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VIREEL IR RANIEN gy gilh ko - Norwi%, - et it B Pedaris % o, MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, v {84 pipet 4d alse iné lécil Heds Dublisbed o - CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MARCH 12th, 1921 11,026 WANTS JUSTICE DONE. . That thé boundary line between Pan- ama dnd Costa Rica wil] be amicably ad- justed through the assistahce of this country seems td be the probable out- comé of the difficulties that e arisen. While an award has been it has never beén accepted by both sides and put inte effect. There are points about it which neither side likes and that gives ground for hope that just as they saw the folly of fighting and endeavoring to settlé the troubls threugh & demonstra- tion of fofee they will sée the wisdom of reaching an understanding with the White award a8 & basis that will put an end to the dispute and ilt feeling. AS it is new disclosed both the coun- trieg are sighateries to a treaty to the effect that they Wil turfi to the Unitéd States .as mediater in case of disputes, Costa. Rica has already signified_its will- ingness to @8 this 444 it seema probdable that Panama as the result of the new note which has béen forwarded to it by Secrétaty Hughes Wwill récognize the ad- visability of sueh astion, Much more important and ich more serious disputés havé been adjusted in the way that it is proposed to end this. It is of the greatest importance that there should be the disposition on the part of those interested to reach an adjuStment that will be satisfactory. With mots than sne point on the boundary line in dispute it is possible to range one against t other until by such redefinition of the line the trouble is overcome and an accept- wble liné established. Panama cannot ex- pect to get any more than it is entitled to. It hag & right t6 expect to gét what belongs 0 it. This ébuntry has no'othér purposé in view tha&f to see that justice is done in the case of both countries. That has béén its object from thé start dnd it has desired that it might bé accomplished' without bloodshed. The interruption of hostilities by thir country has saved much devastation &nd many lives and its services will aid in reaching a settlement if given a chance. DRASTIC KANSAS, Kansas has had strange - {déas and Wwhile theré is nothing new in the idéa of applying tar and feathers to undesirables it certainly is sufficiently radical to de- velop in that commonwealth, though per- haps not quité as deésperate as might have been expécted from states in the south. Yet it should have beén possible for Kansas to have let it be known that it thoroughly discountenanced the effotts being made to promote the non partisan league within its borders in some other way. If these Who were harshly treated invited the severity of the attack by fail- ing to keep their promises t6 get out of the state, it may be that they are chatg- ing up) their éxperience to contributory negligence, but whether it is in Kansas! or ahy other state it ought not to be over- looked that those who are expaynding the perits of the mon partitdn leagus haye rights Which are entitled to respect’ pre- vided they do not attempt to eéxceed them. However much it is impossible to ap- prove the course followéd by the Kansas tar gang, it would séem to indicate what the sentihent in that part of the country| Is regarding the Townléy organization. ‘Whether Kansas held such cofiviction be- foré the disclosures in North Dakota is not indieatéd but its radieal course ap- péars to have béén taken in order to pro- tect the peoplé of Kansas from the ex- periences of the Abrtherfi neighbor. There are reasons to believe that Kan- sas could have taken means that would have been quite ab effestive, althouen they might have Had to bé dxtended over & much longer pérlod, had it displayed its bpposition to the hon partisan league in \ ® less dfastic manner. Acts of violence may teach their lésséns to what the tar and feather gang believe to be dangerous propagandists but they cah hardly ex- péet to get endorsement for such con- duct. While it may have to bé admitted that such individuals tock a short out to & common sense tresalt it Ransas was thinkifig right there ean be little ques- tion but what it would have been the| outlook quite as discouraging by its cold shoulder as tha few énthusiasts did by their thr &nd feathers. [ WHERE ATTENTION 18 NERDED. In connection witl the admission of immigrants to this country particular ef- forts are made to see that they can pass cerfain tests and are what cah be coh- sidered as desirable,. Mahy Who aré not desirable get by thé inspectors but while close attenition Seéms t6 be given to deal- Tifg With aliehs who come hérs to maké their home nené tos much if Aay mtention is given to thote alien déamén Who desért on réaching thése, shores, or Who in fact comé here as seamén fér thé purposé bf getting around ‘the laws of this country, With the arrést i this stdte of a for: signer who hdd bee ifi thé country but short Whilé it was disciosed that he had come hérs as & seaman ahd desetred. Hé Ead enspped his fingés at the immi- gration restrittions and was, as there aré reasons to believe, an indivifual who had , _eemé hers for the purpéké of breating trouble. FHé i & bolsheVist by Eis ad- mission and disclosures régarding him came when he confldéd to another his possession of tWo powerful bombs. Hé put Wp & hérd fight when arrested but wis subdued and will be deported, but plainly hé was a fhan Who ought not to "zel systém the président was unwilling | the brought to this country way of South American ports. in getting thé into the countrs od eh indicates is probably one.of ::’ o:'.'." the big sources of supply for who | Pt ana are engaged in the distribution and salé|ness knos of rarcotié drugs in violation of the law | .« in this country, : watéri gers Thus while evéfy poséible attention | back -poreh. “T've should bé devoted.to the breaking up of ::l as me: model thig' filicit, traffic it would appear thit too ,;,l ! uch attention camnot be directed toward | L IHEE S the safeguard of the country from the| .y, can’ undesirable, deserting seamen as WEIl 23 'that Jeads to all sorts of complications.” from the seamen who aré extensively eni| ‘Why, when Herbert said he had to g6 gaged n smuggling and getting fich re-| to Indianapolis on business and would be gardless of the demoralizing efféct their|away ,l;m .::h:hc tv:o nl x::dnxw:: m‘ n:: e e e S i really didn't see hw’vu could stand it, WORTH POLLOWING, and what on éarth would we do during Well doés Secretary Melleh eof the that long and dismal time! | “The day hé d tréasury department direct attentio at|, bi¢ at dinner betause he had found he this time to the importance of establish-|could take an 11 o'clock train, thus giving ing 4. national budget system. Long|him the évening at home with s, and, of needed and long urfed the mew congress|course, we werg delighted—though to tell should devots -suffiefent of its attentfon| thé truth 1 iahcon by yebs thih to this need to insure its establishment. f;’:‘m":{n 3 h ;‘;’Y.:"mx:'c;’:u Lo Nearly a year ago much stress Was DeIAg| ey work that takes time and that one laid upon the passags of the budgst bill| can't do When a man's around.” and action favorable to it was taken by p— congress. But: for the veto applied by| “Isn’t it 862" agreed the lady with the President ‘Wilson it would long ago have | geranium bo: 3 become.law, but While favorable to a bud-| ‘Bxaetly, id the gingham lady with tragedy In the famtly. “So I read a to /danction what he considered the in- 50 &nt magaziné and looked as expensive fringément +of ‘his rights under its pro- :‘m'l :,':;E mlonb.‘h Herbert faréwéll 2 > The next evening visions. Thers was not timé i the rush| wpen after dinner The 6mas dolled up and of business at theé close of the séssion | pr to g6 out I impressed it upon to' modify it s he Suggested; and bécause | him that sines hi§ father was-.away hé the president and the senate were net in|must return homie early, because I didn’t as close touch as they should have been, | want to bé left alone. Thomas, being 18, nd possibly bécause more or less feeling | IS it 16¥¢ and it was a calamity having existed no setiblm effort was made to put| [0 1eave Bmeline’s front porch at 10 the bill through at the short session just | OC oow, UL 25 the man of the famiy, ended. . < self for the cause. Then I told Johnmy ‘With congress and thé president politi-| that he ahd I would go to the movies: cally and othérwiss in harmony the spe-| Nobody likes movies in our family but cial seéssion called for the eleventh of | Johnny and myself, so both of us wefe April Shetld see that thé budget system | gréatly exeited at this chance for a spres. legislation is plaeed mear the tép of the| The picture we wanted to see was at progtamme for the session. It is o | SOme distance, but we were feeling reck- that the governmént was doifig business ©n a bueinesy basis, giving due consid- eration to the hsé of its money as well : S the getting of it, preventing duplicats |} 60D INCIDENTS IN AMERICAN appropriations Whith are ble under AISTORY the present arrangement and checking thé wagte and extravagance. Secretary Melion in this eénnection had | ATTEMPTED ABDUCTION OF GEN. eome;nmumqrud:lln‘:n t:! u:hy in rn"-’rd t: SCHUYLER, L e e country And| pyping - the Revolutionary war the the nesa which Hot only exists NOW, But | yeouting parties of the Britien, embolden. will continue te éxist for some time of €0 | 44 by the féeble state of thé country, and handling the affairs of the nations that| encouraged by thé high réwards offéersd the tax burdend will not be incréeased.|them, ware éxcéedingly Aetive in the se- Well aoes nhe indleats that because the cufi;xl oti 1nfl:|:ng:’\n :me.rzcn:‘: ;v;«:! m;; ¥ ul veying them 2 DI . war I8 dver thal we §hould not disrégard Tatepba and sometimen by fores, they the valuablé 1essons :in thrift that have fell 11 thob® DeFséns, marked &s half been taught. We are out of hostilities | (€0 HEP1, 0N PUERIAE T N e would \biit we haven't finished paying for thém. manage to escape beyond pursuit almost Much g0od can Be obtaified by following | betors their dutrages would be Known. out his suggestion that thé génerdl pub-| Many o6f these attémpts were successful, lic should become more intérested in n;- ‘while fi?men signally fafl;d.h The l‘auer ing the government monéy than if spend.| Was the case with one of the most au- ‘in: it. 5 datlous attempts in the securing bf Geén, Schuyler) They also failed i their ob- VEILED WITH UNCERTAINTY. | Jtot with Gen. Gansevoort. Mord or 18 uncertainty has besn feig| Gen. Schuylers residence was In the suburbs of Albany. He had retired from fegarding the reports Which have ¢oMé| ine army, but still Wa$ of vast conse- out of Russia conotfning tevolutionary | quéncs and influence to the . American activities, and such' ig bound to be felt}cause. The imporu&ce that he assuméd at the present timé as to the storfes of| in the control of affairs made it an és- the efforts that aré being made by the|pecial object with Maldimand, the Brit- revolutionary forces to wrest that coun- ‘;:‘m::m":“::pe‘:‘g‘;;dt&‘;‘;:::::°:.‘: try from the contrsl of thé soviet govérh- d 2 ¥ % ment. Hdgh side aintalhs progress s |t on féot. Jonf ‘Waltermeyer, a no. totious Tory partisan, was éntrusted with being made and that the opponents are| i .vecutiop of the design, and wrth gradually being weakened. a company of whites and Indians he Whether thé existing situation has! proceeded to Albany and prepared to en- servad to advance thé négotiations be-| trap his anticipated victim. tween the koviet govérnment and Poland| The general had béén often cautished rélative to peacé térms, or fiot, it i8 in-| 6f the danger to which he was expossd teresting to note that preliminaries have| by such attempts and the frequency with been agreed upon at this timé when by a| Which influential citizens were entrapped, continued refusal on the part of the bol-| 2nd captured, was sufoient cauke for hifa sheviki could easily mean the turning of | 12 “FAeish SMELY VETATCe ARG catton Poland to hostilties and thus open up aé-| poysenold a suard of six men) Who wers, tion over an exténfled front and throw in| by turns on duty day and might, with the anti-bolsheviki & mbést powerful] The evening of a sultry day in Auguat opponent. > . was selected as the occasion to make the About’ Petrograd the revolutionists are| Attembt. ~ The general and his fam- stil] fighting regardless of soviet claims|!ly were all gathered in the front hall of important gaips. Whether General of his house, and the doots wers all Budénny and his army are Aighting for or | theoums "wir pescirle whes a orarnit Al agamst the bolshevik leaders at “the|nsupced that a stfanger at the back gate present time is a Dbit uneertain. If his| requested the presence of the general on army has joined thoS€ who are oppoking|a matter of business, Lenine and Trotzky hé is ifi a position| A messhge so singular at énee excited to cause much trouble for the soviet|Suspleion. gllfoflt':mnely, n'-\: ;v;n\n‘: was 50 (warm that the servants had dispers- heads and to have great influence among ea." The thres setriées just reNevhd others who tay bs wavering. Not only fro 4 . duty had retired, and the others, is he close to Moscow but he s In & Po-| wpo enould have been at their post, were sition to shut off the.supplies fof that city | stretched on the grass in the garden, and other sections Which look to the south| Tnaé doors were hastily closéd and fast- for such néeds, éned, while the family hurried to thé up- Much will depénd upon the léadership|per rooms. the géneral to arm himselt undér which the fevolutionists are acting. ::gytr‘:!m::df:;es;x:igé“ i Evidence is disclosed regarding the feel-| ¥ T OO apd almost smmediately "{ ing among the people as Well &8 MANY |}, (10 crash of heavy blows asainst vnits of the bolshevik forces, That they b are desirous of shaking off the present the doors below. The peneral threw up a window to alarm the ~uard. A violent voke is indicatéd but whethér it is possi-| struggle wa& now heard below. The three ble for thoss leading the révolufion to|guards who were within the house had get concerted actioh remains to be seén. |been aroused and were endeavoring té And theé uncertainty in the inds of these Wwithéut as well a8 thosé Within the coun- drive the assailants back. Finally the guards were ove: try i increased by the reports which are contradietory. and the assailants rushed into the house, While fthis struggle was going 6n the alarmed and terrified ladies wete in an - agony of fear at the remembrance that EDITORIAL NOTES. in their bustle of escaning an ;‘nnm had ! Deen left in the nursery. AS Margarétta e A Sl °*“‘:;"°; the third daughter, went for the child she grad : &l s was confronted by Waitermeyer, ths peacetul city. leader of the gang, who exclaimed: ——— e “Where i§ your master? Just at the present time it is hatd 8| With admirable presence of mind, Mar- tell which reports cofiing out of RusSia |garetta réplied: “Goné t6 arousé the are t6 be believed. .ltown.” Alatmed at this, hé hufrisd by ¢ e B permitting hér-to escape to the room After this if sick people get well it is|Where the family was gathered, who, in probable that a majority of the cases at dreaded apprehensioh, were awaiting the least Will be attributéd te medical beér,|1SSu® of the daring 4fd hérole explof 2 SN *|. Waltermeyer hastily summoneéd his fél- lowers from the drawing roorh Whers they were éngaged in plundering the place, and who reluctantly désisted from their work to listén to the ordérs of their 185dér. At this mowrént the general thréw up thée window and called out: ‘Come on, my brave féllows, surround the house and sécure the viNaihs, ‘Whe are plundering.” 'The party, terrified at this, dhd supposing that they were sur- rounded, made a précipitous retreat from the housé, carrying with them the three meén who had, as sentinels, s6 heroically detendsd the place, ©ne of whom was wouhded. Ty oy Waltermeyér himeelf had récéived a The man on the corner 8ays: Except!byllet fr6m one of the ghefal's plstels, for the fellow whe fofgot it, it is & relief | bjit was only lightly wounded. to knéw that the income tax return datelt is pdst for andthef yeat. ‘When France indicates it will aecept a modified league, it jooks as it what was said a few months ago was béing verified. ‘With the inauguration costing but §1,- 500 there was real esonomiy practiced at ‘Washingtén tor Which President,Harding ean be thanked. It is easy to Interprét what the Palme: ruling amounts to when one big nu:\er declares it was the bést néws he had heard in seyeral years. e the ity ®as &larmed and the citl- zéng came hurrying to the spot, but net betors the éntire body of sesailants had ed, * 1 The thtee guards wWeré conveyed to Canada &nd were restored aftér the war. To each the genéral béqueathéd a farm in feward for his services. (Tomorrew: Pulaski's Amerita.) [T E— | Steries That Retall Others ‘ Just Naturslly Frieadly, A wothan n liness and her absenimindedness went on a shonping tour to a neighboring city. She planhed to return on a lafe attérneon Dr, Simens says the occupation of Ger- many is & blow at the world. Perhaps he thinks so, but Germany hasn't quite reached those propbrtiohs. It 18 tolly t6 talk bout & bats rodd Eeve % whtk. Nothing {5 that direction sheuld éver bé attémptéd that Would Rave as thé goal anything 168 thah safé réads évery diy in the year. It is said two million have been set aside for relief of farmers in the drought stricken’ sections -of the country. © And it Wasn't supposed” that thets was & dry community in the lands have béen allowed to stép ashote here. HoW miny others ae doing the same thing he did 12 ;flun ufiu,, ;?:x geahtities of n are Béing straggled ints the &bintry by thots fal. s fréqusntly disclosed. ailniiy & dose valned g R Deported réds aré said ts be disap- pointed Wwith Russia besdusd thé cbm- munitic r&gimé means nothing but hafd laber without adequats feed. And this about dear .seviet Russial Why it cannot be pessible! s train and hurried from store to stere. She bought several Afticlés at a depart ¥ieRt tefe and Was rapidly tb the exit thinking Where he Would go net 1h Hef haSte £fié arébped ofie b the paok- ages. A floor walker reeovered it ad HAnding it t6 hér Rald: “Hete is your parcél, maddm. Call 10 1éave he cheered WP | o vigilancé and caution. ‘ y this | 4 Aetio 1 kmown for her friend- | 1% . the || 4 o v g 47 £ . iy [} = - 9 we | e TEOk wh s | SPRING mks, Who had pre- confusing Four would be away tiwo nights to find he hasn't beén Away at all. IDiS 6 hard to readjust your mind. “Just thén Thomas hurtied up te stairs and staréd at his male parent. ‘Oh, 1y, ‘Dad’s home! gether with clever Parisian milliners. i 4 Iy not gled to s66 me! I Am rélieved to learn the trué éstimiation in whith I am held——' and so forth.” “Don't they aiways aet that way, though!” eomménted the geranium lady. “It's n6) use teyIng to makeé 'em uhder- stand ! You'll Nave to také lemon cfeam pie and strawberry shortéake for dessert for & week to 1644 Nix wiind away from LAV “It's coming hard, though” sighed the woman in the cheéekéd gingham. “We certainly are -stefping artfully at my house thesé days, the boys and 11 Men aré 86 queer !"~Ex¢hange. The Spring pléase.” g “Thank yeu, I will,” she replied. “You bring your felks and come to see us real soon.” = A¥ Iselstént Hostoss. Eight-yéar-old Ruth was htving heéf first party. Beforeé the guésts came mo- ther gavé hér a leng talk on the dutiés 6f a hostess, and told her to bc sure that everyone Wap served with all the re- freshménts. And- Ruth promised. But_among the guests was one littlé ‘miss WHho Wis véry shy. She difn't play any of the games, shé didn't converse, and when tne cream was orouglt for- ward refused to take any. ‘Mhen Ruth came over to har. “You must eat some,” she insisted, offering her anothér dish of creai little visitor shook hér head. *“I don’t want ahy.” ghe persisted. “But y6u must éat it,” Ruth insisted. ‘You muft eat it even It you hAVE to thEdW it up afterward.” cost. — IN THE DAY’S NEW. PANAMA. ‘Washington, D, C.—The Republic of, Panama, which was déscribed in recent D ary, is the subject of thé follow- ing bulletin issuéd by ational Geographi¢al Society : ! squirming snake. It is 31 milée hcross at its narrowest point and fhot much over 50 miles wide throughout most of | its 450 miles ot length. It is about the size of South Carolina. The great- est part of the Atlantic side of the jsthmus is occupied by jungles. The population is between a third and a half of a million. Some pure Indians occupy the central mountains and a part of the Atlantic coast toward South Ameérica. There is a large negfo ele-| ment in the population. The remainder are of Spanish extraction and 6f mixed blood. The majority of the more dv“'l jzed and progressive inhabitants live on the Pacific side of the islaad, and | are concentrated noticeably in the western end toward the Costa Rican border. Since the cession of the Canal Zone to the United States, Panama has had no army but has dépended solely on its national police force.” Paname, has probably had as v thtills the square foot as any other seéction” of the earth of similar sizé. TH thé igno- €y hive ra ] blé t6 thé fi6ble, ffom the drunkén de- bauchériés of bléddthristy pirates a: they sécked hé pérous ecities o the country, t6 ghé féelings of Balbos hé stood, first whité mdn to viéw the wat of the Pacific, and thosé of thé Améfican efigineérs who saw the complétion there 5t thé world's greatest énginééring teat. And through it all Jurge tracts of the little country have remainéd much as they were whan Columbus first set foot there in 1502, and happy to find a part of a real continént after seemingly interminable islands, naméd it “Tecra Firme.’ “Paniamd prépetratés one of the greatést of geographic jokes on those who visit it. It very convincingly makes east wést. From Panama City the sun rises qut of the Pacific, which 1o most Ameritah minds is the proper place only for sétting suns. And he Who sails through theé canal from the Atlantio to the Pacific travéls not from east t0 west hé naturally expects to do, but trom west to east, or more, accurately, from nofthwest to south- east. né gets the impréssion, as one ‘Writer has phrased it, that ‘there is something crookéd, about this’ The crookédness is found to be in the isthmus which rung predominantly east and west instead of north and south, and in addition makes a double curve like the letter S, so that at one place the Atlantic Waters are actually west of those of the Pacific. ‘It may seem & fit cty from the lay of the land at Panama to the South Séa, but bécause of the éast and west trend of the isthmus thé popular name for that hugeé, island-dotted ocean has largely taken ‘the place of the more nearly correct, ‘S86uth Pacific’ When Balbea stood on an isthmian mountain crest in 1513 and discovered the great ocean stretching off to the southward he naturally nameéd it ‘El Mar del Sur’ —thé South Seéa, A few days later when 'he had Wéh his way to the! nhewly discOVéred océan.he wadéd into | it an@ madé thé --singularly modest ; claims fot the XKing of. Spain to| sovereignty over thé sea and all lands and islands bordéring on it, ‘from pole to pole, till judgment day. “Since & few years aftér Balboa's distovery thé Isthmus of Panama — for a long time caliéd Darien—has been the gatéway for commerce between theé Bast and the West and between Paci- fic South Ameriea afid Burope. The 618 city of PAndma wis foundéd as the entfy port 6f the Pacific side in 15‘1’},/more thaf & Hundréd years be- foré¢ the Pilgrima landed ih Maksa- chusétts. Poftebells, known to all readers of pirate tales, Wwas the At- latitic pOM, af@ betweéen thém was constructed & paved trail. At the height bf Bpanish colonial power gold and silver from Peru wers cartéd Acrtéss hlhls o:d tn]ll like cord wood. “Such great wealth gas an irresisti- w attractioh to thefbuceaneers who mfllg the Cari & aftef {rné théy s A6%n on thé isth- MUs from their stPange com- moRweAIltH fhedr Haitl. Buffalo In Canada. ek For years Indians in the nofthérn regions of Canada have declared that at least one herd of wild buffalo was thriving in the disttict of Mackenzie. White nomads coming casually into; contact with civilization told similar stories. Sometimes details were added. The whité men usually contended that the animals were not true buffalo, but a Epecies to which they gave the name of wood-buffalo. Generally, how- ever, their information as to the num- bers and condition of the animals, afd | the pafticular territory in which they roamed was nebulous. The settled communities eon the fringe of the lonely lands placed little credence in the tales. Civilized Can- ada indeed was convinced that the herd of wild buffalo in thé horth was a ! myth—a variation of Indian legends that had grown with the passing years sifce the last of the vast herd of buf- falo that once thrived on the prairie lands had disappeared. The myth has been dissolved. A real herd of wild buffalo has been dis- covered, numbered with as much ex- actness as poseible, their condition and | habits notefl, and the extent of their range approximately measured. F. H. Kitto, of the natural resources Intelligence branch of the Depaftmeént of the Interior of Canada, spefit the greater part of last summeér In ae: quiring this Information in. the buffaio territory. . He was fortunate enough to be able to secure séveral snapshots ot the buffalo, though most of his at- tempts to secure close up pictures were frustrated by the rapidity with which the animals whenever Mr. Kitto or any Of the guides got wi rea- sonable_distance of them. Mr. Kitto, who is no stranger to the north country, having done a great deal of exploring and surveying there, devoted his whole attention to the effort to verify or disprove the wiid buftalo story. Having obtained visible proof of the existence of one herd, he began the search for another which the Indians declared was in éxistencé atill further north. He was compelled to abandon this seafch by the approdch of winter, but hopes to bé able tb re- sume it eArly héxt summér and be- liéves that it will be successtul, The range of the wild buffalo, ae- cording to Mr, Kitto's pr-nminarx res port, centers in about latitude 80 de- greeg north and longitude 112 degrees west. The territoty lies in the north- orh part of the proyvinee of Albérta an hé eouthern pary st the district of I.Cr:hllpt It is bounded an the -onéh S ar bou mountains, and on the north By Great Slave lake. T estimiatés (hé herd with which he cathe into contact a8 numbering mnig Old Panama was efitifely destroyed in 1671 by such &n expedition ufidét the leadership of thé notoriou Hefre Morgan, later Sir Heénry. On other' beoasions, Portobel- 1o, 1A Spité of itk formidable fortifica tions, wasx taken, 4nd)éven otcupis by the pirates A8 & for months a time, orts % P'Mto s of thé sld bells, lséléss in thé vi Phich the one-time lent port has Shrunk, was demol utig the building of the Panama Chnal &nd fts ston crushed to make material for eoncrete, “Politically the Republic of Panama thing apart. It was formerly a state of the public of Columbia, in Bouth Amer but gained its inde- rendence in 1] Geographicaily s 4 part entral America, but it has béén 18Ft dut of the recently 2ormed Unién of Cén: eri¢a. This {solo~ et s et e nl B ip Panal tehding thro 4 setion o SOL b 1 Wednesday, March 16th, Thursddy, Bringing to you for formal view the " Faehisive Williery IN NEW APPAREL AND SUITS, WRAPS, SPORT COATS, DRESS COATS, WAISTS, DRESSES AND GOWNS . ‘A display which of individual and exacting appointment levels itself to the desires of those who would be correctly appareled at moderate We Invite Inspection. THE PORTEOUS & MITCHELL CO. ‘OPENING March 17th adaptations of Fashions Dresses and Blouses Try our ready-to-wear depart- ment for your Spring outfit. | Quality and fit combined with reasonable prices our aim. ) HAGBERG, 310 Main Street b § { t e 1000 head. This figure he feached after the most careful calculation extending over a period of some weekd. Biifnina- tions were made day to day, me- cording to the locality covered, so As to avoid the possibility of eounting thé same groups more than once, He found no buffalo in the more northerly part of the range—of Wwhich he was ablé to cover 4 small séction—but hée I8 hot now so strongly ificlined as forfmefly to disregard the assertiohs 6f th{lw #ays a writer in the Christian Science Monitor. Each has his or her corner on a certain stféet anl there is ne Protection for those canines who stray ihto terrjtory not théir own. 1 bands of ten t6 twenty, they patrol the ety by day, And at night time when they aré it Adding 6 the noista of the Ofiefit by voedl protésts against the ways of the world, they sleep in every nobk ‘ARA ctanhy about the thorough- ng_p.. hey ffe Alwaye hun, And it needs ohly the cail, “Buk, suk, Buk,” to rouse In the summer season thé buffale | thém in legions, for by that token of scattér through the woods, feedi in | eaktetn speech théy Khow that some the markhes and meadows and - | oné, fof some reason, is about to feed quenting the sand- hills for protection|thém bread. Against the Rles. During thé Winter But wahdef about the different they gather in big bands for protéetioh | stfeets in search of food? Not they ! against the wolves and stick tty,| Rather do they maintain a “Spendid closely to the grassy meadows. 'héy | Ib8lation” ahd refuse to stfay from seem to find no diffieulty in getting ir own stfeét, of even from théir through the enow to their feed.—Néw | PiFticilar #nd of 4 certain thotough- York Bveninz Post. fafe, for théy afe clannish beyohd 3 Tuure and their prejudices are dis- fictly 1Akular even when they are extremiely hungfy: 5 Under (Re hew 1A% to come Ints efféet It is estithated that thers ate afiy- [Ih Onthels Aext Beptember brides under where from 15,000 to 30,000 Aoge in |sifteen years of agé will have 16 retutm Damascus, and théy are all pafiahs, |t school dians that there is another herd of hedd there. DOGS OF DAMASCUS More Than 15,000 of Them and Al Homeless ) CERIZANE BALSAM ‘Quickly 83 ;ri i 2 g Relieves Coughs Pt g Kl et B