Friday, June 26, 1925 Another LFttle Job for the Reducer , • Japan’s Latest Earthquake <£ ! -" " M»W. —i» ijii uwimewioi t* ' v _ . • .. 4|i;i ’ ' .i. 4*;':. &mM‘. If. ' '' , WSbsa* |» -1.., w.i.jlf -' - ; -$< ;£> - ■ -* 1 *' : |By 4-j This picture gives a graphic idea of the devastation wrought by Japan's latest earthquake. It was taken at Toyooka ns members of the military ruins for the dead while those who survived hoped for the recovery of loved ones. Fire in 'many communities added to the hprror after the earth had opened in 21 places as the tremor sook the island. ~i i tf ii.i.... ■■ - ■' ■■"■— -e —_■■ i.. g in ii |i —m There Seem to Be Plenty of Potential Victims i. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE WHAT IS A LUXURY? | William Feather. A man tells me L can reduce my ex penaes by cutting out all luxuries, and by doing a dozen mean little jobs I now pay others to do for me. He says, “With the exception of the electric light, the' telephone and a very small percentage of the automobiles no permanent economic advantage has been contributed by the luxury business.” The man didn’t say this to me; he wrote it and it was printed. I wish 1 kenw the gentleman, so I could describe him to you, I think he is about ninety eight years old, with a full growth of hair in eaeh ear, and I suspect he wears congress boots. I wish some one would tell me what a luxury is. Is a handkerchief a luxury? Is an umbrella a luxury? Is a hair cut a luxury? Is a.rose on the table a lux ury? People once got along without any of these. I have been trying all my life to get along without luxuries. Not six times a year do I consciously indulge my desire for luxuries. Yet. if I cheeked my ex penditures today against my budget of twenty years ago anil charged the dif ference to luxurious living I could con vince myself thatjl am squandering a lot of money foolishly. Yet this is not the case. I can af ford to live as Ido live. I couldn't live any other way, because in doing so I would have to deprive myself of things .1 have come to regard as necessities. As to the economic advantage of lux uries, there comes a time when it doesn't pay to figure ,in terms of economic ad vantage. It is said that njnety per cent, of the cost of foo(i is the flavor. If we weren’t particular about the flavor we could get along on about ten cent's worth of food a day—breat), salt pork and hominy, the usual fare of convicts. A honey dew melon has not greater economic or food' value than a pumpkin, probably not half as much. Yet there are days when a section of ice-cold honey dew melon will do more to set one up than all the pumpkins in Illinois, t The exquisite odor of a rare perfume may not have any economic value, but if, the moon iq. hanging just right and the breeze is from the south, it does the. soul a lot of good. No one lias yet quite satisfactorily explained just why we are on earth, and until this is explained I think we might as.well take it for granted that we are at liberty to make life as sweet and joy ful for ourselves as we can. To this end. our first task is to un load the drudgery on to machines, which we are doing very rapidly. As we acquire leisure and freedom from back-breacking toil, it seems logical that we should leaven our lives by en joying a few uneconomic futlities. It doesn't hurt me to see a family of five making a trans-continental tour in a flivver. It may be uneconomic; per haps the man should be hoeing corn and the woman washing dishes, but to deny them this bripf spell of alleged happi ness would be like shooting a boy's pet dog because he wasn't paying his way with eggs or bacon. , What She Saw in Church. Household Journal. He stayed at home and she went to church. ‘After dinner lie asked her: “What was the text, dear?” ”o|h, something somewhere in Genera tions; I've forgotten the echapter and verse. Mrs. High sat right before me with a Mother Hubbard bonnet on. How could I hear anything when I couldn't see the minister? I wouldn't have worn such a thing to church if I had to have gone bareheaded." ' "How did you like the minister?” “Oh. he’s splendid: Kate Darling was there with a Spanish lace hat on that didn’t cost less than SSO. and they can’t pay the butcher's bill. I’d wear cotton lace, and go without any. first.” “DM he say anything about the mis sion fund?” “No; and the Jones girls were all figged out in their yellow silks made over; you would have died laughing to have seen them. Such taste as tlipse girls have. . And the minister gave out i that the Dorcas Society would meet at Sister Jones’ residence —that old, poky plaee. “It seems (hat you didn't hear very much of the sermon.” “'Yelk I'm sure it's must better to go to church if you don’t hear the ser mon, than to stay at home aqd read the papers. Oh. Harry, the new minister has a .lovely voice; it nearly puts me to sleep. And did I tell you the Riches aye back from Kuroire, and that Mrs. Rich had a real camel's hair shawl on, and it didn’t look like anything on her!” “They Never Will Be Missed.” Monroe Enquirer. Every community has in its midst cer tain citizens, who intelligent and weal thy, arc able to do many great things (or themselves and. their section. Anil, (here,is atvvjys sopn* who do nothing to build up .the town where they made their, money, or wliere their ancestors made it for them, and they pass to a ripe old age and die, never being missed by the places in which they lived. It is pathetic to think about the man who has given over his life to the ac quisition of, fortune, who has made fc,w oontyftpitions to the betterment of any cau-e or thing who has niggardly watch ed the expenditure of a rich return. It is pitiable because the man has, never learned to live. He lias bound lup oo.pl by his greed for money, and he lips given his life to something that avaifs him little when the gaunt spectre beckons him across the river. If such men believe in a future life they must seldom think. Mark Twain tp)ij of the man, who dying, went to the pearly gates, and upon being asked from whence he came, replied, “the world." The guardian at the portal astonished **W 1 by. asking, "whieh one?" The rich I apjl selfish "ho (lift will very probably assail the pearly gates and be asked why the* expect to enter into the kingdom. Their only chance of entry will depend, upon hQW their answer will look. "I made a good sum of money and took care of myself,” The surprise will eome when thc. .gp*’lxlian, st-Jis Ctbcm. j'.what kiud of >l-.’ •■■ fit '• i Both Whistler; the American fetcbeei;; a pd, artist. and Doe the poet, were drop ped from the military aendemy at West Point. The British motorcycle industry, with a yearly out put or over 140,000 mach ines, now leudse the world. CHINA UPRISING IMPERILS THE AMERICAN EXPEDITION UPPER RIGHT, ROY CHAPMAN ANDREWS; BELOW, THE EXPEDITION’S CARAVAN CAMPED IN DESERT (BY NEA SERVICE) Erie, Ja„ June 20.—Threatened with starvation and in constant danger of at tack by marauders, a little band of Am ericans is imperiled by the civil war now raging in Chinn. Word from the expedition, headed by Roy Chapman Andrews, which represents the American Museum of Natural history, has been received here. Food is at a premium, towns and vil lages are being looted, and death is being meted out quickly to those who are cap tured by contending foces. Upon arrival of the expedition in Urgit the entire community was in a "state of disruption." The Minister of War and his chief secretary laid been shot to death, aud. according to Andrews, efforts to get food were unavailing. Refused Supplies. “When supplies for the expedition, in cluding two tons of flour, a ton of rice and other articles in proportion, were ordered, the natives laughed at us,” An drews reports. “The day before I had intended to Wh&t the World Is Doing (As SeenbylPopular Mechanics Magazine) 7 i Automatic Cranker on Motor to Prevent Stalling Attachable to any automobile that has a Bendix drive, an automatic cranker ( ■tuts the engine the moment it stalls and t saves the ignition. It »■ actuated by magnetic force, throwing the starter into action as soon as the engine stops. In emergencies, such as being stalled on a railroad track, the cranker starts the mo tor immediately. It may be placed on the instrument board, behind the dash, under the hood with its two small buttons showing on the instrument board, or un der the floor. In-the latter case, the starter pedal is removed. AH that is ■necessary to start the engine is to turn op the ignition, and as it must be turned off to stop the car, this scarcely will be forgotten. * *. * Handle for Small Cameras Serves as Tripod Holding small cameras steady without the use of a tripod has been simplified by a wooden handle which is screwed to the underside of the. instrument and is held sn&h, Up left h*hd while the shutter is pleased with the right. Further stability is gained if the top cf the camera is light ly pressed against the operator's fore head. When not in use, the hapdle may be dntgehed and carried in the pocket or - i Stamps Reuse Democratic Ire. is When•yNTOigJi’ipv , Willson .. was alive therf' ; \Fg>y afcjffrtfiprp ,'picture ;ai>itenv dh postage stamps.’ Bui-the- post office department explained that no liv ing ex-presidents can be -sot Now that Wilson is' dead the Deities crabi, have revived the subject. Refusal of thf authorities.to give the war presi dent a, piece oil the i\«w, postage' issue has aroused the ire of ■ Wilson s friends ship our supplies to Kuigan we had word that, the city had been looted by sol diers. “Their punishment was swift and wholesale. The looters had gathered at the top of the Pass waiting to see what wbuld happen. “Word was sent to them that their sins would be forgiven aud they be sent home if they would surrender.: About 450 of them came into Knlgan and gave up their arms. “The men were put into box cars nnd box cars and told that wltbin a few hours the train would start for Peking. Instead of that they were taken out. half a dozen at a time, searched, aud if loot was found on them they were marched to the stone bridge in the center of town and shot. “At the end of a few hours 450 bodies I lay in the dry river bed. “This is only one example of what has | been going og in China almost coutin-: uousiy since" last October.” Andrews says that Chinese soldiers"! have confiscated every camel, car and j , -I)—■ . ... -w- - Drink of Ultra-Violet Light | i A|ds Throat Treatment Treatment o? certain throat diseases is given at a London hospital with a special ultra-violet light apparatus. It has a long funnel-shaped tul e, the small end of which the patier, put- 1 ; in his mouth, The rays are directed through it. so that they fall upon Ihe affected pacts and little of their beneficial powers is lost. * * e Oldest Child in the Family Most Likely to Succeed Studies made by Prof. William Os burn. of Columbia university, indicate (hat the oldest child in the family most frequently succeeds in life, the youngest ranks next and intermediate children third. Three thousand names ware se lected at random for a survey: LOORart ists. including doctors, musicians, authors and painters; 1,000 scientists of all grades, apd 1,008 of a,more general class ification,. including business men, jour nalists and men of “good mixing quali ties.” Questionnaires were sent to these individuals with the request that they', indicate their position in the family. Re plies were received from 1,700. Turning to “Who’s Whb” as a criterion of success it was found that of the 577 who wcresjfce oldest sons in the family and brothers less than five years younger, 342 appeared m the lists of noted men,; 155 but of the 398 who were the youngest children with brothers five years older were in the book, but of the. 729 who were intermediate children, only 237 anil admirers, especially ,iu of the. fact that ■ Harding’s picture, alv ; readyVappiMifod ofo stanitw. . i , ''••“The picture of '-Wilson is H)U any postage .stamp '(ffipiilg'i this v administration.” - says the iftit**] the ,< Nfttiangl. Demm crate- “ARhourirethe officials saw f tit to honor the Republican president preeed inahira and-the one-\#h* foltowsd bij»V it had mo place far the great command- PAGE ELEVEN mule for a hundred miles hayseed) jflal!- gan, the base from which the expedition started. It was found necessary to. drWthdir camels far out .into the desert to keep them from the. soldiers. Confiscate Mounts. Andrews' reports were made to an Erie man whose financial assistance did much to make the expedition possible. Tire man, whose name cannot be disclosed, died recently and the reports are being received by others interested in the expe dition. The expedition is conducting a search for dinosaur eggs and traces of. human evolution. The plans called for the pen etration of the region south of the Altai Mountains, a district which has never be | fore been oxploredl. | “We will work west of Chagan Nor I (White Lake), along the northern base | of the Altais, as well as to the south. 1 This will bring us to the home of the j wild camels and wild horses and I hope '! we can bring back specimens of both,” j Andrews says. could be foi |id in hr. These data were regarded important in measuring early; influences. * * * Patching Auto Tops The application of a patch ■to a lam auto top without removing ,thp covering from the frame is often a fsnlure, as it is difficult to apply pressure evenly ov«r the surface of the patch while the otsnent is drying. A novel method of overcom ing this is practiced by a Wisconsin mo torist. After the patch has been on mented and applied, a small muslin bag, filled with sand, is placed over it, and the car it: left standing in the sun until (he ccmeat is dry. The bag of sand ao pommodates itself to the curved surface sis the top with the result that the patch will adhere along all the edges. * * * Loud Speaker Made from Paper ! Gone A simple loud speaker, which give* a) good tune and volume can be made by anyone from a disk of thin, cardboard or stiff paper. The disk is-cut radially mwi the edges-of the cut drawn up to form n wido cone, A pin is fastened in the cen ter and soldered to an ordinary head phone diaphragm, as shown. The coon may bn pleated as shown in the fltustim* tion, bwt this need, not b» done unfed ’ dreirp^ “mean-minded’iffleh.” 'J? i ", ' • 1 Three • are the days theVboes get# mad when' he • finds things went along’nicely while he was away fishing. , ’’ ■ ' 1 > ' ’ ; ; SSj ■l Here and there you hear'of a stream * , '.TTj9