has in store
for those who have a mind to find it.</p>
</div>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<div class="transnote">
<h3>Transcriber's Note:</h3>
<ul>
<li>Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note.</li>
<li>Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant form was
found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</li>
<li>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.</li>
<li>Mid-paragraph illustrations have been moved between paragraphs
and some illustrations have been moved closer to the text that
references them.</li>
<li>The Contents table was added by the transcriber.</li>
</ul></div>
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