?omatvce ? Bclicious Tw vr&oRoirf By ROBERT H. MOULTON C1IE world is full of raonu ments erected to the mem ory of notable men and women, and in commemo ration of notable events, and even famous race jjv - horses and pet cats and! dogs have had their merits I extolled on granite shafts. 1 But the only monument to a tree of which there is any record stands in a held in Madison county, Iowa, and tells the romance of the big red DAiclous apple, which was born in Iowa, and is now known and grown in every quarter of the globe where I'omona waves her waniL^ This unique monument di cated on August 15 U>jJjA<[farent De licious tree which is still standing and still bearing apples abundantly after a life of 50 years. Its offspring, in trees distributed and planted, num ber more than 7,5(XMKiO. According to the lowest estimate by experts, fully a third of the baby trees have survived and grown to producing age. The same experts- estimate that the annual crop of apples from these trees | brings in the markets $12, 000, (XX) an- 1 nuallv. Therefore, the fifty-year-old tree, near which has been placed this memorial, a granite boulder suitably inscribed, may call itself the $12,000, 000-a-year apple tree. The story yf the Delicious apple tree is a pon jological romance with out a precedent. Back in the fifties a young Quaker! fanner left his home in Indiana and settled in Madison couny, Iowa, near the little town of Feru. Jesse Hiatt was his name. He loved the apple and the apple tree with the love of one who knew their secrets. To him an apple was an institution, and a new apple was an epoch-making event. The new settler planted an orchard shortly after he acquired his farm. He made a spe cialty of apple trees. He grew trees of the popular varieties of that time, always seeking something newer and better. One day in the spring of 1S72 Hiatt found that a Belltlower seedling in his orchard had died, but from the root had sprung a tiny shoot. He resolved to watch that apple sprout and see If it was worth while. He would give it a chance in the world. A few years later the Bellilower or phan reached the producing point. A few buds were observed in spring. By midsummer :he buds had become 1 tiny apples. By early antumn the baby apples had grown to big red | ones, and from each emanated a most delicious aroma. Jesse Hiatt plucked one and ate it. The flavor, like the aroma, was delicious. The apple tasted like no other apple that he had eaten. The shape was different. Each apple on the tree had a quintet of rounded knobs, well defined. This precluded it being a Belltlower apple, in the opinion of Jifrsse Hiatt. It must be something else ? a new apple alto gether. Thus it came about that, in honor of his adopted state, Hiatt gave his new apple the name of the Hawkeye, Iowa's nickname. For 15 years after bearing its first crop the new tree bore annually, and increasingly, be fore its discoverer found a way of making it known beyond his neighbor hood. There, in the midst of Hiatt's big orchard stood the single tree, sturdy, a rugged trunk, branches radi ating with strong self-support, the foli age of a glossy green, the fruit a rich red glory. >r- ? *v^?&ssaR. 11^ ,E 7*azu&y2-, sion, Early Agreement W ... ? Not Be Surprising. WASHINGTON. ? AUh^.y .v British debt commissicn s Itome with the mission whirl, : it to America uncompleted. ?.?. formed officials in Washington no means pessimistic over ?! bility of an early agreemi;;r refunding of the British w;ir i the United States. In view of the TArts dis- he ; ? the first time, some of thos" i, ... with the recent exchanges the British and American comb ers would not be surprised if !?;. ? assent to settlement plans tenti worked out here is given soon . : "n fluenced British n^icials, are enu: rated the possibility of an expen.vvo war with Turkey, heavy losses of as the result of the operations of French in the Ruhr, followed by ir creasing unemployment of Engl Is?! workmen, unrest in India, and unsatis factory conditions in Egypt, which might make it necessary to modify he? present independent status. To tip up the government In such an enorirmu* financial transaction as that conten: plated by the commission under tb/^n ends is said to have been viewed as hazardous in the extreme. Car Carried North Carolina License. Jacksonville, Fla. ? Although Thorna? creek, 20 miles north of here, was dy namited four times following the find ing of an automobile submerged at the end of a "blind" road, without any bodies bing revealed, county officers were of the opinion that several per sons perished when the car catapulted into the stream. The creek will be dy namited further downstream. The outomobile, which was re moved from the water, bore a Greens boro, N. C.. city license No. 307, and a North Carolina state license No. 40. 735. There was a shriner's emblem on the front of the car. A short distance from where the automobile was submerged were found a baby's tin horn, a pair of woman's stockings, a handkerchief, some or angeB and crackers. These articles had lodged in some vegetation grow ing near the bank. A farmer, hearing the automobile going down the "blind" road, went to investigate and found the machine in the water. The road ends at the stream. Peacock to be Given Hearing. Lakeland. Fla. ? Dr. J. W. Peacock who escaped from the criminally in sane department of the North Caro lina state prison and who recently was declared sane at Arcadia, Fla., will return to North Carolina without requisition papers provided he is as sured no technical charge is placed against him and he would be tried only for insanity, it was reported. The decision is said to have been arrived at at a conference between Dr. Peacock and his attorneys. Dr. Peacock has been visiting here but could not be located. Forest Fires Raging. Kinston, N. C. ? LeQrange reports told of extensive forest fires in that flection. Several thousand acres of -wooded land have been burned over. Houses have been threatened in some localities. One farmer reported sev eral hundred dollars' damage on his premises from a blaze started by rab bit hunters in an adjacent thicket Rainfall over the district has been be tow normal for several months. The farmers have been compelled to quit work to cope with the fires in some places.