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Show - "Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land- -" i 5 N i t j : ttotrp of Nation j r ,. . 'J""?. ti, ta i ixX r::;; tiri. "tf as. fc,"--r:'"-r.';;i;rS--.- . N rJsffi 4r 2 W " ' "" "". lJl lb fcaaSMk? M tts.'tfst-!,"!- "iVr.T!,;y ::"ir".:.".. , e - ' ' ' In iS'tf ban. to s:2,:'X"'TScr,:t:crsLxTS'isJ''.'J H BsisnsarHj ' " "" ' "- etB.ss. eai Uto ef Mm j. ..- - 7. . Heasasi iMuihLi im. m a. , lB.;.,?',''-;,1,,1- tag... .( fa kaaka a Fw..Tm IcZ ''. ik m,m h .Bt .isM.ar.Bea. flue rfiJjL!JI.? ' rrt,a, ,Hf HhMW a.ss -- la Aa.ttas aaf ay aa La..)..r. VI. TJ!L ""4M " hMwul, Ih. at. a .,e...-fa- . sag fc aaJ,,Vl(',.","Il .j lM ... .... m - H, Bm M. r.t.,.i t. k.i.i NWb.j T V ' ' - r." M W. . -- - - --tw PH Tb, tt.4 r M r.t U..B ei 7 l. A am h Mi siae wh that H eCl lliilti .iTJVrr! " a.. ,B. a,,., ,u .bm rale ef ff.-. HiaaaW !,. b!111 ' -7 give .. B.. rme u. ta. gaM B..W. W- -.. W fBa. pa r ,'4 ft ... m, pa . . , aai BSI .l...Mr. . . ....... BM H. PB TJi 2? w pa lrJ : luig 4, irre ! : I BBiBiB Bl B B Bi fa Si ti.Bii to Bakk.k. k. .b.k . . . The above la a reproduction of a gouvenlr of the Centennial exposition held In PhlladelpMg In 1876. It shows the Declaration of Independence In the form of the Liberty Bell. It wag handset in the smallest pearl size type, from which an electrotype wag made In the type foundry of MacKellar, Smith and Jordan in Philadelphia. Thou-sands of these printlngg from the electrotype were distributed at the Centennial. By ELMO 8C0TT WATSON A Sll the average American i what took place on July 4, v 1778, an3 ,ie wi" prob,,y 'f reply In some such words A'L,.rjf as these: "Why, the Dec-- j if . j I luratiou of Independence, II II which made us free from VlL Kngland was written by 7 Thomas Jefferson and signed by John 11 uncock, George Washington, and some others. Then In celebration of the event they raiifj the Liberty bell until it cranked wide open." And thut represents pretty well the sum of the misinformation which many of us have upon the his toric event from which we dute the beginning of our nation. In contrast to this misinformation, consider these simple chronological facts In regard to the making of the Declaration of Independence and Pro-claiming of Liberty: On June 7, 1770, Itlclmrd Henry Lee, delegate to the Second Continental t'oiij;ri'iig from Virginia, acting under his Instructions from that colony, pre-sented a resolution declaring thai "these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and indeiiend-cu- t states." This resolution was in congress for nearly a month find a vtla I tend ,lul llwtP.i I tA O ill.. commanding officers of the Continen-tal troops; That it be proclaimed in each of the L'nlted States and at the head of the Army." It was late In the afternoon of Thursday, July 4, when this action was tuken, so the committee, com-posed of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and Benjamin Franklin Imme-diately hnstened from the state house on Chestnut street, in Philadelphia, to a little building on High street, where Dunlap and Clnypoole conducted a print shop. These printers were pre-pared to do "rush Jobs." They hud put out broadsides Immediately after' the Iiattles of Lexington, Hunker Mill, mid upon receipt of the news of the disasters at Tlconderoga and Quebec. So they at once set to work and gave their personal attention to the setting In type of this greatest of all docu-ments, which bad fallen to their lot to print. Since the printing of it hud to have official supervision, Jefferson, Adams and Franklin stuyed In the shop until tle Declaration was set In type and the first proof of it was pulled. They then made corrections on this proof, (the major responsibil-ity for cutehlng un.v errors resting on Franklin, no doubt, since he was a practical printer) and remained In the shop until this Magna Chnrtn of Amer-losophleal society. The man who read It to the assembled people was Col. John Nixon, formerly an alderman In Philadelphia and commander of a reg-iment lu the Continental army at the buttle of Long Island and at Valley Forge. He acted for the sheriff who would by right have read 1L The rending of the Declaration was received with much enthusiasm by the l'hlludelphluns. It Is true that the Liberty bell In the state house steeple (that bell whose makers had placed upon It the prophetic Inscrip-tion "Proclaim Liberty throughout all the Land unto all the Inhabitants thereof," when It had been cast some twenty-thro- e years before), was rung at this time to call the Philadel-pliinn- s together for the reading of the Declaration and to celebrate the occa-sion after they had received the news. But the cracking of the bell did not take place nt this time. That exactly 59 years later while it was being tolled for the death of Chief Justice John Marshall, which took place July 8, 1835. Other bells chimed in the etiorus, bonfires were lit thut eveuing and all in all it was one of the most memorable days in the history of the historic City of Brotherly Love. Although flip flrat rtttlflul nnu'lniita. ferred until It seemed certain that the restrictions placed tipon delegates from other colonies would be so ni"d-Hie-that there would be a unanimous or almost unanimous approval of the resolution when It was put to a vote In congress. On July 2, 1776, Lee's resolution was put to a vote and approved by the delegates of twelve of the col-onies. The only silent voice was that of the New York delegation. The Dec-laration was penned by Thomas Jeffer-son and offered to cougress, sitting as a committee of the whole, for revision before its adoption. On July 4, 1770, the Declaration ol Independence, us revised, was adopt-ed by the delegates from the colonies with the exception of the New York representatives. The men who had voted for the Declaration of Independ-ence realized that It would be nothing more than a scrap of pnper unless It received popular support and received It Immediately. So arrangements were niade nt once to have the document J)tit before the public In the form of broadside. Therefore, after record Ing the vole on the mnin question, It was "Ordered, That the Declaration he authenticated and printed; Thut he Cointmnlttee appointed to prepare the Declaration, superintend and cor-rect the press, That copies of the Dec-laration be sent to the several Assem-blies, Conventions nnd Committees, or Councils of Safety, and to the several lean liberties had been placed on the old flat hand press and was being printed. On July 5, 1770, when congress met again, a supply of tiiese printed copies of the reclariitlon were on hund, and one of them wus "wafered" In the blank space left for It In the rough "Journal of Congress" before the read-ing of tlie minutes of the preceding day took place. In the meantime let-ters transmitting the Declaration to the various assemblies had been pre-pared by John Hancock, president of congress, his signature attested to by Charles Thompson, secretary, and some of these were printed on July ft and the remainder some days Inter. The first one was; sent to; the Com-mittee of Safety of Pennsylvania, dat-ed July delivered to the com-mittee on July 0. The committee le elded to promulgate the Declaration on the following Monday, July 8. since elections for membership in the new convention were to be held through out the state on that day and would furnish a better opportunity than usual to secure a large public attend anee to hear the reading of this Impor-tant document. - On July 8, the Declaration of Inde-pendence was first proclaimed to the citizens of the United States from the balcony of an observatory attached to the building in the state house yard which occupied the site of what Is now the home of the American Phi- - tion of the Declaration of Independ ence look place on July 8, In Independ-ence Sqimre, this was not the first knowledge which the public had of the great news which it contained. For on Saturday, July 6, the Pennsylvania Eveuing Post, "published every Tues-day and Saturday evenings" at a "price only two coppers" devoted the entire front page of its Issue for that date to the publication of the Dec-laration. On July 8, Dunlap and C'laypoole also published It lu their weekly, the Pennsylvania Pucket, and within the next week or so it had been published In nearly all of the Colonial newspapers, as well us hav-ing been proclaimed In various places by the assemblies, councils of safety and the like, for post riders were car rying'some of Dunlap and Claypoole's printed copies throughout the newly-create- d nation. In Massachusetts where the struggle for liberty hud be-gun, it was first proclaimed on July 14, 1770, und the Interesting fact Is ; that It did not take place in Boston, for, according to a contemporary ac-count, "at about uoon on Sunday (July 14) a messenger on his way to Boston stopped at one of the taverns oti Main street (Worcester) for din-ner for himself und team. While waiting for his team to eat and rest he was met by Isniah Thomas, who obtained from him a copy of the Dec-laration which he took to the church and read from the porch." The KITCHEN-CABINE- T SS, in. Western Ntwinw Union Where the pool r bright anil deep, Where (he gray trout llee (sleep, lip the river and over the lea, Thai's the way (or Hilly and me. Jame Hogg. SEASONABLE FOOD Salads, greens, and frond ege tablet should he used abundantly at thla season. Salad. Slice three-fourth-of a cupful of green onions and cover with french dressing to which a tenspoouful of sugar bits been added. Let stand one-hal- f hour. Drain and arrunge with one cupful each of sliced new Meets and green pens on a bed of water oress. Garnish with cheese balls made by mixing the cream cheese with two-third- s of a cupful of finely chopped peanuts. Mold Into small balls and dust with paprika. Serve with more frenth dressing. Rice and Beef Cutlets. Take one cupful each of chopped uncooked beef and rice (cooked), combine with one well beaten egg. Muke a sauce by frying one-hal- f tublespoonful of onion In one tahlespoonful of butter and then add one tahlespoonful of flour and one-ha-lf cupful of milk. Simmer until smooth, add one-hal- f teaspoon ful of minced parsley, one-hal- f l of tomato sauce, teaspoon ful of pepper and one half teaspoonful of salt Add this to the rice and beef mixture and form Into cutlets. Brush with beaten egg, roll In fine crumbs and fry In deep fat Boston Brown Bread. Take one cupful each of graham flour, corn meal and rye meal, three-fourth- s of a teaspoonful of soda, one and one-hal- f tenspoonfuls of salt, three-fourth- s of a cupful of molasses and two cup-fui-of gour milk. Mix and gift the dry Ingredients, add milk and mo-lasses, bent well, add a few raisins and pour Into a well greased mold, two-third- s full. Cover and steam three and one-ha-lf hours. Plain Muffing-M- ix and sift togeth-er two cupfuls of flour, three tea- - spoonfuls of baking powder and one-ha- lf teaspoonful of salt, Add one cupful of milk, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and one unbeaten egg. Beat and mix the bntter thoroughly, stirring In widening circles, keeping the spoon on the bottom of the bowl. Place In muffin pans and bake twenty minutes In a hot oven. Spanish Meat Loaf. Take two cup-fuls ,of ground beef, one-hnl- f cupful of fat salt pork ground, two cupfuls of cracker crumbs, one cupful of milk, one beaten egg, salt, pepper, tabasco suuee, one onion, one and one-hal- f cupfuls of strained tomato, strips of bacon. Mix all the Ingredients ex-cept tlio tomato, form Into a loaf and place In a greased baking pan. Cover with strips of bacon and over the top pour the tomato sauce. Bake forty minutes in a mndernie oven. Good Dishes. A nice dish to serve for luncheons, which may be prepared from stewed fowl is: SJS Chicken Warmeln. Kjw(w5 Take a large fat fowl, EsgfiJ cut up for serving, and I Pllt on to stew In plenty E7 wu,cr' when tender, Jkifll remove ,lie chicken, and Lj&fj&fj cut It Into small pieces. ff&affi"ti removing all the bones. diced celery Into the broth and cook it until tender, remove It and add noodles, cook for fifteen minutes, then serve a nest of noodles with celery and lop with the chicken. Add a lit tie gravy made with broth, cream and serve. Green Peas, Onion and Cucumber Salad. Take one and one-hal- f cup fuls of cooked, drained, small green peas, the same amount of thinly sliced young cucumbers ami one cupful of flilnly sliced green onions. Mix and dust with salt and puprikn. Add any good salad dressing, henp on lettuce and serve. r Lima Beans and Celery. Take two cupfuls of cooked lima beans, add to them, one cupful of green celery dl'-e-and two tablespoonfuls of chopped onion. Serve on lettuce with a good boiled dressing; garnish with radish roses. A Dainty Dessert. Cut out squares or circles of sponge cake, muke wells With a small cutter und hush well with melted butter. Put Into the oven and toast Serve with the wells filled with sugared fruit. Strawberries or any seasonable fruit may be used. Top with whipped cream or serve cream with the dessert When tired of sal nils use a fruit cup for a change. Combine almost any fruit add n bit of lemon Juice and some sugar sirup and serve well chilled. In tail glasses. Orange Banana Cream. Remove the skin and fiber from six bananas, mash to a pulp, adding gradually two cupfuls of orange Juice. When all is well mixed add four tahlesponfula of cream and chill. Serve "in glass cups Maple Sirup Salad Dressing. neat of a cupful of maple sirup to the boiling point and pour over throe egg yolks well beaten, add a hit of salt and paprika and one tea-spoonful of lemon Juice and one-hal- f cupful of cream beaten stiff, when the mixture Is cool. I fl "Mkj Freedom from every pesky mosquito at once! P""',if Spray Flit. Just close doors and windows a few ' Jmffrif moments so Flit will have full effect. Fill room fJI with FUtvapor. Every mosquito will die. Flit also I kllli Qles, ruacho,beJ bugi and aat. Guaranteed. I K "The ytttnvt fin r?n n1!? " n You Mast Wear IT l Shoes 1 T3UT DO they hurt? Do your It Hi nfet MiMU--t nd bum, corns mod It III bunion ache and nearly eat you ll 111 wild? They won't if you do as mil" It 111 I011 of otbeis ara doing. Shake U 1 1 AUen's Foot'Eaas in your shoes, IB I 41 takes the friction from the ehoea U l and mekee walking or dancing a l real joy. Sold everywhere, I I Allen's I l Foot'Ease Ball 11 orFiwefrienacgejfeaageFnor1" 1 B Wtlkini Ualt, edrfreee I UiUl Ali ooe-i-M, L kof, N. Y. ' iiisaauiigBijaLjujii..iiLJi Business Training Pays Last year we placed more than 1000 in good positions. We can place you when competent. When will you be. ready! Snul or Suete) Catalog Behnke-Walk- er Business College llth and Salmon Streets Portland, Oregon SO WEAK SHE COULDNTVVALK Helped By Taking LycUa E. Pink, ham'g Vegetable Compound Gretna, La. ''After my first child Was born I took Lydla E. Plnkham'g I .1 Vegetable Com I . l .... ' JF down, condition. I yr"i could not walk 4 1 across ray room at rfsif.f' 1 times, I was eo Lf - C" ' f eak- - tTieai ,n-- X duced me to take ne Vegetable Com-- i pound. Since that time I have also jgaaf j0 T taken Lydla H. S Flnkham's Herb I I Medicine and the Pills for Constipation, and I have used Lydla B. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I am a housekeeper and I am still tak-ing the Vegetable Compound as a tonic to enable me to do my work." Mas. E. F, Vickiuu, 829 Hancock St, Gretna, La. Aaents IVantedt Sure quirk action seller. Vlrtory Tire Him Tool, change tire 4 Exprleiioe unnremtftry. Splnndid op. portunlty active mn. slict territory. Wrlle ImmtHllately. Victory Tire Kltn Tool To. lftlfl Pico lllvd. - - Knnta Monl.n, t'alit. HeadacM An rfl NATUBI'S BKMEOT fn. mm Tablet will promptly start the fM!3 seeded bowel action, clear I JrK vut. and poison from your m fikj ayetem, and bring welcome frn relief at once. The mild, IU NlGHI snfa, kuta- - ' tiva. Try It --26c Q ALR.ICHT For Sale at All Druggists y TrTTBirr- - UeaI(h fslvlntf --rara iifiaIaiiiH All Winter long . Marrdona C'lfmste Cod Hotels TooHsl Campe Splendid Hoade Cnwesne Moantala Vlewe. The mnuUrful drt rwort of the ITeet writ or emrr (Palm SpriagtS AirfMitM Wntei-T- o hftmll eelfhra(d Our ke Kerutiv-n- Oil Buriwra end KeniMiM Blow Twrvlicv, no rating of torch, IlKht wltri triatch. Burners for a,tl commercial purpoMa namely VulranlBflr, Bmall Bollura, Water Htiili, Feed Conviirta kltrh-- raiiK Into van ntov. AIov article In great Krllanoa Oil liunwr Co.,8iikvlllr.Whi. I' 1 Absorbing teduceg thickened, M swollen tissues, curbs, filled ten- - f dong, gorsnesg from bruises or FT strains. Stops spavin lameness. 1 1 Does not blister, remove hair car i t lay up horse. $230 at druggists, V J or postpaid. Veluable horse book II 1- free, Write for it today. a Read this: "Hone had large swelling FT nL.iut below knee. Mow aone; has not re-- J jjw'apgeared.HotaeaxiodMever.HeyeBecd AbaorbineforTeanwithfrmitiiucceM." W. f . YOUNG. Inc. Q Lyman St.,Sprin'gfiald, MM Salt Lake City Directory To Read Aor 1$ to Learn More All Books at Publlsher'g Prices Wall sand them CO.D. if you gay so. DESERET BOOK COMPANY 44 East Booth Temple St. r.O.Boxl793 . . SaltLakeClty McCune Scbocl of Masic and Art Faculty of Eminent Teachers fading lluslc School in intcrmountaln Heelon Mlc Dramatic Art Dancing !0 North Main St. Halt Lake City. Utah. OBISMOX NH HOI. ASSAYERS AND CHEMISTS (mre nd Laboratory t2t-l.- 8. West Temple St., smt Lake City, Utah. P. O. pox Hailing envelopes and prlcei furnished on request. Choose a Profitable Vocation A Leant the Beauty Culture Oonrae siren By a , , S man that nns taught 841 students how to , earn Biti MONliT. Catalog sent on leanest. 4 , T TJTAH HTOTI SCHOOI, ' T OF HirAUTV CULTUKB X 831 dirt llldg. - Salt Lake City Cullen Hotel Fred i. Leonard, Mannger ' Paul Purdue, Aaat Mgr. Meet Your Old Friends at the Cullen Dr. C L Evens, Optometrist EVES EXAMINED Cross eyes straightened. U lasses fitted. 1 1 East 2nd Seata, SALT LAKE CITT. UTAH Pipe - Valves - Fittings NSW AND USED FOR ANY PUBPOSB SALT LAKE PIPE CO. 47S W. Sixth Sooth St. Sell Lake City. Utah SERVICE GARAGE C, W. BREWER RAT U PUCK VUh n Urri trtMKAO ntrar. (hn.r-i- lui. Sarvta 4th Bo. and Main Htrect Salt Lake. Adjoining Newhouse Hotel. Used Pipe, Fittings &Valves Newly threaded and coupled for all purposea, Monsey Iron and Metal Co. W Bo. 3rd Wert gait Lake Cltr, Utah. PICKLES AKHOW BHANI) For those who rant the beet CTAH P1CKLK CO. SALT LAKJfl CITT. COMMON 8K.NSE BVHTEM KSooifS" Beauty Culture COMPLETE! COI'RRE. Including Perma-nent Waving. With our complete course you can wprk In any whop. 37 B. let Ho. Hiw. m , - Rait Lake, Office Fumltnre and Supplies." Theater and Church Furniture, EMlBon-DIc- k Mtmeofrraph and Supplies. Full Line of Stationery, Wrap-ping Paper, etc. Oldent and Largest School Supply am! Kiulpment House In the West. I T NCIIOOL SUPPLY CO. 168 80. Mute Street - Bait Lake City. GUARS' I Cafe and Cafeteria 33 W. 2nd So. St. Salt Lake City. Vimh, CULLEN GARAGE 87 H Went Ind So. STORAGE AND SERVICE Columbian Optical Co. 337 So. Main, Salt Lake City, Utah Opposite PoKtofuce Lenses fflp55 Artificial Dapliccted PL $Lji3 l'yel Scientific Eye Examinations Send ns your broken glass for repairs. Work returned same day. Little Hotel 1(57 Main Street SALT LAKE CITT Rooms, R'ne'eW'thnnt Dnth. per dnr, 1 to ft .IS Room a, Double Without itatb, perdnj, tl .VI Koome, nine-- e Wllh Kith, per dj, SI. Ml to fS Room a, Doable With Bath, per uv, to it-- All Depot Street Cars Pass the Hotel REARNS DLDG. GARAGE I Ooaiie Little Hotel. FIKfcl'KOO-- . nee Gill piston rings, Bay Day and Arrow. I head pistona, king pins, Emsco brake lining, I GILL PISTON RING CO. I IS East 4th Sooth Salt Laka City I THE PHYSICIANS SUPPLY CO IS West ind south. Salt Lake City, Utah. TIU'SNKS Etaetie Stockings. Abdominal Supporters. Uaterntty Pupportere. Invalid Chairs, Oulrhea, Canes, tnrglcal Instruments and Hospital Supplies. For Pool rabies and Supplies and anything m Show Cases and Store Fixtures work annte 3 V. L. WETHERBEE Si W So. Teas?: - Salt Lake Cltj DIAMONDS, WATCEE3 "ifoflu Buy your Diamond now for Chrtstmns. Wilt send to your bank for frc-- inspection no obligation. THE CAPITOL JEWELRY CO. it East 2nd Snutk Salt Lake City mmJ Keep four money in the Wat amf Bay HAWK BRAND Work Clothes manufactured by PYKE Mf G.C0SfiaLkeClfy.tllab W. N. U, Salt Lake City, No, :9. That's What Counts Sportsman la the hunting good here? Native Excellent I But ths Dndln'g ' awful poor. I Little Journeys in Americana I By LESTER B. COLBY .1 What Came of Whittling ELI TERRY was considered worth, utterly. Some of his neigh-bors Intlmnted thut he was duft A few advised his young wife to leave hint, and she finally came C a mind to do so. she went home on ong vis-its to her people, because there was little food In Eli Terry's house. Folk who lived In Waterbury, Conn, considered Ell Terry shiftless and because he Snt all his time whittling. All day he whittled Instead of working. II o got old, dried lumber and planed It down to smoothness. Then he would take a compass and make drawings on It. I'eculiur wheels and levers with notches' came out of the wood. But there was no money In all this and Mrs. Terry soured. Neighbors were critical and the gossip grew. Then one day Ell Terry put all his wheels to-gether and he had a wooden clock. It was a good working clock, large and Impressive and It kept good time. A neighbor, who had wealth, bought it of Ell Terry for thirty dollars. That night there was plenty of food In Ell Terry's Lome and hla wife thought better of him. Ail of the thirty dollars, however, did not go for food. tie spent a part of It for tools, tie loved tools and he had work for tools to da The next time be made a wheel he would finish twenty-fiv- e wheels just like It. When he bad bla parts ell made he began to assemble them. Soon be had twenty-fiv- e completed clocks. A cabinet-make- r, under contract, had been making cases for them. Very soon everyone who could af-ford to buy one wanted one of Ell Terry's clocks. The price went to for-ty dollars for case and clock. This clock-makin- began about 1800. In the year 1807, Ell Terry purchased an old mill and equipped It for turning out clock parts by machinery. Several prominent citizens of Water-bur- Conn, agreed to back him and a company was formed. In 1808 Terry started to make clocks In lots of 300. Tills was the largest batcL of clocks that up to then had ever been made at one time in tue uistory or me world Improvements followed, quantity production wag undertaken, operations were speeded up and Ell Terry be-came the Henry Ford of the clock-makin- g world overnight Wealth poured In. But his period as an active clock-make- r was brief. Seth Thomas and Silas Hoadley, workers trained In his plant, pur-chased the business In 1810 and Ter-ry retired. But his wealth wus mostly reinvested In clock-makin- plants and plants of this kind sprang up thick In Connecticut Eventually the wooden clock craze died out. Better clocks were made of brass. Finer machinery was possible. Cost was cut down. The wooden clocks vanished. But not the clock In-dustry thut EH Terry had fathered In Connecticut. For more than a hundred years Con-necticut has made more clocks In more factories than were made in any similar spot anywhere on the face of the earth. There must hove beeisome pride, too, In the hearts of old Eli Terry and old Setli Thomas. Ell founded a city which be called Ter-ryvll-and Seth founded another which he named Thomaston. Ell died In 1852, his muzzle whitened by his eighty years. His family, for the next hnlf century, thrived on the gold thut old Ell had laid away. When he died. Ell Terry and his sons con-trolled about all the wealth In Terry-vlll- e. But latterly, the Terrys have gone like their wooden clocks. Van-ished. There are no more Terrys to Terryvllle. ((E). 192. teeter B Colby.J Table Is Work of Art Three years of tireless effort have made Burton VV, Blair, of Marion, Ohio, the possessor of a library table that la regnrded as a work of art Without the use of a single nail or screw. Burton has made a table that ninny collectors would like to own. The top Is constructed of 1,557 pieces Of wood, seventeen kinds relng used to give the desired color effect The table contains three designs, the Ma-sonic square and compass, composed of sixty-tw- pieces of wood, and the American Legion emblem. Blair la a World war veteran, lie began work on his tuble the day ground was broken for the llanlln;t memorial at Marlon, October 5, 11)25. But for their conceit men wouldn't find life worth the trouble. Stoves Brought Here by the Early Dutch Stores Are supposed to have been Introduced Into Colonial America by the Pennsylvania Dutch. The earli-est were of curious design. A par-ticularly odd one used In churches was of sheet metal. It was shaped like a box ; three sides were within the church; the fourth with the stove door was outside, which made it pos-sible to stoke during religious serv-ices with a minimum of disturbance to the worshipers. Possibly the winters In the North Atlantic Rtntes are as severe as they were In the 1000s and 1700s, but mod-em progress had reduced their ter-rors. The present generation would fancy It could not have survived the discomforts and inconveniences of an early colonial home. The biting winds poured down the great chimneys, sift-ed through crevices In walls and floors and rattled the loosely fitted windows. Cotton Mather and Judge Samuel Sewali recorded In their diaries that frequently me hik iroze on meir pen? hs they wrote not far from the chim-ney side. One of them that when logs were brought Id from outdoors and laid on the fire, the sap oozing from the freshly sawed ends froze into Ice drops. Seldom were the bedrooms warmed Deep feather beds and heavy bed curtains were the only things that made these sleeping apartments en-durable. ' Warming pans, and later sonpstones and hot bricks were em-ployed to mitigate the first frigid en-trance to bed. Worry If yon worry about the possibility of gelling III, you will he III. The mind affect the body, lowers Its pow er of resistance, and makes It "recep tlve" of disease germs. To keep well, don't worry. the public service commission office I" "Well, I kLcw that," was the quick answer, "and If you don't consider It a public service to take care of a baby once In a while I think you'd better change your name until yon can begin giving real public service!" And she rang off. Wanted Real Service Not evpry one has so clear a of the duties of a public serv-ice commission as the Baltimore wom-an who rang up the Maryland de partmcnt of public service one day and Inquired for the service engineer. "May I leave my baby In your of-fice fur a while! I want to go down town and do some shopping!" "Why, you must have the wrong number I" the man gasped. "This la Longer One Needed A new Jiizn roiiipoHltinn Is said to be so difficult that very few musicians can piny "It This Is certainly g step In the right direction. London I lu morlst. New Model Children Every child is himself and nothing is gained by trying to standardize clill dren and Infancy. Woman's Home Companion. ' was tlrst identified. Doctor Francis Isolated the germ of the latter, and the ailment is known among the med-ical profession as Francis disease. Gcats Carry Fever Malta fever, or, more technically, undulanf fever, epidemic along the Mediterranean coasts, particularly on the Island of Malta, Is carried by goats. It Is common In the United States, principally In Texas, where gonts are raised. Kecenlly Dr. Ed-ward Francis contracted the disease. He also w;ig s victim of "rabbit fever" (tularemia), named after Tulare county, California, where, in 1010. ll Produced la Emergency Times of general calamity and con fusion have ever been productive ot the greatest minds. The purest ore Is produced from the hottest furnace, nnd the brightest thunderbolt Is elic-ited from the darkest si nrm. Cotton Popular With Biographers ' There are said to have been pub-lished over I.'siMI books alwul Lincoln. Lincoln, ("lirist and Napoleon buve been the subject of probably the great-est number ol books written In the Odd of biography. Watch Children's Feet Children wjilk with their feet straight forward. As they grow older the toes turn outward If any pecu-liarity of walking exlsta an examina-tion by un orthopedic specialist Is ad-visable. It uiay prevent serious trouble later In life. Stepping Heavenward or (?) Accredited sclent I He observers ar telling us with increasing plainness Ihat under the new ideas of today which have translated lilierty Into 11 cense, mttltltudeg of girls, to say noth log of young men, are being swept nway Into open and notorious iui mortulity. New York Journal. Success Recipe The talent id success Is nothing more than doing what you cao do welt, and doing well whatever you do, without a thought of fame. Ingfel-lo- Woman Architects Rare Vvonn ii architect? are rare becanse Jt.ools don't favor their admission. It i, gnld liul Increasing numbers ol l icn are employed In the drafting U.n of large architectural firma Await the Explorer There are us yet remote, nnox- - plori!il region in Africa and the jungles of !rxz!l wlilcl, have not been nciielrntetl by alilie meu. |