SUCH IS LIF p= wr rv I MAY NOT KNOW AV | Ber YA WOULDNT KAOW THE Good Will Offering to Peo- ple of United States. Washington—Sent by the American University of Beyrouth, Syria, as a good will offering to the people of the United States, 13 living cedars of Leb- anon from the Phoenician coast at the eastern end of the Mediterranean were recently unloaded in America. At the direction of the President they were planted in the grounds of Arlington National cemetery, overlooking the Potomae river, In the Bible these majestic trees are called “the trees of Jehovah, the cedars of Lebanon, which He hath planted.” Their most famous appear- ance in history was when King Hiram of Tyre transported Lebanon cedars to Jerusalem for ling of Solo- the building mon's temple, Famous Trees Never Numerous. differ as t how non accor a Scholars 0 many there were, In an- to the National cedars of Leb tiquity, Geographic It is the limestone r completely clothed In trees, In ancient times already valued, not only SOC that at no time were Let majestic probable the inon these the wood was for its great SE To Be June Bride Miss Helena Woolworth MeCann, granddaughter of the late F. W, Wool- worth, founder of the mighty Wool: worth fortune, who will be married in June to Frederick Winston Churchill Guest, son of a British member of par- liament, strength and resistance to but also for its rarity. Some decades ago, with the encour agement of Queen Victoria, the small remaining cluster of giant trees was inclosed by a stone wall. The trees had long been considered sacred to man, and Hadrian issued an imperial order that the groves should not be harmed. Later the Maronites, who have a small chapel amid this tiny forest, threatened excommunication for anyone who harmed the trees But herds of goats have showed less respect than man, and by nibbling at the saplings have prevented new growth, A count of tree rings, made on small branches, indicates that the Lebanon cedar has a slow growth and a long life. The cedars are not nearly So tall as sequolas, but they have thick trunks, as large as 47 feet in circum- ference. A notable feature is that the horizontal branches are so thickly car. with needles the firm cones appear as though up-ended on a well-kept lawn, On Republic's Flag. The site of the chief cedar of rare massive and 4.000 feet rot, peted that heavy, grove one beauty, the amphitheater high. stage hind them the k to its cniminating 10,000 feet above rises than ranean. The famous cedars are in the Leba- nese republic, at of the Mediterranean, just north of the Holy Land. Although the Lebanon is included in the French mandate with Syria, it has its own government un- der a Syrian president. The flag of the republic is the flag of France with a green cedar of Lebanon in the cen ter. The cedar of Lebanon also appears on the seal of the American University of Besreuth, donor of group of cedars to America, and lapel buttons bearing the university's insignia are worn by graduates throughout the Near East. The cedars have been studied by specialists of the univer sity. Dr. George E. Post of facul- ty. authority on Syrian botany, made the statement, “There is not and never has been a rotten Lebanon cedar. The wood is incorruptible. The imperish- able cedar remains untouched by rot or insect.” The wood, like that of the cypress and the sequoia, Is close grained and aromatic, the eastern end the $ the Eye Expert Says Eight Proper Age for School Boston.—Children should not be per mitted to go to school until they reach the age of eight, in the opinion of Dr. Laurence P. Folsom, president of the New England Council of Optometrists, “The eyes of the human being,” he gays, “do not reach the state of ma turity until the child is eight years of age, and much of the unnecessary strain to which we subject the eyes of children In the classroom should be avoided to insure healihy eyes among the future generations” ODD THINGS AND I [1 fed 3 rT NEW—By Lame Bode - fn \ TO MALARIA =~ THE BLACK MAN IS REL- ATIVELY IMMUNE TO MALARIA. IN PARTS OF AFRICA NEARLY Christianity and Civilization By LEONARD A. BARRETT In a recent issue of a metropolitan newspaper Appeared a cartoon in which our Capitol building at Wash- ington was se curely embedded In a huge rock which rose from an Angry The waves dashing against the rock were va- riously named: Marxism, Red volt, and Leninism. But the named Christian- ity. That picture Was more a cartoon. It preachment of the highest order, it rushes for expression, history, tionalism, patriotism The ar rock civilization safely sea. lo rock was than was . is Gibral John Lyman of Stanford university photographed as he was breaking the world's record for put by throwing the shot 54 feet 1 Inch. the shot ‘ in denominational organiza- It has no reference to the di- ‘splits” tions, an organically united Protestant world impossible. Christianity as pictured in the cartoon, harks back to those fundamental virtues and beliefs to which every person can give assent, and upon which the entire Christian world can build a permanent civiliza- tion. Principal among these virtues is brotherhood—a condition of society in which the spirit of mutual helpfulness dominates and not the Epicurean phi- losophy “every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost” The principle of liberty is important, but it is in danger of being misunderstood. Liberty 1s not license. Liberty is al ways limited by the sanctions of the moral law. Christianity also elimi. nates the ultimate domination of that spirit of selfishness which always de- stroys. It emphasizes the importance of “service” without which neither na- tionalism nor business can succeed Christianity has always emphasized the importance of education. Very near the church has always been located a school. Life, liberty and the pursuit of hap- piness will never perish from the F YOU wish to have your roots at ve you consider outline n. This is not confined to shapes of furniture and articles in the room, although these play a part. It chiefly consists in the imaginary lines which are subtly registered on the vision by the linear contours of arti tract! must decoratic example some articles are high, some low. The eye takes in these differ if a line | were drawn on the wall up and down It the is monotonous, It is outline decoration It is inartistic. therefore, to intro in heights of articles and jest any length mar a beauty outline. For- tunately there is in most persons an inherent, If unconscious appreciation of this essential detail of interior dec- oration. Breaking Up Wall Spaces. There is expression, breaking up the wall spaces, which In effect, brings about much the same desirable result. However, the decorative out. line has nothing to do with depth of | articles but of their flat silhouettes, while the bulkiness or lack of it comes i into the equation when breaking up wall spaces, In the consideration of outline dec oration there immediately springs to mind built in bookcases, with their long even line across the tops. Good essential, of decorative he decoration not ghelved walls, notwithsta line, the monotony until It solves from the picture, bookcases are from and the way up. only but reco actually Variety in Effect. In the first Instance Takes Much Water to Quench Engine’s Thirst Long-distance nonstop runs and high speeds on our rallways demand enormous quantities of first-class water, much of which is purified by being passed through water-softening plants before it is supplied to the troughs placed between the running lines at convenient points, letween 3,000 and 5,000 gallons of water are carried in a locomotive tender, and into a series of troughs varying in length between 600 and 700 yards hinged scoops are lowered by the fireman of an engine running over the troughs, the speed of the train forcing the water through in- ternal vertical pipes leading from the scoop to the tanks of the engine ten- ders. By this means, between 2,000 and 2,000 gallons of water can be picked up in 15 to 20 seconds, and on the assumption that a passing train picking up water draws 2,000 gallons from the troughs, it is calcu- lated that the normal water level is regained in less than five minutes, The water troughs are filled from storage tanks with a capacity of any- thing up to 30,000 gallons. Zach trough has {ts own valve and aux- {liary tank apparatus preventing the passage of a train on an “up” line reducing the level of a trough on a “down” line. The Flying Scotsman on its 14 miles journey from King's Cross to Edinburgh “drinks” on six occasions, picking up some 11, 000 gallons An- Fa of water~London WEers. Your local dedler carries Ferry's Pure Bred Vegetable Now 5 cents a package, Reads, only oF Adv. Human Bones RF nds aiierin ye ryior! § experts Smooth Off Ugly Freckles, Blackheads Nature’s Way Here is an inexpensive, quicker way to skin beauty-——a way that has been tested end trusted by women for over & generas : ion. You can.whiten, clear and freshen your complexion, remove trace of blackheads, freck- les, coarseness in ten days or less. Just apply Nadi. pola Bleaching Cream at bedtime tonight. No mas. saging, no rubbing. Nadi. nola speeds Nature, purge 41 ing away tao and freckles, “4 blackheads, muddy sallow andi color. You see day-by-day improvement until your skin is all you long for; creamy-white, satin-smooth, lovely. Get a large box of NADINOLA, only 50c. No long waiting, no goents; money-back guarantee. mentioned, naments, between them relieves of the outlines, outline decoration, will be achieved. decorated and see whether the outline are goc dad or rooms already nished, and decorations ment. Do not decoration, but so manipulate things to produce good «outlines with out diminishing other necessary and desirable qualities and characteristics, It is the combination of comfort with griistry that distinguishes good dec oration, ©. Bell Syndicate ~—WNU Service. use LEONARD EAR OIL FOR DEAFNESS & HEAD MOISES A soothing snd ting combination Chat has im. the Hearing and lessened Boad Noes of many, put in the Ears but Rubbed Back of Ears and 1 fn Nostrils, Also excellent for deafness exuwed by Flu, Colds, ete. Leonard Ear Of] has bees on the maoket ince 1907, Price $1.25 st drug stores, Descriptive circular seni on request, A. ©. LEONARD, INC, 70 Fifth Avenues, New York Clty LL ALLFLIES 4 attracts and kids Shes, toed, effective. “Neat, connection with Parker's Hair Balsam Makes the hair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at drag: gists, Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N.Y, FOR! LAS: ICELESS REFRIGERATION No tric. gas of expensive equipment Cherry wine, rust remover, vinegar, Ine sect axterminator, sell vulcanizing cement, mosauiteo lotion, 28c each; § for Ede (coin) EN . P.O, Box 1136, Wichita, Kansas, YINARCIAL INDEPENDENCE Easlly possible within one year. No sell. ing Even lazy men make money. It's plenty good. BOX 1111, Cashing, CONSTIPATED ‘After Her Ta) Ee leh A HUNDRED WHITE MEN DIE OF MALARIA FOR EVERY BLACK MAN, earth If fortified by Christianity, fot us have more of such cartoons! © by Western Newspaper Union. Safe, All- Sun Dogs and Halos Vegetable Woy A sun dog, or parhelion, to use its he bad given up technical name, is a bright spot which appears near the sun when sunlight shines through a thin cloud composed after of ice crystals floating In the atmos phere. Halos are the result of the re. fraction of the solar rays by these crystals. Sun dogs are sometimes tinged with color, and may appear at all times of the year, because even in the warmest weather the temperature of the upper atmosphere is below - . mn BATHING YOUNG = WASPS HAVE BEEN OBSERVED . CARRYING WATER TO THEIR NESTS, ON HOT DAYS TO SPLASH ® ON YOUNG LARVAL WASPS. Jo-15" CuT GLASS UNDER WATER- ORDINARY WINDOW $ CAN BE CUT BY TTT SCISSORS WHEN UNDER WATER, Charlotte Guy of San Diego, seventeen year-old granddaughter of Mme, Ernestine Schumann-Helnk, being crowned Desert Queen at the University of Arizona in Tucson. The men students conferred the honor on her by vote. of Her maids of honor are Thompson, Frances Davis and Anita Knott WNU Servies Sam