FIND LIKENESS OF AUGUSTUS J|rchaeolofll8t Discovers Splencficl v- Statue of Roman Emperor - at TivoiL . , STUDY BY Imiluable Addition to Portraits of Roman Emperors and la Only Ono • Dont During Wm - i It ' pewa ufo. . Rome.--Tlvoll, that lovely little city perched above Rome, called Tlbur by the ancient Homans, has just given to tbe archaeological world two new art treasures--an augusteum, or ball, and a splendid Lead of Emperor Augustus. Prof. Alensio Valle, one of the archaeologists who have made Tlvoll a special study, long believed that Tivol! should reveal an ancient hall -.importance, considering tbe flourishing state of the city la Roman days. He began to dig near a newly discovered weights and measures ofice, also dating from the Roman empire, thinking that the public weights Ohd measures must surely he near eorne Important hall. He was not mistaken. He has qpened up a ball with a Roman pavement of white and green marble which looks as if it were put down this morning, so fresh is it, and the wmm Not Stopped by Coal Shortage VIGILANCE NECESSARY TO KEEP CHICKEN HOUSE FREE OF MITES Cutouts 15!!^ For Infants and Children. Genuine Castoria Always Bears the ALCOHOL-3 PER GWf AVe^etablcPrcp«fit»awA* s imitating tbeFood ty MM Opld».Morphine . r • » >. -vv In Use Over Thirty Years CASTORIA W JSt) * Ahd*alRSn£^ Constipa Small Atomizer Will suffice for Applying Insecticides. and Fcverishn»s tvftW YDHK; Exact Copy of Wrapper thc enrrMiR coswt. mw veea m Kennebunkport, Me., bas a grist mill, operated by the tide. It was erected to 1836 and has never stopped since then. Unaffected by shortage of coal or "daylight saving" laws. It goes steadily on, working four hours and then resting four. As the moon is an hour slower each day compared with the sun. however, the miller bas to change his hours somewhat. statue of Augustus, broken but with the bead Intact, as the picture shows, with the lifelike lines cut out of the marble by some unknown sculptor of evident genius. Likeness of Augustus. The statue is a likeness of Ai tus when he had grown old. An Inscription underneath It. which dedicates the statue to the gods, "for the happy return In good health of our ,300 SPIES IN THE AMERICAN ARMY Amazing Story of German Esionage During the War It Disclosed. DESERTER MAKES CONFESSION • * ir Officer Telia of Being Sent From Germany With Other Cadets to Enlist in the United States Army. Mew York.--An amazing story of German espionage during the war was disclosed when John Wlllet, former captain in the Forty-eighth United States Infantry, confessd he was really Hans Willers, a cadet in the German army until 1914, when he was sent to this country with 800 other <ftdets to Joint the American army and become United States officers. Wlllet admitted he had absconded With 16,000 of bis company's funds at Camp Sevier on November 28, 1918, a few weeks after the armistice, and deserted. It was this offense and not any suspicion of bis spy role which resulted 1b his arrest here when Hugh J. Hannigan, formerly a first lieutenant In the Forty-eighth, recognized the de- Miter on the street and hailed a po- Hints at Treason In Waahlngton. "You would be surprised how many Ugh German officials held jobs In Washington during tbe war, Wlllet told Detective Sergeant O'Leary. The prisoner made this statement after be had narrated how he came here aad what he would have done had his regt- •ent been sent to France. "I would have led my men to slaughter, and could have been useful to my own country in many other W*ra>" Wlllet declared, according to the police, in explaining why he and others were sent to the United States to enlist in the American army. Wiilet was taken to Fort Jay prison on Governor's island. Confronted by two ex-lleutenants of the Forty-eighth infantry, Sidney P. Howell, a lawyer, and Francis Hatch, Wlllet began to respond to questions. As to his pedigree, he said he was born in Germany and educated there. "1 was trained for spy work when I was a boy and later when I was a cadet In a German military academy," the detectives quote Wlllet as saying. "When the World war began In 1914 I was selected to Join a band of cadets who were to come to the United States with orders to Join the American army. Other groups went to the French army and to tbe British. About 900 others came over here with mo. I knew my military training soon would be recognized and that promotion would follow, so I enlisted as a private the first opportunity I got. 1 bad no citizenship papers--I did not need anyv, Enlisted as Buck Private. UI enlisted as a buck private In Albany soon after my arrival in this country. Within a very short time my ability as a soldier was recognized and 1 was promoted. "My heart was nearly broken when I discovered my regiment probably would not be sent to France. I would have died for my country gladly. So, 15 days after the armistice, I took the company fund money and left camp. "I'm telling you this freely because I might as well be dead. Life does not matter much to me." Wiilet said that after he deserted Camp Sevier he started traveling. He toured the Pacific coast. In Chicago about a year ago he married an American girl named Crawford, It is said. Wlllet recently opened a mall order business in this city under the name of Crawford. Augustus Caesar," proves it was wone during the famous emperor's lifetime, a votive offering to the gods by a loyal Tlvoll citizen who signs himself M. Veranus Dllfilus. The same man gave the public weights and measures to the city. History lets us date this statue between B. C. 31 and A. D. 14, when Emperor Augustus died near Maples, aged seventy-six. Experts say the face Is the face of a man of fifty. In tbe worn lines, tbe ill-tempered mouth. Its upward twist at the left side, we havo no flattering picture of the great emperor, but a lifelike study by an artist who dared to cut his statue at he saw the human model. For thlf reason, and because of Its surely be ing done in Augustus' lifetime, it Is a very valuable addition to the collection of portraits of tbe Romas emperors, and probably the only one extant of Augustus done during his lifetime. The figure, which originally sat on the pedestal at the head of the halL is graceful, as Suetolus, that gossipy historian from whom later scribes have learned nearly all the? know about the Roman emperors* told us, saying1 Graceful Person. "He was a very graceful porooc through all the stages of life, though he was very careless In his dress and would set several barbers to work upon his balr together, and would sometimes clip and sometimes shave his beard, and at the same time would be reading or writing." Augustus, though emperor, called himself a democrat and, says Suetolus, "always abhorred the title of lord as a scandalous affront." He tells us, too, that the emperor caught cold easily and wore woolen underwear in winter, "with o thick wool toga." This broken statue, with the base on which it stood, unearthed after so long bridges .the gulf of centuries and brings one of the greatest rulers tbe world ever saw very near. Laborer Gets $130,000. .Anaconda, Mont.--From a laborer's task at the Washoe smelter to the possession of $150,000 was the realization here recently of Claude Sheumaker, who received a telegram from an Eastern broker advising him that he had realized this fortune on the sale of oil stock. Sheumaker Immediately drew his earnings, purchased a railroad ticket and started East. Sheumaker conceived the Idea of buying oil stock while In the army. While serving overseas with the Twenty-third division he was wounded. His original investment was $300 of back army pay. Where Italy and Jugo-SIavia Are Negotiating mm estern PNheowtos pba>p er Union View of an old quarter in Rapallo, where the Italians and Jugo-SIavs formulated their treaty, and are seining their respective territorial claims. % : > • : .m • :V' <:J-' t • C; ' V Love of Music Traps , Robber o! Poor fiox r»* • • Philadelphia.--It was his love for music which led to the arrest of Jacob Kats, twenty-tfonr years old. Katz entered the Emanuel Lutheran church here shortly after midnight and found the poor box which be emptied of Its contents, $8. Then he found the new organ. Katz had musical talent and he ran his fingers over the keya. Then he became so absorbed in the Instrument that he forgot where he was. pulled out the diaphone and thundered away. The strains awakened the pastor, Rev. Rudolph Nleder, who lives rext door, and ho called the police. CASH AND LOVE GONE For the guidance of commercial aviators Great Britain is planning to establish 20 meteorological stations that |gjjU supply hourly weatherreports. • - . V • Once Wealthy Man Brings Action /gainst Girl Wile. . Husband Demands an Aeeouni Ing for $50,000 Turned Over to Wife and Relativea. Atlantic City.--Penniless and sixtyfive years old, William P. Riffle, once a wealthy resident of Uniontown, Pa., appeared before vice chancellor Learning here In an action he has brought against his nineteen-year-old wife and her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mathews, formerly of New York, but for the past year residents of this city. He sues to compel the latter to give an accounting for $50,- 000 which he turned over to them. Riffle testified that two years ago Mrs. Mathews showed him the picture of her niece, then seventeen, when he went to her hotel on South Illinois avenue, m search «C health. He said that he became enamoured of the girl and Mrs. Mathews brought her to the hotel. They became engaged after he had promised to give her $10,000. Shortly afterward they were married. He testified that ho gave Mr. and Mrs. Mathews nearly $50,000, with the understanding that the money was to be Invested in real estate. After bis money was gone, he charged, his wife sofa the furniture he had bought for their home despite his protest. She then gave him $16 of the proceeds to go to his home, he added, and even tried, he swore, to take that away from him before he left. The defense sought to show that the money had paid for $6,000 worth of clothes for the youn£ wife, an automobile, diamonds and Jewelry. Riffle admitted the money lasted only six months. He declared that be was forced to leave his wife la March of this year. •It- Poultry raisers are all too familiar with the common red or gray mite which Infests poultry houses. In general those who are making a specialty of poultry raising have comparatively little trouble with mites, or at least they keep them reduced to a point where they are of little Importance. On the other hand, farmers and others who raise poultry as an incident to other operations frequently find their chicken houses overrun by mites. Detecting Presence of Mites. The attack of this blood-sucking mite Is of an Insidious nature which does not readily draw attention to Its presence, and often the poultryman is not aware of an infestation until he Is attracted to It by the Irritation produced by mites on his own body through coming in contact with the Infested coops. , The presence of the pest may readily be determined, however, by the detection of small areas on the boards specked with black and white as though dusted with salt and pepper. This is the excrement of the mites, which are hidden In adjacent cracks or rough places. More careful examination will reveal masses of mites In hiding, together with their egs# and the silvery skins cast by the young. In moderately Infested poultry houses the injury to the fowls Is not easily apparent, but the constant blood loss and Irritation are shown by decreased egg production and the poor condition of the fowls' flesh. In heavily Infested coops It Is not unusual „ for the chickens to become droopy and weak, with pale comb and wattles. Sitting hens desert their nests and thus ruin the eggs or, as is often the case, they are found dead on the nest, being killed outright by the attack of thousands of mites. In extreme cases a considerable number of fowls succumb, even though not sitting, and all are so weakened as to bo very susceptible to various diseases. Owing to the fact that mites feed during the night and secrete themselves In cracks and crevices during the day, their presence very often Is overlooked until a very heavy infestation has developed. In such cases they should be attacked energetically. Although not hard to kill, the greatest obstacle Is the difficulty of reaching them In their hiding place*. Dust baths will not control them, as, at most, only the few which remain on the chickens during the daytime will be destroyed. The first step necessary to destroy the mites Is to get rid of the hiding places so far as possible. The roosts should be taken down and all unnecessary boards and boxes removed. In heavily Infested houses the mites are to be found In all parts of the building, Including the roof. Where they are less numerous . the Infestations usually are confined to the roosts and nests and the walls Immediately adjacent. For small coops a hand atomizer will suffice for applying Insecticides as sprays, but for larger houses a bucket pump, knapsack sprayer, or barrel pnwp is desirable. A rather coarse spray should be applied from all angles 'tond thoroughly driven Into the cracks. The floor also should be treated, as many mites fall to the floor when the roosts are being i removed. j in tests conducted by the ©filted States Department of Agriculture during the last two years a consider- ' able number of materials used as I sprays have proved effective. One of the so-called wood preservers was found Immediately effective, and Its killing or repelling power lasts for months. As this material Is rather expensive (about $1 per gallon), and Is too heavy to spray well, It Is advisable to reduce it with equal parts of kerosene. Crude petroleum Is almost as effective, retains Its killing power for several weeks, and in most localities It Is very cheap. It will spray better If thinned with one part of kerosene to four parts of crude oil. It has been found that one thorough application of either of these materials will completely eradicate the mites from an infested chicken house, but ordinarily it is advisable to make a second application a month after the first, and in some cases a third treatment Is required. These subsequent applications may be made with a brush, using the materials undiluted and covering only the roosts, their supports, the walls adjoining, and the nests If they are Infested. This method of application Is effective for the first treatment also If the houses are not heavily Infested. Poultry should be kept out of the treated buildings until the material Is well dried into the wood. Using Pure Kerosene. Pure kerosene and kerosene emulsion In double the strength ordinarily applied to plants will destroy all mites hit, but these substances have not body enough to destroy those mites which arf In more protected situations, and several applications at ten-day Intervals are needed to destroy all the mites. Arsenical dip, such as is used to destroy cattle ticks, has been found fairly satisfactory for use against chicken mites. Several applications are required to eradicate the mites • from poultry houses. Women Workers "Make Good " The Women's Industrial l.eu^ue of Great Britain asked 5.000 firms for a statement of their ex|»erlence with women as Industrial workers. Nearly 1,500 repltvs were received from companies whose experience had been encouraging enough for them to retain women In their employ and in inany concerns to increase the number. Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash ofT Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It Is wonderful sometimes what Cuticura will do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red rough hands.--Adv. Tight Skirt Js1 Really Ancient. The modern sheath skirt is the revival of a very ancle it fashion. A statuette In the Louvre. Paris, shows an Egyptian queen of from 3,000 to 4,000 years ago in a gown cut low In the neck, with sleeves stopping well short of the elbow, and with a skirt that fits even more closely than the tight skirts of today. Will'!'!' low I i-O'Oi*.: }»* the sontug of food, I believe that tt please anyone.--Latin Proverfe Sure Relief Garfield Tea, taken regularly, will correct both liver and kidney disorders.--Adv. Spellbound. "Why dqn't you go on writing aiy speech T" said the orator. "I am spellbound," replied his typist. "Has my eloquence such an effect?" "Yes, sir. I never worked for a man who used so many words I cant spell."--Boston Transcript. SHOCKED CORN GOOD SILAGE Refilling 8ilo With Surplus Even Middle of Winter Is Moot So* nomieal Practice. in "Corn cut at the proper time and put into the shock can be made into good silage, even In the middle of/the winter,* says Alvln Kezer of the agronomy department of the Colorado Agricultural college. "Of course, such silage will not be as palatable as when siloed early and there will be more mechanical waste of leaves and other parts of the corn plant because.the shocked corn had been stored for part of the winter, either In the shock or In stacks. But If this dry fodder is run through a silage cutter and the proper amount of water run In with it. It will make good silage and a much more palatable feed than the dry fodder, which will be eaten by the stock with less waste. "Sometimes, shocking the surplus corn after the silos are filled and refilling from the shocked corn is a very economical practice, a practice worth remembering, especially when the capacity of the silos Is not great enough to take cam of the entire crop. It Is a good way of Improving a valuable feed." VERMIN CARRY HOG DISEASES Lousy Animal Will Consume Mors Food Than Clean One, According to Many Experiments. • hog affected with lice can't make as profitable use of his feed as one that is free from this pest. No successful hog man will dispute this statement; yet. Judging from the condition of some farmers' hogs, it Is doubtful whether all realise that .it really costs money to feed lice. However, feeding experiments have been conducted from time to time which show plainly that a lousy, hog consumes more feed per pound of gain than a clean hog. This loss of feed, however, is not the only reason for keeping hogs free from lice. Lice are also disease carriers. They will carry Infection from one hog to another and that, perhaps, iss.as strong a reason for holding lice to cllfeck as any other. INSECTS SUCK Hall's Catarrh MedidM Those who are In a "run down" condition will notice that Catarrh bother* them much more than when they are in rood health. This fact proves that while Catarrh is a local disease. It ts greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is a Tonic and Blood Purifier, and acts through the blood upon the mucous surfaces of the body, thus reducing the Intl and restoring normal conditions. Ail druggists. Circulars free. W, J. Cheney * Co.. Toledo. Ottst Sodium Fluorld Will Rid Fowia ef Parasites--Uoe Grease or ON . on Live Stock. Lice mites and other parasites suck their living from fowls. Who ever saw a fat lousy chicken? Did you ever suck cider through a straw? Which got the cider, you or the straw? Which gets your feed, the chicken or the lice? The lice and mites get the feed. The fowl is the straw. «. x Sodium fluoride Is an effective remedy. Your druggist will supply you. Dusted Into the feathers it will kill the mites and a pinch worked into the feathers where the lice congregate will get them. Lousy pigs, colts, calves, e can be freed of lice with grease or o! 'te* OIL VENTILATION FOR POTATOES Tubers Tend to 8weat Upon Being Put Into 8torage and Air Is Needed to Dry Moisture. Large piles of potatoes should ha*t ventilation channels provided, eithef by lattice work or by rows of crates. Potatoes tend to sweat upon being put into storage. Ventilation Is necessary to dry this moisture. Only a general rule can be given, but potatoes should be kept as dry as possible, yet avoiding shriveling, and should be kept as near the freezing point as possible, yet avoiding freezing. ( An Improved Method. , An American Inventor has devised a scheme for lassoing enemy subma rlnes. This Is s decided Improvement on the method of Just sticking a pin Into tbem as they whiss by.--Londtn Punch. •iM M 6 BELMUUI Hot water- Sure Relief RELL-ANS I^FOR INDIGESTION **A few minutes more, dear, and Daddy will be bs^ with the Kemp's Balsam. Then yon can go to sleep and Sotgst that horrid old cough.' KEMP'S &ALSAMI wmmnnrim SLOW, DEATH Achoo, pains, nerve culty in urinating, serious disorders. Tho standard remedy far kidney, bladder and uric add troal GOLD MEDAL bring quick reUaf end often wasi deadly din--Known as the aad remedy of Holland for mora «haa yam All druggists, la three s l«ak lb* smm CUM IkU mm ----i Kill That Cold With CASCARA bU«,™«b Neglected Colds are Dangerous , § Take no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the fire* sa ' * Breaks up a cold in 24 hours -- Relieves Grippe in 3 days--Excellent for Headache Quinine in this form does not sfisct the hand--Csscaia la haatl Laxative--No Opiate in HiU'a; ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT AMD WILL AID WATERMELON CROP Little Sandy Spot 10 by 40 Feet Fa* tttfced Now Will Prove Quito Profitable. If you have a little sandy spot on your farm measuring 10 by 40 feet, put ,pn a little fertilizer now. Those watermelons will grow so rapidly next summer that you will be amply rm WW* N ' Concentrated Feeds Beet. ' The use of artificial lighting can not be said to stimulate egg produo tlon In the same proportion that coo eeatrated foods 4sw „ AS sdssfBspwIIoiistwiwt % "WESTl helping their husbands to prosper--are glad they encouraged then to go » here they could make a home at I ewa--save paying rent and reduce coal of hying--H could reach prosperity and inrtrpenrtmre by buy lag en aaeff Fertile Land at $15 to $30 an Aero --land similar to that which through many years haa te 4S heahels of wheat te tbe acre. Hundreds Caaada have raised crops in a single season worth am cost of their land. With such crops come prosperity." hemes, and all the comfaorrttaa aadcanveB Farm Garden!--Poultry- Dairying fft sources of oelv to KTein crowing ad stack fshhQi Good climate, good neighbors, churches. - -- school*, rural telephone etc. sree ycu the opportunities of a new land with thc cooveniencea of old settled datricta. •- ' 'il ...-j: ' f i m iltaatntad ti Uittrnna ocuuppoorrttooaaiittMM** mia Maoi Mid AlMrtB. rtdwwO Ban taiit *t liaai C I. MOCGHTON. INS 411 111 W. A*at St.. Ctecaae. SL: M V. MadNNlS. 174 Jefhnea Aieaaa. Data Canadian Qovtnmwt •(•ot*. i£~ .J'/ A*