SILVER SERVICE PRESENTED TO THE ARKANSAS The battleship Arkansas was presented by various notables from Arkansas with a 70-piece silver set valued at $lO,OOO. This photograph shows, left to right, Neeley Burn and Eula Spivey with the D. A. It. and the Arkansas Traveler's trophy cups. Spoofing Pop. "Say, pop," began little Willie, edg ing toward the door as if to get a good lead off first base. "There's some thing I can't understand." "Name it. my boy," said pop, "and your childish mind shall be flooded with the light of knowledge." "Well, it's this. I've been watching grandpa sliding all over this room in his rocking chair. He goes back and forth and don't keep still a minute. He just goes rock, rock, rock. How can people say 'firm as a rock,' when a rock wiggles around all over the room, an' —" And just then Willie had to exercise the primal law of self-preservation.— Indianapolis Star. Manifold Uses for Cottcn. In calling attention to the manifold uses for cotton, cotton seed and cotton seed oil, the Boston Herald mentions the following products: Photographic films, automobile windows, buttons, "ivory," artificial silk, combs, knife handles, trunks, book bindings, shoes, furniture, headwear, handbags, lard, Boap, butterine, paints, rubber, guncot ton and smokeless powder used in ex plosives. Salute to the Flag. The salute to the flag is given by raising the right hand, palm outward, until the index finger is even with the lower edge of the forehead, and stand ing at attention. Not as Interesting. To know thyself is better than try iag to find out all about the neighbors —Toledo Blade. [ft? Ao \ter To Avoid Counterfeiting. In the production of their notes, the Bank of England authorities' chief aim is to issue a note which is impossible for anybody to counter feit. Toward this end, all the parts of the note —the paper, the water mark, the ink, the engraving, the printing—are prepared and done in a special, and, as far as possible, se cret manner. At the mills where the paper is manufactured the most strin gent precautions are taken to pre vent any of the paper being stolen. Of course, there have been many at tempted robberies, but only once, in the ye*r 18S2, were thieves success ful in staining any of the paper. Very shortly afterward forged notes were in circulation. The thieves did not enjoy the triumph long, for with in a short time they were captured. Boing Neighborly. After the workmen had cleared out the landlord took especial pains to show to each tenant the bill for doing over his flat. The householders re garded that attention in different lights according to the improvements they had fought for and secured. "Some looked frightened, thinking it portended a rise in rent, some apolo getic, some defiant. The third floor right man was non-committal. Three days later he called at the landlord's office and presented a slip of paper. It was a bill for six shirts, summer socks and ties, a straw hat, and a blue serge suit. "What's that got to do with me?" exclaimed the landlord. "Oh, nothing," said the man airily. "Just an interchange of courtesies. Nothing like being neighborly, you know." The Old-Fashioned Folio. The advantage of the old-fashioned folio was that it was safe from bor rowers.—Emerson. JAPANESE FENCING COSTUME ijijVeNter:i Newspaper I'ni. n 1 Costumes used, by the Japanese army to teach the soldiers the art of fencing and bayoneting. These cos tumes permit them to use as much force as they would in actual combat. The photograph .was taken In Siberia. FAST HAND GRENADE LOADER Mrs. Annie Oienda was the maker of a world's record in a new line of work, that of loading hand grenades. She loaded 10,000 in a day while employed at the Gorham Ammunition plant at East Providence, It. I. Up and Out. Life In Argentina will never again be quite the same. The Latin-Ameri can idea of woman as a secluded and ornamental feature of human life has at last been unsettled. The women of Argentina, at least some of them, have decided that women should vote and hold public office, and that it is quite unworthy of the present state of civilization for anybody to think other wise. No more languid waving of fans in parlors, but up and out and into the arena of political life. Some thing of the sort was to have been expected even with all Argentian tradition against it. Circumstances having included South America in the world neighborhood, the women of the Argentine family were bound to be affected by the habits and opinions of their new neighbors. Fats in the Body. Fats in the body occur under the skin in the muscles and around certain organs. They act as a protection for the body nirainst 'njur.v and serve as a stored supply of fuel, in case food can not be taken. Fats are liquid in the body - and are stored in albuminous cells. | COULDN'T FOOL HIM Employer Had Read Detective Stories to Advantage. Why Mr. Petty, With Other Members of the Office Force, Regretted Their Choice of Birthday Present for the Boss. Mr. Petty hurried into the office an hour later than usual and was relieved to find that his employer was late also. "Pretty good I" laughed Mr. Petty to his assistant. "He will never know that I was late." When the head of the firm came in he scrutinized Mr. Petty long and closely, then leaned casually against the desk. "Your session at the bowling alley was prolonged last night," he began. "How do yon know?" asked Mr. Pet ty, opening his eyes very wide. "I infer it from your stiff manner of bundling the ledger this morning," re plied the head of the firm severely. "You exerted yourself more than usual on the alleys. At breakfast this morn« ing you were so drowsy from want of sleep that you dozed over your morn ing paper." "So I did," admitted Mr. Petty, un comfortably. "I know it was at breakfast, because there is egg and coffee on the paper," frowned the head of the firm. "And while you were asleep your little six year-old son climb into your lap." "Y-yes, he did," gasped Mr. Petty. "But—" "How do I know?" Interrupted the head of the firm. I know because your collar is written over in a child's scrawl. It Is done in the peculiar shade isf lead that you had in your gold lead pencil, which is usually in your left hand vest pocket. It is not there now. I hope that the boy has not lost it." Mr. Petty felt for his lead pencil. "It is gone," gasped Mr. Petty. "You were late to work this morn ing," went on the head of the firm, coldly. "I do not have to be told so, because you bought an evening edition of the paper at the subway station and It is an edition that does not come out until a late hour. lam very particular about the hours of work observed here." As the head of the firm was finally disappearing into his private office Mr. Petty wiped the perspiration from his brow and remarked to the assist ant: "We were all against giving him a watch for his birthday because he la always watching the time, but we made a great mistake to give him the detective stories instead." Enlists at 53; Says He's 39. American Magazine has an article a"bout "Foghorn" Macdonald, who en* listed as a private in the Canadian forces at fifty-three and is now a ma jor at fifty-seven. The author of the article says: "By canoe for 31 days through the wilderness, by an old tub of a leaky steamboat, by whatever means of trnvel he could find, including his own feet, he made his way back to Winni peg, only to find that the troops had left. All .right I . A machine jcnn com-. pany was* Pelhg formed" tna Unapplied for that. "The recruiting officer was a friend of his. had helped celebrate Foghorn's fifty-third birthday the previous Jan uary. But when in making out the pa pers he came to the question. 'How old are you?' and Foghorn whipped out: 'Thirty-nine!' he never batted an eyelash. "Before his official cronies at Ot tawa knew It, Macdonald was on his way to England— a private at fifty three! Two years later he was a ma jor; the only man in the forces of the allies who has ris*fl from the ranks to that grade iu the present war." Wartime Economy. Mr. Bensou went to New York to business, but lived In Brooklyn. Often he was not able to get home in time for dinner at night. He told his wife that he would phone her every day as to whether he could leave the office or ; not. Mrs. Benson was of a very thrifty disposition, and the following was her solution of the problem: "Sam, if you find that you cau't be home for dinner, phone me exactly six o'clock. If the telephone rings at that hour, I'll know it is you and that you are not coming for dinner. I won't answer it, and you'll get your nickel back." —Ladles' Home Journal. Gloves From Whale Intestines. The Norwegian state whaling sta tions have caughtl2oo whales, but ex pect to catch in all 500 during the summer. The stations have orders to take care of the intestines and salt them down, as it is the intention to make gloves of them. The material !s fine in every respect, pliable, soft and exceptionally strong. The manufac ture of gloves will probably be com menced at ouce. Plenty of Color. Several soldiers were standing on a street corner talking when a "loudly" dressed girl passed. One of them turned to his comrades and said: "Here, boys, salute the colors; there goes plenty of 'em." New Phone System. Barranqullla, Colombia, Is to have a municipally owned and operated tele phone system to replace the antiquat ed equipment now in use. There will be a demand for American supplies. Ordering One's Life. Take time to scrutinize your life. Try to define just why you are "run" and decide for yourself that If you are going to be ruled, as most of us are. It must be by something or son#body well worth the arduous sprinting we are all indulging in. If the goal to ward which we are being steered is worth while, only then can we look back and feel that the race has been well run. No Hasty Judgment. What your mirror tells you you may depend upon hs the result of reflec tion. —Boston Transcript. Sire of the Foot. The foot should he as long as the nlna, or chief hone of the forearm— that is, from the small head of the bone to be seen at the wrist to the point of the elbow should be the length of the foot.