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* & 8 Im stitching the sole to the ‘epper. it ts the sane as leather—possidbly due to sulphide, which, however, ‘Rot present in surround. hi ad the object, un. the werk of a master % oak jr. Matthew says that Knapp’s fan accidental creation of - before man first ap em earth. It is the most perfect specimen of its found, better than | i E : i [ i | i : & [ 8 R iH : i il | | i iH ey itt | | g i z t 2 BF { es i : I i rat Hl November every member the house must stand for re They wanted the soldier | efate—who must run next Novem- each make a “bonus ree- making bunk speeches. two-thirds of the sen- and democrats— up for re-election—can bill from passing and se President Harding from the must write if he stands repeated statements. there you are. The bonus bogus. It is bunk. Before ‘was passed it was agreed every congressman might “extend his remarks” in the Con- gressional Record. ‘That means that millions of copies of speeches that never were and never will be delivered ‘will be sent out by congress to their constituents. The eagle will scream; ‘The soldiers will be smothered under adjectives; rpear Het pei! ee ar ‘The soldiers will get nothing. Bunk. If all things work together For ends so fine and dest, What need to question whether Hach in itself is best? —Anon $8.06, im the state of W $4.60 for € montha, or # The politicians will get the votes; imaginative thought es 8 & knife. Inside these edges are two rows of neat perforations such as would be A mysterious object—apparently the petrified sole and heel of a shoe—has been dis- covered in solid rock far under the surface of the earth. The discovery was made by Albert Knapp, mining prospector, in blue limestone of the B: dt mountain range, Nevada. ‘The Tfiassic rock, in which this peculiar object was entombed, was formed between Li 0,000 and 300,000,000 years ago. So says Dr. William D, Matthew, paleontologist t the American Museum of Natural History, to whom the fossil was rushed, John T. Reid, mining engineer, thinks Knapp’s find is a clue to an extinct civilization existed millions of years ago. If so, mere youngsters in time are the Piltdown and Java ape-man which, scientists say, date back hundreds of thousands of > * * “fossil” found by Knapp is a perfectly shaped sole and heel for a shoe worn by 10-year-old boy. It has beveled edges as smooth as could be made by a shoe- THE Oo the unset edge of the western world Te the SEATTLE ST Superd in your glory you stand supreme Vistoned by fathers of fathers of men Crushed but to rise yet agein and again city ef now. Mat the city of then Was only « pioneer dream. And the epirtts of those of the bygone days Who founded and builded and hoped and prayed Keeping pace with the slow moving hands of time Baw the ships from the harbors ef every clime And the tale of their traved’s a tale sublime In the They knocked the first“ out of “lawful whisky” and look what's le This doctor in the cabin of the interior. Too much rest is causing unrest. oft. et ought to be secretary MARK SABRE ts Introduced to the and who has just renewed hi: Sabre acquain SABRE, in Penny Green, pushing development company. leven in his childhood, jother fellow’s point; opinionated goaxip. | calling Mark's room his “den,” « word Don’t Indulge in Anger ®* dohn Apselseth, hotel clerk, had an argument the other night— and then dropped dead. This is a rather trivial bit of news—for everybody exeept Ap selseth, But it teaches » good lesson, Scientists long ago determined that having “a mad” works «© chemical change on the buman body; it generates a flaid which tends to make one live a couple of months in » couple of seconds. city which they have made | |] Dear Polka | |] bara to ten, Vor inetance Brew. hin pay. dom of the » when he's fob; for do in politics. I did my duty yeaterday WEDNESDAY APeotter from | ALVRIDGE MANN Yor theres a man that gets my e7e—he's ech « soberminded ruy—-he never stoops to joke or jest, he has a wife and wears vert; and he's an artist, #0 they say, be draws—at least, he draws Tin name’s agninet him, that ts true—for Volstead doemn't favor Brew—but even so, it seems to me, nea, where even storms can brew with ease—for that's the “free And 0 I hope you'll join the mob, and vote my candidate the mayor's chair |] action there—and that’s the thing you have to mix with all you Cwrihge Nomn in the I regintered, I'm glad to may—and #0, before 0 very long I'll have to join the voting throng, and try, with all a voter's care, to pick a winner here and there. It nearly always gets my goat to try to figure how to vote ta in such a mob, the one that ought to get the job | and tho Il try my very best, I'm just a dumb-bell like the rest. there's the mmyor’s place, the race; but who is best it's hard to sec to me—and so I've nothing else to do but cast my vote for Homer MARCH 29, 1922, with they al nine gazaboes tn look fairty good the mayor's time i» spent at he'll keep his ball in ‘The throd of the commerce pulse you've known Yow'we seen men mad for the greed of gold Yours the key of the gate of the seven scas Your thousands and millions of mighty trees You've men fer war if fate decrees Yours to build—to have-—te held. And thet men mep de proud of you centuries hence Lat as give end in giving give only our best For tha sons of tha fathers whe made your seme WW be fathers of sons whe will make your fame And the spirit of service they'll find fust the same In Seatiio—Quece of the West Coprright 1927 bier children. cause you'll live longer. ‘ jamelt it hi }ting bis t When you get to some of the |. reservations in Plorida where they (retld ducks, ete) are edsolutely one of those rooms, jell they bad sean. those women, those men, thore He imagined himeelf in maw it, felt it, He imagined himeelf cut hroat in one of those rooms. in their hotel on their re I Uhink Ite «@ very good jstrongly—in deliberately jout ideas ASMHutchinson ©1911 ASMHUTCUNGON reader by— HAPGOOD, & garruious London solicitor, who went to school with him tance with him. At this time—1912 and ts Living with bis wife— an Engltoh village seven miles trom Tidborough, where Sabre ix in business—“seven miles by road und about) seven centuries in manners and customs,” but now being “improved” by a! Hapgood suspects Mark and Mabel are not| suited to each other after visiting therm in their home. was remarkably tolerant whereas bis pretty wife is @ typical and violently He explains Sabre, always able to nee the Their temperamental difference was first brought out when they first went to their home, immediately after their marriages. Mabel insisted on which the latter particularly detesta, | while Mark aroused Mabel because he immediately nicknamed their serv- lanta, the Jinks sisters, “High” and “Low Jjnks” Mark thought it over | however, the night after, and characterintically decided his wife couldn't be biamed for their apparently trivial, but irksome, differences Now go on with the story. ur It was years after the Byron ept/ sode—after he had come down from Cambridge, after he had traveled tairly widely, and luckily, as tutor to @ delicate boy, and after he had set-| tled down, from his father’s house at Chovensbury, to learn the For-| tune, Mast and Sabre business that he began to collect the books which now formed hig collection. Hi in ltense fondness for books had come! |to him late in life, as loverof litera ture goes. He was reading at twen |ty-eight and thirty Hterature which, | | when it is read at all, is as @ rule read ten years younger because the taste is there and is voracious for as a young and vigor } for its meals. twenty-eight and thirty, reading the first time, he read sometimes} | with a sense of revelation, always | | with an enormous eatisfaction. Es | pecially the poeta. And constantly | jin the poets he was coming across | passages the sheer beauty of which | shook him precisely as the Byron lines had firat shaken him. His books appeared to indicate a | fair number and a fair dive of interests; but their diversity present | ed to him a common quality or group lof qualities ome history, some so- clology. encer, some Huxley, | some Haeckel, a small textbook of ge jology, a considerable | pure literature literary men, the in a nice » | forma a glance hi | All the boc for some proportion of s edition of and were picked up at sec | ond-hand dealers’ in Tidborough, none had cost more than « few shillings | The common quality that bound them was that they stirred in him they presented |imagen, they suggested causes, they revealed processes; the common group of qualities to which they min | istered were ibilit and myrtery They m and auty and wonder. think bout things | thinking about things; the poet jhis mind with beauty, and he Iutrangely stirred by beauty. on him liked fillea Jeye. Bes Iv Hers, tn the effect upon him of beauty and of ideas communicated to his mind by his reading—first manifested to him by the Byron rev elation—was the mark and label of his individuality: here was the link ing up of the boy who as Puzziehead Sabre would wrinkle up his nut and say, “Well, I can’t quite mee that, air,” with the man in whom the same habit persisted; he eaw much more clearly and infinitely more in- tensely with his mind than with his ty of place imagined was to him infinitely more vivid than beauty seen. And so in all affairs it wan not what the ¢ye saw or the jear heard that Interested him; it was | | what his mind anw, questing behind But at| the seene and behind the speech, that | interested him, and often, by the in tensity of its perception, shook him. And precisely as beanty touched in him the most exquisite and poignant depths, so evil surroundings, evil faces dismayed him to the point of mysterious fear, almont terror-— On a Sunday of his honeymoon in London he had conceived with Mabel the idea of a bus ride thru the streeta—“anywhere, the first bus that comes.” The first bus that came took them thru South London, | dodged between main roads and took them thru miles of mean and sordid dwelling houses, At open windows high up sat solitary women, at oth em solitary, shirt-sleeved men; be ,|hind closdd windows were the faces of children. All staring--women and men and children, impasstvely pris oned, impassively staring house door presented, one above the other, five or six iron bellknobs, sore hanging out and downwards, as if their necks were broken. On the pavements hardly a soul. Just street upon street of these awful houses with their imprisoned occupants and the doors with their string of crazy bells. An appalling and abysmal depres. sjon settled upon Sabre, He imag. ined himself pulling the dislocated neck of one of those bells and step was} ping into what festered behind those |—,"* ach | good thing to am idea of their lives. I cant amy I'm pind I went, | thea. You've no idea how awfully How ever can it? How funny you must bert i ‘Then she said, “Yon, I'm giad I've seen for myself. You know, when wort of people come into your servioe—the airs they give them |arlves and the way they demand the |best of everything—and then when | you mee the kind of homes they come, | from—t" | “You, tt makes you think, don’t ad j “It doen” | But what It made Sabre think wae entirely different from what it made Mabel think, v “Pursishead™ they had called htm at his preparatory school—Old Pus aiehead Sabre, the chap who always wrinkled up his nut over things and came out with the most extraordi- nary ideas, He had remained, and Increasingly become, the pussler. | And preciacty as he ceased to share aA room with Mabel and carried him- self with satisfaction to his own apartment, so, by this fifth year of his married life, he had come to know well that he shared no thoughts with her: he carried” them, with In jereasing absorption tn their interest, to the processes of his own mind. An Incident of those earty school days had always remained with him, | in its exact words. The exact words of a nelectly famous professor of philosophy who, living the few years of his retirement tn the neighbor |hood of the preparatory school, had |ctven—for pure love of seeing young things and feeling the freshness of young minds—a weekly “talk on things” to the small schoolboys, And whatever the subject of his talk, he almost invariably would work off his familiar counsel | “And a very good thing (he used to my), an excellent thing, the very beat of practices, is to write a little every day. Just a little scrap, but loultivate the habit of doing it every day. I don't mean what is called |keeping a diary, you know, Don't |write what you do. There's no bene. fit in that. We do things for all| | kinds of reasons and it's the reasons, not the things, that matter. let your little daily scrap be something | |you've thought. What you've done belongs partly to some one else; often | |yoy're made to do it. But what you | think 1s you yourself; you write it down and there it is, a tiny Uttle bit | of you that you can look at and sa |"Well, really! You see, a little bit like that, written every day, is a mir | ror In which you can see your real eelf and correct your real self. A boking-glass shows you your face is dirty or your hair rumpled, and you go and polish up. But it's ever so much more important to have a mir: ror that shows you how your real self, your mind, your apirit, is look ing. Just see if you can’t do it, A/ |little scrap. It's very steadying: | very steadying . ..” | And his «mall hearers, destring, | Ike young colts in a field, nothing so | little og anything steadying, paid as much attention to thin “jaw” an to) any precept not supported by cane or imposition. They made of It, indeed, | |a popular school joke, “Oh, go and write a little every day and boil your. | self, you asst But tt appealed, dim. | lly, to the reflective quality in the| child Sabre's mind. He contracted thé habit of writing, in a “bagged” | book, sentences beginning laboriously with “I thought today | It remained with him, as he} exercise I sinister doors: the dark and malodor: grew up, in the practice of writing “You yourvelf. The real you” vi Vagucly—without solution of nmet of the problema that puzzled him, turn Mabel chattered animatedly OM and without even definite knowledge | how on earth—?* “I'm awfully glad of the tine along which might Ne Here, in (here own stairwayn, the dark and malodor-| sometimes ideas that occurred ts, another world—his own world—he ous rooms, their prisoned cooypant# | bim, as in the ease of bin feelings | paced among his ideas as @ man opening their prisons and staring 40) .ou¢ his books and—much more might pace around the diemantied thinking |and scattered intricacies of an in |trieate machine, knowing the parts | could be put together and the thing | worked usefully, not knowing how on rarth it could be done... “Thin goes im there, and that goes in there, but Here, into there him: his the LOWEST rates. ESTABLISHED 32 YEARS || LEARN A WORD EVERY DAY Today's word Is PREVARICATE. It's pronounced — pre-vart-kayt, with accent on the second «yliable. ive an ambiguous answer, to quib- bm, to deviate from the truth. It comes from—latin “prevart cari,” to walk crookedly, Companion word prevarteation. It's used Ifke this--“As the prose entor fired question after question, the witness was inclined to prevart- cate.” relations with Mabel; his eens, in a | hundred ways as they came up, of | | strong interest in the social and tn. questions from time to time before the public attention. He could be imagined assembiing the parts, dragging them in, check ing them over, slamming the door, and—Hiow on earth? What on earth?” There was a key to all these | problems. There was a definite way of coordinating the parte of each But what? He began to have the freling that tm all the pumzles, not only, tho par tieularly, of his own life as he had come to live it, but of fife in general na tt is lived, some mysterious part [was missing. | That wae as far as he could get. | He was like & man groping with his (Turn to Page 11, Column 1) It means—to evnde the truth, to/ |the odd businens that life was; his | dustrial problems, and in the political | |hand thru a hole in a great door for| ution | cloisters, he dragged the parts of all|a key lying on the other side, Noth- of |the pumsies that perplexed PartorFun | FOREVERYONE A SQUARE CUT-OUT MATERIALS: Scissors and square cardboard with 12 marks as shown. | PROBLEM: To cut the square |into four equal pieces, each piece containing three marks. SOLUTION: Cut the square as shown by the dofted lines. no longer doubt the efficacy of that old-fashioned root and herb medicine, ‘Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, because it relieves the ail- ments to which they are afflicted. In almost every neighborhood there are living witnesses of its wonderful effects. Therefore, if you doubt its value or power to help you, ask your mighbor. In nine times out of ten she has been benefited by its use or knows someone who has. It will pay | you to give this root and herb medi \cine a trial.—Advertisement. If you value your watch, let Haynes repair it. Next Liberty theatre. —Adv. “There’s a Reason,”—and the reason is that we alwa: our DEPOSITS invested in the HIGHEST GRADE bon on a moment's notice, without loss. As a matter of fact, our bonds are of sach HIGH CHARACTER that we could sell them at the present time at a large PROFIT, as the prices of the kind of bonds we carry have INCREASED materially in the past year. Why, for 32 YEARS, we have been Able to Pay Withdrawals ON DEMAND (Bond and Warrant Investments as of March 26, 1922) United States Government Bonds. ........-...--. .-+--+_nmaneessenennsose est (immediately convertible inte cash at « substantial PREMIURL) United States Treasury Certificates (Immediately convertible Other Highest Grade State and Municipal jo cash at all times, through WARS and FINANCIAL P wubet. Resources 1101 SECOND AVENUE OFFICERS: RAYMOND TR. FRAZINR, President WILLIAM THAANUM, Vico President © President cretary WALTER J. WARD, Assistant Secretary MARRY SHELTON, Assistant Secretary TRUSTEES: 1 18 » TERS rw. ROLL WILLIAM Cc H VILAS “There’s a Reason” For 32 years this Savings Bank has been able to pay all withdrawals ON DEMAND. keep a substantial portion of and warrants, that may be sold, oo ee ne co ne eo wren oo ee rn ) Bonds and Warrants, immediately salable. 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