in Im- Adept Staug- •iprt, Is Charse. ILLICIT TRAFFIC Many Shifting ttarln About Smug- £ f*r« ami TWr Dofctga--Difficult for Swedish Coastguards to Koft Thetn. rf$r..£ •&•• P:&. Stockholm. -- Bom running Into Sweden from Cterman^ hu devel- ^ oped Into nomethlng like a publle - -'. scandal, n| Swedish newspapers. §s:J The broken nature of the coast tine |£-; : and the thousands of small islands ' dotting the sea approaches are all in ig\«: . favor of attttggling enterprise, "'he craft engaged in this trade ar» h **nerai8y ®sawi11' flwt-aatllng schooners. ..V..?" i*apt*teed, as a rul«, by ez-oCSeers of ImperleJ German navy. Many of the skippers bear names well known In the records of submarine activity. Their daring and experience makes It very difficult for Swedish eoaatpMds toralop them. C / Landed After Night. From Beval, Koetock, Stettin, Luan<* other German ports these vessels put to sea, their cargo always a consigned, according to the ship's pad$ - pers, to some Finnish port. Once amonS th® rocky archipelago of east- Sweden, the cargo is landed plecemeal after nightfall on the rocks, from IK which it is later removed by accotnpl'ces ashore, who have a widely raratiled organisation for the Inland dta- C;"4, trlbutlon of the goods,* |pr1^ This Illicit traffic is said by Swedish papers to be enormous. The papers * ®re full of stirring stories about smugly >V'~ gters and their doings. They remain outside the territorial waters, cruising ^ about until their friends seize their chance to rush out in fast motor boats, ^ften In a heavy gale, transship the r>*t 'I<luor and disappear In the dangerous labyrinth of the archipelago. Lately the police have started a scheme to beat the rum runners at their own game. The other day a police boat, camouflaged as a smug- >•-# --, •---: :--.-- wsnfflrom of gllng craft, boarded a German schooner and loaded up to the gunwale the schooner's held, unco the fact that the schfener was Just outside the territorial lil»lt When the policemen tried to leave the schooner without peylng, the smugglers threatened to thrift* them overboard- and there was nothing for than but to pay for the liquor. v In another case, the correspoodeot was told, a gale blew up soon after the eoaift guards had Jfeirded a ship whtaSl happened to be uAthln the threemile Halt, and, owing ttrthe dangerous coast, the ship had to put oat to aea, taking the Swedish guards away to Gerssnnjt. la Sweden and la Finland many of the COM* ptyulatioo get their living by smuggling and refuse to go fishing and carry on their legitimate fiades. In Finland, where total prohibition prevails, eoo^tloas are even worse j than In Swed'jn. Fishing there has entirely ceased. It Is said, because ram running far more psoOtable business. f*V f~r* m This photograpb afrows therlet Ifcoad of the witon police (department guarding die Norfolk county courthouse, at Dedftam, Masai, darling On IwaHng of a motion for a new trial for- Nicola Sacco and BartoUmuneo Vaniettl. the two ItaUaa cotemuWrfi fomJSgumy last June of first degree murder. This case caused the attempt to bomb the American embaaaj In Part*, and communist demonstrations all over Europe and South America. ' Costly Stockings Causa Divorce. Chicago.--Because he refused to pay $3.50 for a pair of stockings for his wife, Albert Larson has been divorced. The couple had been married 17 years. Zlils Is an ingenious French contrivance which Instantaneously eotv; verts the finest walks and boulevards1 Into billboards. The cost erf operation to close to nothing. Water coming ' through the roller to the form of a spray passes through a perforated belt and as the machine is wheeled along It leaves a wet advertisement that r*> mains until the sun dries It up. • •» . - ".m lYioiiT' ' Silent Drama « Thing of Pasft - Scientific Discovery at IMnols University May Revolutionize Movie Industry. RESULT OF YEARS OF STUDY u of Mary Todd Kims. •xtremely Sensitive and Reliable "Photo-electric Cell" Whloh May Maks Pictures Talk. KU^KIO FID IS HEC&ARY Building, Now a ConfectioneryStere, Is Admirably Preserved--Houee In IMIoh Mrs. Lincoln Was ' Destroyed. * ' Lexington, Ky.--The home of Mary Todd Lincoln, where she lived from early childhood until her marriage te Abraham Lincoln, will be purchased as a memorial to her ancr a museum for the preservation of Lincoln turnltive. manuscripts and other relics owned Is Lexington. The old Todd home at 574 Weal1 Main street, once a saloon and now h | soft drink stand and boarding house for railroad employees, Is on the market for the first time In many years. The site Is being sought for business purposes by persons who wish to tear down the home. The owner Is T. K Arthur, proprietor of the confectionery. Well Preserved. The building is In a splendid state of preservation and the quaintneas ot the Interior has not been destroyed by HI.--Will the moving pie* ture Industry receive a revolutionary addition through a scientific discovery made at the University of Illinois, basic patents for which are held by that Institution? It seems possible that this discovery will make the movies of the future talk, so that there will no longer be "the silent drama." The scientific discovery la that of an extremely sensitive and reliable "photo-electric cell," made about two years ago In the physical laboratorlea of the university by Prof. Jakob Kuna. The incident Is at good example of the unexpectedness by which some great Munn Home for Premier Lloyd George When David Lloyd George arrives in Washington for the conference on the limitation of armaments, he will occupy this residence, the home of Mrs. Charles A. Munn, which her son, Uurnee Munn, offered the British premier. I several partitions, easily removed. The ! discovery may be made years in ad- • historic rooms where Mary Todd spent' vance of lts possible practical use. her happy girlhood, where she re-, ceived Mr. Lincoln, and where they visited after their saarriage have not been changed. While the Lincoln (arm at Hodgeville and the cabin In which he was born have been acquired and beautified for the nation at the cost of a million dollars,, the part which Mrs. Lincoln had in preserving the nation has not been recognized. The house in which she was born has been de-' stroyed, only part qt the old foundation remaining as the beats for another home at 501 West Short street, Lexington. Option Obtained. An option has been obtained on the property and civic nnd historical clubs have become interested. The property can be bought for $14,000 and It is thought that $5,000 or $7,000 would be needed to restore It June 18, 1856, Abraham Lincoln, Ma wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, and others conveyed the property to Benjamin F, Edge to settle the estate of Bobert S. Todd, deceased, and the deed of record Is In the Fayette county courthouse. Plans for the ceremonies attending the dedication, if the home is purrhased, would Include an invitation to Jtohert Lincoln, son of the martyred President, and Mrs. Ben Fardln Helm, a resident of Fayette county, who la a sjlster of Mrs. Lincoln. < FARM WOMAN IS AN EXPLORER « -- Mas an Exciting Time in South America. "" ^ '€ of Caltfornta tt Wit Peru by Capitalists te Investigate Concession Offered by • the Qevsrnment. ^ ,¥k-r"H*r *W*.--Mrs. fistelte Wins te s practical farmer of Oakdale, near Stockton, Cal. She does not pretend *"• to be an Irrigation expert, but ahe has driven and climbed over every dam In the Sierras. *1"'. '•? When the farmers at hercounty wanted a report on a big New England lrr*Sf,tlon a°d hydraulic power enter- *V r prise they sent Mrs. Wills east to find out all about It and tell them what V they wanted to learn. She took 40 California turkeys with her to sell to .#>4 the Boeton Yankees. ^ ^ Then some men with money who Bad Investments la Peru began to loek for someone to send down there. They were offered by the Peruvian government, an enormous land concession on conation that they would colonise and cultivate It They picked Mrs. Wills tor that Job. Bhe went to Perh several months ago add has just returned after seeing a whole lot more than Peru. She had raced over the Andean peaks In a little American car, finished her work in Peru and then had motored, ridden on steamboats. In trains and canoes and swam a little way In a Journey all around the continent and all alone. Mrs. Wills told a reporter all aboat It at the Hotel Pennsylvania. She is a widow, young, with large, bright, sharp eyes. She looks as If she could make the old ladies perfectly comfortable at tea, teach the young ones some new steps, give all a luncheon they would simply coo over and then take the local pet college youth out on the tennis court and trim htm to a fare-yoewaft-". One soon discovers that she knows a whole lot about other things than farming, but she does not look it She smiles too easily for a lady pundit Maybe that's why she gets so much Information. ! 'TirKriiA Bank of England Home to Be Entirely Rebuilt London.--The fa moos of England building win «oon be entirely rebuilt, made several floors higher and thoroughly ica> ova ted inside and out The bank's growth necessitated establishment of offices outside the old Threadneedle area, where It Is located. It is now planned to reunite all these under one roof. Efforts to preserve the original features of the building will be made. ****** * * * • •• -Tinrm iiW The photo-electric cell is a device for turning flashes of light Into electric pulses and Is so sensitive that tt reacts to light from stars which cannot be seen with the naked eye. Because of this extreme sensitiveness the photo-electric cell promises to displace the selenium cell which haB been used up to the present time in experiments carried on to produce speech to accompanying moving pictures. Better Than 8wedish Devloe. A Swedish scientist has developed a device which be calls the "photophone" by which such speech is more or less perfectly produced. This la done by having a second film on the same spindle as the moving picture film, on which are photogaphed various curves and openings corresponding to the words which are to accompany the pictures. A beam of light sent through this film falls upon a selenium cell. The selenium cell depends upon a discovery made many years ago that the metal selenium changes Its electric resistance when light falls upon It It Is thus possible to get variations in an electric current by letting the beam of light from a speech photograph film fall upon such a cell. These variations act In a telephone to reproduce speech. The aeleniuiu cell is much inferior to Doctor Kunz' photo-electric cell In transforming light waves Into electric pulses. The photo-electric cell ta not only much more sensitive, but It has no lag; that la. It responds Immediately to a light wave even after hours and days of use. The selenium cell Is not only hot as sensitive but It has the disadvantage of having this lag or fatigue. Result of Years of Work. "Doctor Kuna has been working for several years on the effect of light on certain of the alkali metals such as potassium and sodium," said the head of the department "A layer of any one of these metals when In a vacuum or certain low pressure gases gives off negative electricity; that la, a current of electricity can be produced by letting a beam of light fall upon a film of potassium which is properly prepared inside of an exhausted glass bulb. The current passes across the evacuated space to a loop of platinum wire and thus to the outside circuit. While this" electric current is very small. It can be amplified by methods which aie well known today In electro-techntes, «nd«.. so the fixe of the current 1a no detriment to the use of the photo-electric cell. "Just as the little currents, which weft set up at Arlington cemetery on Armistice day by President Harding's voice were magnified and reproduced thousands of miles away, so can these little photo-electric currents be magnified and produce sounds In loud-speaking telephones." It is therefore logical to expect that the scientific discovery of a sensitive and reliable photo-electric cell will be used to give us the perfect photophone of the future. One large company Is said to be already developing such a use of this photo-electric cell. Bride's Pa Too deed. WDlesden, Eng.--Brought before Magistrate Dent for breach of promise, Alfred Wilson said he became suspicious when the girl's father offered to provide a home, buy the wedding ring and furnish $25 for the honeymoon. So he decided to give up the girl. - MAN LOST A MONTH IN WOODS Camp Cook Staggers Back a Uvtng Skeleton. Wttrvderi About In Bush Aftir Being Assauited by His Boss, Living en Roots and Raw Flesh of Partridgee-- Attacked by Bear. 1 Sudbury, Ont.--Assaulted by the cook at Chew Brothers' lumber camp, near Collins' inlet, and left In the woods for dead, Edward Kelly, cook in the camp, wandered about In the bush for 29 days, was attacked by a bear and staggered back Into camp a living skeleton, after nearly a month had elapsed from the time be left it Fred McCann, the cook, was sentenced to two years less one day la Burwash by Magistrate Major at Little Current after being arrested in Sudbury and brought back for trial. kelly alleged that McCann had knocked him unconscious some distance from the camp and he then decided to leave the place. For days he wandered about In, the bush,, living on roots and the raw flesh of a partridge, which be knocked over with a stone. During hi* wandering Kelly reached the shores of Georgian bay and In the distance he saw a lighthouse. He took off his shirt and waved to it but was not seen and there was no way of getting out to the lighthouse. He turned back Into the woods, resolving to climb the mountains m an effort to find a vajr oat tp qbdllsattoii. On one occasion, while lying on an Improvised bed of boughs, he was gwakened by a rustling In the bush beside him and when he moved, received a blow from the paw of a bear, which ripped up his knee, and as he rolled frantically over so as to get out of the way he received another blow which gashed his leg. He rolled down the side of the mountain for several hundred yards and managed to escape the bear. On several other occasions he saw bears, but kept a safe distance. Finally Kelly stumbled Into a clearing In the woods where a number of men were working. They were men from the camp and they brought him back with them. He weighed 124 pounds, whereas when In good health he weighed 180. McCann had disappeared from the camp the third day after Kelly's disappearance. He was arrested at Sudbury. Kelly will recover, his strong constitution having stood htm In good stead. He Is a veteran of the Imperial army. *r~?r*' .'.•<« • Cross Marked on Corn. ^4 HW#vilIe, Ind.--While husking Hftrt recently Louis Orinley found an ear marked In red grains In a manner that formed a perfect cross. Except for the cross, which consists of nine grains, forming the center, and two on each side making the cross piece, the ear Is white. The phenomenon Is strikingly beautiful. KARL IS TREATED AS A GUEST Former Emperor Is Honored by People of Madeira. There are nearly 000 sulphur In the Island of Sicily. ZOO BEAVERS CONDEMN "ART " OeaMllsh New Home and Dam Crest if' One of Own Architecture In 'KfvT Bronx Zoo. Mew Yortc.--Beavers at the Bronx ^ r, aoo have no use for houses made for : them by man. The keeper's decided recently that the beaver" house not onTy was Inadequate, but Inartistic, lo, the lake was drained, the house «*«» down and a new structure, pleas- ^4? lng to the human eye, erected. The water was then let back Into the lake and the bearers swam out to look 5-J. over their new domicile. It was evi- 3* "if dent that they unanimously condemned ¥ the affair, for without even taking a peek within, they started to demolish t/J It A home of their own notion soon appeared and everybody seemed happy, except the discomfited keepers and carpenters. The beavers did not the dgm the keepers had erected, after they had plastered up with mud and made itlona for a hard winter, they the level ot the water In the Bank Deposit of 1819 " ^' Reaches Big Balance ' August 5, 1810, Dr. John Sullivan Thornet opened an account with a bank In New York city, depositing $5. A year later he added $10. No other deposit was made. Today the bankbook, now showing accumulated interest and principal, totals S2.» 000.60. It is held in trust pend* in# the* settlement of the estate of Samuel S. Hasiett a recluse. Close Another Women's ML Carlisle. Eng.--In consequence of a decrease In the number of women convicts. the women's prison here Is being closed. Recent years have seen a gradual -closing down of prisons for women in this country and there are now only 25 left of the 100 which were In existence several years ago. Women prisoners have decreased from 3,100 In 1914 to L200 in Oefchw, 182& . - "DOCTORS" TAR BY WIRELESS Nate York • Physician Treats "rimss on Freighter 1«0 Nlleo at Sea. Now York.--How a physician of the pobUe health service In the hospital on Hudson street administered to a seaman on a freighter 100 miles at acu Is the uitrat A wireless iron the ship to the Seamen's church read: "Seaman suffering from bad swelling over kneecap. Appearance of housemaid's knee. Unable to move. Intense pain. Advise." Women .Attempt to Klas the Hani of 'the Former Empress--Only Qaartf la Plain Clothes Policeman-- Zita la Affable. Paaehal, laland at Madeira.--Vomer fimperor Charles of Ahstria-Hungary and former Empress Zita are living quietly in their exile. Their only guard at the villa Victoria, where they reside. Is a plainclothes policeman, who accompanies them on their Journeys about the Island to prevent beggars from bothering them and to avert other annoyances. Charles and Zita are treated a# honored guests by the new governor, MaJ. Acado Correa Pinto, and the other Portuguese officials. They attend mass on Sundaya and have engaged Canon Antonio Horn en de, Vouvela aa their private chaplain. After mass recently a few women outside the church attempted to kiss Zita's hand, thus showing their affection for a member of the family of Dom Miguel de Bragansa, pretender to the Portuguese throne. It Is considered likely that the former royal pair will engage the villa Victoria for a permanent residence. The villa adjoins the grounds of the Palace hotel, at which the British consul Is staying, but the exiles do not mix with the hotel guests. Charles is tsctlturn, but Zita is affable and talks cheerfully to those she meets. Both enjoyed the voyage through the Black sea and the Mediterranean oh the British cruiser Cardiff, which brought than here, and they expressed themselves as being sorry when the trip ended. As the cruiser teft here on' her homeward trip Charles and Zita stood in the windows of their residence waving farewells to the officers. There was some talk of a Portuguese cruiser being sent here as a guard ship to prevent any possible attempt at escape by the former royal pair, but thus far It has not appeared. CHASES ENGINE TEN MILES Fireman Catches Runaway Loeomo- «va After Two-Hour lt«m Ofpr> Dangerous Road. Frazer, Pa.--A passenger locomotive on the Pennsylvania branch road, was chased by her own fireman for ten miles up and down steep grades, over a high bridge, and around dangerous curves and was csught two hours after she had left Phoenlxville, Pa. The engine had been placed in the yard after the run had been finished. When the fireman left, the locomotive began slowly going down grade. The fireman gave chase. There was 165 pounds of steam In the engine's boiler and the locomotive ran until this was exhausted. PRINCETON MEN GET JOBS Twenty-Seven Per Cent of Freshman Claaa Working Their Wgy Through College. Princeton, N. J.---Twenty-eeven per cent of the S66 freshmen in the class of Princeton university are working part or all of their way through college, and 18 per cent of the newcomers are being assisted fcy the university In the form of scholarships or remission of tuition, according to statistics gathered by Secretary V. Lansing Colllqg. Approximately lfiO Afresh men are now doing some sort of remunerative The message was sent to Doctor work.- Men desiring permanent Gray, who had the following radioed ! positions have become waiters in tl»e ' university dining halls, and others sell copies, of campus publications and pw- Wife Brings Offenders Into Husband's Court back: "Advise Epsom salts , to pint hot water. Five dropa of carbolic «pfd added. Apply with hot compresses to knee joint several hours." Subsequently a message came from grams at football games and food and refreshments by a nightly canvass of the dormitories. Some deliver metropolitan itewspapers and The Dally the ship saying the patient was out princetonian, others publish syllabi of pain and gratefuL : to help duller students, and still others are competing for the position as The United States is richer in JmU< of the various student estab- ^ um than any other country. * * 0 * * * 4 0 4 0 0 0 0 4 4 4 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * '• ' 0 m m « m « « m «> m « «+ c ilr. and Mrs. Theodore Heeg of Lagrange, N. Y., have a monopoly on the administration of justice in their town. Mr. Heeg Is justice of the peace and his wife has Just qualified as constshto, "" Mr Heeg swears out the warrants and bands them to bis wife, who, In turn, serves them and brings offenders before her husband's court or turns them over to him for de- ' livery to the county Jail llshments, as of pressing, shoe shining and the furniture exchange. U. S. FOOD CHEERS TABTAR HtyCk Finn's Friends Show Apprecla- ' .'* -Han by Sending Memeriai Mr Relief Chief. ? Am long a* you refrain from saying .iiffcinf yon keep the other fellow Remarkable Faliacyr , "Somehow or other," saM tlltcle Eben, "de man dat ain't never learned to do no regular work hlsself alius manages to git filled up wif de notion I can people, especially the little Aiuerdat ha would make a good ban." ( leans. Signed, Children of Chlatepui." Chlstopol, Tartar Republic, Russia.-- Mark Twain and Thomas A. Edison were known to the Tartar children of this inland town on the Katna rlvei before the American relief administration found its way here and served the starving youngsters with white rolls made of Minneapolis flour. In appreciation of the American feeding, the local youngsters presented the American manager of the local feeding with a memorial reading: "It is not only agreeable to eat the lovely American bread and sugar, but it Is pleasant to think they come from America. We like to read about. America. We particularly love Mark Twain and Thomas A. Edison. Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn are friends of ours. We know that Edison made many Ingenious inventions. We bt»g you to] Ciea ^ express our gratitude to the Araerl-' Immful or habit Such a •wdicine ia Dr. Koot, kidney, liver awl b]*4d*V The same shwdswl of parity, and excellence is maintained In bottle of Swamp-Root It is scientifically rnsspiimuli il vegetable herbs. It is not a atinolut and is tcaapoonfol doses. It is not recommended for evstything. It is nature's great helper ia relievusj|*| and overcoming kidaey, Hver sad Msff; dsr troubles. J:? A swora statement of parity is ettff every bottle ef Dr. Kilmer's Swamps* Root. If yon need a medicine, yea shooldi have the beet. On sale at all draa atena in bottles of two siws, medium sna fcaafc However, if you wish fiist to tKjr tttfc great preparation send tea asnts te SNs Kilmer h Co., Binghamten, N. Y., Sor a •ample bottle. When writing be rare su$ - mention this paper. Advertisement DIDNT HAVE TO HAVE PROOFS Colored Lady Had Confidence in flat Ability ef Wltneeses te Suotada Her bharga. A ao^hem magistrate had- Mn| 4Jhtm as a complaining witness a cofr tored woman who had caused to bpf held a mat) on the.cbarge that he haS ~' attacked her with a pair of sclasers. "He mighty neah gouged ray ejfK-^% out, jedge," she said. "He poked In the face with them scissors. Jedg% 's f - not once, but fo* or five times. HiO Jest cut up my face like it was a yart|; of ribbon. There ain't no me* dange#^ ous man alive, jedge." The magistrate looked her oret, She had a wide, smooth, yellow faaii ? that did not have a mark on It. Hip f told her to repeat her story, and she went through It again, telling how tlah |' man had slashed her face with that pair of scissors. ; ^ ,'t "But," said the judge, than a mark on your face." ? "Marks'! she exclaimed tndtgnantly. " "Marks! What I care fo' marka, lemma ask yo' that? I got wttneseea, I teQ yaalT • ^ 2 ^ . . . # * l y on " A p p r o . " m In one of our ancient towns whUp has recently been the scene of g pageant, a praty of Americans was bf>^ lng conducted over the admirable ah* bey. The age of tills part and that waif ^ J pointed out by a learned attendant and, at length: "That arch," said h& "may possibly go back to Alfreda anS . Edward." %. ' "Don't yon like ltf said a goe#-" promptly. The attendant explained that ha tHpr not understand. "Why are you sending It back, aa£» way? Doesn't it suit youT" Cutleura for Pimply Fac To remove pimples and bit smear them with Cutleura Ointment, Wash off In five minutes with Cutleura Soap and hot water. Once cleap keep your skin clear by using them fdl dally toilet purposes. Don't fall to dude Cutleura Talcum. Advertlseme OLD SAYING PROVEO UNTRUE Onee, at Least, a Physician Wife.- Willing to Take His Own Medicine. "They say," remarked George Fallon, the noted aeronaut, on Aquitania, "that doctors never tah^ their own medicine, and In my youth believed that lie. "Once, however. I made a veff stormy passage across the Atlantic, and got frightfully seasick. The sbip'b doctor, a genial young chap, preacribe# champagne for me, a half bottle twlcifv a day, and say, I wish yon could have seen the perfect and unfailing *ag%. larity with which that ~ would drop In at the appointed and join me In carrying ont his pre* scrlptlon. - ----• . . iC--f No Interfereneo. : ' •-», "Didn't you see Jimmy?" demsnde(| - M r s . J o n e s . _ • ; • "I did," said Mr. Janes. "He wa|r --" playing ball, and whan I aaw htm h£ ^ was on second baaa." ... " '"•Wfll "Well, why didnt yon bring hh» . ^| home?" A "My dear, I wasn't In the gaam. W was up to the batter to bring hlan homo."--Chicago Herald*, . ,r ^ »*-*" " % \ Doubtful. "Maud appears to 6a wOt 'pt*« served." "Oh, yes; bnt I hardly Chink ah* .' would stand a chemical --*-- Boston Transcript. *£ Those Pencil Marks. Sunday School Teacher--"Who was It aaw. the handwriting on the wall, Bobbjff Bobby--"The landlord.*-- Life. Just So. "AH the world's a stage." "Ana thern's only roomJS*^ . .. V "Are yon a good cook?" "Tea, maa*m. I go to church vmW - »--Tlt-Blta. . w Capital Pwnlshasan*. "How do you spell Income tasT*** * * "I don't know, but It Is pronounced with a short 'L' **--Wayside Tales. Experience frequently baa puplla. are the altver war clouds. * Morning <h! KeepYburE r V, : »"7> , - .. V " A- 1/^'; . Ml, hi:***. : w, N. u* CHICAGO, Ha iS»1Stl.