A HOUSE THAT CAME TO LIFE HERR By FANNIE HURST . Le lei ele lool: YA 1 ) aueleeleteteieletetietietiet (® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) (WNU Service) HE terrace upon which Miss Eustacia de Lima sat each eve- ning was regarded, by all for- tunate enough ever to have trod its perfect turf, as one of the most exquisite and commanding of all Eu- rope. It hung, this terrace, over the gray-green slopes of Fiesole, which commands that view of the city of Florence which spreads like a lady's proud fan at its feet, Not even in the days of its original owners, Fifteenth century Medicis, had this terrace boasted its present perfection. Carefully restored by its American owner fpom the overgrown condition in which she found it, back to a semblance of what must have been its original pattern, Eustacia had added subtly, and with conservatism, to its bloom and geometric scheme of pinnts and walks, Approaching the Villa Fiesole, a half mile of slender and precise Italian poplars, as straight and narrow and rigid as tall spears, pointed the way to the villa. Once at the top of this battalion of poplars, the terrace and villa, and all its incredible view, burst upon the beholder. It was said in some of the guide books that its wealthy owner, Miss De Lima, had set about to make this villa the most glorious in all Europe. After a while, of course, as her suc- cess came to be noised about and friends, acquaintances, and sightseers came from distances to behold the per- fection of her dwelling place, beautification blossomed into her hob. by. Her only motive for ever leaving it, her only desires, were that she might gather within its massive walls treasures that might enhance its glow ing beauty. How well she succeeded Is fTurthe attested by the fact that out of defer. ence to her outstanding achievement in the way of perpetuating and ideal. izing a landmark, the government hon- ored Miss de Lima, Fiesole Villa became twice over the target it had ever been for t seeing thousands who annually crowded in for the feasts of beauty Florence had to offer them It was after the acknowledgment of the government that Miss de Lima de cided to throw open her gardens one day a week for the further enjoyment of those who came peering through t! grill-wor Guards throughout th was j its protect | the general to one rope. On this Lima kept moving atl ment teenth, century objects of that Miss de ly to her chambers, day each week carefull enloy consoles the Sixteenth, among high-patined, Fif and even Thirteent! farniture and art collected with lov ing care as if these objects packed very memories of turbulent and picturesque yesterdays live and breathing compani Each one had a history, of which she was most carefully aware, Here, the elaborate carved bed in which a Fifteenth century Doge had Here, a Gothie chest of incredible associations. Here, a paint- ing by that was laden with reminders of his early life, For twelve years Miss de Lime, growing older, more fragile, more re motely associated with the bygone centuries she loved, dwelt in the midst of the luxury of beauty, sharing it, to some extent with the publie, but for the most part, drinking her pleasure and her tea alone, on her terrace, at sunset ; strolling, with her two lean wolfhounds, through her gardens, olive groves, and leafy hillsides at dusk ; spending long hours In arrange ment and rearrangement of the rows of chambers: tending and earing for a bit of eracking wood or majolica as if it had been a living thing; loving her solitude, glorying in the beauty of this solitude with which she was able to surround herself, Gradually, as this began to pall a bit, Miss de Lima allowed herself the luxury of invading friends, who came eagerly to share these blessings with her. But after a while, it seemed to Miss de Lima the pecking curiosity her visitors brought with them, the restlessness, the desire for bridge and pastimes, after the first few hours of exclaiming delight had worn off, dese. erated, In a way, the crystal siiences of her villa, and so she relapsed Into sotude—solitude among hanging gar. dens and strutting peacocks and tiny hissing waterfalls, “Selfish I” sald her friends. Some. thing of this awareness must also have struck Miss de Lima, because after a while, prompted by a com bination of ennul and sense of duty, she arranged that the vilin be open to the public again, two days a week. In a way, that served to Increase her isolation because it meant that addi tional hours must be spent indoors, prowling among her objets d'art. It was with something akin te un- pleasant surprise that Miss de Lima began to apprehend herself In what had come to be her habit of peering such timbers with with were slept. Yes hhoha TUDeNs through the heavy brocades and shut. ters of her windows these days that the gardens were open wide, The voices and streamers of laughter and high excited exclamations that came to her, seemed to draw her automat- feally towards the din, There it was, the same old van- dal, vulgar, poking, curious publie that she in a way despised even while she tolerated its ways. How they moved about, down there, through her gardens, kept in place by guards, ad- monished by perents, splashed In sun. light that seemed positively coarse as applied to them. How they could met- amorphose her beautiful silence into din; her paradise Into a mere penny- a-stare spectacle! One onslaught from them, and dignity became so much raucous curiosity, The racing children, the gaping matrons, the heavy-legged papas brought desecras tion, and yet, for the life of her, It was impossible for Miss de Lima not to feel drawn to her windows as if to an open grate that held warmth, They were a common lot, but there them, mysterious as mist, the They electrified the rose off aroma of hufhanity. the Even Yenuses, marble faung, the Don- atellp the Della Robbla friezes around the garden, scemed to take on a sort of relationship to life. They emerged from the centuries as replicas of Mfc; not as mere ob jets d'art It was that curious warmth, coming her these days, gradually Im pelled Miss Lima, although she would never admitted it, even to herself, to throw open the gardens and on the sixth place, the RUOUDS, over de have week, itself! five days a the villa That was the most exciting day of all! The youngsters, with their round questioning eyes and grimy little hands into those of the gaping matrons and the heavy-legged papas! Young honeymooners standing bound before the beauty of a Botti. Men and women out of the humblest walks of life, trailing along the bathed in the mystic beauty of they knew not what! From various apertures which she had arranged for herself, Miss Lima, clasped «111! Cel. corridors, It was as If the great stone ult to heat at best, warmth, warmth of the beginnings which was at thi This is the story igantic plan 's bra . i a home for one W ten children the Fiesole i nurses, musical from over the dwell world, frescoed chambers, palettes, music rolls, toys, In- at the top had never Miss de she restore, children, Smallest Split of Time iit seconds for time fraction of one sec. This fine distine- tion can be made with a ervstal clock deseribed in a report to the National Academy of Sciences by W. A. Mar the st lest is a ond in 3 DIUries rison. The clock, he says, can be made to lock on mean sun time and the other on sidereal time, which about one second apart In 30 operate one « are or centuries, The crystal, of quartz, vibrates 100.- 000 times a second, and this Is reduced by gears to the required number of beats to operate a elock an Associated Press cor explains, The sun time clock, says Marrison, would operate at 3606 cycles per sec ond, while the sidereal clock would have 366 cycles minus 0.000,701.803 eycles per second. The crystal arrange ment can be made to maintain this fine distinction, electrical accurately, respondent Wail for Whiskers There is a movement In Pfance working for the return of whiskers to popular favor. Some time ago the American idea that a man presents a brigsker and more youthful appearance with a cleanly shaven face took root in France and whiskers fell to the sween of the safety razor. In anelent Gaul the beard was the symbol of an- thority and power. No slave was al- lowed to grow one and the local lord would tolerate no beard In his district that was more luxurious than his own. And was not the beard held among the Gauls and the Vikings as an es. gential sign of manhood? The “beard: less youth” was a person of no consé. quence. The advocates of the whis- kers do not expect to popularize the full beard at once but are paving the way by encouraging gontees, Imperials and side whiskers, Spider Once “Spinner” For the origin of the word “Spider” we have to go to Old English spidhre, which was formed from spin-dhre, from gpinnan, to spin, It has no rela. tion to the fanciful souree that John gon gave to it—"gpider from spy-dor-— the insect that watches the dor or humble-bee.” That It was long In the language before it was referred to In any manuscript is a reasonable dedue- tion, but the earliest literary record found among the materials collected by the Philologieal society of England has been ascribed to the year 1340, In which It was spelled spldhre.~Kan- sas City Times, Wonderful Evolution of the Homely Plow SEs Progress of the Plow: 1-—Pliny's Plow, 70 A. D.; 2—-The Syrian Plow, Known 5—The Egyptian Plow, No agricultural has im- proved more throug inventions down thre has the plow, O'Brien, Washington While originally advanced stage, the plow started from “scratch,” literally. The original plow, O'Brien, was a forked stick of & tree with a projecting point, this implement the ground was broken by dragging fork or projecting point of the stick through the ground, forming a continuous furrow, the fork of the the while the malin the beam. One of the shown In plows of this kind on Syrian tween the share tree limbs While the earlier model by one man, it is ¢ more men were required to handie the long series of wagh the ages than " declares Clarence A pate atlorney. many farm Implements were conceived In a fir according the Thus stick was share, part of the stick was first pictured monuments, was a brace be and the beam to hold the more i arent that two or Syrian plow, First Home of the Plow. Upon a very clent Egypt, the count to have been the plow, Mr. O'Bri shows a number plow hy means of a rog Another later d anim: ian plow ghows an the that It had ing a wider furrow that more ground. It also had instead of one and fairly effective In Yergil, In his which formed land movement in the F B.C the Egyptian plow, Pliny, a Roman writer of the First century A. D. re fers to a plow that had wheels to reg. ulate the depth t also had a coniter, or knife, fixed in Tront the share to make the first cut of the sod. Mr, O'Brien intimates, however, that such fa plow was not in general use in Pliny's time. Plow With Wheels. A thousand years later, however, a plow with wheels and coulter was doubtless in common use, It had evi. dently spread up into England, since extant drawings show Anglo-Saxons of the Eleventh century using plows of this description. One of these shows a plow with two wheels pulled by four oxen. Five hundred years later, at the time Columbus discovered America, the plow showed little further Improve. Egyptian ite shows 1 crooked stick of a hroader si looms “Croorgic part of a irst century of up and turn over » share, tirred it up Cops with a har First Moldboard Plow. United States in the teenth century, nis began to ap in France his { of having In mathemati Plow of. Cast iron. Newbold a farmer yn N. J in 179 nn ant moldboard all cast one piece, The New Jersey farmers, however, did not accept this Inne Wood a plow Iwation, made of cast iron ing the best features of th by Jefferson and by plow had the point, share and could be replaced. By en. 1 ron plows of earlier While the United States patent office lists many later Improvements, In the main the best plows today closely re semble in design that patented by Jethro Wood In 1810. The gang plow appeared about the middle of the Nineteenth century In order to take care of the needs of the farmer in the vast prairie, and while originally drawn hy horses, they were later drawn by steam. John Fowler, about 1865, introduced steam plowing in England. drawing two sets of plows, And today it Is not uncommon to find tractors drawing a number of plows turning a breadth of many feet at one time, tte Pruning should be done In the fall, winter or early spring. - - * An attractive sign at the farm en. trance helps in advertising the farm and its products, - » * Plant only the best. It does not re quire more space or effort to grow a good plant or flower than a poor one. . » » Size or volume of business as meas ured by cash receipts is a better in. dex of farm labor income than ig the number of acres in the farm, ee & » The best land for seeding to pasture is usually that which has grown a cultivated crop for one or more years and has been kept free from weeds, ® * » When raised for seed, the soybean crop ean be harvested with a combine or binder the same as wheat, The mower or bidder can be used to har. vest the hay crop. . = @ Pastures need fertilizing and lim. ing after years of use, the same as other fields, Improvement of old pas. tures will provide a large amount of feed and better quality grass, Limestone is beneficial to pasture iand, *» . Ld Sudan grass was introduced in this country In 1000 by the United States Department of Agriculture, . -. - Weakened fruit buds will be alded by application of a fertilizer high In quickly available nitrogen, say Penn State fruit specialists . * - Newly planted nursery stock should be watered twice weekly In the sea. son is dry, Cultivate to maintain loose surface free of weeds, ® - - The common brown rat breeds six to eight times a year and produces an average of 10 young at a litter, Young females breed when only three or four months old, * 8 » Efficient potato growers hav found it helpful to have a sufficient supply of lime and blue stone on hand before the spraying season opens. Plan to have a surplus Instead of a shortage, . » The black locust, planted by early setttlers for the fragrance of its blos soms, and Improperly called honey locust on that account, is now recom mended by the New York College of Agriculture to plant for future fence posts, Newspapers Make Gain in Number of Readers The aggregate circulation of pa pers dally in this country and Can- | ada Is 45,100,245 as against 44,110, | 094 In 1080, a gain of about a mil | lon dally readers, according to a | recent newspaper directory, It is a sign if people are reading more, They are attending the greatest school In the world, as | somebody has called the newspaper, | This school takes up every morn- | ing In the year and usually begins | its sessions before breakfast, It has | a voluntary student body and its | cost 18 but a fw cents per day. It ig the cheapest tuition of any Insti | tution for adults on earth. It knows | no vacations and holidays, The teachers are on the job all day and through the night preparing the text. book for next morning. No time taken out fo ax an fons, If good More Moncy or Whiskers If the postal Kovno employees o district get higher wages n livered by bewhi anti-shave strike faces of the strikers ing The increased wages sey but recelvi uanfan postal that t+} y vos TH ne use ol razo from view, to strike ive, thes gon. are hest Ome little cathartic,- Dr. Pierce's Pe for bowels and stoma Pellet a laxative—three for » Up and at 'Em! ved the mys “I've =» a hotel rooms £1 nnd lien 1 mp," “What is 17 *1 got was up all night, means Ww one of the dollar rooms and w for Stomach ond LIVER TROUBLES Coated tongue, bad breath, constipation, bili. ousness, nausea, indigest! dizziness, insom. ch, Avoid serious wer at once. Get Relieves promptly = er, aids digestion, iliness by taking 2 any good druggist sweetens stomach, livens Hiv clesrs out poisons. 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N, U, BALTIMORE, NO. 21.1931, Parrot’s Long Life Parrots have been known to as long as O0 years & live War a relief and satisfaction And when older, fast-growing children get out 8f sorts and out condition, you have only to give a more Jiberal dose Lo! the vegetable prepara to right disturbed condition quickly. Because Castoria is made ex- pressiy for Shildrmm, it has just the needed mildness of action. Yet you can always depend on it to be