nder the ming a arrowby Minot. t, fresh as ar 80 hot, with life, La robin,” : said Mi- and make ” wake’ ~ ‘on’ a bed Wall didn’t rafter all tng oa” the )'8@gEs. i tning’s col- age vault,” Harrowby— it out.” 4 cklace back rom Martin ast night in e Lileth.” sighed Har- at the dia- ; i Gr fe owby quick- that should | ore the wed: | y certain to’ you'd better | ly ‘to search! 41 61d chap, 1 white dixon? akg why flushed { ones in ours Everybody: Ne?” 1 er. There's; le as men of Mr. Trimmer's » things. I give can serve Mr. g the necklace ng to it that it hands of the rit.” omiy ahead of ut. took up the - to his pocket. said. “If I'm or 1 went sing. He rose, ywhy remarked, nner tonight at NTT nued.) Seeded Raising sani bills for models. A TSR - w ee ee i ; ZY : a Ea THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, . J J ALE, PA. VC. (Size'10X7x1% Inches) HANDSOME CLUTH BIND 1000 Things For Boys To Do. 1000 Things That Boys Can Do 1000 Things Boys Like To Do The Boy Mechanic—Vol. II (A sequel to, but containing nothing found In Volume 1) Undoubtedly the Greatest Boys’ Book Ever Published - Price $2. 00-7) fares: DEPARTMENT ——————==— POPULAR ‘MECHANICS MAGAZINE. 6 N. Michigan Ave.. CHICAGO 480 Pages 9985. Hlustrations FA aaa Published by Popular Mechatiics Magazine . It gives complete directions for making all the things boys love - to build .and- experiment - with SUCH AS £like, Yet Very Different. On Seventh aveaue the other evening I saw a small red headed fool of a boy throwing cans. “An excitement crav- ing. empty headed kid,” I said to my- self, driving by. On the next block 1 + Saw a girl with red curls, dressed in furs, rather dashing, who gave:me a little provocative smile as I passed. Did I say to myself that she was an excitement craving, empty headed kid She was, but I didn’t. On the con- trary, for the moment at least, I feit quite drawn toward her. Yet she and that boy might easily have been broth: er and sister and twin rowdies at heart. Why did one of the two so at- tract me and the other repel? The strange lure of sex. It was ready to blind me to the meéntal d- fects of that zirl. It was ready to fix my thoughts on her cheeks or her hair if I'd sat with her. Now, isn’t that odd? 1 should never have given a snap for her kid brother's hair. or well over and seen at a glance he. hadr’t much character and maybe less brains, but could I have seen what she lacked once I'd felt her attraction?— Clarence Day, Jr., in Metropolitan Magazine. . Wonders of Color. A small and simple experiment can be mide by any reader which will £1 far tc convince him or her what a road thing it is we have sunlight. which en. ables our eyes to take advantage of th beautiful hues of nature. Make a room quite dark and then burn some car bonate of soda in the flame of a bun- sen gas burner. It will burn with a» orange yellow light sufficiently strong to illuminate everything in the room but you will realize with a sudder shock that, bright though the light is all distinctions of color have vanished Only light and shade remain. A crim son carnation, a blue violet, a red ta blecloth. a‘ yellow blind—all look gray or black or white. The faces of thos: present look positively repulsive, fo: all-natural color has disappeared. No other experiment will so well convinces those who have witnessed it how great a loss would be that of our sense for color. Artist and Gounterfeiter. There used to be an old German counterfeiter in this country who was a veritable. wonder with the brush and pen. This man iiteraliy painted pic- tures of twenty dollar notes which were works of art. He used no tools except his pens and brushes. and it took him a week to-do the portrait of a banknote. Te figured that his handi cap was worth about $3 a day and worked under the idea that the world owed him a fair living and should not object if his talent led him toward portrait painting, with twenty dolar Even jail terms fail- ed to impress him seriously with his wrongdoing, -A collector of curios once offered $500 for one of his speci mens of bill portraiture. and the value of some others was said to be even greater, so marvelous was the delicacy of his brush work. Helping Old Rubber. Rubber that has lost its elasticity may be rejuvenated by immersing it for five minutes in a bath of glycerin mixed with twenty-five times its vol- ume of distilled water and heated to 70 degrees C. and then drying it with filter paper. : A Fluent Talker. Whangs—Is your wife a good con- versationalist? Bangs—She would be but for one thing—she talks so fluently that she interrupts herself. Alpine Shoes. The shoes worn by Alpine mountain- ers have steel soles with eight project- ing points. 16 have Touked ‘him. } gi rg tt They Could Keep It Up. Thess have been big men in Wall «treet who did all the work them- selves, who attended to every minute item, who were from Missouri in re- card to each point in any proposition put up to them: One of these marvels wus among the very zreatest finan- ciers the country ever had. -But he didn’t last long, and there have been few others like him. If a man with the first order of brains and ability could only keep it up there is nothing to prevent his owning the United States. If B. H. Harriman could have ‘kept on fifteen or twenty 3 rears longer rt the pace he was going he would have gobbled up all that was worth - taking. He had about all the rail- roads in sight, and Be was just getting a strangle hold on the big banks. He conquered every square foot of terri- tory as he went along. There was no, force on earth to stop him except pre- mature death, and now he is almost | forgotten.—A. W. Atwo ) Saturday vening Post. Most Buoyant Wood. The lightest wood known, so far as any evidence attainable is concerned, Is balsa wood, which grows extensive- ly in the Central American and north- crn South American states. It is com- posed of very thin walled cells. which are barrel shaped, interlace with eack other and are almost devoid ef woody fiber. These cells are‘filled with air. making a natural structure well adapt: ed to prevent the transmission of heat because of the particles of air impris- oned in the material without intercon necting fibers. Various tests of the in- sulating properties for resisting the flow of heat have been made. Balsa wood has been used quite extensively in the past as a buoyancy product for life preservers and in connection with the fenders of lifeboats and rafts. Its life is short, under ordinary conditions. unless treated with antiseptic or pre servative material. Ariake Bay's Mystic Fire. Shiranubi, the mystic fire of Ariake bay, Kyushu, has been famous for the past 2,000 years, the sight being con- sidered one of the great wonders of the Japan seas. In a recent issue of the Taiyo Maga- zine M. Kaneko, a teacher in the Shi- mabara middle school, relates his im- . pressions of the fire. According to Mr. Kaneko, when he witnessed the spec- tacle the first light appeared like a star i about five miles distant. Suddenly the volume of light increased until it soon covered an area of many miles. The “light moved with the waves and re- -sembled electric lights being lighted and then suddenly extincuished. DM: Kaneko says that intermittent wave like movements are the chief charac- teristics of the mystic fire. He fails to find a cause for the origin of the fire Cheaping. In ‘parts of Switzerland the baker : wife carries round the bread in a son of hamper, and she has not a fixed. im mutable charge, but ¢haffers for a price with the customers. The old English word for this process was ‘‘cheaping.” which in many places in England has been corrupted into chipping. Chipping Norton, for instance, is really Cheap- ing Norton, or the place where goods were cheapened—that is, sold by chaf- fer.— London Standard. Congressional “Pairs.” The custom of legislative “pairing” is the practice of members of legisla- tive bodies by which two members of opposing parties agree to refrain from voting on a prescribed subject or to be absent during a certain time. It was first used in the United States house of representatives in 1839. Yellowstone Park. Yellowstone park measures fifty-four miles from east to west and sixty-two miles from north to south. WILSON BACKED BY CONGRESS President Not Yet Ready fo Go Before Joint Session YANKEE SHIPS NEARING ZONE Order to Arm American Vessels will Not Be Long Delayed, It Is Said In Capital. With the German crisis apparently suspended in mid-air, it was officially stated in Washington that President present.” There ‘was no disposition to states however, that .the president has de- termined not to lay the demands of the international situation before con- gress some time between now and the expiration of the sixty-fifth congress on March 4. Despite the clearly defined lessen- ing of the international tension it was apparent that the presidént will not alow the present congress ‘to: die emergency that may grow out of. the German crisis. . It was stated that he will probably go before congress late this week or early next. ; hind the president all of the pow~" authority and finaneial’ support of the United ' States in any:.move that he man erisis. The slackening of the Gorman cam- paign, of destructiveness on the high seas and the fact that as yet no “overt act” has been committed involving American lives and American ships brought a general feeling of relief to Washington. In some quarters there was even an inclination to believe that some means may be found for preventing the German situation from developing into open, hostilities be- tween the two nations. ; In this connection administration sources today emphasized the fact that the only serious question in dispute between the two countries is the sub- marine problem. It was stated by an ment today that the numerous other matters which have aggravated the ers, the treatment of American citi- zens in the Teutonic countries and other minor matters of this character were merely collateral issues. ‘There were no new reports from the } 3 war zone at the state department ‘and bh officials noted as | state department somewhat significant the general de- cline in the German submarine cam- paign. They pointed out that up to date the ruthless warfare had failed | merchantman at the rate of 1,000.000 tons a month fixed by the German admiralty when the campaign began. With the Ameri can freighters Orleans and Rochester in the neighborhood of the war zone. however, Washington waited anxiouc ly for reports of their progress. It was stated that the sinkinz of either one of these vessels without warnin~ would make the situation still more serious. The navy department, it was learned today, has practically com: ' pleted detailed arrangements for arm- ing any American merchant vesse' sailing for the war zome. Orders for new guns suitable for use on merchan* + ships have been ordered rushed by the armament manufacturers and | meantime the navy: department ar | ranged to use naval guns. Plans have. | been worked out in detail even to as- | signing particular guns to individual ships. It will be a matter of a few weeks, a navy department official said last night, to arm every American when the president gives the word. There were indications today that the order to arm American vessels will not long be delayed. Administra- { tion officials were clearly concerned over the economic results of the Ger- {| man submarine campaign. It was | pointed. out that the holding up of { American ‘shins''in' vrriou ports by lhe submarine menace was practically an acduiese nce in the Ger*ion hlap™ "ade declaration. The president, it wa: understood. is extremely anxicue tho: i American commerce should resume =: regular movement as soon as possib ALL RAY ITUA TA a0 HOME “< 53,000 State ‘ruops on Gorder to Ba: + tg cred Out. With the roc ‘ning of the Ar 'r¢ .; rmbassy * M xico (i. bg pational gu rdiicen cune nieatod the bord:r cn Comin a; bondi livities, will be in pro oo: oi gd tion. Orders were issu c hy ‘ao w { department directing Genoral Frid - erick Funston to :beegin imm~disic { demobilization of all guard units re maining in border camps, and it is ex pected the last troop train will be o its way north by March 7. Tho pur: | ber of guardsmen remaining along th: | border is about 53,000 | General Funston still will have on the border nearly 50,000 troops, all of the regular army, disposed along the line from Brownsville, Tex., tc Yuma, Ariz. on plans worked out by the gen- sral staff. The command includes ail of the troops who were in Mexico un- der General J. J. Pershing, and their | distribution was carried out under the : direction of General Eben Swift. { Wilson will‘ not go before congress “at in administration’ ‘eircles without i} 4 making ample provision to meet any} Leaders today’ ‘planned to plade be- i} may deem necessary to meet the Ger- authority close to the state depart- | break between the two countries, the | detention of the Yarrowdale prison- by a wide margin to destroy shipping NAVAL MILITIA STAFF MAN BUSY IN NEW YORK | Photo hy American Press Association. COMMANDER A. B. FRY. * kk ES x oR 2 Es Eww GERMANY DENIES TALK: OF OVERTURES TO U. Ss. * * * y . * It is denied in Berlin that Ger- > any in a note to the United * States, or throughout her medi- * ums, is inviting suggestions for * the avoidance of actual war. It * is reiterated that the imperial * government is not permitting * “doubts in any quarters regard- * ing the position actively as- * sumed in the U-boat warfare, * and that there can be no talk * or thought of recession from * the program already being car- * ried ‘out. . In view of this, it is de- * clared in authoritative circles, * that any further parley or ex- * change of notes with the Unit- * ed States may be dismissed as * unwarranted and improbable. $ The origin of the report is as- * .cribed to the recent announce- * ment made through the Swiss * government that Germany was * willing to negotiate respecting * * the amended treaty of 1799. * % kx = % Xx % x %x ¥ * % % 5 rst rts Pe rissa es Prt ei REBEL FORCES DEFEATED Cuban General Willing to Surrender - Jf Life Is Spared. A dis; atch from Manzanillo, Cuba, reports the defeat of the rebel forces je under . Colonel Masso. The ther of casualties’ is not given. Colonal Masso has offered to surren- der at Campechuela if a guarantee is given that his life will be spared. La Discussion publishes a dispatch’ from Cienfuegos saying an attack on Perdo Barbo planned by rebels under ex-President Jose Miguel Gomez to prevent the holding of re-election: there was frustrated by governmen' troops which, after the passage of mii- itary trains, dynamited the railroad bridge at Jatibonico, on the border line of Camaguey and Santa Clara provinces. Bayamo Manzanillo, sub-secretary o the government of Montalvo, reports that the situation hore is much im proved. Heavy fighting occurred between rebels and government troops near Hoyo Colorado, seventeen miles west of Havana. Several rebels were killed. It is reported the United States government is sending four warships, one each to Santiago de Cuba, Nue- vitas, Cienfuegos and Havana. The newspaper La Lucha says that American troops have landed in San- | tiago de Cuba to guard the American consulate and that they are patrolling streets adjacent to it. The paper says also that it is officially confirm Americans have landed elsewhire in Oriente province. © GREEKS EAT GRASS Famine Stalks Through Country as Result of Blockade. , The Greek legation says in a state- ment that famine is resulting from the entente blockade of the coast 0. 3reece and the poor classes are living on herbs and grass. It alsg is de- clared’ that despite compliance wit (he ultimatum of the allies, there hs been no relaxation of blockade meas: ares. “The Greek Toation has received information to the effect that the Te- ults of 'the blockade of th~ Greek :0asts enforced by ‘the entente al » since Dec. 8 are of the most gru ‘tome character,” the statement rea: “Ten deaths from been reported from the province 0° Jannia, one ir Laurium, ten in Acarn- ania, two in the province of Precez:. one in Eubia and one in Messina. Th» poor classes have begun to live o» ‘herbs and grass. Epidemics are rap- idly Spreading in the country.” . Score Railroad Pact. Chicago board of trade members who have been seeking to move mil lions of bushels of grain to the east complained of the “gentlemen’s agree: ment” entered into by eastern rail roads to embargo export shipments until the domestic situation is cleared. They claimed that the British admir alty has had fourteen ships waiting for more than a week in eastern ports for nearly 4,000,000 bushels of differ- ent grains rnaneen 1 um— that | starvation hav: | DEATH PRAMES TO GEM, FUNSTO Commander of of Troos at the Border Strickan In Hotel WAS HERO OF PHILIPPIKES ‘Military Man Had Just Finished Din. ner In San Antonio, Tex. and Was Playing With Child When He. Fell. Major General Frederick Funston died suddenly in San Antonio, Tex. Monday night. He collapsed in a hotel and soon expired. ‘ General Funston had gone to the hotel with a party of friends. Attend- ing physigians said the cause of death was acute ind gestion. General Funston had just finished ad when he ’:l1 unconscious. Major General Funston was fifty-two years old. He had been farmer, coi lege student, railroad conductor. botanist, lecturer, newspaperman, €x plorer, trapper, soldier of fortune, fili- busterer and finally United States, SO} dier. He saw service in the Philippines and: was in command of the detach- ment which captured Aguinaldo. In the spring of 1914 he was sent to Vera Cruz at the head of the army of occupation. When the chase for Vil’ began Funston was placed in com- ‘mand of the southern department. Funston was born in Ohio but grew up on a farm in Allen county, Kan. At ‘twenty he went to the University ‘| of Kansas. ! General Funston’s military eareer began when he was thirty-one years old. He joined the Cuban insurgent army in the spring of 1896. This ‘Cuban fighting was in scm» ways the most interesting of Funsion’s whole career. It was hand-to-hand fighting, with the cannon pushed up under the very noses of the Span- iards. Sometimes Funston fired at a distance of less than 200 yards. #un- ston was in Cuba eighteen months, He was wounded in one lung, suffered a broken arm and his hip was injured when a horse fell on him, Jlaming him for some months. Funston never got to Cuba during the Spanish war. He was commis- sioned colonel of the Twentieth Kan- sas. The Twentieth went to San Fran- cisco and stayed till November. It drilled on a sandy, wind-swept ‘parade ground; hoped, grumbled, lost hopc; decided it would never get to the front. Peace was concluded with Spain and still the Twentieth kept drilling. It was a weary grind, but it was making soldiers of the farmers, school - teachers, printers, salesmen, lawyers and young collegians who had formed the Twentieth. Drill regulations, Funston said with charming f(rankness, were Greek © him when he reached San Francisco. The ‘officers hired horses from loc: ‘livery stables and on the Fourth of July, when a paradc was planaed Colonel Funsion’s horse ran away with him. At a time when it was expecting 1 be ordered home and be mustered cu i the Twentieth Kansas was sent to th - Philippines. Fighting started Feb. 5, 1899, wi’ a night attack .by the FMlipinos. The followed the fighting up the river t Malolos, which included the crossing of the Tuliacan and the Bog Bar rivers. Troops swam from the bok en end of a bridge about forty-iv- feet to the opposite bank of the Bag Bag and were under fire at the time. Funston swam himself. FEAR BIG STRIKE IN CAMBRI” 5,000 Miners Now Out; Many Thou: sands More May Quit. With nearly 5,000 miners on strike twenty-five mines idle and the possi- bility of the strike spreading, the co: situation’ in Cambria county, Pa.. assumed the most serious aspect in years. There are 20,000 miners in this district, all under control of the United Mine Workers of America anc a strike sprred is feared. Thirteen coal companies are alread ‘affected. The strike ‘started when the miners of the Portage district re fused to enter the mines and declared a strike on as the result of the re fusal of the companies to abandon ths standard weight system of loadine coal cars. Under the standard weigh system the miners do not get paid for any more than 3,000 pounds of coal regardless of whether they load more them that upon the car. $3,000,000 From 1917 Auto Tags. i Automobile license fees for 1917, a received by the Pennsylvania stat highway department Monday, totaled $1,677,000, or $447,000 more than o the same day last year. Indication: are that the total for the year will be close to $3,0€0.000. Harvester Company Case Collapses The government's case against the Independent Harvester company col lapsed in Chicago when Judge A. L Sanborn ruled there was no evidence to convict and ordered the jury to bring in a verdict of “not guilty.” Knapp Nominated as Rear Admiral. Captain Harry S. Knapp was nomi- nated by President Wilson as a rear admiral. Several lesser naval promo- tions also were sent to the senate. -dinner and was playing with a ch.ld} A i LY Ei iTIA | SRS . Photo by American Press Association. £3 ga fr = 3 1 E™ A GEWZLIL SURVEY OF kid iil 4 im Tr THE ¥ IE YAR ‘The big entente cilensive along the Somme front hos apparently resumed. The British during the last few days have shown great activity and have succeeded in making important gains. The English are said to be now only six miles from Bapaume, one of the objectives of last year’s offensive.’ Many prisoners and guns have been taken. Berlin officially admits the loss of ground in this region. # Official announcement was made in London that the British forces on the Tigris front have established a line across the Tigris bend west of Kut-el- Amara, completely hemming in the Turks. Russian positions in the Meste Can- esti sector of Rumania were stormed by Teutons under command of Arch- duke Joseph, says the German official statement. The captured ground was held despite violent counter attacks. More than 1,200 Russians were taken prisoners and the booty captured by the Austro-Germauns included three cannon and twelve machine guns. Three civilians were injured and a small amount of damage was caused by the recent raid on Karlsruhe by French aviators, the Overseas News agency reports. German aviators on Feb. 10 dropped 7,300 pounds of ex- plosives on a railway station at Amiens, settling ire to the building, and 3,300 pounds on the station at Aveluy. Britisk troops in strength continued: their attacks cgainst th~ German posi- tions on the noi brnk of the river Ancre in rs "wo British ?-- tacks sou © of ‘he tewn of Sorre were: repulsed o'r violent hand-to-hand fighting, according to the official aa- nouncement. Troops of the ( in an attack agains south of Ripen’, '» (ths ~ the Berlin war office announced, ons a front of about a mile and a half, captured gronnd to a é-~*'h 2° q half": mile. The Germans took 585 prison-- ers, including 21 officers. The attack, which was preceded by intense artillery fire, was made main- ly against French positions at Mais- ons de Champagne farm and Hill No. 185, about one-third of a mile south of the farm. Four lines of French positions were stormed in the attack. The French made counter attacks, but: were repulsed with losses. The Ger- man losses are said to have been: small. BERNSTORFF ON HIGH SEAS Former German Ambassador Given Farewell as He Leaves For Home. The Secandinavian-American line steamship, Frederik, Viil,, carrying Count von Bernstorff, former German ambassador to the United States, is to- day on the high seas bound for Hali- fax, the first stop on the long ocean voyage to .Copenhagen, wiaence the count will proceed to Germany. Von Bernstorif had his last view of American shores late Wednesday ait- ornoon, when the ' Frederik VIII passed Sandy Hook and swung ea‘ into the Atlantic. Shrill blasts fro i the whistles of river craft resounded as the -ship got under way and tock a course which would circle her around the Statue of Liberty. The crews of the great German lin- ers tied up here climbed on the rails nd waved a farewell to their depart- rg compatriot. On American ships officers and crews were on the decks, and along the shore hundreds of ightseers watched the vessel swing down the river. ! The fermer German ambassador and his party stood at one of the rails of the liner and waved responses to the farewell demonstration. Through Dudley Field Malone, col- lector of the port of New York, Count Bernstorff sent ashore the following signed message: “] cannot refrain from a last ex- pression to the American people for the wealth of flowers and gifts sent to the countess and myself. It is hard to tell of the good will sent us both. No expression of gratitude would be adequate *0 speak an affectionate farewell. Bernstorff.” aaa I ra prince: noe Mons ‘rinun pane gan,