PIGEON-WHISTLE CONCERTS.
A traveler in Eastern lands tells the following little story of theChinese and their most unique pigeon whistles.
"One of the most curious expressions of emotional life in China is theapplication of whistles to a flock of pigeons. These whistles, verylight, weighing hardly a few grammes, are attached to the tails ofyoung pigeons soon after their birth, by means of a fine copper wire,so that when the birds fly the wind will blow through the whistlesand set them vibrating, thus producing an open-air concert, for theinstruments in one and the same flock are all tuned differently. On aserene day in Peking, where these instruments are manufactured withgreat cleverness and ingenuity, it is possible to enjoy this aerialmusic while sitting in one's room.
"There are two distinct types of whistles--those consisting of bambootubes placed side by side, and a type placed on the principle oftubes attached to a gourd body or wind chest. They are lacquered inyellow, brown, red, and black to protect the material from destructiveinfluences of the atmosphere. The tube whistles have either two, three,or five tubes. In some specimens the five tubes are made of ox-horninstead of bamboo. The gourd whistles are furnished with a mouthpiece,and small apertures to the number of two, three, six, ten, and eventhirteen. Certain among them have besides, a number of bamboo tubes,some on the principal mouthpiece, some arranged around it. Thesevarieties are distinguished by different names. Thus a whistle with onemouthpiece and ten tubes is called 'the eleven-eyed one.'"
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ADVENTURES OF A BOY GENIUS
MOTOR STORIES
Most five-cent weeklies are founded upon the adventures of boy wonderswho perform all sorts of impossible feats and who never act or talk asa boy really does. This is displeasing to the intelligent boy of thepresent day, who is better educated, and who, consequently, demandsmore logical reading than the old-time boy did.
The boys who want to learn something from what they read, as wellas to be interested by it, will never find another publication thatwill satisfy them so well as MOTOR STORIES. "Motor Matt" is not animpossible boy character. He is simply a youth who has had considerabletraining in a machine shop where motors of all kinds were repaired,and who is possessed of a genius for mechanics. His sense of right andwrong is strongly developed, and his endeavors to insure certain peoplea square deal lead him into a series of the most astonishing, but atthe same time the most natural, adventures that ever befell a boy.
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No. 1.--Motor Matt; or, The King of the Wheel. No. 2.--Motor Matt's Daring; or, True to His Friends. No. 3.--Motor Matt's Century Run; or, The Governor's Courier. No. 4.--Motor Matt's Race; or, The Last Flight of the "Comet." No. 5.--Motor Matt's Mystery; or, Foiling a Secret Plot. No. 6.--Motor Matt's Red Flier; or, On the High Gear. No. 7.--Motor Matt's Clue; or, The Phantom Auto.
TO BE PUBLISHED ON APRIL 12th
No. 8.--Motor Matt's Triumph; or, Three Speeds Forward.
TO BE PUBLISHED ON APRIL 19th
No. 9.--Motor Matt's Air-ship; or, The Rival Inventors.
TO BE PUBLISHED ON APRIL 26th
No. 10.--Motor Matt's Hard Luck; or, The Balloon House Plot.
TO BE PUBLISHED ON MAY 3d
No. 11.--Motor Matt's Daring Rescue; or, The Strange Case of Helen Brady.
TO BE PUBLISHED ON MAY 10th
No. 12.--Motor Matt's Peril; or, Cast Away in the
Bahamas.
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Transcriber's Notes:
Added table of contents.
Italics are represented with _underscores_, bold with =equal signs=.
Replaced oe ligatures with oe for the text edition (they are retainedin the HTML version).
Page 1, changed "who" to "whose" ("whose past record") and changed"Motor Mart" to "Motor Matt" ("who aids Motor Matt").
Page 4, added missing italics to "helped the skipper sail the_Christina_."
Page 8, changed "gratfying" to "gratifying."
Page 15, changed "dutsy" to "dusty" ("clothes were dusty").
Page 17, changed "intrrupted" to "interrupted" after "now I rise toyou."
Page 29, changed "wtih" to "with" ("with the regularity oftirelessness").
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