Ee Belefonte, Pa., November 26, 1926. TURKESTAN BANS POLYGAMY AND SALE OF INFANT GIRLS Reforms Brought About as Result o* Murder of Woman Who Fought Against Evils. Poltoratsk (Formerly Askhabad), Turkestan.—As a sequel to the mur- der of the young Communist worker, Anna Dechkan, for which five of her relatives were executed, the Turkestan government issued a decree prohibit- ing polygamy, the exploitation of women and the sale of infant girls in marriage. These were the things against which Anna fought and which aroused her relatives to warn her and finally to descend in a body and stab her to death in the presence of her husband and infant child. Fifty-two wounds were inflicted on her body. Under this decree the marriage- able age for girls is fixed at sixteen and for boys eighteen. "The profes- sional marriage brokers who thrived en the sale of women are suppressed. It will no longer be necessary for a man to pay a price for a wife, and those forced to do so may later re eover in court. It was revealed at the Dechkan trial that young girls were often sold fnto marriage without their consent, frequently becoming the third or fourth wife of an old man they had never seen before. Also that parents who sold their fmmature daughters into marriage en- eouraged divorce, so the girls could be sold a second time. Some girls were resold as many as five times. The trial further brought out that under the peculiar conceptions of hon: or prevailing among Turcomans, it was considered a disgrace and an in- sult to the husband if a divorce were secured on the wife's initiative, Such “insults” were avenged by the husband killing the wife or her newly acquired spouse, and these af- fairs frequently led to blood feuds among whole families and even entire villages. All five of the murderers went to their death unrepentant for the crime, which was one of the strangest and most sensational in Russian annals. They insisted that Anna had dishon- oredl the proud family name and also had dishonored God and their coun- try by renouncing their religion and parental teachings and embracing Communism. Crosses Ocean Alone at 94 to Visit Family New York.—After a lifetime passed fn the little town of Kovno, Lithuania, from which her children long ago mi- grated to the new world, a little old woman has thought of little else In the nine years since her husband's death but of coming to America to see her son and daughters again. At the age of ninety-four, she arrived on a ner, having made the trip alone. dhe is Mrs. Rachel Dwojra Gabero- witz. A -nut brown transformation with mot a suggestion of a gray hair, dia- mond earrings, and cld-fashioned rings on her small hands added a guaintness to the little old figure which was by no means lacking in dignity. She had hoped to dance on the way Jsver, but the sea proved a little too much for her. She had not heard about the charleston. She was met at two daughters, Mrs. Rochester, and Mrs. R. Rosen, Jersey City, te whom she was turned over by the immigration authorities. the pier by her Esther Garrelitt, Woman at 83 Pieces Quilts to Support 3 Philadelphia.— Wholly unaware that she is doing anything to inspire her adopted city’s admiration and wonder, a woman whose years are thirteen more than the allotted three score and ten pieces quilts to support her- self and two grandchildren. Mrs. Anna Henningsen has always peen independent of others for her support. Since the death of her hus- band, 40 years ago, she has made her own kving, asking no assistance from the werld on the ground that she was a “widow with dependents.” It was in her native Denmark, the and whence came Mille Gade Corson, when she was still a child that she frst became self-supporting. At the age of seventeen she migrated to America because she learned there was work for all in the new land. Dainty Colored Cigarettes Make Hit With Male Paris Paris.—Cigarettes of dainty color, for years an affectation of feminine smokers who shop in Fifth avenue, Bond street and Rue de la Paix, have captivated the male of the species in France. Not long ago, as an experiment, the state tebacco monopoly began wrap- ping its higher-priced cigarettes in pa- per of various hues—coral, amethyst and emerald, They have proven so popular that the monopoly intends to adopt other colors, and even to issue one assorted package under the name ‘of “rainbow.” The ordinary cheaper French cig- srette will remain what it has always heen—neither a thing of beauty nor loy. TINY DIATOMS HOLD SECRET OF SEA LIFE Study Plants No Bigger Than Grain of Dust. Washington.—Millions of plants no larger than a grain of finest dust and invisible to the naked eye have been brought to the Smithsonian institu- tion by Dr. Albert Mann, custodian of diatoms of the National museum, as a result of summer field work at Wood's Hole, Mass., and at the Car- negie Marine Biological laboratory or the Florida keys. These diatoms are the grass of the sea. They transform within them- selves inorganic matter into food ma- terial for the smaller animal life of the sea, which in turn forms the food of other larger animals and finally man. Therefore, in spite of their mi- croscopic size, their importance is im- mense. Doctor Mann illustrates this very graphically in the case of a young hake whose stomach contents he once examined. The hake was filled with very small herring, these in turn were gorged with copepods or water fleas and the copepods were full of diatoms. Backed by Carnegie Institutions. So great is the economic importance of these microscopic creatures that the Carnegie institution began to sup- port Doctor Mann's work on them ten years ago, and he is now co-operating with the United States bureau of fish- eries, the Canadian fish commissior and the national research council. Diatoms exist all over the earth, in salt water, fresh and brackish water. About 8,000 different kinds have al- ready been described and this figure is steadily growing. What the diatoms lack in size they make up in numbers, some water containing as many as 35,- 000 of them to a quart. Doctor Mann's program involves a survey of living diatoms on the American seaboard and in its inland waters; a represen- tative collection of these and of all fossil diatom earths so far discovered. In this way he is building up in the Smithsonian institution a diatom col- lection of practical usefulness which will have no peer. With the aid of this basic material such practical problems ‘as maintaining the diatom food supply for the support of food fishes can be better understood anf Investigated. Require Delicate Instruments. Mounting specimens of such minute plants requires the most delicate in- struments and touch. Doctor Mann has developed a glass needle attach: can pick up, turn over and otherwise arrange the infinitesimal diatom. This permits him to mount a single specimen on a slide. Under the microscope the diatom Is seen to be one of the most intricately formed and beautiful objects in na- ture, following every conceivable geo- metric pattern. Each little cell builds for itself a case of silica, which is ca- pable of enduring for millons of years. This quality has produced results of great economic importance, for during past ages these shells have been laid down on ocean floors in immense de- posits which in turn have been raised as the result of geological convulsions and are now available to man. They occur in all lands. At Lompoc, Calif. is a huge deposite of fossil diatoms covering an area of 12 square mile: and 1,400 feet thick. This diatomaceous earth is mined and used as a polish, is combined with nitroglycerin to make dynamite and as a filter for certain serums and es- pecially for thick liquids like sirups. oils and varnishes. It has even been used as an adulterant for cheap candy and also as a base for tooth paste. Finally the diatom is the standard test for microscopes and microscopic investigations. RADIO INVENTOR An amazing radio development, hailed as the one evolution of naval communications which will put the United States navy above any danger of enemy interference with its signals and which may prove of wide value in commerce, was announced by Maj. Francis E. Pierce, radio officer of the United States marine corps. Complete and conclusive tests have demon- strated that the invention of Major Pierce is capable of transmitting radio signals in such a manner that they can be ricochetted over interven- ing objects between the sender and receiver of the signal. ment to a microscope with which he | Winter Threatens Death to 100,000 Homeless in Armenian Earth- quake. The disastrous earthquake in Ar- menia will be a matter of life and death to the 100,000 homeless peas- ants within a few weeks. The coun- try is located nearly a mile above sea level, and the winters are therefore very severe. Within another month, the savagery of winter will overwhelm the entire area which has been devas- tated by the quake. Early in No- vember snow buries the villages and piles against the peasant cottages un- til the edges of the roofs seem to be only cracks in the sides of snow drifts, Leninakan, center of the seismic disturbance, is in the center of a dis- trict which has been frequently visit- ed by earthquakes in the past, al- though none of the tremors have been of any serious consequence since that of 1840, which shook off a segment of the 17,000-foot-high cone of old Mount Ararat, burying the village and mon- astery of Arghuri and snuffing out the lives of the 600 villagers. Both vil- lage and monastery were covered more than 200 feet deep by the debris from the mountain landslide and no trace of either buildings or people has ever been discovered. Mount Ararat, with its beautiful twin peaks, rises straight into the sky from the plateau on which Leninakan is situated. It is an extinct volcano, whose active period is prehistoric. But the peasantry for many miles about have always been fearful of a renewal of its activity, and the occa- sional slight earthquake tremors therefore cause invariable panic and anxiety in the countryside. Ararat, which the Persians call the | “Mountain of Noah,” is placed by Ar- menian tradition as the site of the Garden of Eden. Relics of Noah's Ark, displaced in one of the Armenian monasteries, were destroyed by light- ning many generations ago, but the site of the old monastery is still re- vered by many of the faithful. The traditional burial place of Noah’s wife and the place where Noah is supposed to have planted the first vineyard, are still pointed out. Prior to the world war, Mount Ararat was the dividing point between Russia, Turkey and Persia, part of the mountain being in each of these three countries. Under the present boundaries, the mountain is almost wholly in Turkey, the American or- phanages at Leninakan standing al- most on the frontier of Russia. It was long believed by the Armen- ian church that no human being would ever be permitted to reach the peak of Ararat, but it was climbed successful- ly in 1829 by a German explorer, Dr. Parrot, and it has since been conquer- ed by several climbers, including three Americans, one of whom lost his life as a result of his efforts. One of the most noted conquerers of Ararat was James Bryce, who climbed it in 1876, many years before he entered the dip- lomatic service of Great Britain and became British Ambassador to the United States. None of the volcanic peaks in Ar- menia have been active since prehis- toric times, but the entire country is subject to occasional seismic disturb- ances, and the district is spoken of by scientists as a “volcanic amphithea- ter,” being entirely buried under vol- ! canie deposits of ~—— — remote periods. Many of the small lakes are located in volcanic craters and are of such depth that measurements have never been made. The capital of Armenia, Erivan, which also suffered in the earthquake, has a population of about 40,000. It also has been the scene of important American reconstruction projects, car- ried out by the Near East Relief. It is the center of a chain of irrigation projects which have recently been completed after more than three years of refugee labor undertaken under American supervision for the reclam- ation of 250,000 acres of farm land. The American orphanage schools at Leninakan include an agricultural school with 1500 students who culti- vate more than 15,000 acres of land; a hospital of 800 beds; a nurses train- ing school for 300 girls; a trachoma hospital for the cure of eye diseases, caring for 5,000 patients; industrial schools teaching 40 trades to 6500 children, and several other important educational and reconstructive enter- prises. Sr ————— A ————————. Marriage Licenses. Edgar Charles McGuire, of Philips- pure and Lillian Lopensky, of Clear- eld. Gordon D. 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