Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Aug. 22, 1935, edition 1 / Page 6
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,V" 'A IS" ''if$ v ''?' 'Mis V, Old Port of i iveveal Excavator at Ottia Bare , , Many Tomb and Houses A 'V,! ,(:.-; .. ; ; ' - -Rome. The excavations' . being I conducted at . Osila,' the ancient port of Borne,, are beginning to ' fyt rival, rt least It the popular fancy, , . v, tboM at BercalaoNia and Pon ' v . pelL While the two Graeco-Eoman cities of the Neapolitan Campania were almost entirely dedicated to , ' leisure and : elegant life, Ostla thrived with commercial, life- and ' . .Its people were, principally manu facturers, merchants, small' capital, lata, clerks an sailors. . ' .", . "It was a population always' on the move and alert," says the Agen da d'ltalla of Rome, "and having dealings with, merchants and brok ers and : travelers 'A coming from every part o the ancient world. This explains Ostla's appearance, very different . from Pompeii,' wltlj Its large number of Insulae,' which in ancient Bomu were the ' type of houses 'used by the lower and middle classes. - ' v Ancient Tomb Unearthed. - "The discovery made a few days age In the excavations along the southern side of Ostla,. near the new 'motor road' going to the Soman Lido, will attract especially the attention of , archeologlsts. It Trying Out Real Warfare at Fort McPhersbn - I , - , - - i : ' "This photograph shows 'a It of exciting action In the mlmlo war staged at Fort McPberson on the ou', skiru of Atlanta, Ga. Two pursuit and observation" planes 'may be seen as tbey dived at-full -speed to strike troops on the ground. 'The latter, members of the, regular Twenty-second Infantry, fought back with' rifles and machine guns. The planes were flown by the reserve' officers under the command of Major Wiley B, fright and the Infantry was under command of Col F. S. Chalmers. ' . y .y.'Cyi Boulder Dam Opens Up New Industry '' Big Scale Production Metals" Is Foreseen. of New Torfc a! new electrochem ical industry utilizing desert ores Is In the making at Boulder dam, ac cording to chemists, who foresee large scale production of aluminum, magnesium, and other metals In the Southwest The completion of the enormous power houses, promised within few months, has raised the question of electrochemical products . made from ores of the nearby Nevada Arizona desert wilderness. Never before has there been a large sup ply of cheap electric energy any where near the.' group of unique mineral deposits adjacent to' the Colorado river. It ts pointed out. Several products now considered Indigenous to Niagara falls are pro posed by O. K. Leith and N.' H. Eavenson of the bureau of reclama tion - as reasonable for the South west. These Include aluminum and . magnesium, metals practically ob- talnnble only by electrolysis with the expenditure of vast current loads; Aluminum alone already consumes over 2,500,000,000 kilowatt hours an nunlly In the United States under normal business conditions.. . "Large deposits of alumlte at ' Marygvale, Utah, within striking distance, offer a promising source of both aluminum and potash In one enterprise," Prof. O. Boss Bob- ' ertson of the University of .Cali fornia, Los Angeles, says In. a re port made public by the American Chemical society. , "Furthermore, the increasing demand for extreme ly light alloys is boosting prospects for magnesium, a metal In ample supply In the desert region. ', V "Ferrotungsten, f erromanganese. Explorer Declares V ' ' ' Peak UnclimbaDle Vancouver B. C. Mount ya'n eouver, most Impregnable ' of Canada's mountain peaks,-never w)ll be scaled on - foot, Brad ford Washburn, noted mountain climber,. believes.. - ; .' . 'y 4 . Washburn Is the' leader of the Washburn expedition which has found many hitherto 'unknown peaks"ln the lakon territory. ' ' Mount Vancouver lies In south', western -Xukon. Washburn , flew over the peak in an airplane and aid "it was ,"Btterly. Impreg nable." ':';- ''y'1 uKn:' "It is one of the most amazing mountain , masses I : have ever seen. It rises to ad altitude of nearly 18,000 ,'feel from the flat snowflelds or the .Hubbard gla cier In one' gigantic cliff, of Ice and rock, without a single climb able angle." ". '. . - ? s Past consists ot a mass of tombs, some of -which seem to go as far - back as the epoch of Augustus and, ap pear to be very singular In their type; and structure. .These excava tion were made on as are -ef about 100 meters on one aide and 100 on the other." :''':i::'-'''v-;7' "A road, Boman paved, shows the beginning 'of the newly; explored area, passing along two' rows of buildings recently excavated. A, lit tle farther on are some stairs at the' end of whlcl Is a square show ing on the: left side the molding of a stone monument, on a quad rangular basis, ' almost five meters high.' It la one qf the..' most char acteristic Boman tombs ; of' the imperial epoch, of a style reserved for wealthy families., i;';; "In the central part of the' area excavated, both on the right and on the left, are cubicles, nearly all built -with curved vaults, with niches of various slses cut into the walla. ' , ';.' Many Fins Pictures.,' - "On the walla , are remarkable paintings and stucco. One 'picture Is three .meters wide and two, me ters high and represents, a lion de vouring , the, bead of an ox. . ;: ' "Painted under the central screen Is another representing a crocodile, boat' with two pigmies rowing, ialclum, silicon and boron, carbides, and electrolytic sine complete the list of reasonable ' prospects enu merated by the federal ; investiga tors, On the other hand, such items as electrolytic copper, at first glance a plausible entry In the list are dla- connVed, since, the' red . metal re quires only a . very' small quantity of electric energy for? Its' refine ment Electric power .for the, nu merous' mines of the Boulder tone Is probably a- matter of greater sig nificance, and will assist to some extent In taking care of the new energy supply.' : .' V..1. "The Boulder dam plant ls rated s - t.' , l ' l ,' "l T VELVET AND TWEED ? Br CHERIB NICHOtAS ' ' ' . Than ; a Velvet wlnd. breaker" with a tweed skirt there Is nothing smarter or newer for wear on early fall days. The model pictured IS by Malnbocher. The velvet Is dark brown and the tweed is In beige and brown. These velvet- lumberjack blouses will probably be the rage before - long Just wait . . until the news spreads among golng-away-to-schoot ' coeds andr Jn-thelrteens Jnnlor highs. H Imagine this 'outfit In tones of rich green and the new ginger brown or -dark dubonnet red with creamy: beige,. Tese velvet and tweed outfits are smart to wear about town good-looking any hour In the day. ' ' ''. . ' ' si ; , : 'Vi"'vCt' ; .; nipiiiilw:- 'i.n '. ;." ,;( ' ' " - i I - v. al. i i s ucks, one with i pljjiiiy rld t on its back. .'V. V . "' .. e picture, In 4" niche, rep resents a woman sitting In front of a small table end a' human- tig-', ore with, wliiga. On 4he right are. a' peacock and some 'Other birds! and on the small vault a bird look-i tag very much like a crane. VTbese, pictures ' are astonishing ly like those of tie Empress Una s 'ulnfeum' at Saxa ' Bobra. In a cubicle.' enclnftpA In an - nm im many animal bones, most probablyj sheep bones, belonging; presumably to animals saer'.accd according to pagan rites. Every tomb " Is. cov-j ered with v Inscriptions containing the names t -the dead ;,: j f Find Matty, MeiSal , v ' , 5 Ills Amc32 Vci Jeers 'Dallas, TexasFnlly 60 per cent , of all .' persons employed In American , Industries suffer from Varying degrees of emotion-' al,or mental 111 health, according to IL'L. Pritchetti professor of sociology at Southern Methodist university.' ' y'-: W Many men and women ' who are highly , successful, In bust-' ness and; "are entirely, rational, nonetheless V suffer ' from . emo tional, maladjustment Pritchet said. x-.-j?"?: iy;:Sj.: ,, Belatlvely few - people' are en gaged l4 the type of -work they, really wish to follow, he said. Most people are, engaged' as they are because; of -gompalslbn -or, circumstance.' at ,663,000, torse 'power figured on lew-water -conditions, fn'd over 1,800,000 horse '; power maxlmua) capacity. 'A generating cost in the vicinity- of two miles per kilowatt hour is estimated." ' Two SeU of Triplets ' ' Arrive About Same Time Providence, B" L There's an old saw starting "it never rains,? Provi dence ; Lying-in hospital ' was the birthplace-of 20,000 babies heforfr a set of triplets, was born there. Before the mother, Mrs. George Hagoplau, Was discharged with her three daughters, ' Mrs. Bobert Coughlln gave 'birth -to , two boys, and a girt. - l''L,-?y ' " "ry'' Discover Mummified Body o( Man in .Mammoth Cave Mammoth Cave,4 Ky. The mum-' milled body of a man verhaps' one thousand years nold, fonnd In ,the Mammoth cave here, was the., sub Ject of lpfense Interest among not ed archeologlsts. ,, , Grover. Campbell and Lyman Cut' llff, cave, guides,' discovered the.: body on a. 30-foot ledge pf the cave. J The man had been-' caught On the ledge "by the fall of a four-ton rock.' Marks of fen Implement' near the base of where the rock had been Indicated- the" man bad been' digging 'I under It when It became dislodged, . Near the body tras found torch made -f rem ' r e e d s b e q n d with J grasses, it-snu was sacking near ly upright In, the sand, t Among, th crude Implements' found was a .dagger-shaped' limestone rock believed to he'a weapoW;i:Ai5j;;-y,H'5' The man' worea oln cloth of fiber; It yas well preserved.' The man's stone spade , was , Aesxv his Road Owr-fa Oldahoma ': Kills 700 Snakes in Day " Medlclpe Park,, OWa. Workmen on a highway project In the Wichi ta mountains here killed more than 700 rattlesnakes In H)ne, day, ; , S ; The snakes ranged In 'slze'from Ave ' Inches .,(6' several feet a length and wore discovered when a huge power shovel scooped Into theiir den. - f ' e : ' Many ' dther t rattlesnakes have been I killed . by the ' workmen, but never so many in a single . day. Workmen believed the blasting of tne aignway up tne siae or Mount Scott, In 'the Wichita national 'foe--est and, game' preserve drove" the shakes to the anrface.-'',""i''.;'v:!:T. Thief Left With Rifhtr Waterbury Conn. Imagine the dlsappolntmeat of the thief wbq stole 55 shoes from William Llpson, Providence' (Bi L) salesman, only to flnd-tiiey were alV!fdr the.riKht foot. Tl; y were pamples for et'4 Mi'' i r-i"fr."e ; ... , OUR COMIGiSE 1 Er:.:lJ WHAt.WAS . . -t- 1 (CopyrtiW, W. W, P.) .' V FINNEY OF OT PORCE jkiW. Ol'M .GdNMA TAKB A WAR- 1 ALL RiWT V rso dACK j oiovyt bb x . HAMS Tfco TT2EE HOURS' HOURS' I JT ' 1 ...FAWYyf to'fl:l;.k'' . THE FEATHERHEADS 4,ibo-yooFAMrlY . HERBS "ythE n?QOF t-i-. . , r, its. - , r PHoTbSRAPHER I . '.'.',; 1 jWEREMr .jJJhe -foOK BAD J-I . ' . Iff f-yr T j QrTl J.CHm2Sg - V V V AMD .U-HT-lriAP - V , A $"ORT op SPIRIT" OSS' :;i l!:? Lives ' of, Lillk ' , SOUNp-r-J ' tm . . w f iflJlir tit it m i nw- i' y I -SHARE Avl tr- 11 HAM, M -' ';'-By oJbanf oh - wUy - oh tTM KNEW cm 1 qilST .? 'V. .j; , mi at: Be , -. ' 1 j -iirr.'.r t us w ., 1 x TION lleti 'gg.jj: ',A,- '''' THAT Ain't MRS SNOOP HERE rr " Negative Beatity - ', -ABB J. fT NNftLL I GUESS nHAi uani t -r.'; A FLASH IBS . 10- Qlrv "MO.fC-v'-ol TT4 T.fijjpogj -'It seems, that girls will be girls this season even ? In the field of sports! Arid mosf welcoinev too, is the return to' femininity In dothes. That natterinsf aualltJ1 Is most often , achieved '.through , the softness of , gathers, (as you see in this yoke or easy freedom of line (like the pleated sleeve with its casual air!) But every important tailored detail is retained , making j the 'Shirtwaist ( frock so universally becoming I S See j how trim the collar how neat the front closing how simple the pocket I Make yours of sport silk or cotton. .1 Pattern 2212 Is available In sizes 14, 18, 18, 20, 82, 34, 86, 88, 40 and t 42. Size 16 takes 3 yards 83 inch fabric. Illustrated step4)y-step .sew ing Instructions included. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS (15 ) coins or stamps Jcolns'preferrefi) .., tbU pattern. Write plainly n address and style number. BE , TO STATU SVSBy'-' '' S Address orders to' the. Sewing Cir cle Pattern department, 243 West Seventeenth Street New lork City, - - - y GOOD CONSCIENCE "What sire you going to say when the congress meets?" s,' -1 am going to avoid the complica tions of, world economics, answered Senator Sorghum, ,"nd concentrate on a notorious tnatter of- plain fact and simple Justice votes for, Wash ington, D. C." u t . x ' ' Something Worth Wbiie ' "Do you know that ar mathema tician wrote 'Alice In Wonderland! ' "Certainly,"'-answered Senator Sorghum, "that's, why, I contlnu i struggle, with big figures. If , I balance the budget I may at L J be able to write a good fairy story;.'' Toronto Globe, t . Phytic! Effect , .' "What makes you speak. at the top ' of your voice t" ;-.-. v "In order," said Senator Sorghum,: "to remind folks of the. loftiness of my Ideals." Moat Be Tkero. Teacher-HrTommy, tell me where'. Mexico Is. Tommy If s on pnea ten of . the Joggerfy. Pathfinder .Mnra slne. . ' '. '
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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Aug. 22, 1935, edition 1
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