pen 19, mt Today and Tomorrow By FRANK P. STOCKBRLDGE Dowsers Thai certain men can find underground water by means of a forked g twisr, preferably of witchhazel; is a belie j which is held so persistently by so many people that scientists unable to explain it, are investigate ii it in the hope of discovering the principle hack of "dowsing." That dow - do succeed oftener than they fail is certain, whatever the reason. A scientist of the U. S. Department of Agricwltuie, who recently witnessed an exhibition of waterfinding by a German dowser, has revived interest in the subject- The explanation which he suggests, and which some other scientific men believe is possible, is that the radium emanations of rays, which are constantly coming out of the earth, have a definite effect upon the nervous systems of certain persons who are highly sensitive to them, and that when the direct path of these rays is oustructeu uy water, me rcsuu is a contraction of the dowser's musfcles and a movement of the forked twig or "divining rod." Other suggested explanations are that a pood dowser is sensitive to the faint vibrations caused by running J water; another that the minute trace of dampness in the earth immediate,.?U;iy over a subterranean stream affects V him. Whatever the answer, it seems as if there is something in the ancient belief. Villages A Yale professor recently remarked teat there was no reason whatever for the existence of most small towns. The editor of the New MilTord, Conn., Times has "called" the v; professor, pointing out that it is only "in the villages that people live a community life which is at once comfortable and free from the annoyances of life in the cities. __Small towns today offer everything of real importtance that any city c?\ fers to its inhabitants, and a great deal that the city cannot give. One can buy in the village stores everything thai the great city department store offer, except, perhaps, the / flashy jewelry and extravagant furs which the city stores are always tempting people who cannot afford them to buy. In the village movie ijg theatre the same pictures are shown i that are seen on Broadway, and usually before Broadway sees them. Nobody but the very wealthy can afford to keep an automobile in New York; few village families are with-; out one. It is only in small towns that most people can afford to own \$fand live in their own houses. And jiiowhere but in the small town can ,70lie have neighbors who are really /neighbors in the old, friendly sense of the word. |$ Stimulants Alcohol, morphine, cocaine, all of y^thc habit-forming drugs, owe their /^popularity to the fact that, for a short -iaftime, they enable their users to do SjjjBithings which they othcrw isb would u?iXiot have the energy or the "ourage Sffito do. Coffee anil tea are stimulants less powerful effect. Every race V-.jpf people has developed some sort a of stimulant which speeds up cer' jgfcin physiological piocesses for the Jabt beingf f ."tjf In the light of this world-wide huSapan demand for additional sources r&gaw oocniy energy, scientists have been I ?g#orking for years in the effort to raftscovS* some substance which will ^l^ccomplish the desired purpose with*||g$ut the disastrous and physical re^wfictions which follow the use of the ,i Bgvdinavy stimulants when the first ef SSect has worn off. During the war a Govman chemist S ^Efound that small doses of acid sodium ffipho.sphate increased bodiljr energy aR^'ithout apparent ill effects, and this 18-drug was used to enable workers in ?K German coal mines to do extra la| ^ " ~ Now the Smartest W the Globe Are Elgins ' Look the whole world ove niest and most elaborate upward, you will find th smartest watch styles on t expert yon know. This sri the smartest cases that evi a watch. Elgin depenriab ways led . . . and now. El our line of wrist styles ? 1 WILLC. WATCHMAKER m One Way to C i Wi! jVt - jMT" ss3^BHg^yiJ^?jP!5 >: 3 / ' ,- < * '' j H. E. Mann of Germantown, 1 every day when the calf weighed onl; pounds and Mr. Mann can still lift it. creature weighs. 1.200 pounds bor. Research since the war has failed to disclose any serious bad effects from the use of this drug and there is ground for the belief that this or! something similar may become as popular as tea or coffee and much more useful than alcohol. Frauds The Federal Radio Commission has ! refused to renew the broadcasting | licenses of certain stations which | have been used to perpetuate palable , ; frauds upon the public. There is still i I too much (if that sort of thing going | out "on the air," however. I listened in the other night to a i 1 j J :i 1 ? tf-a uioflutuMci utrnvi ruing ?\ wvnnvnuij electrical machine which would cure almost everything, according to him. Of course, he was tying, deliberately trying to get ignorant people to spend money for a worthless device. I heard another broadcast, an astrologer inviting people to send her money to have their fortunes told. She was lying, also. There is no possible basis <if truth in the claim of any person to he able to read the future, whether by consulting the stars or the tea-leaves in the cup. Frauds like these, are prohibited by law in most states, but Mie radio cuts across state line?.. Reputable newspapers do nut permit palpable fakes to advertise, but the radio seems to be running wild in the perpetration of fraud. Depression How serious has the much-talked-j of business depression actually been? j Not nearly as serious noi as farreaching in its effects, [ believe, as the drought, about which mueV less has been said and-. According to .one authority, business as a whole is only about 9 per cert, off the norma! for this time of year, employment is 95 per cent, of normal, retail sales are only off about S per cent, taking the country] as a whole, grocery sales are. about! the same as last year, regular ir.tev-| est and dividends are being paidis] usual and thirty million families are! living on almost the same scale of expenditure as they were in the height of "flush times.'* It is the fashion to "talk poor." Cash is not circulating as rapidly as it was, but credit for those entitled to it is easier than for years. The chief sufferers arc the \ ictims of over-production, who are mainly the farmers. L_ : Six Edgecombe farmers sold one car of 87 fat hogs on the Richmond r market last week.for $1,195.44.. atches on i. . . . | * 8 I r. And barring only tfce tiwatches costing from $700 at ELGIN offers you the he globe. Just ask any style >rc will prove the case with sr cloaked the movement of ility and accuracy have algin style. Come in and see" tnd beautiful pocket cases. WALKER ; AND JEWELER I jjjl Penn., began lifting his pet bull calf y SO pounds Now 4he bull weighs 850 He thinks he can keep it up until the I Mother's Plea Sends Son !To Penitentiary for Life Bardstown, K>\?The quivering, I halting words of a mother 500 miles I away Saturday sent her son to the j penitentiary for life, i Confronted with the State's offer to swap a life sentence for a plea ; of guilty in the murder, February I 22, of Carl B. James, railroad off.i| cia!, Anthony Piotrowskv, alias Tony I Prwosky, alias Anthony Pe.terson, was | overcome with fear and confused with I happenings of the past few days. He turned to his mother in Detroit for advice. If he^refUaeXvfhe" Stntv'a Of fvi', he faced trial by jury with death in the electric chair as maximum punishment on a verdict of guilty. Mrs. Agnes Piotrowsky, whose lack of funds prevented her attending her son's trial* speaking over the telephone from Detroit, sealed her son's! fate when she advised his attorney to enter a plea of guilty. The mother had before her news iwijci awtoums ui tne late 01 ner son's companion, Prank Carson, alleged t^'gger-man, who yesterday was convicted *and sentenced to death by a jury in the same court for the same murder. Both are under twenty years of age. David Sessmer. the youth's attorney, said Mrs. Piotrowsky could hard ly speak for her sobbing. She hesitated, almost overcome, but finally mustered strength to tell him her decision. Circuit Judge .Tames Tudor, who had allowed two hours for the mother to decide, then sentenced the youth to life imprisonment in the reformatory at Frankfort Thus ended the final chapter of hi murder which has stirred -Kentucky for days and which was Icrmed b.Vj commonwealth's attorneys as the j most "inhuman murderir. the histo'^| of Nelson County.1* I The famous Goodyear All. Weather Tread is superior in BHH traction. Note how the deep- K&V cut tight-gripping blocks ore KK^ placed in the center a? the ^ tread, where they belong. Press the palm oF your hand upon this tread and Feel haw the blocks grip and pinch the Bash. B This illustrates the AH-Weather * Tread's hoIdFast action on pavement or rood. 30x3& TIRES 3.50 29x4.40 TIRES 4.45 30x4.50 TERES 5.45 Standard Service I Station, Home Owned VERY THURSDAY?BOONE, N. C. "Dead" Returns to Life Before Burial Santiago," Chile.?A dispatch to La Nation from Los An?ele?. in the province of JBiobio, said a 22year-old woman, wbo apparently had been dead two days and nights ' "came to life" Sunday in her cof- 1 fin, thereby escaping burial alive by three hours. The family and friends of the ? woman had neared the end of a period of mourning when she | moved her arms and head and opened her tightly closed lips. In | a quiet voice she said: "Plo.ise give me a glass of water." St. Patrick's Day Meeting of d r11 *-.? ? manner C.1K UIUQ. Banner Elk, X. C.?The Women's Club of Banner Elk held its regular I monthly meeting Wednesday after"'"I) f i;?-t week at the home of Mrs. Rooda Hardin. The president Miss Fanny Lowe, presided. After the opening exercises, a St. Patrick's Day program was given under the leadership of Mrs. Edgar Tufts. Mrs. \V. R. Smith read a most ixi-l teresting paper on St. Patrick himself: Mrs. Rosalie Shell gave a reading, "The Clinic," by Alice Hegah Rice, ar.d Mrs. Tufts told of the mu-l PASTIME THEATRE "Place of Good Shows" ^ FRIDAY-SATURDAY, MAR. 20-21 Barbara Stanwyck and Sam Hardy iN "MEXICALI ROSE" j MONDAY, MARCH 23 | KoDert f razer ana Louise Lorraine IN "BEYOND THE LAW TUESDAY, MARCH 24 CLARA BOW, HARRY GREENE AND A BIG CAST IN "NO LIMIT" HER LATEST PICTURE WEDNES.-THURSDAY, MAR. 25-26 I Robert Montgomery, June Warier, Anita Page* ?IN ? "WAR NURSE" = tKHBonuBsan ja?za IBraiun The patented Goodyeor Supertwisf Cord Coreass is H||(^ superior in vitality and long ^toMiwc ^?* Under continued flexing Kfr :' or sudden rood-shock, where H|';j ordinory cords fatigue or snap, Lifi BBWM thn extro-eiustic Supertwist cords stretch and recover, like ^hber bands. Ask us to snow youon our cord-testing machine the extra stretch ? enormously ?or oupeiiwsi <oro I cv?r lb? best ttondard cord. [ Central DISTRl w _ Boon sic of Ireland and the place its song? have taken in the hearts of all poopie. Two contests were held, one nam-| iiijr aii the liowen? whose names begin I with the letters of Patrick, and onej using the names of the Irish songs.) Mrs. Ben Council! of Boone won the! prize for the f irst contest and the I winners in the second were Miss .lanej Gray and Mrs. Edgar Hall Tufts. The club had as visitors Mrs. Frank Linney, Mrs. Paul Coffey, Mrs. Gra-I 1 m I New Styles $jl?j| | Real Values ^ I STOCK R i SA i ? i ?? * 5 We have so many ba | to mention them in c 5 tions have been mad !| We also have a numfc thrifty buyers who w | Take advantage of ?? i ues in nationally A cordial invitatio <; to visit our store. I 1 t e a i o n. 1 Departm buy <* Se 0 300DYE LEADING T See these demonstration! consider the fact, true foi people ride on Goodyeo other kind. The public h THE leading tire! The p more Goodverir? nnn Goodyear to give the have the latest types . prices. Trade in your old ED TIRE REPAIRING Tire Coi BUTORS FOR WATAUGA COUN1 r. R. Winkler, Manager e and Blowing Rock, N. I dy Farthing, Mi*s. Suma Hardin, Mrs. I Henry Hardiii, Mrs. Ben Council!.. ' Mrs. Tracy CounciU and Miss Carrie I Coffey, all of Boone. | Beiigfecfui refreshments were ! served by the hostess assisted by I Miss Eveiyn ArJedgt and Mrs. Chas. ^ | Zimmerman. The meeting adjourned I to meet next month with Miss Stirling in the Lees-MeRae Library. ! Democrat Ads. Provide a Short-Cut to Better Business. [vtvvi if^'H ?uy Now I jjjjpfl^ f?r Easter | EDUCING J LE! J i j rgains it is impossible | letail. Drastic reduc- | e in, the entire stock. | >er ot Specials tor the ill be attending court. | money-saving valadvertised goods. f >n is extended you | 1 i ACS | ent Store | &tji| 5 lli M mwgrirrnrrrniMiTiiffiTfri^ti ?f* \ fi^^0 I ^HERE'S I 3OF WHY I :AR IS THE I IRE ... . I ; of superiority. Then ' 16 years, that more <r Tires than on any as made Goodyear ublic buys millions ually and enables greatest valoe We . . all sizes . nil tires! B GOOD USED TIRES npany I ' - . i ; J

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