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1 Property of the Watertown Hstorcal Socety V. -;rr^<t~ w - f -v-^^m:km^- s t^< w --* v *>. \ *- v. "* j-*a»*-- -s' _-l "fe torn* te DEVOTED TO TEE WHOLE COMMUNITY NOTUJNO ML8M OM LB88 Vol. XV. No. KJ. (ATERTOWN, CONN, FEBRUARY 10, IKS. TWO DOLLARS PER VEAA. FIRE TRUCK DAMAGED I CIVIC UNION DRIVE GREAT I SUCCESS The Reo fre truck of the local, Fre Department was damaged con- The Cvc Ilnton Drve closed Mon- derably on Frday afternoon when) day evenng, at a dnner served to It collded wth a telegraph pole j the drves worker* n the Communwhlle attemptng to round the curve Uy hall. A delcouq turkey suppef near, the Seymour Smth factory In Oakvllle. The Fremen who occuped the truck were very fortunate to escape Injury In the crash. On roundng the curve, the. truck beng was enjoyed by Ube* workers who had met wth success n ther drve. A grand total ot $8,775 was Uken In by the canvassers n addton to the $14,538 subscrbed by the executve equpped wth chans, skdded on the cement hghway crash!np Into the pole. Ths Is the thrd accdent wthn a short tme to occur on ths turn and tn%- attenton of the Bute Hghway Commsson should be called to ths hazardous spot so that steps could be taken to remedy It before a loss about $7,269; for 1930, also about were In $7,269. guests ncluded.mrs. James Hannlng, Mrs. John Shelds. Mrs. Mary Mrs. Merrtt Hemlnway's team, composed of Mrs. Edwn Englsh, Flynn, Mrs. Edward Klelty, Mrs. Stephen Canty, Mrs. Irvng Campbell, Mrs. Bartow Hemnway, Mrs. Char- Hungerford and Mrs. Buel H. Mrs. John Holleran, Mrs T. F. Mc- ' When ths new ce-les Hemnway, Jr., won hghest team Gowas, Mss Mary Redy, Mss Elzabeth Kelty, Mss Veronca Holleran honors havng brought In $1,437,60. Second place was taken by team one. amt-mss-alee Sullvan. Mrs. C^avles Shons, captan, Mss Mrs. Chrstopher Nelson of New- Gertrude Kllmpke, Mrs. Sherman York cty s vstng at the home of Perry, Mrs. S. Kellogg Plume, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Mrs. Orson B. Powers, who brought Wheeler,on Mddlebury road. n $907.G0. Thrd place was won by E. W. Wheeler spent Thursday In of lfe occurs. ment hghway "was bult there was consderable bckerng over the grade at ths turn by the adjacent property owners and the Commssoner and In caterng to ther whms ths hazardous turn was made such as It Is. Between Watertown and Waterbury ths turn I* the most dangerous pece of hghway for the. entre sx mles and there Is hardly famlar wth ths accdent trap. Transent traffc are the ones who suffer most from th(s freak or engneerng as they are not famlar wth ^tle hghway -at ths partcular pont ajy.-j-tum where th* hghway slopes n--such a way. as the Smth turn tlohr, g unexpected. The town of Watertown wll now be forced (o nay out qut* a sum of money to place the truck In condton agan, and It seems no more than far bn that the state should be compound to puffer the expense for allowng such hazard knowngly to exst. NO LONGER "MOST BACKWARD ; ST-AT:E" r ^ ^ - There are '150,000 grade and purebred Jerseys In these seven countes. They are the bg money producers. These seven countes formerly were cotton countes, but because of the fertlty that the cow has brought to the land better cotton crops are now jrown the,--<y than ever before. In Msssspp they have condens-'.arles and cheese factor s>s:and creanv "fres.. The daryng.industry has the enthuslastcvsupjort' of bankers, fou.'tne'sb mencxenslon. for.ee...work? ers. -A:?'"- r x ' NOTICE >F PROPERTY TO SSAT FY TAXES DUE THE TOWN OF WATERTOWN On Aprl S, the undersgned wll sell at Publc Aucton, to satsfy tax leves dte.jthe town of Watertown, fnm FRANK» C. BENE- DICT of West Hartford, Connectcut, the followng descrbed property owned by Frank C. Benedct of Wft Hartford, Connectcut. A certan, strp of land n sad Watertown on the northerly sde of the mll pond of Homer.P. Barlow, four,.(i) rods n wdth and extendng from hghway on the easterly sde thereof, to -the land formerly owned by Henry E. Davs 'pn the West. Sad strp of land s»bounded: Northerly on land or hers or R. C. Armstrong: Easterly on hghway; Southerly on H." P. Barlow; Westerly on land formerly of H. F. Davs. Also a certan strp of land dne foot (1) wde located n sad Watertown on the westerly sde of West Street and les between property'of Andrew Barton and George Beebe and West Street so-called and s about eght hundred and eghtyseven (887) n length and s bounded: Northerly one foot on Prospect Street; Easterly on West Street: - Southerly one foot on lot No. 70 as shown on a map of Watertown Heghts,! Munson Tract; - Westerly feet on land of A. W. Barton and George Beebe. Bee Watertown Land Records, volume 33.1 page 176. and 34, page 16.' Taxes' due on the above mentoned property are as follows: On lst pf Tax Int. Len Total 1W5 On lst of $5.72 f.92 $1.00 $7.64, 1926 $5.72 $.47 $6.19.Total amount due $ Tbe^e taxes, together wth all necessary fees' and costs of sale, must be pal* before ttle can be. gven. Sale to be held at 10:00 a. m. at' Town Hall In Watertown unless all taxes shall be pad by the owner or nterested party before sad tme _Watertown, Conn.. February 8th, , :: IRVING P. SMITH, Tax Collector for Town ' of Watertown. f commttee, brngng the total to $ Snce ths drve was carred WHO'S WHO THIS WEEK Mr. and Mrs. Joel Atwood of Prospect street have gone to Florda where they wll sepnd several weeks. Mrs. S. McLean Buckngham and daughter Josephne are vstng n Pttsburgh, Pa.,'for a tew weeks. Mrs.' D." G. Sullvan entertaned team 17, Kdward Plerpont, captan, Merrtt Hemnway. Gordon Hurlburt. who gathered $ COMEDY TO BE GIVEN BY GIRLS' CLUB The Watertown Grls' club Is busy wth-fnal rehearsals for the comedy, "Be an Optmst." whch they wll present next Tuesday evenng In thn Communty t heat re. An evenng or enjoyment s In store ror all.who'see the performance. -The play wll bo followed by a dance n the lower Communty hal In the form or a novelty Valentne party. New 'York cty. has soldjs cottage on ' A %. he monthly meetng of the The. cast of charactej-s n "Be an Wfertown Fre Department on Optmst." Is as follows: Tue.-ly evenng It was voted to "Isaac Goldtch," owner of an an- hold a socal and dance for the Fremen and ther guests n the Con- MflUJB^sJpP, Sydney Merrll; "Becky," hs 'daughter,- Esther EHcksOn; "Petro D'angel'o - Caccoland," expert J February' 20; Interest seemed, to Ian j-nunly buldng on Monday.evenng; wormholer,'lous Brandley;. "jmmy In the matter and the commttee Maynard." a poor stff.. Donald Thuer; "Hlldred Clnton." Elzabeth Kl- was unable to decde whether or not elty; "Mrs Clnton," Mldred's mother, Ellse Root; "MJfce." Peter Bevordge; "Ray,Hudson," Ralph Brand- h ley; 'Mss Hull," Interor decorator, Helen Rchards;."Magge," the. mad. Dorothy Johnson; "Ethel Peabody." Maron Lyons; "Spencer," a pad guest. D. George Wldman; "Madame Gooper." Mrs. Harvely M. McCrone. DELPHIAl..CLUB DI8CUSSES BURNS A program-on -Robert Burns, hs Hfe- am lterary achevements, was the topc of study at the ''meetng pf 11K; rx'lphah Club laat Tuesday. The npetng was held ths week at the.lom.e_or_mrs.a; S.^Nagle onhilcrest avenue. In addton to the text.reports gven, a group of Scotch songs was sung by Mrs. Wllam Walker and greatly enjoyed. Mrs. Walker was accompaned on the pano by Mrs. Harold Budge. Tlu> dub wll meet next Tuesday at the homo of Mrs. Arthur (J. Evans on Warren way when they wll study the HIV of Hyron and some of hs works. NOTICE 8ALE OF PROPERTY TO 8ATI8FY TAXES DUE THE TOWN OF WATERTOWN On Aprl 14, 1928, the undersgned wll sell at Publc Aucton, to satsfy tax leves due the Town of-watertown, from JAMES MOORE, of Waterbury, Connectcut, the followng descrbed property owned by James Moore of Waterbury, Connectcut.. A certan pece of land stuated In Watertown, Ltchfleld County, n sad State of Connectcut, and beng more partcularly descrbed as Lot number 167, one hundred and 'sxtyseven. In the Oakvlle Heghts Tract so-called, as shown by map on fle n the Town Clerk's oftce In the Town of Watertown. Sad lot beng ffty (50) feet front and rear and one hundred ffty (150) deep. Also all rghts of way over streets leadng to sad lot. See Watertown Land Records, volume 35, page 493. Taxes due on.the above mentoned property are 'as foltowstv Lst of 1909 to nclusve -- - ' Tax- Int. Len. Total $14.66 $7.16 $17.00 $ These taxes, together wth all necesbary fees and costs of sale must be pad before ttle can be gven. Sale to be held at 11:00 a. m. at Town Hall, Watertown, v unless all taxes shall be pad by the owner- or Interested' party before sad tme. Watertown, Conn., > February 8th, _ ~ IRVING F. SMITH,' Collector for Town of Watertown. Mrs. Ellen McCleary of French street has purchased the Sm Jones farm stuated on the Northfleld road. A number from Watertown art? plannng to attend the hockey game between the Wate-bury Hockey cju,b, and the Yalt» junor varsty hockey J team at Fulton Park n Waterbury.' II. I). Tat'!' attended the'taft Alum nl dnner In.New York cty Tuesday ov.nln«' FIREMEN'S SOCIAL FEB. 20 to go through wth the socal us planned but after open dscusson of the matter a great deal or nterest was aroused and before the close of the meetng the'entre ararngenent' for tln> affar w«re placed n tlv? hands of varous commttee. Through he courtesy of the Cvc Unon, the Fremen were donated the use tf the Communty buldng for ther pet-torether event! IT. J. of Cheshre was a recent vstor n town. The monthly meetng of the local fre department was held n ther rooms on Tuesday evenng. A number of Watertown resdents were summoned to appear as wtnesses at the hearng of the Brahenjllradshaw cvl acton whch s be- I ng held In the Superor Court n Wsted.f Mrs. Nelle St. George s ll at her home on Man street. Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Buzzee of De Forest street are vstng relatves n Brooklyn, N. Y. P. B. Randall, propretor of the been serously ll at hs home on De Forest street s greatly Improved and s rapdly ganng strength. Edward Englsh has sold hs property to a Waterbury party. Contractor Robert Val has completed the : Englsh desgned, home on North street for Charles Hamlton and the workmanshp Is drawng a great deal pf complmentary/ remarks. Mr. Hamlton bult ths Ideal home wth the ntenton of sellng and durng the past few days, sev- resented n the Senate by one of ts ctzens. Mddlesex County's only eral rospectlve purchasers.have Senator was Samuel W. Dana of Mlddletown, who served more than a ^'mo OVPI» (he premses. tsng on the cloud-- anl commercalze th«> sky,' century ago from JS10 to 1.^21. Calvn \Vlley. of T.fl!Ja$ Mr and Mrs..Henry O'Connor of Sen!.': avenue^have.^returned'after ;,. lk25 to : If the. be'u.y. f Amerca s to be "w ; n*-1'jt'o lasu#sjrvnt lasu#s,jrvnt of ToIJand ToIJnd saved the Am-rcn people. of ths vnlng relatves n Northampton, Kfterutlon must call a halt. We Mass. THIS WINTER OF OURS stand.,s a monument for Hurley V. Persons well past mddle ace who'r»b'<>rts. amog.-t. Watertown. Vltlzens.. ' lake thought as to the, weather. ar>> compelled to admlt-'t'taf, 'w:hlle,:..,tno wnter'thus Tar has been farly comfortable,'lt?.las-:.beeh,. t d r evoli..-ot.jnf-rts svw'poi-umi to be.slghtly lm- At tn. present wrtng Mr. Hobteresyng features. In -thj Souh*It; lthoukw'stlll svfrosfy^ ll: las- been marked by temperatures whch have been low for that secton of the country; here."" cne* 1 'the' LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY THOUGHT great flood of early November, t has been comfortable and uneventful. The snow cover, now pretty nearly at ts "maxmum for the wnter to date,'s merely formal and thermometers that have reached _ the zero pont are few In number. Even n northern New EnRland these nstruments have shown a dsposton to malnger. Ponts on the Bangor & Arnostook Ralroad have recmdt'd nothng lower than a mere mnus 20. Northneld, Vt., If our memory s correct, has contented tself wth n readng sf 'l-l degrees below jero, a fgure whlch'-to Northdeld suggests nothng more, severe than late autumn. However, the record snowfalls, we have noted, have appeared n February and March. Asde from the epochal storm or March, 188S, we recall few more btter storms thau that of February 14, whch, loaded Hartford streets wth snowto such an extent that the Fre Department was hampered n two serous fres that occurred about a week later. There s stll,an opportunty for wnter and -for much severe, weather. Stll, 'seed catalogues abound and the days are growng longer. Hartford Courant, Feb. S. REPERCU88rON8 DIFFERENT Mr. Robnson s a very powerful man physcally. I should say he was the Samson of the Senate. Hs gestures are muscular rather than graceful. Hs voce s powerful, almost as -powerful as Senator Wlls', but t does not leave the mpresson Of mere sound. The Senatorsowho advsed Heffn to keep away from the Democratc caucus that fouowed the clash between bs and Robnson probably feared a physcal encounter. Washngton Letter!. HARLEY F. ROBERTS ILL IIarley.F..Robcrt-H, assocate head nastf-r at the Talt school, Is crtcally ll at hs apartments at the Tuft school and s under the constant attenton of several doctors am nurses. Strcken ll whle at tn- bmklast table on.sunday morn- HK. -Mr. Kob'ts was hastly removed to hs'apartments' and hs personal' physcan..summoned... Tn; townspeople of Watertown were deeply greved to.learn of hs sudden and serous llness and Inhas the well v^shes or all for a hasty and complete recovery. Mr. Roberts s one of the most publc sprted ctzens of our communty and under hs.'untrng ambton'an'd sprt great deeds have been accomplshed. RenlzhK HIP ntm'ds of communty sprt ard assocatons In Watertown, Mr HobMs.organzed--'the Watertown Cvc Ttlon whch wll, always Th" orators 'wll be called nl 'a., usul on Lncoln's nrthday, February 12, for thoughts on the career of that profound thnker. The day comes on Sunday, so the mnmers can tt>ll us what they thnk hs career means for o_ur day. It s commonly used as a mean* of comfortng boys and grls who CONNECTICUT AND THE SENATE If Senator McLean's decson to retre to prvate, lfe at the end of hu present term s nnal and t s hardly necessary to say that we hope he wll not deprve Connectcut of hs servces--t may be assumed that 'there wll be somethng of a scramble for hs scat. It may be taken for granted, too, that the localty queston wll enter nto the contest for the domnant party nomnaton. For one thng, t seems safe to count New Haven out, as t has one Unted.States Senator In Colonel Ungham. It wll not be consdered as enttled to another. From 1789 to tnu present thne, Connectcut has had thrty-eght Senators,* of whom eght have been resdents of Hartford and eght of New Haven. Norwch has had four Sen: ators, Ltchfeld, New Mllford and Norwalk two each and the followng 'owns one each: Wndsor. Wethersfeld, SImsbury,' Stratford,,Lebanon, come from. very, humble homes. They are tnught that ths man as-genccended to belong to the great ones of ths character. It should be of the earth, from'a home whch had less of convenences than the humblest dwellng now standng n Canaan or Ltchfleld County. Such a career proves that there.is no bar to achevement n Amerca. The Amercan people come pretty near acceptng a man or woman for what he or she does. H the achevement of the person s of beneft to! communty, one's lowly orgn s forgotten. People wll alro cease to laugh at any awkwardness that such-a'one carres up from the early begnnngs. But when they are told ths story, young people need to form one dea qute strongly. People do not rse to any knd of trumph wthout effort Lncoln had very lttle schoolng, probably, not more than a year altogether. But he had access to a number of the world's greatest lterary' masterpeces. He read hs Bble ands Shakespeare and Amercan hstory untl he knew them and the rest of hs small lbrary by heart, and had taken deeply nto hs thought the profound wsdom of these sources or nspraton! If lke the average boy today, he had spent hs spare tme on-superfcal readng and ordnary entertanment, the_world would-, never ^ave-feantof hm. The person who aspres to a noteworthy career, must lke Abraham Lncoln seek nspraton, from the world's best mnds. But one.must also learn how to apply one's wsdom sklfully- to-the problems of' every day lfe. -Conn. Western News. - -Ths beauty s today threatened Mlddletown, Tolland, Cheshre, Falrfleld, Salsbury, Merlden, New Lon-lowng the syeam.pf automoble wth destrueon. Advertsng, foldon. trafllc, s spreadng out 'along our WIndham s the only one of Connectcut's eght countes n^ver hplways, commercalzng our. land- rep- Cpu'nyslnjle Sena.te. The law Farfleld County matoo-ko,. fcrtlje Senate \v;.< Orrs S. Ferry of Norwalk', who ded'before, hs term expred. Fr,om the lme of hs death n 1875, more than half a century ago, the Senators have: been from Hartford, Now Hven, New- London ard Ltchfleld Countes. The localty ''argument s not an deal one to use n the selecton of a Unted States Senator, but t wll doubtless have ts weght In fllng the sent whenever t becomes necessary for Connectcut to. pck a new man. Sectons of the State that have lacked recognton n recent electons, are lkely to make ther de- We do ask you- to nsst that such door- advertsng. mands and there s no reason to advertsng shall not mess up the suppose that Hartford County wll landscape.-about 1% of natonal adv^rtsn;. today star '.-t o!«the land-~ consder that t has'-'osjmts'vl-.lnt, Hartford Courant. sc::pe. Elmnate that 1%. Keep outdoor advertsng n commercal dstrcts and save the. beauty of WARNS OF ICY WINDSHIELDS Amerca. Effectual.relef, can come only Of all the dlllcltes tha confront through, publc opnon crystallzed To AN AL the Chambers of Commerce the Unted States and Cvc Organzatons You are organzed to footer the best development of your town and communty not only the development of ts commerce, but of everythng that makes t a better communty n whch to lve. Therefore, we beleve, you should support the present natonal movement for the conservaton of natural beauty. Busness, If successful, enables -us not merely to exst, but to lve, to grasp some of the hgher and fner thngs whch make exstence worth whle. If then busness In Its forward surge overrdes these fner thngs and destroys them, t has defeated Its own ends. Beauty, and especally outdoor beauty, s one of the fner thngs of lfe. Outdoor beauty Is not merely a commercal asset to your communty. It s one of the greatest character-mouldng nfluences or the naton. scape, and very serously damagng the beauty of our.country. And now a new Inventon s announced whch by beams of lght wll throw adver- mu.- nsst!t the landscape s no place for advertsng,.that outdoor advertsng -::<>u!d be hep; commercal ds! r'h. We must convnce our courts lat tn' rural bllboard * a publc nusance. As the Natonal Ueal Estate Assocaton has well sad: "The natural beauty of our country s a publc hertage to be conserved. It s a communty possesson, and no ndvdual "and no corporal on has the. ;rkht to despol the natural scenc beauty of the land for prvate proft." \Ve do not ask you to oppose oat- the motorst n wnter few are more.^j n legslaton. 'Reformed standards dangerous than the Ice-coatod wnd- on -tn*''part. of. the Organzed Blh> sheld, says. Frederck- H. Ellott, d, rector of'publc'safety, of the New York Automoble Club, le sad; last Saturday, that, nsny.". car owner.: -were..wlder the talsal^en ln res-:o! that t I Is partcular stuaton has no remedy. "Alcohol, sal! and glycerne-, are three -substances that.deal very effectvely, wth the.'ice-coa'ed wndsheld." he.sad. "Thu.motbrlsf who dt slre< to avod ths problem, whch s responsble for so many accld lls, should carry one ot the three'along j wth hm on nl hs wnter motor journeys..' All lend themselves very readly to beng'made.'addtons.n the tool kt. "If sal s tho subtance one decdes to- have handy for the emer- appled 1 'when, the wndsheld begns to collect ce.. Ths creates a brpe soluton tha wll not freeze. Oylcerne rubbed on tle.'.wndsheld'forms a flm to whch water, snow and ce wll 110V clng." A WET ANO WICKED MAGIS- TRATE A student at a Pennsylvana college was arrested for drunkenness n New York the other nght ; The magstrate before whom he appeared n the West Sde Court suspended sentence, but took occason to say: "It s unfortunate that such thngs Happen to a boy 23 years old. It would be a good thng f all the bottles were thrown out of the fraternty houses. Before prohbton we never saw a boy 21,.22 or 23 years of age brought, n for ntoxcaton, but now t s a frequent occurrence, and most of those arrested are college students." We cannot expect our prohbton frends to gve credence to such statements. Ths magstrate must be a wet. He must be alled wth the "lquor nterests." He s malgnng the youth of the land n general and the college - student n partcular. Hasn't he seen the statements and/ statstcs of Professor Irvng"Fteher, provng that drnkng at college s no longer a popular electve' course T Would the magstrate dare to suggest that Professor.Fsher Blght change bs mnd were he^to.spend. a lttle tme In aome New courts? Hartford Courant. York board Industry may mprove condtons somewhat. They cannot effect a (lre, () because the. ndustry sth assumes that the landscape Is ts t-ultmate" neld for, advertsnk, and (2) b-cause there s a vast dual of outdoor advertsng over whch t has no control. We urge you to do.your part towards the development o mblc opnon.. Save, tl"- bssest. asset of your communty- ts beauty. Advertse your town, by beauty of streets and.approaches (rot by rural bllboards). Name your town by a small and artstc maker whch wll not mar your entrance. Keep your bllboards n commercal dstrcts. Lend your support to ths movement for conservaton of the beauty of Amerca. "To mak«us love our country, our country ought to be lovely." Edmund Burke. "Here s your country. Do not let anyone take t or ts glory away from you. Do not let selfsh men or greedy Interests skn your country of ts beauty, ts rches or ts romance. The world and the future and your very chldren shall judge you accordng as you deal wth ths scred trust." Theodore Roosevelt TO REMAIN ON THE JOB Secretary' of Commerce Herbert Hoover shows hs customary good judgment n'decdng to reman In the cabnet, letyng hs frends run hs campagn. He s a recognsed canddate tor the presdental nomnaton and as such has numerous and enthusastc supporters. /Ha frends very much prefer that be contnue to do the work n whch le has been so conspcuously sucetmful. They hold ths s the best sble contrbuton be can make He has been thoroughly loyal to Ms. cwef v Presdent Coojdge, and wll reman so, declnng to make an an* dgnfed scramble for preferment It' he ls eventually chosen t wll/w.be-y caused bs manfest and 'proven? qualfcatons rather than tnro clever poltcal manpulatons;^ consstent record of ments as a man. and as an ; many capactes to. hs Brstol Press., - of «*,.<- ;.-r.ft

2 Property of the Watertown Hstorcal Socety «.r--*'."* r - 1 -* "" OtPFllWW/M 1TF1 Name By ELMO SCOTT WATSON PEAK of o "rdng Presdent" and one naturally thnks of the former ranchman, Rough R,der, lover of the outdoors and exponent of the strenuous lfe, who occuped the Whte House from 1001 to So It wll be a surprse to_ many Amercans to learn thut perhaps the -greatest rder of them all was not -Theodore- Roosevelt, bat (Jeorge Washngton! -r Ths fact I* revealed In a new book, "George Washngton, Colonal Traveler," wrtten by John 'C Fltzpatrlck and publshed by Bcbbs-Merrll of Indanapols. Mr. Fltzpatrck Is already known as the edtor of the Washngton Dares and one of the leadng authortes on the lfe of Washngton, and bs' offcal poston as assstant chef of the manuscp.pt dvson of the Lbrary of. Congress, whch enabled hm to search everj Important document In the.natonal xtorebouse - of hstorcal treasures has made It possble for hm to present the frst complete documentary record of Washngton's career from hs brth In 1732 to that day In 1775 when hs lfe as a colonal gentleman ended and he became commander-inch lef of the Contnental army. In hs prefatory note, Mr. Fltzpatrck makes ths statement: Pew - Inhabtants of Colonal Amerca traveled 1 tbe country so wdely or contnuously as dd George Washngton and t la not too much to suppose that ths acquantance wth hs natve land had a decded bearng upon that broad patrotsm whch was hs dstngushng mark from the moment he took command of the Contnental armes. In.ths, the.frst perod of hs lfe, he traveled from Wlllamsburg* VK., to bah* Ere,. from Mount Vernbn to the Shenandoah, Pennsylvana and Fort Ptt, from Wnchester,: up the Shenandonh valley to the North Carolna lne, from Mount Vernon to Oho and lower Went Vrgna beyond the Allegany mountans, from.wllllamsburg nto the Great! Dsmal rwamp and from Mount Vernon to Baltmore, - Phladelpha, New York and Boston, not to menton Washngton's False Teeth Untl 150 years ago dentstry comprsed lttle more thnn clumsy methods of extracton and was largely the avocaton of barbers and the trade of travelng "tooth-pullers." Paul Revere, patrlur Hnd slversmth, practced dentstry. John Greenwood, a Contnental trooper, ganed surh s skll that he suppled Oenenl Washngton wth a full set of teeth curved from a hlpnotusk. The most noted of the a voyage to the West Inde*, frequent trps to Annapols, Maryland, and the many tmes he traveled up and down the "Northern Neck" to attend the ne«- slons of the house of burgesses at old Wllllamsburg, In these last mentoned Journeys he often crossed Into Maryland, to recross agan Into Vrgna and vce versa, to avod the mud and heavy gong of "the old Potomao path down the west bank of that rver. The Journeys to Wllllamsburg, from Mount Vernon, by way of Frederlcksburg or Port Tobacco, Maryland, were made so many tmes that It Is. regrettable that none of the old Inns, or "ordnares," at whch Washngton was wont- to stay, have survved.- The state of Vrgna Is now earnestly at work upon a system of markers, or tablets, for Its hstorc pots and the locatons of the more Important, at least, of these hostelrles wll, doubtless, be fxed as a result; but as the buldngs. themselves dsappeared long before photography was recognsed as a valuable art, there la small lkelhood that authentc pctures of many of them ' wll ever be found. Pror to Washngton's marrage and whle he was n command on the fronter, he traveled, almost. entrely, On horseback and' there are Indcaton* that the excessve and hard rdng of those fronter days was largely responsble for one of the severe Illnesses of hs lfe. Exceptng the western plansmen of later days, there are few Amercans who have spent so much of ther lves n the saddle as dd George Washngton and few parallels enn be found In Amercan hstory, for the rdng performed by hm In hs servces to hs state and to the naton. Nearly all of. the rdng, durng the perod covered by ths volume, was through regons wld, or sparsely settled, mnus' the advantages of good roads and frequently upon nothng better than an Indan tral or huntng path, exposed many tmes to the arrow or bullet of the savage. Although the book Is In effect a "day-by-dy" necount of the actvtes of Washngton over ths perod of years, complete only so far as accessble documents make It possble to comple such a record, and there fore-lackng the narratve appeal of other books on Washngton whch have appeared In Increasng numhent durng recent years, there s a'world of human Interest n some of these documents. There Is, for example. Washngton's account of Braddurk's poneers and tbe founder of dentstry n ths country was Joseph Le Mare. frend of Lafajrette, who landed In Newport n James Gardette and Joslah Flagg, two of hs pupls, became leaders n the professon. Flagg was the frst tpuse gold fllngs. ThtFrttlnmgoraHoT George Washngton wan Inaugurated an Presdent the frst tme In New York on Aprl The onth of offce was admnstered by Robert Lvngston, chancellor of the state of defeat, the story of whch has flled many a page of hstory In the 173 years snce It occurred. From the Braddock Orderly Book Is taken Washngton's laconc report on that dsaster as follows: July 9, Wednesday. Monongahela, near Fort Uuquesne: On the 9th, I attended hm (Braddock) on horse-back, though very weak and low.. On ths da} he was attacked, and defeated by a party of French and Indana, adjudged not to exceed 300. When all hope of rally- Ing the dsmayed troops and recoverng the ground was expred (our,provsons and stores, beng.gven up) I was orered to Ounbar's camp. A few days later he wrtes from Fort Cumberland to John Augustne Washngton: As 1 have.heard, alnce my arrval at ths place, a crcumstantal account of my death and dyng speech, I take ths early opportunty of contradctng he frst and of assurng you that I have not as yet composed the latter. What a chance waa lost there to antcpate by more than a century Mark' Twan's celebrated epgram about tbe news of hs death beng "greatly exaggerated"! But It could not be expected that Washngton, wth the scenes of that carnval of blood stll fresh In hs mnd, would be Inclned to comment upon such a report wth any degree of whmscal humor. Instead hs thoughts on the matter were' far dfferent. In tone, and they suggest the possblty nt hs havng some- strangely prophetc vson of the destny tha awln«1 hm when he contnued hx letter wt I these words: By the all powerful dspensatons of Provdence, 1 have been protected beyond, human probablty and expectaton: for T had four bullet* through my coat, and two horoes «hot under me, yet.'scaped unhurt, although death was levelng my companon* on every sde of me. ' And there are those who agree as to the "dspensaton of Provdence,' who beleve that If the bullet whch klled Edward Braddock. the Brtsh general, had struck down Instead a young' colonal named George Washngton, the hstory of the Unted States would have been vastly dffer ent New York. Samuel Ots, secretary of the. frst senate under the Constltu tlon. held the Bble on a cushon whle oath was admnstered. * At the close of the ceremony the frst Presl dent bowed down and kssed tte Bble. Tbe rght of property Isn't holy, bat Is Just common sense. The man wn la Industrous enough to attan prop erty nugnf to have "nore rght* than tbe loafer. Atcblsoo Globe prophetcal Old Moored -slaaaae, probably tte teat known, predcts wan and roof wars throngbout tte world. IMdastral unrest wll occur at Intervan. Tte poutcal partes to Brtan wffl undergo startlng and unexpected changes wth at least one bg upheaval lkely to set Brtan to.a ferment Western natons, are urged to guard aganst tte awakenng of Chna, wth Us consequent reacton on tbe orental temperament to So Fve IcflpsM. In tte frst of tte fve eclpses whch occur durng tte year, three of tte sun and two of tho moon, t Is predcted that every effort wlt be made, to brng, about the fall of tbe Brtsh government and to Involve Brtan In war* fare. Poltcal enterprse from Rome wll endanger the peace of Europe, the forecasters say, and tbe Medterranean basn wll becnue a seethng cauldron by the frst week In August Tbe next eclpse. It Is prophesed, wll wtness martal reelngs In Italy toward Austra. 8ecret plots aganst Brtan wui be batched. War n the East wll be followed by actve warfare In many places. A revoluton among transport workers aqd mysterous deaths In hgh places feature the thrd eclpse, says Od-Meem,..0fttenrse.tte.perlod,ls.a blank. Tbe fallng of the fourth eclpse on the horoscope of Mussoln Is a fnal warnng to the projector of tbe Roman empre, It s predcted.' Mussoln s told to beware of France. There s a sgn of actve hostltes from Rome eastwards. Ths wll be fouowed by a great earthquake. Europe wll face many exchange problems, and Brtan wll be no excepton. Danger to London Is predcted In tbe fnal eclpse. There wll be great alarm among tbe Inhabtants and a hasty exodus. The cty wll be under a "cloud" greater and more dstressful than the worst of Its hstorc fogs. The people wll have to face great hardshps n regard to food supples and transport servce of all knds. Some compennatlons are offered The people wll become more sober, whle relgous effort wll receve a good deal of encouragement Good weather Is predcted. As a fnal warnng, however, old Moore foreshadows the spread,of Russan propaganda In Inda and Chna. Raphael, "the Prophetc Messenger," has no soothng ol In hs almanac. Storms and Floods. He predcts floods, earthquakes and wdespread death and dsaster early In tbe year, to be followed by a crescendo of dsaster at tbe year end. December wll be marked by great storms, and devastatng earthquakes, affectng Amerca, France and Europe. Brtan wll be faced by tbe danger of a great mnng dsaster March brngs news of wars and declaratons of war. Mussoln may be endangered, the almanac states, whle fascsm s lkely to fall as a house of cards. A fearful"fre and a ralway accdent, hurrcanes, and. sesmc shocks wll follow. Sckness, labor revolts, a great spread of drug vctms and other forms of vce, a wave of crme and an outbreak, of pests of varous sorts, are also predcted In the new,year. Zoo Plans to Group Anmals by Geography Berln. Anmals n captvty are to be gven a new deal at Munch, where the frst "geographcal zoo" Is about to be constructed. Tbe custom of exhbtng tbe varous speces of wld and domestc anmals accordng to types of famles wll fee rtsregjjsqad.. Bengal, Afrcan and Manchuran lons wll not occupy cages next'to one another. Instead, Afrcan elephants, zebras and other fauna from tbe same contnent wll have ther quarters In tbe same secton of the zoo. Wherever they are not a type that seeks to devour or destroy the other, they wll even be permtted to roam about wthn the same Inclosure. Tbe drectors of the Munch xoo beleve that ths Is a much more humane way of dealng wth beasts n captvty. Cages wll be abolshed as far as possble. It Is hoped that breedng n captvty wll be encouraged, by ths system. Summer Ermne Fur New Weasel to Scence New Orleans. A new speces of weasel has been found n tbe swamps of Lousana, E. Raymond Hall, enrator of mammals of the museum of the Unversty of Calforna, has announced. Although- long known to the trappers and tq,the fur trade, ths weasel Is a speces new to scence, declared HslL Unlke the weasel or tbe northern statesv the Lousana anmal does.not change Its fur.to pure whte'in wn ter. It retans ts brown coat the year around, and for that reason has been known to the trade as "summer ermne." ' v Tbe habtat of the new weasel Is In the parshes or the southern porton of the Lousana delta, wbere also arc? found many moskrnts. ol kav* of thewsyasf weattk bap bad HttW Arts* vssotm ttefsmralof so s,that of Us as well s Is a part of the rte. After trbemsn's death, mlattfea and frends reman for severs! days wth n tbe Indus lodes. They hare no chars or beds, tetslt or sleep qcrtbe wooden floor. Tte cssroas permts them to leave quetly and to stay away an boor or two. The cofln Is n tbe center of tbe room, and pad mourners chant werd tunes la a eor- When the bural day arrves, tbe body Is placed n a fttng posture and a panter draws lnes on tbe face, each lne representng an outstandng benev. otent deed. Tbe Indans fle by the. corpse; snd whsper In the dead man'a ear the communcatons they want delvered to relatves who preceded hm to tbe happy buntng ground. Tbe body Is taken to tbe grave, and after tbe bural the funeral party returns to tbe borne of tbe deceased for a^yeast Often several beeves are slaughtered for ths feast, snd many of tbe whte man's best foods also are served. All tbe'guests are expected to eat heartly. The entre trbe and Its whte frends are unted.' The estate of the deceased pays for tbe feast. Boat Ted to Wharf for 3,000 Yean Dscovered Berln. A boat, ted to Its landng wharf for 8,000 years, has been found bured under sx feet of peat In an ancent bog In npper 8uabla, accordng to Dr. Oscar Paret, a Stuttgart archeologst It u a dugout canoe about ffteen feet long, hollowed out of tbe trunk of a gant oak. Tbe ades. Doctor Paret says, were shaved down to a surprsng thnness. Several paddles were found In t A number of earthen vessels snd bronae objects found In the turf uroundjt date the boat as of the Bronze age;'about' 1000" B. C contemporary wth the sege of Troy and the regn of Solomon n Jerusalem.' The boat was found at the end of one of three long wharves, wblcb ran back to the vcnty of the remans of a number of houses, Apparently there was once a vllage on tbe edge of the bog, on a sold ground, separated from tbe open water of tbe lake by a wde, marshy margn, wblcb could be crossed only by these causeways. When the vllage ste was abandoned, the vegetaton n the bog and the lake contnued to grow untl tbe lake dsappeared and tbe plng up of the dead leaves!.and.stems bured all the works of the ancent men who lved there and used to go fshng In ther dugout canoes. Oho Governor*. Wfe Is Real "Homebody" Columbus, Oho. If there Is anythng to be done around the Vc Donuhey home to make It a lttle more "homey" Mrs. A. V. Donahey does It herself. She la essentally a home bulder. «The Donuheys bave ten chldren, and when they moved Into the Oho executve manron some fve \years ago there were several chldren, yet under the parental rooftree, requrng the panstakng care that all growng chldren do. : The governor's lady raked grass, cut weeds and sowed seed whle the sun beat down hotly on ther vacaton ste last summer, and she reveled n It then she and the governor decded to buld a new cottage on an adjonng lot 8o they helped erect a lttle stucco home wth an old-fashoned freplace In the center of ts generous lvng room. But when Mrs, Donahey returned to Columbus she adapted herself readly to tbe manson's background, recevng In the approved manner at mnslcales and the lke. A Perfect Mn New Yorkv-^Tbe army recrutng bureau has a perfect man Sergt Herbert B. Smth, aged twenty-seven, weght 188, heght 5 feet fl Inches. He passed 1 an examluu coverng moral, mental and physcal attanments wth a mark of 100 per cent He does not drnk. He smokes a ppe. r130,000 Match Boxes n Boheman Neudek. Bohema. A gate of j match boxes Is a current attracton here. The Assocaton of Germans In < Bohema, tbe largest "veretn" of Its knd In. OsecboslovSUs. planned a get-together of all Its, members, As a spedsl attrac- ' ton tbe admnstratve commt- : tee bt upon the Idea of con- ; structlng a gate of honor entrely of match boxes. Every member of the assodston was requested to contrbute empty match boxes. It-was.not long b 000 boxes hsd reached Nendek. Adolf Delmer. a Ifeudek artst then constructed tbe match-box gate, beleved, to bave bad no counterpart. cantag to m old story that s ear to year by Wth'the spectacles, tbe story, SttftDtt Is gold and Has. Ths fact, probably the presents of the das, helps keep tte taw alve. Tte story, too, 1 has te hstory woven tnto It to ante t plausble, sspsrally when every so often some plowmen or well wmpsv* uncovers a spot In tte vcnty wheresomethng ones was bdden. Tte begnnng of tte tale goes back to tbe tme when Joseph ScBltb washlled by a mob n Cartbags, ty. rotlowng hs death two tolers areaswthn tbe cult One was Brlghan Young, who led bs charges to Utah and made natonal blstory.-tbs other, about whom leas s generally known, was James Jesse Strsng, a mas whose pcturesque career Is worthy of a novel. 8trang, sad to bave been to possesson of the sacred spectacles, eventually led the lttle band that followed blm to Beaver Island In Lake Mchgan, southwest of the 8tralU of Mack- Inac, and tbe neghborng lttle Hgh Island, alleged Elba for recalctrant members of tte Israelte Houw of Davd. ' Ether because the northern clmate was too rgorous or because the hlglt quorum of tbe Mormon prle»tlond> then lay nearer tbe southern border of Mchgan, Strang decded to purchase land tor bs colony near Sturgls. ' Messengers Carry (told... For ths purpose he s supposed to> have sent two messengers south. These messengers had wth then* $120,000 In gold to buy tte land. But for some unexplaned reason they dd not buy and Instead returned to the colon;, leavng the money burlejl on one of tle varous peces of property they had vewed wth an eye topurchasng. Strang, In the meantme,' fndng that bs colony was numerous enough to control tbe votng strength of hs county, was elected to the state legslature. He served two terms there, but had a stormy tme and at last wa* lured off In a boat and klled by hs enemes. Shortly after hs death tbe burvd money came to lfe agan. Two counsellors went south once more. Wltl» them they had a lttle lead box contanng'the law-gvng spectacles anrf some books of ther fath. These they are supposed to bave bured wth the money. Returnng to Beaver sland, h» counsellors made a memorandum of ther actvtes and the locaton of the burled box. But the memorandum was lost and wth It the treasure. London Inyents Lock. to Guard Mlk Bottle London. 8clence and a London mlk company have come to the old of desparng houbewlver whose mornlk bottles of mlk bave been dsappearng wth Irrtatng regularty. Doors are beng ftted wth a devce whch automatcally locks the mlk to the door and places s metal sheld over the top of tbe bottle. It ran only be released from the Insde of tbe door., * The devce Is placed hgh op on the door out of the reach of chldren and cats. The metal cap coverng protects the bottle from maraudng brds, A determned thef could only break the bottle, but that would arouse the household. Recently resldentc of an entre Mock clslmed that ther mlk 4*ae beng tampered wth and an -Inspector assgned to learn the cause dscovered an aged Jackdaw makng the rounds, peckng out the pasteboard bottle caps, apparently for bs own mschevous amusement The nsw nventon wll take care of hm. too. Huelva, Span, Plans Shaft to Columbus Hnelva, Span. A great monument to Columbus Intated In Amerca Is to be erected In tbe place where ttur explorer spent bs last nght before salng on hs quest Almost three-quarters of s century ago the monastery of La Rahlda, whence Cotunbus saled to the New world, was ordered demolshed by. the government and tbe land where It stood, save that occuped by the lttle church, was ordered turned over to truck gardeners for tbe rasng of onons and caulflower. But tte governor who receved the oruer wts soon removed snd bs successor declned to carry out the mynl decree. Hs name wss Marano CHStlllo and n ht honor tbe dry of Huelva has named a street after hm and the monastery has now placed hs portrat to the room occupwi «y Father Marchena. who helped Columbus In bs enterprse. Phlladelphla.-Aufomnblles 5 mls apece I Two were knocked dnun nt that prce by the polce to an auptlnnof lost, strayed or stoles The buyer* were Junk deulersv

3 A Courtyard In Bogota. na hy tke Netleaal OM Soctety. WMUntt D. CTt BOGOTA, captal and metropols *L,$t. Colomba, haa's* -Indtvldn. J atlty In ta atmosphere that the Tsltor at once notces, he general character of the buldgs, the preaence of an open square puna In the center of the cty, Ithout whch BO Latn Amercan setement la complete; theae and other saturea are strongly remnscent of gons north of the Isthmus. Bat fere Is a feelng of Isolaton about «place whch Is new to the traver. '. Perhaps It les partly In the memry of the 12 days' Journey up the gdalena rver from the Carbbean Dscountng as. best.one can ths dor, he'stll feels as be gases past ubstantlal houses of brck and plasto the dstant crests of the.suma mountans, as he breathes d>epof the cold, rare atmosphere of lese Andean heghts, and as he wantrs through sde streets, strangely lent save for the patterng of ban upon the naked cobblestonesstll feehv'and wth a convcton tat Increases rather, than dmnshes the days pass by, that he baa left ehlnd, far down beyond the Magda- >sa, those thngs wth whch be Is tnlllar and haa launched upon a urney through a new world. The almost total absence of Indans, characterstc of Mexco and Gnatla, stands put promnently. The appear to be of two classes: ll-dressed men and women of pure, nlsh stock, and the somewhat ragpeon element the laborng class whose faces gve evdence that the n race, though vanshed n Ita rlty, stll llngemjn the blood of lese sturdy folk of the plateau. ' As the vstor comes Into more Inmate contact wth the lfe of Bojta, of Ita many dlstlngnlshlng feares, none s more attractve than te elegance of Its Spansh. If hs wn vernacular baa been pcked up travels through Central and South merca, he feels It so glarngly out place that he scarcely dares to teak. Ther Spansh Is Pure. It Is sald;that the Spansh of p'rest-duy Bogota Is unusually pure beuxe t haa been free from the conrolnatng nfluence'of other tongues, lbcha, the language of the aborgl Inhabtants of the plateau, scarcesurvved the Conquest. It Is true, lerefore, that there has been less portunlty.to Incorporate natve rms, or to acqure a natve accent, nn has been the case In Mexco. Ith ts' huge-' element of Nahuatlteaklng aborgnes, \ or In Peru, here the language of the Incas Is III spoken by several hundred thound people. Freedom from contamnaton may nt for the purty of Bogota sh, but It cannot account' for Ita Only a people of real In- Illgence and- of lesure to cultvate e fner thngs of lfe could have de- unversal, aa It Is today In Bothe use of language whch for tleal purty and rhetorcal' flnh Is unexcelled In Amerca. Added ths polsh Is a quxotc love of speech, whch Is to the outder one of the most delghtful trats the Bogotano. There are probably few places In e world where more attenton to Iven to 1 dress than In tlls remote ndean cty. Even the humblest cltlostcftses a cutaway coat and slk Wth many these are reserved be worn only upon great occasons, those who can afford It don ths rb regularly to the, afternoon, almost equal regularty evenng, dress at sundown. The f-the-wjdktey-stlckjaunlvenpt Queer Roots In the ajartwt A vst to Bogota's market place fcmvlnces one- that he las left behnd > beans corn aad'sn>»*b Property of the Watertown Hstorcal Socety CRANTWER gstesjtsjstllaftsrlvatfe AFTER ALL of Central Amerca and baa entered Into new regon, the Andean tone, In whch the potato replaces Indan corn to a large extent, whle other root crops cublos, hlblas, arracachas and ehuguas play Important roles. Wth the excepton of the potato,^ these products are not often seen on the tables of the well-to-do: they are staples among the lower classes, but are relegated to the background by those who can afford-to do, so...'.. ^ The arracacha s the most lkely to please the palate of a Northerner. It suggests the parsnp In character, but Is of better flavor and texture than that somewhat unapprecated vegetable. In the homes of the humbler folk and sometmes, atoo, on the best tables In Bogota, for ths vegetable enjoys wde popularty small chunks of arracacha root are often found In the savory sancocho, a sort of South Amercan Irsh stew. The hlbs Is a slender, pnkshwhte, tuber, whch yelds, when stewed wth sugar, a product strkngly lke green apple sauce. The cublo, a whte tuber about the slse and shape of a small sweet potato, and the chugua are of a' muclagnous consstency and Inspd flavor not Ifkely to please.the novce.. The market strkes one ss one of the most complete In. all tropcal Amerca. It occupes an entre d{y square of large slse and Is dvded Into a number of sectons, each devoted to some partcular product or group of products. Here la a long row of stalls, all handlng nothng but root crops and grans; there another row, where fruts only are sold, and close besde It the vegetable secton. Elsewhere are baskets and natve artcles of bamboo, as well as ropes, fber sandals, pack saddles, and the lke; and fnally, along the northern edge of the lnclosure, a row of tny shops, boastng more dgnty than the others, wheren the countryman can purchase a new ruana before returntog home. The Ruana Is Ther Poncho. The ruana Is the Colomban equvalent of the poncho, so wdely used elsewhere In Latn Amerca. It Is somewhat less ample than the latter, measurng usually four to fve feet In dameter; It Is square and made of two strps of natve woolen cloth sewed together so as to leave a slt n the center through whch the head of the wearer can be thrust. It Is not an elaborate, nor yet an elegant, garment; but there are few thngs more expressve of unaffected grace than the manner n whch a country gentleman of the Colomban Andes dons hs ruana when mountng for hs mornng rde about the hacenda. Wth one hand he gathers up the folds and opens the slt In the center; then, wth a majestc toss he throws It over hs head, allowng tbe folds to fall upon hs back and shoutden. If the weather te far, he turns up the two corners In front and drops them one over each shoulder. In many Inland ctes of Latn Amerca the departure of tbe daly, sem-weekly, or perhaps weekly tran for the coast Is an event of socal Importance. In few of them, however does It assume the Internatonal aspect whch attaches to the departure of the tran for GIrardot Bogota to a large cty, by Latn Amercan standards, and the people do not have overly much to amuse them. Furthermore, travel from ths remote -Andean captal to the Carbbean coast to nor really heavy. For all these reu. the Bogotanm rarely fall to take full advantage of the departure of a frend for Europe as we are," sad Marvto Webster. esspbatlcauy and Marvn Webster, terns*, deddsd after weghng a' That waa why the swtod hm to. qsrtog Judgment and honesty. "PreJ- dce has nothng to do whh It." ^ added. Tve thought the matter over farly. Ufa a luxury we can't afford.' -Why?" asked Grantber Webster. "Because every dollar pat Into. Insurance would be token from the chldren's dottng or schoolng or somethng equally Important You know bow bard the troes are wth us. grantber. I work from fourteen to sxteen hours a day and yet every dollar that comes crawlng In, has to go flyng out" "I know. son. 1 know. But ye've got Insurance on tbe house an' barn,;* "A lttle, yes. They mght twrn and leave us or the cattle homeless." "Seems to me lfe Insurance Is pretty much along the same lnes." "Maybe." calmly. "I'm not aganst lfe Insurance for those who can afford If "You mght de." -- "There's a chance of Uncertanly." admtted the farmer. "But Ifs' only a chance, whle the money necessary to provde aganst It would be an Immedate and postve loss to the chldren. A good educaton and fttng for some professon or trade, as they seem Inclned. Is the best Insurance I can-.leave them." =. But granther ddnt seem convlrfceav "There's a good many Ifs an' and* an' nuts." he sad, gently. "You're a better argufler than I be, son. an' can make'thngs stand out your way. Rut I alnt sure. I've lved a good whle, an* In my eghty years have seen heaps of tmes when a lttle outsde help would have prevented trouble or the Unted States. They down to the e tran tralnan jn-hour-befovrr scheduled-to-lssve--sevehe-mornlna'rtfaerr a» flowers and- o'clock In sweetmeats to be presented: and good-bys are ssldtand' resald many tmes before tbe nto fnally pulls p Sound sense an' hard work are most, but not all. They're lable to have gaps an*, so far an we ran. them caps ought to be provded for. At least, that's m.y Idea." "Why not empty that stackng heel or tn box or wherever It's kept. Intr the Idea?" suggested hs, son,, teasngly. "Provde for n gap. gran'ther." The old man chuckled. "Have your fun, son." he sad. "Boys wll, be boys. You're only forty and I'm eghty an' that makes me thnk I must go rght out an' cut over my 'spnragns bed." He rose and went out, and hs. sun. after a few words wth young Marvn and Alce about ther school books, went back to the plantng he had left at sound of the breakfast bell.. All the Webtters were workers. The chldren, wth ther two or three hours before and after school; Mrs. Webster, who looked after the poultry and dary and superntended the ktchen garden In addton to dong the regular household work; her husband, wth hs fourteen to sxteen hours a day. and gran'ther. who was always "putterng" about. Gran'ther was somethng of a mystery to the others; It was evdent that most of hs putterng had drect, tangble results, aa wth hs asparagus and scarcely less proftable "rosberry patch" and strawberry vnes. He doled out enough frut for table use and took all the rest Into town hmself, htchng the old horse, whch hart long outlved feld usefulness, to a buggy even more ancent. He never took the new buggy or one of the best horses. Old companons were moat sutable, he chuckled. They were three of a knd. What the chldren and ther father and mother earned could be seen In food and clothng, a few school books and other thngs. The money ther labor brought In could be accounted for In vsble objects, almost to a cent. When gran'tber's frut and asparagus dsappeared at a bend In the road t was the end. He never bronght anythng back. He had gven up the use of tobacco years before because It "cost too much." But not one. of them' ever thought of Gran'ther Webster as. s mser, pear, no! The gentle-voced old man who always bad a cheery word or kndly act for others, wth never a thought for hmself, waa the last man In the world to be mserly. Somewhere In a stockng heel or a tn box or perhaps under o loose board lay a lttle hoard watng for somethng that gran'ther had In mnd. Prosperty was not smlng on the lttle rocky farm. these days. The fourteen or sxteen hours, the mother's dversfed tabors, the chldren's belp.all went up to mak* a trfle less than the lvng and mortgage Intereat and taxes. Tbe.rest went to swell the mortgage. There waa only one apparent way out. It occurred to Marvn Webster more than once and was dsmssed wth repugnance. Mrs. Webster thought of It, and her face clouded. Even the chldren knew, and U was young Marvn who frst spoke the thought aloud. "Well have to sell or rent the farm and move over to the factosy vllage, father," be sad,' "We can all get Jobs tsrtbe-mlll-at-gmnlpay have gone and tbe boys yt and better pay." :, '... ' "And a lfe sentence ranyh*" naled hs rather. "N». nn. my boy. we t thnk of that There's an apt they cesse taroagh tae sate bsalthy as yoa an te be started tote next year. Alce enterng Ugh school wth dad made up as te what aba.- "That's Just tbe trouble.- berat oat young Marvto protesttegly. "It's Just far Alce and me We dont want so much sacrfce. Tm not a boy any longer, father, but a man grown to sue If not In years. I can see thngs. You're not old enough for year shoulders to be stoopng and your har to be so gray. And mother's lookng tred out. too. We cant " The old farmer lad a hand upon hs ant's shoulders. "My boy," be Interrupted, "your mother and I want you and Alce to do tt for us. It has been the one great thought In all our work and plannng for years. I ddnt get ray chance: I dont want you to lose yours." "But It Isn't rght." faltered the boy. *!atlce and I coulb work In the factory for a year, savng all our money, then go on wth our studes.. YfflL know we mght lose the farm If thngs go on lke they've been dong." "The farm wll hold out tll you and Alce are settled." returned hs father. That Is the man "pont And I don't lke Interruptons, for they're lable to prevent any more gong on. You've got a lot of ambton, and so has Alce: but I wouldn't wonder If your mother and t have ths future more at heart than ether of yon. Wont you fll It out for us?" The boy struggled wth hmself for some moments, then, nodded. 'All: 'rgur: father.*" he agree*. "And Pll study as 1 never dd before, to more quckly ft myself to take some of the burden." So another year passed, snd tbe mortgage grew a lttle larger, and the fgure of Marvn Webster a lttle more weary lookng. But the wearness was not In the eyes. They seemed to be growng younger wth the progress of hs hoy and gtr. Then one..mornng they found gran'ther had gone away. Only hs body was In bed. A few dnys after, they looked for the stockng or tn box. or whatever It mght be. gong about the room wth lovng thoughts and reverent steps. But nothng was there. "Probably he has sent It away to releve the dstress of some old frend." hs son sold softly. "Gran'ther had a good many frends. Lkely, some old solder's famly." Gran'lher had been an offcer In the Cvl war. wth a record. Hs commsson and other chershed mementoes were- In hs lttle horsehar trunk. Mrs. Webster looked them over, wth a thought of savng them for the chldren. Among them was a paper, whch she passed to her husband. "What do you make It It. Margn?" she asked. He read t through from end to end. slowly, carefully, hs face work- Ing strangely. "It's a lfe Insurance polcy." be answered at length. "Been runnng for years. It's for $4,000. And on s slp of paper pnned to It gran'ther says $1,000 Is for Marvn to fnsh bs educaton and one for Alce to fnsh hers. The other two are to nay off the mortgage and to have some to put Into the bank to keep off any more worry. Ths Is why granther gave up hs smokng all these years. And he never told me anythng about It. because he knew I was aganst lfe Insurance for poor folks." Marvn was very thoughtful the rest of the day. The next mornng whle they were at breakfast he looked across at hs wfe. "Gran'ther was rght and 1 waa wrong," he sad. "We haven't the money, and I 1 wouldn't lke to use any of gran'ther's for a thng I've been aganst But I thnk we can spare one of the horses the bg black. We'll use the money to get lfe nsurance for us, wfe." Wommn Prate* Make Appearance n Chna There are few rofessous und occupatons that wanen of the West have not nvaded. They' have eventackled-the 8teeplejack's job and tred marne-engneerng. It has. however, been left to the women of the East to lead the way aa poneers of pracy on the hgh seas. Women have. Indeed, played an mportant part In some or the recent pratcal attacks on the West rver, near Canton. One woman to sad to have appeared on deck wth the rest of tbe gang, a revolver n each band and wearng a mask made from a' handkerchef. She held up the purser In bs offce and threatened to shoot the rest of the crew unless he handed over the keys. She was a Chnese woman, smartly dressed and wearng black patentleather shoes, whte slk stockngs, a serge skrt and a fox fur. When a band* of rver brgands were captured recently It was found that two of them were women. Fortyone of the gang were sentenced to death, but the'women were spared. Phlp Hone,- a-merchant who waa later mayor of WeWYork and promf rent In natonal poltcal affars, estnhllshed the frst savngs bank to New York In EGGS IN WINTER AEE PROFITABLE Wnter to the very tme when are worth the most, when bens want to lay as much or more than they do at any other tme, and when they are not allowed to do so by most poultrykeepers. Folks thnk there la a great mystery about'makng bens lay to wnter. There to none: anybody can do It; that to, the hens wll lay If ton let them. They bear a good deal of cold to the sunshne, and even frees* ther combs and toes, and yet wll net stop layng altogether If they van sleep warm. They are warm themselves, and usually only need to be crowded on ther roosts, wth the roosts all on one level. The cellng of the roostng warn should be only a few feet ab»v» the fowls' heads, and provded wth ventlaton from the floor If posslole Gve them very close quarters, wth no draughts of cold ar, and fteaa oat under the roosts every mornng. The combs wll then redden up, and eggs wll be plenty on less feed than usual. It roust not be corn, however, or only a small percentage of t, for ths wll make them too fat to lay well f they sleep warm. A good way to arrange a ben house for wnter to to make a cellng of rals -about sx feet above the floor, coverng the rals wth hay, or coarse swamp hay of any knd. The roosts should be about three feet hgh above the floor, and movable, so that they may be kept perfectly clean. For small flocks of 80 to BO bens. It to lttle trouble to take the.moats down every mornng when the floor Is cleaned, and replace them at nght It removes from lacy fowls the temptaton to alt h Idleness on the roost for half the day. Keep Chckens n Good Health by Gvng Oats One or the best ways to keep chckens In good health Is to feed green food. It acts as a regulator, keepng the bowels open. Sprouted oats are as good a source of green food as.anythng, when fed, roots and all, to the layers once a day as much as the brds wll clean up In about half an hour. The oats are soaked for 24 hours In warm water, that Is, slghtly warmer than room temperature. They are then spread In tray a of any convenent slp to a depth of about one and one; half Inches und allowed to sprout untl the green sprouts are about three Inches long, at whch tme they are fed. If tbe oats can be kept at a temperature of about 70 degrees, tbe sproutng wll be more satsfactory than If the room Is cool. To prevent the oats from becomng moldy, wach and dsnfect the trays when they are empted after each sproutng. Three or four drops of formaln may be put In each pall of water used for soakng the oats, before they are spread on the trays. Sometmes the oats are allowed only to germnate, that Is, they are soaked In water as for sproutng and are spreud on the trays but are not permtted to sprout to the extent descrbed above. They, are fed when the sprouts show a length of only one-fourth Inch. They are not green. These germnated oats are frequently mxed In the mash anl fed. Metal Bands Are Useful n Cullng Hen Flock In order to systematcally cull the poultry flock, one should know bow old the hens are. All two-year hens ought to be sold, wth the excepton of those to be used for breeders. Ths s especally true of the general purpose and heaver breeds. If the pullets are marked wth some knd of a metal band, one wll have no chance for guesswork. Specal sealed bands may' be secured for the purpose or ordnary round hog rngs may be used. The advantage of the regular bands les to the fact that each hen can be Identfed. If the bands are put on the left leg one year and on the rght leg the next year, one has an accurate mark by whch he can tell the age of the hens. Sand Is Essental Sunrt Is essental for hens to supplv grt but not for dustng materal Kven fne sand would not be dusty enough to do any good from the standpont of a dust bath. Hens dust themselves In order to keep lce under control and ther feathers In good condton. The fne-dust gets Into the breathng pores of the lce, thereby extermnatng them. Supply the hens wth a good-qualty dust snd then rve them nharp sand -so that they can pck up the grt. Hen to Keep The knd of a hen to keep s one that s strong and vgorous wth a short, neat head and a strong beak. She has a long, deep, rectangular body, the top and bottom lnes of whch are parallel. She has large brght eyes, to actve and; has short, well-worn toe nals. She tent much for appearance,-..but -has s brght 1ty- «o1(r~8mrnmltt-late-and-rak Idly: to nosy, happy and frendly. She retres late and to off the roost wth be break of day. Sde COULDNT OUTDO HIM The scene to a quarter eta century ago to a backwoods secton. A brokendown motorst was tryng to make conversaton wth the farmer across the fence who was havng trouble wth hs mowng machne. "What knd of a machne to tbatr asked the fanner. "That to an automoble." repled the tourst. "And what do you call that machne of yours?" "Oh," repled the fanner dsgustedly, "that to an automowhuy.'but It won't" The Temptaton "Whatever Induced you to marry me, anyway, If I'm so dstasteful to your be asked fercely. "I thnk It was the ads," she repled. "The what?" "The advertsements. The household bargans, you know. 1 thought t would be so lovely to go to the department stores and buy Ice pcks for only 9 cents and 25-cent egg beaters marked down to 14 cents, and so on. Of course. I had no use for that sort of stuff as long aa I remaned sngle." TOOK HIM OFF HIS FBBT Tourst There's one wonderful thng about the Italan country that Just took me off my feet Frend And what was that? Tourst Ita earthquakes. "Does ha b«lon«to our «etr sbt asked.. And It arava th«tad a Jar. Bat b* rased tau head a* b* mldly sad: "I do wh»n w«have» war." Not Staworthy Gentleman (buyng an umbrella)! suppose It opens up all rght, has a good cover, and all that? Clerk Open It slrt Good gracous, no! People who can afford an umbrella lke ths usually take a tax at the frst suggeston of ran!" So Ineonmderatm Voce Over Wre Madame, husband baa been run over truck! your by a "Good heavens! On the afternoon of my brdge party!" A TOE DANCER "What knd of a dancer to her "A toe dancer Judgng tram my mashed toes." An Ancent ProUmm When Noah saled tb«ocean bo*. He had bt troubles skme r M you: For days and daya he drove the ark. Before he found a. place to park. George (nervously) I'd lke, the best to the world. Ktty, to marry you; but I don't know bow to Ktty (promptly and practcally) Thafa all rght, George. Yoo've fnshed wth me; now go to father. Two Credkm Buth rl gve Regnald credt n gettng me a nce engagement rlna. Ruby I expect that's what tk Jeweler gave hm. too. Bldermed Mother Helen to possessed. says she'll never be satsfed untl she to handlng the stck of an arplane." Father Try and persuade her that she can,get good practce by handllns tbe stck of a broom.. The Apmx e Dmprecttmm "Thnk of It! A hundred per cent year." ', - ' " " "What are ran mkng aboatf" "Auto lcense plnes." -'Al..-'-' vt'.

4 W- Property of the Watertown Hstorcal Socety *s«4t. C«r< #j»dber Publsher Pnunfa P. Ft**, AaaoeUte Edt*? ulmertpten J3 yearly, la Entered as 2nd class matter at the Watertown postomce under act of March ft. U71. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, ~ "THE DEMOCRATIC MESS" Marl; Twa once sad that a thn? 'whch * xasp*fa-d hm when readng thf Indan dores by Cooper was WHY ME COULJO MOT PAY wholesaler a answer to a dan: My Dear Frend: In Caro $10.0ft» was rased far tua I ben leave to nform you that the fund, an unheard of \hta«m the stated a 71 per eeat of the reples that the ecoaoaslc re to of present shattered condton of my East. About $».000.baa wthn the bank account makes t mpossble but two years been receved from prohbton had been benefcal both ror me to send you a check n response to your requests for funds frends n Sao Paulo and Ro de Jan- nearly three-tenths at the the few Syran alumn and ther to the paaea from ther stand- for the "Aged and Decrept Arm/ ero. Brazl. Indvdual Syrans Worms." have gven large sunu, many of them anonymously. Last week a formes The slate of jny present fnancal student. Raml* Sarkls. edtor of the condton Is due to the effects of Federal laws, stte laws, county laws, leadng Arabc newspaper ln Syra, turned over 1,000'' Syran to the corporaton lasvs, by-laws, brother-nlaw, *lster-u-la.w, mother-n-law and alumn fund. The money was* sent to hm by frends all over the world (tlau.-. Mn have been fosted upon "a,< a sft In commemoraton of the an utsu.-p'-c'k publc. Through m'th annversary of hs newspathese varous laws. I have been held tha. WIKII Rleoe was _worth at ln'.v, l>rll ut>. walked on, sat on. least $H' n second, someone was sure -:r:d.i.1. llal'cnt-l ml S. X. Mallouk, a, Sytfan busness man h New York and a former student, to step on a dr> twg. IJ.v the san" untl 1 do uot know where.1 am. token when', harmony nv seems es-en-' essental to tn- fortunes 's of H.- Den..., These laws, compel tte to pay a,,,,-*\ t * lhe unversty of Berut what I am. of why I am. " "«"' has»<» ur^" been *""» gttlng "" for - a - - number n> se. ns e^en,,. of wars $1.ftO«annually for scholarcratf party son, dstngushed m.rchan. r ax captal stock^tax ex- " Mme. Mare. el-khoury and P.M. member of t s lookng for trouble: cess proqt tak, ncome tax, real es Jabara. nether of whom has studed he s never compelled, lo look lone rate tax. school tax, syntax and carl»'t tacks. n the Unversty, have alwo been We now see one of those strknz mantanng a number of scholarshps ror the last years. Other large Instance* and. what s worse, we In addton to payng these taxes I hear t as well. The state whch once am requested and requred to contrbute to every socety and organ- Trabuls, Joseph Macksoud and An amounts have been gven by Naab sent fnderwood to the Senate now has a blatant soul named Hetln zaton that the nventve mnd of drew Ncola. DAvd A. Hmad, of whom t would be charty to regard man can organze. To the socety the class of 181)8, has nstalled a as nsane, but to be nsane presupposes, at least, a pror condton Keller, the Navy League, the CWI- campus of the Amercan Unversty n St. John He Baptst, the Woman's complete telephone system on the of santy and there seems no proof drens Home fund, the Polcemen's!, Bf, lrut> at a CO st of $4,000. that Hefln was ever In that condton.. Ilenefl. the Dorcas Socety tluty. SMm of tne cj of 1908 M. C. A the V \V C. A., the Boy ProfeMor Of Mathematcs at Ths year the llemocrats had at Scouts, the Jewsh Re."ef. the Bel- Pennsylvana. has least a lghtng phun.ee. Bryan, wlo k-pt th»>'party n the wlderness almos! as lof; us Moses kept te chl- the Gold Dggers' Home. Also every ' to the Amercan Unversty, of Belru» n memory of Dr. Carslaw, a ms- hosptal am. every chartable nsttuton In town, the Red Cross, the dren Ql l.sra'l there, s (lead and >> OIIP seemed wllng to take hs place sonary n hs Lebanon '.vllage who Illaclc..Cross--, the Whte Cross, the as offlctl trouble-maker but, when IU raged hm to go to school. Proand tlo Double Cross j matters wev a: ther brghtest, Hefl appeared or.- worse luck. I he povernmen has so governed. &A.,.,..-.-wr Shlbll, whle carryng a full. He Is opposed to Al Smth because I nw:.-- nt.v busn. \}. I ss ant that suspected,.nspected, I dn not know who! earned... ths nm-- money,. h. by,-.,, speakng on the X-ar Kast durng hs spare lme. *Je I latter l s not regarded ld as fdly frendly examlt'l, ' '" rt'rexnmlned. These gfts represent only a part to prohlbtuu nlthnugh Senator Hel:t know.- t s no more effectve n c n.fl! (1 unl all I know Is that I Alabama than ll s In Conneeteu' am encourage Anu-rlcan educaton, for supposed to- provde an whch Is Buyng qute a ll'.tle, but j ;. a most of nl. he s opposed to the New York Governor because the latter s a Roman Catholc. If Senator Hefln realzes that Artcle I of the Consttuton of the -Unted States begns wth "Congress shall make no law respectng the establshment of relgon, or prohbtng the free exercse thereof," he gves no sgn of the fact. Instead he' asserts that Roman Catholcs "seek hs lfe to destroy t." to quote from the Bble of whch one fears Senator Hefln knows lttle. On one day last week the Alabama man walked about the Senate Chamber shoutng a Speech. for two hours ard twenty mnutes though he could have uttered all the facts he had n stock n' less than fve mnutes of that tme. Tme s apparently as valueless to the Unted States Senate as t s to a hen, for the members, or some of them, sat there and were assumed to lsten, though why they should have done so s beyond human understandng.' Why should any one lsten to Hefln, most of all the Dem ocrac members who could not fal to realze tha he was dong hs best to wreck the 1 party as Bryan dd so often n hs day. No canddate can prosper f he enters the comng campagn carryng a handcap-of bgotry and.ntolerance but yet ths Alabama man apparently lves n the perod of the "No FoM-ry" rots whch'were epdemc n England tor a tme'durng the luter part of the 1Mb cev- '". j they are also makng large contrbuknown need; all I have and can go supply of money for every lons annually to the Syran Educatonal Socety In Berut and New out and borrow, beg and steal, money York to prepare boys for college entrance and to loan, them funds to, to gve away:* I am cussed, dscussed, boycotted, talked to, talked pay.ther fees at the Amercan Unversty of Berut. about, led to, led about, held up. held down, and robbed, untl I am nearly runed, so the only reason I Contrbutons from no less than am clngng to lfe Is to see what two thousand men and women of the H- s comng next. Sylvan n Syran orgn scattered all over the Telephone. < world and representng all the relgous sects and racal communtes NEAR EAST COLLEGE ASSOC. of the Holy/ Land have been re- What Is Beng Done by Graduates and Others to Ad These. Insttutons To the Edtor: In order to clear up any possble msapprehenson as to what the peoples of the Near East are dong to ad the. sx Amercan' Colleges n the Near ICaxt. I should lke to pont out several notable nstances of the way In whch graduates and former students are suptortng the work. In the frst place, students at all sx colleges the. Amercan Unversty of Berut. Robert College, Constantnople Woman's* College, Internatonal College of Smyrna, Sofa Amercan Schools... hud.athens College, (reece pay tuton and. boar! n. the same rato as do..students In frst class colleges and unvers- ceved. It s asserted by those who know that ths represents the greatest educatonal movement In the hs tory of the Syran people. Jacob Arakelyan, ah.armenan of Dorchester, Mass., has establshed a scholarshp fund n each of the. throe large colleges, representng a total nvestment of $30,000. The Armenan Educaton Foundaton approprates $1,500 annually to help nne men and three women pay ther tuton fees at the Amercan Unversty of Berut, lu Soft. graduates of the two Constantnople Colleges are 'rasng funds for one of the new buldngs of the Soda Amercan Schools. Through the: Interest of these alumn, the Bulgaran department of ag-. rculture has planted the new carajus wllh choce trees and shrubs and the Government has gven the buldng commttee a grant of lm ber worth $50,000. Alunn of hpso colleges n all parts of the world arc anxous to partcpate n fu'rtherng Amercan educaton n the Near East In the belef that t wll do more than any other- : sngle agency to establsh ud demandng between natons and to tes n-'r.-'knt<>d States. That s, the amount pad for tuton and board represents approxmately one ; hull" of the. actual cost of educaton per. student. Our: students do not tury. The D-mocras are due fur ask for charty.- another defeat unless' all sgns fal" and a Senator Snatr Helln llh Of of Alabama must j The graduates and students ' In colleges, feel as great a sense be hed-responsbl'-for to no small '" r Io - valt - v l() ""'' 1 alma mater as do degree. Norton n Shore I.ln- ' A ' l ' '' < " 1 students. d They are anxous to partcpate n puttng the develop goodwll In a part of the Tmes, February 2. colleges on a self-supportng bass world- whch has always been a THIS ALLEGED WINTER through the rasng of the $15,000,- breedng center - of wars. 000 endowment fund, and are makng So far, $7,717,165 has been rased By the tme ths s prnted 'th't' notable contrbutons to ths toward the $15,000,000 needed to may bo two fee.t.'of snow.on the campagn In addton to supportng mantan the work of the sx colleges ground and sub-zero temperatures many scholarshps, rasng lbrary as now consttuted. "Goodwll but t the moment when t.s typwl'aml other specal funds, grts" for the fund should, be made the ground s bare and grass (res j Perlups the most notable example payable to the Near- East College are abundant and pestferous. Sap, Is 1 rhat ftf Mr. Ery Kehaya, a trustee Assocaton. IS East 41st Street;-New s movng up n The maples ard l of Athens College, who was for a York. farmers cared to c!o so they malr -hort tme a student at Robert Co- Sncerely yours, use ther plow*. The old-fashoned,'"f*..mr. Kehaya beleves that WILLIAM MORGAN KINGSLEY wnters, of vhl'l we hear a<, a-n-n-' Amercan educaton n the Near East Charman/Executve Commttee, tons before u.s have, wen- not of ths, s tle on.-^wy of establshng goodsort vet memory remnd.- the wrter W 'M between the..*, countres and ol February 2, 1!»2S. Near East College Assocaton that the wnter of 1<AS was mld up b'nphur tn- Hatan peoples nto to the end of tn- fr.-!.-n days of '"ore frendly relatonshp. Accord- HAS PROHIBTTION PROMOTED March and :1K (> I! S um-hn^ he las contrbuted $IO<>,I>(IO' PRODUCTIVITY* happened. T ' u M a!:: lb:1.,,,...,, He.Found, rs 1 Fund-of Athra-I r. s. Senator Morrs Sheppard chansr'l' plm-n h...r.l. t al«.y- [<>]-K" md has elvt-n»5ii,ihiii for (Kxc,. m from speech n Congroe, has b'un. br : the cmae cmnr'-.s '''ldntt a boy.-' dormtory at, the January 16) nobody s a'«l" ;o catch n tn; ad. Sl '" ; - Nn ' rcn Schofls. In addon An mportant crteron by whcl: One may study the New Ifavwj"- sttpnrts sv.-.en scholarshps fur ' t0 ju(lge,, ro,bton may be found records whch so back to ll* 1780's ' Vultrlan boys and grls at Sofa, In the economc status of the naton and h.'wll fnd now am h^n a de-' ''"< a flre-k 10 f-on t r»>m.- so g-nvrcade wheren tl» tem;m'ratun-s ran. r " ls! > '" 'h- educuton or Bulgaran many others, prohbton has justfp ths vewpont, as well a lower than n the precedng one but, >< :l '" '-'» convncng expresson of tsplf Our standards of lvng have as a rule, the followng \<m years I nt-n.tf.nnllj,n. reached the hghest peak In hstory made good rh«. dfference. If we had A '!'"'k r'.-r.us In Athens, Mr. _ The productvty of Amercan records coverng a thousand years, E. A. It..akl. gave?7.-,.non for tn"...,... thp,. PVpr k nn s thf} Rrpltest ever known «. I we mght JIOIP a gradual drft ether frst bul.llns of Athens Colle K e am nm bpen well sad that prohbto toward colder or warmer weather, WW ror, equpment n addton,,, uttnk morp money ln the Amer but lfp s short and nature changes lo hs glt of a hrty-nve acre cam- can fan, ny,, O cketbook than It eve very delberately. Recent nvestga-. pus. AlroKftler Greeks both ton shows that-the ce-cap whch once covered New England was a.matter of '26,000 years n recedng from" Hartford 'to Sprngfeld, a fact whch makes us wary of acceptng the theory that' wnters were more severe when' Grandfather was a boy. has The lfe of any one of us s mghty Alumnae of f tlu- l fugtve but w«mav bp fpt'-lv pertan tl.t MI fj»r as h at and cold,' ' ho1 ' J.'Vdrouglns and flood. are comnd, there ml be mght} lttle change a hundred, years twce H. t wll not be a matter of grut non nt to us. Norton n Shore Lnt February 2. Tmes. n Gr'ec> and Ann-rca have contrbuted $I1O,IHIO for ths college as nral > Ull(1 had before. It s well known that blue Mon In $n.ooo fo r the llbrar,-' - by noontme beer n. wet era s Wo-.l ( fn tn I Sj-nn erulu.f., of thr Ameran I nvr-. f > of I;.nut ha\e bon tn ponuoh In establshng <<rlol.r<<hlp fund^ These alumn 1M\I> r.ml (",n,000 for the Unl t pont and to the employes from ther standpont that prohbton bad caused a general Increase n producton effcency, accompaned. by an Increased producton per hour per man; that less absenteesm, tardness, loafng on the Job. fewer ndustral accdents, ncreased earnngs, more contnuous employment, a-general mprovement n lvng..condtons had been noted as accompanments of prohbton. Henry Ford tells us (tbat In hs vast, workshops there were before prohbton In each group of men about 100 who gave trouble because of ndulgence n lquor, that after prohbton.the number n each group of 5,000 gvng trouble on account of drnk was less than" 10. He says that before prohbton It was necessary to nvestgate absences from work to ascertan whether the men bad been or were drunk or 'whether good reasons exsted for layng off: that n a large proporton of such cases drnk was found to be the cause; that after prohbton luch Investgaton had become' unlecessary. because t had been arned from observaton that lquor was no longer the trouble; that as a sut of prohbton the.men In hs 'actores were workng more, workng better, wastng U»ss and savng more; that now when a man's pay s rased the-ncrease goes to the Iff or. to a savngs account nstead f the. saloon keeper. It should be sad to Mr. Ford's ternal credt that when a bootleger begns operaton hear ha plants never rests untl the bootlegger Is apprehended, removed, and punshed.. He says' that ln thls^ work he gets the cooperaton of-local, state, nd federal authortes.» * * Prohbton Unted States Is the chest country n the world. The otal ncome of Its people amounted In 1926 to $90,000,000,000,.a sum never before equaled In ths or any ther land., Wth but lttle more than 5 per cent of the word's populaton, prohbton Unted States produces 43 per cent of the world's co'al and consumes 42 per cent* t produces 54 per cent of the world's ron and consumes 5? per cent;.t produces 64 per.cent of the world's steel and consumes 57 per cent; t produces 49 per cent of the world's copper and consumes 44 per cent; t-produces. 64 per cent of the world's petroleum and consumes 72 per cent; t produces 69 per cent of the world's cotton and consumes 37 per cent; t roduces 52 per cent of the world's tmber and consumes 51 per cent; t produces.41 per cent of the world's shoes and consumes 39 per cent; t produces 43 per cent of the world's prnt paper -and consumes 50 per cent; It produces 90 per cent of the world's automobles and consumes 80 per cent....' Prohbton Unted States has fve- Jghths of the bank deposts of the world or $52,000,000,000 out of $84, , Prohbton Unted States has 61, Snjrs and acts wth an jl)a(lonent that shoots nrrowk of fre over the footlghts. N. T. Post, Feb. 3. Feb. 13 Buckngham Hall WATERBURY METEOPOLTTAN OPERA'S FINEST LYBIC SOPRANO CONCERT Tckets $1.15, $1.73, $230, $238 and $3.45, ncludng tax, now at Stenert's, 55 West Man St, phone 3079 and Prentzel's. 48 Park Place, phone 3026, Waterbubry. NOTOE The Board of Relef of the Town of Watertown wll meet n the Town. Hall on the followng dates: February -1. from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. February ->. from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. February 6, from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. February, 9, from 9.a. m. to 5 p. m. 'February 11. from 9 a. m. to 5 p." m. February 20. from 9a. m. to 5 p. m. to attend lo any busness proper to come before the Board. Watertown, Conn.. January 23, 1*18. CHARLES B. LOCKWOOD CHARLES E. BRBWBTBK FREDERICK or the naton, as A result of prohbton, possess clearer mnd", steadl nerpq. and sounder mu*-rles Producton Effcency Increases Under Dry Law Roger Babson, one of the foremost economc experts In ths naton, reaflk, bat the earth's Natnrallr States leads water power; tta plants for ths purpose nearly equalng those of all of Eurtope,. - Prohbton Unted States has the largest per capta wealth of all the countres of the world., -Prohbton Unted State* has a natonal wealth of W2O.00O.00O.00O. more than half of the wealth of all 'the remander of the earth, and $200,000,000,000 ln excess of the nrxt wealthest country.. Great Brtan, whose wealth Is rated at $120,- ^ Dry Amerca Exeats n Number of Students The number of students attendng all knds of schools h the world outsde the Unted* States s roughly estmated, accordng to the Unted States Commssoner of Educaton, to be about 104^ In prohbton Unted States we have nearly 2S,000,000 n school «number equvalent to more than a fourth of that of the rest of the world'combned. Accordng to.the same authorty, there are- between and 950,- 000'students, n colleges and unverstes- outsde of the Unted States. behnd The next best thns, s excluson Cram the. mays whch. Postmaster. General New has osdered. The sla-a of the eontempume "league" that It had a rght to attach these Insultng tckers s met wth one suffcent word floom Mr."New who says "Bo-h!" And ho s lfccked up by the legal department department and unan publc opnon. Bftto Press, the postal decent 0IQGER AND BETTEh WINTER : The ground^bok barelj^ gof out at bs bole today before Jtfs shadow stretched across the snlnr, a cold. Indfferent remnder that I wnter has. hardly begun. There I no pessmst lke the, ground hag, n ordnary crcumstanc If>tbe akea are overcast and depressng, he s ' n hs element; If the sun shnes, he dves below n search of {ess cheerful surroundngs. He dosn't know any more about the weather than a rver rat. but he has managed to mslesd slot of people Into thnkng tbat he has a personal contact wth the weather man. Ground ' hoe or no ground hog. have'about or almost as that the month of February s very many as n all other countres of tely'to a. month of vgorous the earth put together. wnter. Wagers are n 'order'and I do not contend that prohbton; hwe, 8 at leagt one bet standng s the sole cause of all ths progress., ha,, he h w n gee ejev bu? The wets however, have panted, a n ^t e^ d^ N ^ o l h J n coujd such woerul pctures of a land de- j 8w >et(. r Th and bauched. and a people wrecked by )th(, ^ m Uke the prohbton that It Is but Just and j dea ot un nnusua)ly, onk far to put Intothe foreground trfay co, d bnt,, ne,, of New U.e real Unted States, the Unted ^ ^ ^ clan> the fw ^^^clan>the fw ^^ States ment and of the the Volstead Hghteenth Act. Amend-, blgger wnter8._ Waterbur - Amercan, Feb. 2. Clearly the Unted States under prohbton Is makng the greatest economc progress n Its own annals M1LO D. BEACH. EXASPERATING IMPUDENCE The organzaton callng Itself the "Ant-Imperalstc League" dscloses the same mperturbable Ig- Try a Classfed Adv. A P MEAT MARKET SPECIALS, PORK ROAST, rb end... lb. 17c Whole Lon... lb. 18c FRESH SHOULDERS, vey leanall s^zes...lbw 15c GENUINE SPRING LAMB SALE Legs, any sze... lb. 35c Forejs, whole... lb. 19c Roulettes,boned..;... lb. 31c SMOKED HAM SALE ^ Whole, 16 to 18 average lb. 20c Shank Half lb. 22c Butt Ends lb. 24c SKces lb. 39c * SUGAR, 10 lbs. for 59c The Great ATLANTIC & PACIFIC Tea Co. Have Ydu Made Arrangements For Your Vacaton? The WE SELL TRAVELERS 9 CHECKS -. * WE STORE VALUABLES Watertown Trust WATERTOWN, CONN.

5 Property of the Watertown Hstorcal Socety >«taste, ft fa th.a#wly rust scoots. Tfcsy steal to fts*j«ss tbsitth.aaasal tha'* the. TMe euath f save 'gone from tree to tree. The t» Mfa>*r Mary nowadays. thsrhwsmlo held to conneetwwlth Healthy tress are not tooefeed. The Asjktoaltnrat steettaf at tte > - that the ttsy wol apt want to drtak. Mo SS9KS woaltvthey mot to draft Qarde 14 Hsrttod last weak to the aatlossl Canhu taled to far to wort they would probamy be less lkely If then -wen open salooas; Indeed tog to the announcement ort&ounlssloner Platt. All the prses, oat as t tl expected. Instead of wpnc ot* the Uooor traffc t bw probably oentwd t. Certanly /there Is more drfaklog today tban there ever was. The saloons, many of them, probably mot of them, hare.been closed; q they are beng eose4 every day, and others are 'openng up. Whle ( cannot voocb for'bs from personal experence, ', I ant told by those who clam to ' know, that t s not dffcult to get a drnk p almost any cty or town, provded yon are known. The newspapers are full or accounts of lquor, cases and of much crme n whch lquor s concerned. There apparently l plenty of boose f one wants gantly. Nobody lkes to see a per- smoke too much, or dress extrava- t and has the money to pay for tson drnk too much. But many re- people used to drnk be- Wth all due respect to the sn-spectablcere advocates of temperance, t does seem as f they must be allowng themselves to be terrbly deluded f they really beleve that the prohl blton law and the condtons sur roundng ts enforcement have brought about benefcal results to ths country. They must ether, be blnded by ther fanatcal zeal fo - then- deal, or else they are unwllng to admt the condtons as they exst today, or else they cannot, see theso condtons. The drys can produce statstcs to prove that prohbton has succeeded.n brngng' about better socal condton*. The wets can show by statstcs that the country s worse because of prohbton. Statstcs can be made to prove, almost anythng. Few«r Drunkards *> The old tme saloon wth Its dsgustng condtons has pasned out. Perhaps we see few drunkards staggerng about the streets and lyng n the gutters. The drys beleve that the oncomng generaton, not havng seen these sghts wll not know what whskey and wne anl beer are. So they wll not have a chance to be tempted by strong drnk; thus they wll grow to manhood as temperate Indvduals. Many _ former drunkards have found t dffcult to get lquor, or pay the hgh prces for bootleg booze, so they have brought borne ther weekly pay.envelope to ther needy famles and ther savngs bank accounts have Increased;- Insofar as prohbton has produced ths result t has been benefcal. But there- s admttedly much lquor and much drnkng. It has been made a crme to sell moderate-, ly good lquor so people by the hundreds have learned to make ther own concoctons wth some knd of a kck n them. Many chldren now see lquor 'made n ther own homes. They certanly are gong to learn what lquor s, and they are gong to fcnow that t Is beng; made contrary to the laws of the land. The rch are stll able to get lquor of varyng qualty. A vast army of people are engaged n llegal sellng and transportaton of lquor. Some or them are payng fnes or servng Jal sentences, or beng shot n ther busness of volatng the laws. Another army of men upend ther tme n a' more or less sncere attempt to enforce the law. Some of these are gettng shot, or takng brbes to neglect ther sworn duty. I understand the job of an enforcement agent s extremely dangerous, and also- that there Is a great deal or crookedness n the busness. Men are pad by the government to enforce the law, and they are-pad by those engaged n the lquor busness not to enforce It. The whole'process seems to be demoralzng and encourages dsrespect for law. Poson Lquor 0. If the law worked- out as t was hoped t would there would be n ths country, only a comparatvely small amount or alcoholc lquor to. be used for medcnal purposes, and the chances are people could get along qute well wthout It when they are ll. But there are all knds of Jlquor n ths country, some of It good but most of It bad, and some of t poson. People make ther (Own hooch and 'cder and drnk It. 'People have It to sell and people buy It and drnk t. It costs more, but t s clamed you'don't need so much n order to get a tremendous kck out or t. Young people get t' and drnk t. Reports are probably exaggerated, but t s probably true that there s very-much more drnkng among young people than ever before. At ther dances, on ther automoble partes, at.the bg football games! lquor Is used and you do not need a spy-glass to see t Ths certanly s not gong to have a good effect on our young people.. The knd of stuff, obtanable at present, much of t, s sad to have a terrble effect on the body. It would, appear that a relatvely less quantty of.the potons now beng drunk wll produce the same dsastrous physcal.and mental damage-that toe comparatvely de> cent stuff avalable mpre-prohlbton; ^ajfcpdd And ths devastatng physcal and mental havoc s beng wrought la young people. To the young person, to almost any-person, tar rut, to be dened anytunr Is, >'effect a ehallaace. to- wast to drnk If they saw.the r»- f go to the central and southeastern Connectcut farmers. rollng condtons of the worst saloons.- And f magne we should be We do not understand why the-local farmers allowed themselves to surprsed If we, knew the number of be that ths work of the squrrels may hest control the dsease.. If t does young people.n supposedly nce counted out of the contest. Ths ndcates somethng more thsn the that they may have done n spread- It wll be only far pay for the work famles who do take a drnk upon occason. ' - mere fact.that the termers n ths ng the Kooneberry seed from whch Condtons Worse secton were beaten out by ther grows the prckly bushes that pass It would seem that the prohbton neghbors. It ndcates that the the blster dsease from sck pnes law Is not workng out as we ex-farmerpected H would, and condtons seem the crop of corn they should be. Ths hereabouts are not rasng to healthy pnt-*. to-be gettng-worse nstead of bet-iter. Nobody womd dehy that tem- good corn country and there s no It IK not surprsng that the squrrels hare be-n somewhat slow to learn of the tasty cankers and that perance Is a good thng. Everybody once havng nutre the dscovery thn ought to be temperate, not only In they are no' beng systematc n the matter of drnkng, but In everythng. It la bad to eat too nuntng the affected trees. We're- much, fore prohbton. If they drnk now they cannot be consdered respectnble because the law la agttnst It. If they do not volate. the taw by manufacturng or transportng lquor, certanly they are encouragng the volatons of the law by drnkn? t. If nobody draqk alcoholc beverages nobody would sell It, and there would be no Inducement to make t or 1 smuggle" It Into the country. So the wealthy drnker of lquor, wn) keeps a (bottle and a Mngle unsantary glass In httsare In JUKI about as gulty as the bootlesret. And It would seem as though he should ln» punshed equally wth the. boot log- Even before the prohbton fyneulment became.effectve lu-re was a rapdly growng Hentnmu akalnsrthe sale or alcoholc. beye'r- HRCS.-.. Several df the -Btates were dry, and n many wet'states there were towns and ctes whch had voted out toe saloom. It.was only a matter of tme when practlcalfy all of the states would have been dry. Under no other condtons could- the prohbton amendment. have been ratfed. The'e <was probably no more drnkng before the law became effectve than there s today, and ft s safe to say that the total evl effects of drnkng comparatvely good lquor before 1920 were less than the total bad results caused by drnkng the poson of today. If the matter had been worked out gradually nstead of tryng to wpe t out In one fell.swoop more and 1 more states would have swung nto the dry group. The saloon would hav» been left perhaps n those places where sentment s stll overwhelmngly n favor of lettng aa man drnk If he wants to, but It would be qonflned.to a comparatvely small area and the general results would, probably have been more desrable than the condton we have today.. Saloons Dffered Another way to have attacked the proble'm mght have been to gradualy wped out the worst saloons an<l leave the best ones. Some -temperance advocates make no dstncton between saloons; a saloon s a saloon. Buf there were degrees And some saloons and saloon keepers -were very bad. Some saloon kfpers tred to keep ther places clcau and decent, and had some regard, for the famles dependent upon the drnker's wages. They dd dstngush between pe.oplu who took a drnk or two and went on about ther, busness, and those who drank up ther week's pay and let ther chldren suffer, r the general level of saloons could have gradually been rased by gradually elmnatng the worst] certanly ' Condtons would have been mproved, n tme t mght have been possble, to elmnate them altogether, but t would have.taken a long tme, and possbly t mght not have been' desrable to elmnate them entrely. Instead we have legslated the saloon out of exstence, but we have not stopped the drnkng. Instead of the government recevng a large revenue as t dd before the amendment became effectve, the government has to expend a tremendous sum annually n an attempt to enf^ce the law. If the law really accomplshed Its mont desrable purpose and actually made people temperate In the 'matter of drnkng t would be worth the cost, almost any cost. The amendment s a part of the law of the land and so It s the duty of every law abdng ctzen to obey the sprt of t. It Is the duty or the offcers of the government to respect the law.and do ther best to enforce t. PoBsbly a longer tral, say 10 or 20 years, may prove that the 18th amendment was wsely conceved. At the.present tme, however, the results jof the' law seem extremely questonable) and If t appears that the results'are gong to be ncreasngly harmful to the yfeu fare of the people, partcularly' by encouragng dsrespect for all laws/ It would seem'wse to take steps to. repeal the amendment or else change It -so, that t can be enforced more effcently. Lltchfleld qorres., Wa- ;terbry. Sunday Republcan. EyerofFl*, The ejeh of -^ne dragon fles have between O,(MM) nd?.ufm) facets or lenses und, tlom> of a smull but ' terfljr. between 5,000 and ' reason, why Lltchfleld County should not head the lst, as t used to* Jo some tme* 50 years ago. It means, we beleve,' that the fapners, Instead of rasng" ther own corn-are buyng t In the west whch Is a mstake. Every dollar that goes west does not help buld rjtutchfeld County. Wake.up you Ltchfleld County farmers and let's have some przes next year: Wlnsted Tmes, Feb. 3. NEW BILL OF FARE FOR SQUIRREL8 It appear* that the Cornwall squrrels ate at last begnnng' to pake up to a new tem on the bll of fare. For some tme mce and squrrels In other parts or New England have been feastng on the whte pnes whch have the blster rust dsea.se. After the blster rust secures a frm hotd on a pne (n some cases as long a* ten or ffteen years) the bnrk a the canker accumulates a sweet depost whch s very palata- UALTY' DINERS means Qualty and Servce $ E. A. BBERCE MO VINO AND. GENERAL TRUCKING When n need of servce n my lne, get my prce frst ' Phone 66 2 The WATERBURY ' GAS LIGHT CO. Oor. Center A Leavenworth Streets WATE^BUEY, CONN. PHONE 5564 WE SELL, MILEAGE' MOT JUST TIRE& ) ) DURING THE ^PASTYEARWE HAVE SOLD MILLIONS OF MILES TO OUR LOCAL MOTORISTS AND TRUCK OWNERS-- TMESE MILES WSRJE WRAPPED UP \H. : IINBEA TfllRES We stlt have mllon?, of mles m stock n your she*', \ '.' Potter's Garage Man St. Pnon.648 dseased trees'are not gnawed except where the dsease eavkers occur. At these spots the rodents have recently qleanly strpped the bark the entre length and crcumference Of U»e cankered area. R Is possble member heurng our granduncle tell that when the potato bugs (called Colorado beetles) frst came, that he found where a skunk had dscovered for the frst tme some potato vnes loaded wth ths new klrnl or fat jucy bug..the skunk bad eaten not wsely but too well. Evdence showed that he dd not go far before lu- became so upset that he must have been for a tme a very mserable skunk. Succeedng generatons or skunks do not make the same mstake. We sha.ll expect from now on to see a good deal more rodent work on the pnes whch were Infected years ago before the boys began n pull currant and gooseberry bushes. Some of the squrrel gnawltr.' Is on cankers whch orgnated lu I'M3. whle other tankers date from 1920'or E. P. CLARK. Agent, ' ' Blster Rust Control TRY A CLASSIFIED ADV. from n.u»»v and Bladder Trouble. Dent let these organs make* a martyr of you. Heed the frst warnng that "thngs are.. not rght" Drnk freely of water and take Gold Medal Haarlem Ol Capsules. A world famous remedy for Iddney.lver.bladdcr and urc add troubles ancel69& HAARLIM pa at st anshrt?s^st!lo6k o»mooo the blue-md gold bo*. W'tfrWwrHtmM^^ tor ton / "Luckes never cut tp.y wnd"says Blly Burch, Captan of N.Y. Amercans'Hockey Team "1 can't afford totake " any chances wth my physcal condton. That's why I stck to Luckes. In addton to the pleasure I get from ther fne flavor, they have never cut my wnd to any no*. UceabledegrecFnal' ly, I neversuffer wth sudden coughng whch mght be very dangerous for me whenthere r sascram» bte on the ce." of the Tobacco Crop; It's toasted No Throat Irrtaton-No Coutfh. Offerng the "Clmax of Value Gvng" In Oar Greatest FEBRUARY Furnture Sale Not an ordnary February Furnture Sale but more carefully planned and _on a Greater Scale than any Furnture Sale Howland-Hughes have ever held. * Nearly $100,000 Worth of newly desgned, well bult furn-' ture purchased at great prce concessons and offered ' durng ths sale at tremendous savngs. OUR NEW CLUB PLAN OF PAYMENT; makes t possble to take* advantage or our very low sale prces j wthout a great outlay of cash and at np extra cost. For nstance:;] Purchase $200 Worth Pay $20 Down '{.[ / V and balance n 52 even_weeky-4>ayments. ' > '' ' * FURNITURE DEPARTMENT ENTIRE FOURTH FLOOR I * s. >... >"J J^ ', " -.

6 TVS ' *V *» Property of the Watertown Hstorcal Socety : - - t "*?- ; **.' OMXTEEN-TKAB-OtP Betty Nathan, Halea Wllb* rval So Umpre Connolly Had to to the Declare It a Draw. > V* tat comple* tar UK? to Hamlton Prce, ncatee awl a afasd aatfcorlty M d* aahfcct Mm. Ktty MeKaae Oodfree. Aery e* lalsaatunal play, was gve* rse ef the yoathful to a great players enth t» second la a sngle year. Mat Nathalra shewng to wtaajag the hard coert champonshp ef Gnat Brtan aad Batonng as naaw up to Mlsa WUIa In the Ualta Stles ttle mot last fall spectacular, bat Mrs. Oodfwe stll ly tha better player. by esjedged ellgbh She was whue In Mlssdaterry. MtosSterry receved a place m the reesm lst largely be. la wnnng a set from Mss Wlls at Wmbledon. Ss of the other twelve Mr. Prce's "frst dosen": Mrs. In Prce's Use "*** Godtrse, Mss Nuthall, Mss Joan Includng Mrs. Oodtree, captan, and Fry. Mnw^M. Watson, Mss P. Mss Nuthall, were members of the Sanndera. Mss Eleen Bennett. Englsh Wlghtnum cop team whch Mrs. a C Covell, Mss K. H. lost h a match wth an Amercan Harvey. Mrs. John HUL Mrs. Me-team headed by Mss Wlls st Danhaat. Mss J. a Rdley and Forest Hlls. N./T, last summer. Golf Play at Nght Now 7 Seems to Be Feasble The gor Bend whose chef regret s lfe Is that ha cannot crowd enough daylght boon Into hs tme on the Uaka, may derve some'solace In the clam of Mlllard J. Bloomer, a golf enthusast acd mauaglng drector of.the Amercan Arways corporaton. that he has Invented an Ulamlnated golf ball that makes playng at nght at only practcable, bat a pleasure. Bwymer pot bs Inventon to * practcal demonstraton recently on the tfoahata course I* damp weatber aad plated eghtbols 00 the frst ah echafentttntw'lurwere recov- nd frees Ota, drtaas sad ptayect out to.the e*a> la lurtaam ajhtlab^jafr the balls, are- Vugs' ft CMwHRs' MM' WTgeppCw tnfol nhtu used. The Illumnaton for approxmately lrteea mlnwas after the halls are removed from the Boll. Athlete of 1927 The Amateur Athletc onon tns sabmltted ts suggestons tor a resume of 1927*8 progress "«04 outstandng events of the track and fleld. Sabln Carr of Tale was chosen a*.the outstandng athlete of the year. «<ktrr started breakng records' In February, and kept the world beet mark for the pole vault, steadly mountng untl he Anally cleared 13 feet fl»4 Inches Indoors and 14 feet outdoors. ttankees Refuse $30,000 for Young Star Hurler The New York Yankees have turned lown an offer of $30,000 for Henry Vohnson. twenty-one-year-old ptcher. Surprsngly enough, the offer was nude by a mnor league club Mlwaukee, of the Amercan assocaton. "I told H. W. Kltllen. the new own- <ar of the Mlwaukee club, that If Johnson ; was worth. gjfmkmi to hm he was worth a fortune to us." sad Col. Jake Ruppert. owner or the Yankees. If the deal had" been completed. It would have consttuted, a record prce for the purchase of a major league player by a mnor league club. -Johnson was wth Mlwaukee on opton, last year and was recalled by the Yankees at the close of the Amercan assocaton season. The Yankees al have bagged Bbealy from St. Paul, and Bob Connery declares they have acqured the two best A. A. twlrlera of HK7. Gene Tunney Is Landed as Fnest n the Rng Gene Tunney. world heavyweght champon. Is regarded as (le.most valuable man In flstlanu In In a declaraton by Wllam Moldoon..sentor members of the New York state athletc commsson. ' Landng Tunney's boxng, actvtes. Muldoon sad: "He Is the fnest representatve the Came baa even had; la. the heavy-, weght dvson. I base thto.opnon only on. bto reputatons* a clean. awgfa«er In the rng; bur also on blgto standard of personal habts.and conduct outsde, the rng." Tommy Looghran of Phladelpha nest ttf Tunney In Mnldoon'a tun ef fplwle ratng. JborfflMes Prnceton has 17 all-year coaches. Brooklyn. It Is understood, wll tran at Atlanta. Ga* In *\ m. Lou Gehrg bt two home runs durng the 1927 season wth the bases fully occuped. Gar Wood, famous speedboat drver, plans to buld a boat capable of. makng 90 mles an hour. -, Toang men are sad- to excel at That may be true, but so few of them ever go- In for t >-' Gene funney says If yon work hard enough and try hard enough yon can do anythng you wan* to do. Rusty" Callow, new rowng coach at Penn, s extremely satsfed wth rowng canddates at hs school.. All regular members of theruulver* slty of Vermont basket-ball squad ths season,are more than sx feet tall. \ 8ome scentst aays you can't lve more than four weeks wuboat«stoen» That*a why we lmt bcycle grnds to sx days... - Lonel Conacher. the "B(g Tran" of the New York Amercan hockey team. Is probably the best all-around athlete Canada has ever produced.. ' ' The two boxers had already clnched through lve rounds. "What Is It." asked a voce from the 12 seats, "one* of those companonate thngs?" '..,,.,. An attack of tonstlltls wll keep Johnny Gbson, one of the best mlddledatawee- rtmaer» n the world; from, takng, part n any wnter meets. snce- he Jolwd the Brooklyns In the sprng of 1922 Dnzxy Vance las funned more batters than any u her Natonal league ptchr.. ", ' ' T..e New York Yankees announce the outrght release of Joe Gard, ptcher, and InOelder Ray Morehan to St. Paul Amercan Assocaton club. " ' *. ' " Bobby Jones and Walter Hagen, two of the greatest golfers of all tme, have only a sngle hole-ln-one apece am each came after many years of play.,:'.. -; ;. {:;K«;5Sv Johnny Mldrexter, former" Denver football star, wll try to land a berth as a ptcher wth Conne Mack, thl* sprng. He tred the same stunt last year. Conne Mack, manager of the Phladelpha Athletcs.-announces that Carl Uuata, thrd baseman, had been sent to the Toledo club. Amercau. assocaton. There wll be no change In the manugement of the Amercan assocaton Kants next season, the club has announced. Nck Allen beng retaned for another year. ' Johnny Wlls and "Lefty" Sennett. members of the Parkslde club In the Greater Baltmore Soccer league, have been playng sde : by sde snce both were about ten* years old.» Bll Bradley, former thrd baseman for the Cleveland Indans, has been engaged to scout college' teams for the trbe. General Manager Blly Evans announced recently. ' Followng the announcement that the Seattle Pacfc Coast league club wa$ on the market, fgures were quoted that San Francsco was the only team n the league that had made any money. - Tommy Harrson of the Broadway Y. M. C. A, In Toronto, Is a star of both the Intermedate and senor basket ball teams of the assocaton, ha recently took, part In- two gunea la\ one nght.." Marty Putell, Jopln manager,.bw sgned two newcomers for bs entry In the Western assodatluu next a stn. They are Guy Morton of Beckley. W. Va* and Jesse (Slm) Wrght ot Commerce,'Okla. NO BLOW STRUCK Tbe acquston ef Howard Shaaka ae coach of the Cleveland Indana ra> la a Moodest # battle betweea Shanks, a regular Washlagtan tofewv er, aad FreV Confess,'pTfeber tor the Indan*, wrtes Heary P. Edwards to the Cleveland Plaa Dealer. Conmbe waa oa the coachng lnes and hto Jbes began to get the Nats' tta. At any rate. Shanks, then playng thrd, came back wth: "1 nope Fohl sends yon In there to fnsh thto game, rd lke to get a couple of ht*." The next Innng, Coumbe was called upon to go to the box. Shanks was about the frst batsman to face hm. The next ball ptched dusted Shanks* off. and forced hm to hurt hmself backward te avod beng ht He pcked hmself np boppng mad. "You ht me." be yelled at Coumbe. "and rl come out there and crown you wth thto bat" The next ball planked soldly Into Shanks' rbs, whereupon be 'started for the box to make good hs threat Now, be It known that two players mure averse to fghtng than Shanks and Coumbe never lved. But nether would back down In front of hto comrade*. And then ensued one of tha rchest bts of unconscous comedy the damond ever saw. Wth every step toward the box. Shanks would tarn around to see If any, of bs colleagues waa rushng op to stop the lght Not a member of the Nats was movng; they seemed slngularfy unnterested. Coumbe wss punnng the same tactcs. Wth every step toward the plate be would torn to see If Bay Chapman or- Bll Wambaganss - waa runnng In to grab hm. Nothng ajlrrtng. Instead of hurryng to avert what mast have looked to- the spectators as-' aa Impendng brutal battle wth fsts and bat both Indana and Nats were doubled up wth laughter. Fnally, Umpre Tommy Connolly, who had been enjoyng a chuckle or two hmself, came to the rescue of. the two reluctant bellgerents. Just as they came to wthn three or four feet of each other (they havng taken at least three mnutes to get that close) Tommy ran down and yelled: "Shake bands! I call thto fght a draw." Each player gave a sgh of relef ju&ltbe.game proceeded. Drake's New Coach Is Brght Star on Track Mddle West athletc fans are Interested In the selecton of Frankln P. Johnson aa track coach at Drake unversty, Des Molnes, Iowa. "Ptch," who draws hto nckname from hs mddle naue. "Ptcher," to recognsed as one of the best hgh hurdlers In the country. He waa seted^as a member of the 1924 Olympc team whle a student at the Unversty of Illnos, and equaled the Olympc record of 14 4-C seconds In the tryouts for the 110-meter hgh burdlex at Boston. He reached the sem-fnals- tt Pars- where the- games' were staged. '«He has also run n the low hurdles and has a mark of 23 feet 2Mr nches In the broad Jump. After graduaton from Illnos to Johnson became assstant to Harry GUI, track coach of the IUln, and also acted as freshman coach. He was holdng thto poston when the recent offer.came from Drake. Coach Ruby of Illnos Would End the Drbble Elmnaton of the drbble n favor of a sngle-bounce.rule In basket ball Is advanced by Coach Crag Ruby of the Unversty of Illnos. He favors the change for the general welfare of the game. "My. belef In the necessty of a change s based on the stuaton In Illnos basket ball. here the stallng attack Is carred to an excess." he sad. "On small hgh school floors the fve-man defense proves so strong that It causes stallng. "My belef that the one-bounce rule wll create a better game Is based on sx weeks' practce wth It last sprng. It means more passes, more ntercepted passes and more actvty by playera generally." ' TCearns Plots Baker Bergt. Sammy Baker, mddleweght baser; now 1s under the wng ot Jack BeaHw through a deal Involvng $10,- O0U, a letter from Keams at Loa Angatas aald. The letter was to Teddy Haye, promnent traner of boxera. Baana sad ha had bought Bakar> eoatnet from Bergt. Steve. Weber. M THKDt and lentls ara wdely aver the face ef the earth, beta the OM world aad the Hew, sad there are probably W spades that are actves of tropcal Amerca. The bean whch meat people mean, however. when they use the wam. tha whte beam (a sad by botansts to be aa old as the earlest mgratons of the Aryan race Into Barope from Its ancent home ewhere In soatb- bean to as old aa any cultvated plant b western Asa. For all we know, theh now known to man. Homer's "Bud" mentons the bean as a cultvated plant and the scentst Vlrchow, found beans In a tomb at Troy. It was wdely used In Some. Even In very ancent Roman tmes people followed the rte of placng beans In the sacrfces to some of ther detes., Ancent Inhabtants ot Swtzerland and Italy, In the age of bronsc. cultvated a small varety of the common bean; some of whch have been found' In the ktchen dumps of the very ancent Swss take dwellngs. Beans were cultvated by the Egyptans of olden tmes. Because beans are so : abundant a crop In Chna, some have advanced the theory that beans actually orgnated there. One scentst has ottered evdence that of the fve plants whch the Rmperor Chln-nong commanded '4,6Wyew»*go ta> be Sown eacw aattm wth solemn, ceremonal, waa the, bean. ft has been shown, however, that ths was not the plant we mean when we say bean, but was the aum or soy bean. Soy beans are stll one of the prncpal crops of north Cnlna and Manchura and have been IntraducMI proftably Into Barope and Amerca In vary recent years. Beans probably are nowhere found wld today. The best evdence goes to show that they orgnated In,two apota, one south of the Caspan sea. whence went the frst Aryan Immgrants Into Asa Mnor, and Europe, and the other. In the northern part of Afrca, lands such ss Bfypt the hnterland, hdch of Carthage. d h U * coastal dstrcts oow held by the v Moors and Berbers. The natve.area of; the bean as a. natural plant probably has been growng less and less over a tremendously long-perod of tme untl today llsextncton asta wld form Is complete. So the bean Jons the honored crcle of thngs that have been here "always," or at least as long as hstory and legend record, and even longer stll than that Though there may be hot twp platts/.wbere It.to a oatjvw son. It Is at least an early and poneer settler wherever manknd now lves, under clvulsaawav and condtons favorable to Its cultvaton. O The Watermelon NE becomes convnced that there s nothng new In the world when he learns that the watermelon cornea from Afrca and grows wld by thousands In the natve home of the rack whch fances It most It to one of relatvely few wdely dspersed food plants that come In the frst nstance from the Dark contnent Even aa.recent a. botanst as the great Swede, Lnnaeus, beleved the watermelon to have come from southern Italy, where he had seen t growng -In abundance. The plant had spread durng the days of ancent cvlsatons, and at the openng of the Chrstan era was grow* In Egypt. Palestne, Greece, the Roman empre, and probably In Inda. That Its orgn should have been shrouded In mystery to not strange when one remembers tbat Afrca was lttle explorad untl the mddle of the Nneteenth century. In fact Lvngstone, the famous mssonary, may have been the frst to establsh It as Afrcan. In hs travels he* found t growng wld In. abundance and establshed beyond a doubt that It WHS Indlgenon* to that land. The wate melon to one ot the r«od plants shown n drawngs on ancent Egyptan monuments, provng.that they were famlar wth It Thto makes It Ilkefy tbat It was known also to the ancent Israeltes, who carred. on coumerct wth Egypt and were carred Into captvty h that country. 8pantoh and Berber names wth antque characterstcs go to show that' It.was also grown at the western end ot the Medterranean In days very long ago. Not untl the Tenth century A. D. was ths melon Introduced Into Chna, where It goes under the name, "skua," but the Sanskrt name, "cltayapula" Indcates Its aadent cultvatnn In Inda. Wld watermelons are frequently btter, s character that baa been bred out ot the domestcated varetes.- The natve negroes bant the melons wth a clnb and taste the Juce, savlng-the sweet ones and leavng the btter ones where they le- Farther pnet of Its Aftna-usgtoles h the tad tbat scentst* have' 'taled' to fnd the'watermeha growtagwltd-ln any other part-or the world 4. It s a member of the ctron famly, sdentrtrally known aa eltrullns vol DHM.I tar the oatfts fee* the shaft bat fashonable vst Whatever the ttteerary. and w ever the smart eet for many the tme tn the pne woods or tans or at tha sprngs or golf resorts the Berne Palm Beach covers the styles.for the occason. At the hotaa and dabs women wear dotbe* of every descrpton that salt a saatle cumata. Partoana have long followed these castoaw to gong to the European waterng places and we on thto ade, wrtasa tashton-correspoadent'ln the New "York Tmes, have) sdded many beautfnt styles for the purpose whleh have ban created by artsts here especally to salt ( the tastes of Amercan woman. Became the openng of the season la Southern resorts to vared by the condton of the weather, the slwwogpat CaUTJf el MsatSBStlOO Of WaUAltD- For to emphassed to the latest news from Europe. Broadtal, brown shaved tomb, mnk, sable, sealskn and chnchlla have Important places to the new wraps, and the op-tp-dato noveltes known - as amber rabbt, gray seat and saed shaved g goat.appear appe In wrapsde»yke* to be worn over dresses of soft materal. As fur to no longer strctly a wnter artcle, but to tn style tha year round, these fun* whether In wsps, neckpeces or trmmhgs.are Included n the wardrobes of woman who leave tha North fuhy equpped as to areas for ther Southern destnaton. One of.the new coats made by a promnent Parsan house to a long one of leaf-brown velvet, cat straght and trmmed down the' front The hem to fnshed wth a deep band of sable, as are the sleeves also The wrap to desgned to be worn over several' dfferent gowns, hot to par tlcularly salted for a certan one of ' bege' georgette whch to shown wth self-toned embrodery trmmngs, two rows of whch mark Its double wastlne. Many Types of Gowns., Gowns of many types have been especally, desgned for the Palm Beach saaaon. (tome have wraps to match or harmonse. Some " conspcuously beautful ensembles are shown. There to a gown of French blue and slver, tome made to be worn for dnner or an Informal supper-dance, whch has wfl' t "a- coat-wrap of a darker Mne velvet trmmed heavly wth gray far Aa evenng dress of- wld rose pnk crepe de chne to made wth a plan bodce and a skrt embrodered In a delcate pattern wth rhlnestones. and wth It Is a shawl of gold Meeof the delcate weave of a cobweb. An Ellxabsthan dress desgned for the Palm Beach season to of red and' sold lberty gauke brocade, the bodce beng -heavly encrusted wth gll of Prnted Fussy Wllow Flag Blue and Whte. ' ocraston. It has a sktft of toaf-greea a«nftf f»4 a long dreator cape. The bodce, whch to attacked to tha skrt to make a one-pece dress, to ** ured crepe de chne to whtrb the patembrodery and small doll-red brad. In contrast to thto tea lovely nlng gown.of whte satn made on ultra-modern lnes' and embrodered to crystal and sapphre beads. For ths gown to desgned a wrap of tappblre-blue velvet, whch has s large shrred roll collar of the velvet lned wth slver lame..-both' or these are examples of the latest styles for evenng In the tropcs and sem-tropcs. p Some of the best are' from Parsan nesujss,. one, the- protnlnen 1,ths bemg Pant Csret-Two othto models stand out'aatonr the many. Owf Wot whte erepe aatln. trmmed wth dagonal aanda of strass from sbtalder to hp the bodce. The-satn to draped af tb skn and In end! la a got thread; A wrap ta ha wera wtta. ths < to gwmate #at tttaaval w^mawv^ wl wl j Mawa east style, wth «rfdt ff^f a cane Uaad wth caapa A of tae asms shads. It toberdered a* M tta Carat entrely dfferent type, whch to characterstcally far Palm Beach, ft Is tor afternoon, to ha wen tor a ana* A Charmng Sut of Whte and Black. Flannel Is Shown. tern, tn bne, green and rose, to prnted on a green and whte background. Amercan stylsts are Indebted M several of the promnent freocb couturers for some dstngushed models Intended for the Palm Beaeb season. Some of the moat mportant of these- are from Worthy war* team heavly toward the medeval style of costume In evenng gowns. He has used thto model successfully for a weddng dress, makng It of sllve lame.combtned. w*h-~sstla, a«d tulle, and has repeated It In crepe satn tot a conventonal, dnner gown. An Informal ravers wth thto frock of blue and whte prnted chffon k* w> Ix won wth a long coat of naw>wloe wool georgette. From thto same comprehensve collecton to shown a sem-sports salt of navy blue doth^ the snort skrt ef whch to wrapped around the fgure, draped on one hp sod attached to a closely ftted sleeveuns whte blouse. Over ths to to be worn m/ short bolero Jacket trmmed wth flat brad. It has abort sleeras wth whte cuffs. Some Almost StartUn*. These'are but a few models selected from the Worth collecton, whch Is an Important one for the Palm,;. Beach type of dothe*. Some are almost startlng In effect For example, h the evenng gowns to to he seen the dress of the Samese end HInda dancng grls, a composton of goldand slver on slken gauxe foundaton wth a bolero-bodce and sssh to be wound around the hps. Another Parsan' desgner. Jeanne Lauvln, whose gowns have an establshed vogue among Amercan women, has also done a collecton for Southern resort wear, whch Is equally sutable for the European or' oar own Rvera. Some of her most cfaarmlns models are made of her favorte materal, taffeta. Her famlar sllhsastte to.vared n the latest desgns. Instead of the lfted llne*comlng drectly In front and the bouffant-eklrt beng dropped low at the back, oe dresses made for the Smth have aa uneven lne at the bottom, made usually wth ponts or scallops, and some of her charmng dance frock* are flounced from belt to hem. The bodce of the new Lanvta models la also dfferent beng hgher to the neck, and to several of the evenng gowns Introducng at least a suggeston of sleeve One character' Iste of the Unvto^robt d>style to Its conservatve. decouetage. and Its popularty has resulted In tannmerohle reproductons, snes even an amateur dressmaker- Is able to copy the m del wth success. Shoes are pretter and less showy than the footwear of last season The reptle skns of fner gran an wee. wth narrow hand trrnnrng ef plan. kd, and- some- charmng styles an shown n plan colors, such as bege. tan or castor. Most o* th*,awr models have., a -btodm. or other trav ~ oonsof learter^ another I Stockngs* are f or drop slrh rbs to' the same eowr,a» the. shoes for ordnary wear aad are shown In a number of new emwtle pattens fat sparta J. '"TT". ~

7 Property of the Watertown Hstorcal Socety vrrns Thto range, wth n length of a»gre tluu 000 mles and 4 greater wdth of nearly 200 mles, la perhaps tbe last great mountan range of tbe world that had remaned andscovered. Ir has been named In honor of M, Cberakl. a Russa* geooes wbo explored parts of Sbera. 'V. tttsb^^eaftuja) IA -^^ev*a>flt^a^^babaft^ga^batflbbaflfh(afatt rver tbe Cberakl range comprses nne mountan dmbn. whoa* hghest soaunta reach, more twr 10,000 feet. The party passed some.of tbe gorges by raftng down tbe rver' bat found others Impassable and/bad to Make long detours over tbe mountans. Because of tbe unexpected rough- ess of the dstrct the exploraton consumed mart more, tme than was antcpated and tbe party was overtaken.^>y heavy snow before returnng. Ranks Farm Chldren WeMngton, t: Zr-rarm chldren are" superor to dty-reared -chldren* says o natonal report on a survey of the physcal growth and mental attanment of the boys snd grls of New Zealand. Superorty of farmers' chldren was most pronounced at tbe age of thrteen. The survey Included-20,000 town and country chldren rangng n age from ten to fourteen, and was carred oqt. by Dr. Ada Paterson. drector of tbe health department's dvson of school hygene, snd Dr. B. Ifarsden. assstant drector of educaton. Groupng the boys and grls n accordance wth the fathers' occupaton*, tbe Investgators ascertaned that the chldren of the farmers were tallest beng closely followed by those of professonal men. Regardng weght.. It.was shown that farmers* chldren were- markedly heaver than the avert age., the dfference Increasng' wth age, whle the chldren of professonal men, though above! the average In heght, showed no excess In weght Total result Of the survey showed that the> average- heght and* average weght of chldren of good menul attanment.were greater than In the case of those of Inferor ablty., Story-Tellng Cbanpon of Uthuana 100 Years Old DxukIJa, Lthuana. Wars and rumors of wars do hot dsturb the serenty of old Dede Pasakorus. famous "story-teller of Lthuana. Hs home les close to the Polsh demarcaton lne, whch Is the apple of dscord between the two natons, The regon la especally dear to patrotc Lthuanans, for all the beautful age-old folk stores and songs. In whch the Lthuanan language I* rch, orgnated here. Even ths vllage, "Dsuklja." has a poetc name. It means u 8ong4MaV"> PasskoruB Is known all over the country as the "story-tellng unde." H«bss an nexhaustble fund of them. And he tells them wth a natural charm to delghted audences. He Is well over one hundred, but when one asks hm how old he really Is be says: "Oh, boy! No man can. tell. I'm so old, I've forgotten.'* Pad Its Way Rapd Ct> & D. George Fsher brought a tre for.epalr here after recevng, a puncture In the Black hlls. Repar'men dlscoverad a gold nugget, about one and s quarter Inches In length, embedded In tbe tre. A local Jeweler sad the nugget was ^worth 91JB6, ornach more than the cost of reparng the puncture. ' Turk, 154, ^oolong Constantnople. Zaro Agba, j! who clams b) be one hundred : flftyfonr years old. Is about to j j take hs twelfth wfe. j ^.Tbe self-styled longevty! r champon oftheworld la recuperatng from a slght Illness In a Constantnople hosptal and! the aged' Kurd asserts that W«recovery would, have bean much more rapd If'It bad not been tctr,tbe:; vlsjt;: m htt *M worn. an,5twj^ss^a>fsnto ty^ has begun to make her a bore ^MlaupS^^; p^gt^. centenarsn. He vows he wll dvorce jber as soon as he IS re< : leased from the hosptal and naa5-ows<bbj.as8-;w flj ajnd:? hearts hjw M^^^Bft N^p youn wnasl S^^ lfhlpbjs Bparjt»!j^» -.WBWIK^SSm^.\ : the unreadgadob Ja- to be made m conascnon t n aw won or survey* fk«and restng: now' slrptaaes acros* tbe Keystone state. la years gone by. when Laagln Held. Monsdsvllle, was the mdway stajlmt on tbe model arway bstwaan Dayton, Oho, sad Washlagtoa, the fall and wnter was a nasal perod for crashes b h mountan sectons. Almosr mu-acolonsly the plots of army plan** escaped death one year, when there wrecks after the plots had lost controls Avoded by Brds. Many armen assert that a mysterous threat to flyng men lngers over sectons of the hgh rdge whch separates tbe seaboard from the vaat contnent to tbe west. They -pont to the deatha of Plot B. R. Broory of Neward, Oho, and Wllam D. Zollman. mechanc, of Frederckatown. Oho, wbo were klled, when tbelr plane, modern In every respect, crashed. Both men tred to Jump, bu\ bad no tme. Ther broken bodes were found besde ther wrecked-plane'in the mountan forest." And the plots pont also to a fact long known to dwellers In the mountans r th" 1 there are certan spots brds svold n tbelr flght. Even In the sprng and autumn- mgratons, when the brds generally fly In a stralgth arlne, they detour from these suspected areas. "Spotty* Atmosphere. There may be a key to the condtons when It Is establshed why motorsts travelng tbe Natonal or Lncoln hghways over the "Bg Fellow* suddenly flnd tbelr motors-- stalled* There seems to be a pecular atmo- pbe? "n spots," unbalanced ar probably, or that condton whch all research In physcs seems to dlrprove an atmospherc vacuum. Avators may have ths same motor trouble over the mountans, It la ponted out.'snd they tafk of the Pennsylvana rdges as of "bad lands" or*. In, the vernacular of the ar, a "bad douds." A number of machnes dependable In every way have crashed In the mountan* they, Just have d r o p p e d. '-:!:- What dd the avators, who looked death n the face, see? What dd they realse In the hurtlng Dash- of ther descent In ther helpless, slppng planes? If any In that nstant comprehended the cause of the dsaster, the knowledge ded wth hm. None wuo fell over the mountan lved to dsclose It World Is 75,000,000 Years Old, Says Professor, Berkeley. Calf. How old Is tbe world? About years, accordng to tb<> account In Geness. More than 75, years, accord- Ing to three Unversty of Calforna scentsts, who have just returned < from a.» geologc- survey In Artama. Utah and Colorado. The Calforna professors C. L Camp, paleontologst; 8. C. Pepper of the -phlosophy department, and James P. Fox. geologst studed the deep gorges of the Orand canyon and the pecular geologc formatons of Arzona's Panted Desert Three fragmentary phytossur skulls, whch they brought back wth them, fx the age of tbe world at mnr* than 75, years, the professors contend. She- skulls,' furthermore, accordng to the dscoverers, show fhst even at that somewhat remote age tbe process of evoluton was at' $250,000 Smuggled n Chld's Teddy Bear Glelwltz, Germany. How WUO.OUO slotles (Polsh natonal currency),-or about 12511,0001, were smuggled In 9 large Teddy bear wir he told In the courts at Konlgshotte. Karl Kessler, a Polsh postal employee. Is charged wth havng stolen the money from a mal tran. He la alleged to have handed It to a marred caspte, named Oasllk. The, slaty blls were sewed Insde a Teddy bear, wth whch tbelr lttle boy was told to play whllex crossng tbe fronter by tran Into Germany. In ths way they hoodwnked the customsrftmam,but jt Offenbach, where they tred to change the"*lntles Into other currency, the Clesllks were arrested, aa wer» also Kessler% brother and a number of accomplces on the Geramn PoHsh border. t. Keaater, who fled wth rase bassports, was arrested In Bavara. -Frst Tee*. New York. Thf frst ^test of Ideal husband la whether he.is a JSK. aa sevenfcorf* /Island gtrhv vew."the.matter. PMtadHpala. Md n ammi fltawll' Wftp Is^flhpV 0t far-to Pr-afthe ChaMaes. has be, red by tbe Jefett srcbeoogleat dttsoa ombe tfwveralty of receved. Tbe grave Is unlke others excavated la Ur. wrtes U Leonard Woolley. drector of tbe expedton, and baa -provded defnte nformaton new to Mtenee aa well aa affordng materal for far-reachng theores concernng the hstory of cvlsaton. Tbe body of the kng was not found, but presence of the bodes of more than a score of men snd women who consttuted the.kng's household, offers proof. Mr. Woolley asserts, that' to $he fourth nllenlun B. C there practced n Mesopoa'mls bural rte* and ceremones about whch later tradton la slent am archeologlsts htherto knew nothbg., A magnfcently decorated charot and harp, gold and slver vessels, aa. exquste tolet set, and varous other treasures yelded by the grave serve to. Illustrate the extraordnary degree of materal dvlllsatlon whch Mesopotama enjoyed more thanfcoooyears sgo. rays the report. Kxcsvston of the grave, whch clorely followed upon that of the grave of Mes-Kalam-Dug, a royal prnce, was accomplshed only after coaamsnbla tme had been spent In uncoverng an area some 40 feet by 17 feet. ' Lght Blends Wth Musc n Inventon by Woman. Phladelpha. A basc patent tor an Inventon to blend lght wth musc has been granted to Mrs. Mary Hal? lock.greenwalt. Mrs. Greenwalt has been conductng experments In the blendng of lght and sound for 27 fears. She beleves that her patent Is the flrat jgranted for a new means of exprewlng human emotons In rhythmc form. Whle musc Is beng rendered by snger, volnst, panst or orchestra, Mrs. Green wat's apparatus floods the performer wth lghts of varyng ntensty. The fluctuatons n lght are ntended to enhance tbe emotonal and Intellectual appeal of tle musc. Tbe apparatus.may be operated wth a keyboard. * Yearn of tranng In musc, of professonal experence as a* concert BlanlMt nt, study of physcs, mechsnlcs, physology nnd psychology 'went Into the achevng of the results now rec* ogabted-by the grantng or the basc patent. / / Mrs. nreenwalt was born In Berut, 8yru. tbe.daughter of 8amuel and Sara Tabet Hallock. She came to the Unted States when a grl of eleven. After she left school she took up the study of musc. Balks on Marryng on Huntng Lcense Conway, Ark. All lcenses look alke to an excted man venturng upon the troubled matrmonal waters for the flrst tme. ' W. U Angel, twenty-four, of Green Brer, near.here, rushed Into the Olr-.cut court and asked tfor,"a lcense," Deputy Cferk "R ṿ AJ NowelU'who bss been ssung bubtug lcenses by the hundreds snce duck buntng ^ season opened recently, haa been marred many- year* and knows lttle about the~ romantc end of lfe. 80 he landed Angel a huntng certfcate. Not notcng the mstake, Angel returned- to bs brde-elect wbo was watng at the pastor's home. The mnster, however, veteran at performng nuptal knots, was not to be fooled. Angel returned to the courthouse,.where the clerk canceled, the.buntng lcense snd substtuted a. marrage certfcate. 110 Bllon Interest on Brtsh Wsur Debt London. Before the Brltlsb war debt s pad the present generaton and Its descendants wll have pad S110,OOOJOOO.OUO In Interest alone, accordng to-phlllp Snowden, -former lamr chancellor of tbe exchequer. "It would take a man more than 700 years to count It at the rate of a $5 bll per second." he sad. Runs Mark Spread $ LasOuces, N. M. Remans of an ancent pueblo run have been dscovered bere markng fwhartt^l* beleved to be tbe farthest pont south that true New Mexco pneblo culture extended. The run Is located on the old tral known as the Jornado del Muerto; tloursay of Deatb. M so clled br the eary 8panlsb eondsa^r* b^-from MM and ^,^«^^M ttk^ff^pt t communal houses toasbelght'oftwo ltffllp s Tr 5 M*' * '' l& T ^^^^^ ^on_lj^^^ j{^^ o D HNNEY OF the FORCE, COOQff^ttQSSM*. lmsooocct FINES VbuUSMMJft CAQ., C2,«ASOA ttaar tu» MtTSUtSSUUTAAfOl SOB- THE FEATHERHE ADS ffkdvuisft W «NM MKI CHtm tffeftt- OM m uwm, I SVJULD 8RV-ASKtDHlM OUT Dong Hs Bat Nnyaa! Nnyaa! Yer Honor! PattABS SCOOTS// MBO«OMNHSSD» Pfft AcflUMItAAP. A Strong EndortcmenT : '-' '. S * "Stf Jtt

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