t T Pseorge W~ATER was first discoverea L and • investigated. by Noah, who succeeded .in living on it for forty days. Most men admire Noah for his bravery, bufvery few have any de sire to break his record. • Water is one of our most useful and necessary possessions. »it the earth v/culd be a desert and worthless," stocks would only yield a beggarly six or eight per cent., and mankind would curl up and die. A great many men avoid water and try to get along with a * substitute which they claim' is • just - as good. But their widows and creditors sel dom speak I of js,the j experiment i as i a success. There < unliir "ted" supply r of water on' the planet, but" most of it is badly J seasoned/ and * is < unflt_ for drinking i purposes.. are. five great containing » 160,000,000 ( square v miles * of v water \ and sur rounded * by **. 200,000 * miles * of sea beach, giving room for 5,000,000,000 bathers at*one-time. And yet a great® many I people 4n this world are no eleaner than they should be. Water is. very* thin and transpar ent,' except in" the Chicago and Mis sourl i lt i is very restless, and is continually climbing up into and falling down on base ball games picnics in the sum mer, and on new millinery in~ all seasons. . Water is'very gregarious, end loves to collect in ponds, rivers, Jakes. m gulfs, oceans and corpora •tlons. It is very. unstable, and; the man who tries to wander around; in it without a life preservei soon sinks and dies from swallowing too much of it. Too much water is Jesst as fatal as too little. Waier»is useful for running steam engines, making soft drinks, soak ing soiled citizens, increasing the supply of milk, putting out fires, making Baptists and Insulating Americans from kings and " 4 dukes end iWaldorf Astors. Among!the mtmwanasßms& ! . . [the"call of duty^ i By NAOMI H. ANDERSON j When Uncle Sam began sending his telegraphic messages to every city and hamlet of the country that stenogra phers and typists were needed in Wash ington, Ann Rogers saw them printed in the daily news, read them, won dered if she ought to offer her serv ices, and 4 then forgot them, for her daily tasks at Burr & Marchant's seemed quite sufficient for the sum total of her existence, and for three months she ignored Uncle Snm's con stant and urgent appeals. But one day, when one of the stenographers came in and calmly announced that She was going to Washington, Ann Rogers took up the newspapers again, read and re read Uncle Sam's appeals, and finally decided to follow in the footsteps of the former stenographer. Two months later, having followed the call of "The Great Adventure'* (as she called it), she was happily en sconced in one of the offices of the war department busily checking names of applicants for one of the branches of the war service, despite the fact that Burr & Marchant's had offered her a larger salary if she would have re mained, and quite unaware that be side her an officer, whom she had hardly noticed, would be a great par ticipator in her "Great Adventure,*' and forthwith treated him with de liberate unconcern. But the days stretched on to weeks, and each day the officer by her side began to loom up of greater and .creator interest on the horizon of her happy existence. Finally she admitted even to her co workers that she thought he was aw fully nice; and the days slipped by. Three months later an order came from the adjutant general's office, or dering First Lieutenant Downs to go to camp, and there he would be as signed to some company for early overseas duty. Ann had known for some weeks that the order was coming through, but the days chased each other so sublimely that she did not realize what the order would mean to her until It came. But when she read the order that within three days he was to report to his commanding of ficer, she knew. The three days dragged by—they no longer flew —and the nights were an eternity of tears and prayers; but on the morning of the last day when the first lieutenant said good-by. Ann was smiling, and for all the world none would have guessed at the tears and prayers. The week following his departure dragged through its course, but the brightness and novelty of the throbbing, crowded city had died for Ann. One afternoon when a letter arrived from Mr. Marchant asking if Ann would not come back to her old posi tion, she dispatched an immediate re ply to the effect that she would be back in three weeks. The next day she handed in her resignation. "Oh. she's got the blues on account of a sweetheart back home." confided the sergeant to the corporal, but Cap tain Downs knew, and accepted her resignation. On the morning that she presented herself at the office of Burr & Mar chant she found a beautiful bunch of red roses in a vase on her desk, and attached to them was a card bearing WATER o mostf noted collections"of water "In the world are the Great Lakes, which are" 1,000 miles long over all and entirely drinkable; the Mississippi River,i the father of water*;* the Noah'7 Houseboat idea ' Amazon* River,l the ' greatest female riveri in|the# world ; < the Great - Salt Lake* the Dead Sea and Wall Streeiv Niagara-) Palls' and the; Old Faithful geyser are% the two f athletic bodies 'of*water. The* mostUndus trious water* is the, Colorado 1 River; which has«burrowed I its way 6,000 feet into the ribs of the earth. The most imposed upon water is the Chi -1 cago River, whichwas tifrned around, r loaded full of : sewage and madeTto|run backward. ,The. most restless l y water is Missouri River/which' changes its bed'every night. The most neglected water Is found f in Kentucky, where it is: not used* for.? anything but storing "cat fish. And f the' most over-advertised waters thef world is Minnehaha Falls,^which"only fall when a stout man? in r overalls £ turns? on • a'spigot and begins-to "pump. Mr. Marchnnt's name. It occurred to her then he was a bachelor, and she asked herself, "Is it possible?" but soon -forgot the question in the busy examination of, her old desk and type writer. Later when Mr. Marchant came in she shook hands with him and thanked him for the roses. "Are you glad to be back in this smoky city?" he teased. "It's the best eity in the world,*' she rejoined, laughing. Again the weeks began slipping by, but Mr. Marchant was quick to notice that the happy laughter in Ann's eyes was gone. - "You onght to take a vacation," he told her one day. "You seem so tired." "Oh. I'm not tired." she quietly re plied. "Then, have a doctor.'' "Why?" and her eyes widened. "You'D. be hi'vitv-r a nervous break down before you know it," he said. "Whv. there's nothing the matter with ; le. or. perhaps it's just a little tout'i of tlu Lines," she smiled. Brit she did not go <-0 a doctor. A du;- '.{'•e 1 : when Marchant. was watching her ho saw a soft light in her eyes, and the doubt in them deemed to have vanished. And he said to himself, "He has written to her." He talked to her of the transports loaded with troops arriving daily, and what a fine thing it was that the war was over, but all he could get out of her was her quiet. "I am so glad," and he knew that it was not the branq of gladness for her. And one morning she came in ra diant. There was a buoyancy to her step, such a shining brightness in her eyes that it electrified the whole office staff, and Mr. Marchant, watching her, said to himself, "He has come back, and she had to go to Washington—lt was destiny." He did not stay in the office that day. He Wont out and walked for miles, and finally too tired to walk back took a taxi home, ever voicing his prayer, "Oh, I hope she will be happy," but had he seen Ann at the moment that he was entering his room, and had he seen the look in tfie eyes of the man in uniform, he would have realized that Ann's happi ness was complete. {Copyright, 1919, by the McClure News paper Syndicate.) CARDINAL MERCIER * ! |#\ \ ; \ Ii Card, Mercier che piobabilmente visitera* 1' America quando prima. BRICKS AND CEMENT SWELL Absorb Moisture and "Grow" to a Con siderable Extent, According to English Publication. How much has your house or the wall at the bottom of your garden grown ? Houses and walls, indeed all things made of bricks, do grow, and this fact is known to architects, who sometimes have to allow for it when making plans for building, says London An swers. . In the old days, when the clay of which bricks were made was mixed with water before being baked, the amount of growth was not noticeable; now that no water, or very little, is mixed with the clay, which is there fore said to be dry baked, the bricks absorb moisture and swell sometimes to a considerable extent. Some years ago in a garden at Ely a pier was 'built of dry baked bricks and the garden hose was turned onto this pier for a considerable period every day for some weeks. At the end of this time the pier was measured, when it was found to have grown some inches. Cement is another substance which grows. That is why you may often see on station platforms and on wall cop ings built of cement one of the joints missed out here and there. The greatest growth naturally takes place where cements and bricks are used together, as happened in a house of which the parapet was built of bricks placed endways and cement sup ported on iron. The growth in this instance was so great that quite large spaces were visible between the iron supports and the parapet. USE FOR LUMINOUS PAINT Material Found Almost Invaluable in War Might Also Be Well Em ployed in Peace. Here is a wartime application of luminous paint that should be useful in summer camps, on the hikes of boy scouts, in peacetime maneuvers of citizen soldiers, in marking the land ing places of aircraft, etc. The British army had disks or but tons two or three inches in diameter, coated with luminous paint and having a sharp spike on the underside. These were stuck upon the sides of trenches, buildings, fences, etc., or were swung by hand to give signals in the well known code where bright lights were dangerous or where silence was golden. The luminous disks were visible from 30 to GO feet, so they formed val uable landmarks. Luminous ribbon also was used for marking trails through the woods, and luminous patches were attached to the backs of stretcher bearers to prevent them from being fired upon by their own troops. The Scientific American suggests that the names and numbers of city streets might well be marked with this luminous paint. The Fanciuila d'Anzio. One of the gifts that President Wil son received in Italy was a silver model of the statue known as the Fan ciuila d'Anzio, presented to him by the Roman municipality. The original is a Greek statue, discovered not long ago at the villa of Nero, in the seaport town of Anzio. near Rome, and pur chased by the Italian government for 4r>0,000 lire. Admirers of art and stu dents of archeology ha(J*fraveled from all over Europe to see it, and the youthful draped figure, carrying a plat ter from which the object it long ago held had been broken, was named the Maid of Anzio. Then somebody noticed that the long robe was lifted a little, as if to avoid tripping over it, that the biceps muscle of the bare arm was more boyish than girlish, and so on, until modern judgment has decided that the title Fanciuila d'Anzio is a misnomer, and that the unknown sculptor was really modeling the figure of a handsome youth performing some service in an ancient temple. Bran Muffins. Roger W. Babson of the department of labor said at a dinner in Washing ton : "Speaking of labor, it has been a tough job to eat some of the health foods that were turned out during the war. "A young lady said to a young man at a Washington dance: " 'Are you the same young man who ate so many of my bran muffins at the Red Cross last fall?" " 'No,' he answered, 'and what's more, the doctor says I never will be.' M The Sign on the Church. Many a pedestrian and motorist looked, observed and smiled Wednes day night as he passed a church on Clinton hill. Obvious and elaborate preparations for a wedding were un der way. Coaches and florist wagons were bustling. The unmistakable can opy was being erected from sidewalk to door. And i» big letters on the front of the church was blazoned the minister's subject for an approaching service: "This Is the Life." —Newark News. Spoiled Her Pleasure. Husband —Have you had a pleasant afternoon? Wife—No: Mrs. Wilkinson and Mrs. Jenkinson came together and left to gether. I had a let of things about Mrs. Wilkinson I wanted to tell Mrs. Jenkinson, and I had a lot of things to tell Mrs. Wilkinson, bur. of course, when they were both together it was no use. BLUBBER A DELICIOUS VIAND Said to Be of Immensely Pleasant Taste, When Eaten Raw From the Seal. It has always betm a mystery to me why the word "blubber" should carry srch a disagreeable connotation to mil lions of people, not one in a million has ever tasted it, writes Vil hjalmur JStefansson in Harper's. I am often asked what seal meat tastes like and am driven to saying that it tastes like seal meat, for it does not resemble any commonly known type of meat. But neither does mutton resemble any meat known to me. and still mutton is good eating, and so is seal. But the fat is much easier to describe. When the blubber is eaten raw, as we commonly eat it by prefer ence, it has a flavor very similar to that of fresh cow's cream, but when boiled it closely resembles the fat of mutton. For that reason Mr. Wilkins, who came from the sheep district V)f Australia, was that member of our whole expedition who most readily fell into the eating of the seal fat. In general most men refrain from tasting blubber because it is named blubber, until they become so fat hun gry that they are eventually driven to trying it, and when they try it, to their surprise they invariably find it so de licious that, if not restrained, they overeat and, as is well known, overeat ing any form of fat causes nausea and other distressing symptoms. After one or two experiences of this sort I am now careful never to allow a man to eat all the blubber he wants the first time he tries it, gets sick he is almost certain to blame the seal and not his own gluttony. NEED NOT TRANSFER GERMS Disease Will Not Be Transmitted if Soiled Hands Are Kept Away From Mouth. It is glaringly obvious that the bit ing of finger nails, the moistening of fingers in turning the pages of a book, and similar half-conscious acts greatly enhance the opportunities for planting undesirable germs where they can mul tiply," says the Journal of tne Ameri can Medical Association. "On the fingers they may be harmless; trans ferred to the mouth they have a wide field for development. "The soiling of the hands is impos sible to avoid altogether, but the swal lowing of germs from one's own soiled hands is largely under individual con trol. "It may fairly be assumed that the most useful safeguards against this form of disease transmission are to he found in such practices as hand wash ing and in refraining from using the tongue or the lips as a moistening-pad, rather than in hysterical attempts at avoidance of all hand contamination. Children are best protected through the inculcation of similar desirable habits at an early age. In a word, some degree of hand-contamination is unavoidable; but the transference of the contaminating germs to the mouth is largely under individual control and is subject to the powerful influence of early-formed habit." First in the Field. The mild surprise with which one occasionally notes the name of a for eign city on a penny box of matches purchased in the United States may before long include boxes of matches hearing the far-away name of Dairen, Manchuria. The world's appetite for matches is apparently insatiable. An American company has been studying Manchuria and Siberia from the match manufacturing point of view, but so has a large Japanese concern, and this concern, it now seems, will be tirst in the field at Dairen, the chief Man churian port. But then if Japan were not first in the field in Manchuria, where would she be first in she field? S Dodging Shop. * They struck up a conversation in the hotel lobby and finally one man sug gested a trip to the movies. The other politely declined. "Don't you want to see Viola Vam pire?" "Nope." "Nor Yorick Hamm in his latest comedy?" "Nope." "What's the matter, my friend? Aren't you interested in the various stars?" "Not this evening. I'm an astrono mer taking a night off." Probably Dogfish. Blank had had a day off, and when he returned to the office the following morning his pals wanted to know why he looked so disgruntled. "Everything went wrong!" grumbled Blank. "How was that?" one asked. "Ever go fishing with a girl?" "Once." "Did she protest against hurting the fish ?" "No. She said she was sure they were perfectly happy, because they were all wagging their tails." —Lon- don Tit-Bits. One at a Time. We attended a country wedding and at the conclusion of the ceremony were astonished to see the bride start on the honeymoon alone. When asked the reason the bridegroom explained thnt both couldn't be away at the same time as there would be DO one to feed the stock and he would take his Tip down the river shooting ducks wh«»n the bride came back. —Chicago ARROW COLLARS fC —I laundered or SOFT r THE BEST THAT YOU '4 CAN BUY AT THE t jVc Jt PRICE YOU PAY MONROE Cluett, Peobody it Co.. Inc., Troy. „V. Y. 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ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 260 West Broadway, N. Y. i iiiiimmmii«| L WHAT YOU SURELY NEED is a healthy, active, industrious liver. Small doses of these pills taken regruierly insure that. You may also need a purgative sometimes. Then take one larger dose. Keep that in rr : nd; It will pay you rich dividends in Health and Happiness. ? Genuine * Small Pill bears *4: ~ Small Don signature f .. Small Price I ROW PI-fFFICS or HEALTHY COLOP. .rdicMea Iron in the Blood. Pate or £ I face* uaually ihow its absence.' °A con" CARTER'S IRON PILLS I Hit Ruling Thought One hears a great deal about th# absent-minded professor, but it would be hard to find one more absent-mfnd~ ed than the dentist who said soothlnf ly, as he applied a tool to his automo bile, under which he lay: "Now, thf* is going to hurt just a little." Maybe You're Rich. Some men are rich and don't know It —rich In health, rich In a large and happy family, rich In friends, rich la Influence and standing In their coro munitfes, rich In the spirit of charity and brotherly love. These same men rflay be poor In this world's goods, but they're rich, just the same.—* Crosman. Just a Little One. Maybe. While to be sure we believe George Washington never told a He we al» ways will wonder how he got around It if Mrs. Washington ever asked hint if he didn't think her new way of serving parsnips made them perfectly i dellcipus.—Macon Te»> graph. ITALIANI! Nel recarvi a fare delle compre nei varii magazzini di- Indiana che fanno uso del Patriota per la reclame della loro merce, mostrate loro il nostro giornale col relativo avviso e sa rete trattati con maggiore con si «t era zione.