THE PATTON COURIER SUCH IS LIFE “Such Is Life” Momier, WHY ARE THERE SO MANY VITAMINS IN CODFISH AND 2 Zz 7z Id : a non- Indian leader. The war office’s an- aouncement of a change in the organi- zation of this Yaqui force was regard- ed us signifying the disappearance of Yaquis as separate units. Hereafter they will be part of the army. Colonel i Enrique Morfin Figueroa has been as- signed to the group under the new arrangement. Chicago Police Skilled Archers a, South park police of Chicago have organized an archery club, and some of them are developing great skill with the bow and arrow. Here are five of the best in an archery tournament in Jackson park. The actual conqueror »f the Yaquis was Gen. Francisco Manzo, one of the leaders of the present rebellion who recently crossed the United States border at Nogales to escape falling into federal hands, The Manzo campaign against the Yaquis, undertaken three years ago, was organized with 13,000 troops and equipment which included nine airplanes, At that time the Yaquis controlled a region extending 100 miles north of Guaymas, in Sonora, and which in- cluded some of the best lands in the republic. The stretch under Yaqui ownership extended along the Yaqui river valley in a district larger than the Imperial valley of California and with water resources three times as great as those of the Imperial valley. Today the only Yaqui country left in Yaqui power is in the Bacatete moun- tains. But the power is small. All the warriors are gone or killed. Women and children and old men predominate in the last citadel. As in the present revolution, the rebel Indians in Yaquiland lost their fight partly through the government's use of the most modern arm of war— the airplane. The nine planes that Manzo had on his front flew con- stantly over Yaqui territory bombing and spreading terror. The federal planes drove the inhabitants of Baca- tete, the capital, into the mountains and finally destroyed it. Ammunition ran low after the war had raged incessantly for many months, the plane raids continued un- ceasingly, and finally, cut off from the world and beleaguered from the air, the Yaquis surrendered. Their sur- render, however, was conditional, They agreed to take service in the Mexican army provided their own chief, Gen- eral Ignacio Mori, should be permitted to continue as their head. Their liberty curtailed by the rigid discipline of the army, the Yaquis were not always good soldiers, although their valor in fighting was unques- tioned. The group at Perote was for this reason perhaps little better off than prisoners. The Yaquis still preserve their ancient language and customs. Al- though they are Christians, in com- mon with other Indian tribes of Mex- ico, they have mixed the symbols of Catholicism with the signs of the old gods While the Mexican government had to all but exterminate them in order to pacify them, it seers likely that the Yaqui fighting tradition which has existed for 400 years will continue in Mexican memory at least for a long time to come, Jimmy Reid, captain of the Harvard By Charles Sughroe| university track team, won the two- mile championship at the 1. C. A. A. A. A. games at Philadelphia. Reid's time was 9:22, clipping 2-5 of a sec- ord off the record made by Ivan C. Dresser of Cornell in 1919. & New York to Be Record City & New York.—A great city of the fu- ture, providing for a population of 20,000,000 with its industries, schools, homes and facilities for comfortable living, is envisaged in the regional planning committee’s report for a new and greater New York city. The report contains proposals de- signed to meet a situation of continu- ous growth in the metropolitan area. It considers a city of 5,528 square miles in and about New York, and rec- ommends a vast system of airports, parks, playgrounds, railway, highway, rapid transit and parkway communica- tions, and the building of new bridges and tunnels wherever necessary. The report was sponsored by the Russel Sage foundation at a cost of $1,000,000 and represented the work of seven years. It was presented by George McAneny, a member of the regional planning committee, before the Engineering Societies’ building. The regional plan looks ahead to Immense Aqueduct Planned New York.—Work on boring a gi- gantic aqueduct 20 miles long and 500 feet beneath the surface of New York is to begin in a few months. The tube, which involves one of the major engineering feats of modern times, is to be installed for the pur- pose of increasing the water pressure for the residents of Brooklyn and Queens. Sixteen shafts are to be sunk along the route to the 500-foot level, where hundreds of men are expected to spend four years in boring through the muck and rock. The shafts them- 0000000000000000000000000Q COMMUNITY SERVICE By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of Illinois. -0-0-0-0000-000000000000 1 had not seen Van Deventer for twenty years—in fact since he had tuken his degree and left college. As an under- graduate he had neen well known for various rea- sons. He was a good student; he was a winning athlete, nad SO inter- ested himself in college affairs as to he pretty gen erally known by | had heard from him in- everybody. divecily during the years since he had been out. but, as 1 say. 1 had aever before met him face to face, “rt's wonderful to get back to the oli? place,” he sai¢ 1s he shook bands “Twenty years is a long time to be away, but seeing the build ing and he campus and a loi of th old fellows puts aew life into on with me and he selves will be so deep that the Lef- court-National building, the city’s new- est 40-story Fifth avenue skyscraper, would find its tower well below street level if it could be dropped into one of them, It was announced that 16 electric mine hoists and 62 mine locomotives have been ordered for use in creating the buried aqueduct. It is to begin at the northern end of Van Courtlandt park in the Bronx, extend south and east under the borough, cross twice under the Bronx river, proceed to- ward Stony Point, cut under the East It's a sort of recreation to be back again.” “How are you getting on?” | asked him. “I've been more prosperous than 1 river to Long Island, cross under Queens and Long Island city, proceed almost #e whole length of Brooklyn and terminate at Hamilton avenue, op- posite Governor's island in Brooklyn. The hole to be bored will be 19 feet in diameter—size enough for three mo- tors to be driven through abreast. The workers after descending the shafts and becoming accustomed to the air pressure necessary, are to ream out the tunnel with modern boring ma- chinery and line its walls with a foot- thick coating of concrete as they pro- ceed. ever had any reason to hope,” he said modestly. “I've had mother and my sister to look after and we're more than comfortable. If 1 did not work any more we could be tinancially \OU'VE. GOT TO STOP GOIN’ ‘ROUND WITH THAT YOUNG MUTT, HE HAS NO CLASS —HE LOOKS LIKE A BUM TO big Father Properly Squelched AH! — GO LOOK IN , A MIRROR . YERSELF AN’ SEE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKIN’ AT i 1) of Wales and an audience of 2 5,000. 1965 and takes as its city 22 counties in and about New York. The area considered is a tenth that of England, as large as the state of Connecticut and nearly five times the size of Rhode Island. Thi world city, so vast that the WINS SONG HONORS Miss Nancy Jenkins, seventeen years old, captured top honors at the Eisteddfod held in Cleveland, Ohio, and is shown above with the cup she won. When only eleven years old Nancy sang in Wales before the ig comfortable for life. ['m happy over having made something of my educa- tion, happy that 1 have succeeded in the profession | took up, but I've had more satisfaction in baving been able to do something worth while in the community in which 1 live than in anything else 1 have been able to ac- complish.” Then he told me in a simple modest way of his co-operation in civie and religicus enterprises, und the work ae had done in the scuools, in the po- litical affairs of his town, and espe cially in the boys’ organization in which he had always had the keenest interest. It was a more than inter- esting work and 1 told him so. He had sensed the real purpose and mean- ing of free education. I often ask young fellows who come in to talk to me just why they are get- ting an education, and | am struck with the almost universal reply that they want to do something that will improve their own personal condi tion. It is self-improvement that rhey were after and self-advantage; they give little thought to what their edu- cation is going to help them to do for the community in which they are to live. The purpose of free education is not that the individuals who take ad vantage of it may have, as one father suid to me once of his son, an easier time in life, a soveer berth, and larg.z income. Those of us Who have been | peaple i mind of man had never before at- tempted to cope with such a problem, would be modeled not only for the efficiency of industry but for happi- ness and welfare of its millions of inhabitants. There would be parks, playgrounds, golf courses and boulevards, and enough transportation facilities so that the people could move about com- fortably and live without undue | crowding. Since the future of aviation is “an unpredictable thing,” the plan pro- vides for 16 new airports, making a total of 38. From these airports passengers would be coming and going in a | steady stream. The motif of speed would be maintained in a metropoli- tan belt line, connecting with all rail- | roads entering the region, so that all points of the city could be reached easily by rail, both by passengers and | in the handling of food stuffs and | freight. The city would contain 421 separate communities, in the states of New | York, New Jersey and Connecticut— | all the territory within a radius of 50 miles from the New York city hall. SMART SPORTS DRESS Gypsy colcrs are se=n in the scarf | that is tied smartly around the hip- | line of this white sports dress. A jun- gle green silk coat completes this on- semble, topped off with a | pandora green baku bat. which is the com which we educated at the expense of munity or of the state in live for that very reason ure anger obligations to assiline greater sponsihilities than others who hav not had cur opportunities or traip ing. We ure not eniitied to an easie time but must, doing, give more consiat service to the comni GE), 1929 Western Nowe dnt | nl | accidentally, { his arrival, | I decided to write,” | nouses | pened to Christian M. | chant and former | about }eaving { nician | teeth | sions in CAVELL BETRAYER IN LIVING DEATH | Man Who Told on Nurse | Spurned by Convicts. Paris.—Spurned even by the dregs of society among whom he is doomed to spend the rest of his life, Georges Quien, who betrayed Edith Cavell, the heroic English war nurse, into the hands of the Germans to be shot as a spy during the World War, is living a terrible life on Devil's island, the French penal colony in South America. Not a man will speak a word to him. Quien still maintains that he is in- nocent of the charge which doomed him to life imprisonment, but his lawyers long ago gave up their efforts to obtain him a new trial. His parents have died of shame in Paris, and his name dare not be spoken among those who live in the village where he once was a well liked neighbor. Quien has no work to do, for the simple reason that other convicts will suffer punishment rather tham associ: ate with him, The guards whose duty it is to carry him his food leave their trays at the door of his lonely hut and hasten away lest he address a single word to them. Many times the authorities have frustrated plots to kill’ Quien, for they dare not permit him to be killed in spite of their hatred for him. It is significant, however, that the men who’ haye been caught plotting to kill Quien never have been punished. Quien, who at the beginning of his imprisonment was a strong, healthy man, today has wasted away until he is a mere skeleton, Prisoner Makes Money Wording Jokes in Jail Columbus, Ray Gilman was state penitentiary for automobile theft four years ago, he was a salesman in Cleveland. Now, from his cell, he turns out jokes and humorous quips for eight magazines. The Cleveland youth's writings net | him an average of $1350 a month, which he sends to his mother in Pitts- burgh, Whether Gilman would have turned from a typewriting salesman to a magazine writer had he not been con- vieted and sentenced to from eight to twenty years in the penitentiary is a | | matter of conjecture. He related that he began to fill in the hours of sol- itary confinement in his narrow com- partment. A writer's magazine, in a corner of his cell shortly was the incentive. “The magazine said there was a market for jokes and funny quips so said Gilman. He invested his last dollar in stamps which he found in the East. “I had just four cents in stamps left when my first check arrived. Aft- er that it was easy and now I receive | checks at regular intervals from eight ” magazines. | Watch Teeth-Prints Ohio.—Before William sentenced to the | | | | writing | | poration, after | and soon reams of copy had been | i mailed to magazines and publishing | Thieves Are Warned | Angeles.—After what's hap- Shirley, mer- policeman, thieves remember to be as careful teeth prints as clews as they are about finger prints. During the course of a recent party at the home of Ethel Hupp somebody broke into a trunk and stole a pint of rare old whisky and jewels val- ued at $10,100. Detectives found that the thief had pulled off the tinfoil around the bottle neck with his teeth. Shirley was in jail after Police Tech- Rex Welsh reported that his matched perfectly the impres- the tinfoil. Los should Heart on Wrong Side St. Louis, Mo.—The heart of Mrs. Viola Thomann of Belleville, Ill, is on her right side, surgeons operating up- on her at a hospital here discovered. est police station. Meanwhile Helen had fared forth in all her Finally she barber shop, where she usually DEH HHH CH HICH HHH HEE glory, patronized the candy shops and gorged herself on hot went from time to time for a ‘bob. The barber was a bit sus- Washington Girl, 5 Goes Off on Spree Washington, — Helen Marie Gucker, five-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Gucker, decided to “step out.” Helen just became fed up with things about the house, Spying her mother’s purse, she coyly extracted $35 and started on a spending spree. deg and other edibles, without E picious when he saw her roll | Bg! The mother notitied the near- a care in the world. wound up in a and found no adult along with her, He called the police and Helen was taken for a bit of a ride, which seemed to en joy. She queened over all hands at the station house for an hour, when “dad” and “mom” arrived and escorted her home, appar- ently none the worse for wear, She still had of the $35 purse. she 28 left out borrowed from “mom's” HCHO OHHH HH CHO OHH HE A Sour Stomach In the same time it takes a dose of soda to bring a little temporary relief of gas and sour stomach, Phillips Milk of Magnes!a has acidity complete- ly checked, and the digestive organs all tranquilized. Once you have tried this form of relief you will cease to worry about your diet and experience a new freedom in eating. This pleasant preparation is just as good for children, too. Use it when- ever coated tongue or fetid breath signals need of a sweetener. Physi- cians will tell yqu that every spoon- ful of Phillips Milk of Magnesia neu- tralizes many times its volume in acid, Get the genuine, the name Phillips is important, Imitations do not act tha same! [PHILLIPS Milk of Magnesia A sure sign is one that reads, “No trust,” Every man is above the average— to hear him tell it. There are always souls enough to go around, no matter how many peo- ple are born. Mosquito Bites HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh Money back for first bottle i f not suited. All dealers. Financial Giants At present there are the following billion-dollar corporations in the Unit- ed States: United States Steel cor- American Telephone and Telegraph company, General Electric, General Motors, International Nickel, Standard Oil of New Jersey, Metro- politan Life, Equitable Life, Consoli- dated Gas,Trans-American corporation, National City bank, Chase National bank and Guaranty Trust company (merged). Poppy Day The poppy is the official memorial flower of the American Legion. It is worn on Memorial day, which is the thirtieth of May. An annual poppy sale is conducted by the American Le- gion auxiliary just before Memorial day, The poppies sold by the aux- iliary are, as far as possible, made by disabled vetewans. The proceeds of the sale are used for rehabilitation and child welfare work. Harmless Visitor—Is that bull dangerous? Farmer—Oh, no, ma'am; he’s one of the sort they use for making beef- tea. Good Definition Common sense in an uncommon de- gree is what the world calls wisdom. | —Coleridge. None so deaf as those that will not hear.—Matthew Henry. Money talks: even hush money usu- ally finds a voice, finally. Without intimacy, much trouble. A Perfect Day E NOT one that leaves you with tired, aching feet. They will spoil any day, but if you shake Allen's Foot=Ease into your shoes in the morning you will walk all day or dance all night in perfect ease, It takes the sting out of corns, bun- ions and calluses. Sold everywhere. “*Allen’s Foot:Ease For Free trialpackage and a Foot= Ease Walking Doll, address Allen’s Foot=Ease, Le Roy, N.Y. BISMET The Snow White Healing Antisoptic Compound A valuable preparation in ment of Infections, E and Skin Eruptions. Large indus- trial plants, doctors and hospitals use BISMET also for scalds and burns, cuts, boils, felons, etc. Apply it direct to affected parts and FEEL IT HEAL. Sold under a positive guarantee of satisfac- tion or money gladly refunded. READ CIRCULAR CAREFULLY for USES and simple directions. Price 75 cents. Will send C. 0. D. if desired. Please send us name of vour druggist, ROBINSON SHIELDS CO., Inc. Dept. E - Schenectady, N. Y. you never have treat- ma, Piles BUSINE By RI Le————— HE three mankind ¢ home, are the church’ to take the eyes o them toward hea: enjoyed much mo Before the ti were such hard, vidual, that little Christianity and trust one ports our modern become a fascinati it places on a man another, because of its plea In the First tution. Women movement which | comrades. The n tiality for culture because our homes our willingness tc thing because it | The luxuries ness, wealth and vigor and initiati CO-OPEF B } ——— Co-operative can be consolida farmers’ problem lation there will themselves. In business, i respectability as question is raised cism. Why why co-oper upon, staid and should hold up t are co-opera drown their souls of understanding The object « modities is the sa commodities—prc The object o tice for a class, i cultural products | — Good citizen: not exist in the a the press I regard newspapers in wi man, If the experi succeed, must be the eyes ment. The United only other in the The America the press that it yields to s “no.” The Amer tion, editors in politica political convictic nor would tl] Press conditi are subsidized th papers exist for government or by SCHOOL By DR. J —— Religion, the eration as accepte skirts are a few o conduct were base Our youth ar see the why of wh do it. Education m1 life is to be foun content to sacrific Too often, therefo The school dc In this emphasis has so b most colleges fail in this the college emphasis is on pr forgot, the kind « nations.