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GAY TIMES.
WAYS FOR BOYS
1-"
TO
MAKE AND DO THINGS
BY
F T VANCE
CHARLES M SKINNER
THOMAS WILLIAMSON
JOHN ROBINSON
VIRGINIA SMITH
CHARLES E TAYLOR
C R TALBOT
H E KING
ILLUSTRATED
BOSTON
D LOTHROP COMPANY
FRANKLIN AND HAWLEY STREETS
\
, 2 /
.W3
Copyright, 1887, by
D LOTHROP COMPANY.
CONTENTS.
I. Some comical Kites .
F. T. Vance.
II. Hints for young Pedestrians .
Charles M. Skhiner,
III. How TO make and pitch a Tent
Thomas Williamsoit.
IV. Tree Culture
John Robinson,
V. A Boy's Menagerie
Virginia Smith,
VI. How TO BUILD A SIMPLE BOAT
Charles E. Taylor,
VII. Skating
C. R. Talbot,
VIII. Home-made Snow-shoes
H. E. King,,
Page
7
22
39
46
58
78
93
WAYS FOR BOYS TO
MAKE AND DO THINGS.
L — SOME COMICAL KITES.
UNCLE GEORGE, I wish you could come out
in the shop and show Willie and me how
to make that kite you were telling about last winter."
It was a very kindly and venerable old gentle-
man that was thus addressed by his nephew, a lad
about fifteen years of age.
" Well," said uncle George, " I
am busy now, but Saturday
morning I will try to be on
hand, and I would like you to
have all ready for me at least
a dozen nice, clean barrel hoops, as straight-
grained as possible; and ask your mother to
make a pan of flour paste, and give you a bundle
of old rags, for there is little better to make a
7
FIG. I. FRAME.
8 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
really fine-looking kite-tail than rags of any kind."
With this uncle George went off to his office where
he seemed to be always writ-
ing learned books.
Saturday morning, when un-
cle George appeared in the
shop, he found awaiting him
FIG. 2. LAUGHING BOY. ^^^ ^^jy j^j^ ^^^ tiephCWS, but
a great pan of smoking hot flour paste, also
a large bundle of all kinds of rags, a pair of
shears, a sash brush,
a ball of twine and a
package of old news-
papers j but what
most attracted his at-
tention was the enor-
mous pile of barrel
hoops.
" I am glad to see
so many good hoops," ^'^' 3- wild man kite, a.
said he, "but we will have no use for those made
of split saplings, because the bark on them would
be difficult to cut, and they are heavier than those
SOME COMICAL KITES. 9
made of clear wood, while bark don't materially
increase the hoop in strength.'^ Hereupon he took
from under his arm a large roll of something, as
well as a package from his coat pocket, and laid
both on the table.
He took first a straight-grained hoop and said
FIG. 4. WILD MAN KITE, b.
to his nephews, " If hoops were scarce I should
very carefully try to split this into two, but as
they are plenty, I will use a good sharp plane
upon it to reduce it to the proper size, which will
be generally not more than half the width of the
original hoop. That done, you see T take two or
10 WAYS TO TO THINGS.
three tacks and drive them directly through the
hoop ; then I give each one a tap on the point to
rivet it."
Next he opened the package he had taken from
his pocket and took from it some copper wire, which
he wound around the hoop on one side two or three
times, and then stretched it directly across the
hoop and cut it off, being careful to leave it long
enough to twist around and fasten. Then he ran
another piece in the same way across the hoop at
right angles with the first wire. ^^This," said he,
" will strengthen the hoop and support the paper
against any strain it may encounter in the wind."
{Fig. I.)
Next he opened the long roll. *^ I think a sheet
of this pink tissue paper is appropriate for this
kite, which I call * Laughing Boy.' I will first
mark out the size of the hoop upon it, and then
cut the paper about an inch larger all around;
this will give me plenty of room to fold and paste
over the hoop ; and now that it is done, you
can see the barrel hoop already resembles a
kite. Now I might use some black ink, with
SOME COMICAL KITES.
II
a camePs hair pencil to make the different
markings that I mean to put on this blank
rosy face, but we would find that both ink
and water-colors are too transparent to be of
any value in the distance — so I will cut out of
this dark, opaque brown paper eyes, nose, and
mouth; and I also cut \/
out of white tissue paper
the eye-balls and a good
set of teeth for the laugh-
ing mouth {fig, 2). Of
course it is necessary to
cut away the pink im-
mediately under where
the white will come. If
you would like to have
, .^ , 1 iM M V FIG. ^. LISTING KITE-TAILS.
your kite look like a wild ^
man (^fig, 3), you can do it in this manner : take
three or four of your newspapers and cut them
into zigzag strips, without being careful as to
regularity, only leaving as a heading to your
fringe a strip that is about the width of the hoop,
for the purpose of pasting on the kite. This
12
WAYS TO DO THINGS.
furnishes him hair and whiskers, and you can give
him a funny goatee by cutting the zigzags longer.
You see that he now looks
quite wild/' {Fig 4).
*' And what do you think is
the best way to make kite-
tails?" asked Willie.
" Well," answered uncle
George, "if you can get some
good strips of woollen listing,
FIG. 6. iioop KITE, fj-oi^ a tailor's shop, you can
PROPERLY HUNG
make one out of that, and
you can tie on the end a tassel formed of extra
pieces, and if you find it too heavy, it is easy to
take out listing enough to leave the kite perfectly
balanced. But as I have only two short pieces of
listing I will put them both on the same kite add-
ing thereto a longer tail in the middle for oddity
{fiS- S)- Now I will leave you to practice in mak-
ing up three or four plain kites out of these hoops
and this pink and yellow tissue paper."
After dinner uncle George found that the boys
had made no less than eight or ten kites, very neat
SOME COMICAL KITES.
13
ones too. They were so very good indeed that he
at once set about giving them instructions as to
" hanging the kite '' — a very important point.
*' The best way," said he, " to hang these hoop-
kites is to turn the kite face down; then with
a lead pencil make four plain marks on the hoop,
each about midway between where the wires are
tied; I then carefully stick my lead pencil through
the tissue paper at these points, and turn the
kite face up. Now I measure across the kite for
the upper hanging string; and I add to that
almost one half more for the lower hanging string;
and then fasten the two strings together exactly in
the middle ; afterwards I tie the two shorter ends,
one in each of the upper
holes and the longer ends
at the lower holes. Now
you see when I hold the
kite up by the knot in the
hangings, the hoop does
not hang horizontally, but
the tail end of the kite is some distance lower than
the other end ; this is exactly what is wanted
FIG. 7. WASHERWOMAN.
14 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
(^fig^ 6). You need not follow these measurements
strictly in practice, since if you want the kite to
pull hard and catch a slight
breeze, make the hangings
of nearly equal length ; and
if the wind seems too strong
shorten the upper strings."
" Now," continued he,
FIG. 8. OWL KITE.
" I will show you how I
should manage with these other kites if I were a
boy. I will begin with this bright yellow one.
Let us transform it into a Washerwoman by putting
upon her head a frilled cap ; you see that I make
her hair out of opaque paper, and the frills of her
cap out of white tissue paper which will flutter in
the wind as a real cap would, and as the hair did
on the wild man this morning (^fig, 7). Here is
an owl which I cut out of opaque blue paper — you
will perhaps say you have never yet seen a blue
owl; I believe you — and I don't suppose that you
ever saw a flat owl, like this either; but we won't
mind trifles like these. You cannot tell the differ-
ence when the kite comes against the sky. Paste
SOME COMICAL KITES. IS
over the eyes some white tissue paper, and cut out
a piece of the colored tissue paper at the same
place on the kite. Then cover the whole back of
the owl with paste and stick it fast to the tissue
paper (^fig. 8). In like manner I make this
eagle {^fig, 9), and this duck {Jig. jo). So can
you make whole flocks of bird-kites. You can
also make others consisting of regular forms
{Jig, 11), cut out of tissue paper and pasted
together ; you can put papers of different color
upon the various shapes ; only if you wish
to produce the most brilliant effect you will
paste together the different shades of blue and
orange, purple and yellow or red and green ;
these mingled with white or gray. You see that
I try these three schemes of color in these three
kites, although two of them I will put together
as you see by bringing them beside one another
and fastening them in two places by means of our
flexible wire. I call these Twin Kites {Jig. 12);
but that does not prevent your putting on them the
most diverse subjects ; for instance, upon one you
can make a dog eagerly chasing a cat, that will be
i6
WAYS TO DO THINGS.
running for life across the other. It is a good plan
for those of you who find a difficulty in choosing
good forms to draw upon these * mathematical
kites,' (as I will call them for the sake of distinc-
tion), to look at and copy the figures that are
printed upon almost all oilcloth. For I notice
that they are generally simple and can be easily
made with no other drawing tools than a ruler and
a pair of compasses.
To hang these Twin Kites : In the first place
take two strings measuring each one of them one
half longer than the
distance between a
and b; tie the first
string in a and ^ / the
second string tie in
c and d. Then meas-
ure down each string
one third of its dis-
tance from the top;
bring the two strings together accurately; then
tie the flying string around firmly at this point (no
slipped knot). You will now find your kite well
FIG. 9. EAGLE KITE.
SOME COMICAL KITES. I7
hung if every point has been observed. Be sure
and ascertain the fact that the hangings of the
kite pull the same on each hanging.
" I will now show you how I make another
variety of this kite which I call the 'Jumbo Kite.'
I still use the familiar hoop as a foundation, but I
no longer paste paper over
the whole kite-frame.
" I merely cover the sur-
face of the animal or bird
represented with appropri-
ate color and quality of
T • 1 ^1 • 1 FIG. 10. DUCK KITE.
paper. I copied this ele-
phant from one of the pictorials, using a familiar
method of enlarging a drawing. With care
either of you could do quite as creditable a
piece of work. You first divide the engraving
into any number of perfect squares ; then, mark-
ing out on paper the size of the barrel hoop,
divide that into the same number of squares
— of course they are much larger. Now whereas
it might prove difficult for you to enlarge the
drawing without this help, yet by making the
i8
WAYS TO DO THINGS.
squares on the engraving sufficiently small, you
can readily make a good copy. It is simply neces-
sary for you to draw
into each large square
of the kite the corre-
sponding portion of
the outline that ap-
pears in the smaller
squares on the en-
graving. It will do
no harm to number
the squares in both the engraving and your draw-
ing of the hoop. You notice that the squares on
your hoop
drawing are
not all of
them perfect-
ly square^ for
where they
come to the
FIG. II. COLOR KITE.
FIG 12. TWIN KITES.
circumference they are all bounded by curved
lines. Never mind that, only be sure that all
of the rest are perfectly square. After a few
SOME COMICAL KITES.
19
trials I will warrant you to succeed to your own
satisfaction, whether you have any natural talent
for drawing or not. But to go on with my Jumbo
Kite {^fig, 13). You take a piece of flexible wire,
either copper, brass, or annealed iron wire, and
going around the
outline closely,
and using a pair
of bending pli-
ers, you follow
accurately every
bend and curve
and angle — and
you have a wire
elephant in out-
line. Now, with some gray paper I cover my
wire elephant, putting on him a red blanket with
a blue belt, and marking in with black ink the
ears, and tusk, and putting the line in between the
legs. Then I fasten him firmly to the hoop with ex-
tra wires running to the animal from every side of
the hoop, taking advantage of course of those
points where he comes in contact with the hoop to
FIG. 13. THE JUMBO KITE.
20 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
twist a wire firmly around there ; and after hang-
ing and fastening a tail to it, the elephant will
fly as well as any bird, and," continued uncle
George, "if boys are constituted as they were
once, the more singular the object that can be
placed on a kite, the greater will be the fun. So
if you choose you can imitate me in making a
rabbit (^fig, 14), a camel, a lion, a whale or any
other beast, flying bird or swimming fish. But
there is one specialty that I want to tell you about
— and that is how you can make Fourth of July
Kites — kites that will explode a bunch of fire
crackers while they are up in the air, or set off a pin
wheel or a Roman candle.
In the first place it is well to
have a special kite — that is,
one covered with sheeting in-
stead of paper, because it is
less inflammable, and it is a
FIG. 14. RABBIT KITE.
good plan to make the sheet-
ing almost thoroughly fireproof by soaking it in
strong alum water, and it is good to put up the
kite with hempen twine, for generally the wind is
SOME COMICAL KITES. 21
Stronger in the night, and should the twine break
the kite would be lost in the dark. You can
choose any shape for your kite that you like —
a common four-cornered kite is as good as any.
Fix on its front some flexible wire, to which you
will fasten your fireworks ; but you must have at
the same time another wire fastened to the sticks
of the kite in such a way that it will support a stick
of punk that crosses the fuse of the fireworks
at some point; or you may have a piece of safety
fuse timed so that it will touch the fireworks off
at a given time. It is a fine sight to see half a
dozen of these Fourth of July Kites in the air at
the same time shooting off their different kinds of
pyrotechnics in the dark so mysteriously. You
can also do what has often before been done;
that is — fasten a conductor's lantern upon the
tail of your kite ; for it is great fun for boys
and their grown-up friends, too, to see the light
constantly moving back and forth across the sky
without ceasing."
II.— HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS.
IF I could inspire ten wide awake boys with a
fondness for pedestrian exercise I should be
quite satisfied to jot down some hints on walking
tours suggested out of an experience of many excur-
sions, aggregating several thousand miles of walk-
ing.
A self-reliant lad, of good constitution, should
be able to get along by himself for a week or two,
and to find his way through almost any part of the
United States without other assistance than civil
speech and a small map ; and if he is not a self-
reliant lad I know of few things that will do more
to develop his pluck, and cultivate a habit of think-
ing and acting for himself, than walking. Mind,
I do not mean walking about a sawdust ring with
the object of scoring a higher number of miles
than some other contestant ; that is a degradation
HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS. 23
of natural powers, and is not likely to benefit body
or mind; for nerves and muscles are kept on a
strain that often produces bad effects when the
walk is over; and in plodding over dull ground or
empty floors the thoughts are tied down to the
work and the surroundings instead of being free to
roam, as when the walker is in open air and in the
midst of beautiful scenery.
In the first place, you want at least a week for
your trip. If you have more time to give you will
be in better trim the longer you walk, as you should
aim to increase your distance a little every day.
Many people unaccustomed to long walks are ex-
hausted by a ten-mile tramp; but by beginning, say
with seven or eight miks, and increasing a mile or
so daily, walkers become able to pace off forty
miles a day and be none the worse for it. The
object of a pedestrian trip is not, however, to ascer-
tain how much or how fast you can walk, but to
see the country, gain new experiences, and enjoy
yourself. Of course, in order to do this you must
attain a reasonable degree of speed and endurance,
otherwise you will find walking a poky affair. To
24 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
find yourself at night near the place you left in the
morning is discouraging, for you will begin to con-
sider life too short to see much without the assist-
ance of horses and railroad trains.
Lay out your route before you start, calculate
your expenses, and supply yourself with money
enough to meet them as well as to provide for con-
tingencies. Arrange for the reception of letters
at various points, allowing two days between the
time of writing and of receiving for distances over
one hundred and under five hundred miles from
home. By planning your trip before starting, as
you may with the aid of maps and guide books,
you will know exactly what you are undertaking
and will avoid mistakes and confusion. Be sure
that you know where you are going and that you
are posted as to the points of interest along the
line of march.
Do not cumber yourself with useless luggage.
If you carry more than three or four pounds of
"traps,'' you will be tempted to turn about and
take them home before you have been more than
two hours on your journey. If you intend to camp
HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS. 25
out every night you must be content to go heavily
weighted and to put up with many discomforts.
You will sleep cold, you will get wet, you will be
obliged to carry a tent, hatchet, pan, pot, cup,
knife, fork, spoon, and some provisions, and you
will be inclined to doubt if the fun equals the
trouble, unless you accompany a jolly party and
have the whole summer before you. Here is my
whole equipment for tours of any length ; it is all
I took on a trip across the continent, and were I
to visit Europe I should add nothing to it :
( I ) A soft leather satchel, about ten by twelve
inches, slung from the shoulder by a strap. It
contains (2) a gossamer rubber overcoat, (3 ) a
nightgown, (4) a collar, (5) a neck-tie, (6) a
guide-book, or map, (7) postal cards, (8) comb,
(9 ) toothbrush, ( 10) " telescope " cup; and room
is still left for packing small minerals or photo-
graphs of places that I visit. In my pockets I
carry ( n ) a watch, ( 12 ) sketch book, ( 13 ) pen-
cils, (14) knife, ( 15 ) diary, (16) toothpicks, ( 17 )
handkerchief, ( 18 ) money, ( 19 ) and a book for
reading during bad weather and at inns in the
26 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
evening. I also carry (20) a stout cane, which
gets to be a companionable sort of thing, and may
be of service as a weapon. It is worth carrying
for the sense of protection you receive from it, if
for no other reason. The rubber overcoat is in-
dispensable in showery weather. The nightgown
should be indispensable to everybody, for it is
unhealthful and uncleanly to wear the same cloth-
ing day and night. Even when compelled to sleep
in barns — and there are worse beds than a hay-
mow — I laid aside at night every vestige of cloth-
ing worn during the day, allowing it to air and dry
thoroughly until morning. It is a luxury to slip
out of your dusty clothes, damp with perspiration,
and pleasant to find them fresh and serviceable
when you awake. Clear water is the best adjunct
to a toothbrush in the care of the teeth. Soap and
towels you find everywhere, so there is no need of
taking them. By all means carry a note book, or
diary, and make a daily jotting of your distances
and adventures. Though you write but five or six
lines a day, those little hints will serve in after
years to strengthen memories of what will probably
HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS. 27
be classed among the happiest days of your life.
So with the sketch book. The roughest and hasti-
est of my sketches, though of interest to nobody
but myself, calls up a hundred circumstances and
puts me back among the hills in a twinkling. Be
earnest in your sketching, and let your drawing,
although but an outline, be as true as you can
make it. My sketch book is carried in a large
pocket inside my coat.
Now as to clothes : It is plain that you should
not set out upon a two-hundred-mile walk dressed
in broadcloth, kid gloves and patent leathers.
Take your every-day suit, see that all the pockets
are sound and the buttons sewed on tightly. Be
sure that your shoes are thick-soled, well oiled and
broken in and, if you are going to climb mountains,
tell the cobbler to put soft iron nails into the heels
instead of hard iron or steel; for the latter become
smooth and slippery, making 3^our footing unreliable
on steep ledges. There is no need of suggesting
that you may paddle about barefooted, now and
then. As you are boys you will certainly do that
before you have been a day from home ; but take
28 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
smooth roads for it. Bathe your feet every night,
and if they are a little tender put soap on your
stockings. You will see from my inventory that I
carry no stockings except those that I wear. It is
more convenient to wear out the pair you start
with, washing them now and then, than to carry
extra ones. When they are no longer serviceable
throw them away and buy new ones. You may
buy them at country stores for fifteen cents. Wear
a flannel shirt with gauze underclothing next to
the skin. Let the shirt be one of those convenient
arrangements with a rolling collar that you can
turn down your neck on state occasions, placing
over it a linen or paper collar, and a scarf. As
the collar and tie conceal all traces of the shirt,
nobody knows that you are not arrayed in the
finest linen. How do I get my shirt washed ? In
this way: my nightgown is arranged with collar
buttons, and I conceal the front with the collar
and scarf, wearing it in place of my shirt while the
laundress is scrubbing the dust out of that gar-
ment. Flannel shirts need washing but seldom
where underclothing is worn, a good shaking often
HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS. 29
sufficing to get the dust out of them. The night-
gown, collar, handkerchief and underclothing
should be washed and ironed for you within eight
hours, if you make the laundress understand that
you can wait no longer for them.
You will find it so difficult to organize a pedes-
trian party that you may as well make up your
mind at the outset to go alone. For a day or so
you may feel the lack of company, but it will take
only a short time to accustom yourself to it, and
you will find great delight in the absolute liberty
you will enjoy. I have never succeeded in finding
a companion for a longer excursion than twenty-
five miles. No matter what plans are made in
advance, at the last moment one pedestrian finds
himself up to his ears in business, another has a
sore toe, and another has paid his tailor's bill and
hasn't a dollar left. I have long given up hope
of walking in company, but one is seldom lonely
where nature is beautiful, and there is always
enough to think about without talking. Even in
seemingly well-assorted parties if one of the num-
ber proves to be lazy, or sulky, or dissents from
30 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
schemes in which the majority concur, or can not
walk fast, or wishes to linger in uninteresting
places for selfish reasons, or is always expressing
dissatisfaction with the route, or complains loudly
at the little privations of travel that should be sub-
jects of merriment instead of melancholy, or has
some hobby that he indulges, to loss of interest in
his walk, or is vulgar or vicious in his talk or
habits, the whole trip may be spoiled. There
should be in a party the cheerfulness, delight in
nature and singleness of purpose that you would
feel alone, and it is difficult to find this, for wher-
ever people are assembled together, differences of
opinion arise.
Supposing you have started upon your tramp.
The sun shines, flowers and foliage sweeten the
air, birds sing in the wood yonder, the brook
bubbles its cooling music beside the road, the dis-
tant hills are clear and blue. Very likely you
have seen the landscape hundreds of times before,
but it has a new charm now, for you are, perhaps
for the first time in your life, absolutely free.
Steal into some cornfield by the wayside and stand
HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS. 3 1
on your head for a few minutes to relieve the
immense enthusiasm that this feeling is certain to
awaken, and resume your walk. You have eaten
a hearty breakfast, and your appetite is, no doubt,
healthy enough to fill your landlords with some
anxiety when you begin your depredations in their
dining-rooms, but do not eat a big dinner at noon.
If your means are limited you can not afford it, if
your time is limited the hour you will spend at the
table will be a heavy sacrifice, and if your stomach
is heavily loaded you can not walk as blithely as
you did before dinner. Take your heartiest meal
later in the day. At noon, or thereabout, knock at
some farmhouse door and ask for bread and milk.
You will receive enough for three, your bill may
reach fifteen cents, but it is more likely to be ten,
and you will be in better trim to continue the walk
than if you had been eating meat, vegetables and
pie. I have often obtained lunches at farmhouses
that were almost equal in variety and abundance
to a regular dinner. Here is what a man in the
Catskills once set before me, after apologizing
for the emptiness of his pantry : cold meat, pre-
32 WAYS to DO THINGS.
served fruit, cake, bread, pot-cheese and fresh
cider. Now guess the amount of his bill. Thir-
teen cents ! Don't be bashful about asking for
bread and milk, at least in any farmhouse of
respectable size and appearance. It is the one
thing sure to be found, it is nourishing, and though
the charge for it, if one is made, is so low that you
feel compunctions of conscience for not paying it
twice, remember that money goes farther than in
town, while the lunch costs your worthy host the
merest trifle. For dessert, help yourself to fruit
and berries from the wayside. If benighted, storm-
bound, or astray, you will have little difficulty in
getting the good farmer folk to give you a lodging
over night, offering to pay them, of course, for
their trouble. They will perplex you somewhat
with their curiosity, but if you talk cheerfully and
frankly they will like you and your stay will be
pleasant.
Unless you are well supplied with money do not
stop over night in cities and large towns upon your
route. Arrange your trip so that you can pass
through them and put up at the tavern in a village
HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS. 33
beyond. Not in the suburbs, for there the hotels
are wretched, but in some country settlement ;
there the beds will be clean, the tables well-sup-
plied, the charges will be moderate, and you will
not be compelled to " dress up " to an alarming
extent on account of the company you will meet.
Always ascertain the amount of your bill in advance.
If you are compelled to stop in a city it will be
wiser, unless your stay is of several days, to engage
rooms and pay for only such meals as you have,
than to lodge in a pretentious hotel where you pay
full day's board if you are there only two hours.
Should you lose your way, or find yourself belated
and compelled to spend the night in the open air,
contrive some sort of covering to keep off the dew.
A tree is better than nothing. Do not light a fire
unless the night is cold, for it will attract bugs,
moths and flies by hundreds ; but if you do light
one, sleep with your feet towards it and make sure
that nothing in the vicinity is likely to catch the
flame. I doubt if your first night on the ground be
passed in very sound sleep. You will better enjoy
thinking and telling about your experience after-
34 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
ward than undergoing it at the time. Mysterious
murmurs will be heard in the branches, soft foot-
falls and gliding noises will come from thickets,
night birds, crickets, katydids and frogs will talk
persistently, now and then you will start up pre-
pared to affirm that you heard a whisper, you will
wonder if there are snakes, skunks, weasels and
rats in the vicinity, and it may be some hours
before you realize that the queer noises are only
produced by wind and harmless insects ; then your
tired head will sink upon the grass, you will thrash
about and partly wake at intervals, and will pres-
ently sit up to rub your stiff elbows and discover
that it is morning. Before lying down, remove all
hard things except watch and money from your
pockets, as they will press into your flesh when you
lie upon them, and hurt you. Then turn up your
coat collar and button your clothing well about you,
for dew will fall and the night be chilly. If your
hat or cap is too good to sleep in, tie your hand-
kerchief about your head. Ease your feet by partly
unlacing or unbuttoning your shoes, and be sure
that your shirt is not tight about the neck. Use
HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS. 35
your satchel, or nightgown, as a pillow, your rub-
ber overcoat as a blanket, a heap of grass or leaves
as a mattress. You will rest more comfortably if
you will make a hollow in the ground about three
inches deep, for your shoulder to slip into, and
another like it for the hip. I don't recommend
sleeping out of doors "for fun.'' I have tried
board floors, wagons and freight cars, and have
found them, with a little dressing of weeds and
grass, pleasanter beds than bare ground.
As to a " stamping ground," all parts of the
country oifer attractive pedestrian routes, though
I should fancy that the plains and prairies might
become monotonous to the walker. Among regions
favorable for walking, I can, from experience,
recommend the White and Green Mountains, Cat-
skills, the Lehigh region, Hudson, Connecticut,
Housatonic, Delaware, Potomac and Shenandoah
valleys, the New England coast from Cape Cod to
Portland, Western New York and Niagara, and
the regions about Montreal and Quebec. These
districts are penetrated by railroads and the tele-
graph, so that in case of accident, sickness, or loss
^6 WAYS TO 1)0 THINCS.
of funds, you could return or communicate with
home at once.
The walker may pleasantly vary his route by
returning over different roads from those he set
forth upon. Here is a sample route, taken from
one of my summer tramps : Boston to Alton Bay,
N. H., across Lake Winnepeseogee by steamer,
Centre Harbor, Campton, Pemigewasset valley,
the Pool, Basin, Flume, Franconia Notch, Profile,
Echo Lake, Franconia, Bethlehem, Fabyan's, Mt.
Deception, Mt. Washington, Crawford bridle path
over the Presidential Range to the Crawford House,
White Mountain Notch, Bartlett, Glen road and
return. Iron Mountain, North Conway, Lake Ossip-
pee, Portland, Salem, Lynn and Boston. It is
sometimes practicable to establish one's headquar-
ters in the centre of an interesting region, striking
out in various directions from that point. Thus,
in the Catskills, the village of Hunter affords a con-
venient point of departure for Hunter Mountain,
Stony Clove, Kaaterskill Clove, Plattekill Clove,
South and North Mountains, Cairo, Windham,
Lexington and Grand Gorge.
HINTS FOR YOUNG PEDESTRIANS. 37
The young traveller who has the entire summer
before him, and a purse long enough to attempt
such an undertaking safely, may adapt the follow-
ing route to his liking by cutting from or adding to
the list of interesting points, going over some por-
tions of the country by rail, and perhaps accepting
the numerous invitations to ride that farmers,
travelling from town to town, extend to people they
overtake upon the road. Starting up the Hudson
River from New York visit Sunnyside, the home
of Irving; Tarrytown and its quaint Dutch church;
Sing Sing and the State prison there ; the military
school and old forts at West Point ; Storm King,
highest of the Hudson hills ; Newburg, and Wash-
ington's headquarters ; Saugerties, from which
point a detour can be made, embracing some of
the finest portions of the Catskills, returning to the
Hudson River at Catskill village ; Albany and the
capitol : Troy ; Saratoga and its famous springs ;
Glen's Falls ; Fort William Henry ; down Lake
George by steamer ; Ticonderoga and its historic
ruins ; down Lake Champlain by steamer, stopping
at Port Henry or Essex for a brief run into the
38 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
Adirondack region ; Port Kent and Au Sable
Chasm V Burlington; up the Winooski, ascending
Camel's Hump and stopping at Montpelier ; Wells
River; Woodstock, N. H., from which point make
a tour of the White Mountains similar to that just
outlined; Boston, or Connecticut. valley, to New
York. There ! Some of the grandest and most
beautiful scenery in the world is yours to enjoy
upon this trip. Or, if that programme is not suffi-
ciently ambitious, you may omit the walk across
Vermont and extend your trip from Port Kent to
Montreal and Quebec, descending into the White
Mountain region from the North.
The interest of your walk will be much increased
if you will glance through the history of the region
you intend to explore ; or, if you have a scientific
turn you might post yourself on the geology, min-
eralogy or botany of the country.
III. — HOW TO MAKE AND PITCH A TENT.
FIRST, to familiarize yourself with your pro-
posed task, make a sketch of your intended
tent (^fig, A ), which should be six feet high and
cover a square on the ground six feet each way.
FIB A
Such a tent will require, of yard-wide cotton
thirteen yards ; two yards for the front, two for the
back, and nine for the main cover. The cost, if
made of unbleached cotton, will be about $1.30.
The permanent poles (those to be used near
39
40
WAYS TO DO THINGS.
home, or wherever transportation can be had)
should be of sawn stuff. The two uprights should
be six feet nine inches high, sharpened at the foot
and cut off square at the top
with holes bored in them
large enough to hold the
good-sized nails which will
FIBS ^^^^ P^^^ through holes in
the ridgepole as shown rafig* B,
When your camping-ground is
far from home, and you have no
transportation, poles can be cut in
the woods, roughly trimmed, leav-
ing short pieces of the branches
for hanging things on, fewer being
left on the pole in the doorway
than on the one at the back i^fig,
C).
Tent-pegs ought to be cut in
the woods (J^g. D), the main stem
sharpened and the branch cut IW rii^ i^
short, yet left long enough to
hold the loop of the tent-cord.
HOW TO MAKE AND PITCH A TENT.
41
The top should be square, to be hammered easily.
Take two yards of cotton and cut the piece
diagonally, as inj^g. E. Now
" wide-awake " boys know
that this diagonal, being the
hypothenuse (or slant line)
of a right-angled triangle with
a base one yard and an alti-
tude two yards, is equal to
2.23 yards, nearly two and
one fourth yards long. These
two pieces will make the door of your tent. In
like manner two yards more, similarly cut, will
make the back of the tent. Cut the remaining
FIB E
nine yards into two pieces and sew them together
so as to make them one piece two yards wide and
42
WAYS TO DO THINGS.
four and one half yards long. Mark the centre
of each side of this piece c c^ as in^^. F.
-|5 Sew the pieces for
the back and front
^ to the large piece,
^X^
^
■ 4^^yJJf^
FJQ F
the longest sides of the triangle fitting the lines
marked c d, as in Jig, G. The line from ^ to a is
to be sewed up for the back, and a similar line
left open for the door.
HOW TO MAKE AND PITCH A TENT.
43
Lay the ridgepole on the ground. Drive a stout
pin like this (^fig, ZT.) in the ground at each end of
the pole opposite the nail-holes. Loosen
these pegs by slight blows of a hammer
and pull them up.
Set your uprights firmly in these holes.
Put your ridgepole across from top to
top ; fasten with nails passed through
the holes in ridgepole and uprights. Throw the
tent-cover over the poles and fasten the four cor-
ners down firmly by pegs driven into the ground
about three feet from
the feet of the up-
rights; one boy
should hold one peg
in the loop, another
boy opposite to him
stretching the tent
tightly in driving.
Drive four more
pegs ; o n e i n t h e
middle of each side of the square space — the one
at the door is only used in bad weather or at night.
44 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
At Other times the door-flaps are thrown back. If
you have a fly (an extra tent-cloth over the ridge-
pole), you will need to buy nine yards more, also
to provide longer cords to reach the ground. A
stout cord should be sewed as a welt all around
the bottom of your tent. The loops for the eight
pegs will be nine in number ; two of them at the
door being fastened to one peg.
When your tent is up for actual use, a ditch
should be dug close to the tent to carry the rain-
water off; in order to keep the interior sleeping
ground dry. It is also best to pitch your tent with
the back up hill on a slight incline ; the ditches in
that case need be but three — at the back, and
on the two sides ; these should extend, however,
considerable distance beyond the front of the tent.
In camping out each person ought to have an
oilcloth and a blanket, as it is frequently necessary
to sleep on the ground. When not pressed for
time, elegant bedsteads may be made of saplings
stretched upon a framework resting on four up-
right forked stakes driven into the ground. These
spring-beds must be put on the right and left sides
How to MAKE AND PITCH A TENT.
45
as you enter your tent, leaving an aisle in the mid-
dle.
Each boy in the party ought to have a light
hatchet, carried in a " frog " on a stout leather belt,
with the edge to the front and covered with a
leather casing, unless the wearer be a very careful
fellow. Fig, /shows a shape I have always found
very convenient.
IV. — TREE CULTURE,
I HAVE often thought that were I a country boy,
and my father would let me use some of his
land, I would have a small tree plantation of my own ;
for I should like to have something growing which
I might watch and train and study and take pride
in. Often driving in the country, I see how a group of
trees here, and a belt there, and a solitary one yonder,
would add to the picturesqueness, to the actual
money value and the productiveness of the farms. If
my father would let me use the land, 1 would begin
my tree culture at once. He would become
interested in my trees, I think, by the time they
were large enough to plant out, and I should
have talked so much about the spots where they
would look well and do good, that the whole family
would make it an event, and come out to see the
46
TREE CULTURE. 47
future groves and wind-breaks and shade trees set into
their final places.
I heartily commend this work to the country boys
who read this.
I doubt, to begin with, if you fully realize the
importance of trees, though I daresay some practical
farmer in the vicinity will tell you that a belt of trees
at the north of his farm makes the season several
days longer for him than his neighbor whose crop
land is exposed to the cold northern blasts, and that
it often happens that on farms protected by trees,
melons and peaches are ripened, while upon the
exposed farms they always fail ; and I can tell you of
good books to read on the subject; but right here
I will speak of one or two points.
When you read in the papers every spring of the
great freshets which sweep away houses, bridges, and
all movable things, do you realize that this mischief
is caused by the destruction of the old forests ? It is ;
for the snow shaded by the trees used to melt slowly,
and the earth, kept porous and free from frost, held,
like a sponge, the melted snow and rains, and all
through the season there was a steady supply of
4^ WAYS TO DO THINGS.
water in the brooks which fed the rivers ; but since
the trees have been destroyed the ground has become
hard, and often, too, the soil has been entirely
washed away and the land itself made worthless.
The rains and melting snows rush off these bare hills
in torrents, and, joined by thousands of similar
streams, fill these rivers to overflowing and cause
these freshets. Besides, trees are the purifiers of the
air we breathe ; and when we think of the uses to
which the different kinds of wood are put, and our
dependence upon the forests for the supply, we
wonder that any one can be thoughtless enough to
start the great forest fires which every year are
destroying more timber in the United States than is
used for all sorts of mechanical purposes together.
To succeed with your trees, you should become inti-
mate with nature and see how she manages. You should
know how the tree lives and breathes. If you will
take a plant that has grown for some time in a small
flower-pot and carefully turn it out, you will see on
the outside of the ball of earth many little whitish
root-tips. Every tree has millions, perhaps, of just
such little roots. They are the mouths through
TREE CULTURE. 49
which the tree drinks, and it is the loss of these
which causes the tree to die when carelessly trans-
planted ; for they are easily broken, and if exposed to
the sun for even a few minutes, they will often
become lifeless. If we may speak of the root-tips as
mouths, we can call the leaves the lungs of the tree,
for it is through them that the tree breathes in from
the surrounding air the gases it needs. Thus you
should reason that while the leaves and roots
are in active operation it would be a great shock to
the tree to attempt to transplant it. This must only
be done when the tree, with its roots and leaves, is at
rest. With our leaf-shedding trees, this time is after
their leaves have fallen, between late autumn and
early spring.
You may think it will be an easy thing to go into
the woods some day and dig up the trees you want to
start your plantation ; but unless you take very small
trees, scarcely more than a foot high, you will find
that the roots are so long, and have wandered under
so many stones, or are so interwoven with the roots
of other trees, that it will be impossible to dig them
out in good-enough order to hope of their living.
so WAYS TO DO THINGS.
For this reason trees from nurseries succeed better
than those collected in the woods, because the roots
of the wild trees have often gone far in search of
water, while those in the nurseries, by cultivation and
frequent transplanting, have been kept in a compact
ball, and the tree can be dug up without injuring the
root-tips at all.
Rather than attempt much with the larger trees,
then, I advise you to start your collection by means
of a little nursery. In this you can plant such trees
as you can collect in the woods and pastures, and
the others that you may obtain if you follow my
suggestions. You can begin with small beds. The
soil should be prepared in the same manner as for a
garden bed, light and loose.
As soon as the frost is out of the ground you must
start on your tree-collecting excursions, taking with
3^ou a spade, a large open basket, and a cloth to ,
cover over the roots to prevent them from becoming
dry. If you insist on collecting trees over two feet
high, you will have to take the covered wagon, and
one or two friends to assist. Be sure not to attempt
too much for one day, for you not only have to
TREE CULTURE. 5 I
collect the trees, but to plant them after your return.
It will be best to collect trees of nearly the same
. size on any one trip, for then they can all receive the
same treatment, and your nursery beds should be so
arranged that trees collected at various times can be
planted with other trees of the same kind and size.
On your trips you ought to know what kinds you
are collecting; and unless you are acquainted with
the forest trees you will have to invite a companion
who can point them out. You can tell the seedling
trees you find, by noticing under or near what trees
they are growing. The most young trees will be
found where the older growth is scattering, and it
will be useless to look for trees where cattle are
allowed to roam, for they will surely have browsed
them all off. Among those you will readily find are
oaks, birches, maples, ashes, hickories, poplars, wal-
nuts, the beach, chestnut, sumac, sassafras and
basswood ; and at the South and West, the tulip tree,
catalpa, liquid-amber, magnolias and hawthorns;
and nearly everywhere the cedars, pines, hem-
lock and spruces are common evergreens. It
will be well to avoid trees which grow naturally in
52 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
swamps, as they require more water than they obtain
in cultivation. For New England the best native trees
to plant are the white and red pines, the white ash, the
white and overcup oaks, the walnut and butternut, the
hemlock and white spruce; because, besides being
fine trees, they will, if they become large and are cut,
be of value for their timber ; for you know how scarce
all timber trees are becoming.
Having selected a place for your nursery not
likely to become very dry in summer, and one that
you can easily water should there be a drought,
plant the young trees in straight rows about one
foot apart in the beds, unless they are more than a
foot high, when they should be two feet apart or even
more. Use every care to prevent the roots from
becoming dry, by sprinkling them, and by keeping a
wet cloth over the pile while you are at work. You
will of course dig the trees with great care to save as
many of the rootlets as possible ; and the holes in
which the trees are to be planted should be of ample
size. Place a tree in one of the holes and spread
out naturally all the little roots, and if there are any
broken ones, carefully prune them off. Throw some
TREE CULTURE. 53
fine earth upon the roots and settle it among them.
Next fill in the rest, and with both hands press it
firmly down so that the tree is left about an inch
lower in the ground than it was growing before.
You can, if you like, raise trees from seeds. This
is very interesting, as the manner in which the dif-
ferent species germinate is curious and instructive.
It will be an easy matter to get the seeds of such
trees as hickories, maples, oaks, walnuts, and the
beech, honey-locust, and elm ; and, too, many of the
seedsmen throughout the country are now making a
specialty of tree-seeds. Some seeds, however, require
to be planted as soon as they ripen, or to be protect-
ed in some manner, for after a short exposure they
fail to germinate. Among such are the oaks,
walnuts, hickories, magnolias and chestnuts. These
should be planted in the fall, and if sent to any
distance must be packed in rather damp earth or
moss. Plant the tree-seeds in rows about an inch
apart, and the second year transplant into another
bed about one foot apart.
But those of you who think the best way will be
to buy trees already started, so as to gain a year's
54 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
time, can easily order them of Robert Douglas & Co.,
of Waukegan, 111., who put up and forward to any
address, postage paid, for one dollar, one hundred
year-old trees. Their list contains many varieties to
select from. You can form a club and buy 500 or
1000 trees, and they will come in excellent order, and,
divided among the club, each of you will have an
assortment.
While young all the cone-bearing trees require to
be shaded during the hot summer months. The best
shade is made by nailing laths, about two inches
apart, to some long strips of wood, and arranging
them on posts over the beds. A shade can be made
of boughs stuck into the ground ; but this is neither
neat nor permanent.
If you succeed, you will before long have a nursery
of perhaps 500 trees ready to transplant to perma-
nent situations. If you have taken good care of them,
you will have become interested in landscape garden-
ing and have read many books and articles about it,
and you will greatly enjoy a chance to display your taste
in arranging your cherished trees in groups, and by
planting out tlie walls and out-buildings. This will
TREE CULTURE.
55
justly require a great deal of thought, as upon it
depends entirely the result of beauty, shade and
shelter, when, years later, you are perhaps the owner
of the place yourself.
It is impossible to give explicit directions for this
work, as every plantation requires special treatment ;
but in general you should avoid mixing too many
sorts in groups, nor should trees of different habit
be brought into too close contrast.
At the final planting, be sure to give the trees a
good start. It is not enough to dig holes and place
the trees in them. If the region is gravelly and the
soil poor, you must remove the earth from a space
four feet or more in diameter and to a depth of two
or three feet, and replace it with a mixture of muck,
loam and manure. Let us suppose you planting a
tree five feet high, that the earth has been properly
prepared, and the hole, a large one, has been dug.
You can do your planting alone, but there is no rea-
son why your sister should not help you — in fact
the girls can do a great deal at arboriculture, particu-
larly about the beds of seedling trees. Take one of
the trees from the carefully covered pile, and stand
56 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
it erect in the hole. Having made sure that it is at
the right depth, which should be a little lower than
it was growing before, spread out the roots in the
direction in which they naturally go and cover them
with earth to the depth of a few inches, working it in
among the roots. As you do this let your assistant
move the tree up and down quickly several times to
insure the earth penetrating all the spaces between
the roots. Throw in more earth, and treading it down
the tree will be held in position so that you may take
a final look to be certain that it is exactly straight
and fitly placed before the remainder is filled in.
Level off the earth, leaving it a little higher than the
ground around it, for the rains will settle it consid-
erably. Every spring you should dig around the trees,
and through the summer the weeds must be kept
down. It will add materially to the health and the
rapid growth of your trees if you manure them well
every fall, and that throughout all their growth they
are well mulched with any available material.
I have only spoken of spring-planting ; but you
may, if you like, plant trees in the fall as well,
although the spring is the best time for most species.
TREE CULTURE. 57
There are, however, some trees that begin to grow so
early in the spring that they must be transplanted in
the fall. Among such are the larch and several trees
which flower before the leaves are developed. If
you fortunately have plenty of land at your disposal,
it will be possible for you to establish a little abore-
tum or museum of living trees, although it will require
great care to prevent bad effects by too closely con-
trasting very different sorts of trees. You would in
this way be led to desire to study the trees botani-
cally, and form a scientific knowledge of their various
modes of growth and structure. Such a collection
could be extended, even in New England, to contain
some hundreds of trees.
It is quite possible for you to make tree culture
profitable by proving to your neighbors what valuable
accessions trees are to the farms. You may thus be
able to sell a great many of your trees, and also plant
them out for the purchasers. I shall wait with inter-
est to hear of your commencing work, and will
answer any questions you may need to ask me.
v. — A BOY'S MENAGERIE.
A MENAGERIE ! '^ I hear in tones of dismay,
from mammas in more than thirty States
(besides several Territories). But, dear mothers
of boys, this is a miniature affair ; the performers
who risk their necks and "jar the house down," are
not your precious sons, but wooden figures, or dolls ;
the cages of wild animals are no roaring, noisy,
living creatures, but harmless beasts of wood or —
wait till I tell you all about it, first assuring you it is
one of the most quiet, as it is the very most absorb-
ing, amusements I ever knew; for where in this
broad land is there a boy, or even a girl, who does
not delight in a menagerie ?
Now, you who have some money to spend, and
you who have o.nly nimble fingers for capital, let me
tell you how to make a " perfectly gorgeous " affair,
complete from tent flag to the baby elephant.
58
A boy's menagerie. 59
First, you must have a tent. The framework of
this is an umbrella. You who have money may
buy one of the large white ones used in warm
weather to shield the drivers of trucks and wagons,
the larger the better, provided you have plenty of
room to spread it in. You without spare cash may
beg of mamma an old one. This tent may be set
up on an attic floor, or on an old table not too good
to put nails into ; but the best way is to make a plat-
form, which can be placed wherever you choose.
An old boy by my side, who has had experience of
boy's contrivances, suggests that the cheapest way
to get the platform is to buy for a quarter, at any
shoe store, a long shoe or boot box, the boards of
which are exactly what you want. Make the plat-
form by laying the long boards side by side till it
is wide enough, nailing two strips across on the
under side to hold them in place. On this you may
build your tent and its ropes and belongings, and
when you wish to use it, or display it to your friends,
you can lift the whole thing and set it upon a table
or a couple of carpenter's horses, in the parlor if
you like.
6o WAYS TO DO THINGS.
To prepare your umbrella, saw off from the han-
dle the ornamental part, which will bring the stick
just about to the edge of the cover when closed.
Get a piece of board not less than six inches in
diameter, and bore a hole through the middle ex-
actly the size of the handle, so that when you push
it in it will be a snug fit, and will hold the umbrella
upright.
Now take off the cover, and cut a pattern of one
of the pieces of which it is composed. By this pat-
tern cut new covering out of unbleached muslin,
► which you can buy for five or six cents a yard. The
boy without money may cover with the strongest
parts of old sheets. In cutting the cloth after your
pattern you must leave half an inch each side for
seams, and on the narrow edge of the piece let the
cloth ipYoject/our inches, to be afterwards cut into
scallops and hang, like a real tent.
To sew the seams a sewing machine is best, be-
cause strongest, but if you have no^machine, and
no sister or mother able to do them for you, you
must bravely attack them yourself. Take strong
linen thread and run them together as well as you
A BOY^S MENAGERIE.
6l
can. There is another way to make a cover, much
easier but not quite so " ship-shape." Get un-
bleached sheeting, which comes very wide, say two
yards wide if your umbrella is a common size.
Buy a piece as long as it is wide, and find the ex-
FIG. I. — TENT.
act middle by folding it twice, once each way. Now
cut a small hole in the middle, and cut through one
of these folds from this hole to the edge. Lay this
over the frame, putting the hole over the top of the
stick, and the open side at the back of the tent.
It will be too wide, that is, the cloth will cover the
umbrella and have enough left to lap over where it
62 WAYS TO DO THINGS.
is cut apart. Do not sew up this place, but let one
side lie flat over the other as it will ; then with the
scissors cut off the edge all around, leaving four
inches for scallops as before. The scallops look
best bound with bright red dress braid, at a cost
of five cents, but the binding may be omitted.
Next saw off the ferule end of the umbrella frame,
and bore a hole straight into the stick to hold a
flag pole. If you have no flag you can buy one for
a few cents ; but if you are a household of brothers
and sisters, you will enjoy making a dainty flag.
Having made your flag socket, put on the cover,
and sew it to the ribs, as the original one was sewed.
Just before sewing at the end slip over each rib a
common brass curtain ring (costing two cents a
dozen), to hook your side walls into.
Now open the umbrella which has become the
roof of a tent, and stand it up in its block. Meas-
ure from the edge of the frame to the floor, and
take a strip of the unbleached muslin an inch wider
than this length, and long enough to go all around
the outside edge of the umbrella, and three inches
over. This ij for the side wall, and it looks pretty
A boy's menagerie. 63
bound with red braid, but it will answer with a sim-
ple hem, to keep it from tearing easily.
Look now at Fig, i and see how this tent wall is
arranged. On the back side, that you cannot see,
it is in one piece. From aXo b there is no wall, for
the convenience of the operator who sits at that end
of the tent. On the lines