France Buildingo on Better Lines Republic Replace» War- Devastated Area« With Handsome Towns. WOODS GETS MABEL s OU’LL know at a glance the man or woman who Is on Intimate terms of friendship with the smiling heart, though the fmw may he serene ami undemonstrative, yet beaming with an unspeakable gladness. Lip smiles have become mechanical, a mere outward show without mean­ ing Yet so It Is; the tale-bearer smiles; the bandit smiles as he pokes you In the ribs with his gun, steals your last dollar and robs you of your sweetheart’s picture. But how different is the heart-smile, rich with uns|token word« of love aud truth. The heart that smiles when every­ thing goes wrong Is the heart that Is abounding In unsalable faith. It Is the heart that Is unselfish; that Is overflowing with sympathy; that Is V By DO UG LAS M A LL O C H UT THE SMILING HEART planners suggested and put iu forr<. many economies. The ordinary home of the railroad worker consists usually of a four ,oom house A large room is used both as a sitting and dining room and there are three large, well-ventilated bed­ rooms, kitchen and hath. Each house has a porch and also a concrete cel­ lar, which is a need of the French people for the preservation of their wines and fruits. Then there are the larger houses of five and six rooms for families of six to eight persons. THE SECRET OF HAPPINESS OMETHING TO THINK ABOUT (By F. A. WALKER willlng to face obstacles and go to any trouble to lift up the fallen and bind thr wounds of the Injured. It is the smiling heart that builds a cheerful fire In the rusty stove of the poor man's hut and puts pleasant food upon his table; It is the smiling heart that finds w arm beds for half frozen children and comforts their despairing mothers; It Is the smiling heart that Is helping to bring about the redemp­ tion of the world and perhaps saving the worldlings from destruction. if you could penetrate the depths of the smiting heart, you might discover that Its loveliness came from the bit­ ter valleys of sorrow. Through Its own experience. Its own disappointment. Its own tears It grew through the hard sod. sprouted and burst forth a beautiful flower, that the discouraged might see it and take heart again and move ou toward the upward path. The little bent old woman with a basket on her arm filled with food for the hungry Is carrying with her oat- ward evidence of nobility, a heart that radiates mercy, smiling like the noon­ day sun, which she cannot hid* be­ neath her thread-worn cloak. That is the heart-smile, with Its lips that never lie and tta eyes that never scorn. Who at gome period of hts or her life does not need the comforting com­ panionship of the smiling heart? The smiling heart Is the invisible link that binds this world to the world beyond, neglecting to fill Its purse with gold, but filling the breasts of human­ ity with a love as bright as the stars und a hope eternal. T'' SPITh of speechea songa and swords. I have seen many men content. Red flags are waved, and red-not words Are hurled against the battlement Of wealth entrenched, and kings am cursed—• Yet kings there have been from ths first. And wealth there will be, I opine Long after words of yours or mine. N. w York.—Upon some of Its war- devustated areas France bus seen the rise of villages and towns more lovely, more various in architecture, more roniforiable, healthful and economical than those shattered to dust. De­ signs and pictures of these new settle­ Yet I have seen gome happiness; ments, harmonious and beautiful of And. strange to say, not always on aspect, have been brought to this coun­ The throne, nor always In the press try by Julian Clarence Levi, repre­ That swept ahead when thrones were sentative of the American Institute of Bryan’s Widow Has an gone. architects aud the Architectural Yes, even those who hate employed. Electric Horse on Hands league. And what they hated thus destroyed. Returning after some months In Eu­ Miami, Fla,—A mechauical horse And far ahead their banners bore. rope, where he endeavored to arouse purchased by the late William Jen Seemed little happier than before. interest and secure participation In nlngs Bryan, is being held at the the forthcoming exposition of archi­ Bryan home here pending decision by So hnte and envy are not all, tecture and the allied arts, Mr. Levi Mrs. Bryan as to what disposition to I said, whatever flag’s above. Mabel Normand, forsuking for thi Í T Is chiefly enthusiastic about the gar­ make of the electrical mount. The very man who makes to fait. den cities. The exposition is to be Mr. Bryan bought the contrivance time being Hollywood and the screen Would you be happy, you must love. HE YOUNG LADY in New York, says the Stars and from a New York firm after a visit to for A. H. Woods und the spoken drams Hate is the passion of an hour, —this under a flve-yeur contract—hal Stripes. ACROSS THE WAY President Coolidge last July, when he But happiness Is like a flow’r, The man to conceive the garden-city was given a demonstration. It was Just gone to New York to start re­ That love must plant, and love must hearsal for the stellar role In "Diana project and the prime mover in ad­ delivered at the Bryan home after his ’tend. of the Movies." She says she getl vancing It Is a French engineer of death. And share its fragrance with a architectural training, M. Dautry, who friend. Mrs. Bryan plans to present It to $500,000 a year and an Interest . in ths was instrumental In bringing a long some civic organization, it was said. show. list of architects, both French and Yes, I have seen some men content. foreign. Into the work of design. The modest lodging house in San Fran­ And they but little were concerned cisco In 1906. reconstructions were undertaken by War Veteran’s Kind Act With kings, how others’ fortunes went, the Northern Railway company to Recenty recovered from dlsahilitlei What others had or others earned. Brings Him $6,000 Reward Incurred provide new homes and cities for its In the war. Sergeant Weavei The secret of our happiness San Francisco.—For an act of kind­ came to San Francisco, produced a employees. is not a secret hard to g u ess: "SI. Dautry,” Mr. Levi sa y s "is not ness done twenty years ago, Sergt. forgotten letter written by Mrs For happiness, I find, succeeds John A. Weaver, soldier of the World Burns, certified Its Identity at a bank only a capable engineer and executive Not greater wealth, but simpler war, has received $6.000. the total but he is a man of unbounded enthu­ which was advertising for her rela­ needs. 1 © bv M cC lu r« N r w a p « p « r S y n d ic a t e . 1 (IB* by M cC lu r« N»w apa»4»r R yn d lcat® ) siasm and winning personality, able to value of an estate left him by Mrs. tive« and later received the entire res­ surmount every obstacle encountered. Mary E. Burns, who remembered idue of the estate through a trunsfei I visited the beautiful homes und cities through the years the kindness shown executed by an officer of the Superbo the company has established. They her when she was a landlady of a court. number more than 11,0(10. The econ­ omy with which its operations were effected Is marvelous. Brick From Railway Athas. "Even the large heaps of cinders ac­ cumulated for years near the sands of the Aisne were used for brick pur­ poses. They served wonderfully, as both aides, facing the exterior and In­ terior walls, were rough and Ideal for plastering on the inside and for cov­ ering with cement on the outside. Their use served to bring expense strangers that come In from alt Old Volume, Giving Impres­ and down to the minimum. parts.” "Near the Junctions of railroads sions of New England 300 After telling of the White moun­ The young lady across the way there are convenient sleeping stations tains, “upon which lyeth snow all ths Buys she believes she’ll drop In at Years Ago, Uncovered. built for the engineers and train crews. year and are a landmark twenty miles the bank on the way home today and I noticed they had special ventilating Worcester, Mass.—A quaint volume, off at sea,” and of the country beyond get her father a new checkbook as apparatus. I should say that a much them, which he thought "daunting ter­ she overheard him say he was a little larger proportion of the people than yellowed with age and of great rarity, rible, being full of rocky hills, as thick short of ready money. giving impressions of New England as hitherto ventilate their sleeping apart­ ( © b y M c C lu r e N y w r p ip t r S y n d ic a t e ) It was 300 years ago. In the days of as mole hills In a meadow and ----------O---------- ments at night.” cloathed with Infinite thick woods." the Pilgrims, has been uncovered In Literally, new areas in France have Josselyn launched into a discussion o( emerged from the ruins of the war— the library of the American Antiqua­ birds, beasts, fishes, serpents, insect! new architecturally, new in concept, rian society here. The volume carries the title of “New and plant life, much of which ap­ both structurally and in their plan­ England’s Rarities Discovered.” and peared to amaze him. ning for the growth of new civic and Amazed by “Turkie." was the work of John Josselyn of social activities. Methods devised for Josselyn seemed greatly Impressed Kent, England, one of the earliest ar­ the comfort and happiness of their with the “turkie,” as he ca llel It, “« population are most modern. They rivals In New England. He Is de­ fowl blacker than ours." He wrote: have lost nothing of the picturesque scribed on the flyleaf of the work as "I have heard several credible per­ quality which the world associates “John Josselyn, Gent.” EDWARD BURNE-JONES sons affirm they have seen turkie- The old volume bears the press Im­ with the provinces of France, Mr. cocks that weighed forty, yea sixty print of the Green Dragon, In St. Levi says. pound. But out of my personal ex­ Y X 7 H E N Sir Edward Burne-Jones There was Insufficient capital avail­ Paul’« Churchyard, London. In 1672. perimental knowledge I can assure you ’ * wua a growing boy ut school he able after the war for the widespread In it the author, as the title has It, that I have eaten my share of turkie read the “Morte d'Arthur” und "Modern reconstruction of the smaller towns, tells of the “birds, beasts, fishes, ser­ that, when he was pulled, weighed Painters" and these two books made pents and plants of that country, to­ and, while the greatest gratitude Is thirty pound.” na Impressloon on him that lasted all expressed toward the efforts of Amer­ gether with the physical and chynir- Josselyn once found a white goose his life. though lie had not met that famous by a picture, a beautiful romantic icans In this direction, the trail of the glcal remedies which the natives con­ which had three hearts, adding: Everyone Is familiar with the palnt- man. He knew little of draughtsman­ dream of something that never was Four Horsemen had passed over too stantly use to cure their distempers, "She was a very old one and so tuff Ings, "The Golden Stairs,” “The Mer- ship, but his wealth of pictorial de­ and never will be. In a light better wide a swath to permit provincial re­ wounds and sores.” we gladly gave her over, although ex- rlful Knight” and "Love Among the tail made up for tluat. A trip to Italy, than any light ever shown, In a land Josselyn, a son Sir Thomas Josse- construction as rapidly as Industry de­ Ruins," all being widely reproduced. In company with Ruskin, did much to no one cen define or remember, only lyn, an aristocrat of Kent, visited N«w ceedlng well roasted." manded. In bis wanderings Josselyn cam« He had an unusual manner of paint- develop him. desire—and the forms divinely beau­ England In 1638, staying with his Beauty It Prime Note. upon beurs which "walk the country— ing, very pictorial and romantic. Ideal- Ills first "Love Among the Ruins" tiful.” No other artist carried out brother at Black Point In the colony In the new city of Deliverance, twenty, thirty, forty in a company, lstle, as artists would say. was a watercolor, which was utterly Ideals more nearly than he. which represents 827 families, there of Massachusetts, "otherwise," as he making a hideous noise with roaring He was born August 28, 1833, near destroyed by a cleaner who thought It He lived to he quite an old man, puts It. “known as Scarborow and are 01 different types of homes. Pub­ which you may hear for a mile or so Birmingham. England. From the time was an oil. So Burne-Jones wurk«>d dying In Exeter, In 1898 <>ne of his some 100 leagues east of Boston." It lic baths, free medical examination before they come so near us to en- he was a baby, mythology and classic It out again, thia time In the more lust paintings was “Arthur In Ava­ was during this visit of one year's hulldlnga, school and athletic fields are danger the traveler." tales interested him. At college he lasting medium of oil paints. lon.” duration and a subsequent one thirty Included. In the new city of Lena, In Indians anointed tbemselv««s with adopted Rossetti as his muster, Of his own work, he said: "I mean. <© hr O c o rfc Matt be* Adame) years later that he obtained material which the Northern Railroad company the grease from the bearskins, he for his “New England Rarities.” has exerted much activity and to wrote, to "harden themselves against " hose beauty American city planning cold weather." And he recounted that ♦ ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± tt± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± J I overnight. Drain and In the morning Boston a Handsome Town. drop Into a thick hot sirup and Just one New Englander, who had taken T* organizations and architects have con­ scald. Can at once, The melon balls Josselyn found Boston to be "a cold after too copious lit»ati»n "in a tributed not a little, there are not keep their shape and color and are de­ nly beautiful and comfortable homes town built on the soathwest side of a shallop or fisher boat and who grew lightful for garnishing dishes In the but a salle dee fetes (amusement bay large enough for the anchorage crooked, lame and full of pain, was winter when that color Is hard to get. cured by lying one winter upon bear house) decorated with great taste, of 500 sail of ships.” When musk and watermelons ars "It’s buildings,” he wrote, "are skins." playgrounds with every modern equip­ fresh and good cocktella ars especially Josselyn came upon gayly bedecked ment and artistic stores and shops handsome. Joining one to the other as good. ' lending with the surrounding reei- In London, with many large streets, Indian squaws who evidently caught | came Into clash with the authorities, IS IT VANE? dencea. Drug stores, tobacco mer­ most of them paved with pebble­ his artistic eye. He found the Indian especially with Governor Wlnthrigy, men “somewhat horse-fneed, and gen- Cantaloups Cecktall. chants’ stores and barber shops are stone. his name la said to he the same who succeeded Vane In office. He re­ HIS "The town Is not divided Into par­ erally fauclous, I. e„ without beards; to be seen in the midst of flowers pre­ Cut the melon Into balls with a po­ turned to Englnud in 1640, where be sa F ane, or at leaat (he two names vail ng everywhere, even among the ishes, yet they have three fair meet­ but the squaws, many of them hand had the same derivation. They are became a member of parliament The tato scoop and fill serving glasses ; add ing houses, or churuches, which hard­ some, dressed In colors and were gen­ l< wllest of slrops. said to have come from the Welsh per fee» ° f bis office amounted to thirty a few seeded white grapes, « little The American architects and city ly suffice to receive the Inhabitants erally plump as partridges.” aonal name Fane, meaning slender. A thousand pounds a year. This Vane lemon sirup and garnish with a sprig family of the name Fane or Vane were regarded as excessive so he returned ot mlnt ln ,h* ,OP ot *'"' h k1»»» In serving melon never place Ice In lentie, South Atlantic and Esst South ancestors of the earls of Westmore- , th* «mount to parliament. He was Central states Is progressing more rap­ land, and this Vane or Fane family is eventually executed hy his political op- the melon to chill It, as It destroys its flavor. And the most delicious melon idly than In any other sections of the »«Id to have been descended from a , ponent» on a charge of treason. WALKER—An officer of the forest may be ruined by being served un country. New England's relative Welshman named Howel ap Vane, of Monmouthshire, who lived and died bo- 'n "Id England who patrolled the forest chilled. To chill a melon let It stand standing continues to decrease. fore the time of Wllllsra (he Conqueror. on f°°t, walking, w ss railed a walker. on Ice or In a cold place long enough rank and the «mount of developed The most interesting person hf the Th* na,u* sometimes conies from this, to become rhilled before cutting It. If Beport by Departm ent of Interior Says water power for each are as folio»«: name Vane ln this country’» history 1 sometimes from a word Wealcere, An­ a large melon rut It and place near New York It Leading All New York, 1,713,551 ; California. 1,581,- District of Columbia Fines Ice. Tasteless melons may ba treated wss Sir Henry Vane, governor of glo-Saxon for a fuller. Other States. with a sslsd dressing, using oil and 480; Washington, 500,693; North Caro­ < • Sr M e O a r« N«w«p«a«v Sr»dte«t« | Maaaactiusetta, In 1636 and 1637. He U. S. for Smoke Nuisance Vinegar, with red pepper and a dash lina. 584.600; Maine, 476,027 North was born In Hedlow, Kent. England. In Washington.—The District of Colum­ Washington.—The Department of Carolina has moved from fifth place of lemon Juice. 1612, so that he must have been gov­ the Interior, through the geological in 1924 to fourth place in 1925. bia government succeeded In police court In calling the federal government ernor when oo'y about twenty-four. eurvey. has Just released « report on Anotbsr Cocktail. The report also contains records of His father wss Sir Henry Vane, con­ to account for violating the smoke law He developed water power of the the developed water power for 1924 troller of the heusehold of Charles I . U»t the melon, a cantaloupe. Info —a rsther unusual proceeding In the United States In 1925. The total ca­ of England. 8'r Henry, the »on. wss a W » i h i p t o u ra e lv * « , th « Joy. th e ts a r. halls, six or eight to a glass, add a and 1921 and the estimates of poten­ face of Judicial declarations that the pacity of water wheels Installed In O f w h ic h th « c o m in g Ilf « 1« m ad«. tial water power for 90 per cent and well educated man. having studied at little diced pineapple, a slice or two two governments and their law« and ( ants of 100 horse power or more. In oxford and later haring traveled ex A n d n il o u r f u t u r e ’s * t m o « p h * r « of peaches and cover the whole with a 90 per cent of the time computed In regulations must go hand In band. W it h a u n a h tn « o r w it h «had«. March. 1925, was about 10,088,000 enslvely. He was sent to Vienna 'n thin sirup. using a little strawberry or 1914. Based cn present practice at I---rse power, an Increase of shout 961,* fully developed water-power sites, the Judge McMahon Imposed fine» of $10 1091 with the English ambassador and , cherry Juice for flavor, and serve gar­ i„,rse power, or nearly 10*4 per undeveloped water power In the five each In three cases of violating the later in Geneva he became a Puritan. j THE LUSCIOUS MELON nished with a cherry and one or two cent over the total capacity of water- _______ I halves of white gra tes states leading In developed water smoke law preferred hy the district Returning to England he found him P”wer plants In 1924 (9.087,000 horse ONE has never preserved the A little nutmeg Is liked with cants* power will permit of the Installation government sgslnst Robert 8 Regar. •elf out of sympathy with the religions Power). Of th|g increase 99 per cent lellefs of the court party and accord- hearts of pink watermelon they »nd a little red pepper and morn of the following additional capacities chief clerk of the Post-Office depart- Vt>» in electric public-utility plants In «ater wluwls, expreaned in horse ment, for for allowing allowing an an excessive excessive amount amount rifely came to the new world to find have something worth the trouble. Cut ,,ian 1» Ihe dressing will bn sad l p^r vet,t |n manufacturing nower New York 4 784OOO- CsllfOv- of smoke to Issue from the chimneys of -e||g|ou» freedom. the centers from slices of watermelon found agreeable. Plants n?s 7145060; W.'.hing’on. 0.672.(»«; the federal postal heaoquarters. The He at once became prominent In s t ­ and make balls, using a French li potato I New York continues to lead the rest North Carolina 528,000; Maine, 928.080 tines were Imposed upon Mr. Regar, airs and then became governor. Soon ball cutter. Cover them with »«ter In N,,rth sr h i m . „ „„ mdiaWual. but ss . rep reso . cf the states In the amount of devel­ e attached himself to the faction which a small piece or a bit The ret>nrt Indicate, t h . w s t e r