A Traveling Restaurant In 8Jn0?por?. titled to hla tqueezlni %*rrhio Mi Singapore 1s a tip of' Asia. That' ealest of alt . continent* seemlnglr t satisfied with It* own great bulk, retches out flntfers to every other 'fbnUaeut fexcept South America. The [thinnest finger is I the narrow Malar peninsula reaching , for Australia, a pore, which Is an Island as well city, la the nail of the finger, h the grasp falls Bhbrt of A us1 I It la long enough to gather At | the ships of the world. te. Its languid, perspiring resi sts call It ' The reason for their brevlatlon IS only $0 miles away? ?; < Any man who can bring; "on the bump" . Is en wnlms even If he Insists 1 the essence out of one' i>M?t poetic names ever given City. S'pore must have Its Itles, for more than 800,000' s6uls call this great turnstile of com * their home town. has amassed this population, the . found In any . city near tor,' ja Just 100 years. About Stamford Raffles discovered and decided to make this ig - village a world port was a British administrator in iva during the Ire-year period of British control In that tropica domain wrested front the JJotch.' He died a ben aad disgraced man, but his sound, as Britain has t*r Ii/w .^-rivssnn' The two early coei petltora of Singapore, Penaag and Ma ^-?^l .hata become satellites of the port, which may be fortified as Gibraltar, ef the Pacific. 'On the Singapore wharf is a market models and a life-class for a hun y dxed painters [ and sculptors, too, .may study there all the toaea of living ; bronse and more of repose than of f ; Jaaecular action, perbapA Japanese, 5 CWassa, Siamese, Malaya, Javanese, jfwttMa, ) Olngaleae, Tamils, Sikhs, 6 JPanwes, Lascars, Mai aba rn, Malagasy, sad sailer fblk of all eoasts, Hindus J aad heathens of every caste and per iston, era grouped In ^brilliant con- 1 ios of red, white, brown and pat-. drapery, of bl?ck. brown and t aklsuL' Behind them, In fcbost I clothes, stand the pallid Europeans, have brought the law, order and KB, the customs, habits, ckaferta laxurlss ef civfllsattas to the the Janglf. All thai sad picturesque anbe r . pagaaa aad Idolaters, sddbtsts, Brshnmns, Jews, /Tartu, A sad Acs worshipers, AevO dancers, . aad what aot, have cexte with the 'tfaita mta to toll for him under the afeuatortal sn, Mac* the Malays are the .greet Isfsare class ef the Werid, sM wfll aot watk. Jl Well-BuUt and Clean City. ' ?* Singapore today Is a well-built and t4*atlfnlty ordered city, and the mu alclpsl housekeeping is an example to ' ? ' cities ?< the temperate sea the untidy Malay and the sea Chinese, v. 1 ?> (warm to tttf le tradlag n.i.r, are held to cleanllaeas at . strict saaltary la their allott-i quarters. Tbp Itely business ho i?n, the marble see of a baak, t' e tong Iron pavtl shadlag the mm -ts, the spien Baffles mueenrr, nnd library, are i ?' >rtory sights; e fascination 'uveler above ly of turbans ?i every tnor )g snd tbest' pore streets i rivers," Who,' ' r.d Id sp(%B clr humped .a* -r ?*hlfe o primitive regular and so the street life distraction ef i {ery thing else. Tl. id saronga gives eeghfare; but the akique pictures In are the Tamil bul wihtj and statuesq dM Contrast betv white oxen snd tb. Afcur-baga tbey d. c^rt# "^Within the last i saving drams of hilts focused StTerr 1 but ths moS' r Sephles la Ameticr t4g the story of r *thod of obtain Ir ef the An Itter ef tact the .sra a swift d ci'mmerce ?n Slnsspore -chool geog ?ola, in tell <1e?cr!t>e the 'a the Junjle river As ? ?> of r?? rnh he otner *: vf r0Ws of * neat orchard. in eight years the Malay, archipelago hag chpftired the rubber trade, lock, stock and parrel, and noW produces nearly fh, f* CrPt ?f world supply, two thirds; .of which cofcea to the United States. The Amazon valley la ndw" only a supplemental ' source of rubber. Singapore, as the central shipping * point -of th^ sprawling archipelago, spotjlght thrown on ttie romance of rubber. It la to the prompt action and re- ! sourcefulness of SlrHe^ry WlCkham ^"(the British empire, Is lnBebted 'for shifting the wppld source of raw rub hej from Para ,to Singapore. As the ,on* "d careful study of Brazilian -forests he formed the theory .that; these valu able trerfs conld be cultivated and that the eastern tropes would prove' par notice -toT the director of Kew var f!S!L: .6a* *nd the Indian t0 hl?kjM tte m troductlpn ef the. rubber tree into In 2** **|\ Henry Wlckham was In. ttnstea with the difficult task of pro TUntltf 6t hevea seeds and J* M Indl?,? *ovem Z 1* proWem was tfow ? **..the seeds .out of the country, i ?'?jt!&*ipottma6n wa proMb Hew They Got Rubber Trees. While engaged in carrying out his researches ~?n the banks of the Ami *?n ?' SI* Henry Wlckham was one day "Wised hjr the arrival of an ocean ' t^e steamship Amazonaa. Wlck W" opportunity and char 00 beh,lf of **>? Bovern He arranged to send ** ?PPolnUd spot? tte Junction with the Tapajoe-where he succeeded In meeting it_ *ith a SK2JWISJ. '?ed* ^^ired In the Interior. foe seedswere shipped, and mlght^Ser^ WBy do**? the were planted at Kew and **rmln*te4'- The youtlg PlV^ ? Packed In special boxes knbwn^ aa Wardlan cases and dla toJBdU- ** ^dia could not to adept them, so they went to ~nl??. STentually to the Malay **d>other Parts of the East. ?e COffee Plantation^ I dM_to.j leaf disease, some thirty or I^oT's^n^ r f0reed Planters to * ,?nd fot aome other, culture, and fln.il acreages were planted from the tr**? wh,ch had ' Wlckham's original Bra '* Plants. More, than aoo.oou UOO rubber trees in British and Dutch possessions ye products of the parent seeds smuggled by the English knight ^"',become ? substitute I . J tropic Far East. Nabobs *fd .."?0r* Prosperous ef Polynesia 22^" tJu ?etroP?lIs Just as Amerl **** ? Europeans do the rrench WH. Sultans of the tin, * composing the Malay Oration m.H long e^^ourm in Singapore. They ex Change '^ttjedom from responsibility and luxurious living for British control to their tiny kingdoms, since the British do an lnflnitely better Job of administering than the saltan* could do, no one Is loser. To this tropic Paris also come British officials of the empire on short vscatlons from their taring posts. If. they seek; relief from tropic climate they can profitably for. .get . about gay 8-pore. The thermom eter there never goes at>ov# 82 degrees. It Js said, hut It never goes below 72 .?"'egrees and the dampness is Insuf ferable. Down at the quays great steamships are fed with coal by Chines* coolies, who toll silently and expeditiously, a 'vcli-jroomed Chinese on the pier su perintends the lading of queer-iooktn* cases containing birds' nests, con signed to epicures in Hong*^ snd Canton. The Chinaman's prized 'latntr is **ip nh.- from giutinhos Mrd?' n??t? 'n?r, Romeo caves. I A Street of Old < ?-. ? -i Building* In Kalw, Wurtemberg. i'TT-fc-sussfc *w- -- ! A German state that' has made Uttle *1? ^ th? w6rid elther before or since tbe World war, but which In ftl8h,on h?? "?^wed wood" f f" haa become one of the most .Important regions of. the old empire and new republic, Is Wurtemberg. mld (dh? member of :the South German trl ?Villa * ' *. Wurtemberg, Ba . Wurtemberg with its 7,300 square miles Is not Jarfe.; It. would make only a fair-sized island In hiige Prua 'tB near neighbor Bavaria? la usually erroneously Jthought of as very nearly malting up "South Germany" ? has an area four time, an great. But' throughout its history Wurtemberg has been aggrea jrfw, and like at aggreaalve Individual, it has *ot ahead. A century ago It |.:was predominantly an region. but by the time of the World !"* ** P?>bably passed all non Rrtsalan states save Saxony In indus try and commerce. ' In bdth geographical -and political spheres Wurtemberg is a sort of foun tain-head of , the German-speaking world In iti territory are head .irtrtama of both the Khlne and the iDahube. It was the heart of old Swab ia, a dominant duchy in the early Ger man empire. The fiohenataufen fam ily, which ruled oyer the. empire in the Twelfth and .Thirteenth centuries, ?prang from a hill-top c^itle in what Is now Wurtemhei*; and the ancestral home of the Hohenxollern* who swayed tte destinies of the latest German em pire la In tnlth geographically a part of Wurtemberg. thotfgh politically It Is a tiny Island all' but surrotnded by ?Wurtemberglan territory. There are two distinct phase* to Wurtemberg geographically : nearly half tlje .famous Schwarswald or Black Forest covers the western half of the state, as though It had flowed over from Baden; while the eaa'tertt 'two-thirds 9f the country Is cultivate* bliu val ley and platean lajd; dotted with vil lages and cltlea that retain the flavor of the Middle ages, ; and with castle topped hllla that awaken memories of robber barons, whose descendant* be came mighty rtilers. It J? In the Black Forest that Wurtemberg*a quaintest at mosphere la found. The foreat takes Its name from the dark-colored species of pine that cover Its mountains. This 1 heavy growth of timber Ilea over hill ; and dale like a hqge, somber blanket ; save on some of the highest eminences | which protrude above the local timber line. These nnforested places are cov ered with .a scanty growth of grass , and h?rbs ptyo h affords pasturage. The ; climate Is.severe. snow lying on some of these exposed heights for nine or ten months of. the year. Customs and costumes of bygone day* lingered longer In the Schwars wald thkn In almost any other place In Germany. But in recent decades tourists In growing numbers learned of Its charms, and modernity has chased srime of"lts qualntneas away. Old Passant Cuetema. Black Forest peasants, however, have not been pushed Into unfamiliar ways of life, but on their hillsides and 1b thelr valleys continue to . follow th? ways of their forbears. One unusual custom makes the youngest son of the family the heir, while the older brotli .ers most seek vhelr fortunes beyond the ancestral roof-tree. .The..' .heir comes Into his patrimony during the lifetime of liis fsther, and the latter eontlnucg to live In the home as a f?lrlarch and Nestor. The houses of the Black Forest are ''tor,- tn UtemsHves. Almost Invarl , ably they Hre built on a hlllalde. Sharp Iv-sloped roofs spring hl*h Into tbe .gnr to the observer from down hill. On #hpt side there ti.it he five or mora stories : and thej t solidly, covering s considerable pt t of ground. One might fancy; at first sight of these "mqst commodious ^chwarxwafd edifices that each peasant numbered his children and retainers by the do^en. Large fan* llles are the, rule In the forest to be sure, but the hotel-like homes of the peasants do not owe their- size to this tact alone. The secret Is that these are not merely residences ; they , are at once dwellings, stabfes, granaries and barns. Many of them have eh trances from the .hlllsfde at three or more levels. On the ground are ouari tered the farmer's animals. On anoth er level U. stored the^ to or vege tables and hay; and loaded wagoifc maj be driven directly Into this- por tion of the house over ? short bridge from the hillside. On other levels are comfortable family quarters? a vastly superior plan to- the sharing of the same apartments py pigs"; chickens abd people, found In some parts of. the world. .The portion of- a Black Vote est honse set apart for family use can always be told at a glance by theiplcs. turesque ll^le balconies that cling to the walls- outside the doors and win dows of^tJff living quarters. The lordly wedding, feasts of th?j peasants of the Schwarswald are re? Downed, ami 'again a qrfeer custom is Involved. Hundreds of guests attend, bidden and unbidden, a little array of beeves and pigs and poultry are; slaughtered apd. cartloads of loave* and cakes and suntfiy other articles of food arte ,fn -evidence. .One fears for the family fortunes of tlje bos' until he learns that an invitation Im poses the oblfcutlofr to send food , and drlnk.-aqd- that the uninvited guests? who are most* welcome ? must pay ror ihe viands tt^y consume. The yed (dta*. then, merely fixes the occasion and the placet the fiast Is truly a co operative neighborhood Jubilee. Attracts Many Visiters. In ,thB summer, ahe SchwarzwaUl competes with Swluerland as a pleas ure ground. In recent decades nuiher,' ous travelers on foot, on bicycle or In train have flocked to Its cool' shadows and babbling sttea/ns. ^Within Its con fines, both In -Baden, and -Wurtemberg. are a number* of wOll-kno^ watering places, some of which have be^n fre quented by. {hose In search , of rest and' health since Roman days.V Wildbad toward the north- of .the forest not far from Stuttgart. Is the most celebrated of the Wurt?ub4rgian health reaortr and to It the-. Iprds of the land have repaired since th,e days .of jobber bar ons. * ? Stuttgart, capital of Wurtemberg la in the open country to th? east of the i Black Forest, in -the "Valley of the ! Neckar, surrounded by charmlnirt villa: 1 dotted hills. Not far away' Is the site : of an old caatle-crowned berg from I Which the country took Its name. Few European capitals surpass 8tuttgart either In charm of surroundings or In herent beauty. The city even poe seised a "Beautlflcatlon society" which' has painted the already -handsome civic Illy until ita beamy to* tar famed. Be ginning wtth the Schlossplatz where the one-time royal pajnre is situated, building after building of stately grjndeur rises throughout the city. '? -a? architectural consistency not always foHndv most of the struc lures being in true, Renslssahre" style.' Urge, . -oas of tWe ,rltj sre" In scrup ulously sept gardens and parks. In Site 8tuttgart t? close to Indianapolis and Seattle. ?* In the extreme south Wurtemberg touches Lake Constance across which lles.iS&h^rB.nd, ^ FrloUrlchshafen, chler wurtembiTj,,!. >. port of the lake Count Zeppelin de- -.-loped his airship .factory that turned out the great sky cruisers with which Germaay hoped -f? destroy Lpndon la this lltt\e rtty ?he lfl?t of the Oermsn-hullt Z^peltn* ? now h ,ng const ruaied for the United ' Mates t ! WlSESAh:u| ' ? v Hiitred |b' Ingr^iped an,;er. ? (lloerp. ,'? ? ' ? f Joy la thu best of wine.? George Hot. Brevity la,' the soul of wit. ? Sliakuj?lic for being eminent. ? Swift ' ? ? ' , : ? t| Kindness is the golden;- chain by. Which society . Is bound together.-? Goethe. . ' A* ? ? ? . .i ? Moderation 18 the silicon string run ning tlirough the pearl, chain of all the Virtues. ? Hall. ' v"-': ? ?! . ? ' ? - V WISE MEN'S WORDS r ' A * disputable point IS no man's gfound. ' The most faulty are most- prone to ^flnd fault. \ ' ? r. it you want easlfer traveling mend jour ways, , Ji ? * ft : Be not too quick to take offense. Anger is a foe to sense. ' .Books are the windows ?through wlftttr the soul looks out. ? ,*? ft - , . k Every man's nature Is concealed with many folds of disguised ' ^ Ever have an eye as to what and to.- whom you speak concerning any man. 'it ... - (./Nothing is more beautiful than vlr- . tue; nothing moi-e' fair,' nothing more lovely/ ? i ? ' The gTpat end of education Is not. Information, but personal vigor and character. ? Books support ufc in solltode and .keep. us frodi becoming a burden to ourselves, V ^ ) - ' ' " - ? - LOST LINKS i ? - -?*. gVii ' Chicken a who get homesick. .? ? ?- ? ? backbone In a hapmock. A tramp sleeping ia-the dog house. A bankbook lit a circulating library. Landlord* who give kiddle parties. Antomoblllsts who ask you to flbp la. > t 1 i f ' A woman'* bedroom without a mir ror. . ?{ ; ,. ?' A game ?warden ? for a - mdsqulto swamp. , A beautiful weman running a baauty parlor. ' PEPPYGRAMS Moat men will feel deeply-for their, poor relatione? although nbt' la their ^ocklta. T" ' r t 1 ? ? Many a youth with the figure- of an Apollo has the same kind of held ? ?f stone. I Not every person engaged la the pur ?alt of literature la sufficiently swift . te catch it " Variety may be the spice of life? but .it's the. terrible uncertainty that's , the spice of death. ? Many a young man who asks (or (he daughter's hand succeeds only ta getting the father's- foot 1 > i' > WAYSIDE WISDOM ' 1 ? H(r*'i vrayatde wisdom from the .yhoroanTllle Time#- Enterprise : ? -| ' - i Th- business ; woman who adrlses ? ? folks to play poker probably has plenty , 1 luck and'sorry opponents. The American t i wbo married a (Turk pilnce must h.ive heta tempo ra l rllj blind to her opportunltlea. I" When she tromi-a your ace Just am'le and pretend lhat It might kave' be"n otherwise but rot any hott^. Thr heart may long for pence and U' ? iVJ and yet It won't come nnlr>*a ?krAs are at work to briny It f.i MF.N AND CLOTHES tn?t yeur i8,Ame^cnn.iuep, In. ever* hundred \Voro nothing but old hats and 88 out of eai;h 100 got along without buying n suit of clothes. Statistics to ' ' establish ihls /statement, were present- ?' jt d to the Ketull Clothiers' association vj ?y the president of ( that organization * i Ttt' n convention in Chicago, and pre- ? i sumably they are correct. A survey of : j the American .crowd from day to day conveys a different Impression. , It '-j reems to Indicate that most American men blossom out at < least three times a year in new toga, and that very few 1 of them got along with less than two ' / bats, but after all the ?lty street Is not ?' the only place where men wear clothes There are BtlU to be found In some of i the remoter parts of this country boys I who never had a suit of "store clothes" -fi in their lives, and It Is not sofvery long -'J, ago that this waV true of most cquntry ' boys, says the Detroit 1 Free Press. ' ; Nowadays the country qomes to the ) tpercliant In town for wearing apparel, , but the farm worker Is still able to spend the most of his time In a shirt j and overalls, and that dpubtless Is ' what brings ' the average to the low j 'point noted at the clothiers' conven- } tlon. But when the retail clothiers re- t ; call the fact" that their business ,1b, ? after all, only a thing of yesterday -fl they need not feel so bad over the mil- j lions who go- a year or so without a ?, (new suit. There are men still living H who remember" when the. recall clothier? i was an unheard^tfr possibility of the 5 future, "fhey have livid to see hofne-\ j made apparel for men disappear al most entirely, apd the tailor bncked into a position of relative unimpor tance by the once despised ready-made suit- c '? - > Much has been said .about the wrath ; f- V of Tutankbumen at the "desecration** * of his tomb, and curiously many people -j have seen either possibility or proba- V blllty In the theory tliat the Pharaoh,'. ^ though so long dead, stlU Is able to',] avfenge his wrongs, even to the extent '1': ' of Inflicting the death' penalty. As the.-y penetration of the toinb 'progresses,- ' ? however, and as the value- of the king's treasures, considered merely as bill- ,('(/ lion, becomes more and more apparent, ; there Is- reason for suspecting that If a "curse:1 has been, In operation* since , - the, discovery, of the -.tomb. It has its * origin, not In the occupant 'of the sar cophagus within the three gilded :< h- ?? Leonard Day, forty-three ^eara old, has returned to Berkeley, Cat , after'};, hiking 10,678 miles. TWo years 'uw+XJ' bay wrote a book entitled "The Una*- ; llclted Generosity of the America*'' &Y People." The pnbllaher turned It^ down because he did not a?ree witH ' ?' the sentiments expressed In the mann- ? ' j script. ? To prove his book contained {' right theories his walked *crosa tbf I continent without a hat or coat and without a cent In his pocket. He , marched through temperatures vary-. ? Ing from 126 degrees above to 20 da*. '' frees below aero and he jras only' seven times forced to sleep out an$ missed but sixty meals. Day found firemen throughout the nation th* greatest friends of a man without v:" , money. \ ? ? * ? \ *" Angora's power Is being chall ... from all aides. The assault on president of the Turkish repobli Kemal Pasha. Is but one of the comes. It becomes more apparent the government will have to tran Its sest of sdmlnistratlon from the mal realm of Angora to Constant pie. Most of the unrest la fomented ' the orthodox Mussulman eletnen .who canpot reconcile the separation the caliph or head of the Mohammed religion from the temporal powers a Turkish sultan. It la said that amir la a direct descending ef prophet and be la supposed to be good friend ef England. . Envy Is aroused by the atory of sensitive-plant which flourishes In neighborhood ef golf links in the islands and which stables the ev of an elualva golf ball te trace course through the rough by the leas 'which shrivel at Its touch. Wh? the envy la aroused by the good tune of the FUI Islanders or by imagination ef the story-teller will pend on the credulity ef the audle but there Is no doubt that, as the fea told In golfing assemblies. Its can be followed by noting the heat who have shriveled as It passed German workmen protest the ping of the eight-hour day. ? But German farmer, who works eight in the morning and eight In the noon, has tbe bettor of It when time comes. Smile Coue is coming back, pr?_, abiy to iee how his Incantations hi affected the country and to gather a few more American dollars, look very large In Franca Jsit now.