THE A 8 C OF THE LcAGSSE.OF NATIONS By DR. FRANK CRANE. 1. What is the League of Nations? A. A union of the strongest civilized nations formed at the conclusion of the great war. 2. What is its object? A. First, to promote the Peace of the World by agreeing not to resort to war. Second, to deal openly with each other, not by secret. treaties. Third, to Improve International law. Fourth, to eo-operate in all matters of common concern. 3. Does it presume to end war? A. No more than any government can end crime. It claims to reduce the liability of war. 4. What will be done to any nation that makes war? A. It will be boycotted and other wise penalized. 5. How else will probability of war be lessened? A. By voluntary, mutual and pro portionate disarmament; by exchange ing military information, by providing for arbitration, by protecting each na tion's territorial Integrity and by edu cating public opiuiou to see the folly of war. 6. What else does the League pro pose to do for Mankind? A. (1) Secure fair treatment for labor, (2) suppress the White Slave Traffic, the sale of dangerorj Drugs, and the traffic in Wi.f Munitions, (3) control and prevent Disease, (4) promote the work of the Ited Cross, and (5) establish International Bu reaus for other Causes that concern the human race. 7. Who are to be Charter Members of the League? A. The United States of America, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, British Em pire, Canada, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, India, China, Cuba, Czecho-Slovakia, Eueador, France, Greece, Guatemala, Haiti, Hedjaz, Honduras, Italy, Japan, Liberia, Nic aragua, Panama, Peru, Poland, Portu gal, Rumania, Serbia, Siam, Uruguay and the following states which are in vited to accede to the covenant: Argen tine Republic, Chili, Colombia, Den mark, Netherlands, Norway, Paraguay, Persia, Salvador, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Venezuela. 8. What other nations may Join? A. Any self-governing State which will agree to the rules of the League, provided the League accepts it. 9. What Agencies will the League have? A. (1) An Assembly, composed of representatives of all the member Nations, (2) a Council of Nine, (3) a Secretary-General, (4) a Mandatary Commission, to look after colonies, etc., (5) a Permanent Commission, for military questions, (6) various International Bu reaus ; such as the Postal Union, etc., (7) Mandataries. 10. What is a Mandatary? A. Some one nation designated by the League to attend to the welfare of "backward peoples residing in colonies of the Central Empires, or In terri tories taken from them." This Is to be a "sacred trust," and In selecting a mandatary the wishes of the people of the area in question shall be the principal consideration. 11. Does the League mean a Super nation? A. No. It interferes In no way with any Nation's Sovereignty, except to limit Its power to attack other nations. 12. Can any Nation withdraw when It wishes? A. Yes. The League is Advisory and' Co-operative, not coercive. 13. Does the League put Peace above Justice and National Honor? A. No. It puts Reason before Vio lence. 14. Does not the League take away the Constitutional right of Congress to declare war? A. No. The League can advise war; Congress alone can Declare war. 15. Does It destroy the Monroe Doc trine? A. Exactly the contrary. For the •first time In history the other nations recognize the Monroe Doctrine; and extend it to all the world. 16. Does tt not interfere with Treaty Making Powers of the United States? A. No. It Is a Treaty. We can make any Treaty we please. 17. Would we have had the Great War if we had had this League? A. No. That War cost the world over 7,000,000 lives and 200,000,000,000 dollars. 18. Of what Importance is the League? A. It Is the greatest deed of man kind in the history of the world. 19. Has not anyone a right to ob ject to the League? A. Yes. This is a free country. Any one has a right to any opinion he chooses. 20. Why is the League so bitterly opposed by a few? A. Because. unfortunately, any Treaty or League must be made by the President, and a President Is chosen by a political party and many mem bers of the opposite Party think they must decry whatever he does. Advice for Singers. Sims Ileeves. the famous Englitth •tenor, is quoted as saying: "A singer >who does &ot recite or read the I verses of a song aloud before at j tempting the music will never become a great artist." The young singer should memorise a text, should repeat ; it over and over aloud, testing the matter of emphasis or stress upon ; eack word to determine just where it should he and tfhe proper an aunt to give the best interpretation to the I thought. 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 somebody 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 fee£ that the race has been well run. 1 Making &as From Wood. Experiments oc wood as part substl i tute for ooal in gas making have been carried out in France. The wood used was sea pine in the form of bitiets cut from the middle of the trunk. The charge of the wood was about half the weight of that of coal, and carboniza tion occupied half the usual time. When running one retort with wood to every two with coal, no appreciable difference in the colorific power of the gas was noted. Of the two by-products —small coke and tar —the former amounted to 5 to 10 per cent Their Surprising Way. "1 was never more disappointed In anybody in my life than I was in my cousins up to Kay See," admitted Gabe Gosnell of Grudge, who was just back from a visit to the Big Burg. "Why, with everything on earth going on and anything you could think of liable to happen at any moment I'll be switched If they don't poke off to bed at between nine and ten o'clock every night of the | world !" —Kansas City Star. I To Make Attar of Ros«s. After -having gathered a quantity of roses, place them in a jar, then pour upon them some spring water. Cover the top with thin muslin to keep out the dust, and expose the jar to the heat of the for a few days, until oiiy particles are observed to be floating on the surface of the water. Take off •this oil substance and place It In a bot tle. This is the perfume known as "!attar of roses." Oidttene News Service. ;Tn 1532 James Wtitsnn Webb, of tlw N«nv York < 'mirier and Enquirer, .es tablished an express-rider service be tween New York and Washington which gave his paper valuable pres tige. In the following year the Jour nal »*' Commerce started a rival serv ice, which enabled it to rrint Wash ington news in New ,York within 48 hours .)f its occurrence. The most .notable express-mail service of all was the "pony express." which carried message# by relays «f riders across Mountains and deserts and through hostile Indian territory from St. Louis to San Ftiancisco, covering 1,900 mile< in 10 days. Cannot Do Without Sleep. Sle«p is a necessity of life no less than is food. No man has ever suc ceeded in keeping awake for more than a few days continuously. If he is forced to do so, as in ancient Chinese tortures, where constant tickling of the feet made sleep impossible, he falls at last into a comatose state from which he never awakes. Pope's Poetry. His poetry is not a mountain-tarn tike that of Wordsworth; It is not In sympathy with the higher moods of the mind; yet it continues entertaining in spite of all changes of mode. It was B mirror in a drawing-room, but it gave back a faithful image of society, pow deied an;] rouged, to be sure, and in tent on trifles, yet still as human in its way as the heroes of Homer in theirs —Lowell. Fret Board. A restaurant in Yuma, Ariz., dis plays a sign that reads: "Free board every day the sun doesn't shine." At first sight the offer of free board every day the sun doesn't shine might seem a reckless one. but, as a matter of fact, a day without sunshine it that desert country is far rarer than black berries in May. If it rains at all, it is only for a very short time, leaving most of the .day for sunshine, so that the sign would only catch a tender ; foot- Not Much of a Pusher. It wps the elevated station at 8:30 on a weekday morning. The advice of the Irish guard who helps close the gates of the rear cars was an educa tion in itself. But he had a competi tor in a girl who was doing her valiant test tfo get on. "Push, push," she urged of a weak little masculine beside her. in a wish-washy voice he replied that he was pushing. Back came the «wtft retort: "You make me tired? You pus*? like a jellyfish!" —New York Sua. Music Not His Strong Point. The leader of a volunteer orchestra was greatly annoyed by the 'cellist, who repeatedly flt a rehearsal was In error: finally he stood near him, lis tening. "Why, man." he exclaimed, "your 'cello is not In tune!" The player screwed at the pegs, but a few moments later the discord was re peated. "Can't you rune your instru ment?" demanded the conductor Irri tably. "No-n!" said the stout 'cellist, "not always." Then his face bright ened. "But you should see how I can skin fish!" The skinning of flsh was his trade, the orchestra his side line. The Lee Family. The Lee family of which Gen. Robert E. Lee, commander of the Confederate army during the Civil war, was a mem ber. was of English origin. One of his ancestors emigrated to Virginia in the reign of Charles I. and the family was prominent then, during and after the ' Revolutionary war.—Columbus Dis- j patch. j Good Rule for Life. We are ruined, not by what we really want, but by what we think we do; therefore, never go abroad In search of your wants; for if they be real wants they will oorae in search of you. He that buys what he does not want will soon want what he eunnot buy.—Col ton. * Deeds and Words. Deeds are greater than words. Deeds have such a life, mute but un deniable. and grow as living trees and fruit trees do; they people the vacuity of time and make it green and worthy. Why should the oak prove logicaHy that it ought to grow, and will grow? Plant it. try it: what gifts of diligent | judicious assimilation and secretion It has, of progress and resistance, of force t<» grow, will then declare them ! selves. —Carlyle. No Person Has Seen the Sun. Astronomers aver that no one has ever seen, the sun. A series of concen tric shells envelops a nucleus of which we apparently know nothing except that It must be almost Infinitely hotter than the fiercest furnace, and that It must amount to more than ulne-tenths of the solar mass. That nucleus Is the real sun, forever hidden from us. The outermost of the enveloping shell li about 5,000 miles thick, and is called the "chromosphere." t Few Free From Errors. Why not try to look over the other fellow's mistakes? We have been making them ever since Grandfather Adam lost his place in the Garden oi Eden. Beans. The common bean Is a native of South America and was introduced into Europe during the sixteenth cen tury. Now it is* represented by over 150 varieties. The biu broad bean is probably a native of southwest Asia and northeastern Europe. The broad, but not thick, lime bean, called > some "butter bean," Is a pole variety that comes from South America. MIGH O.N SCROLL OF Fm Is Written the ,Naine of Frank Luke, One of the Best of American Air Fiohters. What Lieutenant l.wke. famous American aviator, would, and often did. attei: pt was 'lluMrated y his last light. Starting out alone to attack time "drach.ns," or observation bal looi.s he had seen behind tho German lines in front of Verdun, he was inter cepted by ten enemy machines, lie engaged them all, got two of them, and escaped the others by seeming him self to be disabled. His "fall" was from directly over the balloons, and be fore they could be lowered or protect ed he shot all three of them in tlames. But then Luke disappeared, and what became of him was not known until after the armistice. When* the allies entered the village of Murvaux the rest of the story was learned from the peasants. T! e Amer ican had been forced by wounds or the disablement of his machine to descend, but he did not land until he bad used his machine gun to the extent of kill ing eleven of the many German sol di*. rs stationed there. Then he alight ed safely in a nearby field and was seer, to his machine and start for a little stream as if to get water. Ger man s. !i! l ers ran up. and either by them or by a sh >t from further n way he was kilied. '.'he German officer in command kicked the body and ordered that no one touch it. There it lay till the next morning, when the villagers were allowed to take it, uncovered, in a cart, to their cemetery and bury it So ended Frank Luke at the age of 20. He had lived much. If not long, and down in Phoenix, Ariz., where he was born, they are justly proud of him. He does not lack appreciation elsewhere, for Captain lUckenbacker says: "Had he lived he would have put me nut of business long ago as Ameri ca's leading ace. T wouldn't have had a show against him." Bruges of Today. Mrs. B. (>. Tufnell. writing in ref erence to Bruges, savs: "I think it may be of interest to you to know that Bruges is extraordinarily little ehang ed since the war. We were most agree ably surprised to find our things left behind intact and only one case had been opened. The hotel was still well run and comfortable, and the food was good, only the pre-war prices had changed for the worse! The beautiful old city looked much the same as be fore. The carillon is still pealing lr» the belfry, and few of the public build ings have suffered. The port has been greatly altered, and there the signs of war are very evident, not only In the huge works started by the enemy, but in the effectual destruction of them by our airmen. The shops are open, and the life of Bruges goes on as it did. Only the weleome appearance of khakl clad men or businesslike W. A. A. C.'s strikes a strange note in the cobbled spaces of the Grande Place." ■ ■ " ■ --v Memorial to Great Naval Deed. Were it possible for the British peo ple to forget that greatly daring naval deed of the war known bv the unin spiring title of the Zee! vug;: e raid, the present movement « •* foot to commem orate it will aSNH-e iui* i* perpetual fame. Hap; 'y " In'f f ve lra< been 1 taken by the city ' " s"o th?re Is not the slightest 'eminent of vain glory; in 'he Idea f a memorial to he erected on a suitable site within a few yards of the spot where the blockshlps Intre] id and I >' ig'hia were success fully sunk. The actual sinking of these vessels for the purpose of pre venting the German submarines using the canal to Bruges, was rendered pos : sible only by the gallantry of the at tack made by the old cruiser Vindic | tive. which was afterward sunk across the f irway at Ostend. Standing on an elevation, the monument will be visible far out to sea. —Christian Sel ene • Monitor. S:.. pense Worse Than Attack. There are sailors who will tell you that the actual torpedoing of a vessel was not very much worse than the sus pense and the many false alarms—any of which might have proved to be an enemy submarine. \ merchant cap tain was looking out to sea on*» day, when In the distance he thought he saw something dark and round. He watched to see whether It would move. It did move, and then suddenly It dived. There was no time to do anything, since he did not know from what direc tion the torpedo might come. He wait ed. To his horror the dark, round ob ject rose from the waves only 30 yards nwav from the boat. He said It was the worst moment In his life until he realized on further Inspection that the "periscope" was in actual fact a large seal with a dirty yellow neck and a full crop of whiskers. War and Roller Skates. It is a far cry from the world war to a child's roller skates, but accord ing to the fashion expert of Popular Mechanics Magazine, roller skates of the latest approved model x are after the style of British fighting tanks. Novelty always being uppermost In the Juvenile heart It matters not that the new skates are a bit snowshoellke In size. The new skates are like all oth ers except that they are surrounded by tanklike bodies made of light sheet metal. The Source of Most Good Luck. "IIov; do you happen to have such good luck with roses?" asked the neigh bor. "Don't know," replilnl the amateur gardener, "unless It is because I hoe the ground a lot and spray them a lot, aiid work with them a IqC" STOP! ❖ V ILook, Listen, Learn!! V PARENTS, bring your own and your neighbors CHILDREN (from the babes in arms ♦♦♦ V , ♦ to youths of eighieen) to the Y I BIG INTER - STATE VICTORY FAIR I ❖ INDIANA, PENNSYLVANIA. SEPTEMBER, 2, 3, 4 and 5. V ❖ 'X *;* And Se e The Famous Orientai Clown *«* I CHO CHEW MOO-TOO ? ♦♦♦ ♦> teach the Game of Good Health. (He is a member of the Cho Cho Family, employed by the U. S. Gov- ♦> srnment.) He has been secured through a fortunale combination of circumstances both peeuliar and ♦> «$♦ :extraordinary, ali of which makes his appearance extremely flattering to us Indiana Countians. His sai ♦}» ♦J* ary and expenses are defrayed by a few individuais who love children and have their welfare at heart. «$♦ ♦> " "To those of you who are "from Missouri" he will "show you" as he has prominent bankers and Gov- V 'ernment officials, that he can persuade children to do, eagerly, what you cannot do, by either brìbes or V cross words. He will t>e EVERY DAY at the \Fair. DON'T'all come Thursday. , X Ten Thousand Children will be weighed and measured at the CHILD HEALTH TENT. A beauti- y % fui soisveneir record card will ~be given each one, also a special medal is being made for each normal y x child ; also tables of weights for ali ages and heights; proper diet charts will be given away. V | , EVERY THING F*EE! ? ♦♦♦ . t ♦. r (Includìng admission to the Fair Grocmds up to and including twelve years) V I ■ ALSO LABOR DAY, SEPTEMBER Ist * ❖ . v By special request of the Labor Organizations t . ' CHO-GHEW MOO-TOO f y ♦♦♦ Will march in the Grand Parade and be at their Picnic V |Y One child in -every three is under weight, Is your child Normal or not? The scales teli the tale. 4 «y |1 - ; "Io Weigh Is The Way" ; $ ! ♦♦♦ ♦t 4 \ Indiana County is as fair and beautiful as any place on the globe. Let us ali aid in making it the ♦♦♦ heaìthiest. - «$♦ «£♦ 4 Signed, y CHILD HEALTH > ORG ANIZ ATI ON of Indiana County, Pennsylvania. ♦♦♦ ♦> Hon. J. T. Davis, D. D. Blairsville. Chairman. % M. M. DAVIS, Indiana. Vice President, VERNON F. TAYLOR, Indiana, Treasurer ♦♦♦. MIS. LOTTIE McHENRY STEWART, Indiana, Secretary, ARTHUR BROWNLEE, Chr. Pub. Com V Headquarters; Red Cross Chapter House, 6th Street and Wayne Avenue. % +% j i , .J ' àiM|l ♦ ♦♦♦ This moyement is endorsed by'Dept. of Interior at Washington, D. C., and by Depts. of Education ♦♦♦ ;♦♦♦ and Health at Harrisburg. Thirty States now weighing fourteen million school children. Indiana Coun- <|« «> ty is among the first to organize in*Pennsylvania. Membér Drive Second Week of September. «J» ❖ ' * ❖ No Mother's Child is Safe Unìess Every Mother's Child is Safe" * ❖ ' ♦'v»V./»W«V«V»V«V«V M V»V.A' ♦♦* **