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£ 3 MT. VERNON DUPLICATED FOR FRENCH EXPOSITION Furnishings and Every Feature of Wash- ington’s Mansion Constructed on Seine for Colonial Fair. COLONISTS FIRED FIRST ~ IN 1775, PITCAIRN SAID Batfle of Lexingtbn Traced to Amer- ican Shots in ‘Report to Gen. Gage. Flying in No Woman’s Land Frozen, Bleak, Unfriendly Areas of North Can Now Be Traversed With Ease and Safety—in Airplanes ARIS.—The eyes of Paris, long of the !unaxd of inured to surprises though they |George Washington glln les are, look 'ondefl.anl“y these days | Wilson Peale in 1772, him in to 'a strange building that is | the uniform of a colonel Colonial lifting its noble white columns | Militia of Virginia, will soon hq!‘l: in the boautiful park of Vincennes, | the reproduction of where Marle Antainette and her court |copy was lent for w by the played while Paris seethed with |General Society of nial Wars in revolution. this country, of which de Ben- BY RANDOLPH G. ADAMS, which s marked the places where the Artillery. and Amm on is repol s ;".‘:‘&“’J“m; to be lodged and after destroying the e o uite 3%y LeXington? | same you will retorn, and if your Men It 8 pertinent to recall wh:’i appear much fatigued you may halt Aenerioans have peltved took | them st Lexington or Cambridge and place, It is not always the facts that |1, them xest 1o Barns of otht out- count, so much as what people belleve |ingion'for weak and fatigued Men. If o be the facts. Years, often decades, |any Body of Men dares to oppose you i . d : : : ‘ ; i This apparition in wood and stone |neville Keim of New Jersey is governor must elapse before the findings of the | with arms you will warn them to dis- i 3 . toon ¥k ’ i is the new Mount Vernon, being repro- | general. scientific investigator fllter down Into | perse or attack them. i 3 ¢ » ; . duced on the banks of the Seine exactly | The 1 of this historic the school textbooks--yet it is these | *“«gome Men from the Artillery are or- . Y P w S i as the original stands overlooking the ' hung at t Vernon until the textbooks which often form our earliest | dereq to attend you and will carry g + ; " h . Potomac near Washington. For Mount |of Martha Wi after which it 3nd most indelile smpressions of his- | ledge hammer and other instruments i : ? e ! o e e Clioa Brates exmiblt | Fngton Barke Guste, and. then 1o his 0 > esf e Guns, . 5 % ! v cate as ma e Consider the Battle of Lexington, 2 : - : 9 2 : at the International Colonial and Over- | daughter, Mrs. E. Lee. It now which precipitated the Revolutionary Hidden Cannon Listed. . & ; 2 4 Bl ‘ seas Exposition, in testimonial of | hangs in the chapel of W: and b °g;v§f;gfm’.‘,’“§n:“k‘:‘u‘“ The | “cannon hid in & wood a mile & half 1 v i V, 3 4 5 American friendship for the sister (Le¢ University in Lexington, Va. ' general impression: from the center of the village between : " Yy R, ’ 4 Fihia Mount Vernon de Paris is belng | millar with the furbulent history of Gxge u;: mv,g:tl;re tnf) rlz;ll:, lg_’e&h'l‘:lro’:ll:.: the River and Malden Pond.' The wood 2 - E ¢ 7 ot ; mmum%m decorated as it was wfl Mount ;’m lll'l::‘ the % ..:f age, thick a good deal of underwood. The » # 3 : 2 ‘ashington entertaine George Washington Martha a4 in North America was acutely aware - . % 1 ¥ & ington. The mansion with all its in- of the fact some one was stirring up | §round s little wet, but not a marsh. . come yebellion. The two principal offenders | Three Guns still mounted, the rest dis- 4 na- were one Samuel Adams and one John { mounted and carefully hid and even Hancock. On being authorized from | puried. In the same Flace some Boxes Lcndon, Gage determined to arrest |of Arms hid like the Cannon.” i L 3 . of Lafayette to Mount Vernon will re- these leaders and to stifie their activi-| “The Medicine Chests & Powder Bar- 2 . verberate next July 4, when, climaxing ties. It was known to Gage that |rells, Tents &ca distributed in the chief A ¥ 4 e mous % ’ American week at the exposition, the Adams and Hancock were at Lexington. wg Dlnll:uh;l!y g:. Barrett's, Cnpfi. 5 i " firiest theatrical men)t; mm will ieeler’s, Mr. Hubbard’s Stores an 3 . e cant of his L Move for Arrests Related. the two Bonds.” R - Sotin Philly Sousa, “the Mareh King,” “It would doubtless” (says Fiske), “The three Guns in the Prison Court i 3 a P i & 3 G has just completed the composition of a “be easier to se'ze them there than in | remain there besides many different ® é i 2 march, “The Legionaires,” which will pristi Boston, and, accordingly on the night | articles.” . - - g be the musical contribution of the of the 18th of April, 1775, Gage Not much here about capturing Han- g b United States to the exposition. dispatched a force cf 800 troops, under [ cock and Adams at Lexington. The . g " ss has appropriat:d $300,000 to Lieut. Col. Smith, to march to Lexing- | town is not even mentioned except as % ) 1 # g™~ ; nce the Mount Vernon dupli- ton, and, after seizing the patriot |a place to halt on the way back. What b, ” . P cate as an impressive token nt’mnengl Jeaders, to proceei to Concord, and |took place at Lexington in the early M ipated. The architect of the capture and destroy the military stores | hours of April 19 was not on the sched- ve levl’bs.ruclwflon is Charles K. Bryant of :n:lct’klurr’e.d for some time been collect- | ule at all. o ' —Etching by Inger Velse. | pichmond, Va., who has to The advance was commanded by M: e o IRPLANES, SUPP) E BOATS AND SLEDS OF OTHER DAYS, HAVE OPENED UP THE' FAR NORT! make blueprints of the shrine, a per- | caro; Taised John Pitcairn of the British Marines.| The detachment went. out according ATHELL 2 FRMERTIRG FRIs o ARG z o ¢ - mission ot! — A - WAme ey firfi:\wfifi:fl ""mn;ei.g to orders. The advance guard met the| BY MAUDE RADFORD WARREN. X"'fi" lvn;’.;ghe:“:n gu rllllsl;:e of the :uhl:‘ thhe -Ieltm}m hx‘;u‘x"n’i w hee hl: 3 of the 4 rctic in umn of yoiad e e lan cl [ 4l ' first President Edward Piteatm ordered the Americans to dis- | MiBute Jen, of Gapt Joh, Carter, of E were fiying In o clean wind, | "The other passenger was Capt. G. H.|gentleman who traveled with *seyen Massacmsetia “raised” $09.000 of -t rse “and when they stood motionless | o "SIt oyt Sides started firing. "x“‘n-.“ G iy T eie: | Blanchet, a well known Arctic explorer | wives. Indians kept joining the party, through lectures and School o ek, e, e e 5 B | e e g S0 wound: TR a08, o8 SCI0OnG | s i have Teen Tovatiaie o | {5 Maioqabiey R hued e, vith chiin, vy S e and i T ns opentn; an government, e Mr. of cleties of sort in of iischarged his own pistol, and repeated | 8 0% PRSTIRR SO0 L NSRRI | cloud dnto, glory. | In that| Spence, he had little to'say of his | Eskimos. Heame saw the tragedy com- the country contributed m;?-?nu the order, whereupon a deadly volley | b " aroq that first shot? For years it fid nulrp:\‘:’e one -y petty wor d work, The people who have accom-|ing and could do nothing to avert:it. and dollars to the fund. ‘when slew 8 of the Minute Men and|g.. o tradition among Americans to slipped away, nothing sor plished things in the Far North are| To this day a certain lack of trust the $200,000 was at last raised, the task wounded 10.” - The war was on. blame the officer in command of the Brit- really existed, that one was almost im- | really like the heroes of old-fashioned | Prevails between the Eskimos and the | pre was only half accomplished, for Con- For more than a century this Was |, qvance guard, Maj. John Pitcairn. mortal. fiction —strong _men, imperturbably | Indians. They are not congenial. Anoth gress refused to grant money for its the American ides of the beginning of| As jate as 1912 a Massachusetis his- | The rorthwest territory of Canadasilent about their own achievements. Arrival at Settiement, dated Tepair and maintenance. the Revolution. What few musty and | torian wrote a book about the battle, | comprises a million and a quarter square | Mr. Blanchet took plotures out of the .. | had_flown Finally Congr:ss literally was heckled antiquarian scholars might ‘;' o t"’“‘mf with & frontisplece portrait of Maj. | miles, and everything in it is on a gi- | cabin window, while I gazed down at| Presently, ahead, an overshadowing | on his into voting an appropriation of m no difference to p-tflollfl:u l" he | Pitcairn. Beneath the major's picture | gantic scale, Great Bear Lake, just the landscape. . grayness. Our green river had taken us | for thi to repair the ravages that had writers and !palkfl: at pol &I ':n n: are the words “by whose orders the | beneath us, which it had taken me four| oOp we. swung, following the course | 0 the margin of that vast ocean that | toons. e crumi ‘mansion in its more than ering. Recently, however, the antl-|opening volley of the American Revo- | days to cross in a little power boat, i8 | of the Coppermine River. I remem- | flows among its great cold islands. {0 | had been 100 years of life. the Mount guarians have become mote vocal. THey | jyion was fired.” uncharted, but it is considerably 1arger | bered what -Toots,” & trapper friend, | (1€ €ternal ice barrier of the Farthest ess > ufactured products, | Vernon 7 campaigned have questioned the mccuracy of the | “ACUyha} time, and until last vear, |than Eric and Ontario put together, | niad said as he helped me hto the air- | North- We swept on over Coronstion e Sy chis 't SeiNRcTION old story—not from motives of debunk- | 41,0 pqior was not allowed to speak for | and some trappers who have followed | pia; Gulf, circled, banked and came down e i Lo S ing history, but from a sheer love of | i iHC, AN TUE 1 Town version to | the shore line believe it equals Lake | ” “ainn. slowly, catching glimpses of white truth. torians, Among Gen. Gage's papers | Michigan. The Mackenzie River sys-|in a m.,,,’,,";,‘,‘,",“.}',‘, ‘,";;“{g‘;,?,',;;‘:,gg tents and the moving forms of people. British Papers Found. was the following report of Maj. Pit- | tem embraces an area of 682,000 square | to tak, three We taxied landward, got out, sidled cairn to the commander in chief. miles, Even the little lakes and small | team. There 15 Welter Gilbert of the | Along & pontoon and scrambled to Nowhere have they received greater rivers seem to emphasize the larger fea- | Western Canada Airways, doing in six | shore. We were in Coppermine, or Fert Bupport than in the discovery and the Forbade Fire, Said Pitcairn. # | tures. It is hard to grasp this immers- | weeks & trip of 5,000 ‘miles. that used to | Hearne, the most considerable settle- return to America of the archives and | \MAJ, PITCAIRN'S REPORT TO GEN. | ity until one sees it from the air. Then | cost the old-time explorers five years, | Ment on the coast, consisting of someé gm ?2 the %o mh‘ 'eeom.:;nwl TG GAGE. the huge lakes, '_"‘,h,l}-l:“ );m"' '&hel ir- | All the same, some of these prcspectors eg&n v;:m,e men and three or four score , Gen. Gen. | «gjr, regular ranges of , long and low, h A Sir’ Henry OClinton. These geners’s | =iy you are anxious to know the |the boundicss plains, the. forosts and |uomt oo wene &t s G oUMIMEr | One fiick of the eve could enfbract | til the suggested . fought, and lost, the War of the Revo- | particulars that happened near and at the vast treeless areas give a bewilder- the residences—at the east end the | knew that word and kept saying it back Jution, but ""’,’\,:’“ ;-;hllcrt; :’l;:lr_fl}:fllu; Lexington on the 19th Inst.—agreeable | ing sense of space. o ,‘:fiin 3..:“ B Wikior (%o et % ianatioan mission; to 5‘;’ g B this | t11) all the hands .m"}-.u','n".' E:’G“";m .n'a he Olinton papers to your desire, I will in J‘. gflnflu‘ ® | We were passing over a region from | The light white clouds thickened be- e e e m“’tfie w-ru5 = age (gt ety o Brgland, mlna;rl u‘wlfilhlf ;uu -5 acts, ‘3; which, ever since the earliest days of | neath us. Far ahead against the blue house, his e ey hiad been Dlaced by the Te- | 117, 8t Dresent 18 0 M oy | eXploration and fur trading on Hudson | sky they seemed like a snowy shore of | interpreter's house; then a bit bel turning and defeated generals. B D o ey that day. | Bay have come mysterious rumors of | a bright lake. Presently the blue-black | the living house and tents of the No_Epglish historian_wanted to dis- | “gix companies of Light Infant Were | huge boulders of pure copper, of which | shadow of our plane was cast on the | Northern Aerial Minerals Exploration; turh “thte. papers. Why should he, | detarneg b Le Ceols Bomitn {5 take | the Datives fashioned Weapons and | white floor, and surrounding it, & fiaw- | next a few tenis belonging to_the with glorles of Marlborough, Welling- | possession of the Two Brigades on the tools. From time to time white men |less ciicle, was a rainbow. I have never | Eskimcs; then the house of the priest ton or Lord to take up his at- | other side of Concord. Near Three in | D2V gone there exploring. Whep, some | seen anything lovelier, anything more | and the lay brother: then the white ?fim? No American historian thought | ghe € three years ago, the boats and sleds of | strange. Then the clouds passed, and | tents that are the hospital; and finally Neighboring Swamp Drained. Mount Vernon, built in 1745, has been a chronic care to the association. The soll constantly has to be rejuvenated, that the famous survive. ‘Why should he, with wnhmm»m !I'.’;.fifl;fia":;'l;g;’;:g: the early travelers were supplemented | we saw that the woods had grown | the doctor's house. A sense of white- papers. h by airplanes, the Canadian government, .sparse and spindling. The Land of g = subject mg'z‘::nh iz ) e e e et e actay. | Decause of fmportant concentrations of Fyrrivglr By P B o Ay gy .‘;?‘a’;n"p’é}}m Americans, 1ike | mined to oppose the m"‘:": Troopuetnd copper found north of Great Bear Lake | There were snaky streams and there | other Arctic flowers. Jared Sparks of Harvard, did ransack | retard them in their March, On this and about the Coppermine, in July, | were lakes, sometimes nm and some- | And the people standing there to x 1930, threw open this region for staking | ti . Par to the left th times a long parka, like 8 mother hub- English archives, but Sparks kept close- | intelligence T mounted my horse, and | 274" prospecting. | Thousands. of miles | Dimal Takes that used o mark, the | Breos o o T veY o e Tnan and | DArd With & hood edged with wolverine - 3 d 1y %o the public, not the private collec; | Galloped up to the Six Light Companies | of it have never been sten by any white | dividing line of the hunting grounds of | benind. e O o Bekimos. But | fur, the only fur that does not freese d that was a life work, of | —when I arrived at the head of the ad- Fhtich ‘the Deveect BREHIE TIOCTy. 1, | vinons Oonastn oo s e Nowhere in it, before this glorl- | the Indian and the Eskimo. what they all really stood for it would | When demp. o o e and may well be, proud. informed me that a man of the Rebels | oy, 437 of fiying, had there been a| Soon all the trees were gone and we | take time to realize. At the moment rikind e, ey we A R 3 Bought by American. advanced from those that were there | White YOmAN. were in the region called the Barren | they looked like people enloying a Sume | (0 % oY yinled them. Their own assembled had presented a Musquet and Making for Arctic Ocean. Lands, where the caribou drift, feeding. | mer vacation. Russell Martin, the young — e of White, wem Tt remained, therefore, for a twen- | attempted to shoot them, but the pi The ground really bears an abundance doctor, sent by the Government to’es- | are mere th 1y down tieth century American business man to | flashed 1n the Pan. On this T g:vg i | _The guest of the Dominion Explorers’ | of grass and herbaceous plants. Now | tablish & hospital for the Eskimos and mg:’:%»{;'{-m ‘husbands' !::& find and to bring back to America the | rection to the Troops to move forward, Co., I was making for the Arctic Ocean | and then we saw the,bed of a dry, gray | for any one else along the vast coast- 1 d T at an hflmm e ni most_important British papers on the [but on no sccount Fire, or even at- | With the chief pilot, Mr. (formerly |river. Mr. Blanchet pointed below to a |line who might need help, seemed 1ike | Ju o;!!:lhme by my um. uy 5 Revolution. Prom 1903 to 1923 a Mich- | tempt it without Orders; when I ar- g:.w))udwfllllm smge flMr. spebcde spat where there was a score of white (a nollzflanen,fiia( the "%- m&e ;' the !‘wnm-foot mllquflrexmhnlu et collected an aston- | rived at the end of the Village, I ob- a remarkable flying record, |tents. Here were Eskimos, fishing, he | all looked athle c_ll‘rnlnd m‘es. Xed the ey @ reproct oo e rove wmdimpostant | served drawn up on & Green noarly 900 | both during the war and since. He |said, and the site was Bloody Falls, | Hudson Bay manager - " B T e e ey | of the Rebels when 1. eame. withtn | Was one of those who flew in quest of | That name still carries bitter connota- | ant; the two wireless boys: the Prench | their plots of land. They showed me the earliest . In 1923 he gave the | about One Hundred Yards of them, | the party of Col. C. H. D. MacAlpine, tion to the Eskimos. Samuel Hearne, priest, Father Falaize, and his lay (Continued on Fourth Page.) air entire collection to his alma mater, the | they began to File off towards some : by Lafayette, niversity of Michigan. Then he began | stone Walls on our Right Flank—the now in Mrs. to_collect historical manuscripts. Light Infatnry observing this ran after in the old In 1926 he obuol:wg’ the British head- | them— quarters papers r Henry Clinton. Ordered “) » Disarm In 1930 he bought from the present M B ed, E Viscount Gage of Pirle Place, Sussex,| T instantly called to the Soldiers ‘The entire exhibit for Guam slso will the papers of Gen, Thomas Gage, who, | 207, 1 T, 2, 10, Srvont, Aok O P be bult and assembled in Mount Ver- as A that expe- v < non. Samoan exhil A g of those positive Orders, not to Fire of special millwork and lumber, to-|the Guam exhibit will have two & dition out to Concord on the fateful &ca—some of the Rebels who had g i 74 ther with other materials occupying | ramas showing Ao e, ATt news of Lexing- | jumped over .the Wall Pired Four or BY HENRY W. BUNN, SPAIN.—Apparently the Republicans, | would fain have kept the Dahna as dispa 000 cublc feet of = hold . was | lon o Ak T L oy these papers Five Shott at the Soldiers, which following s & briet summary | Socialists_and _Constitutionalists have | the last remaining preserve for djinn, the loaded on a fast ocean freighter and | The exhibit representing the Virgin On' Ajefl 15 Geén. Cags was wounded a Man in the Tenth, and my HE follow " m‘ el ymint ;’; decided to participate in the coming | unicorns and the like. sent to France. Islands, the latest of the e o SO S B et e | | PR | el Bl S e R ks | e e ot | P e o8 LR bu: ets, Adams and Hancock, | tyme al Shott were fired from a ended February 28, 1931: elections to & Cottes. The Constitu.| SOUTH AMERICA—It's an old story B e e | . hak oo Bl as by the itive information that the ITIS) MM ¢ ALTH » e evetious "Amerionns " arouns " Boso Metiog Hovee,n out Lelt oy thi | BT e B wamirity haa | donaiets Pave, denounced the propueed| e U % ELL kel i | Ghlko o vicaits, and. wr ged. o | lan, bulding metnods sach pece of were gathering arms and ammunition— ided to make extensive cuts A d A and thet they i not intend.to o bird- | Lenb Infantry began s scattered Fire | decided 1o MoK St nakc an im. | character: whether or no they will AT. | prieny, On February 20 some 60|l S (he plasualtles of ihe | with numbers in the architectural de- shooting with that ammuntion. There- | some Jittls contrary to the repeated | portant beginning on April 1 with re- | foRete In Slectonh Feiero SOU8 TOF ¥ | woldiers and civilians insurrected with | reported. tailed blueprints _especially fore, he drew toward him a sheet of | Orders both of me and the oficers that | tirement of 1,044 officers, including 881 | (ISR 1L rofmally retired from poil. | & view to releasing and probably 10| “Dispatches of the 22d show the entire |1oF the bullding of the structures over- paper. On it he made out a list of the | were present. It will be needless to | lieutenant command:rs and 163 | tios. One feels deep sympathy with | restoring former President Leguia. They | Arequipa garrison in revolt, and (ac- "’;iws i sonatriitbion 'l aridtep munitions he had learned the Ameri- | menticn what happened after as I sup- | lieutenants. the Count de Romanes, who complains | began operations gbout dawn by attack- | cording to a Government statement) cans were storing at Concord. ~ Upon | Colo. Smith hath given a par-| The British government has with- | in2, QUMY S8 CRIRRen W00 HoNR e e | ing the presidential palace at Lima. | joyal troops from Cuzco, Puno, Julisca | MoUnt ‘s’:“;,“e"“flgl"“b‘:"”‘:,;‘:{,,';"’mm"“ the lower half of the same sheet he | ticular account of it. I am Sir, Your | drawn the bill proposing drastic amend- | 4yigence in his favorite sport of hunt- | Repulsed by government troops, they'|and Tacna marching upon Arequipa, |y crican in methods 10, i wrote an order to an officer under his | most Obedt. humble servant, ment of the trades disputes act, the | g’ made for Callao, where they took Tefuge | while the government bustles itself with | I2€FoR0, W4, (iR, Empeoyec, TG command to go out to Concord and de- “JOHN PITCAIRN. Simon section of the Liberals having R OB X in the custom house, a former fortress. | miljtary preparations (involving air- constitute an educational exnm.le of stroy those stores. “Boston Camp, 26th April, 1775 |remov:d its sing in committee. This| ,;pantA King Zog of Albania is| Here loyal troops and armed civilians | pianes) at Lima and Callao, and mani- | cursneedy building emmmctlonppnc- water, all arranged is very important. tacked them. They made s brisk de- toes confidentl; $o scale. Original Draft Discovered. 8o says the major—that he did not |1 VE¥ TERSLER Y 0 g sortant, is the | lucky man, For about two months he at! Tes Y. tices, which are so unlike the European | ing model of one of the canal locks will g : 4 1 ense, hen they had killed some This draft, truly the plece of paper t-hfn Tt . id every-| fact that the fivcmment is having | had been in Vienna about his health. iu o,'g?,‘.'i, :'“‘l’fi-nuymd lost about 20 mflll mon g’fl. Sl s e s and foreign colonial erection methods. | be included in the exhibit. in his power to stop the firing. that started the American Revolution, | yeo8 * B8 QOWCE, to POP Fhe FUTE: | great diffculty in committee With 15 On the night of Pebruary 20 he was|of their own band military bombing | FETO SR € FLIEC, Ton o esi- has just come to light. After 156 years | g0 - agricultural bill. lanes appeared above their heads, up 2 O it has been brought back to America | Santislly agree with his—as many of | *po"piicri;m Trust of Great Britain, [lesving the Vienna Opera House after| U all oyer. | dency. To strange shifts are rulers among the thousinds of Gen. R | O s " | Which {5 dispensing & Rund besiowed fof | performance of “Pagliacel” He had | Went the white fag and it 58 Al PVLL: | being driven these days. The same day Balanced Farmmg New Relief Hope papers, Here it is: ly opposed 3 . B general stated purposss by Edward S, |Seated himself in his automobile, when hez C of Peru has had pretty | the government junta issues & decree » “GENERAL GAGES INSTRUCTIONS Soant ohe Sas Kiled st e patile of | Harkness of New York has - g Bt B WA hard sledding since on August 325, i e Rkt As Market Problems Are Reduced TO LIEUT. COL. SMITH Bunker Hill, less than two 'months | $100000 towsrd restoration of BASCOTS | wounded in the hip, the King himself | 1930, s dneciacd imprisoned Presi” | I¢ is both interesting and edifying to 18th of April, 1775 later. The opinions of scholars whol 5Pl " Cathedral of Edinburgh and | Was untouched when nine shots had f:m.m&“:'m jow mothing, caused him | follow the dispatches in sequence. |On have had access to these British ac-|¢qh 060'ty Queens University, Belfast. |been fired. The assailants fied. They o dismiss the revo- | the 24th we are informed that the (Continued From Pirst Page.) of any one State & production “Four Brass Cannon and two Mortars | or Gohorns. with & umber of smaiies | COUnts are inclined to give greater | 700 Y HCNE 107 i dead at 66, of | Were caught by chauffeurs of other au- | in November iast % SIS UL T | Arequipa garrison has set up 8 gov. ht to them. tomobiles and Incarcerated. “Southern Junta” arms_in the cellar or out Houses of | "C8 a tkin disease contracted in Egypt on o overnment, mostly of new mer, | ernment known as the ui of Agriculture, co-operating with many Mr. Barrett a little on the other side | Long in America. her way home to Australia, the which | King Zog is lucky. The very com- > J and that the Cuzco garrison has joined. | interested groups and_agencies. 1y, side Gage Long in ca. y hich | petent. viennese doctors tell him there | Resuli—much tension, including & | 304, 100, 8 PYRE LT ™0 “that Gol: | the pien deatt itk thes these: proplems of the Bridge where is also lodged a .o | completely baffled the physicians. a Quaniity of Powder and Lead. | ot pedios to sey, that the (x| Goubiiul if the. word Has known | 1t nothing organically the matier with | siect ot LTy lavor st 1 | Certo ha falsitied the promises on the | of competiton,” production and_ mat- | the 2 . % , be of of nervous- , -efc. is nciation of can- House s in the Center of the Town.| from 1154 o 1715, Gage it was who | Ustencd to her In her prime. She Wb | 1" Albania, Too mmuch smoking | general economic slump has complicated | SGI08 [0 108 SCrmtent "Dreeidency | | “This Is the way the State which Pro- | oilouina mast be. recognised: e & led the advance guard of Braddock’s | LI being adopted from Melbourne, | MIEt be effect & well as cause. There e DO e s rowvam Of “recon- | may cause them {o break Off (helr | duces one-tenth of all the milk and |Australia and Argentina have in “Threc Guns, 24 Pounders, lodged In | the Promcn and Tadions Snbinbied the | the Australian city near which she was | ate four recorded attempts to assassinate push b two-thirds of all the cheese in the | their Wheat acreage 300 per cent in the United States looks forward to meeting W i oocasion f& | struction and_purification.” ~ Elections | movement. the Prison yard with & quantity of | Britien and Solomim - Torees st Pory | born. She was crested Dame Grand | him. His behavior on this occasion i | FICCO% Lubh it President are an- coursging &0 the g:n’:rm i A Canada, its own future. Wisconsin is going for- settlement, the insurrectos Insisting | yqrq with plans to lower the cost of Cartridges and Provision Duguesne. . As the. suctessor "o Sir | OTosS, order of the British Empire; in | varlowsly descibed . | nounced for July 28, and so far he “A Quantity of Provision and Am- | Jeffery Amherst, it was Gage who re- | TeCOgNition of her work on benalf of | It Sbbests thot one of the MOW'he | tlone"has announced himself & candi- munition in other places the Principal | ceived and kept the letters of Maj. | the Red Cross during the war. e "Gertainy he has done well in | that Cerro resign, the latter proposing | Jod tion' of milk, and to im ‘the Deposits are the House of Messrs, Hub- | Gladwn of Detroit, letters which Park- *x ok k King Zog some vears ago and that, the | {0\ihg 5o his aid & group of American | to debellate ‘e dispatches of the 26th | GUALIEY of the milk. e bard, near the Meeting, Butler, Jones | man needed, but did not have for| PRANCE—The French government |captain in the Albanian army and is an | économic (chiefly financial) experts ery e I the ox. |, Other States have taken some action the taflor, near Hubbards, two men of | the central theme of his “History of e BP wh 10 tH i rdge- headed by Prof. Kemmerer, the “eco- in the matter of definite policies and the name of Bond, and particularly at | the Conspiracy of Pontiac.” e et 5t e Broup of | T . Acte. i Albania as & Democrat, | nomie doctor.” The behavior of the ¢l | treme norih, P BroFeams of production.” fncluded in Mr. Whitneys who lives on the Right| As commander in chief in North | vessels planned to answer and outelass | but was constrained to fiy his country, | Villans in the recent emeute would | revolution, o thard list are Alabama, California, Colo- Hand near at the entrance of the Town, | America {rom 1764 to 1715, Gage Was the famous German Ersats Preussen g " | seem to indicate popular approval of the | troops thither as well as southward. = |rado, Georgia, Idaho, Tlinols, Maryland, st & House plaistered white a smal | virtually the viceroy. Certainly his type “the 10,000-ton pock-t battleships.” colonel. Report of the 27th of expul Montana, New Hampshire, New York, yard in front and a railed Fence a large | office was the focal point of the Brit- | They are described ai ARABIA—It is announced that Roba | Former President Leguia was tried | Of the re ¥ by loyal North Carolina, ‘North Dakota, Okla< Ly I troops, Quantity of Powder and ball is reported | ish Empire in North America. To him ! of anoroximately armored crulsers” | ¢ ‘Khali or Dahna, the “Sandy Desert” | for “grafting,” found guilty and fined | of adhesion to the r:bellion of & crulset | yimq, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Da- 10 be deposited in his stores adjoining | went the letters from the colonial gov-| ° 1t was an innovation in_ diplomacy | OF “EmPty Quarter” or “Abode of Lone- | §7,625,000. The same dispatch told of | sent to block Mollendo, the P""b‘g kota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and W, the house. ernors, officials, agents, merchants, of-| when February 2 Y| liness” of Southeast Arabia, has just | revolutionary flare-up at Encarnacion, | Arequips, and of defeat of Cuzco re ashington. it ekl ficers at. frontiers posts—any one who | wcTpOf February 23 Arthur Hender: | peen crossed for the first time by a |a town of Paraguay on the Parana, op- | troops marching for Arequi i R AT rely Ordered. had official business with the mother | Alexander, British first lord 'of the ad- | European, .amely, Bertram Thomas, | posite Posadas, in Argentina. . Its im- county programs have bee m"““ i “sir, country. At the same time he received | miraity, made a ial to | One-time wazir of the Sultan of Muscat. | partance is yet to be shown. Encar- “A 'Quantity of Ammunition and | ihe letiers from the various admini- | memfe wit armtine et st oo | Mr. Thomas journeyed on camelback | hacion is the terminus of the Central Provision together as Numbers of Can- | strative departments in England, the|i; e: ting & Pranco-Italian naval | from south to north, from Dhofar, &g Paraguay Railway. A ferry makes con- non and small arms having been col- | Secretaries of State for War, the Treas- | accord. Apparently the Britons aimed | the Arabian Sea, to Dohah, nection with the Argentine Northwest- ete. B persuade the Franch to, curtall thels | Peninsula, on ‘the Persian Gulf, The | ern Rallway at Posadas. Jected at Concord for the avowed pur- | ury, the Admiralty, etc. time agricultural devel of assisting s Rebellion against| Apparently he kept almost every letter | naval program, especial regard desert is some 650 miles from north t0 | And the same dispatch told of arrest for the E‘lfljw-o«vmt.mwfllmm.nd’umewielonhmnvrw&new u-uherngfll:dwabw?wummduommmmmMnmflmoflmnfim ;:.n the Corps of Grenadiers | the frontier. He kept of all of | Within 24 hours the Englishmen had | Only the merest fringe thereof had pre- | Aires, charged with plotting against the tory of his " to| viously been penetrated by governm tempt had snd Light Infantry under own letters. Upon return to | obtained “agreement in , ent. command with the - ‘expedition | England in 1775 he took with him this | thelr proposals and had taxen train for | CApt. Cheesman, St. John Philby and | * Later dispatches indicated that the and secrecy to Concord, where you will | great eollection of papers, which ex- | Rome to_lay thelr agreement before | Others. One eagerly awaits Mr. Thomas' | Peruvian uprising was a deal more seize and destroy all the Artillery and | plain America in the 15 years before Premier Mussolinl. We are yet to be | 8ccount of the journey, hoping that he | important than the ear ones pie- Ammunition, Provisions, Tents and all | the Revclution. There they have re- |informed of the terms of this agree- has a goodly share of that literary skill | tured. We were told that the Peruvian other Military Stores you can find. |mained in 12 large wooden chests—at |ment, but presumably it contemplates | Which hes distinguished so many Eu- | navy was cold to the movement which | tu You will knock off one Trunion at|the ancestral seat of the Viscounts |considerable reduction of the margin of | Topean travelers in Araby. The optimists | overthrew Leguia, and never really ac- dest the Carriages, and beat in the 0';4“‘ il they 'u?:?"”'"’ 't’!‘n ml xull dnnchd;l"l:yl ::' ::Ie Shuhites %‘i h:‘-?m the it hatched in the d ot until two years ‘were “re- nage to at of ly AN Tevolt wis NAvY, muzzles of the Brass ones so_as to | discovered” by Dr. Cl:r'e‘r’nu 8. Carter of | France, At the London Conference of | through Bildad, the Shuhite, Job's | that the insurrectos of the 20th were gi 23 if i i vender them useless. The Powder | Miami University, Ohio. Last Spring |last year the Prench demanded a mar-| comforter. ‘mostly officers and men of the navy and and Flour may be shaken out of the |they were purchased and recrossed the | gin of 244,000 tons; the quid nuncs are| Now is the time to read “The Penetra- | marine corps, with some participation Barrels into the water, the tents burnt, | Atlantic for their permanent home in |sure that have lowered the figure | tion of Arabia” that extraordinary o(t.hm Participation of naval end the Men may put the balls and | the Clements Library at the University | to_about 160,000. man and ‘writer, David G. | vessels seemn required to explain mmmmwmam ‘The hto-y,butfl-flz!gm mw&muh way by Degrees into the Fields, Ditches | (copyrignt, 1931, by the New York Herald should from announcements but some of mmmmfi m’hmmm:,fimg Ito applaud Mr,-