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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. FTAII Mam :IFciDipgj)Mim MiieaDlleft BRAINY WOMEN ' IN SECRETARIAL' WORK AT GENEVA Howe About: Importance of Leisure in the Scheme of Life Lincoln Cause of Humiliations Genius Is there no time you can reclaim from pleasure that really doc not much pleasure, from empty 'give By ED HOWE from Inferior plye jtalk it u, A W1AHAM LINCOLN wa Tree- from doubtfully enjoyable weekend Ideal during t critical time, 'or not very profitable trips? Do you and worried a good deal He once 'realize the value of minutes? A man said: If to be the head of h I Is had wife who alwuye kept him as hard as what 1 have had to un- - 'waiting tew minute before dinner, ilergo. I could find It tn my heart After a time It occurred to him that to pliy Salan himself. eight or ten line could be written Still Lincoln was fur better off during this Interval and be bnd pa ' than million of Ms fellow citizen per and Ink laid in a convenient during the Civil war. Think of tlie ' plane. thousand of good Union men One of the most deeply apprecl-siarvtin Libby and Amlersonvlllo ated of our American women writ era, to whose attention tlie foregoing was called, ceca tlie matter from au other angle. Flie eavs: "This deplorer of wasted time' goes on to tell all ltd man accora pllslied, over a period of years. In those few minutes a day. A reader pen o. Whether hla Judgment was' gent me the quotation with the or had. his salary went on, 'mark that all young people ought to and all the time lie was aecumulat-'reait, that they would get so much tng great fume. Tlie war hopeless- - more out of life If they did not waste ly ruined many millions, but made o much time, Lincoln rich and famous. "At tlie risk of being misunderstood. We have heard of the poverty of j am going to agree. I think we his widow; I read the other day a alreudy heard so much about she was a rich woman when shelve value of time, the dangers of died; and how little ahe deserved I wasting It, the benefits of conserving I Imve no sympathy for the woes ,lt, and wlmt can lie accomplished by of statesmen on the public payrolL salvaging (hose few minutes here From I860 to 1861 millions of Amer- - and there ao much that we are la leans had had luck that Ahrahnm danger of forgetting tlmt time was Lincoln might have their share of 'made for living, not life to save time, good link. During his four years Time, like money, Is only worth In the Wlille House, Lincoln should What we get out of It And 1 see so have daily thanked the gods. In- many people In tills hectic dny so stead of complaining. I had an preoccupied wllh tlie matter of getuncle George, with a young wife and ting the most out of their time thut haliy at home, who had hard luck they are not living at alL at I'lttshiirgh landing thnt Ahra-hat"It Is right thnt young people Lincoln might get ?36,NK) a should be taught the pity of waste In J ear and endless fame. time as In anything else the folly of not taking advantage of the opLet any man think of the great- portunities open to them In their forest degradations and humiliations mative years for mental and bodily throughout his life, and I believe growth, of heedlessly for some foolhe must decide sex was at the bot- ish pleasures, turning their backs on tom of most of them. It Is the one the benefits that are open to them. "But there Is time for work and thing we should endeavor to subdue and regulate, yet it is the thing a time for piny. And the constant with snatching we regulate least, and let run wild. preoccupation for Our social system, our literature, profit every leisure moment, begrudgencourage wildness In sex rather ing time given to real leisure. Is, to than regulation. The man bull Is my mind, the source of many nervforever permitted to bellow . his ous and physical Ills. I hove seen young people who had lut. Instead of locking him up until his services are needed. And been impressed will) the Idea of acInstead of trying to keep him quiet, the objects of his bellowing aggravate him all they can. C. Bril Si.du.t. WXU t.Mtc. Ju - , A new type of responsible womns has evolved In the secretariat of the League of Nations at Geneve. She Is described, says the Literary Digest, as a hard worker, of smart appearance and Intelligent enough not to let her masculine superiors know Just how Intelligent she la. Th dappers of the smsaing early 20s in the city beside the beautiful Lake Leman are said to have disappeared. Those who were Juat pretty and not much else have married. The others with ten years' unique opportunity of coutact with the Influential persons of every country passing tn and out of Geneve, have become trained women In world affairs. At liaison officers In the Informs Hon departments, In the press and research sections, some have achieved really Important positions. But untidy women of genius are not tolerated at Geneva, writes Ellen Wilkinson In the London Star, end the of chic Is recognized despite the Inadequate salaries for the very high coat of Geneva living. Then, with sly smile of humor, this woman observer at tlie League goes on to say: "They have wrestled, apparently suceeatifully, with that problem which Is th nightmare of every clever woman who has to work with and under men. . . . IIow to secure sufficient respect for your brain to be given responsible work, wlthont making (he fatal error of letting them see you know as much as they do, "The women who make that mistake gol So by a process of elimination. through marriage or promotion, error or Just plain revolt, evolved the Geneva type, the League of Nations woman. counting for every minute, restless recreand nervous at wholesoui ations. I have seen them nimbi to really rest, because their minds, always on the minutes, could not be stiunrd lo relaxation. They bad been taught that rest ran be achieved rnertly by a change of occupation. The tiling to be avoided aa the plague was to do nothing I "Knowing full well th condemns lion I may be bringing upon my head. I must soy sincerely that one of the lesson I tune learned from many year whlih never lost eight of the value of a minute, la that one of the most wholesome, healthful and eon struct I ve tilings we can do with some leisure mlnu'es, Is Just doing noth lug ! C- Bell ijrftdlmlt. AVNU trslcc Scientists Find Relics of Long-Gon- e Peoples d nt ' n Nicolet's Meetinq with the Wirmebaqoes fcer (Af the Painting at Green Baq by L.W.Deming in the Witcon sin Historical Society) nA, high-strun- - tlfc j jJ An envious dull man once said genius Is Insanity, and other dull men have made the saying famous. It was never true, for genius has always meant special ability. There are millions of geniuses; thousands climbing to distinction, hundreds to I have known great distinction. several promising candidates In small towns where I have lived. Among cats, dogs, cattle, and the lower animals generally, a scrub never won a blue ribbon, but It Is characteristic In the human family that scrubs oftener achieve great distinction than thoroughbreds. Irobably this comes about because there Is no stud book among men. Goethe had fourteen mistresses and no great progeny. Mozart attracted attention nil over Europe as a musician when six years old. Before lie died at thirty-fivhe had written symphonies and operas now performed somewhere every week In the year. He never sat down to display his genius that he was not disturbed by a bill collector, by the screaming of a woman In labor, a row with relatives, or some other incident of love affairs. Had he been as free to devote his time to music as Relgh Count was to devote his time to winning races, there Ii4 no telling what heights Mozart might have easily reached. Many pampered race horses have won a quarter of a million dollars In two years. Mozart received less than a thousand dollars from Figaro." Don Giovanni," and the Requiem, and, when he died, was so poor his funeral cost under five dollars. WORLD IN GRIP OF DRY PHASE? Far baik among the mystic shrine of Monument valley. In northern Arl tons and southern Utah, there are untold proofs of civilization existing a early as &) A. D., yet untouched by archeologists, any T. IL Kelley, field director of a group of Arizona and California scientists, who recently explored the 2, Out) mile square area. Robert Branstend, a member of death by Kelley' party, t down a rope from the crest to a cave. It was located deep In tlie solitude of Monument valley. Into which no white man has dared to wander. There he found what Kelley believes were two pieces of pottery of the hnsketmnker type, known to have been made about f00 A. D. The room he discovered had been dug out of almost solid rock, much lu the manner known tn have been used at that prehistoric dale. No tools or Implements were found, however. Tlie entrance to the cave was partly blocked by great bowlders that had dropped Into position and wedged tightly. Tlie cave evidently hnd been tlie resting place for animals during past centuries. Many bones littered the fioor, and here and there was scattered evidence of a death battle between great boasts. rl-k- alld-In- g De Mackinac vorable climate for producing th necessaries of life than In this corn belt, of which Iowa Is the center. Des Moines Tribune. formation about weather happenings has been gathered In this and other countries. It may he possible to predict the next swing toward dryness and. tlie next swing toward wetness with real accuracy, so far as any large area is concerned. Meantime we here In Iowa may rest on tlie fnct that drastic changes In climate do not seem ever to come rapidly, and that several times In the past this region has known prolonged dry spells, only to emerge again into compensating wet spells. Nowhere on earth has there been, within the period of white men's knowledge, a more dependably fa While we are speculating about the possible causes of dry weather In our own region, we may note, for whatever It may signify, that In By ELMO SCOTT WATSON entals Marco Tolo had written about several England they are giving serious I'KIMJ the last Presidential campalg centuries before and that In timling them, the thought to problems caused by fallheard a great deal about the long sought now route to China might be discoving of the water levels in streams, a All Make Helped Man, een though no one ered. That was why Nicolet carried with him "a Theq Historq phenomenon that lias been developseems to have known exactly who superb robe of Chinese damask, embroidered all at ing for a couple of years now. That lie as and why he was forgotten over with flowers and birds. He was prepared may be mere coincidence, but on tlie This summer tardy honors are to be to make a proper appearance on meeting the Indian was about to other hand it may suggest thut conbe put to death by the a real to liaid forgotten man, one Chinese mandarins. ditions affecting a fur wider area Algonquins. The Sokokis were allies of the Irowhose name and whose right to fame Nicolet left Three Rivers, Qne., July 1, 1034 quois and Nicolet knew that if the than Just our group of a half dozen Algonquins have been allowed to remain In In company with three Jesuits, Fathers Brebeuf, killed the dozen states are nt work, It meant a renewal of the that captive obscurity for a matter of 300 years Daniel ami Davost, who were accompanying It may be that the areas which now TELLS HOW SHE TOCS bloody strife between the Algonquins and the lie was dean Nicolet, a French band of Ilurons on their way home from their Iroquois. seem to be particularly wet, not dry, courier de hols, Indian Interpreter aonuul trading visit to Quebec. He traveled with It was then late In October and Ice was such ns some parts of tlie East, are IBS. OFF HIPS and explorer, the discoverer of Lake them to the Isles des Alluinettes where he linin the river. Nicolet hastened aboard the exceptions, and thnt either tlie forming fir-t man to white visit the gered for a time with his friends, the Aigon a Michigan and the A whole world or at least the northern shallop, making for Sillery. squall struck 7 HIS. OFF WAIST present states of Michigan and Wisconsin. In quins. Later lie joined the Jesuits at Ihonatiria, the boat, overturning it and throwing Nicolet. a hemisphere is lu tlie dry phase of a view of the latter fact, it would seem appro- where he assembled a party of seven Humus friend and the crew into the icy water. One by time long cycle. priate If either or both of these states had and embarked In a frail canoe for his Journey one they went down. Only Nicolet and one other In 40 days by taking Kruschen Salts, Everybody now knows, of course, chosen to perpetuate his name in at least one into the West. were left that radical climatic changes do take Mrs. Helga Rlaugb of New York City ol Its towns, comities or rivers. Iut you will reduced 20 & lbs. took 4 inches oil hips, Lake Huron, the party Journeyed up Then, chilled by the bitter cold and exhausted place. That the ice caps at the poles 3 inches oil bust and search the gazetteer In vain for such a name. St.Crossing river to what is now Sault Ste. Marie, in Ids vain P to reach shore, Nicolet called attempt Marys have 7 'A inches off waist. advanced and Is retreated It is true that a Nicolet tablet was dedicated returned west to his friend: Make for the shore, DeCliavigny; south, then proceeded through the She writes: I havent proven by the evidence of our hills on Mackinac island in Michigan by the Mackinac Straits of Mackinac and paddled out into Lake you can swim. Bid good-bto my wife and chilgone hungry a moand valleys and lakes and soil. Even Island State Park commission and the Michigan ment I feel fine and which was known then and for many dren ; I am going to God. Michigan, some of tlie ancients surmised that look 10 yrs. younger. Historical commission on July 13, 1913, and that A moment later he disappeared forever. afterward as the Lake of the Illinois. Con years there had been great climatic To get rid of double In tlie Wisconsin State Historical society at Mad southward Nicolet and his Indian friends Nicolet was not a great explorer like Chamchins, bulging hips, changes In Europe, by which the cold Ison hangs a painting by Edwin Willard Denting tinning entered Green hay and near the head of that plain, declared Father Campbell, who spoke at ugly rolls of fat on in central and northern Europe had depicting Nicolet's meeting with the Winneba body of water lie found the people he had been tlie dedication of the Nicolet tablet on the Island wait and upper arms SAFELY and without greatly moderated. But these changes goes on the shores of Green Bay. But aside from sent to find the Winnebagoes who had come to in 1913, not a picturesque governor like Fronte-nac- ; come over such long periods as to discomfort at the same time build up these memorials he has been neglected by two blows with the allies of the French, and or even a successful discoverer like MarIlorons, health and glorious acquire a clear skin, mean nothing to any single generacommonwealths who had the best reason for with whom he had been charged to negotiate a quette; nor a martyr like the devoted Jesuit bright eyes, energy and vivaciousnese men. tion hint. of to look younger and feel it take a half remembering missionaries who followed the Nicolet train into peace. Whether there really are definite teasnoonful of Kruschen Salts in a glass However, July 1 of tills year marks the beginWhen he neared the Winnebago town, lie sent tlie Northwest, Brebeuf, Jogues, Daniel and not water every morning before of cycles, subject eventually to meas- breakfast. ning of the tercentennial celebration of the state a messenger ahead to announce his coming, and, since canonized by the Church of Rome. condiweather urement, of Michigan and the week of July 1 to 8 will be whereby One He was simply an Indian Interpreter and exjar lasts 4 weeks and cots but having put on his gorgeous robe, followed him tions vary within a relatively brief a trifle at any drugstore the world over. observed as Nicolet Week on Mackinac island on the scene, writes William Henry Johnson in plorer, unspoiled by selfish ambition or surroundMake sure vou get Kruschen because t where a pageant, sponsored by the Michigan French Pathfinders In North America. period of years says a Never ings calculated to destroy every noble ambition, its SAFE. Money back if not joyfully to dry cycle or a forty-yea- r wet satisfied. Daughters of 'the American Revolution, Daugh- did a circus, making Its grand entry Into a vil- who proved beneath so plain an exterior to be to dry cycle it not yet known. But ters of 1812 and the Michigan Historical comlage In all the glory of gilded chariots and brass a man whose virtues may be proposed to the mission, will help bring his name out of the band, Inspire deeper awe than this primitive am- youth of our country as an example and an inWriting of the late Frank Harris, there seems reason enough for even a biographer He trans a nonscientific person to suspect It. obscurity Into which it has been lost for three bassador, with his flaming robe and a pair of spiration. says: A hundred years hence, when a centuries and make it better known not only to In his tribute to Nicolet another great church- gressed all the Inflexible rules of the which he fired continually. His pale face, pistols, citizens of that state but to all Americans the first the Winnebagoes had ever seen, gave man, Right Rev. Bishop Frank A. O'Brien, has righteous. He wronged friends, be- vastly greater amount of reliable in well. them a sense of something unearthly. The squaws said : Under the banner of the Cross he weut trayed everyone and violated every Nicolet was bom In Cherbourg, France, about and children fled Into the woods, shrieking that forward. He led his chosen bands through wilds decency. And yet he was one of the fewest Hotel 1398, and as a young man he is described as it was a manitou (spirit) armed with thunder unknown. Nicolet was intrepid, unafraid, majes- noblest men of his day. If this be Is It and also zeal and full of near paradox, the enthusiasm, very being religious and lightning. The warriors, however, stood their tic and courageous. possessed of a consuming desire for adventure. Certulnly such a person deserves a better fate truth. Championing the helpless and ground bravely and later entertained him with This naturally led him to seek his fortune In a feast of one hundred and twenty beaver. than to be a forgotten man In American his- fighting oppression, Harris was France's dominions across the Atlantic and In But If Nicolet did not succeed in opening tory and one of the purposes of the pageant magnificent; at his worst, he was too close to rascality for the 1618 he cast his lot with Champlain, the relations with Cathay and Cipango (China and that Is being given in northern Michigan is to far him a richly deserved, though belated, trib- comfort of his admirers." Founder of New France." pay did he else him entitles that something Japan), This Is mere literary piffle. A Champlain already had instituted a policy of to be commemorated among the Pathfinders. He ute. But he is not the only historic figure who sending promising young followers to the Indians ascended Fox river to its headwaters, crossed is to be memorialized during the week, for the mau who violated every decency, so that they could gain a knowledge of the lan and betrayed every friend, could not the little divide that separates thd waters flowing whole thrilling story of the Straits settlements guages, customs, country and woodlore of the into the Lakes from those that empty Into the Mackinac, Sault Ste. Marie and St. Ignace Is to have been one of the noblest men of Ills time; to say so, or think so, red man.' A Few Every Gulf of Mexico, and launched his canoe on the be depicted by 300 costumed performers. Included in the episodes of the pageant, be- is silly. Nicolet was sent to the Algonquins on the Isle Wisconsin, first white man, so faf as we know, Morning des Alluinettes In the Ottawa river. Here he who floated on one of the upper tributaries of sides the arrival of Nicolet, are the coming of Half the people are creditable, the Jesuit missionaries; the era of the explorers considering the slime in which lived among the ludians as one of them and for the Will Promote Clean, mighty river. they two years did not see a fellow countryman. Ber Joliet, La Salle and Tontl; the rule of Cadil- originated. are dull, ! Nicolet made such a favorable impression on coming a trusted friend, he was made one of an the Winnebagoes that he was able to negotiate lac at Michlllimaekinac (the original name of but amenable to sound teaching, All Stores At the ; the British and who famous 400 the some and place) of have good Instincts. regime Drug journeyed Algonquins embassy Another treaty with them by which they agreed to take massacre there to the Iroquois and negotiated a temporary peace their during Pontiac's war; the con- quarter are hopeless: dead beats, WriteMarineCo..Dpt.W,Chicafto,for Free Book furs to the French posts on the SL Lawtest between the British and the Americans for disturbers, thieves, killers. And with that traditional enemy. 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths rence. He also won the friendship of the of this strategic spot during the this disreputable After his two years with the Algonquins, Nicostir spent the winter with them and returned possession Radio in every room. connection s of the trouble. As let next took up residence with the Nipissings, to Quebec in 1633 to report to Champlain of his Revolution and again during tlie War of 1S12: up and the of fur trade the American RATES FROM a beginning renear the lake which bears their name. He $1.50 plain matter of justice, those in adventures In the west under John Jacob Astor. Wherever il occurs on the bodq hoav the great majority are at fault be mained there for eight or nine years. He was il opposite Mormon Tabernacle Eight years after tills historic Journey, Nicoever tender or sensitive the all For of of are these in links tlie chain parts quick cause they do not force the small recalled by Champlain In 1633 and Instructed to let met a tragic death in the SL Lawrence river ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. Iq and safely relieved bq prepare for the trip into the western wilderness By tills time he was the chief official of the Mackinac's history which began on a July day minority to behave better. But ail "to learn of those distint Western people, who trading company at Quebec and his influence 300 years ago with tlie coming of that forgot- our laws are keyed to treat tlie dishad neither hair nor beards, and who journeyed among the Indians was perhaps greater man ten man who is now being honored Jean reputable gently and kindly, and WNU W Nicolet, tlie Frenchman, Intrepid, majestic, 2631 in great canoes. the respectable majority hardily. that of any other man of his time. In 1642 word readied Quebec that a Sokoki It was believed these people might be the t)rl-- j C b Wsstsrn Newspaper Union. Old Fb-- t Mackinac on the "Hillof Historq" Old Canadian Town The oldest white settlement In Canada, Tadonssac, Quebec, this year la celcbrnllng with the rest of the province the four hundredth anniversary of the landing of Jasquet Cartier. It was at Tudoussac that Cartier wintered during one of his voyage to Cannda, and Tadoussac was ons of (he Important centers In the early history of French Canada. Long before Cartier's time, according to tradition, Tadoussac was visited by ancient Iberians and later by tb Vikings. DO YOU SUFFER FROM NEURITIS? American and European Scientists Agree That Mineral Water Is Beneficial TRY THIS NATURAL WAY People spend hundreds of millions of dollars every year going to the great mineral water health resorts of Europe and America. Many of these people have to travel thousands of miles. 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