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14
THE GEORGIAN'S
BOYS AND GIRLS
How M
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Forcing Spring Things.
By BELLE CASE HARRINGTON.
Everybody is eager for the first
ppring things. Here is a chance for
wide-awake boys and girls.
If you have a well-lighted furnace
room, or a sunhy chamber, you can
bave rhubarb to sell. Almost any
one with a large patch will let you
take up a few roots. Put these in
wooden boxes, and cover well with
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rich manure. Soak with warm wa
ter and put in a light, warm place.
In ten days the first stalks ought
to be ready for market.
Make a hot-bed, sloping down from
the sunny side ¢f a building, banked
with stable litter, and covered with
an old window sash. In it raise rad
jishes and lettuce. It will pay to
grow tomato, cabbage and aster
plants to sell when people are ready
to make gardens.
Beans, peas, corn, beets and rad
jshes do not transplant well when
started all in one hox. At a dry goods
or novelty store collect small paste
board boxes. Cut the bottoms out,
fill with earth and plant your seeds.
Spring blossoms are easier to force
than spring vegetables. Pussywil-
Jows are always in demand. All that
is necessary is to cut the branches
and place them in a jar of water in
a room moderately warm and light.
When the “pussies” are well out they
are ready to sell
Apple and cherry blossoms are oft
en forced, but are more difficult to
do successfully. They need much
jonger to mature, Cut the bark
back for six inches from the end of
the stem, add a few drops of ammo
nia to the water and place in a cool
dark place for ten days. Then bring
to the light and warmth. The blos
soms, which will be small, should
come out in two weeks,
The variety of spirea called bridal
wreath, is eatisfactory for forcing.
Cut the branches and put in a sun
ny window,
Forsythia, or “goldenbell” is the
most satisfactory of all The
branches may be cut early in Feb
ruary, and in two weeks the jar will
be a mass of pale vellow bells., Later
in the season the branches will
sometimyes come into Dbloom in a
week,
(What do you know of the oppor
tunities in the rubber business? Find
out tomorrow,
DEPARTMENTS WILL BE PRINTED AS FOLLOWS:
EVELQ;I MONDAY: Study Problems Solved; Nature Study; Outdoor
ife.
EVERYMTkUEGDAY: Handicraft for Boys to Make; Homecraft for Girls
to Make.
EVERY WEDNESDAY: Young Citizen's Adventures; Woodcraft for
Boy and Girl Scouts.
EVERY THURSDAY: Sports That Make Men and the All Around Girl,
EVERY FRIDAY: Dollar Making |deas and Every Day Science for Boy
Mechanics,
EV!EY'SATURDAV: “What Shall | Be?™ Answered for Boys and for
iris.
These artcles appearing regularly are both interesting and useful
for b°£l and airle, It is -ug?on«{ that an exceedingly valuable
scrap book can be made by clipping the articles each day and
pasting them separately by departments.
e e e e e e e eT e eet e eo o it et ettt |
LET WEDDING BELLS RING OUT.
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21
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN W
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What Runs an Elevator
By G. M. HYDE.
““What makes an elevator go up
and down, Daddy?"
“Some are run by hydraulic or
water-lift, but the electric elevators
are commonest. An electric eleva
jtor is really a very simple machine,
“The car itself iz just a metal box
or cage which is hauled up and down
the shaft by steel ropes and an elec
tric motor. {L runs along greased
guides (C, C) on each g&ide which
keep it from swinging and bump
ing against the sides of the shaft.
“rhe steel rope (D) on which it
hangs passes up to the top of the
shaft and over a big pulley (E) in
a wheelhouse that is usually built on
the roof of the building. Sometimes
the electric motor is in the wheel
house, but generally the steel rope
runs back down the shaft to an elec
tric motor in the basement,
“To help the motor and relieve the
strdin on it, another cable runs along
beside the hoisting cable to a heavy
fron counterweight (}) which slides
in another track at one side of the
shaft. You seldom see this welght
when you are in the car because it
goes up as the car goes down, and
vice versa, and they pass at the
middle of the trip. Because of the
counterweight, which weighs about
as much as the empty car, the elec
tric motor has to be strong enough
to haul the difference in weight be
tween the two-—sometimes only a
few pounds. Thus when the car is
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crowded, the motor {s hauling up
only two or three of the passengers
while the counterweight hauls the
rest; and when the car is empty,
the motor simply pulls the weight
down. |
“The car cannot fall, even if the
ropes break, because of a safety de
vice with a governor on the bot
tom of the car. This is so arranged
that if the car breaks loose and
starts to fail, the gßovernor causes
the side-arms (F) to pinch against
the guides and thus puts on the
brakes.
“The controller (A) with which
the elevator boy runs the car is a
device, working through hanging ca
bles (B) to turn on and shut off the
‘motor's current.”
~ (Tomorrow: “Being a Movie Ac
tress.”)
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Booby Explains Thoroughly