The watchman and southron. (Sumter, S.C.) 1881-1930, November 13, 1920, Image 7
A Plea Fer Football
Better Attendance it Games
a Newsnity?Championship
? Game With Columbia
Thursday
Football fane do you realize the
fact that the Sumtrr high school team
haa an excellent ehaneo of capturing
the State championship? With the
help and cooperation of the citizens
and busfoese men of 8umter they can
refeeh their goal. With a cheering
t:rowd on the aide llnet this will cre?
ate a stimulus that will be hard to
overcome. On Thursday. Armistice
Hay. the local boys meet the eleven
of the Columbia high school In a gume
which Will in all probabllty determine
which team shall repersent this sec?
tion of the State in the final selection
of a championship club. This Ig ths
moat important game played In Bum
t*?r in many yearn. Several weels ago
th*ee same teams met In Columbia In
a I to ? tie but the fighting bunch of
Coach Dargan's are determined to
show ths'r superiority tHlH time. Ths
game la bound to be a scrap from
start to finish
A word about the Sumter boys. In
the backfield there are five men. all
dub's: thinkers and fast runners. Wray
st auarter. Wright. Chandler and De
Lorme at halves and the line plug?
ging Wheeler tt fullback can be re
'led upon for consistent gains at all
time*. In the line we* find two of the
b"tt tackles in high school ball In
Capt Burns ftnd Frank gholar. *At
tnda Weinberg and* Friar are both
hard and sure tackier* who play hard
atl of the lime. The center of the line
im alto strong cooila?,-ig of Bnc<< ;.t
renter and Uatfle.'d and JBIand at
gusrda This trio are hard flghterr
who ate in the game and In every
pier.
Let the people of Sumter show th^ir
u r-reclatlon cv the efforts of these
boys by tun Ing out in large numbers
on Thursday, th?? eleventh. Bear ir
mlnrl them* faets: the time 3:80
o'clock; the plnce. the fair grounds;
the price 85 and 50 cents
"A Student".
thi: spick or LIFE
Too Often 'Tftj So.
I'd.?"Have you forgotten you owe
me ft so dollars? 1
Nad?"No. not. yet. Qlve me time
and I will "?Do Jonge Monthly.
Pkk the Cargo.
We favor an early opening of trade
with Oermsny and Husslu. bu.t hold
that the first hundred ship-loads of
freight sent to those countries ahoujd
be eomposed of* former rerfldnts of
said -ountrles.?Capper's Weekly (To
tea*).
A Lett-Over.
Mletreea <ta newly Installed cook)
??Matthews' What does this mean?
How dkl this policeman get here?"
Cook (equal to the occasion)?
"Dunno. mum 'E must 'ave bin left
over by the last cook."?London
opinion.
Thon?lilies* of IIhn.
Ltfo-Qusrd (rushing up excltedly>
?"Madam, your poor husband has
Just been drowned.**
The Widow (In bathing costume) ?
"And have they found his body?"
Life-award? No. It's lost."
Widow?"Now. isn't that just too
provoking?he had the key to our
bath-house around hte neck."?Tiger
Wasn't Hissing.
There was a commotion In the rear
of the theater, and the usher was se?r
ejecting a man. The mln was splut.
taring angrily when the manager of
the theater came Into the lobby.
"Why did yon ject this man?" auk
ashed the mansger.
"He Was hissing the performance,"
replied the usher.
"Why did you hies the perform
aace?" asked the manager.
"I d-d-dldnf h-b-hhlss.' splut?
tered the man. "I m-sn-an-merely *-?
e-aaid t-t-to m-tn-my f-f-f-frlend be?
side me: '8-S-S-S-Sammy. Is-s-s-n't
the s-*-s-e-?!ngtng s-s-s-s-euperb!' "?
Cincinnati Jpnqulrer. ?
i i
Literally True.
Brown?-'Th*t new cook of ours
makes even thing out of the cook?
book."
Derby?1 Th?n that must have been
one of the rov irs 1 tasted in the pie
last night."?Coroell Widow.
IIomt Spirillen? Helps,
lira Bitter (to Aunt Jam*, who Is
siting her)? Shall we go to the
loctur?*.' play rsrds. or pass the
evening with out deceased relatives?"
?London Opinion.
Those Out-of-Dste Swedes
An American correspondent m Swe?
den save the Swedish ;n ?? working
rontendedly Why. the old-fashioned
things:?Nfacon "Telegraph."
Suggestive
Blac If the principe I shade In the
new Oermsn flags It serves th?
i0H8Mt 'I'ttv of signifying that mutton
iliiv's record and Its mourning for
the consequences.?Baltimore "Amer
icaa."
Cause or F.nVct
"Plge esueed the war." declsres an
Austrian count. Don't know ai?o\it
Ihst. but we d ? know thst the well
known wir produced ?i I'd of hogs.?
Columla Ilecord.
No Spirits Desired
Lady Astor says the prohibttlonl?ts
ere "still out of touch with the spirit
of *h* time* ' That's what keeps them
sober.?Peoria Transcript.
New York. Nov. M ?Cofidllhtni in
Asia MIomt and F.m pOan Turkcv Is
s?? serious that the Near K.ist Relief
will n*t further expos* relief workers]
to tho peid This announe ,nent fol
love* the reeetpt of cablegrams saying
J. P. t*iM?ms relief worker, and a na?
tive of Apalnchicoio. Florida. Is be?
ing held h) Turkish i\*thmHht(?1*.
Loot From
Abbas Touman
Enver Pasha, Young Turk Lead
er, Pillaged Palaces of Russian
Nobilit
_
Constantinople, Nov. 10.?Pillage b>
tho^Turks of the Imperial Russian
watering-place of Abbas Touman In
the Caucasus mountains, is being In?
vestigated here. A targe quantity of
the furnishings und paintings belong?
ing to the luxurious villa* of this lit?
tle city, where many of life aristocracy
Of Russia used to pa^. (hi It vacations,
nas been .uscovered in Constantino?
ple Home of these furnishings are
in the palace of Enver Pasha, form
?rly Turkish war minister, on the
CosphoruS. now occupied by the
French general, staff
The pillage of Abbes Touman is one
of the untold stories of the rapacious
Turkish pashas and generals. Abbas
Touman is nnknown outside of Rus?
sia. Yet it was) one of the little pa?
radises with which countries lying
near the Black Sen arf blessed. Nestl?
ing In th* mountains of Georgia. It
possessed one of tht beautiful and
lengthy driveways for which tho Cau?
casus is famous. During the hot sum?
mer months, the Imperial Russian
family used to pass' a few week*
umong! the pines of this rich center
of museums, villas and churches.
Up the beautiful roads from Batumj
to Tiflis. irame !n tht spring of 1917,
the Turkish army, following on the
retreat of the Russian army, which
had gone bolshevik. The Turks were
imazo.l at the riches or Abbas Tou?
man. The commandant of tha 31st
brigade sealed UP all the valuables he
?ould find. Then came the signing
i)f the treaty by which Abbas Tou?
man was left to Oecrgla
No sooner had the Turkish com?
mander learned of ?I is treaty than he
fathered up. 'Mfore lesAriftg, all valu
it?l. * Bifid hurried tluni lo P.;ilum.
He notified Essad Pasha at Constan?
tinople that hlsloot should be offer
ad to the Sultan. Meanwhile, as his
urmy withdrew it Is charged that he
rystematlcally rebbe.. churches anr*
convents and sent these treasures also
to Batum. Two othei Turkish com
rnanders are alleged to have shared bjj
the loot.
Finally ?ho three men sent their
'elatlve shares to Constantinople.
Shen Hnver Pash demanded to have
i look at the three lots. As minister
ft war, he took his choice and sent
loms of the furniture and pictures to
kouroutschesme, hi* marble faced]
)?taco on the Bosphorus, where they
?t.H remain.
Counterfeit Pas
ports Issued
Paris, Nov. in.?Scores of counter
eit Polish passports have been issued
n the last few weekb to persons go?
ng to the United States, according to
be Paris police who say they were
old for from f OO id 1,000 francs to
?ersons to whom the authorized Pol
?h consulate refused to kIvc visas.
A traveling bag full of blank forma
nd rubber stamps, one of which was
he counterfeit American form, was
aken by the police who watched a
?ogus consulate until a man known
is the former Itursian Lleutenan:
Isimansky went there for bis outfit.
This brought about the arrest of his
wo confederates.
Philadelphia Do
mestlc Scienct!
Philadelphia, Nov. 9.? The art of
nuking Philadelphia scrapple, chow
:how, chill smuce and of preserving
fruit is now taught here in the public
ichools.
Instructors in the domestic science
lepartruCnt have asked pupils to
vrlng part of their mother's canning
iad preserving utensils to school
The youngaiers an.? Lolng taught the
^est methods of preserving.
Other innovations Introduced in lo
m1 schools in an effort to train glrla
or home-making are:
Little Mothers* Classes, under su?
pervision of tho Child Federation.
Grocery atorea in some schools tc
:each arithmetic and economy in buy?
ing.
Millinery and dress-making in th.*
Olds' Trade School.
School cafeterias with domestl?
science classes.
In the Little Mothers' Classes the
pupils when they cannot borrow a rein
baby from one of the mothers in the
neighborhood. practice on dolls as
large as an average Infant. They ure
taught bow to wash and dress the
r .ii y and Instructed in health rules for
Its care. Many of the small pupils In
the congested districts of the city
bring their own wards for tho class
to "mother."
Hanover, Oermany, Nov. b.?Field
Marshal von Hindenburg, speaking at
a demonstration of students on the oc?
casion of his 73rd birthday said:
"The tln.rts ore hard. Wo cannot
get awty from that. But it Is a man's
business to look danger In the eye and
discount It. Ood has not yet forsaken
rio- German people. Much has been
taken from us. but God will give it
bsi k lo us again, one thing i* left us
? our fatherland. To that fatherland
v. e shall rllng without respect for
party divisions 1 make this appeal
to the Gorman youths."
Tree and t'.asy.
Dean Jones Of Yah- is credited wl?h
thtfl definition of freedom of speech:
' The liberty to say what you think
without thinking what you say."
?Chicago "Tribune."
Fryorr!
Mrs Thrlcewedd?"Well. FJlsle. how
do you like your new papa?"
BlsiC?"Oh mama, do go on marry?
ing men like that, he's given iti? * a
whole dollar."?Doston Transcript.
< )\crbanled.
? Was that n nev. girl I na\v you
with last night.'**
"N'ope. Just the old o i?" painted
sver."?The New .Mn'orltv
Y. M. C. A. Scholarship?
More Than Six Million Dollar
Appropriated by the War
Work Council
New York, Nov. 9.?More Ulan $0.
(?OO.ooo has been appropriated by the
War Work Council of the Young Men'?
Christian Association for free scholar
ships sind educational service for
Xonner service men. The latest ap?
propriation, of $1,960,000 just an?
nounced brings the total to 16,100,00
Free scholarship awards have been
given to H8.5S2 former service men,
the educational service committee ha
reported to the council, representing
an outlay of $2,367,8u5. The men
aided represent every state and motu
than two-thirds of the cities an
counties, of the union, the com mittet
states.
Tho grand total, a considerable
portion of which Is now available for
scholarships, has been apportioned as
follows: Scholarships, $5,050,000;
Americanization work, $500,000; voca
tlonal service, $125,000; education:.:
lecture service, chiefly In rur*l com
munitles. $100,000; publicity, supervis?
ion and administration, $325,000.
Seven thousand volunteers, serving
on 1,582 committees supervised th?
granting of the scholarships alread"
awarded, examining 50.000 applicants.
The large number of applications re?
maining on file will be considered it
apportioning tho latest appropriation.
The council expects that before thr
end of the educational year on June
30, at least 60.000 former service me
will have received assistance from th*
Y. M. C. A. in educating themselves
Treasure in Old Trunk
^Philadelphia, Nov. io.?An old
trunk for which 9h<? paid $1.00 to a
junk dealer in Soranton. Pa., before
^he moved front that city recently har
addvd $395 in gold to the capital of
Mrs. Alfred Bltterlin, of Collingdale
Pa.
Believing tho trunk had outlived its
usejulness, Mrs. Bltterlin started to
burn it. A Jingle attracted her at
'.? ntlon. the fire was extinguished an<'
Mrs. Bltterlin extracted the gold
pieces from the lining of the trunk.
Forewarned Is Forearmed
Owner of the House (to burglar) ?
'Pardon me for disturbing you, but
would you be so good as to post this
letter for me? It must go to-night.
!Ts the premium for my burglary In?
surance."?London Opinion.
The News Direct
"Those people never read a news
Sapor i i'om one year s end to tho
other."
"ThoA doesn't matter; they've en
gag*d ?i maid who's lived in about
every other family on the block."?
Baltimore American.
Heady to Forget.
Magistrate?"Do you want a law?
yer to defend oyu ?"
Prisoner?"Not particularly, sir.'*
Mug'atratc?"Well, what do you
?ropose to do about the case?"
Prisoner?"Oh, I'm quite willing to
drop it as far as I'm concerned."
London Punch.
Helpful Elimination
"Well." said Farmer CorntosseY.
"I reckon I've done a pretty good af?
ternoon's work."
"Put all you dld,"yCommented Jud
Tunkins. eontemptously, "was to sit
on the fcnCe and whittle."
"Yes; but what I whittled up was
the family oulja board."?Washington
?tar- I_
Followed Directions.
Kva S? t* mty-fcur years old.
maid employed In Jersey City, was
locked up last night m the West
Thirtieth Street Police Station, charg?
ed with grand larceny. She is alleged
o have stolen $160 worth of articles
from a Sixth Avenue department store.
The explanation she gave was that*
?me saw a sign in the storo which read:l
"Customers, please take small pack?
ages home.j?New York Times.
Greenville, Nov. 11.? -Announce?
ment In mudc that a one hundred and
fifty thousand dollar pool has been
raised by local merchants to be ready
:n lend to farmerp or. their cotton be?
ginning Monday.
Other Way * Hound
"Did you ever fool with the stock
market 1
"No. I was In earnest. The stock
market did the fooling."?Washington
Star.
slight Sarcasm
siie?"I never try to parade my
virtues."
He?"No. ir needs at least two to
make a parade."?Tyrihans (Chrhiti
anla).
One Argument Against tho II. C. of L.
"Don't charge so much for the
coat. Remember, the cheaper it ?a
the 'es? 1 shall o\v? y?u." - - Kolds
Hans (Copenhagen).
The Been nnd the Unseen.
"We need some new rug**, dear."
' hon'i we need blankets- more?"
"Yes, but who sera blankets.'*'??
boston Transcript.
she Shines for Other*.
'The girl who shim's brightest in
society." remarked lite observer of
Events nod Things, "ilo? sn'l always
brighten up her own home "?Yon
ket a Statesman.
Painful.
Oenlus !s the enpneily for making
somebody else take Infinite pulns,j-*
S'ev YoiK "Kvenlng Hun '"
-?????wp?'?'
Geographic News
Bulletin
(ireece?New Nation of An Old
People
Washington. Nov. It.?Tho question
of succession jto the throne of King
Alexander of (Ireece tufTls world in?
terest once more to southeastern Eu?
rope. The changes Greece has un?
dergone territorially and the part it
has played in the wars and crises of
its corner of the world are discussed
in the following buleltin issued by the
National Geographic society:
'What is Greece?
'In the light of the past the an
might well be tentative, for a
ieflnition of Greece's area at any
time during the thousands of years
>f its history would have held good
hardly for a Quarter century; and in
latter years, so swift have been the
changes in the New Greece, each de?
cade has seen the fixing of new boun?
daries.
Grooee "A Sea Surrounded by Land"
"Not until modern times?except
during the momentary empire of Alex?
ander?has 'Greece' meant a nation.
In the Grecian Golden Age, as well as
before and since, Greece was a house
divided against itself. Its detailed
history would mean the history of ,
more than 150 separate states. And
et there was at all times some feel?
ing of riehenlc nationality even
though the rivalries among the va?
rious groups stood in tho way of fu?
sion into a single nation.
"While Great Britain may be de?
scribed as a land surrounded by seas,
Greece may be said to be 'a sea sur?
rounded by land.' .The Hellenes have
always been a sca-faring folk, and
the Mediterranean sea and more par?
ticularly thn Aegean have been their ]
own particular 'herring ponds.' The
islands of the eastern Mediterranean
eeanv (Ireek territory in their en?
tirety, and this was true also of the
s lund-lii;e Peloponnesus .and some
'liter portions' of the Greek penin?
sula. But an equally important
it of Greece?or better, of the land
of the Hellenes?were the settlements j
ide by Its mariners on the shores of
the mainland that hem in the Medi
erranean. These settlements constl- ,
Luted an unbrokenn fringe of Hellas
along the shores of Asia Minor, and ,
spattered communities on the shores
of Italy, in Sicily, even in northern ,
Africa aad what is now southern
France. This was the loose 'Greece' 1
or Hellas at its greatest?a domain :
of one people but of many states.
Greece find League of Nations Against
External Aggression.
"Greece gave the world Its first.
League of Nations: the DeHgn League,
organize,i in 4 4 7'P.. C. by way of mu?
tual protection against the 'external j
aggression' of/l'ersia. which had a ]
sort of Berlln-to-Bagdad ambition of j
it? own in those days. Athens was ?
the only 'principal power* in this ,
league and was the recognized leader f
of the organisation. t
"Later came the hegemony of Ath- ,
ops by force, tho paradoxical empire
>f a democracy, bereft even of the |
trapping:; of monarchy. At this period |
and under what may be termed the ,
empires of Sparta and Thebes, a close ,
approach to -a Greek nation may be \
said to have existed; but In none of (
these eras were most of the territories ,
peopled by Greeks included, and even
largo parts of the Greek peninsula it?
self were governed by other Hellenic 1
states. For a brief period under
Alexander the Great, Greece reached
the status of a nation, but it was a
t'ysion forced by a virtual outsider
and contained much territory inhabit?
ed by others than Greeks; and on
the death of the great military genius ;
the Hellenes separated again into nu?
merous governmental units.
"Greece, expanding from the city '
state, had comprised for a moment
almost tho whole civilizoj world; but
the m eat dilation was followed, by
an equally great contraction. Greece
fell under the rlslnp: power of Rome,
and became a mere province in the
western empire.
"The military ability and power of
the Greeks died under the Roman
yoke; hut when the Eastern Empire
was formed with Constantinople as its
seat, Greek culture conquered where.
Greek arms could hot, and Byzantium
became in reality a great Greek state.
Once myore the territory that by con?
struct ?on at least, can bo regarded as
Greece, spread outward until it held
within its boundaries much of south?
eastern Europe. It Is on reviving tho
glory of this period in Grecian history
that Greek amb'tion, when it could
live at all, has dwelt.
Greece Snuffed Om "Territorially
"The night of Greece's martyrdom
was not under the Roman yuke but
in the long period from the fall of
Bvaantium to modern times. During
that time Greece was all but snuffed
out territorially while the blood of
its people suffered dilution from the
hordes of conquerors and immigrants
of almost every nation of Europe that
poured in upon It?Albanians, Slavs,
Teutons, Spanisn, French, Venetians,
Turks. In I?Sn Turkey dually gained
complete dominance of what hud beeu
Greece.
"Greet e, as a nation, was born again
in 1829 as a result of at. most turbu?
lent war of indept mlence againsl
Turkey, which was at the same time a
series of civil wars among contending
leaders ;md factions. The new Greece
which emerged under the Joint pro?
tection of Great Britain. France and
? Russia comprised besides the Cyclndes
Islands and the nearby Peloponnesus,
a strip of land about ft miles wide
across the peninsula north ?f the
Peloponnesus, it haa been the con
Btant ambition of modern Greece to
push its bopp.uarics outward from this
region Wh ?h it considers only a nu?
cleus, until mue| ?f not .ill of Hellas
irrldeuta' should be Included This
ambition has led h? > continuous sei les
Of Internal crises and external wars.
Now U"se to Cherished Ambition
?Now. ninety years after the
achievement of Greek independence,
the territory of the kingdom Is ap
proximal el \ throe times ,-is gr.-al as
when ii was established Thanks to
the great war and the dismemberment
of Turkey, Greece now includes much
of old Macedonia and southern
Thrace, practically ah o| the islands
of the Aegean, and a large part of th?
province of Smyrna on the coast of
Asia Minor. The Greek Mag flies al?
most within a stone's throw of the
Dardanelles?a hare f?u miles from,
Constantinople. Greece has advanced
far toward attaining her. ambition.
"Tho modern Kingdom of the Hel?
lenes?as Greece is officially known?
has had five rulers Not one has
served until his natural death or vol?
untary abdication. Tho first ruler,
president of the abortive Greek re?
public, organized before independence
was entirely assured, was assassinat?
ed. Otto, prince of Bavaria, who was
given the throne in 1832, was deposed
in 1862. Prince George of Schleswig
Holstein, who was then called to the
throne, ruled for lifty-one years but
was assassinated in 1913. His son
Constantino was deposed in 1116 be?
cause of his sympathy for the German
cause. The death of Alexander, who
succeeded Constantino, was due to
an unusual accident."
French Cook?
ing Decadent
World War Said to Have Killed
Art of Pastry Making
Paris, Nov. 10.?The art of cooking
in France and the excellence of the
pastries are passipg, say some pessi?
mists.
Apprentices, said speakers at the
recent convention of pastry makers,
can no longer be found and "the art
of pastry making is dead or will be
soon." This is said also to be the
case with cooks. Those who worked
for years step by step to. the rank of
chef ar?' reported extinct. Brillat
Savarian. w hose "Physiology of Taste
century ago. put cookery on the
plane of an art and whose descriptions
were almost as satisfying as the food
itself, did not forsee the war with its
social and economic changes.
Travelers from other countries may
not all agree that France's reputed
supremacy in the kitchen is in danger
but disconsolate makers of cakes and
sauces seem convinced that even when
the days of gray bread and yellow
fatted, stringy, frozen meat are over,
there will not be a revival of the "lost
art" of the pot and pan.
Land Grabbing
at Vienna
Vienna. Nov. 10?Cultivators of the
garden plot allotments on govern?
ment land near this city are agitat?
ing to secure title to their holdings.
There are about 60.000 of these plots,
fach of about r?00 square feet on the
Mopes of the great Vienna forest and
the cultivators have organised to get
title and permission to build huts.
While expressing its sympathy with
them the government officials replied
to a great demonstration held the
other day that they Were opening up
the whole question of land expropria?
tion, a delicate issue between the two
dominant parties, and one on which
the demonstrators themselves are di?
vided when it cornea to applying it t"
private estates.
Tobnooo Growers Meet in Kaleigh.
Raleigh. N. C. Nov. 10.?Curtail?
ment of the 11'Jl crop of tobacco
J3 1-3 per cent., tho production of am?
ple food crops and the launching of
plans for the nationalization of state
associations of tobaceo growers with
tho final goal of national cooperative
marketing of tobacco were deter?
mined upon here today by representa?
tives of the growers' associations in
Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia.
Leaders of the movement declared
that already plans were under way
looking toward the enforcement of
the reduction agreement, which,, it. is
believed, Will reduce the bright to?
bacco production In the four states
represented by more than lOO.OOO.OQO
pounds.
An organization executive commit?
tee was named with power to employ
expert services looking toward the
duplication of the plans of the Cali?
fornia Fruit Growers' association, tho
scheme to embraco every tobacco
growing -fate in the union. Formal
nationalization cf the associations is
expected t<> materialize before Jan?
uary I, 1921.
Still On the Job.
The girls who used to knit socks for
tho soldiers now seem to be darning
them for the same parties.?St. Paul
Non-Fortlzan Leader.
Knowing lTis Place
"Pid you order ham and eggs'?'"
asked the head waiter.
??Certainly not. I humbly requested
them." -Washington "Star."
Let ?Eni Flicker?
There la a discussion Rolng on as to
whether the pictures are bad for the
sigbt. The genera1 experience is thi.t
they hi ing a film l>efore the eyes.-?
The Pas-in? Show (London.)
Police Power.
Mr. P? ck?"Would yon .mind com
pelling me to move on, officer? I've
been waiting on this corner three
hours for my wife."?Puck.
After paying our meat bill, wo know
just how Rhylock felt when he de?
manded his pound of flesh after pay?
ing for it.?St. Paul Non-Partisan
, Leader.
West Wants
Fedei
Rocky Mountain Stat
Convention to Asfc
$100,000,000 '
- ?i
Denver, Colo., Nov. 11?TttsVlj
convention of the National
Park Highway Association, wtfh
ly 100 delegates In attendance, o|
ed here today with a program
for congressional aid for the 12 mos*
westerly states in raising $lOO,OQ0$f9
for hard-surfacing the 6.600 mile* of
dirt roads ihut serve as conneitijg
links to form the National Psrk-ti
Park Highway. The convention srfb
last three days.
Stephen T. father, director of
National Park Service, officlthi Of
American Automobile Association, t|
Rotarians. Optimists and other w1
tern organizations, are partiell
The National Park-to-Park ff
Association will be put on a p4f|
nent organization basl?. and etste
local branches formed rn if stal
and to cities of the west.
Congress will be memorialized (.o
make this a federal highway, fonghj^
circling nine western states. C<Mo*#
do. Wyoming. Montana. Idaho, Wfesfc
ingtno. Oregon, California. Arizon~ $d
New Mexico and connecting V
tlonal parks.
Representatives of the governors
these states, as well as t tah. tsti
and Texas, are attending the ?on|
ence. which marks the close of
official tour dedicating this At&trU
motor way, with the start and |
in Denver. The trip required 71
noon and night meetings being b^
towns on the route to arouse Xht 'wri
to a greater appreciation^ of its Seph
Industrial and agricultural ppeslfcl
ties . Jgi,V
This wonder highway in
f a l.'Hat loop embraerp -oti *j
4/tcs4ee than continental "Bbr^;
touching in the course of itt. i
running noo.*e. Mesa Verdig;
Mountain. Yellowstone.
Mount Rainer, Crater Lake.
YousCmitc. Sequoia, Genera]
md Grand Canyon National pgrl
branch road will some <la,y
Zlon National Park in Ctaji.^
enne Great Falls, Spokan*
Tacomn. Portland. Sin Francis^?,
Angeles and Denver are ou th^ renfy
-?.-\jt
Exports to CMI| vf
h
United Slates Holds Lions Share
of Business
l 'At
Santiago. Nov. 1*.?Tbo
States continued far in the h;<
other nations in commerce.fW
In 1919, supplying nsajdy
Chile's total imports of M
This is shown by the annual f
of the superintendent of custsia*.
ports from North America imog
to $70.026.914 ngainst |74.tSU.H
1918. Great Britain Wa* eotOjkf
$28.423.274.
Total Chilean exports 4urlnr i
decreased more than *u?f*t.f^li
compared with 1918. ttils'W*? ',
chiefly, it is said, to the reduced
of nitrate, the predominant pre
tor export.
Mr. Reardon Hoars Run?**
-. * ?,t
Secretary of Chamber of C'-emm
E. I. Reardon stated that Jft
heard rumors iodsy that sbmaTbj
business houses of t6% city
sorted that tney *ere not
close up their business tomo
account of the Ptnewood cola1
because of none of the. sfor
business offices' closing tdjft
Armistice day. Artrdstlt* Aay
never been legally declarexl arhol
but the merchants and bJstn'desi
of the city h8.d a perfect right t#
among themselves to close ?&etr
nnes for today. r| ,
It is hardly possible that
doing business in the city of* ?u
I will go back on their aigne*d 0
ment to close up their busiar*
noon tomorrow. Surely these rumors
are unfounded, for our business swaft
i of the city cannot be of <h*t ogliber
- i 1.-?
Suiting ?ttm.
Official at Hrraid's College
want a coat of arms. sir. o* ?0t
New Knight?'Cost! PuY m?-ft**
for the ole suit!?! ea? afford ItP'^
London PasirtR Show.
Painful Meeting.
Bill-1- Just happened to run'
an old friend downtown."
Phil?'Was he glad to see vwt? 4
Bill?"You bet no*. I smashed. ?T*
whole right fender."?Cor^e^tl *(Wow'.
.' " ? i mm- ;
\ear-< hb ken.
Diner?"What on *a*th ,i* InM
broth made fr-m #hh>f? ^irrtfe^lf
Isn't i In?ken-broth!" !4o
Waiter?"Well, sir, iVi
oth in its mfanef IPs" ml
of the wat??r the eggs were boi
London Tit-Bits. - 4 .
-;-,,v M.^s ?
Spirits In the H/*Oe.
-. ??
Widovr Nansen?'Now. chNkrfitt+pW'
good when * am out. Remember pmp?
is In the table-leg #atWrtwg jtoilr?
Xarlkaturen tChrtstinnfa).
-_i_
Washington. Nov. t^.-^be Atil
qOes\(bn is believd b. be rtomM'tti
;is the United State? N concef^fgi;
official announcement try th*
embassy says that Italy s^?.f
Shi Via boundary Pne t.t Sgt>^j
The line Is east <?f whfM H kt
the Wllwn hnr.
i I km
l?n>p?Tiy Uerlne?vl
Miss Snips?"I wonder
Rave her age as twenty
married that rich Old ml
Miss Srtnppi.?"Oh.
made a discount for