Newspaper Page Text
Russia Developing Own Industries But Still Offers Big Field to U. S. Trade By PROF. JOHN DYNEEY PRINCE Had of Deputmn of Slavoic Lauage Columbia U.mi aut Rlussia is bound to become a great industrial nation, perhaps a rival bf our own. As Ru.ssia increases her power of production she is going more and more to protect her own industry. Still, there remains, an enormous opportunity for this country. Russia needs so many things and uses so many that for years she cannot begin to make them all herself. For example, they are still using the old wooden plow throughout the land. For modern American farm implements there is an almost limitless field in Russia. Then the Russians need telephones. Most Americans probably do not realize it, but Russia has a really excellent telephone system. Next to Swedetn's, it comes nearet that of the United States. which is the best in the world. But during her N\hili-t troubles before the war Russia rather frowned on private telephones. But the war has practically stopped these troubles, becau-e all the people, even the Jews, have united against the foe. These are two spt, i e thin,s the Rus-ians need. There are any num ber of others. They want pins. nectll,, cl,cks and machines for making machinery. They wrnt ma hi:nerv for making motors and motor vehicles. There is, I think, only one at uallv Russian make of motor on the market. Russia is bound to ho,.ome a great industrial nation-perhaps a rival of ours. HIow can Ame.rica share in the trade her growth is bound to bring, and in the HIuslarn tra, e, which ;Germanv lost when the war began? The only way to do it is to etlu,.ate ourselves in the Russian language and in Russian commntri al nim t.,ls. The most important feature of the latter is the fat that H!l--i;ei are anustotmet1 t) long credlits. The Rus sian thinks iothiig tf Itt iu a bill le u7ipail fr .ix mnitthls, and to let it wait a t:ear or ., , n no th< i ,t uno i:rnmm n. The ( rmarns knew that. ant thl:y a' l ,tt' I.,.r trat!in', l -vy to tIh Iu~-ia: Ipra ti,-e. The fact that t l l ;-- :< , 'a : it ,ls 71 i te .rl i - t.i ic,:.lv atteted by the I rl, (i.crrr tr, lti u; t ha tl .mr trv. Ti, ( 'r: are v'crx iauiiti, h lt - IPt. :' l :. , .ul lt .t trot,, w ith i ,.,e l, :o ditl not pay their !ill~. 1 2ia's tralde with Germany amnunt,ý1 to $3'0l:Yl '.0,* annually before the war startel. A lot if that is giun be',int lnow. It is up to American, 10to grasp th ir oplportunity. Poverty and Consequent Ill Health As Factors in the Propagation of Crime Ba DR. H. DEARHOLT Dior of Wcomia Heah Buremp One cannot meet Thomas Mott Osborne or study the work that he has done in the reform of prison conditions at Sing Sing without feeling that society is making an awful mess of its efforts to solve the problem of the criminal. Osborne has shown that the convicts he has come to know so well are, in many respects, much the same as the general run of people outside of prisons. Others are more like irresponsible children than the vicious individuals we commonly consider criminals to be. Some time ago a lawyer who has had a great deal of experience with criminals expressed the positive belief that crime is largely an expression of ill health. He stated that the average criminal is fourteen pounds under normal weight. lie said, in part, t!at the ability to resist crime is physical and depends largely on health. With ill health or malnutrition in the young, the first thing to give way is the power of self-control. Pov. erty causes ill health; ill health causes crime; accidental mutilation creates an aptitude for crime; neglected youth and education cause crime. In 1870 a Scotch prison physician said that it is frequently a diffi. cult problem for the expert in mental diseases to determine "where bad ness ends and madness begins. The inmates of asylums and of prisons are so nearly allied that thin partitions do their walls divide." In our .Wisconsin prison it has been found that the inmates are uncommonly subject to degenerative diseases which cause a breaking down of mental and moral strength. It is a well-established fact that criminal classes are especially likelv to be drug fiends. Whether (drug-taking is merely a form of their general lawless tendeney or is responsible for breaking (lown the ability to resirt evil tendencies, is frequently a debatable question in an individual instance. In either case, however, a health problem is presented, the solution of which is sufficiently difficult and suffi iently important to warrant the employment of the most skillful medical brains. And while it is quite possible that mental-disease experts may fall down on the job, also, the evidence that crime is a manifestation of disease, rather than a condition which stands alone, is sufficient to commend the consideration Newspaper Most Potent of the Three Instruments That Mold Public Opinion Dy REVIFRANK L LOVELAND cf ldiampoli., Ind. The founders of our republic painfully learned and plainly saw that only by a free press and free speech could we have a free republic. If public opinion be wielded in a wrong direction through the news papers, the church cannot make saints as fast as vice and ignorance can make sinners. So we no longer look on the newspaper, the bank, the business house, as private institutions, but as builders of the national ideals, makers of civilization. There are three instruments that mold public opinion-the church, the chool and the newspaper, and the greatest of these is the newspaper. ,The church reaches its handful of people twice a week; the school reaches its larger group five times a week, but the newspaper reaches its thou sanda daily. Les than one-fourth of the people go to church, less than one-fourth graduate from the common schools, and only 2 per cent gradu ate from college; but thousands find their church, their college and their culture through the newspapers, for 99 per cent read the newspapers, periodicals and magazines, and more so here than any other country on earth. In the days when I was a boy the newspaper was the expression of the editorial opinion of one man, as instance Horace Greeley and James Gordon Bennett. But now the editor is a supervisor, and the skilled reporter is read more than the writer of editorials. There are today 30.000 newspapers in this country. 3,000 of them dailies. There are 10,000.000,000 copies in circulation annually, or more than one hundred papers for every man, woman and child in America. Crises Bring Out the Best in Men. By REV. JOHNSTON MYERS of Chicago. There are many crises in the life of a nation and of the individual. There was a crisis in our national life when the Pu titans landed at Plymouth Rock; when the signers of the Declaration of Independence had met to make this country free: at Washington when Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. These crises destrov that which is unreal and trifling. As a family in times of sorrow forget their differences and preferences, so the nation in these crucial hours dnells only upon that I which is highest and best. I BEAUTY OF ONE STORY BUNGALOW ilIows Diversified Arrangement of a Rooms Without Causing g Worry to Architect. BUILDER MAY HAVE OWN WAY In This Type of Structure Any Pet Idea Can Be Carried Out-Plan Shown Offers Valuable Sug. gestloln for an Ideal t Abode. By WILLIAM A. RADFORD. a Mr. William A. Radford will answer Suestions and give advice FREE OF COST on all subjects pertaining to the t subject of building, for the readers of this paper. On account of his wide experience as Editor. Author and Manufacturer, he Ia, without doubt, the highest authority on all these subjects. Address all onquiries to William A. Radford, No. 1827 Prairie avenue, Chicago. Ill., and only enclose *. tWO-cent stamp for reply. Almost everyone who plans to build a house has an arrangement of rooms o formed In mind as the result of a ? great deal of thought and discussion with the different me~bers of the fam Ily. The room arrangement Is nearly c eonsidered as the primary restriction upon the architect's free hand in draw ing up the design. U'nconsciously, perhaps. the prospective houne builder often places the architect in a dilicult positionl because of this fact. lteanue. of hi. tr;ininii. the architect de.1 nit soi the ronl :'rrangel:lent I l lne', lbut he ses< v:ri'-u :arrr ee t eIll :t" of partition-, ni' :,v'e the ,'h er s,, that the flir lll l,: rtition l:Iuls will tie enrried 1i; a.t t, hlie fiunild - Stioins; lhe set the in't:lluetitin if , ilunbin. in the miost dehiralle in tcriur wa:lls. and lplaces the rioomns. In which this plunmbling terminates. s where they will be most convenient; he sees the arrangement of door joists aF ...wN.. I4 +..1 w : -.:"Yý 4 .i 1".:t tL in aY 7e..tln. ...l...1. ...ý.ý.1 ..f.3, .. ý... .a..ý a._ ýa a 1 In rooms which ordinarily contali heavy objects, such as the bathroom living room and kitchen, and shift the walls so that the joist spans wil I not be excessive, causing heavy ex pense, and he sees the relation whici room arrangement has to exterior ap pearance. The home builder is often disap pointed when he finds that the archi tect has changed a great deal of whal has been worked out after months ol study. Sometimes he doesn't realize that the changes mean, perhaps, the saving of a great many dollars in the construction of the house. It would no doubt, have been more logical foi hitn to consider the house from thi architect's Ipint of siew before allow ing the fascination of arranging the I rooms to take hold of him. There is one type of house, however which yields to a widely diversifiej arrangement of rooms without caus ing the architect a great deal of trou CL CL. B-D R M' LNic R Ad-;Gt Y *1'I5 c fRONThR0aC Id. to' Floor Plan, Sie 43 Ft. 6 In. by 38 Ft. 6 la. ble. This type is the one-story bunga low. When the home builder plans his room arrangement for this type of house he may he reasonably sure tha the architect will not be forced to change a great deal in the result of the effets of the occupants in buildlng up their hmre. The bungalow comes nearer to meet. ing the average person's idea of home than any other type of modern build ing. One of the reasons is that there Is no wasted space In the bungalow. Every nook and corner is utilized and is in use all the time. This reason has perhaps more effect in creating the Impression of coziness than any other. It is almost impossible to get the cozy idea in a house that is designed so that there is considerable space wast ed. In such a house the coziness is sacrificed for some other effect that is wanted. It is possible to get many other effects in the house, such as grandeur, elegance, etc., but this does not impress the average person much in the design of a home. The little bungalow shown here has that homelike, cosy appearance that tplifes the average person's idea of a real home. All the structural features of the bungalow combine to give this impression. The roof is very low a- Is made with a fat pitch. The eavs have a wide overhang, which is one or the most invittne features of a bun galow. The wide eaves nntd the low pitch of the roof have another effect. alSO, In Iungalow consitruction. The bungalow at Its best is built very close to the ground. In cold cll mates such a result cannot be obtained because of the necessity of having a basement that is adequate to hold a heating plant. The same low-built ef feet is obtained by building the bun galow with wide eaves and with a flat pitched roof. This bungalow is built far enough above the ground so that a basement can be provided with the necessary windows and without too much exca vation. The porch also aids material ly in getting this same effect of being close to the ground. It is very broad and is built under a separate gable from the house. The broad, flat roof and the heavy porch pillars give it a cozy, inviting appearance. The tfijor plan calls for five rooms that are arranged in a convenient style. O)n one side of the house Is the living rom, dining room and kitchen. and on the other is the bathroom and two bedrooms. The mnlain entrnce to the house is through a door at one corner of the living room. This room Is of good size, being 15 by 13 feet. A big fire place occupies almost one side of the room. It is almost necessary to have a big fireplace in a bungalow, as no house of this type would seem to be conmplehte without one. It Is generally place-d in the- living room, tho ugh it may be In the- dining room or solne titie in a snmall den built off the living room. On either sidet of the fireplace in this des;ign is a narrow bookcase W\ith i \\ihilow ove\r each one. There is also ai wide window faeluii out onto the frnt porch. Plenty of wall sp:ee is provided. s that sint c:revfully chovel, f rll'hi~tllr, 4':l11 he ,,:li'tl: d to tit in with til geu, !ral sciteln i -f t his feelit. Ini black of thie li 'in:: root m.rn ,:il rn l1c''te!l tee it by d uh.lle - i.li;i doters. i- th" ii linin room. 1 hlis ro-::i hia< at convenienlit built-in sideebotird. iand thereO- is ailo a sehl entr:ane to the hou-e that i fen' inlto it. In the kitchen is thel inside entrance to the basement, which also has an outside entrance placed alongside tht back porch. A well-arranged and I handy pantry is built off the kitchen. The bedrooms are placed one at the front of the house and one at the bnck, with the bathroom between. This is one of the best methods of arranging this part of the house. British Museum. The British museum recently ob served its one hundred and fifty-eighth birthday, as it was established on Jan uary 15, 1759. It was Sir Hans Sloane, an Irish-born physician of Scotch extraction, who is honored as the father of the museum. Sloane was creatidl a baronet-a title to which no English physician hadl before attained -just twoi, cellturies ago, in rec gnition of his labors in Nwritin, a "Natural His tory of Jamaica." Illis library of 50, (00 volumens and 3..a;d manuscripts, and hI's collection of natural history and art objects he bequeathed to the government, on condition that his daughters he paid $100,t.O, which sum scarcely exceeded the value of the gold andt silver medals, ores and precious stones in his collection. Several oth er collections were added to that of Sloane before the museum was formal ly opened in Montagu house in 1759. Of the books published In England since the invention of printing about 75 per cent are to be found on the shelves of the British museum. "Baby Dolls." There used to be a time when men preferred the doll type of woman, but that period has passed, or, rather, there are so few men with these pref erences that they are not much con sidered. The wife of today must have mentality as well as looks if she is to hold her husband, and the average man, realizing this, looks for a fair amount of brains in the woman he selects to be his wife. Of course, there will always be husbands who prefer i to have all the brains In the matrimon ial partnership, who look upon their wives as playthings, to be excluded from all the real Interests and real I issues of life. Mental attraction plays I as big a part as physical attraction in the selection of a mate. How can a I man develop his future if at the head of I the domestle helm there stands a wom an who cannot meet him on equal men tel grounds, who cannot understand and aooreclate the ideals he expresses? -Exchange. Hypnotized. "Just before you lost conselousness, I what did you seeT' asked the lawyer i who was conducting a suit for dam ages against an autombolist. 4 "Why," replied the thoughtless cli ent, who claimed to have been ,run 1 over, "I saw the prettiest woman I ever laid my eyes on." 4 "You did, eh?" snarled the lawyer, quite losing his temper. Then he sat down. Leaning over to his client, he hissi-d: "How do you expect me to p win the case, when you make an ad- I mission like that?" 1 "What have I done?" asked the dl- I ent. P "You have as good as confessed that, I for the time being, you were non com- t pos mentis.",-Youngstowu Telegram. t Worth an Intruedetlon. 'Tis well to know one's awn mind, but It's at least equally Important to I have a mind worth getting aequalatnd with.-Buffalo Tlies. IDAY 'SVN[NGI AIRY TAL[ T MARY GRAOM.80MR ANNIE SAVES SQUIRREL. Nick and Nancy hlad lven .katirn all the tafte.rnioo, n :i ' Ith." were tell;in;g DIaddy alotut it Sien h.' suid. "I think I will thiave to tell you I thti avatnlng that ,ry of little ; i' t:lti' Annie \ 1.,. h:,l :. %,ry +.=ý ,' .:,, d, tell n' m, S.-:li, l tih, 'hilhlr.'n. fotr the v ware i*'' interested ill skatingt thlan In i It t lu h in g t'e"s th, .-, daty-. TheI'y had leen giv'et slates for Christ A Wonderful Inis by Ihelir ,ld Skater. friend Santa ('hla s. al tthey had blen learnt ng him a to skaite for ti tirst tini e in their lives. "The little girl," said Diaddy, "wa«i at tl wonderfunl kater. Sihe cu'ulld ake the most wl a ilrful strolkesla ali dtl Il sorts of fancly ILure i. "Onie day V hen: sithe ia h '-lti tae' saw that at lt t of lih' ie'.' w': \t'ry thin. '"'\e nu12 ill snti. asst; fl r 1: 1 t 4 " \t,' s iltl * ti . 'f : .i1 lt ltii s ol.t,' s all .\a i, ;t". a-llu 1" l'· t,"l L, ih,a hinlt 't r I lutur. I'r :;l ,, h An:ln t Ei...k 1'i fl ish-h rick-. i.<, s .1 til . - - , 'IS . lt.: rt-r. wi h;:.- litil , r , :y r : ," >l"' e ., ":lii \\n - all:+: t I . "'laIoti 'in I"o ah':, he a hOe.r ('co:ultl:.intl,-. *~'You uil it .. :a< dao g aerta '., "'Itilt I heard a cry.' said Annia. "'Maybe it's a frog unaler, thit wa ter,' said a smaill Girl. "'Frogs are asletep ll wcirter,' said Annie. And she skated off. "There was another little cry of dis tress and Annie skated carefully to ward the dangerous spot In the leie. "Through a tiny crack a little Squir rel had fallen. He had evidently been running across the ice and had broken through a little crack. "Of course as the ee hald gone through with th e weight of a tiny Squirrel, it gave a huge groan and An nih was i the water, lHer hand etught the little squirrel, and she held him above her head. "Btt then the hole she had fallen into seemed to cover her up. She hada floated down under the ice, and she co ulhdn't get her healdl up. "Frantically she timoved her free arm about, trying to crack the ie, and make a larger hole. "At last she had It. But the time had seemed like hours though it had been but a few seconds. "Mea.ntme her companions were shrieking, crying and calling loully for help. "From near at hand caine some big Men with ropes and sledges. "Annie s head was above the hole, but every time she tried to get altave the ice it only broke the more and the hole becate lahirger aid larger. An nia's skates and ihe'vy clothes were holding her down in the water, tos. "All the time shit' held the Squirr I our of the wate'. the poor little aii to -hivetrihg 1ut ke'Piiig quite still. Sote-l hala te sana' iial ta t:tlherslutifn it that watlefitl Vyi that AtAthittalis have of I nlIld'rstanding atiid tilapareintintg all Illait is donet fora thetm. "At htst she cauglht It, aid of a rope, aitd then with a grelt piacao'f lh',tral that was thrown out to her shIt gaot habve the et.e onca, tore, still ha Ilding thew little Squir "' Well.' said one of the Men. 'the youngster almost lost her lift try- . ' l ing totl save a Squirriel. Didal I ever hear otf any thing like that baefore?' " '(ih. but yot1 slould have heard Annie's Head Was scry when Ahe Above the Hole. ale. "'I don't believe I woull have gonet after him.' said tit' Ian. '.Not when tha lee w-uldn't even hoeld hIm Ula" "But the little Squirrel was heing warmed in a great coat they had put around Annie. lHe began to make lit- I tle sounds of happiness and relief. "'My little life dotsn't amount to f much,' he seemed to say. 'to most I'eo- 1 pie, but to you, little Girl, you saved 1 me.' And he nestled closer. "And the Squirrel lives near AnnIe's home and Is so tame with her that he Is just like a pet Squirrel, for he knows and loves his true little friend !" Your Treatment of Others. -I treat her as well as she treata b me," resentfully remarked a girl who t had been taken to task for lack of u courtesy to an acquaintance, and many b people seem to think this enough. But h as a matter of fact, unkindness or h rudeness on another's part does not I rcuse 3fou in the same. Your tre'at- t tent of others shatuhl he deterilinatal ay your oawn priniaples of conduct. anal nat by their treatment of you.-Girl's c Companion. Giving Our Best. The only way to have the best is to nye the best. We must put our whole heart into our frtendships, if we are to have friends that measure up to our Ideal. We must do our work without l slighting or shirking to gain either ef- 8 Ielency or satisfaction. Life gives us t back the best, only when we have put the best into It--GIrl's Ontmpanion. 3 Sure Thing. t Teacher--If a fazmner sold 1,l28 a bushels of wheat at $1.48 a bsIal. t wha: would he get? Blight Boy--M automuobile. Kin Hubbari Essays Do Modern Business M .thnods Jt th' Increased Cost o' Liyrria A highly illuz::n tai, ' li ua.-, n cl"sed th mn 1thly I l..'i ' ( ' ' it ! r.r(!aul ('lul,. h t niI t, ! :t K ,"f t' hal. "h.nr Th q 1at.l I, 1. :" I u s i n e, .. l1 i t h ,l-d .J u t t! ! . t h ' l : r , .--, (',,t ,, Invi n :.' w uz ,!,b,:t, . t',, . I"z I't.h ,hf,.r"l,,I lf th" uIr ,, r" ! prl'. hi:,rr,.. 1 h!I, '1",i i lr ll,y h:t :. n, ,i th' nIl, ordar a,' th::,'a . . f1 t.r , :I', ' thu tt. ,on " t' h 1 'a-t *. , p li ,ty. t1k 4"X~I,-a Iiv 1' it, ill, th" ex " . ,,ItaZ' a r ' i at|'" Itn:u in:f lni ' a ,1.i',., i; s:;,' : :,h' ,,:J:,. r t h i n ý . º " = '., t i a: l t ' , '. ,r ; : w. t i t ' : , t ern auatia' ' Ins I'ttI:,n af r l "6!" thu k a drink a' ',:,r t :it.' , , tayil': "T t:.lght :o I r. l ta, h r, tv i; ' t. r -ve fi wvaftaed iatak thire, th' .i-t ,,,r t' th' ~I," ttllt 'grsF'er :ni" ,utea w,," r t'" ost:bIi..tmlihin t that ,,u) to:,.,, 11 t it. tin 1 ala xthe«n thltr wa i v i:,'" t' a ,+ : a'r:laI--th"' ala familly ,r, ai,, , -t r, with it lv y-s ,,,'a:,,t drin't, all !,' :, ' tu'auk .ral I::T:raI'f''iIlt that V .'' at , ,,,:--'. -.. "A Few Decades Ago E'er' Feller Who Went Hcme in th' Evenin' w Carryin' a Sack o' Flour or a New Brocm, or Some Petrified D Peaches, or a Can o' Keresene With a Potato on th' Spout, or a Low Bread, or a Pound o' Butter That Could Easily Be Distinguishi th' Dark." pophilr swi in in' p,,l fr ever' vwinug.el gperm crrier that .hatc'1, t' 'colne it. vwny. ,'When vWe I:irf th1,,' th' Inidernl grcry vwith it :ll,,i. tlizin' W t nisphlere, its tastefully arranged wares sanitary arralngetnlltl. teilitin' windolw dli.sllays. blonde, c(". hier. quick de.livery art' correct sc:thleJs \we sh,uld nt Ie surlrisedh that a few stalles 'ot a iunny 4r two" m4 re thaitn they did w'hen th' ave1rag.e gro,,,,er shituld have b.lven ketlin' a: livI. ry st:alhe. A few dncadehs lag, ever' feller whi, went hlmt!ne in th' t'VenIin' wuIz 4:rryin' a sack o' flh4ur, or a new br inii, iir Lsome ljetritied udrtd peaches. ,or a ainr o' ker,Isenel with a potaito ,nI th' slut, or a l.:f i' bread. or a pioualo o' but ter that cuiil ea.sily be distingulshed In th' dark. "TIh' 1oh, tlmle grcer even used th' same quart mneasure fer sorghum that Opportunity Knocks Lots of Time OPPORTUNITY--Master of human des ti.rdes am I' Fame. Iove and fortune on my footsteps wait. Cities and fields I walk: I penetrate Deserts and s.Ras remote. andl pasing by Hovel and mart and palace-son or late. I knock unbidden once. at .V,(ryv gat.' If sleepng. wake-if feasting, rise before I turn away. It i.: tile lour of fate. And they who f,,low me reach ,very state Mortals desire,. and conqtur every foe Sav\'e death; but those who, dublt or hesi tate. Co'ltenine I to failure, pr u:lr and woe, mc" k me in a.;ti loland u.ele.sly implre. I uansw,r not, and I r*t:ir:n II no . -John J.me. Incall.q. It's ,e n th' sayin' feor years that op i'.rtun iityv ily kt ll, .s o" '. :I' yevt Its ' uls Ii;v :l i M t' th' Io r a lrmiridr. times-:,!Iu" iithe~r blroke, 4r :iafrul t' it Don't Guarantee nothin'. It Jist Says: 'Y Quit th' Livery St*le *' That Job at th' Saw Mill,' er, 'You Buy Them Lots o' th' MIII Phld They'll Double in Pr:ce in a Year.' take a chan're. Opportunity is ji't like Itan it('uplid whon it (',mies t' reliahility. It don't guarantee' nllthin'. It jki.t says: "Y'eou quit th' livery stable aun' take that job at tih' saw mill," er "yeon buy them lots east u' th' mill pleol an' the'y'll double in price in a year.' Op portunity seems t' go on th' theory that ever'huddy has got money. If some fellers jlst had th' opportunity they'd be broke all th' time, er keep some buddy else broke all th' time. Th' main thing Is t' be able t' tell th' opportunity o' a lifetime from th' com mon. er roadside variety. Some years ago Pinky Kerr's uncle offered him a drug store In a dry town If he'd pitch in an' run It, but Pinky said he'd ruther stay at home an' play In th' band. Th' drug store sold foer nine thousan' dollars y!iterday an' th' band still owes eleven dollars on th' slip horn. Tlpton Bud heard a knock on his door one day an' he bought five hundred dollars worth o' mnini' stock. lie thought it wiz his opportunity, but it proved t' he th' agent's. So that's th' way it goets. If cpplrtulnity wuz responsible, er carriehd a few gilt elged references, it woulhnIi' I e .ro had. It don't even argue' with you. Some fellers give up after tlhy mlss Team Work on Battleship. The problem of naval e'Xlpa:riion would not be so hard weºre it not for the fact that every ship nee'd% such a great number In its cre.w; btc:use the greater the numlbe'r of men that must work together as "a tenam" tlhe greater the difficulty of accomnplishirs g the "team' work" and the longe'r the time required. In a ship, eslpecially in a large ship, like a battleship or bat tle cruiser, most of the men work to her In large groups, such as turret crews. One hundred men sometimes ;"1 '" "t c"atebt , 1 ::r ,'d 't' be lt ' .ý, ýt'tlopp rt . * i hi. toI e • , Jlu s t f tt '.,'r t ihew b o' w f w , Iw °ied a ., . ' hs eo i S I lurln' th' hNr surro anmh ' OU per t j. - tn th' ole f S "' t,n th' left "i . . * n' : nth', ed " I t *. it r t kindle t . sus...der. I ninnent-all oa ,' quality! p . .. . I 1 .l t o t p Iound o' ,b a lif lit,-, ltnl holw our grandfathm eItsa l uilher i\ e , tuns is a myu. "WVith h l:.sin'r o' th' ole tine p c'try ' j I t hi' practihe o' dlikeri a't 'luilblin'. A. feller used t' go In a gp 'ery aill' s:ay. 'I' like to tradeyo out' unrl4. e0,tltisth if we kin make a dicke.' .n" tthef th" tilnurin' an' barglai' wtilht biejin. th' transaction often mfr surnii' th" letter part of a day. Now Ih' prices are fixed an' you kin eithe take tl , c "li'h or learv it alle. E'ver'lnll'ly 1ls.il t' buy somethin' lie they w\uz trwalin' bosses. 'hi' grom, aske.d what he thought he could lit an' th' e(nsiumer offered what he thought he'd take. "Thl feller who cnmplnins about way lInliel'l buslness is condutal should ihe made t' spend one whle week at th' only hotel in Hamlet, b dianny." tlher first opportunity. Ez Pas h a done anything since th' time he CMl hayve bought th' ground where ' Stateh4juse stands fer a song. I diT belleve oppourtunity ever met anybiMl that loafed around waltln' fer it. Sia fellers are ton lazy t' glt up whe tp portullity enters, an' lots o' us ahL it a pIlnt t' be out. o,,cportunity mlay only knocld ae with | IIel. eertniu proposition. bt It'l e bita:k lIts o' times with soletW ek . .Se tih' thing t' do Is t' plgi)l iic he avtiailble. cc! Nih. Turner says opportth dlid ntl knick at his gate till heo I nirnet--,e. ani' thn Lt offered Wblm hundredI icr.es o' Texas rice lead .I he got it pail fir. ((,I yrlght, .\Alrns Newspaper Sulphur in Shoes a Grippe Crus Sprinkle sullphur in your shoe avoid catchinlg the grippe, is the i viee of Ir. George Angel. Yeahl w\hen the e.pidelnic of prlppe Wieptl country, Doctor Angel rcomUS at the time that everybody wee lphur In the shoes as a preventlve, discovery havlng .en made that era employed in the sulphit were immune from the dlsee. The discovery led to which were said to indlcate hat phur prevented the disease, I d a few mild cases developed whle phur was worn in the aboes. It is recommrended that a tieP'@ ful of sulphur be sprinkled I0 the of each shoe and worn during the titn of the epliii.flic. I '.ctor Angel. whose practices the wi\rkir, clcasiss is very laru. that Ie ,' ut:la I ha:l kept proves ca c·lu-ice.ly thawit th' dlisse rarely, if Ie :Lit':s ia plr-i arrmed ngallst IL t';.,,t .,: , , r l,: lts a~i In the 314 kl.t fr f atherI l. lt rs. cnrl r-,iui a turret crew, nevilbdit th, .hiup :~l atl the men It its tu tiral t z.. ther by lvisblhle cords t m Iak . sit unit; nal the lM*d f1, t ,: thei trfinig and of the dO f all kill-, is toi make the whiek livid, ,,rranism.-Wlar Adralral 1.vy A. li'.-ke, In The World's Wotl Irreverent Minx. "I, my tie.." declared s girls wer, moire modest'." "I waiul the fliplnt girl. 'It Ws I :iet. We mray get back t it.'