MILE-A-MINUTE MARTY | | (Prepared by the National Geographic Society, Washington, D ) HE Kurds, who have revolted along the Turkish-Persian bor- der and against whom large | Turkish forces have been oper ating near famous Mount Ararat, have been fighting periodically against the established states of Asia Minor for thousands of years. Always their favorite method of strife has been guerrilla warfare. They have been historic marauders, but perhaps they have every reason, so for as environ ment is concerned, to lead such lives State after state has struck against them with forces more powerful than any they could raise. The days of Assyrian power in Mesopotamia seem pretty far back toward the beginnings of history. Records of that empire show that time and again its soldiers were sent into the rough country around the headwaters of the great rivers to sub- due the mountaineers—ancestors of the Kurds—who harried Assyria’s out- lying settlements. These same moun- #s fought the Armenians when ter came into the region be- ,000 and 600 B. C. Xenophon = retreated from Asia Minor in 401 B. C. the Kurds (then called the Carduchi) attacked his 10,000 Greeks, rolling great stones down on them from cliffs and moun- tains. They fought continually against the Bagdad caliphs. Since the Turks rose to power In Asia Minor the Kurds have fought them repeatedly; in fact, the Turks never established any considerable measure of control over these fierce, freedom-loving high- landers. Since the World war the European territory of Turkey has been negli- gible. The country has consisted al- most solely of the big, fat peninsula lying between the Black sea on the north and the eastern arm of the Mediterranean on the south, and an extension to the east about as broad as the Asia Minor peninsula, reaching roughly half way from the Black sea to the Caspian. The southern half of this eastern extension—the southeast- ern corner of postwar Turkey—is what is loosely called Kurdistan. The other half of the eastern extension, {fmmediately north of Kurdistan, was once Turkish Armenia. Kurdish Sphere Is Large. Now that tens of thousands of the Armenian residents have been driven across the Russian border, while other tens of thousands have perished, the region hardly deserves the old name. The Kurdish population was always high in Turkish Armenia; now it is proportionately much greater. The whole eastern end of present Turkey, constituting almost a third of the territory of the country, therefore, may roughly be considered the Kurd- ish sphere of influence. It is in the northeast corner of Turkey that the Kurds have recently been most active. Geographic and political and eco- nomic complications aplenty are found in this region. On the east Kurdistan touches Persia, and the peo- ple for a considerable distance into that country are Kurds, too. Indeed, Kurdish people inhabit the entire Zagros mountain rafige which extends from Turkey for 600 miles to the southeast, forming the boundary be- tween Persia and Iraq. The Kurds belong to the Iranian branch of the white race. Because of the open-air lives which they live, most of them have harsh features. The great majority are nominally Mohammedans. The plateau region lying partly in old Armenia, partly in Kurdistan, where many of the most warlike Kurds live, presents a good example of the effects on man of a mixture of rugged uplands and fertile valleys. Limestone mountains and recently extinct vol- eanoes occupy the upper levels. Lower are magnificent canyons cut by the Tigris and Euphrates headstreams, and numerous broad, basin-shaped val- leys whose floors are fertile plains. The ancestors of the Kurds were pushed from many of these desirable A Kurd of the Turkey-Persia Border. lowlands by the Armenian invasion and from others by the later arriving Turks, Some Recent Revolts. Even the fairly recent regime of Kemal Pasha has had several Kurdish | revolts on its hands. effort to set up their own government. The scrapping of the caliphate at Con stantinople aroused them and nearly | every change in old Moslem Customs has irritated them. Revolt after re- volt has been quelled but as soon as the Kurd replenishes his forces and supplies, he is ready to attack again. The Kurd farmers of the Iraq plains are more prosperous than the tribes- men of the hill country. climb the trails of Kurdistan for miles without seeing a village. When one does appear, it is usually situated in a well protected spot. Houses are placed without regard to building line and a bird's-eye. view of a village re- veals a jumble of mud and stone structures. The peasant’s house is a one-room : structure which might be mistaken for | a stable. The tribesmen reserves one side of his abode for his animals while his family occupies the other side. | Kurds sit on the floor when they rest or eat, therefore they do not need tables or chairs. The tribal chief or headman fares better. He has a house for his family and a guest house where he lives and entertains guests. He is offended if a traveler does not stay with him. Once the traveler has stopped, he must re- main for dinner, The food is placed on the floor in the center of the din ers. Should a guest stretch his legs toward another person, convey food to his mouth with his left hand, or fondle the dog, his host is offended. No knives and forks are to be found in the Kurd silver chest but if a guest has difficulty in feeding himself with his hands. a spoon will be handed to | him. Few meals are served that do | not include mast (curdled milk) the favorite dish of the Kurd. A little water mixed with the mast makes mastao, the Kurd “national” drink. The tribesmen like vegetables but sel- Jom serve meat. They Buy Their Wives. Under Moslem law, the Kurd may take four wives. Wives are bought. so the peasant usually has only one. The chiefs take the full quota. Wives are priced according to their rank. The tribesman can get a wife in ex- ' change for a pony or goat, or one may cost the equivalent of $2,500. The wedding entails a season of merry- making in which the whole tribe joins. put it takes less than a minute to dis- solve a union. The man simply says “] divorce you” three times and the parties are free. To the foreigner, the Kurds seem to know little else than the “art” of high- way robbery. Many of the mountain tribesmen are adept thieves, but fin ; the hills as well as the plains, many Kurds earn honest livings by farming and cattle raising. Kurds are pastoral people, seldom moving from their vil- lages except to migrate to higher alti- tudes during the summer for new pas- turage. In spite of exciting events in the fighting history of the Kurds, the | tribesmen were almost unknown out- side the Near East before the World | When a delegation of Kurds ap- | war. peared at the peace conferences in 1919 newspaper men did not know who the sunburnt tribesmen might be. When their identity was revealed the | Kurds went on the front pages and | frequently have been there since. The presence of Kurds in the Mosul region of what is now northern Iraq was a hard diplomatic problem for the treaty drafters to solve after the World war. Except in Mosul City, the population of this region is almost solidly Kurdish. It is the odor and power of petroleum that in some ways dominate all else in this region. ‘What promises to become one of the major oil fields of the world centers about Mosul. There was a | sporadic uprising in 1929; and in 1925 | the tribesmen made an unsuccessful |. Travelers DECKER CHEVROLET CO. Phone 405 ...... BELLEFONTE, PA. —by— Decker Chevrolet Co, Bellefonte, Pa 750 SAY WE BEEN DOING To MILES|(Z AT S07 WELL ERE EN EE ave, wor) HE'S LOOKING FOR IS A USED CAR | BOUGHT OF (BETTER TELL THAT A GOOD SPEEDY DECKE | foNE TO THE YUDGE | USED CAR, LEY ME TELL —= YOU WHAT | S ? Pa FOR i . oh > atf gq = 8 1 > — NN ; = 1930 Model “A” Ford Coupe we LIL Oheyrolel San } 250% 1%. Pole: fan [PAYMENT TE Gril la. 1923 Ford COUPE ...oooooooomeen $ 20.00 | ARRANGED Ee 3 200 1924 Ford 1 Ton Truck. .§ 35.00 Overland Touring ....$ 35.00 1925 Chevrolet Coach ........ $ 25.00 1928 Ford Model “A” Whippet Roadster ...$ 150.00 1925 Chevrolet Touring ...... $ 50.00 COUPE -...oovrurmemmersarens .-$ 290.00 Pontiac Roadster ....... $ 295.00 192¢ Olivmatlle ope Ei 3 5200 1929 Chevrolet Coach ......... $ 400.00 1927 Chevrolet Roadster $ 225.00 : vrole ape: an y ! rs : 1928 Chevrolet So Brio Chee Ole LA 150.00 id Cueviolel 1) Ton x 200.00 Woman, 90, Uses Telephone First Time on Visit to U. S. Mrs. Catherine McManus is she made her first telephone call. saw a telephone or a Helpful The widow of a farmer was being , consoled by a neighboring farmer, who happened to be a widower. “Cheer up, woman,” he said. *“Ye're young yet, and good looking, an’ you could soon get another husband.” “Oh, no, no,” she replied. “who would take me?” “Why, if [ had a better pair of boots on I'd run away wi’ ye myself.” said the widower, gallantly. The widow. lifting her face and wiping her eyes. said. earnestly: “I wonder would John's fit you?"— England Birmingham Weekly Post. —————————————— Pleasant Time in Store The umpire had just made a bad decision. The crowd was calling him ' evil names and hurling pop bottles ir his direction. “Why don’t you say something?” said an irate fan to a quiet, sad-faced spec tator who sat near him. “My time is coming,” replied the stranger. ‘““The umpire is a relative of my wife's and she has asked him , to the house for dinner this evening.” shown in the home of her son in Philadelphia as Mrs. McManus, who is 90 years skyscraper until old, never she came te the United States from recently. Fearsome Creature Maud Rex Allen says: “As known in Japan. the conception of the dragon is undoubtedly derived from the prod- ucts of the imagination of the early Chinese, who were especially fond of evolving supernatural forms by com- bining parts of various animals. It is essentially a serpent, with horns of a deer, the head of a horse, eyes like that of a red worm, scales like those of a carp, ears like a cow, paws like a tiger and claws like an eagle. It has flamelike appendages on shoulders and hips. On either foot are three, four or five claws—the imperial dragon of (‘hina has five; that of Japan three.” Ruild New Arena for Bull Fighting Madrid, Spain.—The 1930 bull fight ing season will be inaugurated in Ma drid in the old Plaza de Tores, but in April the new plaza will be dedicated. The new arena seats 26.000 persons. or double the capacity of the old one. and one of the first fights to take place therein will be a benefit for Universit) ¢fiy (Ciudad Universitaria) now un der construction. How Telephone Calls Are Timed on what is known as a ticket, and wh and restamiped. In this way with unerring accuracy. The clock-like device above is the caleulagraph—an electrically operated mechanism that records the elapsed time on out-of-town telephone calls. Upon receiving the details of a call from a subscriber, c : en the conversation starts she places the ticket beneath the dial of the clock, and pulls a lever, At the éonclusion of the cdll, a ticket is ag : the operator writes them which stamps the time. ain placed under the calculagraph the timé consumed in the conversation is computed This photograph was taken in the operating room of a dial central office. | | ! Some Things We Do If You Wish to do Commercial Banking —open a Savings Account —rent a Safe Deposit Box —secure Traveller’s Checks —Ilearn about Securities —or buy and sell them COME TO THIS BANK If you wish to create a Trust, name an Adminis- trator, Executor, Trustee, or Guardian, come to us. We Do All These Things and Try to Do Them Well THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. 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