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PAGE TWO THE COURIER, BROOKFIELD, N. Y., WEDNESDAY, NOV. 8, 1933 H o W6 A b o u t: Austria Keeps Close Guard on German Border Waterloo A Fairly Good Man Smoking ©. 193J. Bell Sjmaicate.— WNU Service. By ED HOW E 'T 'H E statement Is often made that the late World war was the most violent economic disturb- the only other lelng that waged ance of all times, the only comparable with it being that by Nap ipolcon Bonaparte against Eng- 1 do net lielleve either war'ar orig-rig o inated in economics, except in the general sense that every qua human life is based on the effort of each other. The World precipitated by a fanatical German leader who enjoyed displays of sol diering; by subjects too easily sub- mifting when called upon The wars of Napi leon were brought about by a leadc who was not brilliant as a chess la business, but who Id bent everybody in the mas- tlons and displays of sacres, destructions and dlspl battles. As. a general he v IS Byron, w ind found t because of Ills victories in poetry and love. But both men finally stumbled; geniuses must as care fully beep common sense in mind as common men. The other morning a tough look ing citizen rang my bell, and I went grumblingly downstairs to answer i t I have lately been expecting ban dits, and, at first sight, thought this caller might be one, but he turned out to be all right “Mister,\ he said, “for a dollar I ’ll clean out your guttering. Every so often it needs it, to prevent rust.” . . . I answered: “All r ight go ahead. And I thank yon for calling attention to my neglect Also, I commend you for hustling to get work. Instead of g tag on the county or congress, yen’ll come back after the leavi I fallen I’ll so many crying ion ly good man attri lis photograph shows the guard at a railway station on the Austrian-German border where Austria has redoubled her guard to suppress Nazi propaganda and infiuences in the rift caused by tlie differing political ihotograpt imllcies of the two governments. M A N Y STATES TO BE D R Y AFTER REPEAL State Laws Restrict Flow in Half of Them. aska, New iaa. North Data Ampshire, :ota, Ohio, Washington.—Repeal of prohibition on December ( a foregone conelusu national 6 is now ion. but a review situation indicates that some the flood may be sharply restricted about half the states probibitioa by which ha^ liquor this year wet flood 1 by local oj lahoma, South Carolina, South tota, Tennessee, Te Vermont, Virginia and Of these the following have stitutlonal prehibitlon: Id: laho. Kan- line, Nebraska, ! are states which either lad prohibition by Constitu- I or statute or which have cleared Ir book! sas, Kentucky, Ohio, Oklahem “ exas. Utah, and West Vlrginl Florida and Wyoming have prohibition alone, the states which stitutlonal p encountered thi% sentence “A man never really I lately ( In reading: joys smoking until he begins to be lieve it is harmful to him.\ . . . I am an inveterate smoker, but have never enjoyed smoking, although constantly angry at myself because I use tobacco, and only continue It ;ause It Is a habit extremely dlflfi- t to gdt rid of. In spite of the horrors of war, or of an election, one always carries lumber of small things to d Interest him. I am just DOW in the midst of a marrying row between two people I have become acquainted with in Florida. The husband knew the wife was telling me her side of the story, and one day called to tell his, as r had long known them both I told him -of her charge that h had struck her Us hard as he could. Did she show anjf marks to prove books of such prohibition, lese will have liquor as soon as federal prohibition is repealed and although only 10 of them have so control laws it Is as- others will In order to start r passed t . „ med the others will quickly do order to start the flow of 11- ense fees into the state coffers. Six of these ten states specifically provide for local -probibitioa where desired. ites, ^ still ition and of which also hav6 constitutional prohibition, of the 29 have constitutional bibition only. 29 states ha' for spec statutes have been Alabama, Arhansa! slsslppl, North or Vermont. Three More May Get The legislatures will mi which have itory prohibition alone no plan: 'al sessions to act on th« been reported from Esas, Georgia, Mls- Carolina, Tennessee Of the 29 other state have statutory prohibti tliese 2T Ihere tutional prohibition. Two and Minnesota, which lea way open to adding these s the list which might have Micbli coincident with federal repe Also, a special legislative commlt- Kitchen Door Is Winner in Lottery Istanbul.—Ahmed Resit won $10,000 with his kitchen door In the recent State lottery. It was disclosed. Resit, fearing that he might lose his ticket, pasted it on the door. It was a prize winner, bat was stuck to the door so firmly it could not be removed. Resit nnhinged the door, took It to the lottery olllce, and got his isachusc lying a coatrol plan in Missoni rol commis a liquor control commission been named in Virginia, which re cently voted both for repeal of the Eighteenth amendment and of the state prohibition law. The states most likely to trail tlie repeal parade onto actually wet grounds are the 11 which have both statutory and constitutional prohibi tion and the two which have only constitutional prohibition. The latter, Florida and Wyoming, are definitdy out of. the liquor group for more tlian a year. prohibi t are 11 libition. Two 'So‘?S‘“?ro’r'.C German Castles Are Now Jails ; arrangementsingeme been made which might clear the way >r by the date of federal re- >r liquoi it?” he -isked. fornia, Colorado, Coni ware, Illinois, Indiar Maryland, Montana, : replied she did not; in fact, that lad said to her she was probably exaggerating <as plaintiffs usually do) in saying this stout man had struck her as hard a: “I slapped her,\ he replied, \and she kicked me on the shins. Look- here; I can substantiate my side of the story.” “PuHing up his pants, he showed on his right shin a very distinct black-and-blue spot Then we both laughed, and hfe went had advised him to make his side of the pending divorce suit as spcctable would be expect ntanees. Nineteen “Wet\ States. The 19 states where repeal is ef- ectlve at once are Arizona, Cali innecticut Dela Louisiana, utana, Nevada. New Jersey, New Mexico. New York. Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island. ?ashIngton and Wisconsin. Wet organizations here include Indiana in the above list with the notation mt although it repealed its prohibi tion enforcement a c t some donbt Political Opponents of Hitler Held in Them. -Germany's medieval cas- elr awe-lnsplrlng strong er the Hit mitted in the official organ of the party, Voelkische Boebach- CasUe Holimstein in Saxony, of Germany's proudest and ol uHing up his pants, he lis right shin a very :-and-blue spo t Then hfe went away him to make ig divorce suit as re- possible; that this ected of him by all his acquaintances. I had previously advised the wife to adopt the same course, and so advise you. Whatever your row, whether it concerns marrying, business, poli tics or religion, make your side as decent a s possible. In reading I only occasionally ei counter a sentence that interest amuses or instructs me. One writer who was lately wandering around In fancy encountered a prop! said to him: “What is your specialty?” T ’m looking for an argument,” was the reply. “There is no reform I wish to accomplish; let others take care of themselves, a nece.s- sity with which I have always been confronted. 1 wish to argue, and statute Is stUl effective I whlch ty, M I, Minnesota, Mississipp'i, ir pollti States whi have statutory bibition are Alabama. LO, Iowa, Kansas, tncky, Maine, Massachusetts, : utory pro- are Alabama, Arkansas. Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas. Ken- gates dostely was converted Into a prison lltical prisoners by the pres ent power holders. Perched high apon a steep and rocky eminence, with its drawbridges and heavy gates clos guarded by storm troopers, the castle offers no chance fof the alleged foes of the Hitlerite Claims Napoleon Was Breton Says He Wat Born in Brit tany, Not Cmrsica. Morlalx, Brittany.—Napoli Dt a Corsican but a Breton, not in the Italian island which stir up excitement to amuse tlon, and I will oppose i t I enjoy “romrom loi arguing, and, f 1 good at i t If I am able clently Insult you, probably Involve others in our contention and start a war.\ e greatest g ?er Is thee sooundest s possible Jus tice. Take any group of one hnn died, one thousand, one million one billion human being.s, and i right of the majority of them m le cannot be questioned; there Is no argument against i t But we have never had majority m le; the rule ol kings, labor leaders, popes, presl dents, old soldiers, prophets. poUtI clans, has always been mlnorltj rule. When we have acMeveil Virity rule, we can do no I.etfi leon was ilcan but a Breton, born before his birth became French, but in Brittany. This, according to Louis Beau- frere, specialist in Breton history. His statement of his case in the periodical La Bretagne, defying all other biographers and historians, is I substance as follows: Napoleon was bom in the Chateau C Penanvern, near Morlaiz. His mother was Laetizia Bonaparte, nee Ramolino, and his father was Louis Charles, Count de Marben^ one time governor of Corsica. Marbenf fifty at the tfme, Laetizia only eighteen. Less than a year after their mar- was born and duly records of the par Ish of Saint Eve But the page con taining the entry has been tom from le registry. That the Count de Marbenf was apoleon’s father was asserted by lyalist propagandists as far back I the first empire llarbenrs friend- dp with the Bonaparte family was well known and until his death showed an affectionate inter est in \his son.” It was due to Marbenf that Napoleon was able enter the military school Brienne In further support of his curious theory Historian Beaufrere men tions Napoleon’s protection of the Marbenf family. Ume de Marbenf widow of the emperor’s supposed fa was made a bagoness t annual pension of 1 pounds. Also her son, Napoleon’s half-brother, if Beau- frere’s theory be true—became one of the emperor’s favorite aides de camp. Napoleon even arranged the marriage of Francois with a rich heiress of Lyons and gave her a diamond necklace on her wedding The exact date birth is in dispute, peror was very touchy matter. This would sei the theory that be may born in Brittany. At any rate, travelers are now being shown a bedroom In the cha teau of Penanvern “where Nnpo- of Napoleon's the em- tiont the !em to help ’ have been Genesis in 17th Place in Abbreviated Bible Chicago.—A hiodernized and -ab breviated version of the Bible, with bpoks rearranged to appear in the order in which they orlginaUy were written, has just been published by the University of Chicago Press. The first book is not .\rnns. written 400 year <iene.<«is, written In 350 B. enteeiith among the book! ihniiiafa, omy In condensed was edited mong ti followed by Hosea, Micah, Isaiah, Zephniiiafa, Nahum and Den ler. TOe new short rears earlier. !. 0., is sev- :s. Amos is th, Isaiah, Oenteron- liort Bible, 545 book-size pages, by Dr. Edgar J. Good- speed and the late Prof. L. M. P. Smith, whose American translation of the King James version precipi tated a lively church controversy two years ago. state to make their escape. Once, in bygone days, the haughty robber Baron von MIchelsberg pil laged and ransacked the surround ing country from this Impregnable stronghold. In 1353 Castle Hohn- steln passed Into the possession of Hinko Berka von dec erful feudal lord whose stretched far Into Boliemi landed prop- beautiful location. In the midst Switzerland, lily, electors of ony. The Saxon rulers made it one of their favorite retreats, hunting deer and fishing salmon in the moun tainous vicinity, In 1857 Its glamour dimmed some what when the proud castle was converted Into a reformatory. After the World war, in 1924, it turned Into an inn. Its beautiful locati of the so-called made It a favorite traveling ground for youthful hikers. In its hun dred bedrooms the castle could put up 800 guests for the night. With everything in Germany be ing co^jrdlnated with the Hitler regime, a number of German castles once owned by feudal lords were taken over by the Nazis. Thus Cas tle Neuenburg on Unstmt was oc cupied by the Hitlerites Fight! League for German Culture. Cas Sachsenburg. near Zschopau Saxony, has been converted into a school for National Socialist wom en leaders, and Hohnstein became a prison. APPOINTED SENATOR ROADSIDE MARKETING By T. J. Delohery CLEAR CIDER MORE PROFITABLE A PROFIT of at least $10 could be added to the Income from the 100 gallons of apple cider which is made on the average farm if the fruit juice was clarified. The truth of this statement is borne out in the experience of farm ers who have been using the home made Altering device recently de veloped in Michigan. The filterer, costing little more than $1 to make, has revolutionized the sales of ap- srts and fruit growers clear apple juice ry farmer to make, the consumer respondio) juice has been offered the public. College expert feel that, with possible for every farmer and the consumer responding they have when it has been placed consumption of this pure frul beverage. While clear cider Is not a new drink from a commercial stand- farm production has been cause of the cost of machinery. The homemade device for produc- quality apple cider gives the mer. who can contact the public or retail outlets, a chance to turn low grade fruit into a nice profit for the apple grower. Experiments with consumer de mand show that apples which were otherwise unmarketable or salable UHFIOEKO CIDER A Cider Filterer. for more than 10 to 15 cents a bushel, grossed 90 cents to $1.5<* lel as cider, basing the yield gallons to the bushel of ap pies. And the cost of producing the dear cider is around 10 cents a gaUon, everything considered. G e a r cider is easy to make. Ap pies are pressed In the usual man ner and the juice treated with r chemical called pectinoL It is ai enzyme which breaks down the col lodinl matter of pulp. The mixtun is allowed to remaiu overnight, thi exact time depending upon thi temperature, ripeness of the apple: and the amount of pectinol used The process can be speeded up oi retarded, as desired. Shortly before the cider is placet- in the supply tank, a filtering agen called hyflo Is added. It Is ai absorbing agent like Spanish da. and other such materials, whici catches the sediment and permit the clear juice to flow. The filtering device consists of i barrel! five feet of garden hose, i muslin tube inside of a cylinder o copper fly screen. The hyflo set ties in the muslin tube and tli Juice from the barrel or suppl tank, hoisted five to six feet, flow through i t The tube, by the wa.\ la rested la * vvoodea trough aomt what similar to that used for feed Ing hogs. The accompanying sketch show the aiterer. Everything, Includin; the barrel or tank, unless it i bought new, should not cost mud more than $1, and it ' Ufetlnie The device and should be thoroughly cleaned Farmers who have been makin; and selling clear cider report ai unusual demand, some marketing lOO gallons a day a t 50 to 75 centt a gallon, with ordinary cider, on ad joining farms and roadside mar kets, finding slow sale even at 25 cents a gallon. Where both clear and ordinary cider have been of fered, consumers have expressed an exclusive desire for the clear juice, even though it costs more. .vertising advantage O ; a re anxious to see how it is made, and progressive producers have been making it a practice to do the 'job in public and on certain days I which are announced before hand, to which InTltatlons are extended to the public I Farmers who have no direct sell- •— opportunities have found bother with the ordinary Juice. And where clear cider has been placed in restaurants to get public reaction, sales not only hare been larger but the price higher. In one restaurant, diners mistook it Tor tea because of its clearness, a former district |j, addition to clarifying apple who has been dder, the new homemade device Gov. A. W- Hockenhuli be used on othi States senator to succeed knint lamed by IS United States lenat lenator Sam G. Brat ther fruit juices, 1 making vim Senator Sam G. Bratton who -e-1 gn sIgneG to bRcome a federal circuit judge. ^ ^ Wtitern Ne'irapaptr UBlea. direct from the famer.- Do^ Gone! By GENEVRA COOK M“- MOONEY of Mooseville irly-bro LOST: Big tan d o g resembling hound. Nata«: Floppy-ear. Reward: |10.00. P. O. Box 391, Mooseville. Bis steps by years Mconey 11 “as much gold as six mules could loaded upon a heavy 91, Mooseville. made sligbtly uncertain and rheumatism, Mr. ped across the cabin and opened the door into the woodshed. speculatively. “Now If those people that put thet air notice In the pa sign I stuck up la the Ice, I guess likely your folk’ll It along, ma’am. ‘ per sees my : post olllce, I g be rig h t along, ma those summer folks 1 . Some o’ summer folks up to the lake most likely. Don't know no bet ter'a to go wanderin' all over the maonatlng.\ At the sound of a car laboring noisily up the steep hiU, he closed the woodshed door upon the dog. and hobbled outside. The car was This Week i y A kthvb B bisbanb ‘Many Wounds,’ Says Please. They Would Convert Us. Real Advertising Rates. In Idaho an old Nez Perce named “Many Wounds” asks Uncle Sam to be kind enough to pay te his tribe pull, the gold lot The Government agreed to do that ,ii 1855, when the Nez Perce mado considerable concessions. P o o r “Many Wounds” does not keep up with the news. He Is a very old In dian, or he would know that gold La now considered too good for Ameri can white men, to say nothing of In- The wise French minister after the Field of the Cloth of Gold, where Francis First and Henry Eighth wrestled, found that French nobles I spending their fortunes on vel vets and silks an I old one painted blue and id the driver was a fair-l slliii girl, with blue-eyes to match her sweater and beret She left the car St the end of the road out past the thick trees clustered around the 2 of the clearing, and came run- ; across the stony field to the ■“Hello I” she called. “Have you got Floppy-ear?” She ceme up to liln,. breathless. “Oh, please. Is she here? I’ve looked everywhere!\ There was the sound of barking from behind the woodshed door, “Oh. she Is here! Here’s the re ward,” She thrust Into the tough wrinkled right hand of Mr. Mooney a crisp, new ten dollar bill. Suddenly there wau a honk! honk! froia the dl.-ection of the car. “Oh, whoever Is blowing the horn of my c^rf I came up alone! Wait!\ And she was gone, leaving Mr. .Mooney looking after her, his mouth still opened to speak. \'I beg your pardon, s’lrr* Mr. Mooney gave a violent s tart There :1ss sideide wasas a tall,all, good-h withith darkark hiair. Id s w a t g youtli'w d h ■*'r came to claim my dog. sir. You haive h e r here, 1 think—In the shed, oeiliaps?”eiliaps?” Withith threehree h p W t long strides, he was past the astonished Mr. .Mooxey and had opened the door oi the shed. The dog came bounding out to him. jumping a t his legs; ex hibiting every sign of joy and recog- He thrust into the left hi Mooney a neatly folded ten liar bill. “Come, Floppy-ear t\ he lied, and started across the field. lefo re he had gone two steps the ,'lrl was facing him. her eyes flash ng. Without speaking to him, sh uiaci scornfully away. “Corn: I'Toppy-ear I\ she called. And the log came running to her, jumping, larking, with Joy. Air. Mooney, b ^ a u se be was ncar- Ighted, had to move nearer to them a order to puzzle it out He had 0 laove nearer still, because he was little hard of bearl ' tbem noth ” £ 0 0 don’t was saying , that sonchi Ing. But if tbem noticed him at alL n’t want that do saying in an eveu, mui oic«, that somehow held a note of illternesa \Come here, Floppy-ear.” I'he dog earner •\Eon don't value a gift lont care anything for t when you *T do care for t aeax, I—I—did—I mean—\ Tbe young nan’s voice became often, and Mr. Mooney moved a Ittle nearer. “Just what do you iienn, Jocelyn?” an what I said—Gerald.\ MJ( Mooney -was g le didn’t like to have folks kissing Ight in front of his cabin. It wasn’t eapectable. He cleared his IS loud as he could, but no one paid iny attention. Then he tried some hfing else. lUEt o f his pocket “And you’U wear ray ring again. Jocelyn?\ he was Mjlxg. and slipping It, sparkling in slim white•hlte man was taking something finger. old man who was staring Together they turned and smiled or a moment a t the leathery-l ig at them from the yard. Together they calU 'Gome here. Floppy-earl” The di Jlr. Mooney atood In the door of his cabin and watched them walk. close, down across the stony the dog rnnnlng JoyfnUy at heels. Be looked down at thi ten dollar blHi, one la each “‘Doggone I” said Mr. Mooney. LaidIc*-iA-Wailuif Tbe ladles and women of the bed- 'hamber belong to the honsehold of he qaeen. “Ladies-ln-waitlng\ Is the tern for botb. The former an ways peeresses, and the latter orally the dabghters o f peers oorls rank. Tbe princlpM duty of 'he ladies Is to attend the queen at vtate fanctlons. while one of the wonea is In ordinary dally attend- ittce on her majesty. Also there Is a mald-of-honor, sometimes the laughter of s peer of minor degree If not, she is given the style honor ihle.—Montreal Herald. on any trifling tariff, but absolutely irbade the importation of such lux- ries, saying that if French nobles lent fortunes on them French ike them. He workmen must mal planted mnlherry trees, brought in silk worms, established plate glass works and for more than three hun dred years France has led in silks, velvets, plate glass ware. How would t be if the President of the United itates should say: “Nothing can come into the Unlt- d States from other countries, ua- jss it be something that we can’t lake here, like rubber, and the lovernment will subsidize the mak- y.” way to pu-t many Americans to work and en lighten Europe, scornfully refusing to pay what It owes? Since Columbus discovered Amer ica, according to the Bureau of Mines, $15,000,000,900 worth of gold has vanished, more or less mysteri ously. Fire billion dollars’ worth of ) gold is supposed to be in the Id hoards of enormously rich la- princes. Much has been hurled deadead people. Men dig it from with d people. Men the ground, and then bury it again. Much gold Is In wrecks at the bot tom of the sea. Fish that swim above the treasure would give you ten million dollars’ worth of it for one good sized worm. Berlin plans an active program “to Hitlerlze -the world,”.,All on m peaceful basis. Foreign correspond ents are taken through German • (taemical factories, to prove that no poisonous war gases are Stalin In Moscow expects to con-, vert the world to Communism, Ot Leninism, or Marxism, or whatevex Mustapha Kemal, in far away Tur key, you may be sure, plans to make the world adopt his modified theories •nment theories of Kemal. And Mussolini, head of all dlcts^ rs, original, thinks that what ev erybody needs Js Fascism. Here we haven’t started any “Ism” yet. We are simple capitalistic bour geois, pushing up the price of gold with silly international bidding, pushing down the value of the dol lar, pushing up the cost of living by increased prices, and with prob lems ahead. r, pushing up t r increased price Our troubles make ns think, and thinking solves problems. London, and Croydon, great British flying field, have much fog, interfering ith flight. iw a “radio beam” is announced will make it possible, easy and fly between Croydon and 1 , Paris, even through thlcl that will make it possible, easy a safe* to fly between Croydon Paris, even througc rhole way. less beam guides the pilot, who need only follow that to his destination. The beam appear thick, white horizontal line on an instrument in his cockpit It h« leaves the straight course the beam splits in two, the thicker of two white l in ^ showing him which way to turn for the true path. Merchants and others that some times worry about rates in this coun try ihight find comfort talking to Mr. L. A. Plummer, Lord Beavec- bro’ok’s very able young managing director o£ the London Bxpi In New ■York. At a luncheon Mr. Plummer ta Mut advertising rates in ! 2. o T3”,000 Ik’s London Daily Ex- with circulation forced up to 1,000, of something over two dol lars and thirty cents a n agate line. The venerable London Times, rhich. gets advertising, deserved or lot, charges more than one dollar and a h alt an agate line. That should nake American advertisers appre- date their bargains. A new cancer theory is advanced by Professor Fischera, Italian scien tist, who tells the International Can cer Congress a t Madrid, “ the drying out of glands because of age” is the if cause of ilshment olof as a treatmentt glandular secretions m I t should he possible to test the soundness of that theory by post mortem examinations. (9 J9S3, X m t rttlm m Sjmdic»it, /*». i