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GOOD TIME IN STOR PALMAFESTA QUE1 OUR COUNTY'S FLOAT CJ $500 PRIZE The club women of Columbia linv< ji at organized to act as hostesses t< the queen candidates, and are making every preparation to give them tht best time possible. And, of coursi ti e men are making their own prep arations, t<o. We have been asked t< keep the many good things in store foi the young ladies a dark secret for < while longer so their surprise may h( complete. The Palmafesta Association has re ccived numbers of letters from for mer queen candidates expressing theii unusual pleasure last year and thej are unanimous in snying, "It was the best time I ever had." Queen candidates have the best scats already re served for them at every stage performance at Palmafesta. They wil see the spectacular fireworks display the gorgeous exhibits of wearing ap..i-.i -? i <?.ci as, me siyie snow, win near uio beautiful music of bands and opera star now being engaged by the chuirman of the entertainment committee Mr. L. L. Propat, who is in New York with the determination to secure the best star irrespective of the expense or trouble. There will be dinners, dances, balls and?what will be the most beautiful of all events?the queen's coronation will be enacted by the queens themselves, arrayed in the court finery which characterized the coronation of the queen of England in the days of chivalry and Knight Errants. Do the girls of South Carolina want to be at Palmafesta? Interest is running high all over the state. Girls want to enjoy this good time?and there is the $.r?00 diamond ring awaiting the fortunate girl to be chosen Queen of Palmafesta. Last year the contest was close. Up to the very last minute a dozen or more of the young ladies had practically the same VOTING QUEEN OF I "PALMAFESTA" The Union Daily Times. Gentlemen My choice for C Name Address This coupon good for one vo subscription to this newsp Caruso Memorial Meets With Response Atlanta, Ga., March 22.?Music lovers of the Southeast have-shown an intensely practical enthusiasm in the Caruso American Memorial Foundation, organized u> build an enduring tribute to the greatest of all tenors through a well defined plan of upbuilding America music. It is a notable fact that this en.thusinsm has been general throughout the section. It has not been confined to the great centers of population, or particular seats of musical culture, but on the other hand, the warmest interest has been shown in Southern villages and substantial contributions have come from Southern farms where the. tenor was known only through the beauty of bis reproduced voice. It is considered particularly appropriate that this should be so, for the great purpose of the Foundation is the development of musical talent in the obscure places. This was the work closest to Caruso's heart. In his annual visits to the South, no struggling young artist ever applied to him for advice, encouragement, or even financial aid that it was not freely and generously given. Caruso felt a debt of gratitude to his adopted country and no section benefited from this feeling as did the South. It is the purpose of the Caruso Foundation to raise through the entire United States an endowment fund of $1,000,000. The interest on this money will be applied to giving struggling artists the opportunity to develop their art. The board of trustees and the committee on awards announces that no caste or creed will be known in this matter, that aid will be given onlj, where aid is needed and where thert is strong probability of development of extraordinary talent either as vocalist, instrumental performer or composer. Col. William Lawson Peel, president of the Atlanta Music Festival Association and the moving force in th< Smith's annual season of Metropolitar Onomi 2ft tiSnA I\wa?S<IamI> tUo Porno/ I * I^ V II C I'l * olllvlll Wl l/IIV- VO? un^ Foundation for the Southeast, and nl contributions should be forwarded tc him. American Boys Better Fed Than English l.ondon March 27.?Boys in Am erica arc far better fed than EnpclisV lands, declared VV. B. Close, ex-pres ident of the CambridKc Universitj Boat club, in a discussion of the feed of school boys. Mr. Close als< asserts that the averape man he mel in the United States and Canada ii taller and bigger than the averagi Englishman. Citizens of Hawaii in nine monthi bought motor cars to the value o $4,000,000. ? pQJ^ EN FROM THIS COUNTY iN WIN I IN THE BIG STATE PARADE 5 number of votes. Who knows but what > this county will be the honored one p and our candidate bring: back the dis-i ^ tinction of being Queen of 1922, a Palmafesta? e All of the young ladies will assem-! - ble in Columbia on Monday, April 17, > when Palmafesta starts and will be' r the guests of Palmafesta until Saturi day, the 22nd of April, when 1922 ? Palmafesta will close. All expenses will be paid by Palmafesta and all the, . young lady must do to win the dis-l . tinction of being Palmafesta Queen r Is to be elected in her own county and f go to Columbia and compete with the: , other young ladies assembled. The . candidates do nothing in Columbia to win the ruling place but appear be-1 . fore the voters and be introduced. I The beauty supplement this year will be widely circulated over the! . state and the county Queens will not , only have their pictures in this beau, tiful page but their pictures will be! put in the Palmafesta program to be preserved in permanent form. All of the young ladies will be per-, i sonally conducted about the big showj of automobiles and trades displays , where the many industries and prod-! i ucts of the stnte will be demonstrated! > to the public. The $500 prize for the best county! ' float is bringing many registrations.: Ilambone says, "Last year you couldn't buy nuthin' for a dollah, and' this year you cain't get a dollah to buy nuthin' with," but here is a way! to get $500 in gold. This county can easily design a good float to show the, natural rPSOlllVPC tllo ini!nel?-ino rw some historical event and have as pood a chance to win the prize as anyone, j Just write to Mr. James G. Holmes, j 1215 Lady Street, Columbia, and tell him you want to enter a float. The parade will be on Thursday, April 20,; and will be a mammouth affair. COUPON ! PALMAFESTA i I c j < Jueen of Palmafesta is: ! c t te. A yearly paid-in-advance aper counts 100 votes. , - I i . , , ,T-. t r?lSggi |?mMajMsSif? World's I Lowest Priced ; FULLY < EQUIPPED Automobile $525 /. - b. Flint. Mich. The People's Car See it Compare it Try it as Our Guest W. E. GREEN PHONE 35 UNION, S. C. National Convention Called For May Mexico City, March 27.?Reforms I in the Mexican constitution designed to eliminate all obstacles to recoic- , nition of the Mexican government by ' foreign powers are proposed in the platform of the Great Liberal I'arty I which has just been revived after 1 years of inactivity. One of the paragraphs of the constitution which the party would reform is Article 27 which provides fori the nationalization of petroleum de-| ? posits and which the Mexican Sui preme Court prono\?nced non-retro" I active in a decision rendered in ScpI tember last. Other reforms proposed t in the constitution refer to labor, re-' ' ligious freedom and education. * "These fundamental changes will 1 remove automatically all possible ob-1 ^ stncles to an immediate recognition! of the Mexican government by all foreign powers and will eliminate all 1 pretexts for further revolution," as' sorted Antonia G. Canalize, for many ' years financial agent of the Mexican > government in the United States and Rlirope who has taken active nnrt in reviving the old party once influential in Mexico. "With the.se modificai tion the Mexican constitution will be superior in every respect to the con. stitution of 1857," Senor Canalizo i added. A national convvention of the party has been called for next May. Associated with Senator Fernando > Iglesias Calderon, head of the party, t are former President Eulalio Gutier, rez and Alfonso Madero, brother of ? the late President Sladero, besides Senor Canalizo. Senator Calderon, the party leader, was formerlyy Mex?j lean financial agent in Washington f and Ixmdon and for many years I prominent in politics. The Great Coal Strike ' Indianapolis, Ind., March 28.? Grt-at coal strikes, such as the country is now facing, have been few al- ' though for 75 years the coal industry 1 had been marked by almost number- less state-wide and localized strikes, 1 often involving several thousands of ' workers. All of the big strikes have continued more than a month, the longest having been that of 1902 in the anthracite industry which continued 23 weeks. The big strikes?five in numberare summarized as follows: 1894?First general strike in the soft coal industry, called by the 8Unitt <1 Mine Workers of America, the pur- 1 pose being to restore wage scales that 1 had been decreased during the panic of '93; 100,000 to 160,000 men engaged and militia called out in four states; ' first attempt at a compromise failed. l>ut second conference of miners and ' operators ended with adoption of a scale agreement. I 1897?July 4th walkout of 150,000 I miners, called by II. M. Ratchford, I president of the U. M. W. of A. to deplete an overstocked coal market, J which union officials feared would re- ' suit in wage reductions on account of < the slow coal trade; strike was called ' off after 12 weeks' duration, at the ? end of which the market had been de- ' pleted; first great successful strike of < the U. M. W. of A. ' 1900?Anthracite strike in Septem- 1 ber and October, engaged 132,000 and ' ended with miners getting 10 to 16 1 per cent increases in wnges. ' 1902?Great anthracite strike, led ' ty the late John Mitchell, as presi- ' dent of the U. M. W. of A., lasted 23 < weeks, May to October; 140,000 men engaged, and finally called off when < President Roosevelt appointed a com- ' mission that afterward gave the min- 1 ers a 10 per cent wage advance, and 1 made their contract for three years, I ending April 1, 1906. I 1919?Nation-wide soft coal strike t in November and December of 395,000 i miners called off by union in compli- v since with a court injunction, obtained ^ by Attorney General Palmer under the 4 wartime Lever fuel control law; com- I mission later appointed by President c Wilson gave miners an increase of t approximately 27 per ment in wages? ( hpir lflVffOcf oinrfln .? 6v?v ouigic mvicuar. ? Unlike the last great strike, the im- s lending one begins with warm weath- r r approaching while the 1919 shut- t lown came with winter. Stocks now ire more ample than then, but the y >resent situation is much like the d ourth of July walkout of 1897. Out r >f the strikes, both large and small, t he workers as a general proposition c lave won many benefits in increased C vages and improved working condi- b -ions. But victory has not always g >een theirs, though the big strike set- t Jements have favored them. The op- 1 jrator's successes, however, Include e vage reductions, denial of increased f vages, changed working conditions, c ind the crushing of two unions?the t irst national organization of miners, p ounded in 1860, which perished in a j series of strikes of strikes at the close f if the civil war, and the Workmen's ? Benevolent Association, an organiza- s Jon of anthracite workers, which was j lemoralized in 1875 after 15 years' ex- c Istence. . i The first coal strike in the United States occurred in 1849 inthe I'enn- t sSylvunia anthracite field when a Brit- ] hh miner, named Bates, organized a < local union and sought to Increase < wages and better working conditions, i His strike failed and Bates was forced 1 to leave the field and for 11 years the ? workers made no further uttempt at < organization. < Since Bates' day, many leaders have < been developed among the workers < and strikers of various sorts for varied purposes have been carried on, < the early fight being largely centered to smflll nrpnu r?r?r?ocirvr*ol 1 \r inoln/Jinir I . an entire state coal field. 1 Training Russians to Eat Our Corn 1 " i London, March 26.?Training the , Russian in the proper methods of , consuming American corn, has now , been undertaken by the American Relief Administration. The distribution of corn to approximately 5,000,000 adults in the Volga valley has begun, the first 18 trainloads of the American gift hav- , ing reached the famine areas accord- ( ing to advices of February 24. One , Russian funt per day, or roughly 14 ( ounces, is the feeding allowance for adults. So that they may get to know the possibilities of this new food not only from a nourishing but a palatable point of view, cards containing re- | ceipts are being sent to all American ( Relief Administration inspectors, vil- 1 lage relief committeees and distribution centers. j The receipts include such typical ( American dishes as corn mush, corn \ bread, corn biscuits, corn soup and com gruel. A warning against eat- , ing the com in the raw state and directions for its treatment in case of . spoilage are also being issued. ; This is the first time the Ameri- 1 can Relief Administration has distributed food directly to the individ- i ual for consumption in his own home. \ Child-feeding is always conducted en masse, about 2,000,000 Russian i children now being fed one bulaneed < meal a day in some 6,000 kitchens. < Many thousands of clams were kill- i ?>d alon^ the famous Pismo Beach in Southern California, by the cold weather recently, according to the fish and prame commissioner of San 1 I.uls Obispo. Thousands of pelicans i and sea birds swarmed the beach, feasting on the tftanis. Demonstration) in Boll Weevil Contrc "Can cotton be grown profitably ur Jer boll weevil conditions?" is a que tion that is not only of vital impof ance to the farmer, but also to tl entire industrial and commercial lii of the South. In the opinion of thus who have given the subject carefi investigation,' it is the leading prol !em before that section today. Tt presence of the boll weevil is a faett that must be reckoned with in all fi ture cotton production, as it in ever probability has come to stay. Th means, that in order to grow cottoi the grower must adopt a new cours of procedure as respects his method of culture, and acquaint himself will and put into practice, measures i weevil control, if he is to make crop. How to grow cotton under weev conditions has been well worked ou The Bureau of Entomology of the L S. Department of Agriculture hu been studying and investigating th life history and habits of the boll wet v*il ever since the insect crossed th Rio Grande river from Mexico in 1S91 In the meantime, careful research an experiments have been made with th knew of determining what methods o ontrol, both direct and indirect, en be used most economically and etfoc Lively. While ro device or method ha been found to entirely exterminate th iveevil, the Department authoritie have demonstrated beyond a doubt that the application of calcium arsen *te, properly applied, will keep the m sect in check iong enough to ul!o\ the cotton plant to develop a full se >f bolls. There are those who believe tha the measures of control as reeom Mended and demonstrated by the De lartment of Agriculture, are the bes ,hat have been proposed. As an ex jression of confidence in the practica jility of these methods of weevil eon :rol, the Atlantic Coast Line Hail oad, Ceo. H. McFadden & Bro., Su ^annah, Ga., S. M. Bully & Son. Sa annah, Ga., cotton factors, Citizen Ii Southern Bank, Savannah, and tin Jarrett Cotton Co., Augusta, Gn., ii onjunction with the Southern Cot on Oil company and the Virginia 'arolina Chemical company, who initi ted the undertaking, have jointly ubscribed to a fund to be used in car ying out such demonstrations on cot on farms. In accordance with the arranget irogrnm, it is proposed to conduc lemonstrations at approximately 4: ioints adjacent to the mill and fac ory points the Southern Cotton Oi ompany and the Vivginia-CniVdini hemieal company in the state o forth Carolina, South Carolina, Geor ia and Alabama. Jn all, demonstru ions will be carried out on somcthini ike 300 farms lux .belt. A ach of these locations sfx or eigh arms will be selected on which cal ium arsenate dusting operations wil >e conducted and specific direction riven the grower in regard to th >reparaticn of the land, fertilizatior >lanting, cultivating the crop and th tpplication of calcium arsenate, eae] itep taken to be in line with th iroved experience of the Delta lab >ratory of the United States Depart nent of Agriculture. At each point where a demonstrn .ion is conducted, some individual cm ployee of the Southern Cotton O :ompany familiar with and qualified t lo the work, has been selected, an vill be detached from his regular du ties to such extent as may he neces ;ary to supervise and direct th iemonstration locally, and to this en in organization as to personnel, meth ids and machinery has been perfect ?d. The general direction of the wqr will be under the supervision of D A. E. Grantham, director of the Agr cultural Service Bureau of the Vii Icinia-Gurolina Chemical company an Dr. T. E. Bargcron of the Souther Cotton Oil company. Dr. Granthai is an expert agronomist, and was fo mbany years connected with two c the state agricultural colleges and e> periment stations, before entering tli services of the Virginin-Carolin Chemical company. Washington Comment Ideas are epidemic, as well as it lluenza. Someone sees a "ghost which throws stones or sets the hous an fire, and behold, all over the cour try comes reports of "ghosts." Som ane who has a reason for not want in the childen of today well educate sees a mythical objection to the Tov ner-Sterling bill, now before congres which provides for a Department < Education and a chief who is a men ber of the cabinet, and all over th country little men of little minds ech the cry of "paternalism." The Towner-Sterling bill re quirt these three things in" a state before can receive the "paternal" federal ai to education provided in the bill: 1. A public school opportunity < not less than 24 weeks. 2. Compulsory attendance at son school, public or private, for at leai ?4 weeks in the year, of all childrt l>etween 7 and 14. 3. English as the basic language ? instruction in all schools, public an private, in the common branches. The man who comes out in the ope and says those provisions are wron or un-American, or vicious may ha\ courage, if not sense. As a matter cf sober fact, there ni no real objections to the bill, even t those who don't want it! The on persons who don't want it are the pe< pie who have always fought educatio who see in education of the masses tl end of spiritual and thus civil tyrai ny. But the people of the Unit* States as a whole want education, h i & , iu/invn L'J, IVZZ* A " A Few il t. f. s A FEW J\ bear a coat ol ] e ?. And it's s ?1 cream. B , 1 dries quicl f be astonisl And then and Seat I ^op and st /our car.? s "i BAILEY BUILD! ;; SUPPLY CO 1 . UNION, S. C. t t , t, lieve in euucat.on, demand education,| ] > know that education is the one and ! . only salvation for both the individual' \ 1 and the nation. j i Talk is cheap. Action takes thought, f and time. When the Towner-Sterling i i . bill passes it will pass because enough ; .| newspapers, clergymen, educators, in-1 r iluential men and common, ordinary, t every-day citizens have printed, talked t and written about their convictions I - both to and at their respective legis- j 1 lators. s You who read this have a repre-1 I e sentative in congress and the right to j i. address two senators. Three two-cent e stamps and your convictions sent to, h these gentlemen will aid in bringing to! e your schools, your community, your i- children the same federal aid vwhi.-h; -j has helped your and other comnumi-' ties in roads, in agriculture, in postal , - facilities, in reclamation, in mining 9 "? f i- methods, n forestry, n all the hundred iij and one ways in which Uncle Sam as-j o sists Americans to be better, abler d and more prosperous citizens, i- Do it now! e For shame, Indiana! d John Moilick, sixteen years old, or i-: pnnn boy 111 shovt trousers, has en-j 1 tered the Indiana state prison at Mich-' j if/an City for life! k. The judge who sent him there is( r. I.Judge Coring, Valparaiso circuit i-1 court. r-j It makes no difference what his dj crime may have been. It happens to j i> i have been shooting to death his foster-! n mother. But can crime, no matter how, ir, horrible, which is committed by a >f | legal, moral and mental infant be just-' tifiably punished by the lifelong e\piie at ion of the man into which that ina fant will grow? I This is 110 argument that John Mollick shouldn't he jailed, or that the | doubtless moderate and humane laws of the sovereign and great state of i- Indiana should not be carried out. Bui it is an argument against what seems it- to he a travesty of socalled "justice." I-1 If laws are well to serve the body p.?n iej tie they must not only be just laws, g ! hut must be administered so that jus>d tice results. John Mollick may be f.' criminally insane?if so, he could s, either be cured or not cured, but docif tors, not jurists, must say. John Mol1-5 lick may be morally responsible for ipi his act, but he is only a child. Let 10 1 the reader of these lines who sees the i justice which Christ taught, in making ;s a man pay all his life for the crime of it i a boy, ask himself whether he thinks id he should be whipped today for the ! apples he stole when a child? if Doubtless some wise and tolerant governor of Indiana will see to it that ?e' John Mollick gets a chance to be nt' something else than a victim of a >n court procedure evidently more interested in the letter than the spirit of ,f the law. Meanwhile, Indiana, and id many another state, can look serious' ly to their laws, courts and methods >n to see what manner of "justice" is this g I which can wreak society's vengeance to upon children. re Royal Wedding Party >y! Is Very Human ly o- London, March 15.? Princess Mary n, lorowed Viscount I.ascelles sword to ie cut the huge wedding cake which was a- perved at her wedding breakfast. ?d When the party had assembled in the e- dining room of Buckingham Palace, rxr*T">V /I ^ Hours and a N< and H ' hours' work?and you are rea< id new car. That ig, it looks brand Du Pont Auto Finisn. o easy to do I Fairly flows off the irush strokes disappear of themselve tdy. And what a finish! (It will Is led at the results. Six beautiful col after your car is painted, use Du 1 Dressing. Thtse tw o Du Pont prodi ;at upholstery look as they did on tl -Stop in the store today. iRS I' 8 Iiess *herc it a Da Pont R. U<^j| paint orocrniah prod- idf A?j[| I uct made ior every I III I purpote by America'? iOi V tf [vi!?p- George invited the 1'iinccss to .cad the attack on the formidable ;' !?>) pound confection. Viscount I.aseellcs net id as her es ml and as they approached the h im cake he handed Iter his sword. Prini Henry who was close behind his sister offered to >ret a hatchet hut Princess Mary laughingly deeliued. The Duke of York evoked a laugh by suggesting that a Lou's (machine? uun might settle the thing move expeditiously than eithei sword or hatchet. The Daily News correspondent who thus describes the fun at ihe wedding breakfast failed to stat what success the Princess had wi.h the sw id He says that when the queen mother. Alexandra arrivcr at Duckingk;m | Palace after the wedding ceremony, i Princess Mary made an impctuoii-' dash at her and the two mhraci 1 1 feet innately. The-Duke of York remarked that Queen Alexandra was the tir-t to 1. -I the bride hut Queen Mary smilinc > i futed it, saying that she had k'n o iL the princess when the register was being signed in the cl ap 1 of Fd.\.i>d. the Confessor. "Well, anyhow," the Duke of V ol. is quoted as saying. "I am go"i.g i I the first bachelor to kiss her," am: in did it so enmhntienllv > *<-, - laugh at his expense. King George suggested tint tie \ Duke might like to kiss a'1 t!>e In-idf maids also I ut at this point .h. Did < nerve < vidently failed hit-. Measure of Old Life Returns; Moscow, Mareh i 'urtailni n: of the powers of the die.uuled Ch k.i has loosened Russia's tongue and is restoring a measure of its old life. No longer greatly fearin r the ire > f the inquisition, most of Moscow's residents, though .-til somewhat' chary of talking ;> liti. in places, Uu\e little hesitaiion no.? in expressing what they think of tl it. in general. They smile more often, give 111 a 'parties," and are beginning again to extend old time Russian hospital ty to strangers without fe*r that the presence of an unknown gut-st in their quarters will bring an armed Clieka agent there to investigate. Rallied young nun id' the old class of aristocrats, who survived the world war, perhaps two or three campaigns of the civil war and who spent time in prisons are returning to their old habits of enio\ ivimit Some of them look like ghasts returned to a land that is a graveyard of their former wealth hut, if they are ghosts, they are merry ones and dance gaily on their own tomhston *s. Conditions have changed and they must spend a part of their hours working. They have few or no servants and must do their own washing and rooking. The princess who once ordered from Paris half a dozen gowns at a time, herself mends that one of P.H I vintage which she managed to save. But she wears it gaily and, since the Chckn menace stems only one to remember and even joke about, she dances in it all night. The "ghosts" are happy to escape the grnve. The nightmare years are behind them. They are revelling in freedom. Four years of army ra lions, two years of prison soup, a jw Carfow Easy! iy to step into a new if you give it ; brush like thick s. Sets hard and isf too.) You will ors to choose from. Pont Top Renewer :cts will make your le day you bought rj year or mi of nothing; much ut all and i ii\v champagne and cavair, oven if it takes the last of the rubles they earn a- clerks, mechanics, chafl'eurs, or any other job open for a prince, baron or count. A bottle of vodka may represent the pt i? e they pot for the last trinket j^| their aristocratic old grandmother managed to save. But the. Cheka ia not at the door tonight. Tomorrow may go hang. Says Children Start To School too Early Santa Uosa, Cal., March 20. -Bo\ and girls of small towns should r.: * allowed to see the inside of :hool louses until they are ten years old. I.uther Bur bank, noted plant wizard, 11 i 1.11< 11 in a message responding to it gs from neighbors on hi4- ? i ii ibd i\ here recently. "J peak of the boy or g"i" j hi i lie privilege of being it . . < , the only place that is truly fit ' bring up n boy or plant? rh< com I t i'v or the Miiall town the rearer ? liii'.i.ii the het'?i," h said. "In th> ease of children ton pelled to live i' the city, the temptation- are so grea* jtl.e 1 i. -o artificial, the atmosph.r | -o like that of a In th uise, that a hild should be p . o il in :,.u . I earlier a> a matter o." - ifeg'.:.;rd." M ? Burb.ml; lite v I wit h plant ha> cor * . : hint ' 11. sunn' t r at ii'. .1 . .!? ? li? I i." in the hiuli":'* tii \. np:r.er; [plant life i*- i"M'iit'al ti i | development nl human ii:'? \!l animal life i?< s. n? vironinent, hut of ?l! living i.:: child i- the must ? u-iittve " he <' hired. ' Stirmun..:. . art upon .. : tin outside world i -ts upon the i.ite of a camera K.i y possible nolo m e will leave it s ilium-s upon Ii ilnii!. in many rases even overcoming heredity. A i hiltl literally ah oilo environment. The proper i >fliume applied during the intpressioti' ihlo perio i v. ill cause an effect that I vvi.l In- pronounced, immediate and permanent. "IMeK out any trait which you niHy desire in a normal child, honesty, fairness. purity, lovableness, industry, lhi ift. what not; by surrounding a elrld with sunshine from your heart and the open sky giving it free communion with nature, well-hnlanccd and nutritious food and you may fully attain the desired object." I ^ Peal of Eight Bells For Wrexham Tower New Haven, Cnnn,, March 27.? The peal of eight bells to go into Wrexham Tower in the Markness Memorial Quadrangle at Ynle Uni vers it y ii? ? being mailo ready for shipment front l-oughhorough, England, where it was east, to this city. On February >7 the peal was hung in I.niiirhhorough and Cambridge Surprise Major was rung on the hells. The ringing required fi.Ofifl changes and it was considered one of the best ringing achievements in that town. The hells were east in the foundry of John Taylo'j A Co., and were rung from the foundry tower, and the bells afterwards exhibited for benefit of the Ijoughhorough War Memorial. Printers' ink pays,