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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. SEEN- -' HEARD round tho National Capital waan, CARTER niXB Washington. Two divorce In lb Roosvlt family lue Irmupdl! th 4reUrut tin been la tin1 While House bn started nurnrj penitaDua at to ahethcr auuura ufTraf did Cut remox to oin ft tret rall.i r Ilian SurrrlMt tb bail'll at tb poll of rml. da to a ho bar been linuliej In marital iruu Viceroy of India at His Home in New Delhi people back hum who would be at not gcUltig cheap money from tb government for bom building, repair, etc., and of about th ITAII tr Siv fa.t that tbe opponent of the batk borne, while very vocal, wrr comparatively few Id number. I'erhai one of the big reaiton wa tbe meaiur It. ainMi-- i i ti bi'lnti-- By CIIERIE NICHOLAS USE SURPLUS MILK TO CROW BROILERS aitlvliy of th tedcrntlon of law aeverut bor. Union leader thing for them In tbla bill. Flint, there wa the ubtluiii point Dint It would mean work for the biilld-ntradtroniendout amount of work, liven f'neigti no on expect the new building pints of ttie tdlt lira. few Ui Up to 0T Uge(!iiU to t ike thebuhl In the nextexpect-eIntuited month, repair phase that a nian might to be liiinie Ihiie. and to ruu Into to pre la i divorce ass a ifflrlt-n- t considerable figure. vent any contention from nnluat On top of ltd obvlou point I By a curlou Ing him. nation-aidannum uffntge and t the fact that tb building trad unnomination of a divorced mao fur ion are bating a lot of trouble rreldent of lb United State fume keeping their luemtiera from taking that year. At Ctitrago that jeur eab Jo. at the present moment, tb ltiuliili ana nominated Warren Bight In Wusblngtou all th con- 0. Harding. Perbapa a few of M tractor on government building re trying to break the scale and close frlenda realized Unit be bad married a dltorcvd utan, but very operate on tbe open shop Intel. If they rould provide a lot of few of tbe delegate knew about It. If they bud, tb atory might bate Jot' for tbelr tneiulier In repair j tiling been very different becauae at that work, the threat of till particular moment there wa do ipreudlng all over tbe country, with reallullou that there bud been a a certain amount of public opinion change summing tbut there really favoring culling wage in the building trade, would be curtailed, baa been a change. this photograph slot the rlceroy and vlccrilnc Taken by special fwrmlic-hinIndia, Lord and Lady Wll lien If carpenter getting only A few neck a later the Democrat lu the Ufa it u I garden of thlr residence In New Delhi llngdon, on a or work week two three clay at San rranctaco nominated Jauiea JL Cot, who a a nut only hltnaelf repair Job, he I not nearly so likenot theorle have been advanced. Sir In the ly to take senb Job a If be divorced but had remarried. Arthur Conan Doyle fashioned from earlier ftage of Ibis contention, it working at all. Id explanation a romantic novel a time when hardly anyone thought So that tb housing bill Is a long hut no one will ever know Die true Co bad a chance, Homer S. step In tbe direction of maintainnow attorney general, waa ing the present high wages In the story, on November 7, 1972, the big Mary Celeste put out of New ona of the active candidate One building trades. York harbor for Genoa, her hold Tli union leuders were consider-ablof the aonisn orator, aecondlng the On filled with barrel of alcohol worried also about public nomination of John W. Pavla, made board was Die captain, Benjamin 8. om causlc referencea to the necea-althrenk up to work On opinion. Men working at other Brlgg. Id wife, tbelr mnll daughof nominating a man ahoae line for $20 a week, fur example, Many Legends Inspired by night a terrific stem broke uml i crew of seven men. Crewless menhave for waa little Cf She loose from her Ideal sympathy Ghostly Ships. striking family moorings and set ter her on her wandering course. At tioned no names, but moat of the carpenter demanding $12 a day "Five weeks later the British sea Intervals she I reported by the and aeornlng $10 a day. Nor did Washington. The gronte-delegates thought that ah was bitship 1'el Gratia found the Mary and trading Celeste K) mllea west of Gibraltar. they like governmental Interest In mystery of the decade may tie near captain of w tinier ting at Cummlng, wbo bad been diEskimo have salvaged Her wills were set on vorced. cutting housing costs. So they got solution If It ran lie proven beyond starboard that vmnkage behind the housing bill In a big doubt recently most of her cargo, and twice she tack and she was plowing steadily Tbla apeech waa of Intercut largeAuson of washed coast the up has been boarded by parties of eastward but their signals to her way. ly because It abowed that aa late tralia I from the lost Kohenlmvn. while men from passing ea 1920 polUtclani were a Utile conship. But met with no reply. Worried by this World-Wid- e Th well her Drouth (tea guard secrets, always she eludes capture. cerned about the domestic stutua of they sailed along side and boarded and the world ha waited five year "Some ten yeur tbelr candidates. The fact la that ago Atlantic her, finding to their astonishment Possibility that the entire world for news of the Danish training the nomination of Cox proved very la headed for a drouth Is admitted shipping wa for months endanthat she was completely deserted. little. It came suddenly at the end of by fficlals of the weather bureau. ship which galled nnt of Mmitevldo gered by the erratic behavior of ttie The decks were absolutely In orwbat bad looked like an almost hope- This Is not a prediction. It Is sim- In December, ltd, hound for an Dovernor Barr, a disabled British der, no sign of struggle, mutiny, Australian port schooner, abandoned by her crew In lohhery, or murder. In the ship' less deadlock between McAdoo and ply admitted as a possibility. "The Kuhenhavn, says a bulletin mid ocean. sailor cabin were Die captain' Superstitious watch, Ialmer. It la highly Improbable The point Is, according to Chlaf from the National socredited her with supernatural cont:egr.'diio money, nnd compasses. They found that during tbe early bullot on which Meteorologist Joseph B. Klncer, steel trol over storm. She carried In Mrs. Brlgg' sewing machine with ciety, "was a new, five be was nominated any of tbe dole- - that temperatures all over th linrk, the largest sailing vessel In her hold a fortune In Canadian a garment In the gatee thought about Cox's divorce. world are slightly above normal, the world, lumber. Twice steamers put off forecastle were the seamen's chests, equipped with auxiliary and records show that high tem- engine and a On radio. powerful from Nova Scotia to tow her ashore their money, nnd even the remnants Divorce Ignored and drouths go to- December 21 she perature reported nil well. and salvage Iter cargo, hut each of a meal. The ship's log was lyFar more Interesting Is the fact gether. She was then 400 miles out, well time after they had hoarded Iter a ing 0en, the last entry dated eight Which condition produces the oth- started on her course through the sudden storm that although Cox wag hopelessly forced them to abandays previous. Chronometer and Ilk U er Is another question. It beaten tn the ensuing election, the South Atlantic, the loneliest wawere missing, and the don the attempt. Months later she sextant divorce thing did not figure In the tli hen and the egg, Mr. Klncer ter In the world. That was the appeared off the Azores, where ship's only boat nn open yawl comments. last word that was ever heard from again effort at salvage met with was gone. campaign at all. "All we know," he said, "Is that her. Prior to that time primaries had Die same defeat, ller final fate, "Obviously Die Mary Celeste had "One month later Die settlers on like other, remains a mystery. far less to do with nomination than each Induces or produces the other. been abandoned In great haste but Is here To The very simple. point Tristan da Cunhn, nn isolated rock the w Ishcs of the political bosses. It why? Possibly those aboard feared Mary Celesta Mystery, produce rainfall, winds carrying halfway between Brazil nnd Hood la a general commentary on tbe prinn explosion In her hold, put off mary system, the direct election of moisture must be chilled. If the Hope, were greatly excited by the "IVrliaps the most famous myshurriedly with no provisions, then senators and ether officials, that far weather Is very hot, the winds are approach of a sailing vessel. She tery of all, a pu.zle that has defied awaited a disaster which failed to not chilled, and therefore do not seemed to he steering almlcs-lsolution for over sixty years, i the occur. Too late they may have less careful scrutiny Is given to canwith a light salt set. before a gale que-thof what happened one day tried to overtake her, only to find didates prior to nomination than precipitate. On the other hand, absence of which was driving her straight for in December, 1S72, on board the her sailing steadily farther out of was the case when the bosses dictated them. Tbe average political rain tends to produce heat, so we the Island's Jagged reefs. Just as Mary Celeste. Countless ingenious reach." she seemed Inevitable boss nominated a slate with a view get back to the ben and the egg disaster veered aside and drifted safely to winning. He took no chances, Illustration." Some scientists, Mr. Klncer ad- past, not 400 yard most of the time. Iu those pre"There was no sign of life on woman suffrage days one of the mitted, blame the higher temperatures on the sun spots. The weath- hoard, and she was riding far down things they accepted aud never bother bureau Is not certain about this. at the stern. Indicating some damered to test was that a divorced canconage. Otherwise all was in good ordidate would make a poor ruu. It Of course actually the bureau cerns Itself only about the weather der, nnd there could he tio doubt of may never have really been so. outShe was the lost tier Identity. u lu the Stute of New York, There Is do way to prove that. But of the United States. Weather Standing at Wall and placed Is Interesting only Kobenhavn. By the next day when side this country streets, my Imagination went hack his hand upon the page containing bosses the believed It and acted Inside weather In out affect as this It It to was calm may 14.7 put enough to he the strucstone on 11 years ago. chapter of Genesis this Is very much boats she had vanished forever. ture, once the United State- from verse 13 until the end, more The old tradition bobs up every country. Though at more than might widespread now the now and then even now, but no one office, particularly Jacob's blessing of JoStranger Than Fiction. "Many are the legend, songs, changed to a much different buildnow believes that enough voters to first be thought. seph, "the prince among the brethFor example, the drouth In Soviet and stories Inspired by giio-tlren. hall of Colonial ing the city make any difference wrould vote Following the administrato erewless ships, wandering on year times, which was also the capital tion of the oath, Washington Russia, resulting, according against Itoosevelt at the next eleccables received from London, In after year, alone on a wide, wide of the province of New York. The kissed the book reverently. There tion merely because his children's was another moment of silence. "It hurrying crowd of bankers, brokmarital affairs have not turned out purchases of Argentine wheat by sea. Even stranger than ghost ships ers, panhandlers, messengers, runIs done," cried out Chancellor Livthe Soviet republic, has a very well marked Influence In the United of fiction are the ships of wood and ners, telegraph operators, typists, ingston. Then waving Ids hand, he States because It boosts the price steel, ships of fact, which In mod- filing clerk, traders, millionaires exclaimed with a Joyous shout, Big Surprise ern times have stilled our sen unnnd down and outers changed to of wheat. Long Live George Washington. A Passage of the housing hill was those who had witnessed the hirth great cheer arose. The Republic was But that Is not the concern of manned. One of these, the Hudone of the big surprises of the closThe hurrying ceased at its beginning. "Move on, said a Another di- son's bay steamer Baychlmo, has of liberty. the weather bureau. ing of the congress Just passed Into vision of the Department of Agri- haunted Arctic waters for the past and Colonials massed In front of voice In my ear, "you're blocking history. Although regarded as an culture worries about that. What three years. Loaded with a valuthe city hall. Then the Ward traffic. And I smiled at the statue emergency measure, it was known conditions do concern the weather able cargo of furs she was caught statue of George Washington looking down benignly on the passto most of the leaders on Capitol bureau outside the United States in the Ice off Walnwright, Alaska. changed from bronze to llesli and What a difference 145 ing throngs. Hill that the President would prefer are nnd crew went ashore, blood. On a platform were the years have made! changes In Canada, the Arctic, Her captain until the to for congress to adjonrn on the date the wait resolved spring members of the First congress of Pacific, the Atlantic and Mexifinally fixed In confidential White co, which result In changes In rainthe United States of America. With The Bible on which Die hand of House directions to senate leaders, fall or them were generals who had fought Washington rested and which he temperature in the United AFTER SEVENTY YEARS than to stay In session to break the States. under Washington. Beside Washkissed on that historic day Is still expected filibuster. ington stood Robert 11. Livingston, in existence and Is still the property chancellor of the state of New of the lodge that owned It at the Word of this Importance of the Scoff at Theory York and grand master of the Madate fixed for adjournment actually time. With the spell of the past In about drouth One the theory sons. Heads were hared and there still on me, Id have liked to see leaked out and seeped through the the Northern Central states, much was a great stillness. But that was Impossible. So Chancellor 11 Benate. It must have reached the talked about recently, Is scoffed at was about to administer precious Is the relic that It Is kept men who were fighting the housing Livingston the bureau experts. That Is the Die inaugural oath to the first Presmeasure. Yet they did not take ad- by under lock and key except when theory about the change In course ident of Die United States. used In lodge work, and is permitvantage of It. For some unknown of the current being reJapanese reason they suddenly decided to ted to leave the lodge only on sponsible. It was a pretty theory. abandon the fight. Actually the conInstead of administering the oath. unanimous vote of the members. The only thing that Is wrong about sideration of the measure on the Chancellor Livingston turned to Then It must be accompanied by buIt, according to the weather floor of the senate occupied only a Gen. Jacob Mortou, marshal of the a commltte of five, three of which reau, Is that the Japanese current few hours. In normal times It would has not There xvas a whispered con- must he past masters of the lodge. day. Its course. changed are covered with have taken a week even if there ference, at the conclusion of which The historic pages But It Is true that the winds carsilk. The Bible was had been no serious opposition. transparent Morton General hurried while from the moisture away Pacific, rying The amazing part of the whole which formerly flowed down the the crowd wondered. From the presented to the lodge by Jonathan November 28, 1775, the story Is that the opponents of the McKenzie valley and hence dropped platform, General Morton sped to Hampton, the Old Coffee house at Wall and night on which he was installed as measure, and Its backers, both their moisture over the now drouth Water streets, the meeting dace of master. thought the hill scheduled for the stricken area, did not blow that waste-baskSt. John's lodge of Masons of which right up until the last way last winter, or this summer so Recently, a young woman wrote he was master. He was gone only three days of the session. Another far. They have been passing over about the chance of getting asking few a When curious part of the situation Is that the Hudson Bay country lie moments. and returned, her song published. The bead of lie was currying a large Bible restthe opponents any three or four of thence down the Atlantic coast of the largest firm in the country them banded together could have the United States. Which accounts ing on a cushion of crimson veltold me that the chances are revet. He had taken that Bible from killed the measure. But they were for the much heavier snows In that the altar of St. John's lodge-- . Then mote since established song writers not willing to take the responregion last winter and the more It became known to those on the are having difficulty In getting their than usually abundant rainfall this sibility. The state of the summer. and platform at least that while other works produced. spring song business, he added. Is reflect- Dodge Responsibility The Japanese current theory beHere Is pictured Margaret Hayes, details had been attended to care- ed by "Smoke Gets Into Your out, the weather bureau experts the oldest living nurse who served fully the matter of a Bible for adThe only answer advanced to ing admit frankly they have not the In the Civil war, being presented ministering the oath had been over Eyes, the hit number of "Rubersolve this political mystery Is that ta. Despite It popularity, the ale looked. Idea why these winds with a medal from the Los slightest Angeles none of the group of opponents of have not reached 100,000 copies. In changed their course. Nor whether school children and from the peo th bill found themselves willing to the old days, they would have been do could If about It they anything Washington, according to Ossian well over a million. pie of Los Angeles, by Mrs. J. A tak the responsibility for killing tt they did. of Free Masonry Lang's "History Allred, WNU Banrlct . Bell Syndicat. j They didn't like It but they thought 0prrlf ht WNU farvloe. Arm-rlin- tp 1?-- Lace Triumphs Anew in the Mode ") d k-w- colm-IJenr- j l I , 1 1 Cum-mlng- y Old Ocean Guards Well Her Secrets hr fr. lu-- r m.i.-te- d, y. m e. Nj-sa- "1 forty-nint- y, l j Weight la AJJrd Faster and Meat It Better. ft T. 1 $,r''0 m. i Hi SU fret. I; A ue fur a m of tl.e aurplu I au-milk on Di In lb practice of milk fattening broiler. Th! practice may It- - I to four possible wltf jr . gain. Slilk fattened broiler add we'gbt Dura tio cockerel on rang, Tbelr meat la of Letter quality, and In noma market the broiler will faster command better price because of It. By hastening the maturity cf Die cm kerel for broiler the poul-tr- y man can sepurnte them from the pullet sooner, which will reult In better laying stock. Fattening cockerels Its batteries lead to best result, and very fine remit may It secured by If the pen are darkened between fee ling so that the bird exercise bv than they do normally, A good futteplrg ration may b made of three p.vind of yellow corn meal and one pound of wheat flour middling, mixed with liquid milk to the consistency of a batter that pour readily from bucket If liquid rnlik Is not available, buttermilk may be used tn place of the sllmmllk at the rate of 1 4 pound to each gallon of water. Very little fotd should be given the bird the first day a fattening ration Is put before them. Let the birds get hungry. Give them a much feed a they can clean tip In Inca has five minutes the morning of the HERETOFORE aa tiling of second day, and In the evening, a esthetic mein a medium of luxury much a they will eat In ten minIt were, limited to evening ute. Not until Die third day should gowns and dressup blouses and frilly furbelows aud such. the chickens be given full feeding In this day of enlightenment and a much as they will eat In 10 to we 15 minutes morning, noon, and Independent thinking, however, are not allowing ourselvea to be night. Nothing to drink should be by tradition or custom given the chickens. A much liquid hampered as they need Is contained In the and so the fashion world has come out boldly this year with the meswet mash. sage that lace can be every whit as practical and utilitarian ns It enn be glamorous and plctorially lovely. Early Care of Goslings Cited by an Authority Now thut the practicability of lace Gosling do not need feed until has been recognized beyond question, style creators of high degree they are from thirty six to forty-eighours old, when they should as well as those of lesser prestige be fed stale broad soaked tn milk, are using It without reserve for or a mn h made of four parts corn many of their smartest tailored and sports suits and dresses and blouses. men! and one part middlings, say There Is such a variety, too, of an authority In the Missouri Farmer. Green grass should make up laces nowadays which adds greatly to the sphere of usefulness. Many most of their feed and only a limfabric-lik- e ited amount of gr.tlu should be fed. of the newer types have a which makes them verrienty of fresh, clean drinking wa- satilequality for all sorts of apparel. ter should be supplied. After two The big thrill about the new cotweeks. If the gosling have plenty ton and linen thread laces Is that of grass, they will not need any as perfectly beautiful as they are, other feed. In rase extra feed Is 100 per cent to the needed a suitable mash ran be made they qualifyIt comes to being pracwhen of two parts shorts, one part of good tical and wearable. In that they corn meal or ground oats. After launder wonderfully, not even resix weeks old. If extra feed Is still the painstaking Ironing nnd quiring needed, the mash should he changed pressing which Is Imperative with to equal parts shorts, corn meal the majority of washable materand ground oats with 5 per cent ials. Wherefore It Is easy to see Is good, meat scrap. Where why so many women are Including most goslings are raised from the blouses and dresses mado of servtime they are two or three weeks iceable laces In their week-enold to fattening time without additional feed. Whole grain should not be fed until the goslings are well TAILORED THINGS feathered. Because of a limited deNO LONGER DULL mand, It Is doubtful If geese can be profitably raised except where Tailored things used to be dull. they have good range. Dull In both color and muterial, but all that has changed now. Cutting Range Costs Consider Bhlllppe et Gaston's Next to the feed cost, the greattailored three-piecensemble. The est expenses In brooding and reare Jacket and skirt are In black Is in poultry-labor. of chicks Any ing which Is a combination of man, observes a writer In the angora and cellophane. The anCountry Gentleman, whose range la gora naturally gives It that softnot already so equipped can well ness, which we are not so accusconsider Installing certain practical tomed to associate with a strictly devices. A lot of time tailored suit, and the cellophane can be wasted carrying water In produces a glint that has a hint of palls, so any range on which a consequins In It. siderable number of chicks Is reared The waistcoat, which completes should be piped for water. the outfit. Is of white albene pique, pipe for laterals, with and there are cuffs of the same and shut-of- f en automatic, a perky bow tie at the throat of near each colony house, will more the waistcoat bethan pay for the complete cost fore the season Is half over. To Soft Ribbons and Flowers keep the water cool, the pipe should Take Away Severe Lines be laid In a furrow which has been In presenting summer hats the plowed up and laid back over the pipe. Once a day the pans can be mushroom brim Is important, but rinsed, with a large bottle brush, the sailor and brim lifted at back which Is all the labor required In also find favor. There Is a marked tendency tothe watering operation. In the fall ward and "pretty color? In the trimtaken be can the pipes up ming, as, for example, a white sailstored till spring comes again. or with a cluster of flowers and an ombred taffeta ribbon In pale blue; Solves Green Feed Problem a mushroom of brown brilllantlne Sprouted oats or barley will easily straw adds a pink rose over and solve the green feed problem for nnder the brim supplemented by a the back-yarpoultry keeper with twist of pink velvet ribbon around the crown. flock. The simplest a small-sizeSheer effects are cleverly hanand possibly one of the best ways to provide for them Is to level off dled and very much worn. a small piece of ground, place the grains to be sprouted directly on Printed Linen in Plaids the soil and cover them with a piece Interesting New Motif of burlap or gunny sack kept conLinen evening dresses will be has the When moist. grain tinually seen again In printed varieties this to sprouted summer. The pattern Interest ts Inch It Is ready to feed. The length and plaids of time required to sprout will, of varied and lively stripes again of major Importance. In high course, depend upon the weather. Is the linen gauze with If small particles of dirt adhere to style there silk that is available In content of no but when harm, fed, the sprouts less bold designs than earlier when results. By prepay rather benefit, Algerian stripes and plaids were Ing small plots each day, a constant the thing. Embroidery further ditUDDly can be maintained. versifies the pattern Interest t semi-soli- pa-tu- re wardrobes this season. The two blouses Illustrated ar typical of tb turn lace Is practical taking this summer. Each la designed to be worn with almost any type of suit, either tailored or afternoon, for the lac Itself lends ooftoes aud ebann and distinction, whll the styling Is simple and tailored. One of the new string type lace made In an Interesting weave of heavy and fine cotton thread fashions the blouse with the ruffle edge revere. Tbe other blouse Is made of more conventional lighter weight luce. Its mellow creamy color Is extremely flattering. The effective simplicity of these blouses Is exactly what women of discriminating taste covet for summer wear. Blouses like these are the easiest kind of garments to make. Miss 1934 will wear lace In pastel shades quite Informally throughout the summer evening dineand-danc- e hours. It Is not enough that on have a frock of lovely lnce but to satisfy fashion's demands there must be a Jacket to match. The ensemble In the picture Is typical of the newest trend In lace R Is of a heavy cotton lace in pale pink. Baris tins decreed trains for evening dresses and this one Is do exception. Even though It boasts a slight train the gown Is really quite informal, the more so tn that It has tiny sleeves and Is t cut high In front a back, however, for such Is the way of the mode this season. The Jacket la styled with utmost simplicity as are all those which are matched to the lace frocks they top. And so on and so on It goes, wherever smart youth gathers this summer, on country club porches, on cool hotel roofs, on moonlit decks the first favorite will be lace. two-piec- low-cn- Q by Wejtern Newspaper Union. HATS FOR TOTS Bj I'HEKIB NIC HOLAS e "Ano-phan- labor-savin- h g d one-ha- lf Mothers and big sisters need not feel that they are the only to wear those clever hat which are crocheted from crepe paper. Comes now the younger generation turn. We have picked for illustration the two most fetching small-glr- l types that could be found. At the top In the picture see Amy poke bonnet (Inspired by Little chaWomen") for her dressy-upeau and below the beret for wear at play. Think of it, each will cost only fifteen cents, ar the price of a fold of crepe paper. The crocheting Is so easy, both hats can be made in no time few odd moment spent calling upon your neighbor. p merry-go-roun- ! |