AUTO SECTION AUTO SECTION Consolidation of The Evsnlng News and The Roieburg R.vl.w A Independent Newspaper, Published fe( the Bsat Interests of tho People. ' VOL. XXVIII NO. 171 OF ROSEBURQ REVIEW ROSEBURG. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9. 1 927. VOL. XVIII NO. 245 OF THE EVENING NEWS Rose SHEWS v How's She Hittin' BY ISRAEL KLEIN Science Editor, NBA Service The cur's headlights may have little or nothing to do -with how Blie's hittin?, but they are Import ant factors in assuring comfort and safety for the passengers. So ft is essentiul that- the head lights be kept property focused and ' in good condition. TurnlHhed reflectors," dirty lens cb, burt-out bulbs or poor contacts may be the cause of a Berlous ucci dent. The first essential in securing good besdliglrts is to see that the lenses, reflectors and bulbs are in good shape. The lenses should be taken out and cleaned thoroughly. The reflectors Bhould be polished with a thin solution of lamp-black and nlcohol, but extreme care should be taken that no scratch be left on its surface. Polishing should be by means of a light, cir cular motion and only in one di rection. Bulbs should be checked at the same time, so that they furnish their full candlepower. Sometimes insufficient brilliance of lamps may be due to an over or an under - charged battery or to- - poor con tacts. Testing the battery and the lines to the headlights is the way to check on this. There is a fad in some parts of the country for the blue, or "daylight" type of headlight bulbs. They are bought in the belief that they give more light and at the same time do not hurt the eyes of approaching drivers. Moth ideas are mistaken. The blue bulb has been found to give , no more light than tbe clear bulb and yet use much more current from the . battery. Tests have . shown that clear bulbs are just as good in lighting the road as the blue- lights, and in 'fact are even better in cases of fog or wet roads. i . , , Focusing of the lights- is simple, especially si nee- manufacturers ' have provided the easiest -means to accomplish this. : I i t - Back, of every l headlamp is ri screw, In most cases, or a knob or other sort of adjustment appliance. : All that 'Is needed fs to: back-the far about 26 feet from a wall so that it stands on level ground and direct the lights at this wall at . night, of course. . i ; " A horizontal , line V should , be rirnwn on. the wall at the same height as .the headlamps. The best assurance of proper' headlighting would be filling; the car in back jAvith passengers. Bu' where this can't be 'done, another' horizontal line should be drawn about' six to eight inches below the first,' and the lights focused at this one. 1 ' : The reason Is that . loading the car tips the lights upward and that the lowering of the lights in .focus ing compensates for this. ' Merely turning the screw or knob or other adjustment back of each lamp is enough to direct the beam into a sharp, wide light so that the top of It just reaches the lower horizontal line, if the car Is empty, or the upper line if it is occupied.' It Is just a matter of moving the bulb forward or backward, until it reaches the exact focal point of the headlamp. . FAR BEHIND U. 3. Sixteen countries of South and Central America, boasting a total area exceeding that of the United States and Canada combined, have only 12,670 miles of surfaced high ways and 111,900 miles of dlrst road. The United States has 621, 260 miles of surfaced highways and 2,-184,822 miles of dirt road. ASIA REFITS U. S. CARS Asiatic royalty Is refitting Ameri can cars to fit its own tastes. One, for Instance, refitted for the Nnwnb of Bnhawalpur, has a bou doir limousine ' body. The seats are covered with tapestried designs and the root. Is lined with blue A- silk. TO BEAT RECORD Harry A. Miller, famous for his racing cars, has designed an en gine that, he says, will exceed the record of 203 miles an hour estab lished by Major Segrave. MOTORIST'S NIGHTMARE On the Bllege road In Sumatra, a stretch of about 1000 miles. 100 hairpin curves are found within a space of 45 miles. BOOST THIS JUDGE FOR PRESIDENT! .Bv NEA Service HARTFORD. Conn., Nov. 2. Back seat dlrvers, beware! And everbody give three cheers for Supreme Court Jus- ttce Curtiss. The venerable judge'has de- creed that. "A passenger in an automobile should sit still and Bay nothing, because any other course Is fraught with danger. "Interference by laying hold of an operating lever or by exclamation, or even by direc- Hon or inquiry. Is generally to be deprecated, as In the long run the greater safety lies In letting the driver alone." ' RUBBER S Exclusive Market BY MILTON BRONNER NEA Service Writer. LONDON, Nov. 9. Karly In 1923, it was America. Now It Is England that hus become alarmed about rubber. Again there is too much of It on the market, prices have dropped, profits of tho British companies have become smaller and dividends have, therefore, been cut. Worse yet, the future presents even a less rosy picture to tho British rubber growers. Here are the facts: The United States Is the world's greatest consumer of crude rub ber. The bulk of the rubber comes from Malaysia, Ceylon and the Dutch East Indies. With the free and unrestricted growing of all the rubber that ' the plantations could produce there was this mar ket condition: More production than consumption low prices for crude rubber; But In 1923, the "StephenBon scheme" wan put Into practice. Under this all the British rubber pluntutionB were to restrict their output to a percentage of the av erage growth. This was to bring about: Less production than consump tion high prices for crude rubber. British Debt Repaid At .first this worked beautifully. America paid the piper. It hns been said that the increase in prices America hart to pay for rub ber equaled what the British gov ernment is paying us In squaring WOMAN HYPNOTIZED S OVER TELEPHONE ( Associated Preti Leased Wire CHICAGO, Nov. 9. The. Chi cago ' Herald -Tribune today re ported the hypnotism over a tele phone of a patient In a dental chair by Zecca G. Bumzahera, -who was in a hospital 30 blocks away. The patient, Mins Ruby Browne, remained Insensible to pain for 15 minutes, while the dentist drilled a sensitive tooth. Burnzahem, who has made a life 'Study of hypno tism, came here from mo de Ja neiro. .Brazil. He 'recently Jiypno tiiiefl! another' patient! who was op crated upon In a libriitftal here. ' Miss Brown was telephoned by Burtizahem; who1 told her i to ' re move a ring she 'was wearing five it 'to the dentist and "relax": She did so and was asleep almost in stantly, the 'newspaper sold; After the dentiBt finished 1 working ! 'on her. the ring was replaced and1 the patient returned' to consciousness. LONDON'S ANNUAL ! "CIRCUS SHOW"' ON (Awtoclatfd Prea Leatwd Wire) : LONDON, Nov. 9. Cinderella's gold coach came to London today as real as anything. And In the fairy prlnces's seat was the new Lord mayor Sir Charles Batbo all smiles and bows. Six spirited bays trundled the stately carriage through the crowded streets where the happy cheers of the multitude of chil dren drowned the mellow rumble of Its carved and glittering wheels. There were the white wigs of footmen, the cocked hats of pos tillions, and the gayly colored state liveries of various servants Just like those who whisked the little kitchen drudge to the ball of long ago. Mounted trumpeters in scarlet and gold proclaimed the appear ance of the spectacle. It was the lord mayor s show, as they call It, when old London each year for a glorious .hour or so OF Trusty GETS A LITTLE FREE AlB kFOtZ. THEIR fCOTCALL AT UE EXPENSE OF, OL' TTiOSTY; BOOMERANG that Snapped at American Buyers in, 1923 Strikes Back at This map shows the Important rubber fields of th a world, with England and Holland controlling the Orient, while Ford In Brazil and Firestone In Liberia offer threats to their markets. Insets show Henry Ford, at right, and Harvey S. Firestone. up Ha war debts. How well the Stephenson scheme worked can be shown by a few figures: 1923 Consumption, 430,000 tons, production, 413,000; average price, 311 cents per pound. 1924 Consumption, 470,000 tons; production, 421,000; average piico, 29 cents. 1925 Consumption. 652,500 tons, turns out In 'search of Us youth. Bringing tip the rear of the pro cession was the great golden coach of state the focus of all in terest. -'The new lord mayor wore his scarlet robes with , broad edgings of black and1 gold, and the ancient jeweled chain of office which he Is to wear for a year. In attendance were his chaplain, and his bearers of the mace and' sword In gorgeous velvet costumes. In the carriage preceding, was Sir Rowland Blades, the late lord mayor, still in ' his splendid re galia, a. little sad, perhaps, as he jjascdj ,,' i alpng, ttii,es u pathway whore 706 previous oi$ .mayors have, passed and eued. terms be fore him. The ancient; .Guild Hall, the. scene of dinnera to Grant, 'to Roosevelt, to Taft, .Wilson ; and Pershing in their turn, formed the setting of the start The lord, jnayor's show in Eng Innd Is what c J reus day is ln America. , Nearly every one. Is a Peter Pan for; the ,day, at . least. One of: the. amusement; features this .year was . :a float showing Dick. Whlttlngton,: London's fif teenth century mayor,:, and Mb famous cat . ; . . o ) FALL SPENDS A- i NIGHT OF REST fAMftplntwl Prmw ThihhI Wlfe WASHINGTON. Nov. 9. Albert II. Fall; who Is 111 here, continued to sleep well last-night and this morning was resting comfortably his secretary. II. G. Clunn, said. The former Interior secretary who was stricken after the oil con spiracy case in which he was a defendant with Harry P. Sinclair, was declared a mislrlal, will he al lowed by physlcluns to leave for New Mexico probably Saturday, barring a relapse. AUTOMOBILES INCREASE Automobiles In Great Britain now total 1.756.000. This Is an In crease of 17C.O00 over the total of last year. By Wootton production, 616,200; average price, 68ft cents. 1926 Consumption, 545,000 tons; production, 617,600; average price, 50 cents. It will be seen that last year for the first time the rubber freshly produced exceeded consumption. This was caused by two things: the high percentage figure allowed the producers and the success of BUCKS FDR RING .. (Auoolkttd Tnu Uued wtrel ; 1. ', M1ILWAUlE!ljl,,-Dy. A. ret' gee.-iuBibin baron, , Couid. to .liuye borrowed , nponey jOU, ifip eye.qf 'his y-eddjng to, purchase a $4 wedding ring and a suit of clothes, today was ol) the , verge . of , losing his wealthy AmercuU brii)e... ,. 'T t . ' . A- refereei has recommended to Oie: supreme icourt- that .the r mar riage of Florence Marjorie Clenden in, daughter at Joseph :Clendenin, copper magnate und vice-president of the American i Smelting and .Re fining company, to Baron Ueorge Tornow, be annulled' o n 1 it h e grounds of fraud. ' ' Huron Tornow -formerly- enptafn In the Russian imperial guard, mar ried Miss Clendenin-last Decem ber at the Little Church Around the Corner, Broadway's "shrine of romance," after n whirlwind court-' ship of three weeks. , i- The couple, married against the wishes of the bride's father, were sepurated about 10 hours after the ceremony when friends of the bur oness sphited her away from wedding supper at the Waldorf-' Astoria Hotel. She Is now living with her parents at Irvlngton-on-the-Hudson. Tho finding of the referee on the bride's petition for annulment snid Miss Clendenin was tricked in to marrying the baron through the Instrumentality of two friends of the defendant, Princess Ouchtoni sky and Baron K. tvjamgaroff, and that they knew at the time that tho baron was not desirable as a husband for Miss Clendenin. The referee decided that there had been misrepresentation of his moral character, , concealment of his unlawful residence In this coun try and of his true financial condi tion, all of which the bride did not learn until after Bho had been mar ried. Prior to the marriage, the report states, the haron was destitute and a loan of $100 was necessary for him to buy a wedding ring, to ob tain a change of the clothing In which to be married and to pay a long overdue board hill. The re port added that he came to this courAry In 1923 on a visitor's pass port, with permission to stay three months. ILL ON EVE OF . ABIE CONTEST CHICAGO, Nov. 9. The Chicago football squad, one of the worst sufferers from gridiron casualties in the western conference this fall, has a very Important patient on Its hospital list today. Amos Alonzo Slagg. the 64 year old coach, who Is suffering from a severe cold contracted the day Michigan de feated his team 14-0 last Saturday. Slang pulled himself out of bed lo direct practice last night but went nack at once with paper and pen cil lo devise some new strategy for the hereditary foe of tbe mar- HITS ENGLAND the plan proposed by Secretary of Commerce Hoover whereby Ameri ca used a great deal of worked- over rubber. Bid Stock on Hand To meet this the production of rubber In British possesions was cut to 60 per cent or totnr capa city But In spite of this thero are over 66,000 tons of rubber stacks in the Ijondon market nml the oons, Coach zuppke s university of Illinois eleven. Squads In the northern sector of the conference are now realizing Unit the Indian summer days are gone. The Minnesota team is now preparing for, Drake, on a field uf snow In gloomy, freezing weather. The Wisconsin eleven Is looking better than ever before thl-yeuiv after a full weok or rest for niot of the regulars. The seniors on the sqund will-be making their lust appearance on Randall Field when they tackle Iowa Saturday. An other Big Ten coach is beginning to hear the rattle' of. musketry from the Bhnrpshooters, Burt Ing werseu bf lowu: ' A lettof frohr an loiva'aluninus was Made the bhJls df' critical articles' by .one '16Wa newspaper. 1 ' ' 1 " , ' Tho Hawkeves" have not Won conference gume iii their last 'ten starts, going through' the 1926 sea son and thus far in the 1927 cam paign without- a victory. ;(. ' Michigan's' coaching staff bogan Work for the navv tussle - bv re building the bnckfleld, 'In an effort to develop- uupllcute - sets of nail curriers to relievo Ustorbaan, -Miller and Gilbert of some of the loud, and spare thein as much ' as pos sible for the closing conference en counter with Minnesota on the 10th. . ' ' The Purdue team Is envisioning a full strength unltalion at Inst, tho only one more conference game romnlns the traditional Huosler classic against - Indiana ten days hence. ' URGE 40-FOOT ROADS That all main trunk HneB have a minimum width of 40 feet, at least 24 feet of which shall be paved with a bard surfaced ma terial, Is the recommendutlun tho Now .York Stale Aulomohlle asso ciation lniB made to the hlghwny department of tho state of New York. SERVICE 6TATION3 GAIN According to tho Automotive Equipment association, 88,000 auto mobile service stations in mis country Installed nearly a billion dollar's worlh of parts and service supples last year. This would make the uvoruge earning lor encn station more than (10,000. REQUIREMENT LACKING Wife: Before we were married, you said mother could stay with us whenever she pleased. Huslinnd: Yes, certainly but sho doesn't please. Tlt-Blts, Lon don. SINGULAR REASON "What, you don't belong to any lodges?" "No, I'm married." Judge. STUMBLING BLOCK "I hear there's only one thing that keeps Alice from marrying Rodney." "What's that?" "Rodney." Tlt-Blts, London. HAZY ON THAT POINT Professor: I'm getting on splend idly with my hook of memoirs. Friend: Oh, have you gotten to the time when I lent you t)ia.t flv-er?-rPasslng Show. CRACKED ROMANCE Maid: I have to announce to madam that my engagement Is broken. Mistress: I'm not Interested In that. Anna. Maid: But madam has told me that 1 must always report on what ever gets busted in the kitchen. Meggendorfer Blatter, Munich. British Producers price Is only 331 cents. There are two main' reasons for this: First Smuggling about -24,000 ton unnuully. . ,. ; - . Second Tho constantly Increas ing umonnt of rubber produced In in I lie Dutt-li East Indies to meet the American market. Thus in 1923, when the British restriction scheme was put into effect, the Dutch pro duced only 123,000 tons. Last year they produced 202,000 :oi.s. The British market hns further more been made nervous by the scheme of Harvey Firestone to grow rubber In Liberia and that of Henry Ford to have huge rubber plantations in Brnzll. Papers here profess to make light of these American .plans to free the Unit ed States from the British 'rubber monopoly. Nevertheless, they de vote columns to writing about them. It Firestone, Ford and other pio neers succeeded In getting big rub ber plantations of their own going, they will make America free from the semi-British monopoly. It will be Important not only because It will bring prices down to the army of auto owners, but also because it will help make America self-sus taining in rubber in case of war. The last great war showed that no nation could make up-to-date war without n plantlful supply of two commodities not greatly used In former . contests gasoline and ruhher. THERE'8 A LIMIT The play waB of the most wildly dramatic character, but the great scene wqs Hint In which the hero confronts the Biieerlngly trium phant villain.- . 1 Sir Marmaduke." he exclaimed. "you have reduced me to beggary, broken the heart of my aged moth er, and eloped with my wife. But beware! Don't go too fnr" Out look. , ' : BY REQUEST f'Ynii lend thn nrrhentrn nlrT Inquired the tired' Uuslnpss man the- cabaret- 1 ' ''-' '"I do,"- ftipllbd ' Professor 'Jaiz, olo' lirniltllv j i . i ' .1 l . t l ' - "Then wduld yofi mlntl loading them I out for a bit of 1 alrj'pr American Legion 'Monthly; - ' ' : ONE ALTERNATIVE i J Smart young daughter! ' Dnilily, I nood a new' riding habit. " j - Father: I can't nford It. 1 ' i Daughter: But'Daddy, what am I to do -without n riding habit? . Fntber: Get the walking habit. Passing 8liow. ' ' . SPEEDY TURN DOWN ' Ulnn You look llko a sensible girl; ' lot's get married. Her: Nothing doing. I'm Just ns sensible as 1 look. Pathfinder. 'Detour 'Through Historic Del-Mar- Va Peninsula Representative of Delaware ii the imposing state capltol at Dover, shown above. Map shows the vari ous routes through the "eastern shore." f i i By NKA Service WASHINGTON, Nov. 2. The southward trek Is beginning, and the way of thoxo poHBlnjc thruush WanhliiKton can be glorified and varied by a pleasant dolour down the "eastern shore." It In the Del-Mar-Va pennlnsula, bounded by the Atlantic ocean and Chesapeake bay, that furnish es enouKh historic and pictured que diversion to make this side trip worth while. The route can come down the Atlantic coast from New York and Phlladelpha by way of Wilming ton, Delaware, and along the fa mous DuPont highway. Here Is a beautiful, winding road running the length of the state and giving the visitor a cross section of one ot the orlgiual IS colonies still Portland Stations - KQW, 491.58-7 p. m., dinner con cert; 7-7:30, studio concert; 7:30 7:45, poultry lecture; 7:45-8, lec ture; 8-9, studio presentation; 9 10, Pacific const . network pre senting "The Vagabonds"; 10, talk on the Community Chest. KEX, 239 5:80-6:30 p. m., "Our . Gang"; 6:30-7, utility; 7-8, trio; 8-9, studio feature; 9, weather re ports. KOIN, 319 6:15-6, topsy-turvy time; 6-7, dinner concert; 7-7:16, amusement guide and utility; 7:15-8, orchoHlra concert; 8-8:30, studio artists; 8:30-9, studio ar tists' program; 9-9:30, diversi fied niuslcale; 9:30-11, fight re- ports. Other Coast 8tatlona KOAX, Corvallls, 270.17:16 p. 111., the campus reporter; 7:20, do you know Oregon?; 7:30, farm utility program; 7:30, profits In poultry. No. 6; 7:40 timely farm topics; 7:60, farm , market re view; 8-9, the Grange lecture hour. KFOA, Seattle, Wash., 447.55:30- e:u p. m., children's program; 7-7:30, children's program; 7:30 7:45, poultry talk; 8-9, studio concert from KGW; 9-10, Pacific coast network: program. - KOMO, 8attle, Wash,, 305.96 p. ,: m., concert orchestra; 7, quartet; 7:80, concert orchestra; 8, con cert orchestra and soloists; 9-10, i'aciric coast network program; -10-12:30, orchestra and popular . songs. , . . KQO, Oakland, Cat., 384.46-6:30 p. m., Bern's little symphony or chestra; 6:35-7:30, farm , pro- ' gram; 8-9, vaudeville entortaln ' nient; 9-10, Pacific coaHf met- ROBBERS GET BIG 1 ! SUM FROM McELROY , PORTLAND, Ore., Nov', 9. Loss by robbery of $814.05 was reported to police yesterday by J. C. Mc Elroy,' owner and manager ot Mc Elroy'B8pnnlBh ballroom at 288 Main street- -The money was tak en from a small locker In a check room at t,ho .dancing .place, . ' 'Tlio,lliof or ,tUlevqs,ov(Jo(itly fit tended M,qnliv nfghi's ,danqe qnU buUrpom, , check , or rest i rooms when the entertainment eutjed; ac cording, to Inspectors iGrlslm. and' Cnhil, assigned . to the . cbbg , Iby Captain Moore. v I , : . i j : It is possible from .arrangement at appointments there that while In hiding, ttioy may. even .have i bb- seryeii the money being i placed; Hi the locker. ..... ! 1 When everyone bad, gone . the robber oi robbers went to the jani tor's closet and took a small screw driver from his chest Then the three small screws to a pildlock hasp fastening the locker winch was above check racks In tbe check room ' wore unfastened, nnd the brown grip containing the money removed! - ' Exit was simple, the Inspectors said, as the doors are 1 equipped preserved In tnnny of its aspects. Past the state capltol at Dover and on to historic Georgetown the road goes, until It crosses Mary land not far from the Atlantic shore. Anothor way ' Is by the right road from Dover to the mill town of Salisbury, whero Innu merable crates are made to handle the large supply of fruit grown In this territory. If the way Is by Baltimore, a ferry takes the traveler across the inlet from Bayshoro to Rock hall, where a good road takes up the Journey through a country crossed by numerous Inlets from tho bay. This route goes on down to Salisbury, and down fnrther to tho narrowing peninsula of Vir ginia until it ends at Cape Charles small fishing town of singular, work program; 10-11, Hotel . St. Fraucisi dance orchestra. KJR, Seattle, Wash., 348.86-6:3(1 p. m lime signals ana uinuy,-6:30-7, Junior program; 7-8:30. studio program; 8:30-9, quartet;! 9-10, concert orchestra; 10, timet Rtennls:-10-12 dance orchestra. KFI, Los Angeles, Cal., 468.56:15 p. m., raaiotoriai periou; o:iu, popular entertainment; 7, detec tive stories; 8, Calpet orchestra with Eva OUvotti as soloist;! 8:30, semi-classical coucert; 9-10, Pacific coast network program; 10, classical concert KFON, Long Beach, Cal., 241.60 p. m., request period; B:lli-7i : concert orchestra; 7, studio pro gram; 8-9, band concert; 8-10, operatic concert 10-11, organ re cital; 11-12, dance frolic. KPO, San Francisco, Cal, 422.3 t 6-6:30 p. m., town crier; 6:30 7:30, orchestral concert; 8-9, At water Kont hour; 9-10, Paclflo ' .coast network program; 10-11, studio presentation. - KYA, San Franolseo, Cal., 309 6:30-7 p. m.,- orchestra; 7-7:30, -talks; 8-9, diversified studio pro gram; 9-10, club meeting; 10, ' time signals. - KHJ, Los Angeles, Cal., 4056. : 6:30 p. m., concert trio; 6:30 7:20, children's hour; 7:20-7:30, : scripture reading; 7:45,, scientif ic lecture; 8-10, quartet and vo cal and Instrumental solo niuslq ' with open forum. KFRC, 8a n Francisco, Cat., 454.3 6:30-7:30 p. m., Instrumental mu sic by the Ceceluuis; 8-9, court- ' esyVon'cert; 9-10, studio program of lullabies of all nations; 10-12, dance orchestra. KMO, Tacoma, Wash., 254.18-10 ;p. m., Btudlo concert ' - i with I bar-looking devices- to i that :, the , ballroom may be- lef t rnv-unjr , time .merely by,pualing down the b'ars Inside. 'Closing ot (he doors; again locks them from entry from. wo outstue. ; ....; , r . .i i W. McElroy is well known' here , having resided in Rpseburg far nev , erai .years oetore, going ii run, land where he now makes i hls; home. His dance . oroheslra.,Ire- ; qnently- visits ItoBeburg. f ; , ; ; jro.y Mtyy uMfttys',1: ' i 'i'yeliiover had a. chance'' paid Ihn pian with, the, l)ang (lpg expres sion.. '(No matter-what. I do .my unlucky number pops up and gets ine, into troubleJi'i (-: . , 'Anil, what Is . your , unlucky number?'' .., . . , ,, , i , V'Thliteoii. Twelve, Jurors nnd one judge." Tlt-Blts, .London. : . . AN EASY JOB "Mario and I agreed thnt: aftor we, were man-ted-I 'Should decide the major questions and , she should dooide the, minor ones." . "How lias it worked but?" "We luivo been married throe years and I am grateful to say that there have , been, no .major. questions." Tlt-BitB, London. enchantment. Here the ferry may tie taken across the bay to Norfolk and Old Point Comfort where the trip may be resumed southward. -1 Another e'ntry to the "eastenS shore," is by way of Washington. This takes the motorist through Annapolis, where the IT. S. Naval Academy Is, and where' an early morning ferry . transports him across tbe bay. All threo entries into this pen insula are popular, for the roud.i are good and the country is en ticlng. The country Itself retains Its old historic aspects, in tho hulIdliiKS, In tbe InhahltnntH and In the cooking. Many a treasured, antique : has been brought north from this country. . ' . .