/ *. ir ' #4^ omance iH • "* • ~ - >«*& t^':- Jaok Sanborn and His Bride Part §*^/;ifcnd Skeletons Rattle H.;'J ^ - Family Closets. in }!?W, n IWOIVED M WK» Sayi Husband, Knee ^ Mir Chest, Forced Her to Sign Paper Aoouaing Hor Ag*d . » . Owirdlan Undo of Abuea. lUrs"* "'i; ~ --"_ *«aii:V New York.--Staid citizens of Bosas well as of this fair Tillage, . ^ebs and subdebs, are getting thrill thrill as the bones in a dosen ttiaUy closets ar« rattling loudly. and <&*•". iootlnonsly. *A .v The Jong buried fatally skeletons f'^^jtarted on their rampage about the '^fttme the flvfe-raox»ths' romance of young -;~r:$Jeck Sanborn and his bride, Eleanor - ^^ontgwmery Sanborn, blew up with at ^ ' twuig that was beard from Cape Cod k"( Tfo Sandy Hook. T* *'r Sanborn Is R son of Oral Sanborn, ff'coffee fame, and his bride was theft r* -<;%ard of W. Robert Montgomery, for*!! v_ --l*ner president of the Hamilton Nation-* "jti bank her*. r ' ' . Marriage Mad* to OrdeiC-; £ "<* r'~ mama8® wa® niade to order, J••••'^Th® Sanborns were desirous of maring off their son, according to reand Montgomery, bis past unown, was anxious to see the girt jnarried. The eighteen-yearold brtde charges- 3that Sanborn deserted her after five ffnonths of wedded life. Then came more scandal. In possession of the Sanborn lawyers is a letter signed by Eleanor in which she jijpkerges that her aged guardian uncle ,.pbosed her before her marriage. ^ But says she: "K "I signed that paper because Jack .jfMld me by the throat, put his knee Jpn my chest and threatened to kill me Planless I would write what he told jne. He wanted to get $100,000 out of fny uncle." When Uncle Robert heard about the letter and the charges it contained he them both out on their own resources. Up to that time he had been supporting them. Now Eleanor is living In «' Intel here with girl friends. 7 Uncle Refuses co • Forgive. She has tearfully begged her uncle to Sccept her version of the charges and forgive her but he has shown no sign of relenting. ' . "I'd heard of lounge Heards around the lobster palaces of New York, but I never heard of such a thing in Boston until 1 discovered that Jack was hired out as a dancing partner, on a taxi meter basis at tlie Colonial hotel." More skeletons. Beaapr1* parent*. 1ft. and Mrs. Sdward Montgomery are divorced. So are the Sanberns, Sr. Uncle Rehsrtovas caovlctadiJ&a1*** larceny tatt'ffears ago. while ysastdsnt of the Banraton Natlonal.baiik and now the Sanborn lawyer* la deciding on what action to take "with the letter of charges placed In his hands. And Mrs. Eleanor Sanborn, who ftftir months ago was' a principal in one of the most brilliant weddings *>f the season In Boston, is now deserted by her husband, cast off by her parents, spurned by her guardian uncle and Compelled to seek shelter with friends. Neighbors. One of the Joys of having neighbors Is that you can put in a lot of Idle time borrowing things and taking 'em back. --Richmond Times-Dispatch. City Built In Form.of Triangle. Constantinople is built in the form of a triangle. * •• • X Ruins of an Indian Munitions Plant Is Discovered |- * Kentucky Cave, n ^ UNEARTHED BY PR8F. MIliER Geologists Gathered Many Ptne Flints and Also Explored Two Rock Houses That Are Promising Grounds fer Werk of Archeologista. Lexington, Ky.--Ruins of what once was a flourishing "munitions factory" are sheltered in a cave 14 miles east of Mill Springs, In Wayne county, Kentucky, in' the opinion of Prof. A. M. Miller, head of the department of geology at the University of Kentucky, This factory, according to the belief of Professor Miller, produced arrow heads to tip the shafts of Indian braves to whom what is now Kentucky was no-man's land in the days before the squirrel rifle supplanted foe bow and the broad ax the tomahawk. Processor Miller returned recently ashington Gets Tree Seeds From Indiana JjS^iVC Jp:ii , •*' - • ^"-•7-^ -'ffi , j" 1.,"2"--* ^ 'Vip': Found frwn a trip to Wayne county, where In addition to re-examining interesting Invertebrate fossil-collecting horizons visited 25 years ago In company with an Ohio geologist. Prof. August Foerste of Dayton, he said he prospected the region for caves, rock houses and old Indian village sites, favorable ground for archeological exploration and the finding of extinct mammalian remalns \ ?Flnda Many Arrow Heads. "Two rock houses and one cave were examined," he said. MOne of the rock houses was in the coal measure conglomerate at Denny's Gay, about 14 miles east of Mills Springs. Numerous arrow heads In various stages of completion, together with flint-flakes scattered at a shallow depth over the floor of an overhanging conglomerate, constituting the rockhouse fit' this point, furnished abundant evidence that this shelter formerly was Inhabited by aborigines and that they had established there, an arrow-head workshop." The otner rock house, opening widely to the south, wsb near the Mill Springs camp, in the Mammoth cave limestone. This house, according to Professor Miller, is a most promising spot for both archeological and mammalian paleontologlcal exploration. Half an hour's prospecting with geological hammers and a hand pick showed that every shovelful of deposit on the floor of {his shelter was "pay dirt," be said. Wealth of Fragments. A wealth of bone and pottery and flint fragments were unearthed, as much as persons could carry away. The large amount of fine material on the floor of this shelter, which rould not have been washed in from the outside, filled everywhere with, charcoal, ashes, fragments of pottery, • row points, flint flakes, bone fragments and teeth, prove that It was a popular resort for the aborigines for a very great period--perhaps extending back to the Pleistocene times, Professor Miller declared. No human hone fragments were found here, tending to prove that the shelter was never used as a place of burtal. The third natural grotto -visited--a true cave--was near the mouth of a small stream flowing Into the Cumberland river, at Ford's island, about four miles above Mills Springs. This cave had been an Indian burial place, as was proved by the finding of a number of human bones, mostly on the rock ledges along the walls.' I* I 4 ft yc r "itaj. D. L. Weart, at the left, and Lieut. Col. r. o. Sherrlll, with seeds trees that will be planted in Washington. Vtift seeds wepe seat from indi- <4Uia, and *re from historic tree*. Eagles Mfcnace Fox Industry. The chief enemy of the for misers of Alaska is the eagle which .swoops down on the pops as thsar spstt about In the opeito SLIQUID OF THE PAST STRONG STUFF ^lelerft Boo2e Found to Eartton . Jar in Kentucky Cave. jSKor* Potent Than Modern Whisky, It May Be an Elixir That W.m &4 /'Manufactured by the MounV^ ' Builders. Kj.--Were the. mound ers of old ihe first real distillers In itfiat has become America? zfO This question is ..sited following the V> |rtory brought here by two young men jftom the Molds section of Bell county 1 ^ pnount&lns. They say they were exploring the *.'H^-Jflense parts of the hill country when ""the* saw the entrance to a cave, whose , existence never had been suspected. \ *r-. The youths entered its labyrinths, and * .:j»/^lar back in the interior discovered an • ?' Earthen vessel. They opened it careand they are quoted as saying there .came forth a most dellcians aroma. Investigation proved the existence of a liquid In the vessel, which the explorers tasted. Both declare, it is said, that they were familiar with the taste and potency of corn whisky; but this liquid in the long-buried vessel surpassed "Kentucky liquor" in strength. They said that after a few minutes their senses became dulled and visions of celestial delight burst upon them. Finally they recovered and carried the vessel away with them. They are quoted as asserting that there was an inscription on the vessel which no one they have seen'can decipher. It is understood the vessel will be sent to experts in ancient languages In the hope that the letters can be made out If the mound builders left the Jar and Its unusual beverage It Is believed unlikely tbat the words can be deciphered, as It is said the writing of the mound builders never has been translated. The youths who found the vessel declare a single drop of the elixir they found possesses the strength of a quart of corn liquor and that dilution with water Is all that is necessary to obtain a "real drink." Just what the attitude of prohibition authorities would be toward this find In the cave has not been made known, nor has it been sought so far. The mound builders, from strange relics, mounds and. other marks, long have been thought by some historians to have made their last stand In the Ohio valley. In Kentucky and Tennessee there are numerous traces of a strange people, the secret of whose origin oi disappearance has not been learned. Wills Courteous "Newsie* $100. Boston.--"Jimmle" Caswell, Lynn's sixty-eight-year-old newsboy, will receive $100 for his unfailing courtesy under the will of the late Dennis K. Beardon, Lynn grocer. "Jimmy" left papers at the Reardon home for 15 years until his health made it impossible for htm to deliver papers on a regular "route." But his pleasant smile and courtesy were remembered by the late grocer. Steamer Breaks in Two on Great Barrier Blazing Footst«ps Mark JBM Flight of Boy CftldmaA, Okla.--Alvin Rob- ®rts.- fourteen years old, put a tube Of phosphorus In his pocket and is near death as a resplt. His clothing suddenly ignited and soon he was enveloped in flames. He rushed to a blacksmith shop, whefe he was soused in a tub of water, but the fire started again when he was lifted out. The shop also caught firq. Rescuers' hands were seared as they stripped the child's garments from him, but his bare body blazed. Papers and blankets were consumed before the fire was flnally extinguished. * Where' the boy ran In his flight from pain, glowing foot prints were left, where burning phosphorus dripped down his tegs. He found th« tube In an alley* -V "J MOTHER HEN TOO MUCH FOB CROW Btetck Marauder Put to Flight When He Attempts to Carry Off One of Brood. V' ,V <3 • Le#es, Del.--A .mother hen belonging to George Walls, a farmer living along the Georgetown-Rehoboth Beach, has proved tliat the chicken is a better fighter than old Jim Crow. A day or two ago a hen of the common barnyard variety, while piloting thirteen fluffy youngsters through a wheat stubble, saw a big btack crow pounce on one of her little ones and attempt to fly off with It for supper. The mother then saw the peril of her progeny and leaped in the air, reaching the black kidnaper and belaboring him so severely that he was obliged to drop the chick and fly into a high altitude for safety. Several automoblll8t8 who witnessed the battle declare the hen never showed the white feather for a moment nor hesitated in attacking the greatest foe of the chicken family. They were, however, amazed at the ferocity with which she countered on the black marauder, and the crow himself was evidently taken by surprise at the violence of his assailant, for he winged away at top flight to the nearest woods, leaving two or three neck feathers behind as testimony of the prowess of the mother hen. In such encounters the crow is considered almost equal to two barnyard £ J J IN SCHOOLS Dominant Feelirig ArWig Settlers in Western Canada. The Crow-Was Taken by Surprise fowls under ordinary conditions, but a mother hen evidently is the better fighter of the two when the lives of her brood are at stake and need her defense. IS WARNED BY MOONSHINERS Georgia Paster, Who Discovered M •tills, Given One Week to Get Away, WIS Stay. - Atlanta, Ga.--The Rev. Robert Stewart, Methodist preacher of Floyd county, Georgia, has been threatened with death because of his activities against "moonshiners" in the North Georgia mountains. A note of warning, found tacked to the parsonage, read: "We have had enough reporting of stills In this settlement. We will give you one week to get away. If you don't, some one will have to take care of your wife and children." Stewart turned the note over to prohibition officers and announced his Intention of continuing his crusade. "I know how to handle a gun and will not hesitate to use one if occasion demands," he said. He uncovered 39 stills In that region within the last three months. The JfingUah federal steamer Wiltshire was recently a trended on the Great Barrier island, off New Zealand, er forty terrible' hours the crew was finally brought ashore. During a severe storm while she was stnnded the Itsfclre broke in half and so disabled the wireless app&rato% bat the crew was able to communicate with the --* hv wmMKM riuaaHug „ r** Twins Look Alike to Mother. Baltimore, Md.--Edwin and Milton Goslorowski are twin sons of Mrs. Philipina Gosiorowski. Edwin got lost. His motlier left him on a street car. Mrs. Gosiorowski rushed to the "police station, but could not remember which of the twins was lost, so she hurried home to ask the other which he was. He said he was Milton, so an alarm was spread for Edwin. Two hours later he was found. • Child Waa Born With Two fonm». Laporte, Ind.--Unable to eat or talk with the two tongues that were in his mouth at birth, Alden Burkhart, twenty- month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Danlei Burkhart of Laporte, Ind., was operated on for the removal of one of the tongues. The child now Is deteloplng normally, physicians declare. .-'is'i'v" •' 'V' '> Open 80 Vaults in One Building. Spokane.--Burglars broken open 80 vaults on six floors of the Paulsen building, at Spokane, WaslL, and •tola more than 1100,000. Oesitft* "Newness" of Hit Country, There Are No Better Institutions of Learning Anywhere. Ther# Is frequently hesitation expressed by those whose minds am almost made up to move to the agricultural lands of Western CanXda, that the children. will not enjoy'the school privileges afforded them In their present surroundings. This Is a reasonable doubt. The country is new. It is within the memory of many who will read this that the bison roamed these prairies at will, that there were no railroads, no settlements beyond that of some of the Hudson Bay posts, a few courageous ranchmen and Indiana It was a country of unknown Quantity. It Is different today, and It has been made different in that short time because of the latent stores of wealth hidden In the land, which has been made to yield bovjntifaliy through the daring enterprise of the pioneer and the railway? jthat had the courage to extend their enterprising lines of steel throughout its length and a great portion of its breadth. Villages apd hamlets have developed into towns and towns Into cities, supported and maintained by those who, coming practically from all parts of the world, and many, yes, thousands, from the neighboring states to the south, have takes op land that cost them but a trifle as compared with what they were able to dispose of the holdings upon which they had been living for years. Thes* people brought with them a method in life that electrified and changed the entire Canadian West Today things are different, and a trip to Western Canada \ ill show a country new but old. New because chances have been wrought that give to the newcomer the opportunity to become part ot a growing and developing country--It gives the chance to say what shall bn made of it; old because there has been brought into Its life those things that have proven useful In older countries, while there has been eliminated everything that would tend to a back* ward stage. A writer, dealing with social matters, treats of the schools, and says: "Everywhere the school follows the plow. Cities which a few years ago were represented-by scattered shacks are proud today of their school bniM> bigs. The web of education Is being spread over the prairie. Lately, however, a new policy has been adopted. Instead of many rural schools, big central schools are being established, each serving an area of fifty square miles or so, and children who live a mile and a half away are conveyed thither In well-warmed motor cars. In the summer, of course, they come on "bikes" or ponies. "And the young Idea Is taught to shoot In many directions. The instrue. tion Is not limited to the three R's, but nature study and manual crafts are taught, In order that the future agriculturist may have his educational foundation laid. Many rural schools have pleasant gardens attached, with flower and vegetable beds, and the! visitor to one such school deep In the j Country says she will never forget the j pride with which a little lad showed her the patch of onions In his plot. Thrift is also taught In the schools by means of the dime bank. "Following the primary schools there are secondary schools, where training is free. This includes classics, modern languages, science, mathejnatlcs, advanced English, and often agricultural, commercial, and technical subjects, and--but this concerns the girls-- household economics. For three years this lasts, and then comes matriculation into the university, a matriculation which admits direct to the arts or science degree, or the education may be completed by a course In some specisl subject at a technicttl institute."-- Advertisement. wmm '"1m: *w Pure materials, scientific manu- " facture, absolute cleanliness -- then sealed against all impurity. That is Wrigley's as you get ^Hfresh and fall flavored. . ... >V Aids digestion, keeps teeth white and clean --breath sweet V and disposition sunny* :"§m Have you tried this onet yKHIGLETS P. *. W5 - is die new ^ ***** tefreshment* ^ that can't • be beat. r-m I ; J L J ' C y r w u i T i !'jjji* • 111 C108 Wrigley's Adds a Zest and Helps Digest A Slight Difference. Miss Elizabeth Marbury was talking at the Colony club in New York about a beautiful actress who had been obliged to divorce her actor husband after three months of wedlock on account of his shocking infidelity. "The poor girl thought," said Miss Marbury, "that she was marrying a man who would be constant in lovie, but he turned out to be constantly in love." Aviators Had Best of It. According to French statistics, there was less danger of death in the World war to officers who fought in the air than to those who combated on the earth. Twenty-nine per cent of infantry officers were killed, while only 21 per cent of aviation officers lost their lives. , • Ufs of loafing Is less criticised •way from Lome. FREEDOM FROM ' LAXATIVES Discovery by Scientists Has ReplWl v- . Them. Pills and saTts give temporary relief from constipation only at the expense of permanent Injury, says an eminent medical authority. Science has found a newer, better way--a means as simple as Nature Itself. In perfect health a natural lubricant keeps the food waste soft and moving. But when constipation exists this nat? ural lubricant is not sufficient. Medical authorities have found that the gentle lubricating action of Nujol most closely resembles that of Nature's own lubricant. As Nujol is not a laxative it cannot gripe. It is In po sense a medicine. And like pure water it is harmless and pleasant. Nujol is prescribed by physicians; used In leading hospitals. Get a bottle from your druggist today.--Advertise* menu '• i i • |ii._ s \ To Remove 8poUu ' :T*y taking white spots from your dining table with cigar ashes. Dampen them, and rub on with the fingers. If the spots are not too deep they wUi come off. } ? . Something to Pralee. "You don't seem to think mnch o| my car," said the owner «f a diiapk dated flivver. "I wouldn't say that," replied the tactful garage man. "What do yon call this contraption here on the freak of your radiator?" "That's a figure of mercury. 1 bought it for an ornament." "Well, now that's about as neat a r piece of work as anything I ever saw." * 4--Birmingham Age-Herald. , Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 6 BCLLANS Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS 25t and Packages, EvwyAw# FXEK5F5" HAIR BALAAM iDuMral Means Bad Results. "Jones means well." "Yes, but he lives beyond means."--Washington Star. his 'assSftaV n HINDKHCORNS loan*, cte., (topa all pate, •araraa WH»fur» W , fwt, DukM walktac on. U& by Kail or ttM^i Htaoox ChetaVoal works, fklakuc**. N. I. 4 Hay Fever and Catarrh Sufferers No-POLLEN M your dnumat for Frbb Trial Bottlb, m Me-fOLLEN CO., 190p«n., CINCINNATI,0. W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 35-1922. • • 7 ! - YOUNG GIRLS NEED CARE Mothers, watch your Daughten'Health Health Is Happfn< f¥om tte time a girl reaches ihe •n of twelve until womanhood is established, die needs all the care a though tral mother can give. The condition that the girl is then passing through is so critical, and may nave such far-reaching effects upon her future happiness and health, that It is almost criminal for a mother or guardian to withhold counsel or ad- *4ce. Many a woman has suffered years of prolonged pain and misery through having been the victim of thoughtlessness or ignorance on the part of those who should have guided her through the dangers and difficulties that beset this period Mothers should teach their girls what danger comes from standing around with cold or wet feet, from lifting heavy articles, and from overworking. Do not let them over-study. If they complain of headacne, fains In the bade and lower limbs, they need a mother's thoughtful care and sympathy. AHansehoidWsrJ in Mother** Honse writes Mrs. Lynd, about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "My mother gave me Lydia El Pinkham's Vegetable Compound When I was 14 years old for troubles (iris often have and Tor loss of Weight. Then after I married I took the Vegetable Compound before each child was born and always when I felt the least run-down Both my sister and sister-in-law take It and - have only the highest praise for it. It has been a household word in my mother's house for years." -- Mrs. Katheryn Lynd, 2431 Gla<fys Ave., Chicago, 111. A Little Book Helped Her to Decfck Milwaukee, Wis.-- "My daughter took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound as she was so weak and did not feel like going to school. She Was like that for a whole year before taking your Vegetable Compound. I found a little book of yours in our mail box and decided to give her your medicine. She is now strong and well and attends school every day. We recommend your Vegetable Compound to all mothers with weak daughters. You may use this letter as a testimonial.Mrs. E.KLUCZNY, 917 20th Ave., Milwaukee. Wis. "I was always feeling tired and sleepy, waa losing in weight and would faint at times. I had other -troubles too, that made me feel badlv. I read your little books and heard friends talk about the good Lydia R Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had done them, so I have taken it too. The results are most satisfactory .for I have gained in weight and my bad symptoms are gone. 1 recommend your Vegetable Compound to all my friends and you may make whatever use you like of this leCtar."--GLORIA RAMREX, lilt 9th Ava, Tampa. Florida. SOCIAL DUTIES TOO ARDUOUS Old-Fashioned Farmer Realises Cotlld Never Keep Up With the . Procession Today. ,3S?& J Lvdla E. Pinkham's Prirnte Text-Book upon "Alhnoals Peoalbur to Women** will bejwnt you free upon tssssrt. Writs to titojbgdte B. Ptnkhsia Medieloe Os, Igrut "What kind of farming eiperteoe# did you have?" asked the reporter.. "Well, son," replied the philosopher, "I only had a light attack. When 1 '• lived on a farm all you had to do was ,, ~ f§ jilant, cultivate, mend fences, hoe -'..SI weeds, milk c<i*vs, slaughter pigs, doc- 'j, tor sick chickens, tlx windmills, go to ' ^ town after the mail, argy with lightnln' rod agents, attend the county . j| fair once a year, cut wheat an' have .• it thrashed, shuck corn, churn butter, dig potatoes, buy fertilizer, mend the V'|| broken plow with a piece o' wire. , ^ break colts, wash the wool and do things like that. It was hard enough! life then, but just think what It is now* ; f hav in' to be a farmer and keep up a with the radio, fox trottln', silk shirts ^ and at least two cars! Son, even at A|ij my age I might go back and do old- ^^1 fashioned farmin', but I'd never be ^ able to keep up with a modern farm* era ascial duties."--Iudinnapoiiaftev^e, New Excuse. ' ^ It was almost an Lour past TrankV bedtime, but mother's attempts to send him to bed were useless. Like all small boys, he disliked to go to bed, and each time be made a new excuse. Several times he yawned over tb^ story book he was reading, and Mrs. Jordan said: "Now see, sonny, you'ra so sleepy now that you yawn all time." ' "Aw, mom, I'm not sleepy," he y«K slated. **I was Just opening any te let In a little fresh air.1* - ' * "* Smart Animal. "What makes your dag howl whee| he hcers Jassr "fnteNftec* I ««j - ( foe%* replied Mr. (MM