NEWS FLASHES
Nation Wide Happenings Briefly Told
Lively Night Life
Has Passed
Vice Has Been Driven Out
of Buenos Aires
The Forestry Association ol Washincton warns the nation that its supply of wood pulp is nearly exhausted. Ten years apo the United States produced Its entire newsprint supply—now we import two-thirds of it. Mrs. Irene Styles, a young widow of Vineland. N. J-. was shot by a Jealous lover. A New York city "L" was hurled a distance of 25 feet to the street with fit teen passengers. Kont, were in-
jured.
iYed Snead, a Philadelphia negro, searched too persistently for an alleged kick in a certain brand of hair tonic. He died. Philadelphia ministers are complain-
mcnifacturers of rubber goods experienced on account of the propensity jf rubber to expand or contract v ,1b the beat. Daniel Webster, who
Inr because the noise made by w.-s Mr. Goodyear’s counsel in bis
pete it litigation, humorously referred fine cloak of India rubber be owned, stating that in cold weaD.er it stood well by itself, and
planes Sundays disturb religious ser-
vices.
ra.lroad during the walkout.
Three hundred and ninety more rsdltals are about to be deported. Wtrkers at the Philadelphia Navy Tan are in favor of daylight saving. At j recent vote the counts were 3569
for and and 2321 against.
Many were »he trouble* that early
Richard W. Wright. 24. of Cleveland.
O.. Jumped from a burning airplane that he often sat it on the porch near Marlton. N. J.. last week from an ' sii'j.ourted by hi* bat. many persons altitude of 200 feet. Both leg* and ' passing b> mistaking it for the Sage
arms were broken and be died from i of Marsfleld himself.
Western States Still Have Abundance of Wild Game
Deer For Every Dozen Humans Residing in Montana,
Report the States
Montana has still much wild game, with a deer for every dozen humans residing in the State, saya the Christian Science Monitor, and with elk. moose mountain sbeop- and goats, smo even the nearly extinct cariboo, still rooming its mountains, dense woods ard vast plains In large numbers. The animal survey of the wild eulmals of the national forests in this state reveals that the number of these d> hU.cn* of nature has not diminished duinc the past years, rather In son parts they have Increased. The count of the forest service record* about 43.500 deer In the national forests of Montana, an increase of 2.000 in number above tne estimate made at the end of the year of 1918. In far northwestern Mr,ntana. In U> wilds of the Kootenai forests, in the lands of high mountains and deep, wooded valleys. 16,590 deer arc mak-
ing their home.
Thirtein tmmsand nine hundted elk have beep o.msaod in Monts, a. scattend throughout the State in every ono of the forests but one. the Custer, located in ••as'ern Montana. Moose, the rapidly vanishing lords of the antlered tribes, are fairly plentiful. there being 1.900 of them found ir small herds throughout the Slab though on the Flathead in the sylvan regions east of the great Flathead
internal Injuries.
j The municipal authorities of Buenos W L. Mason, lawyer, and Cameron Aires bare started the new year by
BUikie, stock broker, of Englewood, clamping the Ud on vice. A previous-
J.. were volunteer members of »’ Copied city ordinance dosing all at emergency train crew on the Erl'! ttoorta of ill fame as tight!.'
drum has been put into effect by the police, who declare there is going u
be no reopening.
And the slowly-perishing “night life’ of Buenos Aires gave another gasp. The popular North American conception of the Argentine capital as a city of gayety and license, patterned after the Paris idea and freer some respects than New York, has become a misconception. This city today, as far as after-midnight activity is concerned, is one of the quietest of its sixe in the world. With the exception of a relatively small theatrical and dance hall district near the center, the town’s streets are datknned. and the only noise after midnight Is that made by flat-wheeled trolley cars or the whistles of the pegpost policemen In their hourly ’ all’s
I” signals.
The former gayety of Buenos Aire* could never be attributed Argentine people. The introduction uf ’’night life’ can be laid at the door of the foreign dement here. In their i transplant a bt» of Paris on thi* side of the Atlantic. Five years ago the dty was full of a’l sort* of questionable amur-men's. But this element In the life of Buenos Aires languished during the war and It will .robably never return. White slavers found an early market and a clear road for their activities here a few years ago. Now their operations are at a standstill, for not only Is public opinion arrayed strongly against them, but the Argentine passptrt regulations are so stringent, due to the ant I-Red precautionary measures that have been adopted, that this data of "traders" find it abrolutely impossible to Import their human
wares.
Whether the present stringency will St lasting or the purveyors of vice will And a way to get police protection cannot be said, but It remains that visitors to Huenoe Aires, expecting to see the much vaunted “naughtiness." are greatly disappointed.
Lake, there are 750 of them, while over a hundred are found In the herd
on Rose Fork, near Missoula.
Mountain sheep and mountain goats are counted a novelty these days, yet In this State theie are found 2.600 of the former and 3.450 of the latter, ranging the high altitudes of the vae‘ Rocky Mountains as a ,-minder of the bilge herds that once inhabited the moun-
tainous country of the west.
Antelope, the most beautiful and fastest-moving ol all their kind, are still found In Custer county, along thv
Bib Horn, hut the herd is small,
be ring about 175. according to the for-
est rangers.
Thirty caribou arc Inhabitants of the Wilderness of Kootenai, ranging alone the Yaak Valley, wheie there is no te. disturb them. The trail of man and the kind is growing extinct, scarcely any one knows what the animal is like. Ye; there has be*i ■ley when Montana nun saw caribou each day and thought nothing of it Ano on 'he Flathead Indian Reservation is located the great government bison range where wander 3f>0 o' the shaggy beasts which ones were hailed as the monarebs of the plains and the main source of subsistence of the original Americans of the great
Southern Crops Bring Money When Made Into Beel Steaks Investigations Show Profits From Feeding Steers Oi:
Corn and Roughage
’’’hat tne Southern farmer who straw; those of lot 2. 37.4 pounds of
silage. 7.6 pounds of ear corn. 3
raises a surplus of corn and farm roughage can market them at a handsome price through steers of good quality, when properly purchased, can retain fentlising clement* of the feed* on hla farm. Ir dearly shown In recent Investigations by the United Slate* Department of Agriculture. Three lots of native steers, grade animals two to three years old. of
pounds of cottonseed meal and 2.9 pounds of oat straw; and the steers of lot 3, 38.5 pound* of corn allage, 6 pounds of shelled corn. 3 pounds cottonsecd meal and 3.5 pounds of oat
Craw.
Showing at Marketing Time At the marketing time these groups
medium to good quality, and averac of animals averaged respectively, 1.044.
ing about 825 pounds at the 1-eginning of the experiment, were fed for abou* five months on full feed. The animals In let 1 received a daily allowance oi US ! pounds of corn ellage, 5.7 pounds
of cottonseed mewl. 4.9 pounds of oat,tag period.
1.059 and 1.066 pounds an animal, the beeves of lot 1 having accomplished a dally gain of 1.56 pound.-, those ef lot 2. 1.66 pounds, and the animals of group 3. 17 pounds during the feed-
Poor Stock Less Farm Income
Dog Highly Prized In Alaska
It doesn’t poy to grow low-grade or scrub stock of any kind. This stetiment is made by the United Stales lieparment of Agriculture in connection with a series of tests on efficiency in farm management in the South. On 289 dairy farms it «as found that 4S farms receiving 950 and and less income per cow had labor in comes 5 percent b-low the general average, tin Ihe other hand, the 2H “
fauns with receipt* per cow of more:"”'. '
than f 12*“ had labor incomes 45 per- llnfonjir.tion concerning the tesla is cent above the a . rage and were the i embodied in a new circular of the
most flpofltably of the group. The aepartmept. quality «f the live Mock kept is one v
of the 16 point* outlined by the depart When a Voman board* the train Rtent to be tested in determining the for her weddiW trip she
Nowhere in the world has the dog such unrestricted right of way as in Alaska. In winter, when more than Wi.OOti square miles of territory ar' scale4 up in solid ice. dog* are almost the sole 1 jeans of getting from place to place—in fact, they seem necessary to life. The aristocrats of Arctic dog Ufe are the mail teem* In the service of the United States govern-
Radio Amateurs Get Weather Reports An arateur radio operator in North
Dakota has written the Weather Burrnu. United States Department of Agriculture, that he is dally receiving the weather forecasts : ent out by the powerful .wireless Motion at Ailinicton. Va. In Kansas, according to report*, the State Agricultural College is now sending out w bather re-
u.-< by windeaa every miming ex-
cept Sunday, for the benefit of a considerable number of amateur.-, many of whom lice in the rural dh-tricla of that State and so a.e able to be of service to the farmers in their neigh-l>-.:hu«ds. No doubt in other i«rta of the country there are those who are ’’Ustenlng in” in the dispa'cbus sent
out by high-powereu radio lower* . The sending of the Weather au's f• Teens's by radio i* in charge of the Yaty. hence at many point* ft
inland it is Improbable that amateurs could pick up the message:. The Weather Bureau has carefully con-
siuered the possibilities of further
of the wireless in Inland districts, but owing to an arrangement made some years ago whereby the bureau relinquished radio activity In favor oi the Army for inland communlcauou and the Navy for costal work it has not been feasible to extend the fotecast Kerri -e in this manner. However, what the amateur in North
M1SC—THREE
Dakota and those in Kansu* have been abie to do ixiggeet that other* might ’’Pick up” the weather reports, thereby securing them considerably in advance of the published reports. To do this it would be necessary to ascertain the exact -.ime that the forecast is sent out and the wove length used. The Weat hi r Bureau will be glad to inform itquirer as to the po.M at which the Federal Government sends out weather reports by radio, but It will not have information as to such activities by other
iries.
An average girl th'nks all the young msn of her acquaintance wonder whether she would retuae them if they
should propose.
Full
When 1 gill is interested in a young; man «b< ie* to stir him up by telling!
him of :be other men who ore inter-1Dstue Fashion
ei ted in her. (
It is also true that the love cn ' older than her actual age. while mosi ifs that. money is the root of many a family 'o her contemporaries look youngei
vyhee. aea. : than theirs.
Washington Fashion ‘Candidates' wives" is the way a round dozen Washington matrons are now described, some of them quite seriously. At a single luncheon of redate no fewer than live members of the company of thirty came under this new register, it may further be mentioned Jits particular ran pan y was largely from the Senatorial circle. which consequently did not dude Mr*. Leonard Wood. Mr* Frank Lowden or Mrs. Herbert Hoover, eac! rhom has a large following In thi polite circles of the capital, and all of whom are especially distinguished dong sartorial as well at social lines. At the luncheon referred to .Mrs. Miles Poindexter apparenty stood first on the list, with Mrs. Harding, of Ohio, and Mrs. Howard Sutherland of West Virginia, in the also-mentioned class of Republican possibilities. On the T )etnocratic side. Mra. Mar shall, wife of the Vice-President, and Mrs. Atlee Pomerene of Ohio, represented the possibilities of their party. Mra Marshall, as all the world 1 nows by now, would be a model hostess in tho White House. Just as she has been In second place for the last seven years, and a staunch supporter of American fashion* Mrs. William Gibbs McAdoo. who has just concluded a ten-day visit to the White Houue, is In the same das*, sartorial'r speaking, as Mr*. Lowden. whose wealth makes it possible tc have everything from Paris without regard to price. Mm. McAdoo w. Paris gowns on occasions, but following the custom she established in buy ink her trousseau, selects three creations In peraor from a New Yorx Importer, without limiting herself any particular establishment. During her recent visit, she wore a dark velvet afternoon gown showing the straight-line skirt wider at the hem than most skirts of the moment with high, smart hack drapery and lone
sleeves.
As she took no part ta general society her dinner gowns were of the simplest satin of her favorite dark bice, with train and loose half-length sleeves and square decolletage. serving for the family dinner with without guests. Mrs. Poindexter has always been r.ted for her severity ta dree*, for her slmplllcty of manner, both being typical of the genuine good breeding, good sense and good taste this kindly but fearless daughter of the Far West, who never loses her Mnse of proportion and would be amuch at home n the W hltO'House the is in the latnily residence on N street or her home town of Spokane Mrs. Uoind'-xter makes her calls, goes to church or to luncheon in veil-cut. well-tailored coat suit ol black cloth, with medium sized black be., ver hat turned up on one aide with a single quill, supplemented by a stole and muff of natrral otter. To pour tea in a friend’s drawing room or welcome guest* in her she usually wears a deml-lollette of silk or chiffon in some neutral tones, always in style but never extreme. Her dinner gowns (the Poindexter* are much in demand as dinner guests) are usuali> black and made with a train. A velvet on very plain line* anti a net encrusted in Jet are two model gowns that point the way in this practical woman’s practical ward-
robe.
Mra. Pomerene. who is tall. fair, graceful and fond of colors, wears s very becoming dinner gown of goldcolored tulle, mounted on cloth of gc4d with self-colored embroidery In silk appearing on the tulle drapery. For visiting Mrs Pomerene weais dsrs doth suit with handsome dark furs ano give* a gay note to the toilet in a smart little turban of gold and
jade green.
Mrs Sutherland and Mrs. Hardin* arc women who dreat to the occasion in modern conventional lie.*. Mrs. Champ Clark, should she find herself ta the White Koua«. would no dt-nbt. follow the example of Mrs. Taft who was the best-dressed First Lrdy Washington uas ever known because she made every purchase, from a parasol to a fur coat with direct reference to her position and the van ous occasions on which her very er unstve wardrobe was to be used. Mr* Cmric, for all dry time occasions, is inclined to soft silks an d llght-weigh’. wtols always made to order, with rich, neutral-tinted brocades or plain black satin, which she nsua’ly has embel lished in l*.-e for formal evening wear Mrs William J. Bryan, on her recent abort visit, showed the same preference Jr mauve* and grays which distinguished her style of dress when her husband was Secretary cf State. , Mr*. Bryan is distinctly an individualist In dress, who seeks no aid from
back time in
its flight, and consequently looks
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NAME ADDRESS...
R.P 4-34-20

