KENANSVILLE. I. .J CAKCL V u A Split Second Later He Slippery Eels By James J. Montague THE ,' whistle bad blown, the gong had sounded.. From his post by the gang plank a Bail or man had repeatedly cried "All ashore that's going ashore," and turned away to other duties. ' The captain and bis subordinates were on the bridge, and the engineer him self presumably stood by the throt tle, for this was small liner and required no gold braid on the en gine room or costly flotilla of tug boats to swing her out Into , the stream. Deep within the bellyof the craft sounded a gong, and on deck one feit a slight tremor. Ob viously we were on our way. ' Looking toward the shore I ob served, a human figure approaching, and gesticulating as It approached. Its occupant wasted no breath ita sound, but applied himself only to the serious and obvlouslyimportant business of Joining our Tea gel be fore it was everlastingly too late. He ran low to the - ground, only glancing up now and then to Bote bow wide a gap the ship had opened between ber and himself. . There was perhaps four or, fire feet to clear when be set bis right foot on the string piece. While the passengers stood1 ..gasping, the. runner; slightly coiled .bis .figure,, then opened It swiftly out and took off. A split sec ond later he was sprawling on the ; Ideck, engaged In a violent effort to (regain the breath that had been knocked out of him by bis contact .with the deck. Presently be succeeded in this highly important undertaking, and looked up, at first in trepidation at the bridge, afterward curiously at those of us who stood near his lighting place. Bis eye met mine. (After a second look to make sure he said, slowly and painfully: I "Always late, ain't ir f "But this time you at least man aged to arrive," I said, while the spectators, having been deprived of ;the spectacle of a man plunging Into the uttermost depths of the harbor bad begun to walk slowly way. ; "Yep," said the Informal visitor, iTm improvln'." I Be was. Indeed, for he was a reg- nlar member of the crew, and that meant a job at least as long as it required the ship to Journey from New York to Savannah. And for this young man that was consider able, v. The next day I found him engaged lln polishing the brass work , and other shining metal trimmings . on the boat deck. Anxious to learn .where and how he had occupied .himself since we last bad foregath ered on' another ship and In another iport, I inquired of him if It would 'be too violative of. ship's disclplne If he dropped In on me In my room ritirlnff his watch below. He ' said (that It could be managed, and that night be arrived, bearing In a news paper under his arm a package which It would be permissible to open after we passed the ten-mile limit . ; - i ' Having nothing of any Import to tell about himself, I asked him to pick up his story from the time I had last seen him, almost on. the other side of the world. . ( I listed my questions In the or Sfler of their importance. . "What bad become of the whale xaruiing euieryriBc i , "Bad he sot any steamship, mag nate to listen to bis scheme to have trout pool, and thicket for grouse booting on a great liner J" r t "Had he perfected his five lap to the mile track so that small motor cars . cuuiu aw rocvu vu muijp uoaru (during royagef - .,.. "And had be pursued a ny further Sis researches Into the possible use ulness of electric eetar v ;;yr; ' All' VI W w UV UV UI0 m tdea," he said. "And that would of teen all right If rd of had. sense enough to get out In time. An' you can't hang that on me very hard, for look at all them birds In the stock market who thought a good thing was: gofn'- to last 'forever. Where are they nowT";? ? ; : , "But what about the eels? I In fil.ntPd. . Wat Sprawling on the Deck. You can't get away from the fact that the Juice la In 'em. but glttln it out an' makln' it of commercial use was the trouble." ' - "About five years ago when t was to the tropics I stepped off the freighter 1 was servln on without speakln' to the skipper about it, an' got some boys ashore to show me where these here eels was doln' their stuff. After glggln' for 'em for three weeks I had enough to start; an' build me a pond so ( could get them at work. But I ain't no engi neer, an' 'though I tried every way I could think of to get the Juice out of them wriggling flab an' Into a storage battery, it wasn't no good. "But I ain't no quitter. What does a promoter do when scheme blows op oa him? I says to myself. He onloads It onto somebody else' answers back. An' that was what I Started out to do. J got feller who runs a newspaper down In one of them Island towns to do my prlntln' for me, an' we sent out circulars about our eel farm, an' how before very long all the machinery In them parts would be run. by eel power, an' when eel give out, which he seldom done, you could get enough meat off of him to pay all the over head. V i v-'.,;vf -5 .-,6tr'"'iW'-t- "By an' by I got a few bites from people who lived oh some of 'the big islands, but most of 'em wanted to know bow they was to tell If these was real electric eels I. bad to sell. or Just common eels without no kick into 'em. So I wrote 'em all that If they -would get somebody on my Island that they knew an trust ed to see a demonstration I'd prove that my eels was the real McCoy an' would supply power as advertised. By that time it struck me it might be a good plan to find out something myself about them fish before I took a chance on a public exhibi tion. .V -,, ."Well, I got some ship engineers, an' other educated fellers to come an' see the rest, an' to bring com passes along which would point to any place, an' so prove ' eels , was electrical. An' blast me If ary eel made the least impression on. any compass you could rig not even on a magnetized needle floatin on a crock In a basin of water. "Of course I didn't want to be stuck with a lot of useless eels on my hands, so I did what anybody else would of done In my place. : I advertised in newspapers in conn- countries where they didn't have Wl electric power, but needed Tt bad. An' by an' by I began to get let ters of inquiry, and not only that but letters with money In 'em. I kept up supplyln' 'em with Informa tion about our plant an' bow .we was improvln' the breed of eels, an' how before five years you could send eels all over the world to run little local electrical machinery, an' the money cosae" In so fast-that I fig- gered I had my fortune all made. , -An' then one day quiet little feller comes along an', asks to see the eels work. ,. I tried to stall him off. but . be Insisted, so. I took chance' and ..let him come ; to the plant ' He Just looked at my stock once, an' then says: 'What country does this Island belong tor ', "Well, J told him. . What else could I dor An' the' next week a cablegram .come to the main office,' an' a bunch of local' cops come Out an looked me over an' give me two days to get out of the placeman take my eels with me. What do you think "of tbatt ?f '.:'?!Vi: "Here I was doln what many a supposed - big: business -man has done, an" I got kicked practically off the ocean for It, an had to go back to work as a deck hand. It alnt right; I tea you. No wonder there's so many Reds an Soviets' and things growln' up all around as.". Landing Fields Close Together Landing fields and airports In the United States mathematically aver age only 13tt miles apart, accord ing to figures received by the op erations department of Eastern Air Lines from the Bureau of Air Com merce. There are - 2,297 landing fields and 80,000 miles of air routes over which fly panwr,. air mall and exprr.'.'s p!nnil ' r tv t' ' f. rr c 1 1 ' i i ' t -y J C II I J CLAfCE ). Bell 8vti.!l(-iit-VfNU Srvlo It has been a loi.g time since par ents believed that it was the duty , of a school teach- ... er, entrusted with tne edncat0n of - - i young people to "lick 'em, an larn em." I am told that corporal punish ment la nonexistent-In the schools today. ' In my time it was pretty preva lent, too much so for the happiness of myself and my fellow pupils.; But I, do not believe It ever did any good... j . Today, the teachers profession, while still not paid as highly as it should be,, la the most important calling in any civilued. country. The , teachers themselves have been taught scientifically. They know better how to gain and bold the attention of their pupils.. They are more tolerant with dul lards, who,' from no fault of their own, are slow to learn. -. " School teaching Is a highly Im portant buBlnees. i t , n ; It is important because it arouses In the minds of young; people a de sire tor knowledge. -:i":. V( .'.'" S A ' " Convince a youngster that the more be knows, the happier, and. probably, the. more successful he will be, and more than half tbe bat tle Is accomplished. , Tbe teachers In this country are very 'well paid, according to the Old standards, But they are not as well paid as chauffeurs, or horse trainers; or baseball - players, whose value to the. world is very much less than their- owii.';-;'.!:':' VJ;':;-? Today, fortunately in this coon try,- education 'Is compulsory. I But compulsory or voluntary, yon must want It, or you will not get it You must t inun$ted and mbi- tiota, and dturmintd to 'gel out of youhelf ine but rtnUU pouibU. Otherwise.: the time 'you- have spent In learning will be of no pos sible use to you. In these days of colleges and ed ucational Institutions of ail kinds It Is getting harder and harder for a half-taught boy or girl to get any position at. 'W''fi:':'t' This has been .especially evident In: the' last vear or so. 'ris -k ' But those wtto suffer the least from the conditions out of which we are now passing are those who have used their opportunities to stock their minds.. If every young man or woman. starting out In life knew exactly - in what direction ; What ; tp go, there Would. Women Do not be nearly so ,-, t 'many, failures In life. . But unfortunately, what one wants to do, and what one can do best.' are not always tbe same, ,- ': If yon asked the average high school girl today what ' her chosen walk In life would be, she would probably tell you that she would rather be a motion, picture Actress than anything elsfc-.f... .,. , And one time out. of a hundred,' a motion picture actress life might be open to ber , if , she . worked hard.- Ui-'-'i-iy:i- In the other ninety-nine cases, if she persisted and got as far as Hoi lywood, the .result , would only be disappointment, perhaps tragedy. The people who do not know what they want to do are still in a majority, and they are to be pitied.! They- may have Mai Intelligence and ability, sometimes actual tal ent " - , , iiSKV'A. But if they try this thing and that and are . hoping) that some new opportunity will turn up to give them .-a chance, their whole life may be wrecked. . ' ; e t Today conditions of this kind are not so serious ' as they used There are wider opportunities for women. Indeed, in many t cases, . women are doing the same kind of work that men are and gaining fame and fortune. ' "! v . i But these are exceptions. ',-' i .. 'What the average glr ought tfl do Is to get -married and have a fam ily of ber"owa;Av?!';:ii:iy!! , o And - that . Is : what ' she usually does, if she ha the chance. , t But if the chance doesn't come along and it often doesn't the fu-t ture looka. very dark. :- , But the clouds are not so menac ing as 'they were, : -1 i ii i ton find shops of all kinds, once operated only by men, with wom en at their head, often the owners of tb''ptacft";f 'yt 1 One of the largest chain of restau rants In. Mew York Is runv by woman, with great success. Women have v wide opportunities when they go to work In big depart ment .stores, sod often earn sal arles that would put some of their male workers In tbe shade. And al this' has been , accom. pushed within the. last, twenty or thirty years"-. ..(.; : And M remit man u beginning to find out that th wordt "superior " art an a " roiihm. i UR V in r "" J . tCttijiH. W. K P- : ' ' :.,V:V. ;V.'.. ' :1; FINNEY OF THE i f IXi TO i i taw f W . . Airt'f IT ? Oi'vE TASK fE2. TCOMfc ; .vr 1 rt.fZ jLtT' ME. mm Mr'I'W - . ww. mum If BE YER VJIFE SHE BE WAMTlM V&X' I M COURT CLAIMS. Ye?r- f?.Ayl DERTEP THIS if mm. a) WMra NwMpr Vmuym . ' " ' THE FEATHERHEADS .JZJZ?'-' Wind Out of Her Sails - Y HERE HE Comes AT " . .LAST PAT DAY NKfHT . S AND JUsI . SB He'll hear THIS So' Vo YOU B-i CHANCE vjiTh "Thosct r7 3TACKALS Y r-' li It mm " eft- r-r ' IZBuiiSiL r r - ty1 ---J.-.f. '.,.,.1..; l '! ,V-, 1 FORCE t'WiM n . WHO? Nlfct.-N w e7 , Got .r - Lc5kiT BLACK tic; -ANP AIT -TILL. I.TeLL Yoli . VrVKlAT ELSE. SH6 "POKE SrW5j,',i.HjMr VELLArlERE" .Lf r KMOW WHERt? PoYoti thimk I We.eeeil x ctouVE, DEEM? J ?LMHG CARDS rilNV in; . apout ' HAMfs AMY I finest 1 should )pAV?7 j . EE tHAWKFUL. -Jl rAYt f OH, I VoiJ HAVE TKAT i PlPN'T PEM 7.7- MUCH OF TOU. PAY LEFT v:,"iin" . sis in") 07' , .-.v.-v. ...... Fugitive TT rt ) l , 1 MJAL-SEZ PIP IpNES- BUT -RUN) . . S YOU WOU LDN'T FRUKA HEP CALL ME A PipKi'T ytz" J.PESERTE.R, VvOULD Your cm A : ; ; AT THE , CLU3 v I THAT VPT S 1 W X c. .,,g i. rp to t 1 v 1 ( Charing Cro.ss u :io 1 , fluids in Lo.i.lf.i. 1 rived from the i rynge, nieuulng a tmis Edward I erected at C lust of 13 crosses whlth i; route of the funeral pr bla wife, Eleanor, from Lincolnshire, to Westmi. cross was taken down In modern memorial stand;) 1 Charing Cross station yai- J. be remembered that Eian-r neyed with Edward I to the Land and sucked the poison ; wound dealt her husband I Moor. . .- . "Kit LonSMt Lbm B Rccor J Without parallel U a 1 20,881 years that Is held on a In the old parish of Kirkhill, : land. Drawh up about 200 j ago, reports Collier's Weekly, it v ; declared to be legal and va: 1 I r the highest Scottish court wh. j government attempted to conn i theland after; the Jacobite re.i Uon of 1743. , -. " - Starlings Are Mocker . The Bureau of Biological Surv y says that the starling belongs to a different family Sturnldae from the mocking bird family Mlmldae; how ever, almost, all members; of the starling family are mockers. The starling has been known In England to imitate as many as 63 bird songs., , ' ' One Under Sea Early In the formation of this continent the Interior lowlands r ' North' America . were 1 'under s When the water ' receded, the. were left layers of sedimentary rock; In most areas the main drain age was on the surface, cutting what was once a level ocean floor Into Its present contours. Gi an turn Among Animals Giantism exists among animals as among men. ' The famous Lin colnshire ox exhibited In London la 1790 stood five feet six Inches at the shoulder and was nearly twelve feet in length. It is said to have weighed two tons eighteen hundred weight , , : , First EnalUh Colon - The first English colony In Nor-'i America was established on Roan oke island August 17. 1585. It In within , a few miles of Kill Devil bill, marked by a monument com- memoratlng the Wright brother's first flight in an. airplane. - $ i CWneee "Fn Dogs '' The dogs which appear In Clils sculpture and art are known "fd'V dogs.'' Their : origin is , un known, but one of the.. meanings of the word "fu" 4n Chinese is "good luck," and they probably have a good omen symbolism. . - HARDLY EXPECTED . "I want to be honest, sin I can't support your daughter, but She has her heart set on marrying me." "Never mind; do your , best I can't support her either. "Kansas City Star. . - Too Much Imagination v "What 18 your; idea of Utopia?" . - It's an Imaginary state of e '-r-ence,". said Senator Sorghum, ' Is liable to fall down if vou ( finance it with Imaginary money, i r( Probably Not That Quickly How -quickly could a national ref erendum on declaring war be taken T Before tbe Japanese could move from San Francisco to Denver T - , ... ' .I. j , And Howl , . ' "Can your daughter nlay the vlo- - lln?" , 'No, she can't; but she does!" 1 1 i Perpetnal Motion Teacher My ' goodness, , Wi! ;I Bow did you get such dirty band .' Willie Washln' my face, WN0 4 c