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Show The Murray Eajrle, Thursday. December 5, 1929 ! Rescue f Dog Given Medal for Brave Tou have said to me often that a you could smell the tish of the now. There are fish and beer and u tony rest waiting fur you. M AlK'll 1' "Ilefore we have gone a hundred yards our repented volleys bad the effect desired. We hud awakened PJijl tn the knowledge that u caravan was coming, and the people were witnessed rushing up In hundreds to meet lis. The mere sight of the Hags Informed every one Immediately that we were a caravan, but the American Hag borne aloft by gigantic Astnanl, whose face was one vast smile on this day, rather staggered them at first. However, many of the people who now approached us remembered the flag. They had seen It float above the American consulate, and from the mastheads of many ships In the harbor of Zanzibar, and they were soon beard welcoming the beautiful flax with cries of 'Pind-erKlsunga ! a white man's flag! 'Plndera Marlkaul !' the American flag I "We are now about three hundred yards from the village of I'JIJI, and the crowds lire dense a bout me. Suddenly I hear n voice on my right say: "'Good morning, Tan-ganlk- Othen and there HISTORY TOLD AS IT WOULD WRITTEN TODAY BE By IRVIN S. COBB HOW III LIVINGSTON CAME TO STANLEY tl It pos.ibl. to condv. ol. Under clrcum.tnct. a. impl dramatic fillr-od- d two of th. mu.t distlmul.hl men ol Uvi tiro, met on a cartain day. d .illa.a In th, heart ol Afrit., thtn vantably tha y.arj mio. in aoul a. aver On w.ia Dr. David Uvinfiton.. a. aalnlly Dark eontinrnt. .lormy petrel ot a man. lived. Th. other wa Henry M. Stanley, a wrttabla . h leoirarjher. tha plot-arUvlnfston.. th. madll ml.slonai . had been loat lor many months tha unrelentinf foe ol tha .lav.-traderwa. a Scotchman, on. Livlnf.ton somewhere In tha depth, ol Central Alrka. British ol th. no.t uaelul and famous men ol hia lima, yet wither tha nor any privaia individual not any organised body ol men In Great New loi remained Britain or elsewhere moved to find tha mixing man. It York Mwapapat publisher to finance tha euceestful rcKua aapeditioo and to chooaa for Ita head In. great war corraauondant and tha great adventurer, Stanley. wide contrast between tha two central figure, in thi. great Thei. waa emlil-tion- s. historical episode. Uving.tona lollowad hi. Ideals, Stanley followed his On. wa. placid, deeply devout, absolutely unselfish In hi. aervlc. to hucontentious. manity. Th. other wa. restless, auarrelsome. Born In IMS, Livingstone took his degree In medicine in IS40, and Immediately thereafter went a. missionary to th then trackless interior ol Africa. He made converts to From that time on, ha .pent mast ol hi. lil. there. Christianity, be cured tha bodily Ills ol the native, ha fought th. .lav. trade until he conquered it. and through thirty year, ol these unremitting labor, he lound tins to add material contribution, to various departments ol scientific research Facing danger, and lack ol food, driving an cnleeblrd body lorward at th. di tales of an unconquerable spirit. Livingston piled up a glorious record th Jungle finally killed him. of hemic achievement belor Except in the common quality ol an indomitable will. Sir Henry Stanley wa. a. different Irom Livingston aa on man could be liora another. Hi. real name He wa. boro In Wale. In Infancy h. wa. was Rolland ot Rowland paupei. In boyhood a ward In workhouse, or aa wa in America would say. a poor-hou- s. ran and master him. who Imposed He whipped upon away. tyrannical butcher'a assistant and finally By turn, ha waa a haberdasher', errand boy. New remained. and ther at landed Orleans b. Th a cabin boy on ship ship A rich man named Morton adopted bim and he changed bia nam. At th outbreak of th Civli war he enlisted in the Conlederate army, but on being captured by tha Federal, at Shiloh. be renounced bis early allegiance, In the Joined th. Northern navy, and in it served until the end ol hostilities. maturer year, ol his life h wa. distinguished both in America and abroad, first war correspondent and later as an esplorer. as HB first book I ever mid ex- I ceptlng a I'll. Id's- story hook whs the bunk from which quotations will he made further iilons In this article: Henry M. Stanley's story of his tlmling of I hivld Livingstone. As a small boy, spelling out thu hard words nud the long ones, skipping the more dilllcult passives, glorving in the adventure and the danger of It, (ton king up the descriptions of far lands and woolly wild tribes. I lived with that heavy green bound volume for months. It plained in me the desire to A hunJourney to distant lands. dred times, yes a thousand times. I promised mvself that when grew up I. too, would lead an expedition to Africa mid explore the Junules and discover great rivers and shoot elephants, and lions mid hippos. Well, the Jungles, most of them, have been explored and the rivers have all been charlcd and mapped ami somebody else shoots the elephants, and the I '.irk coniiueut Is dark only in spots since the white man has poked his Inquisitive nose Into nearly every part of the In terior where ti white man can live ami I haven't been to Africa vet My dream remains one of those childhood dreams which maturity fails to realize. Probably I never shall go there. Put through the years the vision that the youngster bad has abided with me. Stanley was above all things a 1 think best-P- UT ONE !' " FIND LIVlNtJ-S'- rri i A Urn Hillsborough, N. H. It has recently come to light that the name of Mary has been associated vvlih one family in this town through each generation for more thnn two and a quarter centuries, and Mrs. Mary Cola Is the last of the direct line of Marys that started when Mary Ann Patterson was horn on a little sailing ship on the high seas. A linen covered Bible tells the story anil Is owned by i jtwW : i" Mrs. Mary Ann Wood, mothMrs. Mary C'ot of this town. The hook was printed In a little town In Scotland 210 years ago and on Its family page it shows that ivery girl born In the family since "ocean hnru Mary's" time er of was named after her. A piece of cloth, said to be part of Ihe wedd!nn dress worn by the original "ocean born Mary," is In the possession of Hev. - Ii Alexander. History shows that the cloth for the dress was presented to her parents by a pirate chieftain who wished the baby named Mary Id honor of his wife. sir!' "Startled at hearing this greet- ing In the midst of such a crowd of black people, I turn sharply around In search of the man ami see bim at my side' with the blackest of faces but unlimited ami Joyous a man dressed in a long white shirt, with u turban of American sheeting around his woolly head, and I f the True Trail. After such an interview with his superior, what real reporter would have refused to tackle the Job? Stanley embarks on his quest. Ft Is as hard a quest as any newspaper man ever did embark on. Alongside of this task, finding a lost needle in a slrnwstnck seems Is that The commission easy. starting Inland from one coast, he shall Invade an untracked void and push ahead and continue to push ahead until somewhere, somehow. In that vast equatorial Immensity tie comes upon a lone white nam trekking toward him from ibe otli er side thousands of miles away. Pit her to tilid Ihat while man or his grave and to fetch back the word this id what Stanley has On y; -- 0cean.Born Mary Starts Long Line w Mima .....fiw M ask : "'Who the mischief are you?' "T am Susl, the servant of Hoc-to- r Livingstone.' said he, smiling and showing u gleaming row cf teeth. "'What! Is Doctor Livingstone here?' '"Yes, sir.' "'In this village?' " 'Yes, sir.' "'Are you sure?' 'Sure, sure. sir. Why, 1 leave - WOMAN RECLUSE LEAVES FORTUNE enough. It happened Mrs. this way: of Gibson, Ilaynes, tuother-in-lavrecently acquitted In Conway of the murder of his wife, had Abram arrested for nonsumiort of his child The case was brought before Magistrate 11. S. lliggins of Georgetown, and M. W. Pyatt employed to rep resent the defendant. Mr. Pyatt argued that it was hardly reasonable to require Abram to support his child when Mrs. Ilaynes was holding it against the will or the fa ther. The magistrate then dismissed ami tit the charge of the suggestion of the counsel for the defense asked ihein if they could not settle the dilliculty before they left court. Afier considerable parley they decided to employ the Installment plan In defraying certain expenses in connection with raising the infant, provided that the child be held as security for the payment of the debt. v duce it to reasonable proportions. She seldom had a (Ire In the combination eon) range and heater which she had substituted for her fireplace. "I don't believe." said Mrs. Ma gulre, "that the poor woman burned two tons of coal the last ten years.'' Mrs. her M.iguire welcomed lodger's calls. She liked Miss Poppitz In spite of her peculiarities. Miss Poppitz. according to Mrs. was a wonderfully well Informed woman; with the events of the day and with their significance, had a wealth of business information, and. above all. was as well grounded as the social register in the activities and relationships of society. Scrimped and Saved for 40 Years and Never Ate Square Meal. New York. Pauline Poppitz, who had scrimped ami saved for forty years, while, by the light of a neighbor's gas. she studied the events of society, died recently In her tneagerly furnished room in the Ma-guir- Williamsburg district of Prooklyn. She tlied possessed of a fortune In bonds, mortgages and cash estimated by the police at $:xmkki and by her attorney at "more than Slixi.tKK)," but, so far as those who had known her for ten years, she had lived In the dingy frame house across the street from a lumber yard, she had never been to a party or a wedding, never had a new dress, ami never eaten a square meal. Malnutrition was a con iributing factor In death. Miss Poppltz was eighty years old. The gossip of the neighborhood Is that when her mother tlied forty years ago Miss Poppitr. Inherited a small estate, consisting largely of her mother's home around the curlier on Perry street. It was not considered much, even forty years ago, but Miss Poppitz whs shrewd and determined. denser and almost preventing our inarch. Plugs and streamers were out : Arabs and Wangvvane were pushing their way through the natives In order to greet us, for, their account, we belonged to ibcm. "Soon Susl came running back and asked ine inv name: he had told the doctor that I was coming, but the doctor was too surprised to believe him and when the doctor asked him my name Susl was rath- to do. Months and months later the civilized world Is to throb wilb excite inent at news of a marvelous thing Put first. Stanley, accomplished. heading a caravan of natives. Is to er stat'gered. endure unspeakable privations. Is The Greeting That Rang Round lo be beset hv nil manner of danthe World. and hostile climatic gers delays "Put during conditions, weatlsome palavers with news had been Susis absence, the convejed to the fierce and suspicious negroes, swift do.lot that It was surely a white torrents, reeking Jungles, while-homan that was coming, whose guns plains, wihl beasts, the peril of In were tiring and whose ling could ' fectioii from a skinned foot, of be seen; and the great Arab magfatal fevers from bad water, of nates of Pjljt Mohammed bin poison from tainted fond, of trench S;ili. Savd bin Suliman Mohammed Began to Loan Money. cry from his own men, of n spear bin Hharlh and others had gathlie should have thrust between bis shoulders from ered small tier Income was However great reporter. before the doctor's in been, seeing that before he wrote an unseen lurking enemy in a house together the beginning, Miss poppitz lived the and come doctor had out thicket. this book he already had distinfrom bis veranda lo discuss the far within It. and began to lend He Is quite solitary; once he guished himself as a war corremoney on chattel mortgages, then matter ami awaii my arrival. on l.rst mortgages on real estate. spondent in a day when a war cor quits the shore settlements there "it the of the head meantime, respondent knew no censorship is no man of his own race of whom the expedition bad halted and the As her Income grew she never devi-- ' and miht go where he was pleased he may seek advice or aid. lie Is colorbearer was out si ill small mode of of the ranks, alei) from her to go and write pretty much what In set by doubts as to his course, by but invested the additional Inlife, hoi. his uml own ling flag aloft, my he those to write. Put It was in mist:lvings as lo the dual outcome, come. man Sclint said to me. see the his chronicle of his search for the by fears, not of dying but of fail In a mahogany bureau which sir. ib'ctor. what obi an db. Miss Poppitz had obtained when saintly Scot that he proved up his ing. He has got n white beard!' man! title as one of the greatest reportshe foreclosed on a chattel inert Pinnlly be strikes a hot trail I would I lio have ers of his generation, or, for that the African miip will tell you its And forwhat gage lung ago, the police found 311 a bit of friendly wildergiven location he Intercepts a tile of ness where unseen I mutter, any generation. slate bonds of Virginia of Sbm th1-might vent A Tough Argument, who tell him friendly blacks They were coupon In some mad freak such as nomination. my Joy r I llkt the way bonds, almost as negotiable as so through his Interpreter that a white Idiotically biting my band, what turning mm Ii but safe deposit boxes man wouldn't? after which Stan man. an old while man who has a somersault or slashing ut trees were rash, white hair oil his face and who Is In order to tint pn hided in Ibe rigid ley begins: those exciting "i'ri the sixteenth day of October. weak ami ailing and who came In feelings that allay rig iiicn which Miss Poppitz bad were well nigh the opposite direction from the In the vear of our Lord one thou bud out for herself forty ears ago My heart beats fast but There were nine savings bank sand ekht hundred and sixty nine quarter out (if which Stanley Is I must nof let my face my betray I inn in .Mailt Id. fresh from the uii.ving. has Just reached it town i motions test It shall balances which ag detract from booUs showing cailed PJijl. which is distant from the ibg'-itmore than At 10 a. m and "1 ;imagf of Valencia. a of man white appear lirsl mortgages on real est tile, most I'alle de la Crux, tl Is plm e of meeting only a few ing under sucli Jaci'po, ut No. cirextraordinary can miles. I'jtli - It Is a name hands me a telegram; on opening of It pMiokiyti propeilv cumstances which shortly will echo around It I And it reads. 'Come to Paris on The) will go, nccord'.hS to Mrs I "So di. that which thought Amy M.iguire. Miss poppii,' laud Important business' The telegram the w.Mi I was niosf ii;:i.i!lcil. I pus!. hack A Victorious Volley. N from .lau.es Hordon Petmett. Jr., .Vill, the ciowds and. from tie lady mil ti witness lo her Hie yming manager of thu New The feeble traveler tine-- t t Mr nar. walked downpassing l.itgi'v in f.uir cousins, a living York Herald." The r "I I ln.lv.- - said Mrs llii'i.ne 'I hole ;in be no ntie of until I riime hi front of It would bp like Pciuictt. In tils white man. sit k or well, within the people send clr. le of Arabs In the Mag'tire, "had no bleu wleihei her m h h coii'itless limes, im! prime of youth, to semi of sipuire front of wbiih stood the while i ononis were al.ve or ile.nl, she was summons It would be like Stanley, miles P.Milt.mt h.i! now. S rtu'ey man wiih the !y In the way she lived." As I beard. M.-- s le ludii; Stanley, to tb what be shoves on by forceil man lies Put advatinil sh wlvgray Poppitz was I all mid thin Mm I noinward dM do d soii-.ehe Is stopped by I he suit chief of a ticed lie was hit severe in appear pale, looked wearied, ai "I 'own cone my pictures from strop;; ti.he rjem;iti.i' c tribute ot) :lne She aiwny wore black and ha I n gia heard. Wore II bluish the walls ot my apartment on hchaif of l is master before the Iti was seen In dress that cap with n failed gold band I'otimt never the scci'iid floor : Into my trunks go ' I iV'-t o was of a sl'le newer than that of Ititcrveii'tr! tef do It. had on a ri d sleeved waistcoat my books and souvenirs, my clothe P.t'Kts. the f.ti-tr'tory Pvrntmilly, after almost :i pair of tray tweed Irou-ets- , are hastily collected, some half dry, coming to riipH with the C'ix.,1) utal She had several dresses, hut I wouhl t ave run to film I was only and after a couple of hours of "k.t i ' over the anineiil none iif them over looked new. so .f pny a inwatd In Ibe pn si nce of such hasty bard work my portmanteau' lllelit Stanley Is peii'!e, to p;l"S far as the memory of the neighbor it it, ib would him emhmccl hive are strapped up and labeled for He drives Iris evl au.'i .1 met, for hood runs, being an PtiglUhm ii,. only. I Purls. . . In a fever of lo he ward. The mull carrier brought Miss I know did in bow he wouhl re "At It p. in. I was on my way. from the crest of a steep m.nin'iiin treiiieti tellers, hut. so far I did what cowsrt'lee Poppitz so ulve and being obllted to sinp i, the glittering bow-of the I. .ike llhd f ;i.e. Mrs. M.iguire and Mrs. Anna :,!. pride suggested ns fit Pratidt. who Payotine a few bouts, did tmi TaeiMtnki. and on beyond the full lives on the first ilnor. thifS-watk- ed to deliberately at Paris until the following ranges which cup It In. let Slim timid fs the letters were ns se-- ' trim, look off lay bnt end said: I wont straight to the Cram! lev inke up the story : flight. business like as Miss I ! "'bminr Livingstone. 1 pre- verely herself. hotel and knocked at the dour of "An Immense broad sheet a hull Slid tttosl of I hem. pit Mr. Peunett's room. Hhi d be t of silver luchl canopy sume?' and Mrs. Ptiihdt be Mrs Magulre '"Vis.' .ib he, with s kind "Tome In.' I beard s Vobe of hUie nhove- - loftv mountain are stulle. licve, contained cheik. his I lifting Mr. found cap !,gl,ly. "Kntcrlng. penned its valances, palm fore.-form Its Ssldom Went Out tn bed "I replace my hat on my bend 'ihe Tai wan, k:t fiit'ges! ' ' "'Who Rre you?' be asked Miss I'ojipiu seldom went nut, Alii t'e mot! eiion tit (hr and be puli on bis run nnd we 'My name Is Stanley.' I on rXultnM crv of the Anjo Savon both priifu bands am) then I say eviept to go to Ihe bank or to the swered. ilice ef her real estaie broker, or with the lungs of Mentor, ami the llbo;.' : "'Ah, yes! .!( d"wn; I have lm ' great forests and ti e hills si em to that of her attorney. thank Hod. doctor, "T have portatit business on ban I fur you' share In our triumph. (icciisioioilly she rc.i.L She had bcetl permuted to See you ' "After throwing over hi sltoul " V last the sublime l our has sr twelve volume biographical set. 4 "He answered. 'I feel thankful dors his robe ch:imiro. Mr. Pen rived our llre.inis. our hopes nm! that I nm here lo welcome printed In Herman nnd published In you'" PM:. ami a Herman mod. cat book tied nskvl: 'Whcte do voti think ant iclpnl Ions are lin t n'iiit to .e To smthtr.g more must be published In Ist'k which wete bet Livingstone Is?' n .ilirc.! U:;r teat in ami our fed In li equote an nature of mnl climax. favorites bemuse tbev were virtu "'I really thi not know, P iH.,,t ln's ate nllh our eves, n Let's stop right here. When n phM II. to ti e palM't lltHt ttv t y.ni i, Ink be Is ultv,.?' h lt 't Ine sl'y incxbitisiltile. Svn tll.Ae onl I tirata th' if "'lie may be. and he may ml in whiih but or li. ; chin made bis and l.ii call on tiv,, h, '.' answered in r when she was siricki'u with bet While piMtl Wiltl the treilid We R oad Ik Sid Th Other of n U ,,'vn nnl "'Well. it, ink f.ti.d iiiiiesa four tnot.tl s ago. M;s t t ori the M ;i hi nt.) t r 7 It is said, all I".IM) r.huin that lie can be ' 1, and I nm go " !.(..'. the Poppitz nrgtied learnedly with bim iiinl bi.nl out flg I mean when hey were sufortd lug to Hi nd i.ii tn t;ii Urn' upon bis iliflgtiosis, biisit a her coti K'il' V is a romantic objeit. 'ruMol.s "'What I' Mild I. Mo mu re, lit upon stuiemenis In the nv Wallah, banal Puty ship we Willnh '.U sail In pmb.itk. think I can find l... t..r I except that tne.bi-.ibook the 1'ietl. ivuctlv. responded romance Ibe our 7 and Mom Vessel, I'.i ji.ti tee. in ine to ijuits In the evening M,ss poj pi! liked " ' 'tc. two, three tire" to on ami even other trail In tn go down tn Ihe hiisemciit nnl batig Central AM. a "A Voliev from nearly fifty turn " m ; I on :iri tli ;t veil v the hol?.n Our lite lent trivial, u!k Willi Mrs Matuire. eo 'oiins like n Mililte firm n Not oii'v ' battery , Snd i.r trim ant wo slum to fecotd I , r ,,,,,, )IV)(. of ailiili w itlT.ib'e uml In Mi. Muuue ; we shall to te In elle, t j,,,, ry son. Ihat be U, no I to c,t telligctif. but Mrs. M.iicu'.re lilwuja preset tlv on lie pem efui lookinc V'U can of him and perhaps" do Villaci- - below aeaten her room In col weutl er him-If liverillg ThafVt Reaton iilwtivs had He ga bumma aftet thoughtfully ,,,,,1 ""Now hold H e whl'o mnn flag deliberatcly-t- he rmiii iv up high nod let the ninhaf fin If jntir hibl pctlstetttp pnra. il.it k, and slw;ivs had a fnwspaper, In want lake enough with ,,,? you n bring up the rear. Ami vo. roeti Its beigiise he's got the Mi. Potpiit Inilu'ced In none ot rolls help him should be require It (if keep clos,. ti'L'cthet Rtn kts p tliina wrong t'srcnts-s- nd be didn't se those rttraviigntiocs. If her gag bill rouno ou will net according to until we bull In the mho sIhiva Imttket place, lect them. v nmnu's Home Com ccnis for a month own plum and do what jou or before the white mens boi.se. j psidon. jour j Mis PopiilU le k measures lo ft t Now Aged 110, Expects to Survive to See 131 .Muskegon. Mich. A few miles north of this city lives .Joseph Mill er, who was bom in IS!!), and cele- brated his one hundred and tenth birthday last March. Miller was born March 20, 1SI0. and to avoid military service In the czar's army came to the I'nlted , Slates in a sailing vessel In ami found his way to Muskegon county. While an Ohio woodsman. Miller said, he dreamed a strange person came to bim and asked how lona he wanted lo live. This person mid ut to count the rings on Ihe firs' tree he felled next day. lie did so. and It contained l.'ll rings. 'Tin a believer In dreams." Miller said, "and am eoiilldent I shall live to vote for four more ' i About Aviation Slang Alameda. Calif. Aviation has a language all Its own, as one Oakland member of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, learned recently. Seeing u large placard announcing that a dog light was to be held at the Alameda airport, the S. P. 0. A. member rang up the port and In Indignant tones announced that steps would be taken to see that no dogs fought at the airport nor anywhere else. When Nickerson could control his mirth sulliclently, he explained that a dog light Is ihe aeronautical term for sham battle maneuvers between planes. No protest was filed. 35-Fo- Cube Would Hold All Gold in World ot Washington. All the gold mined the world since the discovery ol America could be cast into a 3.V foot cube. This Interesting fact was revealed by Scott Turner, director of the Pnited States bureau of mines. In an economic review of Tot Held as Security gold product Ion. Prom 14!: to P.I27 world has been l.tHi.'l. for Payment of Debt ."itni.ni production ounces, of which ril(i.2T.'l.inHi. Ceorgetovvt.. S. (.'. Ahraui Hibson or more than half, was mined in and pose H.iyues became parties to the first 27 years of the present a strange contract rivconlly when century. Uihsotl. in order In guln possession of his youtij. child, agreed to puv Farm. Held for Centuries Pose $10 down and additional In the province of Stockholm. before he left town. Ibis,. In fjrn Vrrinland, 101 farmers have reirgreed in surrender the Infant, anil ceived diplomas us a token of the bury the hatchet forever. A com A long tenure of their estates. plication riro'o, however. Just after farm at Kda has remained In one the parlies had reached the agree family since and another nt mem, fur tb.se flatly refused to re Norra Pmterud since 1 10. j . ,0,il ' - Hn-titi- I leases P,od and Ij Profitable, Green feed th. hen's ration . wlJe creased egg productlou m proven profitable "When the exhausted with the cn and cold weather. , U sary for the nmiltrvm.. .1 sucb feed," reeoiiunemi.M rlsti. noulirv ovtoi,u '.I , the North M i , t3 . r "There Is that limy a wide variety 0,S he used to avoid ony. Kape. alfalfa, outg, rjZ wheat, rye, barley, mangei 2 other feeds nmv he imr.H c1 ed oats are also used dfri!:7! some growers. The oats . when the snrout i h, Inches long and make an succulent to supidement thescnw irrnln mot mnuli H Mr. Pnrrlsh says that It ( difficult to build a sprouter. All that Id n.Lj i. number of trays with holes In the bottom to allow excean ter to escape. The seort ni. .. spread thinly over the trays to m. vein i ue lorinatinn or mold growtln Sprouted oats secured lo this tata. ner are fed at the rate of fmm to two ounces per day per lien, i good producina hen will fWnTra, from 2" to 30 pounds of tlilj erf winter Hanging cabbage from ihe floor will Under presents r tarlos aIK In n give about 18 India afford the ben needed exercise ami her the succulent green i "I'i! Ileets 1. same way. Win may be used & It Is Impossible to mot ... " oil mnj It ieen. with the mash nr ral n i supply the same food in mixing this oil with tt ti m a coti-nve- r gl-e- IiiIni (Ion me t fee.' Mr. Parrlsh suiest! that mount of the feed be Ulr '.e cod liver oil worked s the;My and this used ii i sl.nL mixture with the remsintt, One fiint of the oil to Met food PH) pounds of feed Is enoogh t fllVi ami s: -- uie. Damp Henhouse Causes Colds and Other lTu Prof. II. P. Ilotsford of the po trv denartnient of the New Tun State college of agriculture si nca. lias Just written a bulletin how to ventilate poultry hous B savs nil noulirv houses should bsn an air outlet from the highest po:s In the house, ror without this i vent, moisture collects. The fits air that enters the house bewtw warm and rises, and as wsrrs sir holds more moisture than cold. I ii will cause dampness In the pooiirj house unless It has a chnnce lo fl If air vents are not trt out. the moisture condenses under ibe roof and drops, to make the 1I" damp N moist nnd to cause A damp house causes ttfb house. nnd other troubles for the bir nnd a loss of money to tie e ers, The bulletin nlo gives fsm about poultry houses. It tells to remodel old bulldlngs-ev- eo barns, nnd bow to construct K houses. Th the L,f Wi ri & Miller Is In good health. His only occupation Is to cut enough wood to keep the home tires burnone meal per day Is sutti ing, dent to keep bim in good health He married M years ago when be was fifty six", n blushing bride of nineteen, who constitutes the rest of bis household. I new-pape- Dog Lover Learns All Presidents.' GREEN FEED file liomp-m.r- lease the child unless Ahram could offer good security. A solutlttn was reached when an officer of the court suggested that the child Itself he used ns security, and Abrani declared the proposition was fair to Animals. lilm Just now "Now, you Susl, run and tell the doctor I am coming.' "'Yes, sir,' and olT he darted like a mailman. "Put by this time we were within two hundred yards of the village, ami the multitude was getting union-trollable- X- Kileen Iiepson. two years old, of llnlbrook, Mass., with Prince, n of the New shepherd dog, who dragged her to safely from the tracks Haven railroad In front of an approaching train, and was awarded the gold medal of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty ffinh In ." Lack of Water Causci Early Molt by Uyn Water supplies an lini'rtant m the "'j Indlsjiensable part of without M Hens can go longer unti.r nnrl- still ll't- .i n iiii'-u- i lll, 111 ...:.!..... The ben's hotly Is i"'"! W over one half water and m'' which she lavs are approximate! two thirds water. hens tila tt..... . i ir .1. Ho iv i.r...lnclni? iifleD ID - li'1, ue .1....- - I .. milur i i r V a . .....ii ..r..i itint uieiiiis a ma'i" ...... i.,,.' II'-"In ... ef tireilllCtlotl. i ClIIIIOK In the fowls Since the luklnS SI"" ,.fi... pens tirnm vu--oif is quantities lit n time, -thai proper provision "'e e' 4" thirst it ihey limy satisfy Ihclr times. 4 11 PIIIUfilliSOFiES , nr-rh- i j .,. btt j ; m l,,,,,) fo-i- i 1 j ;- ) ,i ,., .cr- M.ide Cnr-negi- j 1 Sum stale-owne- i "'Io CLOSE , 10 $2,500,000,030 Available, for sity of Rochester, and Duke tinker slty will receive as much or more School. Hospitals and Scienfrom the estaie of the late James tific Research. It I take, (.union McKay bcUeathei .Uii.khmhhi to Harvard; John W. New York. When Andrew CarSterling gave an etiml amount to negie, ettihaiklng on his phlhmthro Yule, and henry C. Prick left In pies lsyi. declared ihat Ihe rich msiiKH) to Princeton Pesldes these man should be only the trustee of major benefactions a huge sum In wealth lo be used for the public the aggregate has distributed good be opened n new vlstri of serv-b-- among both denominational nnd to the American millionaire schools In small be Public gifts rroiu private fortunes quests lis Is evidenced by the lact were rare and small In those days that the University of California for Today they have reached such a ten years has received an average volume ihat nearly two nnd n half of SI.iknum) a year from private billion dollars will be available for sources. st bonis, hosjiit;,!,, health, social and The Kockefeller nnd Cnrnegle Scieniitle research agencies In PC. fortunes remain the two great Clyde plirst. secretary of (he sources of public benefaction, ihe foundation, points out this Worlds Work nnltle shows. The significant change In the attitude Rockefellers, father nod son. have of wealth twnrd public welfare In distributed $rsi,ii,tKN) through the the Worlds Work Magazine. He Rockefeller Institute for Medical shows that of no major foimda Research, the Heneral IMuchIIoii tb'tis fef administering great for board, the Rockefeller foundation, lanes for the public good npproM the Laura Rockefeller memutely :nl per cent have been found morial, nnd the Intermit lonnt IMn el since cot Ion board. The SaViO.Ojtt.iSM Cur I Minns It"' .10 years no few nej;le beiptests have gone lo Il.i.HI er it, an n ijureii gntit universities libraries ntul fitti universities ami have received Ibe greater pari ol colleges. Carnegie Instliuie of Pitts Iheir funis from private Weallh burgh, ibe Carnegie Piidovvmeut for while smres uf others hive been tntcrualiotial Peace, the Carnegie iiblid by large rontnbuMons. Mr. Hero Piind commission and other Purl point, out. altruistic activities. The Ptilversity ef Cbl.-nghns Among other great foundations of mmt t(i from tt,e Itocke-fellerreceived recent years are the Russell Sage Senator and Mrs. Inland foundalioti of I la.tMMMi; the Com Stanford gave $j:.,ii.miii to the tnoiiwealih fund of ts.!m,x( esuniversity which bears their nsme; tablished by Mrs. Strphen V. Hark-ness- , Oeotge Pastman bus given approxnud the fiii.ooo.ooo Julliard imately fj:i.tj,in.J to the Univer Musical foundation. Va'-- t t.'-s- la 1929 Pl. ul ftillinir P Season All r.-- itig on Any Flod pra,,, "Culling should he o all seasons of the year nnd stot k when Its use Is s.lvlw savs the Maryland ex per1 d"1' ll.m. Any bird observed lime which Is sick or should be removed from ftn nt once. Helsy In reumvlnl :itV .i J mrj ' birds often results In Ih'W'Jj serious diseases thnuig In'"i" J flock. If such birds fire ous condition they should W buryinl diately disposed ot by hurtling. POULTRY NOTES The logical solution U tmuliry en any farm aren. tf range nj"j f- -r twSL l. t The essentials quarters for poultry are should be cIchii. afh plm-llghled and free from draft A shutter ventilator, of or ! ' pb'cc may be used of n window to Plve Illailon diirlns Ihe winter poultry houe l closisl. In W The question of shotild be cotillned bou.e Htirlna Ihe winter is"' bv poultry men and . divers bins are fiitint tnnnc ti"'!n rf . M hens s; Tie In most blen Ihat hens will has been disprevcl every community ry owners who have Inkrn H" ' to keep fiielr bens c"1,fl,;.,"l,t lo feed well balanced rath , |