A —— — 0D A SECOND-HAND PRESIDENT FRANKLIN PIERCE { 1800—Jan, 7, Millard Fillmore, porn in Cayuga county, New York, 1829-31—Member of New York assembly, 1833.35, 1837.43 Member congress. 1848-—E lected vice president. 1850--July 9, sworn in as thir. teenth president, aged fifty. Sent Commodore “Perry to Japan. 1850— Defeated for nomination. 1856—Nominated for president by Knownothings and Whigs, and defeated. 1874—March 8, died at Buffalo, aged seventy-four. of ILLARD FILLMORE, the second vice president to be promoted by death, was the most commonplace president even in a twenty-year period when the presidency remaloed at low- water mark. Tall and with magisterial front, but cold and hollow, he looked the part which he played—the dummy of northern trimmers in politics and of southern traffickers In slaves. A fable of the day hit off the truth. The new president must have a car riage. and “Old Edward” Moran, a White House attendant in many ad- ministrations, took him to see a hand- some outfit, whose owner was leaving Washington and would sell it at 8 $argain, ! “This is all very well, Edward” Fillmore mused, according to the pop- | Millard Fillmore. i i mlar ye “hut sow would it do for the president of the United States | to ride around in a second-hand car riage?” Arn: i i “But. sure,” argued “Old Edward,” | “Your Ixellency is only a second-hand | prisident |” i fn Fillmore we have another fron- | tier president. For western New York was an when he was bom there of New England parents, After gecaiving about the same kind of gchodling as our other log-cabin pr outpost dents, he was bound out to learn the trade of wool carder, The one enduring act of the Fill | more administration was taken when it sent Commodore Perry to knock at the long-closed gate of Japan, and, | with the gift of a toy raliroad and a toy telegraph, to tempt the Japanese | to come out of their hermit seclusion, | The rest is poliiics, As American men struggled to rise | from the bottom in the more primitive | days of the country, their women of- | ten falled to keep up with them. By | the time half of Fllimore's predeces- | gors gained the presidency, thelr wives were either dead, worn out or tagging behind. Mrs. Fillmore, finding herself with- out strength or ambition to reign with | fier husband, her place was taken by sn daughter. This girl of eighteen, Miss Mary Abigail, was enough of a new woman to have insisted on fitting herself by a course in a normal school | to earn an independent living, Being | time after graduating, she went on teaching school even after her father became vice president. She kept at it until her mother summoned her to preside over the White House, where she promptly induced congress to in tall a library, the mansion having been until then a bookless desert. A month after the end of her hus band's term Mrs. Fillmore was dead. Next Miss Mary died of cholera, and then, after a tour of Europe, the pathetic loneliness of a retired presi dent was relieved by a marriage with a wealthy widow, Fillmore had tried to avert this re tirement by nn unsuccessful effort to be nominated to succeed himself. Four years afterward he attempted to break the retirement and return ¢o the presidency. Although he had both the Knownothing and Whig nome fnations, he ran third in the election, He lived on In his Buffalo home until the very year when another Buffalo nian, Grover Cleveland, started for the White House by way of the ghrievalty of Erie county, 180%—November 23, Franklin Plerce born at Hillsboro. N. H. 1829.33—Member of New Hamp- shire legislature. 1833.37—Member of congress. 1837-42—United States senator. 1847-48—Brigadier general in the Mexican war, 1852—June, nominated by the Democrats. 1853—March 4, Inaugurated fourteenth president, aged sixty-four, 1854—-The Missouri compromise repealed, 1856—Pierce defeated nomination, 1869—October 8, died, aged six. ty-four, tor re the seco JF EARELIN PIERCE was ond dark horse and the third New Englander to enter the White house, He was chosen not as a rep resentative of New England, but rath- er as an agent of the south, and New Humpshire debated half a century be of the capital at Concord a statue of her only president, A member of the legislature at thirty-three. Resigning when The Mexican war tempted Plerce general, he served with Seott In the advance on the city of Mexico. Concord, General practice at that any further public distinction awaited him. Plerce was elected In a more sweep- ing victory than date and the opportunity to be presi. dent of the Union. With all his good qualities of head and heart, he was not broad enough to be more than the servant section, “of those who placed me here,” as he ex- pressed it. 8 2 whole of a Jefferson I set with the south, only surrendered to the ambitions the power for expansion the north and west, but expansion into foreign lands. Slavery was in its last erywhere, Great Britain had abolished slave aver also had abolished it next door to our own slave states, Even Spain was tend Great Britain, France and Spain met in Belgium and issued the manifesto.” ish government should refuse to sell force, At the same time congress at home was repealing the Missouri mise and wiping out the dead line against slavery, which had been drawn ‘ Franklin Pierce, a quarter of a century before. This threw open Kansas to a wild scramble between settlers who wished the new territory to be free and those who wished it to be slave. Then and there the Civil war began. “Border ruffans,” as the north called the settlers, who rushed In from Mis. sourl and other slave states, and set. tlers no less rough ‘in their fighting who poured in from the free states, quickly turned that primeval into “Hieeding Kansas” Rival territorial governments were set up by the two factions, and Plerce threw the weight of the federal power on the side of those who were desperately striving to create another slave state, whole country was drawn into the struggle, and the Republican party into life. At the election In the middle of his term, Plerce saw the Democratic representation in the house cut down one-half and the opposition (Sweep in: wis 8 lig ndouity. (Copyright, 1920, by James Morgan.) to —————————— Motion Pictures a Si'ent Partner of Uncle Sam in His Export Trade. Latin People Disposed to Pattern Aft. er What They See on Screen That Pleases Them—Alds Live Stock Introduction, Washington. —Unecle Sam hos as a ellent partner in his export trade the motion pletures. How the “movies” developing trade and spreading in American goods and American meth. are confidence which should prove the manency of trade In South America, is told by Dr, Julius Klein, commer- division, bu domestic of the Latin American reau of forelgn and merce, The Latin people, he points out, are disposed to pattern after what they gee In the motion pletures that appeals to them. Thus the fllns have made what cre American automobiles and of they can do. The movies have ated a demand for American-made of- of a business magnate's office, which South American merchants in thelr prosperity are eager to copy. As regards ready-made have gotten into the ordering a suit of clothes like their fa yorite hero wore a certain Alm. Thus the merchants have up good lines clothing, which are The movies have had a lke in come with of very emphasizes and has All this, Doctor Klein has happened been forced as trac ) Boom to U. 8, The more natural Isa films introducing indus indus tries mining--the benefits American commerce films can and should carry a romantic scenario. such as appeals most strong 1y to the Latin temperament, with cut ins on our methods In i more "1 will result, industries simi As we show them A the! A Dew in rndustrios lar to theirs and better meth us and the r confidence tput of our outpu i us \ wirnnintively grows cumulativels Germans particularly ¥ ¥ ex v - ple» Sp have hoen ndeavoring ate themselves in Sot I of the Itallane in markets from an eo 4£1 and the the South ctor Klein says influe nomic viewpoln” commercial must of farm with manufacturers are now co-opermting American ture and natural resources, in an en- arouse the possibilities by using such ma- chinery. Motion pictures are prepared to show the most approved methods of eultivation, preparation of seed, use of farm machinery, harvest. tng and storing crops, and methods of packing and handling where these processes are Involved. Aids Live Stock introduction. Introduction of American breeds of live stock and poultry Into South America, particularly Argentina, is to be alded by the use of motion picture films, prepared for this purpose by the United States department of agricul ture. These films also will show American methods of breeding live | s10ck and handling it in It§ many phages from the farm to the home | table, The Argentine government hns { shown special interest in the introduc. | tion of American methods of handling | tive stock, as dt has indeed in the agri- | cultural practices of the northern half of the continent genernlly. As evidence of embassy In has purchased ten films on these subjects for educational use In Argentina and has frequently had United States de partment bulletins transiated into Spanish for home consumption, The Buenos Alres & Pacific rallway this, Washington cently negatiating with the fils showing the swine Industry the United States, And rangements for the introduction American swine In Argentina, It is planned to show CB Al Als A AAA A MAA AA A “Cut Pay, I'm Not Earning It,” Says City Employee # 4 » * » Cleveland, Ohlo—~—"1 am not earning the money I am getting and 1 want my salary reduced.” This is the request sent to City officials by Gottileb Pfahl. He is sixty-seven. He worked for the city for fif- teen years, When he made the request he was foreman of a bridge repair gang. Last March his right arm was affected by paralysis, He cannot se it now, Ke . 3 * . . * - + * . 3 + M NN ie That's why he asked for a snl ary cut, . 3 - + + ‘ 1 1 4 . : : + His request was groated, » 4 + : + : . . - + - * . + . + - i lA MA AAA AA ‘Airman Describes Romantic Charm of Mosques and Gardened Homes. QEDADENCE OF CITY GOES OW Strangers Treated Kindly in an AL mosphere of Friendship—City En. dures Its Shabby Gentility With Pride and Calm, Thrace ~The decadence cal and with- have ineffable Adrianople : § ons . 1: of two centuries, present poi economic disintegration, Wars $ ont end. futy ¢rtain future, and an nnd | heen unable to destroy the Turks originally gave this city of eighty odd thousand souls, Adrianople is still a holy city in faith and in appearance, Romance abides here, “The Orient is the only place left to Europe where cities seen at close range are beautiful” remarked Jules charm the to iting the most beautiful of all mosques, R|inan's masterpiece here the mosque of a thousand windows but one, erect- od at the order of Sultan Selim IL. In the sixteenth century. been one of infinite beauty. from across the lofty Balkans in an a rush, a place of spires, and slate Intersection of three rivers. It had been a welcome sight. National Anthem Turned | 4 Policemen Into Statues Mass, — Dy “The Star Syungled Banner” over and over an Italian Land kept two policeinen, who ordered them to stop, standing at salute in the Fells nenr here, until their arms dropped numb and helpless, A few lial fun women and children, who were nlong for an outing cheered and applanded In great glee, Then the bandsmen fled, Soon tumulinous Poston, playing reserviution, the begun woods after strains had through the Polleeinen Jordan Frost and Roberts peared and informed then they must stop, as they were In the state reservation. The lender at once ordered “The Star Spangled Janner” played. resounding ap swine breeding farms, the work in the biz Chiengo packing houses and the preparation of the product for table, will he made of the | various types of American an effort =» made to go | {dea of the vastness of the | the Pletures snd Ve Bone hogs {11 be i industry 0 { this country, | CATTLE RUSTLERS USE AUTOS | Cattle Are Now Taken Across the In. ternational Boundary by New Method, —The mot BN Regina, SBnsk | seems, achieved thy wih | tle rustling i known when they = ! herds befcre b nine advent nse them, | the pr Ans ¢ ! wore stol tt. A few en ir and spirited international Three of this side Mon- iarder hy the rustlers were arrested on i of the line and two ot? irs i tana at Is a was the Journey's end tor, to a tired avl er Afoot. City. Charming Aloft from ajoft Inrae nt the surround its outer rim, Its nix within the city showing and its flowers, outlying of Mar. Diarbekr bs Turkish beauty, srotesd memories wntains the hosts of other sleeping In by sunshine or moon stay y city 1} tone friendship not unlike The cente husine unty sent of the £ 3 e agricultural exc ge ) as of Fastern and Western Thrace, It Is frequented by peasants traders of Turkish, Bal { garian, Jewish and Armenian nation- alitles There of i American ever having dene husiness in and Greek is record but one and bought up all the brooms, { day may bring forth In the | political strife and crime, | eity preserves this tone of friendship | and order. i the streets or visit treated with kindly | Turkish officers salute courteously and there is no glint of hostility of the WARY todny the shops concern. are rying their new rifles, recently | Bey. | at a dignified pace. | and nolse and poverty of Constant nople. There i= none of the of Constantinople’s street cars automohlles. Pride in Shabby Gentility. There are a few ragged begear and enlm. Here there are none of of Asia Minor. bacaars do a slender business in sell Ing American and European calicoes and homespun cloths and Turkish giver mounted pipes and cigarette holders, rugs, junk, to passing peasant customers: or else when these are | lacking they swap with each other, af ter the happy manper of all the Ori ent. | Decadence seems to have heightened the beauty of the majestic old mosque of Sultadd Bayzid, The windows are broken In, the locks are rusted in the doors, the grass is growing up between the flagstones, the fountain In the court no longer splashes its water in the sunshine, and the interior of the mosque Itself is slowly deteriorat ing. Few worshipers come here, but on the drowsy Friday afternoons, the Mussulman's day of worship, come a devoted band of musicians and sing- ers. The avitor stumbled upon this group and one of the red-fezed band | apluted with the simplicity of the Turk and sald, “Allah esmarladik.”—"May (God ablde with you." . WOMEN NEED _SWAMP-ROOT Fiousands of women have kid bladder trouble and never suspect wir vi and t. omens’ cuiplkints often prove to be nothing else Lu: kidpey trouble, or the restit of kidney or bladder diseave. If the kidneys are not in s healthy condition, they may cause the other or gens to become diseased. Pain in the back, headache, loss of am bition, nervousness, sre often times symp Don’t delay starting treatment, Dr. Kilmer's Bwamp Root, a physician's pre scription, obtained at any drug store, may such conditions Get a medium or large size bottle im However, if you wish first to test this great preparstion send ten cents to Dr Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y,, for « When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. Like a New Car, seems proud of her hus “Yes, She's had him only weeks.” “She very band.” {few Cuticuras Soothes Baby Rashes That hi and burn thiathe of Cuticura gentie Lint Lot it with Soap followed of O ing better, pu ttle of t ily if a n A . t Talcum is dusted on hy anointings sticura Ointment sWeeler, nt Cut the fin espe fran ore irngra » each everywhere —Adv, Main Thing. fiily)—*1 cannot woo #oft words 1 an She (eagerly) A — | Hot water ~~ =" Sure Relief BELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION Harvest 20 to 45 Bushel to Acre Wheat in Western Canada lars with rheat at high prices. N in Western Canada have weir land from a single crop ®n puccess may still ye yours for 3 Or CAEY Farm Land at $I6 to $30 an Acre . jocated near thriviag tow Kets, raliways—ia the great Ce- mar- which to the Good grazing lands ct low prices grain farm enable you to reap the prefits from stock rais- ing and deirying. Learn the Facts About Western Canada 4 ¢ ts your ~jow taxation healthfu churches 8 Prospero For illustrate tion of far Saskatchewan railway of Immigration, Can f. A. BARRISON 210 5. Third Sti., Harrisburg, Pa. ernment Arent ranadian The next time you buy calomel ask for (ocd The purified and refined calomel tablets that are pausealess, safe and sure. Medicinal virtues retain. ed and improved. Sold only in id packages, Price 35¢. Cuticura Soap 1 The Velvet Touch For the Skin Soap 25¢, Ointment 25 and 50¢, Taleum 25c. - asin: KING PIN PLUG TOBACCO Known as “that good kind" 5 ies