Show A 8 HOYS Pugzies shores of Lake levo commercial cities grew and flourished But when the great upheaval in came the century Lake levo was and the cities which onceupon the shores of the lake were left inland With the power of water locomotion no longer available failed commerce and merchants found themselves other homes tho houses and streets stood and still stand to having taken themselves the expressive title of "The Dead Cities of the Zuyder Zee” Between dea'd the cities to the of anorth ‘Amsterdam 'and the' bloom-Ing cities of the south 'a 'distinct line is drawn The one Is filled' with the busy spirit 'of the' other with the dust of the dead past-in Once the quaint old town of Zaandam Peter the Great the czar of all the Bussias lived in a tiny’ hut the walls of which measure ten’ by In twelve the year 1697 Holland1 held the sovereignty of the seas and it was to learn "the trade of 'that the great Peter lived pi this miserable’diutfof two rooms’ incognito doing his own work washing his own clothes and preparing his own food ’The hut 'is’ still to beseen with furniture suclr' as mised a bedstead table two chairs all of description’ Over the chimney a marble (ablet iplacedc-by Alexander of a Russia was in” with the inscription “Alexanto Peter the Great” ‘Ijespite its associations Zaandam is still one of the dead cities of the Zuvupon I the Boys AA1IOAAL i ‘ PAPER and Girls The National Academy Dead Cities of the Zee Zuyder ANCE-- I GIJILS' for -Si The ANT) A ’ ' Desioa or ACADEMIC N5 A thirteenth destroyed -flourished Deserted ' L w 3 — — — : y — - -v ' ' ' ? ’ -modernity " W ’ -6 to " ship-building ' ' ' " -I’etcr a' ’ 6 ' ' ’ 1S1-1 ' ‘ x uvi v z-vv ary 1 CS 1 ' Guvr r ’ ' i 11 all in the place" 400 of m oil seedinto ’at 'one Br°ek North Holland ' s 1 -over in is the which’ grihd i wind- ' clennvst- village he’ ‘t t ' -fa L- V ' ‘ -A -L — M- - Academy of Design in solving these prob names pictured above ’ I Waugh Walker Ward ’Watrous of '-‘the - EACH of the above panels there is pictured the name of a member of the National Carefully add and subtract-the pictured words and letters and you will have no difficulty lem? in picture anthmetic A list' of names of National Academicians from which the six veie selected follows The answerwdl be printed on this page next week flax-' time the capital said to"be is in ' JN f ' z atl— Ay - - life A J -PUwletf -Tliese - T" A"'" arid-serve Ama iura Aiviv mere a liny cabin withared roof is visible between the scattered trees same wee cabins are said' to ’contain such china and old carved furniture as' to make the antiquarians of this century 'green with envy' The"only' O w1 ' 4)V ' fif ' r '7 ’ the'-simplest ! world”'' it is quaint interesting and--: course" very dean but the inhabitants seem to walk in dream as though 'the lethargic spirit of death stalked conU4 utw in lus '' 'Monnikendam vn is said to be the deadest of the dead cities 'No living creature human' 6r am jikuis to ue met along its paved utreets not a door or window of the dwellings is ever opened Williams Wilmarth Wolf Weldon Weinman Weir ’ ’ Wiggins Wiles Woodbury Yewell ' of-' a i u £" - v i j k u -jri I one-storied ML UH5 J vn 1101031 of towns Holland now its’ silent ways with thefr closed windows are like the of: ages eyes gone before The few humans who habit the place scarce raise their from the ground at the approachoyes of a to stranger They say "We of arc the past— the dead past we have nothing to do with those who live in the present” And the world at large is as little interested in the ’people as they- aro in the woild And so they die' away' the last inhabitants of Monniken-dam of the Zuyder Zee V V 1 1 ’ "by- - fast-shut in- ' sec-r ' '’ a A ZA Tommy Atkins ONE time in British historyit was customary for the governrnent-to supply to eaxih soldier a Tn this small norikpt manual manual uic cuicivu name an'e ueiv ui length of service wounds and fits honors of owner ’The war department in sending out of forms used the imaginary name "Thomas Atkins" in of place John Jones or In Samuel Smith this way Atkins was used to Tommy the British soldier any same way "Jack Tar" became used ’to mark British sailor The soldier under the of name Tommy Atkins has recently been' made famous by Kipling in his "Barrack Boom Ballads" T - cii-listmerit -designate -In a A The Naming of Paris MONG the villages which Caesar The Worshipers ire THEthe Parsecs "Eire Bombay arc called Worshipers’’ of the east because they hold in great reverence the lire which they brought with them from Persia and have never allo wed to become extinguishedin town" their temples also because they worship The Celts who inhabited the place the sun as the author of life were called’ "Parisii" and they burned The Parsees are the direct descendants their town of reeds of and rushes and mud the Magi who when they on the approach of an enemy rather heard Qf(the birth of the mysterious than Child surrender Caesar was not slow to who was born in Judea traveled see the advantages of down into’ Jerusalem to the situation of pay him the village tribute and he ordered wall to be The arseeg have always built around the island and held aloof from other temple to people and are Jupiter to be famed for their erected A town sprang commercial ability As up almost at once about the a of temple consequence this ability they rind later this after are the wealthiest most cultured and was called the ancient inhabitants Parisii influential class in Bombay So Thus we can fix the date of the birth they are that Bombay has of Paris at the time of been called Caesar the "City of Parsees" The before Christ religion of the Parsees is on© years Bi ch Bomans took up their residences of the ancient religions of the world this and on island was the religion of Persia when and Julian was lie that country was second in power of emperor in 300 built great palace for himself on the left side of the four great empires of the world —Babylonia the river and Persia Greece soon about this as about Rome the temple In a great many a giowing particulars the population religion of swarmed Later the two towns were the Parsecs comes to nearer Christianity than united of any other and the Paris today has religion grow from this beginning Indian Totem conquered was one built of reeds rushes and mud on swamnv island in the Seine Mud predominated o such an extent that the Gallic name for the place 'was Lutetia or "Mud of a a a numerous P()l fifty-two proclaimed a ‘ ‘ ’ oriental ' n The Off England’s SOMEChrist COO Vocal years large after Mountain the birth Picts of W HAT handclasp and password to modern secret societies totem is to the Indian symbols contained in procure for its owner the rights of help and hospitality With the Indians many things are mutable but the totem never changes His name Great Bear today may be and Killdeer tomorrow but his totem never changes is It always either carved in stone and known as a fetish or insomePanimai pictorial lnJhe the are the army of upon a handful of Britons So great was the disparity in numbers uiut seemed certain that the Britons woulcbe swept to death At this time in Germanus councildeclared that if the Britons would place themselves under his command he would insure victory without the loss oft soldier As a last hope all agreed to 'obey without question MvvL Sadontcd UVtUi tuiae etc which is itame °£ the faniiy which led He them along a road by which has the konsfehow writes of the totem underenemy was approaching until he Indiai1?2 y aS he Wrote of aI1 had come to a hilly place Here he halted and bade them keep silent until nn th°y painted on the grave-posts he the word and then to 2 gave repeat ?graves unforgotten Ids words three times Each his When the Picts own ancestral totem Each the symbol of his household-figures had come to a certain point Germanus of the bear and cried out: “Hallelujah!" reindeer Of the turtle beaver’1 crane and The small band of men repeated tire times to September 28 Answers cry three when their utter astonishment the hills threw back tho ollyEvans’ Rebus sound with such force it great that w® kno October’s near sounded like a great multitude of men Ana11nrLi10 leap and roar shouting "Hallelujah!" Tlie Picts fled And thqLbranches stark and sere at of thinking themselves surrounded bing once winter o’er and o’er and ambushed The National Academy of Design In history this victory of Germanus National Academicians is known as the "Victory of the Vocal 1 Smedlev Torhdi Aiouniain i Turner SnnoM TrySc""' a de-scended it a it a Germanus J ’ ‘ TJRIGIIT ing and sharp pencils will make short work of this interest--' eyes little rebus rhyme the result you get with the answer printed next week just Compare for fun 2 t tr- c T - 1 |