Expert Declores Nine in Right Path if ————————————— AAAI Not Born Per Cent Could Be Kcpt “Ninety per cent of trouble for the boy. juvenile misdemeanors. The glamor the trouble comes in. together and get into trouble. any one else, When this happens “The primary object always when it is their first offense, them where someone will see th their parents and seeking to change ble. try to keep the home intact. We do not want to take He won't co-operate with us and boy in his home, we take hi for the t 03 's own good.” In away. We trv to HMIress i paroled Bovs are rosin ess AMERICAN’S CREED School Children Are Being Urged to Memorize It School in many cities the ged to memor children towns throughout mntry ing ur ead's Creed | Amerien ple, by whose ju ize * which is as fo helieve in the United ax a government the people, for {1 st powers are det the consent racy in a republic; of many un lished of the governed | sSovereigd SOvereign sat on, one and upon those principle dom, equality, justice, and for which American patriots their wy my lives and fortunes, believe it to to ite Constitution; respect its flag: against enemies.” therefore country love it; to ohey and to all Kiev, Capital of Ukraine, Is Great Religious City Kiev, the ancient cag is one of ecitlez. In many as from grims every year storm which laid it in thirteenth century, Kiev resplen- dent with all the glory of Byzantine art. Even now in all that remains of the great cathedral of St. Sophia, built in 1037 by Yaroslav I, mosaics may be traced which show unmistak- ably their Byzantine origin. Kiev fore the war had regained some of her fame as an art center. Her eathedral of St. Viadimir, which was completed in the nineties, Is witness to the genius of one of Russia's modern painters, Victor Vasnietov, who infused a new life into country. Kiev has an seum-—or she had before the viki had the run of the city. of Ukraine, the world's great normal times it 200.000 to ANON pil efore the Mongol +! e dust in the wna he- has also art mn- SAYINGS OF WISE MEN A cool mouth and warm live long. — George Herbert, From hearing comes wisdom, from speaking, repentance, The modern ehild has as 1ittle belief in the fairy tales his mother tells him as she herself has in the ones his father tells her. Wise or unwize, who doubts for a moment that contentment is the cause of happiness? The Frenchman sings well when his throat Is moistened, Portuguese Proverb, feet S000 P000000000000 000000000 To Remove Varnish Stain. To remove varnish stalug on cloth, first wet the spots with alcohol two or three times, then rub with a clean cloth. If the color is Injured, sponge afterward with chloroform to restore ft. unless the color is blue, in which ease vinegar should be used instead. i | put are, W he n and ads they r homes trou- hich CRLIS d the tead Wr rerorssrosrr srr rr srr srrrss rere TIME TO BE WISE Provovvverorevrvvvovovrrevrvorovre Arabian Inventor Said to Have Been First to Devise Airplane and Make Flight Abbas Ben Farnas, an is the being to ifvent and fly fin of his during the al Arabian first huamsn in ventor, it Is said, was died ax a result 3A D Caliph Haroun first Year Raschid, history records, Abbas is have eon ceived the dea of effecting mechan feal flight as a means of approaching the heavens and aiding astronomical observations, from historical still In existence In With the consent and assistance of the Caliph he set to work to construct a machine in the likeness of a bird, with fn clockwork motor the suppossd to thor ments fo actuate In the presence of a great multitude lasted several seconds, but in landing The secret of the construction of the fifst airplane died with the inventor. The Caliph al Raschid offered huge inducements to other eminent scleniists to pursue the study of aviatios, but none was found with sufficient genius to repeat the pio Ornithologist and Artist John Jamex Audubon, famed orn. In the fine street named after him; there is Audubon park, Audubon theater, a hundred or so Audubon restaurants: a telephone exchange is Audubon and the old Audubon mansion at One Hun dred and Fifty-Aifth streets and River. glide drive still stands. In this an cient dwelling remains the artist's studio and the laundry in which was installed by his friend Morse the telegraphic instrument by which was transmitted the Arst long-distance message to Philadelphin, Naturalist Picks Beaver From Among All Others as Most Intelligent Animal We read much about animal sagac- ity and there is a common query: “Which Is the most Intelligent ani mal?" This query, writes Raymond I. Ditmars in Boye’ Life, most fre quently relates to the results In traln- ing animals to do surprising things or to the “smart” things that many captive animals do, Assoclation with the human and the artificial con- ditions of captivity bring forth many gurprising traits in animals, but such have little to do with this story, When the writer is asked which he considers the most Intelligent animal he has no hesitation In answering, although the subject designated may cause much surprise, Despite the adoption of and the elephant to domestic use, the docllity and affection of the dog, the marvelous feats accomplished by trained long and other marked demonstrations of intelligence among Inrger animals, the writer Is un- in his decision, and this do sen the He beaver as And the order of mam- picks the comes from an i i i i the animals, of Be small size the the porcupine, of intelligence, This is order of rodents, or gnawing number of all order the seattered To rats and m greater over this foe, and world pares of belongs the squirrel, ember of fair of the in problems of ingenious construction, All having fecth is a m this order and a rival heaver solving the rodents are characteristie in incisor the front inw, strangely developed those Immediately at the upper and lower proportionstely with growing and hee constant These teeth, larger longer than other animals, fd the'r fashion to ome moving Food for the Family. © av upful ench of pot cut in dice, on Cook nntil tahles are tender, adding boli If necessary. Serve with Salmon With Rice. huttered Line a cooked rice fill mold with the enld center with creamed salmon, cover with more rice mold and more Serve with curry or minced parsiey. cover on the Or put the steam wif an hour with neaned lemon juice or Baked Beans. over night one pint of the next morning drain, the beans with bholling slowly nuntil the skins erack Drain put them into a bean pot, sprinkle the top with two tabhlespoonfuls of chopped onion, pour over a pint of strained tomatoes sand sprinkle with one tea spoonful of cover the pan and bake slowly four hours, adding more those are absorbed hy Fifteen minutes hefore serving add a tablespoonful of sweet chicken fat or beef fat. the lid and brown, Merrie Mogae Sonk heans small caver water, cook snit, ns the beans, remove First Indian Sign Made by A man named Chichester was first to introduce wooden figures as tobace conista’ signs in America. This was in the middle of the nineteenth cen tury. Most of these Indian figures were carved out of white pine, from paper patterns, The instruments ranged from the ax te the chisel and finer wood carving tools. Regular artists had their little shops where these figures were made and old fig ures repaired and repainted. AY ASN A Lens Industry Revived. A revival of the lens industry is anticipated in Sheffield. England, nnd the exhibits in this line range from the smallest telescope to a lens with % diameter of pine lunches, PROBLEMS FACING STRICKEN WORLD Shall Chaos or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great World War? ———————— IMPERATIVE NEED FOR ACTION the Armistice Practically Wasted --Call for Ald From America Must Be Heeded. Article V. Ey FRANK COMERFORD. the fighting. treaty The signing of the peace brought peace, but neither of construction, and when 1 write the word “reconstruction” 1 have not stricken areas of rrance, Italy, Poland and Russia. Gigantic and important as this task is, neces sary as it is, it is only a small part of the work of real reconstruction. Hun- dreds of thouzands of square miles make up the actual war zone, the ground marched over, the territory un- der shell fire. Millions of acres of land that once yielded food In response to the touch of the plow have for the past four years been tilled by high ex- plosives, Belgium was inged and ravished, tire state violated. literally looted, Almost the Nenrly pil- en. was one tion, was ernshed, stroyed, factories dismantled. suffered Italy is filled with mines Inid waste, The ground undischarged terribly. high explo EIVOS, and and hegan men working in this zone have heen blown to pleces, restoration and dan of feet of barbed wire metal make an Billions millions of tons of gerous wilderness ont of what was ance a highly and broken productive area fu of brick ugh stunned Cities villages are ngies i twisted, torn wood, iron and stone I have walked thre these villages and have stood by the the tion completeness of destruc The I with brick and stone and plas ter and glass, g jess houses with walls streets are uneven and umpy aisles of wreckage. Roof- tied and torn, heaps and piles of broken bullding ma- terial Had I not known of the war and come upon one of of debris meet the eve these unsightly, shapeless masses of materi thought n mad epi concentrating nl, 1 should have ature had entered into a Com- and of a tornado rnd an earthquake, and spilled their fury bir ing powers cyclone, a on these mangled, dead villages, Sights to Wring the Heart. Picture ng villages home the sight I have seen the refugees return these coming back What must have n them, them, their faces gray as the gray ruins, standing in the midst of their destroyed homes 1 have seen them picking their way over plies of stone and brick through great openings made In the broken walls, 1 enw in their eves homesickness, a hurt of heart 1 never shall forget. Old men and old women and little bare-legged children: now and again a boy with f worn, soiled uniform, some limping on crutches, others wearing an empty sleeve, thought surged through my mind until it almost sickened me War. The land of the war zone must be reclaimed. These acres are needed now more than they were be fore the war, The world's food sup- ply is low, Hundreds of miles of trenches must be filled up. Trees must be planted, the ground must be cleaned of shells, cleared of barbed wire; villages, cities, must be rebuilt; sewer systems must be installed. The mess must be moved, It is a big job. One great misfortune Is that al though 12 months have come and gone One Here and is being made This I= al] well and client and speedy reconstruction de mands a general plan and an organiza. The capacity for doing big things well, If Here Is a chance for America. time. Europe needs our help. If we are to give it eventually, why not now? But the clearing up of the wreckage and the rebuilding is a minor problem compared with the other greater and more important question of reconstruc. tion, the reconstruction of Industry, the establishment of normal life, The reclamation of the devastated area Is, after all, only a matter of plan, time and money, and notwith- standing the Tact that Europe Is bank- rupt today, the money must and will come. The barbed wire will be rolled up, the mines and shells will be dug from the fields, the villages will be re built; everything that has been de stroyed will be replaced. Physical re construction is the least of Europe's problema, The great problem is the reconstrue tion of life, The war-devastnted disordered the life of the world. threw everything into confusion; left the scheme out of balance. Only Road to Prosperity. We live by work. Prosperity means production. Poverty is underproduc- tion. Stripping economics of all its high-sounding jargon, the simple truth that everyone knows is that the world has only the things it works to pro duce, nn It 1 facts known by everyone which plain the meaning of production: live on the earth, ter. In the ground are minerals. The land grows crops. We need the min- | eruls that are in the ground. We need ing until man by hig work brings the | the soll yield. things is by working. | done we have a shortage, enough food to go around, there aren't { result the prices of all these neces. | saries go "way up. But this is not so important as the fact that when there | Is not enough to feed the world some go hungry, others must | there isn’t enough cos), 56 | others freeze. When there | enough clothes for everyone, some | must be ragged and half-naked. Ev- | erything by which we live is the re | sult of work. Stop work, and poverty follows, Work, and plenty results | Work is responsible for everything that goes to make life worth living. To understand Europe's | today. one must stop and realize that { the The There ne are cold, aren't condition war stopped production. re | sult is a shortage of everything i isn’t there rw there isn't eno | The is told in isn’t enough ugh the enough food material whole story coal. | Poverty. Only Cure Is in Work. here is 8 cure; the prescription ean in a single knows that word, but kn word he one written word d adopting the word ar re. Before we can {to normal life this word eos root in the I ple rust realize 1 will continue sick and gr less this prescriy ther, we must knot taking this » ry «1 : remed time befare geription he work we pet is wrrk. i * 1 mace 10 make Evers it every mat mast re TORe employer not tribute | ness by ref: and { should go with a to {| mer friendly wii I. ENess comprot plover who Or hat he is hetler bed and be meets his n to fight t thought in nd equipped wn labor fuse he has can eat shar has been living fron gurting snd irpine and ith and will starve, He had er Fhied 3 £ i has passed, never in the fac vacation, Imposing who depends up y turn a key door and go off on a is workmen stopped a Now his wil discover ! will on } that certain | “gent of Ho { iand, from doing this very thing to the world, He may wake up some morn ing to learn a definition of | word “fight.” Ome thing that people do not realize i& that the men who fought the world's ! fight for freedom are the men who are complaieing that they not getting a square deal. Who made up the fighting men of the war, the rank and file of the armies that stopped the Prussian Push? Who were the great mafority of the volunteers and the conscripted men numbering millions who went to the front for the allies? The teamsters, the shophands, the mill- workers, the factory hands, the coal miners These are the same men these men of Pottsdam iate new now are lem, ex-soldiers, Please don’t Yorget it. They fought for you. the bond you bought, remember the blood they gave. Applied Christianity. Roman Catholic and one a Protestant, ward he asked the latter, tian, which she replied: 1 have often heard you say ‘Fight the good fight!" That other woman came into my house and she saw a picture of you on the mantdepiece. “That's no priest, sald she. ‘Nor no parson, neither! He's only an old quack. De you think I could stand that, «ir? No! "Touch not the Lord's anointed!” 1 eave, and I ups with my fists and I hits her I"=<London Post, Smart Kid, An Irish school Inspector was exam: ining a class in geography. He had propounded a question regarding longitude and received a correct an swer. “And now.” he said to the same boy. “what Is latitude?” The youngster hesitated a moment and then with a merry twinkle in his eye he replied, “Please, sir, we have po latitude, The British government won't allow us any.” AND KIDNEYS HURT Stop Eating Meat for a While 5 Your Bladder Is Troubling You. When you wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region it generally means you have been enting too much meat, says a well-known au- thority. Meat forms uric acid which overworks the kidneys in thelr effort to filter it from the blood and they be. come sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels ; removing all the backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channcis often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night, Either consult a good, reliable physi- ian at ohce or get from your pharma- cist about four onnces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in 8 glass of water before breakfast for a few dave and your kidneys will then act fine, This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids In the urine so It no longer Irritates, thus ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts Is a life saver for regular ment eaters. It Is Inexpensive, cannot infure and makes a delightful, vescent lithia-waser drink —Ad7, effer- Depopulated Nebraska Town, Forty vears aco ust of dm Neh, the the cits which was then at road and had 61 about 10 lose its » of the extension hopkeeper hac i ay In Cuticura for Score Hands. Sonk hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cutic dry and rub Remove = ura Soap in On tirurn Ointment roils Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one of the things Cuticura if Soap, Ointment and Taleum are used for all toilet purposes. —Ady. will do Sometimes They Won't § trust fu § they have a fish mean 10 genx Constipation, indigestion, sick-headsche snd bilious conditions are overcome by a course of Garfield Tea. — Adv, Horse Owner who bas ever tried Yager’'s Liniment will readily admit | that it is by far the best and mast eCOBOM. ical liniment for general stable use. For strained ligaments, spavia, harness galls, sweeny, wounds or old sores, cuts and any enlarge ments, it gives quick relief. It containg twice as much as the usual 50 cent bottle of lintment, At all dealers. Price 35 cents, YAGER’S INIMENT GILBERT BROS. & OO. Baltimore, MA LATE Death only a matter of short time, Don’t wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking GOLD MEDAL The world’s standard for kidney, National Remedy of Holland since 1696. druggists, Look for the name Cold Medal on every bax and scoept pe knitetion srs — KING PIN PLUG TOBACCO Known as “that good kind" it —and you know IF YOU CAN aber ot winsows 2
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers