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Show To Use Diving Robots on Lusitania ARIZONA'S Development test Brest. France. Fscts concerning tbe sinking of the Lusitania may depend, oddly enough, upon the worlds greatest treasure hunt, how a realized dream off the storm-riddecoast of Brittany. . Sixty fathoms down, nslng mechanical robots, a group of Italian divers are bringing to the surface $5,000,000 is gold from a point off Armen light, near Douarenez. Tha spot, in marine terms, is latitude tragedy of the sea. . On the evening of May 21, 1122, in thick sea fog off the coast of Finland, the Brirlah ship Egypt of the Peninsular and Orient line was rammed and sunk by the French Cargo steamer Seine, Nearly a bun- dred of the passengers and crew of tbe Egypt were drowned. .The next day It was teamed that 40 tons of gold bars had gone down with the Egypt, It was marked down as lost gold, in marine records, But Italian divert decided to try tbelr hand at salvage.-special diving machine was developed, a mar New Device Found Great Aid in Salvage Work n dons contrivance by which a diver, Inside a steel tube, can go to depths undreamed of in early days The tub carries ' its own oxygen and lights and Is an underseas observation station. , , With this the divers began searching under water for the Egypt and found It. 800 feet down, 80 miles of Nashont Then began the work of salvage. In the safe of the Egypt's captain they found the key to tbe bullion room the steel closet in which the gold was packed. But tbe rusted lock refused to budge -- Device Provides Both Light ing with a phosphorescent and Heat . Milwaukee. t A transparent model of tbe human body, said to be the only one of Its kind in the world, will, be a part of tlie medical ex- hibit at the Chicago Worlds fair in 1933, Dr. Eben J.' Carey of Mar juette university ha revealed. Doctor Carey, who is In charge of the nedlcal exhibit, found the model in " Dresden, Germany. - Paris, A bad boy's prank has proved a ?key to a worthy invention, according to Jacques Arthuys, who conceived new sunlighting system from his own youthful misdemeanors. , Flashing piece of mirror about in a sunshiny window to land a glaring light in teacher's eye or In Sallys slate gave young Jacques tn idea that may make him a millionaire. If a tiny piece of broken men curled glass could maka such a bright spot in a dark room, then why conldnt a large piece of min ror In the same sun light up s large surface of a dark room? That was the theory upon which the young Inventor went to work. The finished product, as it has been installed in tha newspaper plant of "LTntransIgeant" by the author and Inaugurated recently by Louis Rollln, minister of commerce, is called the ArtheL It is a simple combination of mirrors and lenses and .lights tbe interior of tho build ? (Transparent Model of i Body to Be Seen at Fair ' bedridden Pastor Gives Sermon Over Mike f Wabash, Ind. A leg fracture s not prevent Rev. EL W. Wolf, -lor of the Christian church her$,-ipreaching to his congregation ch Sunday. From a bed st his tne," Rev. Mr. Wolf speaks into s Mo microphone, which Is attached an amplifier In the church. Rev. . Wolf was Injured in. a .fall on , Ight of steps. rooms. "After tbe original installation of tho two huge mirrors in tha roof there is 'no upkeep except washing them, said Mr. Arthuya. Paris has an - average of 120 days of sunshine, which is a third of the year, and during that time this system wlU save a great deal of money. There is also an attachment which switches on the electric light when the sun goes under a cloud, bo concluded in explaining his apparatus. Installed in private homes, the ray could bo filtered through a cooling process in summer. In the winter the unaltered rajs would provide heat for the home as well as illumination In otherwise dark rooms on bright daya This Looks like Days Before the War i V - & tyv-- f ' 7 4 M 'J n ) 4 1 t .r f a ' n ' r V !ftv s ( A J JfV A ' V V 'L - a Jt y. 7) 4- ; i ' V s glow. projected down tbo six flights and reflected back from a mirror bowl on tho ground floor, acting at a fountain. Smaller, angled mirrors on each floor catch tho strong descending rays and flash them, back along tho ceilings or cofridors or 4 JTs' u Odd Formation In Monument Valley, Arizona. (Prepared by tbs National Oeocraptlo ttoclotjr. Hahinton. Brvlcl I WNU D. C.) youthful state of the ARIZONA, where yesterday bandits chased the bouncing stagecoaches and wildcat calls and Indian warwhoops echoed across sagebrush studded plains and barren hills, now Is a land of modern cities with airports, golf links, western skyscrapers, fertile farms and thickly populated cattle ranches. Although it was not admitted into tbe Union until 1012, Arizona has drawn from the cumulative experience of other states in politics, education and Industry. Years wfter the Chicago fire Apaches still scalped settlers In Philadelphia saw the Cen1 tennial close before railway crossed the Yuma desert, and Europeans by millions had migrated to our shores when Arizona boasted barely as many whites as New York now has policemen. in Dewey had sank Montojo Manila bay and old Chief Geronlmo was selling signed pictures of himself lor ten cents each at tne SL Loula World's fair when Arizona had barely emerged from her long social pandemonium of road agents, gold seekers, and fugitives from eastern justice. Yet Spaniards had settled here, bringing tbe first cattle seen on our continent. Introducing new plants. Snd Teafhlng Pima S affd Hopls tb be better farmers, before the flrst English settlements were made in our eastern states. Tucson was old when Daniel Boone cut his name on a tree In Tennessee where be had killed a bear. In awe Cardenas of Coronado's expedition lifted up the cross at the Grand canyon scarcely 60 years after Columbus reached America. Across Arizona Kearny led bis army to California and Forty-ninefought their- - hard, hot way.' Kit Car?1 son battled here and Lieut. E. F. Beale made bis famous expedition s with Imported camels as In the Southwest until in furiated prospectors shot the camels because they stampeded their burros. But killer Indiana the difficulty of hauling In gooda and preference for California kept colonization down. As late as 18G0, all the whites in Arizona probably numbered less than 5.000. X Rallwaya Brought Advancement. Then Civil war. From It Arizona received a further setback that lasted until railways finally came, hauling in mining machinery, snd Judgea law book a and lock for jail doora Thua after years of neglect, the nation that owned the territory gave it law and order. Arizonas white population, not Including Mexlcana baa Increased by 000 per cent since the 8panlsb American war and Its wealth haa multiplied maybe twenty times Lonely cow trails are changed to crowded motor ianea and million dollar hotels flannt their splendor where 'dobe huts and desert skies were long mans only shelter. Unde the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo In 1848, the United States acquired land only as far south aa the Gila river; by the Gadsden purchase in 1864 It received tbe rest of that terra incognita later called Arizona territory. A Jew studious Americana delving In early Spanish chronicles learned that explorers like Cabeza de Vara and Coronado, and early missionaries like Father Kino bad found here rivers with banks three leagues high and mines rich enough to yield a silver nugget so heavy that two mulea were lashed together to carry It I From beaver trap-pen- , too, who bad ventured down the Colorado, tales of Arizonas seenic wonders and especially of its warlike -- Apaches had been brought back. But to most Americans pnctically nothing was known of of Arizona ;Tt was joo-ha- rd Art-zon- a. a-- -- - to show that, for all Its evil deserts It bad big rich spots of much value ; also, now that It belonged to ns we were free to make roads across It, To tie up Texas with' southern California, Yet for twenty years after th Gadsden purchase Arizona communicated with tbe outside world largely by water. Ships ran from San FVancIsco to the mouth bf tbe Colorado river, via the Mexican porta of Mazarlan, La Pas and Guaymaa A semimonthly mall .and passenger stage line was started In 186? from San Antonio to San, Diego; bnt at times It cost the government $65 to carry each letter I A year later the historic Butterfield stages began running between St. Louie and San Francisco. An early writer says: "This was one of the grand achievements of the age, to span the continent by semiweekly stages, under bonds to perform, by sol power of horseflesh, a trip of nearly 2.500 miles within the schedule of 25 days. It was the trek of people from the South to tbe West after tbe Civil war that began to give Arizona Previous .to that tbe population. white man saw little of It,' except the regions about Tucson, the Gila Bend, and Yuma. Today pasesngers on fast trains through Arizona complain tf the shower In the club car Is not eool, or If the barber's razor Is dull. But look out of the window. Those brush-growmounds are graves of Apache victims. The sufferings of such pioneers from heat, hunger and thirst, from Apacha torture, were almost without parallel . pushed back the shadows of forests and planted fields and gardens He has drained marshes and Irrigated arid regions. He has Invented hoes and plows and harvesters to take the place of naked hands In gather ing sustenance for himself and his family. There Is" no more Impelling motive to effort In all the range of human existence than hunger except the sight of a starving child for whose nourishment one has a responsibility. Trofessor Jacks has called attention to another kind of hunger which is general In mankind an urge to something even beyond wbat one haa achieved, a craving for skill. It is the repeated satisfaction of this bun ger, ever renewed, that results In mental growth and the highest sort of happiness, it Is often questioned whether education has Increased happiness In the individual It may be that tho mere addition of Information does not contribute to the making of happier human being. , But the continuing struggle for higher skill In some worthy fluid of human effort-crea- tive activity" Is the phrase most often used to descrllte It not only brings nourishment of spirit and happiness but adds to the wealth of the world in terms of human intellectual values. The greatest skills of the greatest number may determine the greatest good of the greatest number. Certainly It would if the choice of skills were wise and that does not mean If the skills merely produced materially valuable things. Plutarch remarks, In his essay on Periclea, that he who busies himself In' mean occupations produces. In the very pains he takes about things of little or no use, an evidence against himself of hla negligence and Indisposition to do what Is really good. But the something which one does with infinite pains mny ba of good in tb development of the Individual who does It,' even If the product Is not of valuable 'substance. Ismenias could not have been a "wretched being," for he was an excellent" piper, Alexander the Great need not have been ashamed,-a- s his practical father, Philip of Macedon, thought he should have been, for playing a piece of music so charmingly and skillfully. Leisure hobbles" are for Increasing numbers who cannot find In the narrow range of their vocation their salvation, f . The mind's desire for excellence In something, is a mystery, but It does after an suggest the course which days. Former Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany Here Is m picture that will bring' memories of pre-wI bis wife are shown heading the procession of German royalty during the comemmoratlon of the 100th hday of Kaiser Friedrich IIL Behind Wilhelm are his two brothers, Eltel Friedrich and Oskar. The uniforms are then wearing they affected previous to the establishment of a republic in tiermany. ar Isle IV ICork Jjgbts of waiter trumbull -- "You should excuse r. Hartley IL, Alexander, noted said. Well, yea, tbe days are hot osopher and author, has been vis-- there. Yea, some of tbe nights are New York. He told me of a hot there, too. But my sou wouldnt i and hla wife he heard arguing think of living anywhere else. And the brink of the Grand canyon, ITlS agreat town for business." "Whats your sons business?" ineems the man was a contractor, 1 that be was bent on demou- quired her companion. "Hes an undertaker," said the nting to his sceptical better half t the canyon could be"fltled up, woman, "and once he got live jobs -- 1 estimating the number of truck ds of stone and dirt that the Job aid require. To those who have n the place, It would appear that t man was taking in a lot of ter-nry. rhese doctors of philosophy and mce tell some funny stories, en Dr. A. V. Kidder of Carnegie itutlon was doing some arcbeo-.ea- l work st Pecos, N. M tour-- i used to stop and evince great 'oslty in the operations. They d all sorts of unusual questions, t day, in tbe midst of such a corf- -' . ation, a man said:. !y name's Bplderwhlstle. Whats ' ' 7 a r . "That all name!"- - Corey Ford, antbor of several books and a very prolific all around In one night" writer, la highly Incensed. A publisher, of whom be had never heard, An author who had been called wrote to him saying that he bad to Hollywood actually met one of happened to see sb article of Mr. tbe heads of the movie firm for Fords In a magazine and that If be which he was supposed to be work- ever wrote anything else be would ing. He asked him what he thought be glad to consider It of his story. There Is a woman whose one parSEEKS AID FOR CHINA lor trick Is her ability to imitate perfectly the cries and gurgles of a baby. - Bnt where ahe has tbe most fun with this accomplishment is m a sleeping car. 8he Jas tbe porter and other travelers searching tbe place for the supposed Infant in distress. a 1111. Rn Syndicates wxn 8n4e iK Racing Driven in Dead Heat, Given Same Fine 1 4 . Kansas City, Mo. Two motorists, accused of racing through downtown streets, were brought before Judge Timothy V. Holland. "Who won the rice?" his honor asked. "It was a tie," the arresting policeman answered. Neither driver protested the decision. Prizes, therefore, should be equal, tbe Judge commented, and tbe race should be run again. So be gave each driver flve days and told them to compete agaln, ihls time in wheelbarrow race st the municipal rock quarry. - was st another rife that Doctor ter waa down in a trench, exiting a skeleton. When a skele-I- s perhaps 600 years old, work excavation has to be carried on b the most minute care. Doctor dder was engrossed in bis work ien he suddenlybecame conscious a tourist peering at him tatent- from the ground above. Did he die there," asked the visor breathtessInor did he fall lnr -- . . -- Two women on t bus were talking to loudly that one couldnt help seats rearing wbat they said some the waa One extolling naay. part of living In a She said that her aon West. of the irould sot live anywhere else and named a small town. "It Is the only place to go, sb right said the author. "1 always bsv heard you were a great fellow for Innuendo. Udder." replied the archeologist, leer said the man.-- . What a iy jne speaking out" said the magnate, "I think it la terrible and lousy. V aZ Dr. Robert EL Lewis, advisor to the financial ministry of tbe Chinese Nationalist government who arrived In San Francisco, and took a plane for Washington, D. C, to seek United States aid for Chins in tbs Manchurian row. Fish Had Pecos, Texas. Hisms Teath Sheriff is exhibiting a mounted . EL B. Kiser fish with two teeth resembling those of a ho sun being.- - He said be found a dog dragging the flab near the Pecoa riven - pack-train- ac-ce- This inaccessibility, the character of the country Itself, and tta savage Inhabitants kept Arizona for decades the most backward of all our territories Early Stage Lines Buying Arizona was folly, eastern people said; Ita arid wastes were useless .Yet surveys began Write Own Epitaph "In memory of William George d Vicar of Roberts, the Horsley, England (A. D. 1828-19- ). A scholar of but average ability and a preacher of but medium prowess, he nevertheless obtained a bearing by speaking tbe truth. Though just as selfish as most men. Ilk them be was often capable of doing a kindness when the opportunty came his way. Fairly good tempered on the whole, though a bit Irritable at times, he enjoyed a happy family life, and was fond of convivial society," This Is the tombstone epitaph desired by the vicar of Horsley, DerM. A byshire, Rev, V. "if It Is any comfort for anyone to put one up" after he is dead. forty-secon- r.lcrcolizcdVaic Keeps Skin Young OMwsmh id ss m tinstii C uaiil 4wiw eto ftu few m puepUe, hnf frank Im disappear, ftkia Is thee ssfl pat. Mm iuk ftod Yaor faee 11 Msreehssj kwfcenanpwMfer eel ike katdee kaaaty of rear M Ms. T rneilsrssl teaalftlt lnU witek kaed. At draft wq m iMniwIkMi ! W velvety. u bries Landed Nia-Fo- ot Shark shark weighing several hundred pounds was harpooned at Ocracoke,- - N. C., by David CaskiU, Ocracoke, and Carl Jacobson, Washington, N. G When the shark came within flve feet of the boat Gaskell threw the harpoon. It struck the shark in the back. Tbe little boat was pulled - several hundred yards down the channel. The shark waa finally brought to tlfu shore snd landed with block and tackle. A bine-foo- t Balsam of Myrrh The Peacemaker are you hurrying to?" Where ' "I am running to try and stop quarrel between a married couple." That is good of you. Who are this couple? "1 am one of them." ' i ' Exchaeg ef Compliment She If looks could kill. Id assassinate you with a glance! He If looks could kill, it would be suicide for you to look In that mirror. Melbourne Table Talk. n RELIEVES HEAD, CHEST in the history of human enterprise. Arizona really began to grow np with the development of her mines Quest for gold first brought white QUALITY men here. Legendary SIMM 1113 temples of Cibola lured Coronado. He didn't find a golden Cibola. But for generations Spain helped pay Ancient Wooden Locks the huge cost of her glittering EuBurden for Strong Man ropean armlet with gold and all ' Tile most common look now In use ver from Arizona and Sonora mines on exterior doors of buildings Is the From the Tough Nut, the Glory cylinder lock developed by Linus Yale, Hole, and other claims Incredible Jr snd this leads us hark Into hiswealth was taken, before a sub- tory. Primitive prototypes of Yales terranean river drowned the miners invention were in use in Mesopotamia out and Egypt as early fit 2000 B. C. These were huge wooden affairs reVast Fortunes in Copper. More than $100,000,090 worth of quiring cumbersome keys, as we may copper has been taken from one gather from the Bihllcan passage Arizona mine. Fears that when (Isaiah 22:22) "And the key to the mlnea were worked out Arizona house of David will I lay upon his might decline in wealth and popu- Shoulder. This key, or muftsh as it lation have been allayed since the was snd still is called in the East, Is World war. There are two fea S stick of wood from 15 to 30 Inches sons: First, the Increase of farm long, 2 to 4 inches brood and 1 to 2 settlers under new Irrigation proj Inches thick. Into the face of one end ects; second, discovery of ways to are set a number of wooden or Iron mins snd smelt copper at lower pegs about an inch long. These pegs edrrespond with as many boles in tbe , cost lot ks the e Where copper ore oc- wooden bar or bolt which door snd can only be lifted when these masses near the curs in BACK COLDS McKesson t Robbins gold-roofe- d SOLO AT ALL DIUO ITOSII Unhappiness in Letting Chivalry End at Altar If men would treat their wiles with the same thoughtfulness snd chivalry after marriage as they did prior to It, remarked Bernal Dyas, I think the family circle would be happier. - The trouble Is that too muny men look uion courtship as a sporting eent, successfully climaxed at tbe altar. Yes, a lot of men are like a friend of mine who went home one afternoon with a llmit-- of treat As be stood gloating over them his wife remarked,: Thats all very fine for you, but bow about me? You never bring me candy, the way you did before we were married. Is that so, drawled the husband, regarding his trout limit complacently, "Well, you never heard of a fisherman feeding bait to a fish after pegs enter the holes and lift a corre hed caught It did you?" Los Anspondlng series of pins which drop geles Times. home by force of gravltycsmd keep the bar locked until pressed up-b- y Eay to Remedy the key withltspeg. Such huge keys 1 guess my beauty bas Mother opened the way Into the mighty pal- faded. i aces ofNinevah and Persepolts and Daughter Well, you can borrow Thebes." admitted to hundred-gatecase. Today In miniature and more refined my vanity fashion, the small key that enters the Most Women Do . cylinder lock pushes np the little brass pins inside and permits, the "Why don't you show your wtfe ' opening of the door. Detroit Free whos master of the house?" "She knows." ' Pres. low-grad- great top of the ground, aa at BIsbee, miner simply blast and use steam shop-era- . Mora than 1,000,000 tons of rock' have been, broken by one shot." , One can grasp the size .of Art zona's mining Industry when It la known that the state employs more than 25,000 men and digs each year 673.000,000 pounds of copper, 1? 400.000 pounds of lead. 6.000.000 ounces of silver, and $5,000,000 In Tbe annual mineral output gold. sella for more thaw $100,000,000. ' Irrigation in tbla region is old. .Corn, beans and squash were watered by gravity ditches centuries ago. Mormons from Utah, settling near where Phoenix now Is, made use of prehistoric canals. All over Salt River valley men dig np atone Implements, relics of ancient farm- , d CHILDHOODS FRIEND UazM your children lay the foundations for happy, successful lives, gm tbtm tbi btst bfilAtng nutfirUU. Scow's Emulsion of Cod Laver Oil has been recommended by doctors for more than sixty years. In valuable Vitamin A is stored up by youngsters to raise their resistance to diseases, snd to promote growth. The Vitamin D in this emulsion helps cty Urea gain straight, $uog hones and hard teeth. Used )jr invalid adults and expectant mothers too. Pleasant flavor; easy to take. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. Sales Representatives, Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Inc., New York. mt the ? PmmMvmH "J hwwwt merit Luwrw f Smtf btrtums KHJ Lm Anmim, kOIN PorUd KFRCSd Umm md MJkPX Sprtmx er. It seems quite natural, then, that here Americas modern Irrigation policy should have been first tried as out en --big scale. ter with the RooeevelT dam that the then newly fUrffiei reclamatlon service made its first experiment, begun in 1906. It worked. Today there Is the great Yuma project ; the big new dams at Horae Mesa and Mormon Flat, and tbe new multiple-dom- e Coolldge dam on tbe CUb river, near San Carlos. At present about 4.400 Pima Indian farmers with 60,000 acres are the and Stainless "Rub fo" ond inhalant unsurpassed in preventing and relieving cold congestions. rs 42lvs. Growth Achieved by the Effort our education must take In the de- velopment not only of the child but also of the man and woman to the end of their Uvea. And with this sort of training should be given, aa Doctor Jacks suggests In ia three reforms, a larger place to physical education and the appreciation of beauty. New York Times. Bodily hunger bag driven man" to find ways of getting food. lie has X ' From a skylight on tho roof of tbe central stairway solar rays are - TO "DO SOMETHING Mental Prank is Key to Invention -- I and then cams the supremo By almost superhuman efforts and giant cranes the steel roof was ripped clear off the bullion room, and the great treasure, sought sluct 1929, lay exposed to salvage Without difficulty the gold was started upward to tbs deck of the salvage ship Artigllo, where It will lie until brought to the mainland But of more Importance than tbe treasure bunt the greatest ever held, is tbe work of the steel tube by which tt was located. For by this means If Is believed, divers may view the hull of tbe sunken Losi-tanl- a and answer' once and for all the claim of submarine attack which precipitated America's entrance into the World war. URGE OF MANKIND ll-w- j . |