WKI)NHHI)AY,HK1T. PAGK POUR THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON IDltf A- tfcfi? ffi m & 4. H) t TheEvening Herald B. J. MCBBAI, Editor JAMES S. SHEEHY City Editor Published daily except Sundny by The Herald Publishing Company of Klamath Falls, at 115 Fourth Street. Entered at the postofflce at Klam ath Falls, Ore., for transmission thru tho malls as second-class matter. i i Subscription terms by mail to any address in the Uuitcd States: " Ono year $5.00 "Ono month 50 Member of tho Associated Press Tho Associated Press is exclusively entitled to tho uso for republication I of nil news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa per, and also local news published 'herein. All rights of republication of spo-, 'eial dispatches herein aro also reserv- "--d. "WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 10. 1019. !' .IIOTII EXDS ACiAIXST THE MIDDLE. When President Wilson announced "that ho would carry the fight for the ..League of Nations to the people, the opponents were glad of it. While tho president had been in France, the Senators at home had their ears tol ,' the ground and their fingers on the pulse of the nation, and they knew , that the peopl ewanted none of the !v "foreign alliance that the president was forming on the other side. It is, ?w therefore, interesting to read the re fj ports of the reception he is receiving i,i. -along the line. The following, written ,'f' hy newspaper correspondents, whose "' papers are heartily in favor of the Xieague and who cannot be accused of V hvnlniltfiA nrrntnat fhn nroaf riant tll prejudice against tho president tell the story that the people are not ral lying to the standard of the president as he anticipated: Reports which so far have come back from along the route Indicate that the president has not yet emerg ed from the zone in which, as his op ponents would say, he is known and understood. It is not necessary to examine between lines of the dispa't-' ches of the most reliable newspaper correspondents of the presidential entourage to see that the "going Is not yet good." It Is significant enough when Dav M Lawrence, faithful friend of the president and representative of the TJew York Evening Post, strong for the league of nations, writes of the president's greeting at Columbus, Ohie: "He got more attention In thai ' ' very city seven years ago as" an "un- known candidate." Robert 'T. Small, for years with the Associated Press and whose en tire newjspaper training has been away from partisanship, says In hi? Teport of the first day: "It required but one day of travel In the near west to make It apparent that President Wilson in taking the league of nations fight to the people of the country must 'combat a very definite amount of apathy." And It must be remembered that Mr. Small represents on thl.i trip the Philadelphia Public Ledger, which would be glad to hear from its cor respondent that the president's re marks reecived unanimous approval along the route. Digressing from his account of the reception at St. Louis yesterday, the same correspondent said: "The democrats in this section feel that they need whatever benefit mav accrue to the party from the presi dent's tour. They are very low in their spirits Just now, and while they say the republican radicals in the senate are hurting the party by their fantastic tactics with the league of nations, still the ears of the demo - cratic aonKey out nere are noi napp-inrLt ing defiantly in the breeze. There Is a considerable drop to them, and the tall has a tendency to sag between the legs." This sheds some Interesting light on the partisan aspects of this non- partisan tour. The fact Is that the president, to ( paraphrase the old but sententious . . . -... ...u .1 remarK, nas ueun piuyius ' against tne minute ciass. u is now me middle class that has got in tl.e way ' of pome of Mr. Wilson's enterprises ' both at homo and abroadr I He has nleased on tho one hand and placated Wall street on tho other and ho is now out on the platform toed ln tho jnddi0 West, with Kansas lnduco that great big middle class to, subscribe to his personal Ides. ' has satisfied labor by helping settln some wage disputes its way, and he flattered tho large financial interests by taking two members of J. P. Mor gan & Co. along with him to Pari3 to framo tho financial provisions ol the i peace treaty to their liking. Tint In rlnnllncr with tbeso two 0- I tremes, the middle class, compnslnc ', more than three-fourths of the peo- nJeJias been, ,aa Senatqr ,Jqhn Sharp y?WlllIflraBsaldUhe other day.:crushpd netween tne upper anu neiner himi stone. It is, therefore, tho dlspoel FLYING THROUGH ARC FEET tUJ Fi HHflHHjflfllBHBHBHBHBHBffeH)flHHH 5 i f i r "Timm 1 If "ii n 111llMliililMlllMMHBBWBMMMBBnr'',Hr','""'''i" Freak performances with airplanes are recorded n'most every day. soon will be stale. This photograph shows the most remarkable feat' yet troy, a French pilot, guiding his plane through the Arcde Trlompho In fifteen feet. tion of this middle class to stay at home, and do the fall housecleanlng or dig the last crop of potatoes that Is causing some of the cities that Sir. Wilson is visiting to look deserted. Instead of standing the senate on its head and make it come through with the necessary- two-thirds vote for the League of Nations, it would seem that the president is losing ground. Senator Shekls of Tennes-j see, upon whom the president had counted, has deserted the ship and definitely lined up with the opposi tion. Reports from Washington are to the effect that the Indications are that the president has only 27 votes upon which he can absolutely rely, while the opposition appears to have the two-thirds and a good margin, besides. AUTUMN The glory of summer is waning Autumn touches the morning air with , chilly fingers. j The butterflies and bees sip at some gorgeous flower And glorious summer hesitates and lingers. The hills wear a gauzy, purple haze, ine nius wear a gauzy, purpie naze. And,em,,t0 1USter nCar ,D fr,endly """"" In wooded glens the fluttering leaves ,one,y lQ wandering mates are calling Reminiscent of a happy fleeting passion. summer's The tired, sleepy children of Nature Commune their common thoughts in the various languages blended Rprpnelv nnd tieacefullv thev bow to one great Power That tenderly bore them here from Spring time s hour, Nor sigh, nor brood that earth's short life is ended. Would that I might live as these And all my cares and melancholy fears dispel ' That I might' forget the curse of hu man strife And live like God's true children f , . a perfect summer "- T HL 'Si?, I M, waif Know mat. an is wen. - The first recorded move toward , .l... .... u.. ., iiDi, prohibition was an act by the English Pnrllnmont In l.r.F.2 llmttinir the SB 6 of nqu0r to (certain placls. The' prohibition propaganda in me United States appeared In 1802 in a, book published by, Dr. Benjamin Rush, a signer of the peclaration of Independence. Tho first prohibition society In this country was organized . . . 1 in 1808. Maine was the first State tn Lrn ,irv aiiontinir nrohibition in l7L!iPfTv,l,Tioln 1840. Maesachusette, Rhode Island ann Vermont wont-dry later but after ... . . . -.. ward voted liquor nacK. in ioo, New York went dry by Its own vote, ))Ut tIle Iaw was H00n declared un- j. constitutional, Prohibition, as )'n oreanized movement, did not begin .." lln,n r,or. thn nivll War. Tho (prohibition movement of today start- ,H as the leader.and spread to tho South.. " 1 - I Nn wok Says: Many merchants charge advertising I to EXPENSE whereas If ATTENDED I TO and EXTENSIVELY and JUDI-, CIOUSLY used It would show in an nual statements as a very profitable INVESTMENT. Xo Man a Hero to His Valet ColonoUHouso ,who has bQcndes crlbod -OS. President Wilson's Brain, Valet, Is said now to bo atputs with j our Chief Executive. j DE T&IUMPHE WITH ONLY 15 LEEWAY ONE OF DAILY NEVhK SAW trie SuVVmncc: Writer of Popular Song Jsed Name Because Rhythmic Sound of It Appealed to Him. ' e The song, "Old Folks at Home." made the name of "Swunee Itior" fu- mou, but few people, except those of numher of olunies nsrcrtnliieil to ln Florida and Genrgin. coiinoct the ; stond In crypt undor the public build Swnnee of the song with the Suwiinwc. hit. s of ('oiistiintlnople. hut will tho that Hows from the southern swamps , iim imo'-s nt l.lvy he found? lit i:.W.Ia"tl. rlllVVI. tlltVlll'.ll 111,' U.lllll. ' 'ltn. .itm-t (lid, 111.. Iihiimiii'ii If ...1 ilia. illn(8 0f Klorldd to einntv Into the Uulf of Mexico. mi no better foundation than the "Way down upon the Swunee river" i vuifuu Impression of miuiu uueilucaled Migtfests Micuely the South of the ante- Ttirkl'h uiidei olllelal. And. Indeed. In helium days i, 1th Its cotton plantations! the absence of any Inl'onmillou w hat Its mansions mid negro rubiu-. None ever, on the subject, wh.it more nutu of these things are found alouu the Su-1 ral conjecture limn that the lost hi-- ! unnee. Yet Fliirldans claim that the torlcnl works will he restored to the ! song was written in honor of their for-1 world when the vast collection of an- ' eut stream, ami bontineu even point ! plent books whose existence was pre- j out a tree under which Stephen Kos-1 vloul.v unsuspected come to he ex- ler Is supposed to have pmned the i umliied? ! memorable hnei. Iteports less pic- of the .1." books of l.lvy presered turcMiie, but more generally accepted, I to us out of H'J, two are Incomplete, say that Foster never saw Suwanee j Of the other HIT hooks the summaries i river, but that lie used the name be- remain, so that their -contents are I cause ut the rhythmic sound, drbpplng known. Their full text probably would the "u" to perfect the meter. wit add so much to the sum of knowl- While the Suwunee river may not "ilcc, hat their recovery has been the i be what Its name, suggests to most of dream of clnslesi.s for centuries. The ux, it is a beautiful stream, (lowing ' ('cns-loiuil discovery of even a frng througli a semi-tropical country where nient in the Vatican or other libraries live-oaks and cypresses are mirrored has been a sensation for scholars. in Its clear depths. Heavy forests of Thce ton and tnti of bool;. which M , 8 rmt Uiel.e lane been reduced In recent ,ears as ! .1 1 i I.. . .1 ...! f.. ....... fill. U'.liwl lu 11 .fflllir flulltnllfl fill Ilf.ll. ell making. The Suwanee tigured largely In early American history, for it was u filvorlte haunt of the Indians, iinu many buttles with the red men were mogul in us vancjs. The mun Suwanee lias an Indltin sound, but It Is bald to be a corrup - Hon Of San Juun a name given the j rivM" by early Spanish explorers. Embroidery an Old Art Embroidery Is supposed to he one of j the earliest domestic arts, for i were the only material for clothing t,mt XlS,ed- T"e V,,P,,TOt k"0W" Spe- lmens of entbroldery. however, are some irugments discovered in ugypt. ', ""'' tI,l earliest of these Is supposed ' to have been made nbotit the fifteenth , vntnmi.v inntpPmi nf 7. " "' ... . . ' V.. . ., "'is Kino disappear very rnpiuiy, anil ,t , on,y In .. v.,v (lrv ,.imilte iike Egypt, with Its sandy soil, that fab- rlcs suitable for embroidery could sur- vlve. Dental Hygiene in Africa. The manufacturer of a popular den- . . .... .. . . if. " ini powuer nnvenises mat -aaviiges i lead a different kind of llfo from us. and therefore nature takes care of their teeth without artificial help.". 1irntltiliiiit 4tm trtnTt In ffitrri t I h hkiiciiiuiii, ... ni.uui.-tri ... i.-uiuiwi p,aCes, saw this and Inuglied. "I know ( of nt )eQSt tlir(,e AfrieilI1 tribes," lie 8ad, ''that brush their teeth regularly. Each person cnrrles. it twig of a certain , fibrous tree. They chew the end of It I.. ,.,...i i Into a good bunch of iiristles and si'0, " qunrtcr-hour every morning y, "'".., '...L ,x' ......' ..'....,.'........ VI I lie u nil nit; t" iiik-ih nun uuuki" n i fr()n () wn,n C()rd f t)l(iy ,mv) M() ...t...- All.n.. trt iiDlun It .... It lu .in inner uiuiiicn iu itinicti n uu, ti tn un i Importunt thing to them." The Needed Lubrication ----- - i , A fervent, but unlettered, preacher among tho mountain whites of the Car- j ollmts was exhorting his flock to como , forward and take advantage of the "means of grace." "It ulr pride that's keeping you set- ' tin' lu yoro seats," he cried. "Oome to tho altar and get down on ., yotr lienders'aiiil' If they air too stlfiwltli pride, lie' em, lie 'em, as it says in tho St.rl,ltur Wth Ho of Patmos." New yorij livening Post- n..n.l !... I. ......... 1. ...... l...n A... ' .... . ... . itllf till Will'. A linSMlllIf. II, .ve lllftllutrv I n,.,. .,.u. .. ..in-. ...... ..c-ii mi- jiiere ih not cnniirh ie(t her to go . , , V V .i ... ",'"" lln lin f ti1(. iiunnda country ployed for decorative purposes very j round. Fish skins are suseen'lble , s ."e .1!a.std ...11 " w"ltc- """ I "" "l1 ' I ", ui ' Z fr lite soon after sewing was invented. This ; ,,,,;. m, ,ell. ure ,, hklm wlllch , """ -..i"" "n'r. may..nf -fc,'"n ,n .,..., t Fn the would place It long before the art of i wn;e xon0 ,eulfT l!lr.;o ,.,, . "" " "" ". s.,,,r.nmc ,ffr ;. . " ,'.. Ives are tn be weaving was discovered and back in IUUI y ,)urpo..w. TIl(.,. .,,, ,, for I w.avngcerian ranr.es ..... p.ans are -, . rather h antagonl.e,!. the days when the skins of animals .. t-i,..i t ..!... ....,1 o ...... I ' lv been made for breeding cillnte il rutiur uiiiii ihiu , FREAK PERFORMANCES Landing on the roof of skyscrapers accomplished. It shows Charles dod-o Paris. The wing clearance was only BO. u-.w.io IM IHmkSPOIU ipect Literary Treasures to Be Un- ea .'d FV.im the Volm-ies Stored at Constantinople. Some of the hooks of l.lvy undoubt edly w he fniinil among the emit i i-ovrv I i.hout' n. I... ...m.I.. mnv r.-Ht m.ppo,,.,, . Turl: burned ilur- ,K ,1,,-ir ,miMtM. but which. It np- . mi. tea l... ...of' li.xib ,.1 fll.ll .fl.lltlll ....... i...i I. ..I . ma Increase sio-es of ,. rnlnir and ' ,m,v,. Ill0re .'ellnite our knowledge of , narllei-lar mm (.nil ..i-t.i-iil. r period. , Jt W ngreeable tn thin'! tr.nt forgot- ton authors of great merit and lor i gotten works, of undisputed alue will , ' ciiln new reco-nlthm. 1, if n,e nils-ing work- of the Roman historian are among the volumes fur- j ther cause will be ven for congratll- llatlin over tho Turkish downfall. St. i Louis Post DIsiuiKli. I " -w.' iii lllll-l P(l M ,!. uifo Journal. They may be sewed ' ,op""",r to m!lU' cl'1 ! ollwr Kur- i u.,lts. ,, ., ..,, Illl( t00 snll ,0 ,,e I nvallable for Parts of boots and shoes ; The nernl nilo of -o leather Is that ' the thicker the fur is tin. iwuin.i- tin. .,.,.. :'.. '..'. r ..."". . ",0U r. L """ " l-l s. A.TO! Illllg lO IlllS rat hide would produce superior , i Somebody with the gift of guessing j computes that there are 100,000,000 rats In this country, mil flic damage they d' would feed u rood-sized army. i It would take nt least 5,000 skins a day ' t0 "lPly a mill modern tannery. No- lifirti ivnnfu ta enro limit IiaIaho . .- ,"""" "',."' "c'"" lu ' "nybm'y that can cntfch thPin. That Ir I the or ly problen.-to catch them and SK" tliei'. "" "'"i deliver the goods. New Insulating Material. A new Insulating material that Is Incombustible Is made by mixing 51.7 per cent powdered asbestos; 14 per cent powciereii mica, 'JO per rent mineral ...11 rt. . ..a rubber (a soft substiwicu found in de posits of ole iglnuus schist) ; 1 per cent roslii and 0.:t per cent of bisulphide of selenh m. . rtt.- washing and evnp oratln In tli"nlr, a bird, non-absoih- cut si bstance Is obtained which, on Iientllr;, hecouu pliustle and can be molded to any simpe, . ... , Clasclfied. J cl S'tiy, ,1111, you didn't know that i I vns nn elertrleli.ii? I missed my i call i".'. j lt.1-- IIow.'m that? ' I Jack Why, last night, over at June's ho electric light fuse burned nut, fiuess who fixed It? Me I my self. ' . ' ' Jill Huh ! You're no electrlcihn you're au Idiot I Pennsylvania Punch Howl. t IS Mav Ml" .in W.lr nn llfil- ' rfMTTTWTVr'T'W"-'WT-- -- AN INVITATION WIhIiIiik to CBtnbllHh dancing claHHeM of tin, school chlldr i 1. 1.1 II f iivIjiiiiI 4 r llnttti ir rft)1Ciil tH,.li...i rtinmuiii Minn, i iiu i w iiiYiuiiHHi to fom . Mooso Hull Friday and Saturday afternoons, from 4 t 0 0cl at which time classon will lui formed, r Htinll bo vny Ki, ,0 . ' tho pareutM of the city comu and of teaching HUH llicy may huu iiiii wihuiiiii 01 securing for ........ ...,,i i.li-lu tin, iirnnnr tnntriictlon 111 the art nf .Inn, i..,,n ...... .--. lii) ti pleasure to oxtoml a formal this Ih manifestly Impossible nt bringing this Imporiam inauur umim of tho presB. PROF. L. t CHINA NOT UND OF HUSTLE Traveler In That Country Must Possess a Generous Amount of Patience and Tact. Sooner or Inter, writes E. II. WIIhoij In "A Naturalist In Western China," tho traveler In China muNt dlspciiBO with the comforts und luxuries sof modem occidental method of travel and ad.ipt himself to thuau more primi tive mid decidedly less comfortablo of the orlejitnl. In the regions with which wo havo to deal there Is nothing In tho nature of wheeled vehicular trafllc uvo only the rudo wheelbarrows In use on the! Chengtu plain. There are no mule caravans, and scarcely a riding pdny to he found. For overland travel there Is tho native sedan-chair and one's own Icks; for rher travel the nntlve boat. Patience, tact and abundance of time are necessary and tho woUhhbe traveler lacking any of these essentials liouldSeek lands where less primitive methods obtain. Endowed with the vir tues mentioned, and having unlimited time at his disposal, ho may travel anywhere and everywhere In China In safety, with considerable pleasure and ubiindiint profit In knowledge. With her industrious toiling iuIIIIoiih, her old. old civilization, her enormous natural wealth and wondrous scenery, China alternately charms and fiiNclnutei, Irri tates and pliuiK'eH Into despair, all who sojourn long within her borders. Elephants'-Picnic. An net not down on the program was given without charge the other day In the old seaport town nf Marble head, Mass., when four elephants of a small circus, named with tine allied patriotism Cenerat Focli, (.encriil Per shing, (icneral Halg and Princess Pat, Jumped a stone wall, escaped the cir cus and took to the woods. The per sonnel of the circus, acrobats, riders, clowns mid caimivncn, followed, and so did many nf the townspeople and hnlf a dozen policemen, but the ele phants made the woods first, and there they spent the day with "a large and appreciative audience" watching on the outskirts. Peanuts and bananas, I usually a temptation to elephant. '. '""" ' " "7 " ,rom ,m' r 'w I fc'Kln;l JmiKle; hut as twilight fell. "" lllioil r.UKK-llll-ll.ireUIIIE lime. UlC I l,l h"' "J" l'wfiilly out of the , ""0ls ,iml ""'""''I l ,l' lw "" ' ', "-'''"'t to IpiiiI them hack to the "; """ "" """ went home to belated suppers Germany Seeks Wool So'isVtutet. I Searcli for wool substitute will doubtless continue in Oermany, where ' sheep rearlni' Is not likely tn Increase ' materially. Dogs' lialr and even hu- i man hair have been tried, as felt ma- terlal nf limited supply, and the long hair of women found military use dur- Oil In Mexico. Recent Investigations which have lieen made on the Paclilc coast of Mex ico reveal the existence of rich de posits of petroleum. These discoveries ' nro "r 2reut Importniice, because they vin uiiiu.nteiy serve to intensiry mari time tralllc and seem to presage for soiub of the western ports of Mexico a future as promising as that of Tnmplco or Tuxpnum. S.mple Budget System. -"Every young wife should have a budget system to govern her Expendi tures." "I. know. I .have one. I pay what 1 j, can, and' owe the 'rest." . I ., ., Qusllfled. He was applying for n position fl attendant In tin insane nsylum. "Have you had any experience han dling Irrational persons?" ho was asked. "Some," was Ids response. "I wns n motion-picture director for several ' years." l And lie wns hired forthwith. film Fun. Proof. "My dear, I was one of tho very first to leave," sahl a man, who, on re turning from au evening party, was greeted reproachfully by his wife. "Oh, you always say Unit," she re torted. $jyt'll, I "can prove lt'thls'tllne(ntiy-t how.V Insisted tho husband. "Look In' the hull and seo the gold-mounted urn brcllu I've brought home." SUVilfnl rilllllttit. eT Mui nnlmnlo IIIU. Ill III-la "in " .... .. IIM.l I nnt lllllt 11 1III Mil" II'M ' TT TTf 4slA pass Judgment upon my ,,,.., j their K ItUoilM Invitation to each family, imt , M thla tlmo, I titko this im,tIl0. ;; to your aiumiion llnoucli tho col. A. HEPBURN WASN'T ASKING FOR MUCH All Duffalo Wife Wanted of the Hss. band was Juit "One of Thow Reolonal Danki." Stevenson, we believe It ,' memory Isn't as B, H tl , bcf ""' "' !' "'" Passed trici , ;Z eate the gr,,esi ,ln1llllw , married life, reiiuuks a wrlu-r In Bnf fnlo News. II,. s, u K " meed of Joy emnes rn recoun. Ing tales of courtship, (l(nt he) nr Is the pinnacle of liupphu-M founil In social contact with others, wherrty litisband and wife are spurred by '1H law of contrast to love ono another more dearly? We forget which wu his conclusion. 'Tennyratc, both ure wrong mj as. worthy of so great a mnstcr of iitcra ture. t)ur notion, you amy sny, Is un important, and very probably m speak within the law when you uy do. Itut to us the greatest Joy coinci In that mystic hour heslde tin tie tilng Inmp. when the Krny mo hingi low from the nuptial tree, cunlnt shadowy fancies about the henrt of the home. To sing to her. to write odei to her. to recount the ilny's ork to her nil are pleasant occupationi. To reaI to her, though, is nl(. Mry height of evening enjoyment ; shell so attentive, hangs so Interestedly upon every word, mid then her re freshing woman's views on what ha been read! I'or example, Inst nljht, when he rend two columns of compre hensive matter on II urrcn Inno vation, after which shi- .uiunt'il wound ip the clock anil ulil "I w Isb you would stop tnniiirrow and get one of those regional banU and bring It home. I liae mie ef the A. M. & A. bunks and n illine hank, too. Hut I think one of tlmse regional banks would be so much more desir able for larger money." BRITISH ADVANSE IN AFRICA. Plan to Open Country Which the Hunt Had Picked as Worthy of Exploitation. Hallway development In Africa U evidently to be prosecuted with vigor. At any rate, preliminaries nre under discussion for a brunch rullwny Into Ruanda from the trunk line that Ger man engineers had but Jiit completed from the Indian ocean to I.nke Tnnjan ylku. The new line will advance Into a country where the wnr In Kurnpe probably saved the natives from Ger man attack. Htiiinda had remained nn undeveloped part of the (lemma pos session, hut had I ii examined and written down ns particularly worth wlille to develop for the wirlety of Its products. The new rullwny 'had brought German military force within strlkln;: dlstnnce, and the bMory of (lermun management la Africa fnves everv icason to believe that the open- WOUIU ntusst Itrltlrt con- They races of Africa, held to be rehitci io Egyptians. Assyrians, or some otner ancient African people, and should oe benefited rather than Injured by ne coming of the Iron horse and " opening up of their country under Hrltlsh niisplces.-Chrlstlnn Selencs Monitor. Appreciated American Spirit Here Is an anecdote from M J. " nay Uelth's "The Last Million, that bhows the feeling of one Hr ItWi 'n cer toward the American R "I like tho young Americans pirton atotnircctlon for his country." '' ofllecr. "nn.i his fixed Hww'f'? to boost everything connected '"' ' One day I was waiting hi a vl"1"' nn American staff car which wiis Ing- sent for me from Clmnnwnfc found ono standing nt U the street, so I aske.l tla- ' e thinking he might be fn.n. h, ters, 'Where are you from' h sat up and replied all In ' ns If I had pressed n Milton. J . am from Marlon, Ohio, tlif J. hteam-sliovel producing cci'tei world!1 Just like that, a lint I" I' cull tlio rlglit spirit." New Kind of Construction. Several exhibition halls and bly rooms have been built in i by nttachliig to the uprights ting." fashioned from 0,",e"i in about a third of an nel1 ,'",, to-rross-secllon, which are b u d gether with tin-plated Iron w'y, subseiiuently covered wit ,?..' ..ta,g 'plhft Stfucttn-of thl. "J, Popular Mechanics Mnu-nx nft enslly and quickly constructed wu said to bo useful lu winter tie-